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July 14, 2025 46 mins

Human Events on Real America's Voice

Segment A: The Poso Brothers Live From SAS
Segment B: Exclusive Interview w/ Rep. Ana Paulina Luna from SAS
Segment C: Andrew Bauer’s Chase for Lindsay Graham’s Senate Seat
Segment D: Exclusive Interview w/ Brandon Tatum from SAS
Segment E: Live from SAS w/ Olivia Krolczyk

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
This is what happens when the fourth Turning meets fifth
generation warfare.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Really a commentator, international social media sensation and former Navy
intelligence veteran.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
This is Human Events with your host, Jack Kasovic, christ
Is King.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome board today's edition of Human Events Daily.
We're here on the sidelines of the Student Action Summit.
And you know what we've done is this is incredible
that we have so many access, so much access to
these high profile guests, put together a series of interviews
for today's episode, and of course we're leading it off

(00:45):
with the most high profile of them all, the man
who founded the Body of Water that we're sitting right
next to here in Tampa, Florida, to the Gulf of America.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
It's Kevin Pisovic. That's right. Thanks thanks for having me
on again.

Speaker 4 (01:00):
Jack.

Speaker 5 (01:01):
Yeah, right outside, right outside the door here we're at
the table and the shores of the Gulf of form America.

Speaker 3 (01:07):
Yes, sir, that's incredible. You got to get out there,
got to get out.

Speaker 5 (01:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:11):
Wave runner, a wave runner, I'll do it. I'm in. Hey,
may we go to clear water? See Hogan if you
want Hogan?

Speaker 1 (01:17):
Okay, all right, Well, don't tell the boys that because
if you promise the boys Hogan, they want Hogan.

Speaker 3 (01:22):
That's true, That's true.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
They want to see the man, and he's lived there. Yeah,
but I understand he has he has some help, is
usual recently, That's true.

Speaker 5 (01:29):
Yeah, I saw Rick Flair's just got a surgery as well.

Speaker 3 (01:32):
Yeah, it's out.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
Here, man, it's happening for that. But but we know
Hulk Cogan is the immortal.

Speaker 3 (01:37):
No, No, it was great.

Speaker 5 (01:38):
It was great being on the show and throwing the
T shirts out yesterday.

Speaker 4 (01:41):
That was a lot of fun.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
He did so much stuff and and Golf of America.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
Merchi.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
Just Kevin, tell me something about you know, this obviously
is a student event, so it's younger. Tell me about
the reaction that you're seeing from college and high school
kids here.

Speaker 5 (01:58):
The reaction has been that it's golden really, I mean
to speak to like the golden age. You see, people
aren't as scared anymore to talk about conservative values, talk
about tradition. They're in Bolden and they're in bold Is,
starting families and starting businesses, getting active on campus. And
it's just something I've never seen when I was going

(02:20):
to college. I mean, they always had like a debate club,
Republican Democrat club, but nothing quite like Turning Point has done.
And credit to Charlie Kirk, like, I think it's an
amazing concept that he'd originally started.

Speaker 3 (02:34):
And now we are seeing.

Speaker 1 (02:36):
You're seeing those kids who were in the first iteration
of Turning Point when they were eighteen nineteen, now they're
in their mid twenties, some from even thirty. Now they're
totally on board, highly online, totally activated, totally engaged.

Speaker 5 (02:55):
I would look like Beavis and butthead at that age
compared to these guys coming up, they're so well pushed,
guess so yeah, they're so well put together and thanks
to social media, so litive, so impressive. You can get
access to information so much faster these days. There's so
much more knowledgeable than I was at that age. And
but it's amazing like young guys selling T shirts, selling

(03:18):
Golf of America t shirts and making businesses like young
young and it really is an amazing thing to see.
And that's why I love coming down to these events
and just showing us what.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
Charlie's doing is put together and an absolute national force.
And you see you see in the polls, you see
it in voting trends. You can see it out there all.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
The way from grassroots to the top.

Speaker 5 (03:39):
Didn't you say it to me recently, Like this is
one of the younger administrations with Toron.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
That's a great point. Actually, yes, it is, Yeah, it is.

Speaker 1 (03:46):
It's if you look at terms of the age, the
average aide of the cabinet is way down. You see
a lot of cabinet members in their forties. Staffer wise,
you see a lot of people and uh, you know,
the mainstream media.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
I would probably hate to know how many former tourning
Point people are now in the administration. It's none, right,
it's no, no, it's zero.

Speaker 4 (04:04):
It's totally zero.

Speaker 3 (04:04):
What are you talking about. I can't think of a single.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
One, no, neither, no, definitely not no, definitely not any
in there.

Speaker 3 (04:11):
That would be crazy. I don't worry, Charlie.

Speaker 1 (04:14):
I'm definitely not breaking any news or divulging any inside
information here today on Human Events Daily. But folks, it's
gonna be right back. We've got a huge show, lots
of people kept working.

Speaker 5 (04:27):
People follow you, follow me on X and Instagram, and
like I always say, follow me to church.

Speaker 3 (04:32):
I'm the church's right back.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Second American Revolution.

Speaker 6 (05:03):
Jeffrey Epstein's contact list is making headlines again. The Attorney
General of the United States, Pam Bondi's Justice Department, released
over one hundred pages from his address book between names
like Mick Jagger and Alec Baldwin. While most names were
already known, victim's identities were fully redacted.

Speaker 7 (05:19):
Today, conservative commentators respotted at the White House carrying Binder's
labeled Epstein files. Meanwhile, Attorney General Pambondi accused the FBI
of withholding thousands of Jeffrey Epstein documents, and a letter
to FBI Director Cash Pattel, she promised to release the files,
raising questions about what's being kept hidden.

Speaker 6 (05:39):
This government is now saying financier Jeffrey Epstein never kept
a client list.

Speaker 8 (05:44):
We had heard about that, and contradict's claims from Attorney
General Pam Bondi, who months ago said such a document
was quote sitting on my desk. The two page memo
from the Justice Department at FBI also confirmed Epstein's death
was a suicide and no further charges are expected to
be filed in the case.

Speaker 3 (06:02):
It happened in jail.

Speaker 8 (06:04):
The conclusion is the opposite of what Pam BONDI had promoted.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
All right, folks, Jack Kisovik, we're here, this is an
episode we're taping, pre taping while we're on the sidelines
here at the Student Action Summit, turning point Tampa, Florida,
by the way, on the very shores of the Gulf
of America.

