Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
Good evening, America, Happy Friday. Yep, we made it to
the end of another week, and what a historic week
it's been. Welcome to the latest edition of justin News,
No Noise. I'm your host, John Solomon, reported to us
always from Washington, DC and the Wiredofish Coffee dot com studios.
You know this Wired Fish coffee is my favorite coffee,
my family's favorite cofee. It's now the official coffee of
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(00:42):
dot com. That's Wired the number two Fishcoffee dot Com
and get a fantastic ten percent discount just by using
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they support us. They call the journalism we do here possible,
all right. The situation in the Middle East has been
rapidly escalating today, this after is weel launched Opera Rising Line,
targeting Iranian nuclear sites and reportedly killing some of top
(01:05):
Iran's top military officials. We're already seen response back from Iran,
with Iranian state media saying the Islamic Republic fire at
hundreds of blistic missiles at Israel, also shooting down to
Israeli pilots We've seen a few waves of the missile
strikes in Israel now, and some of them have managed
to get through the Iron Dome, but the scope of
the damage still remains unclear. President Trump today issued some
(01:26):
statements on truth social earlier in the afternoon, is saying
that he was aware of the strikes and that they
were coming, and urging the Iranians to use this moment
to come to the table and good faith and negotiate
to end the nuclear program. But talks that were scheduled
today between the United States and Iran, well they obviously
were called off by the Iranian regime. Now, we also
have some reporting on justinews dot com about American forces
(01:49):
aiding in the defense of Israel helping the Israeli shoot
down Iranian ballistic missiles as they cross the waterways here. Meanwhile,
Iran is reporting they have shot down to Israeli jets
as I mentioned, and captured one pilot. However, that's coming
from my Iranian state media, so it's unclear how truthfull
it is. Well, have to check as the day goes out.
Now to bring in my amazing cos for the eating
Amanda head. Amanda, this is a moment that's been threatened
(02:12):
for decades. I mean two decades of Israel saying we
might have to take this action. It's here now. The
Middle East has got a future that will be decided
I think by the next few weeks.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
Yeah, absolutely, I mean things are obviously very fluid, but
I have no doubt that Benjamin Netanyahu and the IDF
are very prepared for once to come. Oh yeah, you know,
if they instigated this, I know that they are prepared
for the next two, three, four weeks.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
They drew some pretty early big blood too. I mean
there's a big losses for that random.
Speaker 2 (02:39):
Military Absolutely, and we also have some economic news to
get to. In the aftermath of those attacks between Israel
and Iran, oil prices have skyrocketed, with crude oil future
surging nine point three percent and other metrics rising as
high as thirteen percent, even though Israel didn't reportedly hit
any of Iran's oil infrastructure. And meanwhile, Prime Minister of
Israel Benjamin Netanyahu release the video speaking directly to the
(03:02):
Iranian people, urging them to stand up to the Iranian regime.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
The Islamic regime, which has oppressed you for nearly fifty years,
threatens to destroy my country, the state of Israel. The
objective of Israel's military operation is to remove this threat,
both the nuclear threat and the ballistic missile threat to Israel.
And as we achieve our objectives, who are also clearing
(03:27):
the path for you to achieve your objective, which is freedom.
In the past twenty four hours, we've taken out top
military commanders, senior nuclear scientists, the Islamic regime's most significant
enrichment facility, and a large portion of its ballistic missile arsenal.
(03:47):
More is on the way. The regime doesn't know what
hit them, They don't know what will hit them. The
nation of Iran and the nation of Israel have been
true friends since the days of Sargus the Great, and
the time has come for you to unite around your flag.
And you're a stark legacy by standing up for your
(04:10):
freedom from an evil and oppressive regime.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
Well, John, not to make a frivolous comparison, but it's
the same in war as it is in sports. You
hit hard, you hit early, and it's very hard for
your opponent to make up.
Speaker 4 (04:21):
Grown.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
Yeah, I think that's right. And the next few days
I think we'll determine the course of how this plays out,
whether this is a long war or short wall, whether
US gets dragged into it because Iran decides to pick
a fight with US, stacking our troops over there or
even here. We've been talking to members of Congress all
day and a lot. I'm very concerned about the Hesbalataris
who might have crossed the border during the Biden years.
