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October 29, 2020 • 31 mins


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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Up next c J. Pearson Uncensored, part of the English
six D network. You don't own me, you don't control me,
but most importantly, you're not gonna silence me. And the
most important people fighting that fight today are the people
on college campuses who are boldly and loudly conservative. I
guess I'm c J. Pierson and I'm the host of

(00:21):
c J. Pierson Uncensored. This is our very first episode
and I couldn't be more excited to be bringing it
to you right here today. For the longest time I
wanted to start a podcast, I couldn't find the time.
I would to make every excuse for it. But now
that I'm in college, I've got to tell you I'm
busier than ever. But I feel like there has never

(00:43):
been a time, now more than before, where there has
ever been so much to talk about. I have a
lot to say. I'm not gonna hold back on this show.
I want to be really intentional about that. I want
to be upfront because I think there are a lot
of people in the political space right now who are
very worried being canceled, about being blacklisted, about being told

(01:04):
that they are a little bit too edgy, a little
bit too controversial, a little bit too truthful. Well, to
be honest, I don't really care at all about that.
I care about just being real with you, guys. I
care about speaking truth to power. I care about calling
balls and strukes because I've witnessed far too many people

(01:24):
around me in the conservative movement, in politics in general,
in the media at large, who don't know how to
tell the truth anymore. And I think that's what separates
the people that are real in this industry and people
that are realness business, and the people that are just
simply fake. The people who say what the media wants
them to say, who says what the left wants them
to say because they want to be liked by the

(01:45):
left even though they're conservative. Well, I gotta be real
with you, I don't really care about being liked by
the left. I care about being true to myself, true
to our country, and calling it like I see it.
And what I am seeing across this country, I'm seeing
America burning. I'm seeing radical leftist take to the streets
and try to burn down our cities because they're upset

(02:07):
still four years after an election that they lost. These
people are the biggest sore losers that we've ever seen.
They're burning America down. And I don't mean that figuratively anymore.
I mean that literally because they are upset that the
American people rejected Hilary Rodham, Glenn. They're trying to cancel

(02:28):
you for being conservative. They're attacking conservatives on college campuses.
They're doing all of that because they cannot get over
something that happened four years ago. And these are the
same people that with a straight face, tried to tell
you and I the President Trump come November three is
not going to accept the results of the election. When

(02:48):
they ever accepted the results of the election? When have
they ever? And so, guys, when I tell you I'm
here to tell you the truth, I mean I'm going
to do that in this episode, and I'm going to
do it in every single other episode. Guys, this isn't
gonna be your typical political podcast because, to be honest,
I'm not your typical with a little podcaster. I'm not
recording this with multimillion dollar equipment. Guys, I am chilling

(03:12):
in my dorm room at the University of Alabama and
probably yelling so loudly than my roommate is a little
bit concerned I'm sorry, Michael, I'm jack you two. I'm
really sorry about that. But like I said, guys, I've
got some things to say, and those things are gonna
be said here. I'm gonna tell you my story about
how I came to be in the conservative movement. Guys,

(03:34):
I have the unlikeliest journey conservatism than a lot of
people I know. I was born and raised in the
Deep South by Democrat grandparents who didn't really agree with
anything I had to say. Their politics were diametrically opposed
to everything I believed in. I remember when I was
first starting out in politics, they were completely unsupportive of it.

(03:55):
They questioned me and they were like, how do you
have the audacity to criticize the first black president? How
do you have the audacity to be conservative? I remember
this one time. They told me, you know, those people
don't like you, right, because they had grown up in
a time where they believe that the color of their
skin should dictate their politics. They believe that the only

(04:15):
way that a black man was to be was to
be liberal, was to be progressive, was to vote Democrat
time and again, up and down the ballot. And it
was really to no fault of their own and it
isn't at all. I really don't blame them for that,
because that is just the way that society has treated
the Black community, as if we are some chess piece