Speaker 3 (06:26):
Yes, ladies and.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
Gentlemen, the Gulf of America.

Speaker 3 (06:29):
Go and look at your map. You could see it
right here.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
And we're so excited to have a local politician joining
US Congresswoman Anna Molina Luna. And to me, by the way,
for the record, for me, it's no surprise that you
are where you are, having come up as quote unquote
an influencer. But I said, people say, you know, you
think of her as an influencer because you're not listening to.

Speaker 3 (06:49):
What she's saying.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
And I do this crazy thing where I actually listen
to what people have to say. And I remember always
saying this, this one has substance, this one has something
to say that I could.

Speaker 9 (07:00):
Check in regards to stereotype and branding, I would be so.

Speaker 3 (07:03):
You never had and you never did that. No, you
and I had a conversation about that a couple of
years ago.

Speaker 4 (07:07):
I remember that.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
And I even said, like, do you want to lean
in a little bit, because my political analyst at all,
do you want to.

Speaker 3 (07:13):
Lean in a little bit that you're like, no, no,
I don't want to do that.

Speaker 9 (07:16):
It's interesting though. They don't really know how to hit me.

Speaker 3 (07:19):
No they don't.

Speaker 9 (07:19):
They were like, we're just not going to talk about her. Yeah,
And I'm like, you guys, because they realized I go
on and it makes sense, Avengers.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
Like I don't know, okay, right and then and then,
I mean the one time that they did take they
tried to do.

Speaker 3 (07:31):
For your family.

Speaker 10 (07:32):
Oh, they tried talking yeah, yeah, had that not happened,
you know, God works the special ways.

Speaker 9 (07:37):
So they went they tried to say that I was
not Hispanic.

Speaker 3 (07:40):
Oh, they try to say it is not Hispanic. I'm like,
pretty spatitude.

Speaker 10 (07:44):
In the same in the same sentence, they're like, her
grandmother is from Mexico, right, and then and her dad's
also Mexican, and her mom's Mexican. That had that not happened,
Time Magazine would have never investigated.

Speaker 9 (07:53):
And when Time Vaccine investigated, they're like, holy gosh, she's
telling the truth. I was named the next one hundred
bus influence in the world.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
No, I completely agree, and it's been a meteoric rise.
So just congratulations to you because I remember coming, you know,
and meeting you at these events.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
Gosh, I even want to say how many years ago now,
but yeah, you know, at least least seven years ago.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
Yea, at least seven years ago. And to see where
you are it's amazing. But you've launched task forces into
things like the JFK files, and you've been completely outspoken
and obviously you know, and you know, for folks who know,
you know, it's been trending all this week, this Epstein situation.
And I'll just say something that you know, I've never

(08:35):
said this publicly because when this thing first happened, you
were the first person to reach out to me. When
when this whole invitary, when this whole nonsense happened, You're
the very first person who reached out to me, as
if we were the ones.

Speaker 3 (08:46):
Who refused to release the files.

Speaker 1 (08:48):
I don't have the files, I'm not the Attorney General,
I'm not involved in any of this.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
So I've always really appreciated that.

Speaker 4 (08:53):
So thank you.

Speaker 11 (08:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (08:54):
Yeah, I think it's, you know, one of those situations.

Speaker 10 (08:56):
I think the reason why there's so much anger surrounding
us is because of the way that it was handled.

Speaker 3 (09:01):
Of course, I'm right there with it's the way.

Speaker 9 (09:04):
That it was handled.

Speaker 10 (09:05):
And I think that you know, in regards to our
task forse the whole reason why the task force was
formed because President Trump had the CEO on declassifying JFK
releasing I've never seen, never seen documents on Joe Nady,
Jesus really shady CIA operative that had lied to Congress,
was given an award for lying to Congress, was observing,
had interaction with Oswald, and you know, for decades this

(09:29):
was kept under It.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
Was the cast Row group that he was part of
was actually a CIA front for it was a CIA.

Speaker 3 (09:35):
This is what people had said for years and recalled conspiracy.

Speaker 10 (09:37):
Theories, and now they're being crew for us. It's evidence
of multiple shooters. The CIA denied the loan gunment theory
that just on the pure fact that the CIA had
interaction was observing Oswald discrusi wle notion of a loan gunman,
that the Warrant Commission engaged in.

Speaker 9 (09:54):
In uh intimidation of.

Speaker 10 (09:56):
Witnesses, and they omitted evidence that the single bullet theory
didn't take place. And I believe that a roque faction
of the CIA thought that JFK was a radical and.

Speaker 9 (10:05):
They use that.

Speaker 10 (10:06):
I think that when people look at the evidence they
can put piece together, the mosaicle will actually have Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
And then and then who's the attorney on the case,
the investigator who comes up with the silver bullet, the
magic bullet theory, a silver bullet oral inspector, so silver
bullet spector. Then it turns around become the vice president
then president after his role in the Watergate investigation, you
see Spector getting rewarded. So we see this pattern over
and over of people being rewarded for covering up some

(10:31):
of what they call the crown jewels in the intel community.

Speaker 3 (10:34):
So when when you have situations like.

Speaker 1 (10:37):
This that go on again and again and again, I
think it's not crazy to see a guy like Jeffrey
Epstein and all of the information that's out there already.

Speaker 10 (10:46):
Well, I think that's why you want a transparent process
of this, right, Like, no one's asking to see victim names,
so I'm asking to see see Sam.

Speaker 9 (10:54):
But to not release anything.

Speaker 10 (10:56):
And then you have like the daily mail out there
with photos of you know, bags of past sports and
diamonds and safes. I just think that the way that
it's been handled has created a bigger issue on the
distrust front, and that you have to have transparency to
have that trust with your government, especially when so many
of these people went on records saying that they wanted
to So they can't release information even if they have

(11:16):
wanted to, because the DJ has said that they're not
allowed to. And so that's why I put out the
statement that I did that the DJ does need to
really set information that we are going to be asking
all of the task force on the half of the
American people. And unfortunately, though you know, I'm not at
the DJ, and unfortunately I'm not the FBI. I've exhausted
all my resources capable and I was kind of fighting
for this. I felt like alone on a hill for

(11:38):
a while. But I do think that if this is.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
Ever going to restore trust, Recently, these huge ice raids out.

Speaker 3 (11:45):
In California, they are ongoing.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
They've actually been stepping up enforcement operations in parts of
the country, and we keep hearing you know, of course,
Avenuwsom runs.