(04:43):
We've had some good conversations all day. We're going to
start off with one we had just about an hour ago. Yeah,
she is a still or as a veteran of the
US Army, serves the great state of Iowa. Congresswoman Mary
Nett Miller meets will be at tomorrow night's two hundred
and fiftieth birthday for the United States Army. President Trump
celebrating with big parade. Earlier today, we talked about everything
going on in the world. How a watch all right?
(05:05):
Joining us now on this very dramatic day. World history
is changing before eyes. Iowa A Congresswoman Maryette Miller meets
congress Woman. Great to have you on the show.
Speaker 5 (05:13):
It's great to be with you both.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
All right. I want to start with the last twenty
four hours. Pretty historic moment, a chance for realignment in
the Middle East, but also a lot of peril and
uncertainty ahead. Tell us your reaction to what's happened in
how Americans should look at.
Speaker 6 (05:27):
It well, first and foremost, you know, we should be
supporting people who want who want peace, and who want
to have you know, freedoms within their communities. So I
see what's happening now is as an offshoot of what
happened during the Biden the Obama administration and then the
Biden administration. And so Israel has to support itself and
(05:51):
has to defend itself against Iran, which is a world
sponsor of terrorism, especially through their proxy from US ballade
and the Hutis, And so I think this is a
necessary step for Iran to support itself. And Iran is
the biggest threat to piece of the Middle East. So
I see this as an extension of what's happened with
(06:12):
Israel defending itself against Humas when they invaded October seventh
to twenty twenty three.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
Congress Woman, I feel sure these conversations were already taking
place today. But what's your read or what do you
anticipate Israel or Prime Minister at Yahho is going to
be looking for from the United States and President Trump.
Speaker 6 (06:32):
You know, one is that he's unimpeded in defending Israel
and defending Israel's right to exist. As we know, Iran
in its proxies want to eradicate Israel and the people
of Israel, and so they will continue in their quest
to build a nuclear armed weapon attached to ballistic missiles,
(06:53):
and so it's a direct threat to Israel.
Speaker 5 (06:56):
And to pieces of the Middle East.
Speaker 6 (06:57):
We know that there are countries wanting to lies relations
with Israel, especially economic relations, and we know that there
are very large Middle Eastern countries that are on the
cusp of doing that. And that also we know that
the Uranian people went peace, and so Israel is going
to defend itself.
Speaker 5 (07:15):
I think net Yak who made that statement.
Speaker 6 (07:17):
So they're looking for the for the United States to
continue helping with intelligence and to continue to help support
the Iron Dome, which as we know, is a defensive poster,
not an offensive posture. And so I think that's what
they're looking for from the administration and from the American people.
(07:38):
It's support of Israel and Israel's right to exist as
a country, in Israel's right to defend itself.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
Congress woman. For years, we've known that there has sleeper
sales on the United States territory. We saw one effort
in twenty eleven when they tried to assassinate the Saudi
ambassador here in Washington. But the last four years people
cross that we've never got visibility to do. We need
to be more on guard here that Iran and its
proxy as Bulla might try to strike here to draw
us into this conflict.
Speaker 5 (08:08):
Absolutely, we do need to be on guard.
Speaker 6 (08:10):
We also know that there are people on the terror
watch lists and bad actors that came across our open
southern borders, so there could in fact be those individuals
within the United States. Also, with unrest over protests over Ice,
some of these violent protests, some of these which seemed
very much to be well supported, well funded, and well
(08:30):
positioned to engage in violence, that that gives an opportunity
for these kind of sleeper cells to emerge and to
come forward. So we absolutely need to be on guard.
We need to have our our antennas up looking.
Speaker 5 (08:46):
For things that may emerge out of something else.
Speaker 6 (08:49):
So I think this is one of those things that
the administration will advise people on to be on guard,
to be on watch and to report any suspicious activity.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
Congresswoman, this content, I think for your colleagues on the
other side of the isle, is a thread that could
unravel the party or at least one of their major issues.
How do you anticipate Democrats will message on this considering
what we've seen the last few years, at least since
October seventh, as far as them standing with Israel, and
even Jewish Americans, we.
Speaker 6 (09:18):
Know that they have stood with Israel, stupid the protesters
stood with.
Speaker 5 (09:25):
Free Palestine, not all of them.
Speaker 7 (09:27):
You know.