(04:35):
that is owned by the Democrat Party exclusively, that they
don't have to earn our vote, they don't have to
fight for they don't give us anything. They just get
it because they own it. They deserve it. But ever
since I was a little boy, I rejected that idea.
I thought it was absolute bullshit that someone believed that

(04:56):
they didn't have to do a single thing for me
or my community, but they thought they were entitled to
my vote. Because I look at the history of this country.
I look at the history of America, and I don't
see a single thing that Democrats have really ever done
for black people. I see a party that has enslaved
black people. I see a party that segregated black people.
I see a party that fought to treat black people

(05:18):
that we were three fists of a human being. And
don't let them fool you into believing that these things
have just all changed, right, that the party switched, that
we had this really big game of musical chairs politically,
and now the Republicans are the Democrats, and the Democrats
are the Republicans, and now the racist are the Republicans,
because that's just the way history works. But what they
don't teach you in school anymore is that Republicans have

(05:40):
always been the freedom fighters. Conservatis have always been the abolitionists.
They fought for people's freedom, their liberty, and they also
did the same across the board for so many people
of so many different colors. But that's the fight we're
fighting today in this country, a war on truth. They're
not hiding it anymore. They don't like his ree and
the history that they do like. It's rewritten history. It's

(06:04):
rewritten history that doesn't actually have any basis in truth
or fact. They say that the Republican Party was built
upon racism, but tell me how it was the Democrats
had founded the KKK. It was the Democrats that told
Rusa Parks that she belonged to the back of the bust.
It was the Democrats that fought for Jim Crow laws
that try to prevent black people from voting. You want
to talk about voter suppression, Democrats were the architects of

(06:27):
voter suppression. But not enough people are saying this anymore.
Not people are talking about it anymore. But I will
talk about it here because when I say that I'm uncensored,
I mean I am unsensored. I am talking about the
things that aren't being said because they need to be
said now more than ever. I'm tired of people beating
behind the bush on tighter, people saying that we just
need to kom bayya and just believe whatever c and

(06:49):
In or the media wants us to believe. No, it's
time for us to be bold. It's time for us
to be courageous. It's time for us to stand up
and fight. And that is what this show We'll be
about week after week. That is what this show will be.
It's about a call to action. It's about courage. It's
about getting in the fight off the sidelines and going

(07:10):
in and fighting for this country because it is a
country worth fighting for. That's the fight I signed up for.
That is why I'm here, because I realized that there
are a lot of things happening in this country that
we need to discuss and we need to be blunt
about it. We need to be honest about it. And
I find myself at a place in time where there

(07:31):
are a lot of people who would say that maybe
it's easier for you to be a little bit more quiet,
a little bit more reserve, maybe bite your tongue a
little bit, because I'm a conservative on a college campus.
And for all the things that liberals say about the
glories of safe spaces, I guarantee you there is no
safe space on any college gamp as for a conservative.

(07:52):
Unless you're going to Liberty University, Hillsdale, the King's College
up in New York City. There really is no safe
space for conservatives on any college campus in America, not
even at the University of Alabama. I love it here.
I love the people here. I love the enthusiasm that
so many people have here for the president. And I
will tell you that here at the University of Alabama,
probably one of the most conservative public universities in the country.

(08:14):
There are so many days where I go out and
I'll be walk into class, where I'll be walking, uh,
just around campus and someone will roll down their windows
and they'll scream Trump. I'll be at a party and
they're like, c J, thank you so much for what
you're doing. I'm really supporting you. When are you going
to run for president, and those people are incredible and
and they're so plentiful here. There are so many people

(08:35):
here at the University of Alabama who love American who
are tired are the less attempts to divide this country
and to simply so these seats of hatred. But then
there are is a loud minority of people who simply
hate the fact that I'm a free thinker. They hate
the fact that people actually support this president who has
done more for minorities, more for this country, more for