Speaker 3 (11:55):
Out and says, this is racist, this.

Speaker 1 (11:58):
Is your harassing children, You're harassing women.

Speaker 3 (12:01):
These are just people who want to work here.

Speaker 1 (12:03):
And then of course people turn around and say, wait
a minute, what do you women farm?

Speaker 10 (12:08):
In fact, Purdue and Tysion Chicken Farm actually robusted for
this several years back. And what I will also tell
you Jack, is that they're not wanting to address that issue.

Speaker 9 (12:17):
I think it's pretty.

Speaker 10 (12:18):
Egregious that Congress has the ability to increase some of
these punishments for just corporations that are hiring these micro children, and.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
They talking about actually going over the after the people.
This is the pull factor for illegal aliens because they
wouldn't becoming if they couldn't have jobs.

Speaker 10 (12:33):
As loving and big ad that goes into facts this
administration and doing what they're doing. They're not talking about
the fact that they just directed the MS thirteen Kingpin
or that they're deporting pedophiles and rapists. They're trying to
paint it to be that image, just like they were
previous to the trumple lunch in twenty sixteen. They're trying
to film, you know, people getting tear gas at the border,
people bringing their children and getting tear gas. They're not

(12:55):
talking about the actual facts and that it actually hurts
people on both sides. You're literally incentivizing people to come
here legally and they're getting paid under the table. Then
their targets were organized crime.

Speaker 1 (13:02):
The movie, you know, Sound of Freedom was out there.
I saw that movie with President Trump up at Bedminster
that night and got it's true.

Speaker 3 (13:09):
It's horrific.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
But these these networks are in place, and these unfortunately
businesses are real.

Speaker 10 (13:15):
They just busted a massive trafficking ring in Canallas County.

Speaker 9 (13:18):
And in Hillsboro County here and Tampa.

Speaker 10 (13:21):
I think they rescued over sixty kids, but some as
young as thirteen years old, or I think it was
nine years old. Actually, So you know, people calling Obama
racist or x inophobic. Biden, you know, was under Obama's
vice president. They didn't attack him.

Speaker 9 (13:35):
So it is because they want to create this voting
fort to the mid terms.

Speaker 10 (13:39):
And there is a concern that I have that if
people don't educate the masses all what's truly happening with
the propaganda factor in this, that there will people that
drink the kool aid and think that unfortunately it's targeted
because of race.

Speaker 9 (13:53):
That'sipling of the case.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
And I remember two years ago, we did all this
work when we were promoting Sound to Freedom, we went
through and talked about the networ. We talked about the
fact that the Biden administration was losing the quote unquote
losing all of these children in the process. President Trump
is actually going in with ice.

Speaker 10 (14:08):
They're finding President Trump also to remember what he did
the last Adam and he was the biggest person to
fight counter traffic or to fight for counter traffic efforts
in the country and Franqulin in any other administration. So
I think that they don't like to talk about that
because they know that a lot of these you know
there's this like Fight und Rule Darky tour going.

Speaker 9 (14:25):
Around the country.

Speaker 10 (14:25):
Well, a lot of these movements for these counter protesting,
for provis illegal immigration efforts, they're actually being funded by
billionaires tip to the CCP.

Speaker 9 (14:34):
So they don't want to talk about the money trail
there either.

Speaker 10 (14:37):
And so it's going to be interesting for August open
up our investigation into that.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
Commerson went Amblin and Luna, thank you for your fight,
thank you for your voice and your friendship. Where can
people go to follow you see everything you're on the
official counts at Rep.

Speaker 9 (14:48):
Luna and then personal reel on a point.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
You know that you're talking about influencers. These are influencers
and they're friends of mine.

Speaker 12 (15:06):
Jack, Jack, Yes, we need then we have already. The
biggest help is the support of American people at sports
of all friends. Thanks to Lindsey and his Cup colleagues,
to congressmen and centers from them United States, thanks for

(15:28):
the support.

Speaker 11 (15:29):
My father is in support.

Speaker 12 (15:31):
Thank you so much.

Speaker 3 (15:32):
Peace is coming, yes soon.

Speaker 1 (15:37):
All right, guys, we're back here on the sidelines again,
turning point Student Action Summit in the great Tampa Bay
that's right right on the bay.

Speaker 3 (15:44):
Of the Gulf of America.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
And we're so excited to be sitting down here with
us Senate candidate Andre Bauer.

Speaker 3 (15:51):
Thanks you, thank you for joining us here on human events.
Thank you for having me.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
So tell me, why did you want to run? Why
would you want to take a life like yours? And
I had to get involved in politics and run for
a seat like this?

Speaker 13 (16:02):
A great question. A lot of my friends said the
same thing. You know, in nineteen I thought about it.
I got real frustrated with the Senator. I had a
one year old and just time and just wasn't right.
That one year old's now getting ready to be six
in September, and I'm worried about their future. I've got
four kids, and I'm worried about their future. They're going
to see with their eyes of future I'll never get

(16:22):
to see, but I darn sure care about what it
looks like.

Speaker 3 (16:25):
And we got a cenator that we don't see in
South Carolina anymore.

Speaker 13 (16:28):
I think he's more recognizable in Ukraine than he is
in Union South Carolina. Wow, thirty years, he's lost his way.
We're concerned about border, We're concerned about taking care of
Americans and South Carolinians. We're not as concerned about taking
here of the rest of the world's problems, especially when
we had the debt. When Lindsey took over, the debt
was less than five trillion dollars and he ran on Terblin.

(16:49):
But if you can imagine that nineteen ninety four contract
with America Emers, you.

Speaker 3 (16:54):
Got a late in ninety four.

Speaker 13 (16:55):
So he committed to twelve years where nineteen years passed
his expect sea and what are.

Speaker 3 (17:01):
We gotten for?

Speaker 13 (17:02):
We've now sevenfold a debt trillion a year since he's
been in there has gone up.

Speaker 3 (17:07):
So how do you call yourself.

Speaker 13 (17:08):
A conservative and a Republican, if you keep raising the debt limit,
if you keep spending, if you keep getting being a
globalist instead of looking out for your state, instead of
looking out for your country. Look, I'd give you an
easy example. There are eight hundred plus US bases around
the world. Yes, South Carolina lost two of their couple ones.
We lost to Charleston Navy Yard my grandfather worked at,

(17:29):
and we lost a MYRTL Beach Air Force Base. Now
why would we ever get rid of too for premier
right on our coast, guarding our coast, employing people, and
the spinoff from employing those people help those communities too.
Instead eight hundred plus around the world, we got over
forty six thousand.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
So you're telling me that Senator Graham didn't fight for
the people of South Carolina in his divis.