Speaker 6 (09:27):
I have worked and traveled to the Middle East and
to Israel with wonderful members of Congress on the other
side of the aisle.
Speaker 5 (09:33):
But this is an issue that threatens to divide them.
Speaker 6 (09:36):
Given what's happening with Ice, which is throwbacks to you know,
five years ago with defund the police, abolish eyes. This
is this same kind of rhetoric that we're seeing all
over again. And then you add on top of that
the volatility of what's happened in the Middle East and
what has happened with the Free Palestine and the rise
of anti Semitism here in the United States. So I
(09:58):
do think that this very much threatens the Party and
will separate and divide the party.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
Congress from You hail from one of the great states
in the bread basket of America, the great farming country
of Iowa. We get our corn, we get so many
different things. There these recent revelations that China was sending
scientists into the country with pathogens that if they had
gotten into the environment, could have wiped out our crops,
created a famine. Here your thoughts about what's going on
and what we need to do to reduce the risk fromness.
Speaker 6 (10:30):
Well, we know that the Chinese Communist Party of Bad
Actress have been trying to seal seeds and seed technology,
you know, trying to replicate what we've done in the
United States through all of our advances, our scientific research,
starting with George Washington Carver and Norman Borlog and so
not only that, but introducing pathogens, you know, disease entities.
Speaker 5 (10:52):
That threaten our crops.
Speaker 6 (10:53):
Which is interesting because they really do need the United States,
our farmers, our agriculture, both one grain commodities as well
as on livestock to feed their people. They don't have
the agricultural wherewithal it, at least not at this point
in time, or the ground to be able to feed
their people. So it's counterintuitive, counterproductive for them to disrupt agriculture.
(11:16):
But we know they've made a lot of roads into
South America and other places and trying to purchase farmland
in other locations that if they disrupt American farmers, then
that advantages South American farmers or other entities.
Speaker 2 (11:33):
I love following you on social media because it shows
your heart for farmers. And if you look at your
congressional schedule, you know that you talk to farmers every
single day. With respect to the One Big Beautiful Bill,
what are they telling you about it?
Speaker 6 (11:44):
Well, you know, our farmers are cautiously optimistic. There are
things in there that are very important to them, especially
on the tax front. So what happens with the death tax?
That is critically important to our farmers. We have fourth, fifth,
sixth gen farmers. They want to pass their farm onto
the next generation. But the next generation won't go into
(12:05):
farming if they know they have to sell the farm
in order to pay inheritance taxes.
Speaker 5 (12:09):
So the death tax was very important.
Speaker 6 (12:11):
The ten thirty one exchanges, the step up basis, those
things critically important to our farmers, just the tax levels
and small businesses to small businesses or disadvantage when it
comes to corporations, and then the individual tax rates, So
all of those things very important. The doubling of the
child tax credit which will be extended, the doubling of
(12:32):
the standard deduction for those that are younger and trying
to engage in farming in our agg community. And it
also helps our manufacturing sectors. So my district is very
heavy in manufacturing compared to the rest of the.
Speaker 5 (12:44):
State, as well as agriculture.
Speaker 6 (12:46):
So there is so much in this bill that helps
the average Iowa, the working family, the single mother, and
helps our agricultural economy as well.
Speaker 5 (12:56):
So it's a great bill from that standpoint.
Speaker 6 (12:58):
And then today something we have advocated for, pushed for,
talked about, talked about a lot, especially when we're looking
at tariffs and to increase market share for our agricultural economy,
and that's the rvos.
Speaker 5 (13:12):
So we got great news out of the EPA.
Speaker 6 (13:14):
I just asked this question of Administrator Zelden a couple
of weeks ago in an Energy and Commerce Committee hearing,
and so the rbos are increased, which is something that
we have long supported, pushed for, advocated for cajoled about.
But it is such great news for our farm economy
coming out of the EPA today.
Speaker 1 (13:34):
Yeah, that was a big deal. All right. You served
our country bravely in the Army for I think twenty
four years if I remember company. Tomorrow we celebrate the
two hundred and fiftieth birthday of the Great Army. Your thoughts,
I think you're going to be with President Trump at
the celebration.
Speaker 6 (13:49):
I'm going to be with President Trump at the celebration.