(08:56):
the economy than any other president in modern history. And honestly,
they can keep Hayton, they can stay mad because it
doesn't matter what they do to me. And guys, there
have been some things that have happened to me here.
There have been people that have put things on my
door who have said F Trump and f you. There
have been people who have tried to confront me at
parties and say things like, how can you support such

(09:18):
a racist? How can you support blah blah blah? Literally,
And that's that's actually a really funny story. The craziest thing.
I was at a party just having fun with some
friends of mid It's absolutely insane, girl, insane, God's liberal women,
you know, uh, stay safe boys. But like they walk
up to me and and she's screaming at me. She's like,
why do you support that racist? And I'm like, if

(09:41):
he's a racist, and how come how come he's like
signing a lot of colonel just for him. How come
he's done all of these things for HBCUs, given them
millions of dollars? How come he appointed Ben Carson to
his administration. How come he's done all of these things?
It has done more for black people then the first
black president even did himself. You're calling this man a
racist when he's actually done more for black people than

(10:04):
the men you get down on your knees to praise
Barack Obama. He's done more for us than you know
anything about the guys. That's what I mean when I
say that there's no say space for concerns again, like
we the thing for me And why we don't even
need to say space though, is because liberals need say
spaces because all they have to back up their philosophy.

(10:26):
Their ideology is this emotional bullshit. Right. It's like what
I believe is right because it makes me feel good,
it makes my heart feel warm, But they don't have
any facts, They don't have any statistics, they don't have
anything that actually really means anything and actually passes the
smell test. Right. But when concerns are talking about the economy,
we have decades of economic research that backs up the

(10:47):
idea that maybe regulations aren't too good for job creation.
When we talk about the Second Amendment, we have the
fact that our founding followers were very intentional about including
out in the Constitution because they had had their freedoms
and liberties stripped away and replaced by a tyranny, so
they wanted to make sure that never happened again in

(11:07):
this country. They were intentional. We had history to back
us on that. But there are those brave people who
see what the left is doing. They say, you're not
gonna do it to me. You don't own me, you
don't control me, but most importantly, you're not gonna silence me.
And the most important people fighting that fight today are
the people on college campuses who are boldly and loudly conservative,

(11:29):
who realized what they have to lose just by being
conservative on their campus. But they still do it because
they realized that our country is we're fighting for that
America is the greatest nation in the world. But it
didn't just get great. That did just happened. But it
took work. It took effort. It took people being bold enough,

(11:50):
brave enough, courageous enough to stand up and say that
I'm going to fight for this country because it has value,
it has worth or preserving we're saving worth, keeping safe.
And those people today, the most important people in this
fight are on our campuses because they are the pipeline
to the next generation of people who will lead this country.

(12:12):
And they're fighting a lot. They're fighting indoctrination, they're fighting
with their professors, they're fighting with these liberal crazy people
in their campuses who want to shut them up and
and cancel them and all this stuff. That they do
it because they realize that at the end of the day,
that America is a cause bigger than themselves and that's
why they're fighting. And Guys, I'm inspired by their strength,

(12:36):
I'm inspired by their courage. It feels me because I
know that I have it a lot easier than a
lot of people in a lot of places. Here at
Alabama roll Tid, I have the luxury of not being
surrounded by too many people who were just snowflakes. I
have the luxury not being surrounded by too many people
who blindly follow the left. But at the end of
the day, not every person on every college campus is

(12:57):
as lucky as I. Some people have actually gotten punch
in the face, as my first guest has, simply for
promoting his conservative ideals. But what's interesting about this guest, though,
and and I'm so excited for you guys to meet him,
you'll meet him after the break, is that he got
punched in the face, but he kept doing what got

(13:19):
him punched in the face. Hayden Williams was on in
the campus of UC Berkeley. He's doing the entire tabling thing.
He's handing out literature, he's he's trying to spread the
good word about what conservative actually is, because you don't
really get the story about what conservatism actually is on
college campuses today. But guys, what I'm telling you all
of this is that this man's courage is unmatchable. You know,

(13:41):
he took that experience and he didn't let it allow
to push him into the shadows and allow fear to
drive him. But he took it as a call to
action to do more. And it was that courage for
him that actually got him in front of the President
of the United States. And so when I say that
conservatives don't need safe spaces, I mean it because we

(14:01):
don't need safe spaces. We need leaders as leaders like
Hayden Williams. They're fighting for this country each and every day.
And you'll meet break. The man's name is Hayden Williams.