Speaker 13 (17:53):
He was a newly member of Congress from one of
those guys shut down. So I can't blame that army,
all right, I want to be fair, But my point
is is that.

Speaker 3 (18:01):
Why what's real Southerner?

Speaker 13 (18:03):
By the way it is, But my point is is,
why would we ever look at shutting down stuff in
our backyard, protecting our boys before.

Speaker 3 (18:09):
We'd ever go.

Speaker 13 (18:10):
We got over forty six thousand individuals in Germany right now,
there are friends. Why do we have that big a truth?
We got over thirty six thousand in South Korea. We've
got to reassess what our real mission is, what our
real duty and scope is, and where our real allies
are and can they not start doing their own military
and their own policeman.

Speaker 3 (18:27):
I'm tired of being in the world's peacekeeper.

Speaker 13 (18:30):
At some point in time, we've got to address a debt,
and we've got to address he can care real needs
are That.

Speaker 1 (18:35):
Must be because the people of South Carolina just have
too much money and too much employment and too much healthcare.
And that's why he's so focused around the world. Right
there's no problems at all back home in South Carolina.

Speaker 13 (18:45):
I think it's much easier to raise money from the
people that want us in all these conflicts. And if
you look, he's never had an opponent, I shouldn't say
a real opponent. He's never had an opponent with a
big name or war chest. The most he's ever had
spent in the primary was he had an individual one
time send seven hundred and fifty thousand against his like
fifteen million. The last race he raised over one hundred million.

(19:08):
You're not getting that from Johnny lunchbucket sending you twenty
five dollars where after he worked all week. That's not
sweat off the brown money. That's Hey, we're going to
give you a big old check and you're gonna do
what we need you to in Washington. It's taking care
of Washington politics and foreign conflicts instead of taking care
of the people of South Carolina and taking care of
President Trump's agenda.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
I mean, this is a guy that fought Trump to
the now.

Speaker 13 (19:28):
Matter of fact, when I address when I endorsed President
Trump in February of nineteen, the third or Light Official America,
Lindsay Graham was running against him. Remember he called him
a jackass, a xenophobe, a homophobe was Remember on January sixth,
he took the floor and said I'm done with Trump.
I don't know if everybody remembers that. And he wanted
to vote the twenty fifth Amendment against Trump. We wouldn't
have Trump as a president now, lendsay don that. I

(19:49):
think we can do.

Speaker 3 (19:50):
Some work to make that and make that go a
little viral again.

Speaker 13 (19:53):
Yeah, but do your homework, folks that are listening, because
it's there, It's the truth. On numerous occasions he down
talked our president. But he said Joe Biden one of
the finest men God ever created. He said Nancy Pelosi
was a fine person. He voted with Joe Biden in
twenty twenty two seventy percent of the time. Right, they're
worth Murkowski, these are concerned. Is there not Republican?

Speaker 3 (20:16):
Darn sure.

Speaker 13 (20:16):
Not a South Carolina Republican. Maybe a Vermont Republican. No
offense Vermont. But it ain't South Carolina Replican, you know.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
And I'll say this too, because look, I'm from Pennsylvania, right,
I'm a northern.

Speaker 3 (20:27):
I'm not Southern.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
I want to go to South Carolina, and it's such
an amazing state. I love Charles, I love everything bout
South Carolina. I love the food in the low Country,
by the way, amazing.

Speaker 3 (20:35):
But Charlestonian by birth.

Speaker 4 (20:36):
But there you go.

Speaker 1 (20:38):
And but but then I see Lindsay Graham and I say,
how is this guy from South Carolina.

Speaker 3 (20:43):
It's just it doesn't must have not been in South
Carolina when you saw him.

Speaker 1 (20:46):
Oh no, I see him in DC as ye mane
him eye.

Speaker 3 (20:50):
I don't see it in South Carolina.

Speaker 13 (20:51):
You got to put him on a milk joke if
you want to see him in South Carolina.

Speaker 3 (20:54):
He don't come back.

Speaker 13 (20:55):
I mean he came back to his home birthplace of
Pickens County to stump for Trump. They vooted him off
and he didn't asked to be on stage anymore. I
was there, I spoke too. I didn't get the same
reception he got. And that's where he was born, Pickens
County again. Fact check Andre, You're welcome to do that.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
So is the idea that he's been there for so long.

Speaker 1 (21:13):
He's wrapped up in all these other interests, and he
treats South Carolina as a sort of a you know,
as a as a stepping stone to for him be
able to get this higher power in DC.

Speaker 13 (21:23):
I was told by one of his best buddies, a
sitting United States Congressman, that said, well, you know, Lindsay's
run around broker in world piece, he's actually the pseudo
Secretary of State. And I said, well, somebody needs to
tell him that's not his job. He's a sitting United
States Center. If he doesn't want that job, he's stepped
down and go apply to be Secretary of State, because
that's not his job. I don't remember when Trump said

(21:43):
we were trying to work out a Russian Ukraine issue.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
They were trying to solve that.

Speaker 13 (21:47):
The next thing, you know, he and Blumenthal on mine
your dime, ninth trip to Ukraine goes over there.

Speaker 3 (21:53):
We're gonna give you more money, and the next thing,
they're bombing again.

Speaker 13 (21:56):
Look, I'm tired of Afghanistan, Libya, Siria, Ukraine, you name it.
He hadn't found a conflict, He didn't want boots on
the ground, he didn't want more money spent there.

Speaker 3 (22:05):
Don't he said he wanted to do full on more
with Iran and all the rest of these. The jets
weren't even cool when they came.

Speaker 13 (22:12):
Back after President Trump's flawless surgical strike, and Lindsay got
charts on the Florida Senate saying, we need to our
boys would be willing to risk their.

Speaker 3 (22:21):
Lives for regime change in Iran. I hope he's willing
to go.

Speaker 13 (22:25):
Over there and do it, because I don't want any
more our boys over there. Look, if we need to
protect our friends with drones, we need to get behind
people that we're allies with I don't We're not going
to negate that responsibility. But all these boots on the
ground and all this regime change, I'm adamantly opposed to it.