I cannot be more excited. You know, the Army goes
rolling along, so we're out there, we're marching. But you know,
most importantly, I think this is a testament in the
highlight to all of the men and women who serve
our country, who put on the uniform, raise their right hand,
swear a note to defend our constitution against enemies foreign
(14:12):
and domestic. And then you see the riots in Los Angeles.
I'm a Vietnam War veteran or error veteran. I did
not serve in the war, but one of my older
brothers did, and so this to me is just reminiscent
of how we treated our service members coming back from
the Vietnam War. That we have to be very careful
about how we treat those that are in law enforcement,
(14:34):
that are in our military, that are in customs and
border protection, critically important that they are honored, respected for
the service that they give to our nation and being
willing to sacrifice themselves and put their families at risk
and through great sacrifice in order to serve this.
Speaker 5 (14:52):
Great nation, to defend our constitution.
Speaker 6 (14:54):
So I'm very proud to be there, very proud to
have served, married a service member, and as oh, my
father and grandfather, uncle and six of the eight kids
in my family served in the military.
Speaker 8 (15:04):
Wow, that is what a.
Speaker 5 (15:06):
Legacy is, all right.
Speaker 1 (15:08):
A diversion of year down to Congress for joining his
ship is ongoing.
Speaker 5 (15:14):
It's great to be with you. Break also President Trump's birthday,
so we will celebrate you in the bread.
Speaker 9 (15:41):
God bless y'all, God bless America.
Speaker 4 (15:53):
Ten years ago, we let a spark, a few women,
a few voices, a longing for truth, and a refusal
to be silenced. As the world grew louder, we grew stronger,
standing shoulder to shoulder, unshaken. We saw what they tried
(16:14):
to erase. Womanhood is not a costumes. Family is a
non negotiable the hearts and the minds of pigs, and
health is not the government's decision.
Speaker 8 (16:29):
You require more Americans to be vaccillus.
Speaker 4 (16:31):
In a time of fear, women leaned in.
Speaker 10 (16:34):
You know for myself, this has to come from us
as women, as unal athletes. Parents are being held hostage.
They did not sign up to cop here with the government.
Speaker 6 (16:42):
Liberal welcome them to the cause of freedom, Conservatives, as.
Speaker 5 (16:46):
Your respectful rocks for the things that.
Speaker 7 (16:49):
They came searching for truth, for health, for a home.
Speaker 8 (16:55):
This is not a rebellion. This is a return, a.
Speaker 4 (17:00):
Return to womanhood, to wisdom, to wellness, and the women
who lead it are heroes.
Speaker 10 (17:09):
Where the culture war we have started.
Speaker 4 (17:12):
This is the Young Women's Leadership Summit ten years strong,
a decade of beauty, freedom and truth.
Speaker 7 (17:22):
Welcome Homes.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
Podcaster Her podcast is called Culture Apothecary.
Speaker 10 (17:39):
Pop Health and Wellness podcast on the Conservative rights presenters
Alex Clark. The American dream is that a parent will
be able to raise children who are better off than themselves.
Embracing femininity is an act of restoring tradition, which means
bucking the system that has told us to ignore our
nature role instincts, feeling deeply is a woman's superpower.
Speaker 8 (18:05):
Not a weakness.
Speaker 10 (18:06):
It's next generation of women are instinctually conservative. Sometimes stuff
is uncomfortable, but I want to be in the uncomfortable
so that I can be proactive and aware of what's
coming culturally change America forever. If we are able to
do this, and we'll never get this opportunity to get
women hold the keys to changing the culture through raising
(18:28):
and influencing the next generation. If you don't know me,
(19:10):
my name is Alex Clark, and The Guardian recently accused
me of running a psyop to turn American women thin, fertile,
and conservatives. I'm here to publicly say the accusations are true. Ladies,
(19:33):
welcome to the biggest American Conservative Women's conference. Why WLS
And by the way, by the way, this is our
ten year anniversary. You are in this room and you
are witnessing a cultural revolution. Less prozac, more protein, less burnout,
(20:03):
more babies, less feminism, more femininity. They told us to
trust the science, but they didn't tell us it was
bought and paid for by Pfizer and PEPSI. I don't
know if you saw this, but just a couple of
(20:23):
days ago, Self magazine came out with this huge spread
accusing MAHA, the Make America Healthy Again movement, of wanting
to put women back in the kitchen. You know what,
Hell yeah, and no, to the media who's here, it's
(20:43):
not because we wanted to be the nineteen fifties again
or whatever, but it's because the kitchen is where the
real revolution starts. And if I haven't even gotten started yet.