(14:27):
Where's Hayden? Where is he? Where is he? Hayden come
up here, please, Hi, guys, welcome back to c J.
Pearson Nonsensored. You know, earlier on in this show, I
talked about my experiences on my campus here at the
University of Alabama being conservative. I've talked about that crazy

(14:49):
note that was penning on our door that said f
Donald Trump and F you. But I don't think I've
really gone through what our guests today went through. I've
never been punched in the face. I don't had anyone
hit me because of my politics, and God blessed him
if they tried. But this guy did. Hayden Williams joins
us now and Hayden, your story is so signing to me.

(15:12):
But I've got to tell you it's it's frankly unsurprising,
you're punched in the face walk us through that day. Sure.
So my campus is actually, uh, the University of Louisville,
and I graduated from there, and I was fortunate to
get a job with Leadership Institute, which runs campus reform

(15:32):
and they do work with conservative organs. And they said
they were gonna send you to a state that's not
your home state, and you're gonna travel around the different
colleges and universities and and help them recruit conservatives and
and bring in speakers. And I was really excited. And
then they told me that I was going to go
to California. Berkeley wasn't my campus, but it was one
of my schools out in California, and uh, I traveled

(15:55):
to other schools like Santa Cruz and you see Davis
and also the California state schools like Sacramento State and others,
and um, yeah, it was a very hostile zone. But
I've noticed that college is everywhere, you know, even in
my home state of Kentucky. When I was going to Louisville,
I noticed a lot of Marxist indoctor nation and propaganda

(16:17):
on our campus, and I've I've seen it in other
places to, not just Berkeley, not just California. So it's
kind of like a standard hard left position that most
universities have by default. Yeah, and you know, and what's
interesting about your experience too, is that as a part
of your job, you weren't only at UC Berkeley, but
like you said, you were at other campuses throughout the

(16:39):
state of California, throughout the country. Were there any stories
similar to what you encountered at UC Berkeley or was
UC Berkeley kind of alone in the hostility that you faced.
I had been attacked a couple of times prior to that,
I mentioned. I had gone to Santa Cruz. The first

(17:03):
time I was gone, I went there to table with
their College Republicans. I got doused with a water bottle.
I had a teaching assistant ripped my American flag off
my table and throw it on the ground. And then
at U c l A. I got attacked with their
College Republicans at a speaking event. You know, fleckas and
and slightly offensive. They had an event at U c

(17:24):
l A at the beginning of last year, about a
month before that incident at Berkeley, and uh, they disrupted
the event. They came in and threw stink bombs and
were yelling on their way out. They had attacked me
and UH and another person who was working for the
College Republicans, And so, no, it was not the first time,
but it was definitely. I guess they when they say

(17:46):
third times the charm. I don't think it will be
the last time. Unfortunately, this isn't gonna go anywhere, And
and the Left is only getting more and more emboldened.
And as time goes on, so I think we're gonna
we're gonna see more of this and this sort of
conversation is only going to become more relevant. No, you're
completely right, and and but what really hurts me the

(18:06):
most is what you talked about when you just said
it wasn't the first time and it probably won't be
the last time. Like how sad And what an indictment
upon our society that is is that we live in
a world now where the left genuinely believes that if
you don't believe what they believe, that they have the
right to attack you, throw water at you, ripped down

(18:27):
your posters, throw things at you, and do whatever they
want because you hurt their feelings, because you invaded their
safe space. Because you confront of them with facts that
they've never before heard, because they believe that they are
entitled to their own version of the truth and and
it so it's the craziest thing because they call us biggests,
they call us and are they call us hateful? But