Speaker 3 (22:39):
Andre, were just about out of time. This is an
incredible interview. I've got to have you.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
On more because I got to say, I've met Senator
Graham and I've met you.

Speaker 14 (22:48):
Know.

Speaker 3 (22:48):
I said, you seem like the one who's from South
Carolina a lot more than he does.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
Tell people where they can go, to follow you, to
support you and to do and.

Speaker 13 (22:57):
To back you, and what you're doing there down for
the people Jack for me on the show. Go to
Andre Bauer dot com really easy, Andre Bauer dot com.
We'd love to have you get involved. This is an
opportunity for a movement. Look, we're getting rent of corn,
and we're getting rid of tell Us, we're getting.

Speaker 3 (23:10):
Rid of McConnell. Let's kill the biggest snake of them
all and send him pack in.

Speaker 1 (23:13):
And that's Lindsey Graham Andre Bauer dot com driving out
the snakes.

Speaker 3 (23:16):
You gotta love it.

Speaker 11 (23:18):
Thanks Erlone, Terrence Bates here with your Real America's Voice
news Break. Thanks so much for being along for the ride.

(23:41):
President Trump really appreciating the value of life. This morning,
he had this to say during a meeting. It was
a luncheon there at the White House for the White
House Faith Office. He remarked about one year ago yesterday
when someone attempted or made an attempt on his life.

Speaker 14 (23:59):
And it's you mark able to think that it was
only one year ago this week that my time on
earth nearly ended. And if you look at that, God
was with me, because it's something in theory should.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
Not I should not be with you.

Speaker 11 (24:16):
And before those remarks, the President meeting with NATO's Secretary
General there at the White House. The two leaders discussing
everything from sending weapons to Ukraine to negotiating with Vladimir
Putin and trying to end the war between rushing Ukraine.
They also discussed the recent NATO summit.

Speaker 14 (24:34):
We were ripped off on trade and the military for
you know, we protected other nations. Nobody paid us, nobody
did anything for us, nobody helped us. And that's much different.
You know, NATO's a much different situation now. When I
got in, I believe we were paying for one hundred
percent of NATO, and now they're paying They went from
two percent, but they were paying one percent to five

(24:56):
percent that they're paying. That's a big difference. It's about
a trillion, one trillion dollar difference.

Speaker 11 (25:02):
President Trump also threatening to punish Russia with tariffs if
there isn't a deal to end the war between Russia
and Ukraine within the next fifty days. Lexington, Kentucky, remains
in shock following a deadly shooting at a small rural
church there on Sunday. Investigators say the suspect was shot
and killed by responding officers, but only after he shot

(25:23):
a state trooper and then barged into Richmond Road Baptist Church,
where he killed a seventy two year old mother and
her thirty four year old daughter. Two men were also
hit during that barrage of fire and are recovering at
the hospital. That's a quick check of your headlines. I'm
Terrence Bates, Jack.

Speaker 15 (25:52):
I want to see you.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
Great job, Jack, Thank you. What did job get?

Speaker 5 (25:59):
Do?

Speaker 3 (26:00):
We have an incredible thing?

Speaker 4 (26:01):
Where are we talking about the fake.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
News and the band?

Speaker 16 (26:03):
But we have guys and these are the guys.

Speaker 1 (26:05):
Should be getting bullishes, all right, folks, Jack Pasobic here
human events host. But of course we're riding double duty
here at the Student Action. Some of that's Jillian Michael.
She's so great up there on stage. But I had
to cut in here for a minute because ladies and gentlemen,
we're here with the officer Tatum Officer.

Speaker 3 (26:24):
How are you?

Speaker 4 (26:25):
I'm blessed man. I got to ask you.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
You've been coming to these events so often.

Speaker 3 (26:31):
For so many years.

Speaker 1 (26:33):
How do you view the growth of Turning Point going
from where it was six seven, eight years ago to
where it is now?

Speaker 15 (26:39):
What it is is a generational changer, right, I mean
we see generations and generations come through that are learning,
that are growing, that are being blessed, that are blessing others.
And so I think that the beauty of what Charlie
has been able to do as an example for all
these young people is that he's been able to capture
the hearts and minds of people who really want to
do better, and they've been able to grow. And I've
seen the growth and some of the young people that

(27:01):
were here from a very first SAS event is now
leading in this country. So it's been really good to
see the progression.

Speaker 1 (27:08):
No, and you absolutely do see it in terms of
the voting, right, because if you were you know, if
you were coming up through college, you were eighteen twenty two.
But now when you look at that eighteen to twenty
nine demographic, look, that's a voting block. And guess what
the new gen Z voting block. It's totally upending politics
when they saw it, particularly gen Z men that switched

(27:29):
over for Trump. So far at gen Z women, we'll
work on that. We'll work on that. Talk to Charlie
about it. But this was something that up ended politics
because the conventional thinking was that always the youth vote
is going to be leftist, and then as they get older,
they are going to be more conservative millennials and you know,
I call them gen Y centennials. They're kind of on

(27:51):
that arc where that's now sort of your your fifty
to fifty.

Speaker 3 (27:55):
But gen Z is not like.

Speaker 15 (27:56):
That, right, I mean, just imagine a world without turning
pin USA. I don't think we'll have on that stry.
I don't think that young people will have another outlet
to hear something different in what they hear on campus
and being lied to by the mainstream media. So what
Charlie has done and what these young people have been
able to do over this amount of time has been
incredible and literally is a huge part in saving our country.

Speaker 1 (28:19):
Now when we talk about saving our country, everybody's asking
me about it, and I've been open about it. They say, hey, Jack,
you know I've seen this picture.

Speaker 3 (28:27):
You were the binder. It says Jeffrey Epstein on it. Now,
all of a sudden, the.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
DJ has come out with their memo what's going on?

Speaker 3 (28:35):
When it's I said, wait a minute.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
First of all, I uploaded all that stuff from the
binder a day I got it. The very first day
I got it, I put it up and I say,
here's the link. Everyone can see it. The problem was
all the stuff that had been in that binder, it
had kind of already been released through various court cases.
And there was actually an itemized list that came from
one of the search warrants that had not yet been published,

(28:58):
so one page basically an items But all of this
obviously been a huge controversy. People waiting for answers. They say,
wait a minute, we've promised answers. We haven't got those answers.
And I thought, you know what, with your law enforcement background,
right when I was in the military, I was an
intelligent agent. So we had different missions. I was just
trying to collect all the information I could, and we
were going to go either roll somebody up or put

(29:20):
warheads on foreheads. I didn't have to worry about a
court case. I didn't have to worry about, you know,
having a war end or all of these these for
me like just these extra pieces of the puzzle that
law enforcement would have to put into.