But if the truth defends you, you're not very bright.
When we let me explain this. When women were kicked
out of the workforce, or sorry, when women were kicked
(21:06):
out of the home pushed into the workforce, that was
when big food saw the perfect opening. They said, Oh yeah,
don't worry about cooking. Here's a TV dinner, here's a lunchable,
here's a microwave tray of chemicals. And look where that
got us skyrocketing chronic disease, infertile young women, kids who
(21:28):
were totally morbidly obese, and families who don't eat together,
let alone thrive together. So yeah, more women, men and
kids in the kitchen cooking real food. How is this political?
In the least, feminism told women to chase their corporate
(21:53):
dreams for their validation while their kids were eating seed
oils and their marriages were collapsing. Well, well, we're done
pretending that a cubicle is more empowering than a countertop.
When we reclaim our food, we reclaim our health, and
we reclaim power, and that is what terrifies the left.
(22:19):
They've got pronouns, but we've got purpose. And look around
this room. Let's just be honest. It's never been hotter
to be a conservative. We've got the girls who lift weights,
eat clean, have their hormones balanced, have their lives together.
(22:41):
Those women are conservative. The men who stand tall, lead
with quiet strength, don't cower in the face of danger,
and treat women with unwavering respect and honor. Conservative. The
most viral podcast, by the way in the world, Joe Rogan,
(23:04):
Tim Dillon, Theo Vaughn, The Charlie Kirk Show. Not exactly
MSNBC Darlings. We are the new mainstream. We are the
cool kids now. The Left, well, they've got these TikTok
(23:27):
activists with five shades of autism, panic attacks in a
ring light. We've got girls who look like they just
walked off the cover of Vogue and can still deadlift
more than Harry Sisson. We're not running from culture anymore.
We're running it. But here's the thing. We're not just
(23:50):
changing the vibe, ladies, We're changing the laws, the food
and the future. Let me hear you make some noise
if you were here last year. One year ago, I
stood on this stage and I told the doubters, the
(24:11):
people who had accused me of not knowing what I
was talking about when I said that health was going
to be the future of the conservative movement. They accused
me actually of sabotaging the conservative movement by warning women
that hormonal birth control was poison, of fact that I
still stand by today. They said I didn't know what
I was talking about when I was saying last year
(24:32):
on this stage that if Conservatives owned the fight against
food in big pharma, we would win the twenty twenty
four election. They laughed. They called me a crunchy conspiracy theorist.
No surprise to me. At least they were wrong. I
was right. Bobby Kennedy Junior dropped out. He endorsed Donald Trump.
(24:55):
They both pledged to make America healthy again. And guess what,
Donald Trump one gaining eleven points with young women eighteen
to twenty nine compared to twenty twenty. Well, it turns
out when you tell women the truth about what's going
(25:16):
on with their food and what's being injected into their children,
they don't want a fact check. They want to pitchfork.
This isn't your grandma's gop nofense, grandma's we love you.
This is Whole Foods meets the West Wing. It's collagen,
callouses and conviction. It's castor oil Christ in a well
(25:40):
stopped pantry. It's not just a movement, it's a mood.
And let's talk about this movement, MAHA make America healthy again?
Speaker 6 (25:50):
What is it?
Speaker 10 (25:51):
Well, we are pulling women into the fold through truth,
truth about health, femininity, and freedom because we see with
our own eyes that something is deeply wrong. Autism rates
went from one in ten thousand and nineteen eighty to
an explosion of one in thirty six. Today, forty percent
(26:15):
of American children are obese or overweight. PCOS polycystic ovarian
syndrome affects one in ten American women. Infertility it's rising
one percent every single year. And SSRI prescriptions, that's your antidepressants,
(26:37):
your anti anxiety medications. They have doubled in the last
decade for young women. We are the sickest generation and
our kids are on track to be sicker. But MAHA
is fighting back and we're winning. We're not asking for
permission from legacy media, the CDC, or your sociol professor.
(27:02):
We're flipping the tables and we're rewriting our own story.