(18:47):
last time I checked, it's not Trump supporters going out
and punching socialists in the face. It's not Republicans going
out and punching Bernie Rose in the face or throwing
water at them. But it's liberal. It's not Republicans going
on and punching Bernie Rose and the base or throwing
water at them, but it's liberals. It's it's these people
on these college campuses who believe that you are not
entitled to having your own opinion. I think that a

(19:09):
lot of that violence has actually led to um the
pervasiveness of indoctrination on college campuses. There's actually some really
interesting statistics that actually say that the gap ideologically when
students are just starting out in college isn't actually that
deep you're looking at. According to u c L, a
higher education research institute, thirty five and a half percent
of college freshman the fall of sixteen allow themselves with

(19:32):
liberal audiology, but twenty two percent consider themselves conservative and
the rest we're not partisans. And so what that tells
me is that actually, there are a lot of conservative
students like you and I on college gamus is across
the country. But what makes them silent, what makes them
scared to vocalize their opinion, is that they are scared
of being punched in the face like you hate it.

(19:52):
They're scared of having ship put on their door like
I had, you know, and and it's the craziest thing,
and that should not be the reality that's conservatides face
on college campuses today. And so kind of tell me,
what's your advice to conservatives who are struggling to find
their voice in their campus. As someone who's been punched
in the face but continues to do the work that
you're doing each and every day, what's your message to them,

(20:16):
Stand for something, even if it means sacrificing everything. And uh,
that's that's really what it comes down to, is you're
going to have to sacrifice a lot. You know, they
say free speech has its consequences. You know, I don't
agree with that necessarily, but the fact is it's true,
and that if you've become an outspoken activist, a conservative activist,

(20:39):
Christian activists. You are going to be if you join
a club even you're going to be labeled. You're going
to be mistreated, You're gonna be disrespected, You're gonna be
my mind by your administrators, probably your professors, and they
will try to make an example out of you to
the rest of the student body. So you're gonna you're
gonna be oppressed literally in your university setting. And most

(21:04):
people are just trying to make friends and and go
to parties and all this. I get it and and
make good grades, but um, we're being robbed of a
well rounded education by being pressured to quy s to
to this basically totalitarian ideological agenda. And I think people

(21:27):
don't realize that, Yes, obviously the risk is real and
the threat is credible, I know, but you don't know
what the reward will be. If I had said, you
know what, thanks, but no thanks, I'd rather not go
to California to do Republican work. I'll do something else,
then I wouldn't have realized, you know, going on stage

(21:49):
with Trump getting offered this awesome scholarship by Pepperdine after that,
And it was all because I took the risk. I
was willing to stand up for everything, even if it
meant getting attacked or or whether it's literally or psychologically,
I didn't care. I was willing to do that. And
I think more people need to be that way. They
need to not care so much about what people are
going to call you, about what people are gonna think

(22:11):
of you if they if they find out your politics,
because at the end of the day, if you change,
or even if you just censor yourself, then what you're
doing is you're letting your values be shaped by someone else.
You're you're you're silencing yourself, and then other people who
like you said I might agree with you. Half of
the student body might agree with you, but they're afraid too,

(22:33):
because they don't want to be maligned. They don't want
I mean, your grades are held hostage first of all,
and at the professors donate to the Democratic Party. So
if you don't say what they want you to say,
you know, you may or may not have to pay
the penalty when when you get your report card. Yeah,
and that's that's scary for a lot of students, especially
students who have ambitions past college you know, their grades

(22:56):
very well do matter. And it's again goes to the
beggott your that if you don't agree with them, they
want to hurt your grade, they want to cancel you,
they want to get you kicked out of whatever club
or organization you're in. They want to ruin your livelihood.
Like that is what we're tackling today. Um, and I
won't be honest with you. I'll be up front. There
is a good reason for a lot of conservative students
to be silent on campuses today. It is a scary world.