Speaker 3 (29:35):
So can you try to distill some of this for us?
How do these cases work?

Speaker 1 (29:40):
And do the items that people want does that actually exist?

Speaker 4 (29:45):
Well, that's a good question.

Speaker 15 (29:46):
I think that the problem that we have now is
that we have no idea what we don't know, right,
I mean, we don't know if the information was available,
meaning the investigation material was available and it's been deleted.
So therefore they really don't have anything to present. We
don't know if they have someone to present but they
refuse to present it. We don't know if Kesh Mattel
and Dan Bungino wants to present it but Pam Bunny doesn't.

(30:07):
We don't know if all of them want to present it,
but Trump don't want it to happen. So it's a
lot to be involved in. And I'll tell you this
from a law enforcement perspective is that you always got
to have an open mind, don't get married to a
narrative because it's very scary in the terrain that we're in,
because we don't know who to trust and who's devoting
information or not. And what I can say is that
just so everybody's clear, and I love Donald Trump be

(30:28):
my favorite president.

Speaker 4 (30:29):
I vote for him fifteen times if it was legal.

Speaker 15 (30:32):
But the investigation started a long time ago. This wasn't
an investigation that started when Jefstein went to jail. This
was an investigation that concluded to in part when Epstein
went to jail. So the first Trump administration had to
be privy to what information was available that caused him
to be arrested and put into jail. Now, beyond that point,

(30:53):
both administrations, the Biden and Trump administration, had to.

Speaker 4 (30:56):
Know if there is actually a list or not. And
the fact that we.

Speaker 15 (31:00):
Don't know the truth about it is concerning to me.
But what I will say this, I don't want to
throw the baby up.

Speaker 4 (31:05):
With the bathwater.

Speaker 15 (31:06):
I think that we should trust the people who we've
trusted for so many years that eventually the truth will
come out. Donald Trump is a man of integrity. I've
known that. I think Keschwittail is a man of integrity.
I don't know Pam Bundy much. Dan Bongino is one
of my favorites. So I'm just waiting to say there's
more to the story. I want to let it play
out and we'll see where it ended up.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
So you mentioned the twenty nineteen arrest, and people, of
course remember that's why he was in jail. But what people,
I think forget and you know that gets lost in
the story I should say, is that he was in
jail pending trial. So that trial never took place. Now,
a lot of this material, I think probably, and this
is something that law enforcement and prosecutors they wouldn't make

(31:47):
that public. Why because they wouldn't want to tip off
Epstein's lawyers as to what their strategy would be. Now,
of course they would have to give it to him
eventually at some point. But because his death happened when
it did, suspicious deaths, to say the least.

Speaker 3 (32:02):
When it happened when it did, we never got that trial.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
So all of that information that's got to exist somewhere,
because of course they were building a case against them.

Speaker 4 (32:10):
Right and Gule Maxwell is in jail right.

Speaker 15 (32:13):
Now, precisely for exactly that there had to be evidence
presented against her for her to be in jail, there
has to be crimes because she was the middle person
between connecting victims to the suspects, and so with all
of that information and details had to be presented to
her in court against her in court for it to
even be able to go to jail and be sentenced.
So it existed. But this is not something new man.

(32:36):
This is mob tactics. This is hood tactics. If there
is no person to testifying court, then there you go
the evidence.

Speaker 1 (32:44):
I'm from the Philly area, and they got a certain
saying about snitches in the Philly area, right, they said,
because people say, Actually, the New York Times did a
it's funny you mentioned that. They just study just recently said,
I think it's only fifty eight percent of homicides are
solved in the United States.

Speaker 3 (33:00):
I said, well, in Philly.

Speaker 4 (33:01):
I know why.

Speaker 1 (33:01):
I'll tell you exactly why that is. That's because nobody
saw nothing. Nobody heard nothing. Nobody saw nothing. Wait a minute,
you were right there this ring camera. I didn't see nothing,
I ain't hear nothing.

Speaker 15 (33:11):
Snitches get stitches, is what they say. I don't agree
with it, right, I think snitching is humble. You need
to snitch on these people to get these.

Speaker 1 (33:18):
But what I'm saying, that's the dynamic that leads people
to not be able.

Speaker 3 (33:22):
If you don't have any information, where are you going
to investigate?

Speaker 4 (33:24):
Well, check this out. I mean, we got to think too.

Speaker 15 (33:26):
There's implications that there could be incredibly powerful people that
are associated with the crimes committed by f Stein and
Gala Maxwell. With that being said, how do you think
it's possible that if those people are potentially involved in this,
that he will ever make it a trial.

Speaker 4 (33:42):
They would not let it happen.

Speaker 15 (33:43):
Either he's saving face by doing it to himself, or
somebody else made sure that he couldn't testify.

Speaker 1 (33:49):
You know, or and I remember saying this, and I'll
say it again.

Speaker 3 (33:52):
You know, people get mad at you said.

Speaker 1 (33:53):
Look when you mentioned about not being married to your hypothesis.
They do teach us that as well in intelligence school.
And one of the things they do to help us
to fight against that or prevent that mentally is what
they teach.

Speaker 3 (34:04):
Es is an ac H.

Speaker 1 (34:06):
They want you to construct an analysis of competing hypotheses.
And then when you do that, you actually basically it's
like competing against your each hypothesis. So you lay it out,
then you lay out the next one. They lay out
the third one, and I think, okay, was he murdered
all right? Was he murdered by a guard? Was he
murdered by a prisoner that was on the block with him,

(34:27):
or did he commit suicide?

Speaker 3 (34:29):
Did he commit suicide?

Speaker 1 (34:30):
And then you put out and you lay out all
the evidence for each you lay out how each of
it would work. And so one of the ones that
I even said, which I do kind of wonder about,
is because I do trust Cash and Dan, and they say,
we don't think someone did.

Speaker 3 (34:42):
That, And I said, okay, what if.

Speaker 1 (34:45):
He felt intimidated? What if he felt he was being threatened?
And if so, that drove him to kill himself. Now,
on paper, you would call that suicide. But we in
the real world, we know that's something else.