Thanks to relentless moms, fearless women like Vonnie Harry, my
friend the food Babe, who's exposed fake ingredients for years,
and then policy fire brands like Callie Means, who is
tearing the mask off of Big Pharma. We've been stacking
winds that they said were impossible. The FDA finally banned
(27:26):
toxic food dies, but only after we embarrass them into it.
They were fine with your kids eating red dye until
conservative moms on Instagram made more noise than the lobbyists.
We cracked open the baby formula monopoly, and now the
cartel that's been force feeding infant seed oil, soy and
(27:47):
corn syrup has been put on notice. Your days of
poisoning babies for profit are numbered. Any Utah girlies in
the house, Oh, there's some Utah people. Anyone else, anyone else?
So Utah You guys said something really great. You banned
(28:09):
fluoride from public water because no mass medication without consent
is not public health. It's chemical control. California, anyone, California. Okay, Yeah,
California is phasing out ultra process slop from school lunches. Guys,
(28:31):
When the wokest state in the country starts sounding like
the Western a Prize Foundation, you know the tight is turning.
Speaker 8 (28:39):
This isn't a.
Speaker 10 (28:40):
Hippie side hustle anymore. MAHA is the new health authority
in America. We don't need credentials from Yale to know
that your cereal shouldn't have the same ingredients as carpaint.
And here's the cherry on top. RFK Junior didn't just
endorse Trump. He recently helped decapitate one of the most
(29:02):
corrupt institutions in the country. This week, RFK Junior helped
push out seventeen members from the CDC's Vaccine Advisory Panel.
(29:25):
This CDC vaccine Advisory Panel, by the way, are the
unelected bureaucrats who've packed the childhood schedule shot after shot,
year after year without any safety data. In some states,
(29:45):
your kid leads up to ninety two doses just to
attend school. But here's what they never told you. Not
one of those vaccines was tested against a true placebo
in pre licensing trials. Not one fact check that Wall
(30:05):
Street Journal that is not That is not medicine. It
is child abuse in a lab coat. So to the
left wing media, keep crying to the pharma execs lawyer
(30:29):
up to the wine ant feminists. Go back to your
xanax and your seed oil, oat milk lattes. We're gonna
handle the future from here. We're only like one hundred
and fifty days in or something in this administration. Mah
is just getting started. A few months ago, I protested
(30:51):
at Kellogg's for poisoning our cereal with chemicals banned basically
everywhere else. I also testified at the United States Senate
with Senator Ron Johnson and RFK Junior. My podcast, Culture
Apothecary has inspired hundreds of thousands of moms to swap
(31:14):
toxic food homeschool for the first time. Know they're farmer
and rancher, rip their kids out of daycare. And I'm
gonna be honest with you. I did not grow up
knowing any of this. I didn't I went from clueless
about GMOs to touring regenerative farms. Three years ago, I
(31:35):
was popping pop tarts daily, living off Chick fil A.
I was like, why do I always feel so sick
and tired?
Speaker 8 (31:41):
Geez?
Speaker 10 (31:42):
I wonder why now I read scripture and ingredient labels
and I've never felt better. If I can do this,
so can you. They want you weak, worried and wait
for permission. Conservatism wants you strong, sovereign and living a
(32:05):
life so beautiful they feel like they have no choice
but to censor it. You're not just attending a conference
this weekend. You are actually joining a sisterhood. You're not
just voting red, You're living free. So to every woman
(32:29):
who has ever felt dismissed, disillusioned, or downright done with
the lies of the modern left, this is your wake
up call. The crunchy moms were right, the conspiracy theorists
were right. And the future it's healthy, it's hopeful, it's homegrown.
(32:52):
Baby hot girls. Don't gatekeep wellness, We reclaim it. The
left can keep their blue hair in their birth control.
We want beef tallow and babies. Welcome to the resistance,
(33:15):
Welcome to the comeback of gold Star science. Beauty and backbone,
Welcome home, thank you, and enjoy why WLS.
Speaker 11 (33:49):
The original mission of why WLAS was to bring together
like minded America loving god fearing conservative women, encourage them
and equipped them to go out into the different sphears
that God has placed them in and to represent these
values to the world. And now it has shifted to
(34:11):
still be primarily for conservative women, but also promoting faith, freedom, motherhood,
and even promoting a holistic and healthy lifestyle.