(23:20):
But when I look around at what's happening in this country,
I also have to say that we can't afford to
be silent. You know, we're looking at the left openly
try to undermine the values and not deals on which
this country was built. You're talking about Marxism. They are
openly touting it now. They used to talk about it,
used to be hush hush, they used to beat around
the bush when it came to it. But now they're

(23:41):
openly talking about promoting Marxism. You know. And and it's
not even just that. It's about defunding the police, it's
about opening the borders, it's about the most radical ideals
that their party has shied from publicly embracing. They are
now just saying it doesn't matter anymore. This is who
I am, this is me. Deal with it. And I
gotta say that our founding fathers fault far too are

(24:03):
for this country for us to just give up on it.
Our country is far too great, far too exceptional, for
us to just let that greatness wash away. And so
hey when I when I tell you, when I hear
stories like you, and I draw strength from, I draw
inspiration from, and I know that our listeners are as well,
I've got to say. The courage that you possess is
courage that we all need in times like this, especially

(24:24):
as we approached the election and the days that that
will follow it, because we live in a nation worth
fighting for. What I hope our listeners take away from
your story is that there will be cost to being conservative,
There will be cost to being an open and vocal one,
for sure. But what you get to say is that
you fought for your country in a very real way,
regardless of those costs, and I think that makes the

(24:46):
sacrifice all in will worth it. Before we actually wrap up,
I want to bring this up because I think it's
actually really cool you were at Sea packs shortly and
get you. The President United States now knows your name.
I think it very well. We argue that you inspire
that executive order that actually requires college and universities to
protect free speech, to protect diversity of thought. They're not

(25:07):
concerned about diversity of opinion. They love diversity of everything else, gender, race, sexuality, whatever,
but when it comes to someone actually disagreeing with them,
they seem to take issue with that. And so I've
got to tell you, you you know, I can't imagine what
it might have been like when that entire situation started
with you on that campus that day, but I think
looking at where you are now, looking at what happened

(25:29):
at Seapack, I think that you and many other people
who have seen the work that you've done are like,
we're so incredibly amazed by because it took courage to
to stay with it. Hayden, again, thank you so much
for joining us, uh and for taking time out of
your day. Hey, thank you, And I want to leave
you with a Kanye reference, and it's what is it
that your light shines brightest in the dark, So you're

(25:51):
you know you're in this place, and it's dark. It's
it's just darkness everywhere. Left wing communists have taken over
the whole campus. And you you beat the voice that
stands up against it and speaks the truth, and and
it will be heard louder than than everything else, because
there's there's very little of that going on. Definitely, Hayden Williams, everybody,
thank you so much. So got today. You heard a

(26:16):
little bit about my story. You've heard about the issues
I've had here on campus as a young conservative, the
parties and the incidents with things being put on my
door or people just walking up to me at restaurants
and time mean that's they simply just don't like me.
But you also heard the story of Hayden Lambs. You
heard the story of a young man who was simply
speaking his truth on a college campus like you, Ce Berkeley,

(26:39):
who was simply tailing tabling with his college Republicans group
and got punched in the face because of it, Who's
had water thrown at him, because of other things he's
done on campuses across the country, simply because he has
the audacity to be conservative. Now, to most people, that
would be reason for our resolve to be shaken. That
would be reason for us to simply shut up, sit down,

(27:00):
and never utter a single conservative thing ever again. And
that would be easy, that would make sense, that would
be the most comfortable thing to do. But it's not
the right thing to do. And oftentimes the right thing
to do isn't the easiest thing to do. And oftentimes
the right thing to do is right because it is hard.