Speaker 15 (35:00):
One thousand percent. Man, it's not above reality. For somebody
who's facing petition to the rest of their lives in prison
and being the fallman who eventually somebody would kill him. Anyway,
I think that he would be the fall man indicting
all these other people.

Speaker 3 (35:14):
If you want to live the rest of your life
looking over your shoulder.

Speaker 15 (35:16):
Or you didn't think this guy was living on a
high heart. We don't know how he made his money,
but he was rich. He had one of the nicest
places in New York City, flying private everywhere, he knew everybody.
I mean, just the arrogance of a narcissist like that
would probably lead them to say, I can't spend the
rest of my life in prison, knowing that he probably
would spend a rest of life in prison if they
knew what was actually out there with evidence. But what

(35:37):
I will say is this, I use the same theology
that you're saying about everything in life. You never get
married to a thesis. Even with my faith in God.

Speaker 4 (35:47):
I say, I'm going to challenge my challenge. Yes, someone approaches.

Speaker 15 (35:51):
Me with information about the Bible or anything else, I
don't shy away from him and say, well, I'm a Christian, so.

Speaker 4 (35:55):
I can't consider it.

Speaker 15 (35:56):
No, I'm going to consider every principle because what does
it do? Makes you stronger, It makes you deep, It
makes you go deeper in your faith when you find
out that the things you believe are real. That's how
I became a conservative. I said, I'm not going to
listen to what people are saying I should believe because
I'm black. Let me evaluate it for myself. And with
that being said, that's how I became conservative.

Speaker 1 (36:15):
You know, that's that's such a good way of putting you.
And that really is I think the start of conservatism,
right is that we have There was that heat map
that came out recently. They said, you know, they were
looking at social media and they said, here are liberals
and they're talking points, and here are conservatives they're talking points.
And they said the liberals it was like a fist
right because it was all this one solid spot. They

(36:36):
all talk about the same thing, they all believe the
same thing. But then for conservatives, it was a web
and it was sort of you know, and it was
a cluster, but you know, it was like, okay, here's
your libertarians, here's your America first guys. You know, here's
your anti trands. You know, and there were various different
nodes along this web. Because that's what conservatism is. It's
not lockstep conformity, is in fact critical thought and critical reasoning.

Speaker 15 (37:01):
Critical thought, critical reason in comparison to emotionalism. The way
that they're able to get certain people to have a
heat map that's that strong is they get them emotional
and people that don't know how to manage their emotions.

Speaker 4 (37:12):
This is how they fall.

Speaker 15 (37:13):
Into a trap of being sure deceived one percent if
you do an evaluation, I haven't done it yet.

Speaker 4 (37:18):
I'm pretty sure if the science came out, it will be.

Speaker 15 (37:21):
The people that tend to lean left and listen to
the foolery that they're putting out in the media. They're
doing it through weaponized empathy, weaponized emotions, and conservatives aren't
those type of people. And that's why you see certain
demographics of people that are leaning more conservative, whether it
be six or whether it be race or whatever. You
see a difference in people's the way they receive information

(37:43):
and you see the way it's presented by how they vote.

Speaker 1 (37:46):
No, it's absolutely true, and it's just now come out.
They've they still finished the end of the final analysis
of the election. Donald Trump won a majority of hismanic mails,
a majority, not just a lot.

Speaker 3 (38:01):
There wasn't just a no. He won them out right.
And so we were told, we were told over and
over and over that, oh, Donald Trump he wants a wall.
Donald Trump, he wants he never.

Speaker 1 (38:11):
Gonna you know, he wants deportations. He's never gonna win Hispanics.
And yeah, he wont all Hispanic men. How did he
do that? Because they saw the status of their country.
They said, wait a minute. Who wants to get rich,
who wants to get jobs? Who wants to do all this?
We do too that you know, money doesn't have a race, doesn't.

Speaker 15 (38:27):
Right right exactly, And what it boils down to is
people with common sense are the people that will listen
to a message of freedom, listen to the message of
American exceptionalism, and those are the ones that will become conservative.
And it's only a matter of time when people like
you and I are presenting the truth that people will
beginning to wake up.

Speaker 3 (38:45):
Precisely that tell us your social everybody knows it. But
throw out your.

Speaker 15 (38:48):
Social media again the officer statum on every single platform
you can find me.

Speaker 3 (38:53):
Complish take care. Jack is a great guy. Everybody's talking
about it.

Speaker 10 (39:06):
Go get it.

Speaker 3 (39:16):
All right, Jack Kisobik.

Speaker 1 (39:17):
We are here on the sidelines of the Turning Point
student Action. We're talking to grassroots, We're talking to the
gen zs and so I had to and this is
this is what I do.

Speaker 3 (39:27):
You know, I find there's.

Speaker 1 (39:29):
There's there's so many people that want to like tell
gen Z what to think, and I'm like, maybe I should,
we should just listen. I don't know, like that's that's,
you know, such a wild concept, the crazy concept that
I do.

Speaker 3 (39:39):
So we've got one of our great gen Z whisperers,
Ruvia Kolschuk is here with us, Olivia. Thank you so
much for me. Thank you the first time in person, by
the way. Pretty cool.

Speaker 1 (39:48):
Finally, right, and it was inevitable. Is Olivia culture can
ever go?

Speaker 14 (39:52):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (39:53):
Okay, there she is, all right.

Speaker 1 (39:54):
So I was asking before we came on, what is
the hottest you would say when you go to post,
when you're out there online, what is the hottest number
one issue with gen Z right now?

Speaker 16 (40:04):
I would say, whenever I post, the most important or
the one that blows up the most is definitely deportations,
especially even you know we have a white house posting
themes of deportations. It's hilarious.

Speaker 3 (40:15):
So I definitely think that appeals to Benzi.

Speaker 1 (40:17):
So so it's the memes about the deportation. So you know,
the meme is because you know what's funny is I
remember there's a lot of people that have attacked the
White House for posting things like I say, you're making
light of it. Mike Solana wrote like a five thousand
word essay denouncing me over a studio Ghibli meme. But
also he claimed that we were abusing anime by by

(40:39):
posting a meme about deportations. And I'm like, no, it's
not abuse, it's it's it's communication. So do you think
this actually helps to communicate to the younger audience?

Speaker 3 (40:49):
One percent?

Speaker 16 (40:50):
Absolutely, because what's a feeling to a bunch of high schoolers.

Speaker 3 (40:52):
There are a bunch of people going into.