Speaker 12 (34:20):
Why do Bolas has grown so much since I first
spoke nine years ago, and so it was a smaller
crowd than but they were so engaged and so eager
to learn.
Speaker 10 (34:35):
I feel really proud that why to the aless has
grown the way it has. I don't think any of
us anticipated that some of the same girls attending ten
years ago would be still attending, But now they're bringing
their baby with them, and that is just a testament
to the community that Turning Point USA has built for women.
(34:55):
It is really an alumni situation where people want to
stay involved even far past their student era. Think about
how many women on that stage were once in here
a shoe sitting in that audience thinking, you know what,
I have a voice, and I'm going to use it.
And I think that that's one of the most valuable
leadership qualities that we can gain, is gaining our voice back.
(35:16):
An event like why to be a less is important
and necessary for you to grow as a woman because
we need community. It's hard being an open Christian, being
an open conservative, but when you're surrounded by powerhouse women
like the ones in this room, there's no denying that
you are not the minority. You are the majority, and
(35:36):
you have people that are willing to stand with you,
shoulder to shoulder every step of the way as we
take this country.
Speaker 7 (35:44):
Back folksperson for the National Rifle Association.
Speaker 4 (35:55):
Her best selling book, Hands Off My Gun.
Speaker 7 (35:57):
Nationally syndicated radio host.
Speaker 10 (35:58):
Hosted The Dana Show Dana Lash.
Speaker 13 (36:01):
Some people want us to give up our firearms and
rely solely upon the protection of the same government that's
already failed us numerous times to keep us safe.
Speaker 8 (36:08):
A free people have the right to criticize and hold
accountable our free press. Don't give a single bit of ground. Folks.
These are your rights, and once these rights are lost,
you're not going to be able to close them back.
You have to exercise freedom to havelf freedom. So my
first thing to you is fine guns. More performative they are,
(36:31):
they actually.
Speaker 7 (36:32):
The better it works for us.
Speaker 13 (36:33):
I mean, it is the most vulnerable time for a
young woman and then you're in a locker room with
a boy. This is a dangerous precedent because you're setting
women up to ignore the woman's intuition, the women's intuition
which saves lives.
Speaker 5 (36:52):
And lady.
Speaker 8 (37:02):
Bless on that Texas, God bless America. Who, oh my gosh.
Speaker 13 (37:11):
I have to say it is really moving because I'm
in my forties now and a lot of can I
hear for some.
Speaker 8 (37:18):
Forties that is a great decade. Hey, I have to say,
I have seen so many amazing young women.
Speaker 13 (37:27):
I was talking to Alex backstage, and by the way,
who doesn't love Alex Clark.
Speaker 10 (37:32):
God bless America.
Speaker 13 (37:35):
She's absolutely one of my favorite women ever. I have
seen so many amazing young women come up through Conservatism,
and I've met so many of you and so many
others at these events. And I've seen ladies from high
school now coming to these events married with babies. And
it instead of me going, oh my gosh, I feel
(37:57):
so old, what makes me so happy is that I've
been able to witness that I have been able to
watch so many women grow up and maintain principle in
a society that tells you not to and so and
you've held steadfast. And that's what's so amazing about this.
So I'm so I'm so happy for that. Thank you
(38:17):
guys all for being here.
Speaker 8 (38:18):
Some of you may know me from radio. Some of
you may know me from TV. Some of you may
know me from.
Speaker 13 (38:23):
Second of Them in Activism and a very infamous town
hall that took place at a very difficult time in
our nation's history, the CNN town hall after Parkland. Some
of you may know me from my longtime radio sponsor,
super Beats, and I love them. But we've been together
for a long time, and I'm so grateful to be
part of this movement. And I wanted to talk with
(38:45):
you a little bit because we keep hearing about this
this I don't know what it is like Riot's Day
of riots, protests or something that's supposed to be happening tomorrow,
no Kings or whatever. I don't know that they're having
all across the nation and their self isling as revolutionaries
and as rebels and all this other stuff, and I'm
(39:05):
looking at these people and I'm like, these people aren't rebels.
Speaker 8 (39:09):
They look like they're really.
Speaker 13 (39:10):
Bad Borderlands cosplayers that got lost on their way to
Burning Man.
Speaker 8 (39:15):
And then I felt bad for the Burning Man.