(27:21):
And I've gotta tell you there's nothing harder today probably
than being a young conservative on a college campus. You
have people actively every single day trying to cancel you,
trying to shut you up. They want you to believe
that all white men are evil. They want you to
believe that all conservative are racist. They want you to
believe that all black people are disadvantage, that we can't
stand up for ourselves, that we can't speak up, that

(27:44):
we can't make it in America. Well, those things just
really aren't true. Those things aren't matters of fact. Their opinions,
and you, just like them, have the right to your opinion.
You have the right to be conservative. You have the
right to speak your truth as boldly as you please.
You have the right to tell you well on your

(28:04):
college campus without being punched in the face or having
water thrown at you. You have the right to simply
be you. It doesn't matter what those thinkings have to say.
It doesn't matter how intolerant they want to be. It
doesn't matter how much they try to bully you, intimidate you,
or shut you down. You have the right to be you.
But you also have to make a choice, the choice

(28:25):
of whether or not you choose to use that right,
or the choice to surrender it. But my question to
you is why would you surrender it? Remember all the
people that have died fighting for this country just so
that you could have that right, just so that you
could be you, unapologetically to speak your truth espress your
political opinions without any regard for who might want to
shut you down simply because you hurt their feelings, You

(28:48):
made them sad, you gave them an ounce of truth
they weren't comfortable hearing. Well, guess what, guys, The truth
doesn't give a damn about how comfortable you feel when
you hear it. It matters about how its expressed and
if it is. Guys, I'm tired of soncing myself simply becauset.
People are scared to speak the truth. I don't care anymore,
and now there should you. If you look around what's

(29:09):
happening in our country today, you see America burning. These people,
these far left radicals are burning down America each and
every week, someone because they are upset. They're upset, so
now they think that they can just go looped, they
can go destroy, they can go set things on fire
because they are upset. Guys, I'm sorry, I got upset

(29:30):
plenty of sounds when I was two or three years old.
I'll never burned anything to the ground. I've never looted,
I've never ride it. I never had this type of tantrum,
because that is exactly what it is. If this is
terrible for the left to do, to do all this looting,
to do all this burn do all this riding, it
is certainly terrible for you to post that you're voting
for Donald Trump. It's perfectly terrable for you to wear
a Maga hat. It's perfectly tolerable for you to wear

(29:53):
a Trump shirt, and you should wear the hell out
of that shirt. You should wear the hell out of
that hat. You should be unapologetic about the that you do,
because they're certainly apologetic about the way that they feel.
But more importantly, I think we put your money where
your mouth is. You put your vote where your mouth is. Guys,
in just a few days will be casting a very
very important vote that will decide the direction this country goes.

(30:14):
We will be a nation of open borders and lawlessness,
a nation where things like post birth abortion is the
new norm. Or will be a nation of law and order,
a nation of opportunity, a nation where the American dream
is still real and attainable for all, where we recognize
that where you again in this country is not where
you have to end. Will be a nation where you
are punished for being successful under things like Boden's crazy

(30:35):
tax laws, or will be a nation that encourages innovation.
You have the opportunity to help decide, to help influence
what that choice will be, and you shouldn't pass up
that choice. Go vote, Go vote if that's the last
thing you do. Go vote mail at end, go vote
in person, Do what you have to do, because guys,

(30:57):
this election is probably the most important will see in
our lifetime. And I know that's cliche. I know a
lot of people say every single action year, I'm kind
of tired of hearing it, But guys, it is true.
But you've seen the contrast between Jerry Boden and Donald Trump.
We've seen the contrast between the types of people that
backed them the type of people that support them. You
need to ask yourself today what type of America you
want to live in? A country where people getting punched

(31:18):
in the face because they're conservative as the new norm,
or country where we can actually sit across from one
another and talk about why we disagree and just work
towards a better country. That's your choice. To me, Thank
you for listening. Gus joined me every single Thursday right
here on the Hart Radio app or Apple podcast or
well wherever you get your podcast, We'll I'll be delivering
the same hard hitting truth every single week. This is

(31:40):
c J. Pierson, nonsensored, unfiltered, on varnished Wealth, nothing but true.
C J. Pierson No Censored, part of the GUIs six
D Network
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