Speaker 16 (40:53):
College meme because all they they all they look at
is social media. So I think being layable in that aspect.

Speaker 9 (40:58):
And you can make it for like.

Speaker 16 (41:00):
Harder because I think it's hard to appeal to a
bunch of high schoolers get them interested in politics. But
everything is so by the book and so serious, So
I think that means like.

Speaker 3 (41:08):
They're not they're not sitting down reading questions. I don't
even want to do that. So I think it's great.

Speaker 1 (41:13):
So so when it comes down and I agree completely,
this is why I've always embraced memes. I think memes
are they cut across communication, they cut it. You know,
you can communicate a message. But there's there's I could
get into a whole dissertation on like why the left
can't mean because the only I will say this, since
we're on the subject, the.

Speaker 3 (41:32):
Only memes that go viral are the memes.

Speaker 1 (41:36):
That are true. Because so for a meme to be
a good meme, it must contain truth and be a
distillation of truth. Because for a meme to be false,
then it is not a meme. Not that's a force meme. Yeah,
that's that's forced exactly.

Speaker 3 (41:50):
Yes.

Speaker 1 (41:51):
And by this, so what all of which to say
is the left cannot mean because they are memes themselves.

Speaker 16 (41:57):
Yeah, actually that's a great post. I might post that
on at. I mean, you see the stuff that I post.
I'm definitely very lighthearted. I'm not very serious. And I
think that's how I have such a large base of
young people. I mean, most of my following is eighteen
to twenty five because I can appeal to them.

Speaker 3 (42:10):
I can you know, relate to them with stories.

Speaker 1 (42:12):
So then so then when it comes to the deportations issue, though,
because you know, I'll just say this. You know, this
is an issue that people when I talk to you know, millennials,
gen X, baby boomers, you know, they want it, but
it's as as a skew older, it's not the highest
issue there.

Speaker 3 (42:28):
Why is it such a big issue for gen Z?

Speaker 16 (42:30):
Once again, I'm going to go back to, I think
just because it's funny. It's the thing that's pushed out
the most all the videos. When I go on tip
talk or something, the first video to pop up is
going to be from the ice from White House, those
videos exactly.

Speaker 3 (42:43):
Whenever I go on to tap, that's the first.

Speaker 4 (42:44):
Thing to pop up.

Speaker 16 (42:45):
Its guess the highest views on their accounts or took that.
So I think this is funny?

Speaker 3 (42:50):
Is it is? It is?

Speaker 1 (42:51):
I guess there is an angle to of sort of
the economic situation of gen Z. Yeah, And you know,
whenever I read studies, you know, you see how it's
you know, gen Z just lagging way behind every generation
that's come before in terms of you know, being able
to get into the workforce, to be able to find work,
to generate well, to get independently wealthy. And then it's like,

(43:12):
I guess there's this idea or perhaps the overall meme
is that it's this massive which by the way, it
isn't a meme that's going to be clear about this, right,
it's funny, right, and they are funny, But but they're
funny because they're true, right, And the reason they connect
is because there's truth to it that, yes, it is
the illegal alien invasion that's actually creating this huge anchor

(43:34):
and this huge weight on millennials, on gen z, on
anyone who's trying.

Speaker 3 (43:38):
To just survive in Americans today.

Speaker 16 (43:40):
I agree, and I think it's important that when people
my age or younger see these memes that they're able
to go ahead and do some research, like why do
we want illegals out so badly?

Speaker 3 (43:48):
You know, opens up job opportunities. Yes, they're taking up
spaces in colleges, school I was just gonna say it,
schools same.

Speaker 16 (43:55):
I know three people actually from one of my best
friends colleges you are not to return because they weren't
here legally. That's a three spots I could have gone
to United States citizens. Yeah, like that isn't happening all accrassination.

Speaker 1 (44:07):
No, And and by the way, that's not just illegals,
that's that's these these foreign students that are coming in
that are getting led in because and by the way,
they do that not because they're the best of the
best or something. They do it because they have to
pay full freights from if they're from China, if they're
from India, wherever, they pay full free. So all these scholarships,
et cetera that are going to American students, those slots

(44:29):
go over because they get to they make more money.
They have for money over to that exactly. And by
the way, they're not coming here. They don't stay, they
go back to their home country. Whatever they learn, and
if they're at Harvard, who knows. By the way, many
of these cases they're stealing you know, research from the
United States and bringing back to communists China.

Speaker 3 (44:46):
Yeah, it's ridiculous that's happening. It's being taken from American kids. Yeah.

Speaker 16 (44:50):
I hope that these students realize when all these spaces
open up in colleges and they get to the schools
they want to go to, they actually go for degrees
that matter as well, you know, yeah, well.

Speaker 3 (45:00):
And stuff.

Speaker 16 (45:00):
But instead they're getting you know, Starbucks Bristoll degrees and
that's not going to help. So we definitely need to
see a.

Speaker 3 (45:05):
Switch there as well.

Speaker 1 (45:06):
No, No, that's a huge part of it, and you
will because you talk about feminism all as well, and
that's something that I think that is indelibly tied right there.

Speaker 3 (45:14):
Yeah, let's kick women out of school. No, I'm just kidding.
Oh yeah, No, I definitely that. There was a meme.

Speaker 1 (45:20):
There was a meme going around about that. That's too
long ago since we were talking memes where they said,
like they said that women used to go to school
to meet a husband's right and so, and they said, maybe.

Speaker 3 (45:30):
If there's a way we could design colleges b yu.

Speaker 1 (45:33):
Yeah, like if you you can go, but you just
stay away from like the classic No.

Speaker 3 (45:38):
But they go for sobrities and a drinking.

Speaker 16 (45:40):
Life and to become you know a word I want
to say, I'm here. So that's why, that's why they
go to college. Were raising tens of thousands of dollars
and then there.

Speaker 1 (45:47):
We need to we need to end the degenerously and
return to tradition.

Speaker 13 (45:51):
Agreed.

Speaker 3 (45:52):
Yeah, live you across where for people going to follow.

Speaker 16 (45:53):
You Olivia Potek on x TikTok and Instagram.

Speaker 1 (45:57):
All right, got us, Thank you, Thank you, Jack Pasoba
Student Action Summit, Incredible weekend, incredible connections with.

Speaker 3 (46:04):
Incredible patriots, ladies and gentlemen. As always, you have my
permission to lay ashore
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