Speaker 13 (39:18):
People because they're like the hippies that kind of like
want to go out and listen to really bad techno
out in the desert. And I'm like, I don't, like,
I don't begrudge them, So that's kind of mean. But
they're not revolutionaries. That's not what a revolutionary looks like.
A revolutionary goes and gets her nails done. A revolutionary
(39:40):
gets her hair done. A revolutionary wears heels or a
cute flats. A revolutionary loves her family, loves her country,
raises her children, adds to her community, serves, attends church.
Speaker 8 (39:58):
That is a revolutionary today.
Speaker 13 (40:00):
Never before have we seen how powerful it is to
be truly counter culture. I mean, I am so excited
that this room is full of women and some of
you gentlemen who get it. God love you ladies forgetting it.
Speaker 8 (40:17):
I can't tell you how important this is.
Speaker 13 (40:20):
So I want to talk a little bit five things
for a female revolutionary, because society clearly is just catching on.
I'm going to start with the second Amendment. I wrote
in my first book, women had the right to bear
arms before we had the vote. We have long been
able to defend ourselves and defend our families. And we
(40:42):
can also defend ourselves and defend our families with voting.
And I have to tell you too, I have never
before seen how quickly the investment of a vote can
come back with interest as I've seen this week. I
am a mother of children. Two of my two sons
are military age, and it can be terrifying to watch
(41:05):
some of the stuff on the news. And I am
so glad, God bless America that we won in twenty
twenty four and that Trump is in the White House.
My oldest son wants to enlist, and I begged him.
(41:25):
I said, I'm not going to tell you what to
do with your life. Please, dear God, wait until Biden's
out office. Please, That's all I'm saying. So it is,
It means it's so important. And as you as you
grow and you become a wife and mother, and you're
involved in your community. I mean, everything starts hitting you differently.
But this whole nation, women with arms. One of the
(41:47):
things that society has told you is that you are
not empowered enough to raise a child without Uncle Sam,
that you're not empowered enough to defend yourself. You need
to go to you need to be gun free, gunfree zone,
ow everything else. You need to be a statistic because
it's not that society and progressives don't trust you, it's
(42:07):
they don't respect you. They don't trust themselves, and so
they project that onto you.
Speaker 8 (42:13):
They don't respect you women.
Speaker 13 (42:15):
I'm gonna tell you, do you know the first female
led military operation in this country was led by Harriet Tubman.
She raided a faery with Union soldiers under the command
of Colonel William Montgomery and freed seven hundred slaves and
it was successful. So that's women's history with firearms. Annie Oakley.
(42:46):
Annie Oakley is one of my favorite people in American
history for two reasons. Number One, she wasn't just a
great shot, little sure shot, as she was nicknamed.
Speaker 8 (42:56):
She was feminine to the hilt in a Victorian era.
Speaker 13 (43:01):
She was gonna wear the full skirt, the full dress,
and she took umbrage with people that suggested that because
she liked to compete in shooting that she was somehow
less of a woman or less feminine. She always said
famously that she wanted women to be able to handle
guns just as naturally as they handle their babies.
Speaker 8 (43:25):
And it is an investment in your family.
Speaker 13 (43:28):
When you are a female revolutionary, you're not outsourcing your
self defense. You're not outsourcing the defense of yourself and
your loved ones.
Speaker 8 (43:37):
You're taking that power for yourself.
Speaker 13 (43:40):
Having a firearm, training and knowing how to use it
is one of the most revolutionary things that you can
do as a woman. It is your right, your legacy,
your heritage. So buy a gun, go train, teach your kids.
The next thing is family. This is perhaps the single
(44:04):
most revolutionary.
Speaker 8 (44:06):
Thing that you can do.
Speaker 13 (44:07):
Besides standing firm in your faith is fine. Your most
important decision is the man you marry.
Speaker 8 (44:15):
That was mine. I told my kids. It's Father's Day weekend,
you know. I told my boys.
Speaker 13 (44:21):
I said, this is the advice I'm going to give
you about your love life. You find a woman that
you can go to war with. You find a woman
that's got your back, and ladies, I will tell you
you find a man that you can go to war with,
and a man you can go to war four And
(44:50):
I made a great choice. It's Father's Day weekend, so
I got to feel my husband and I will celebrate
twenty five years this year. Love is more than just
those overtures, those big grand gestures. Love is in the
mundane and it's in the hard stuff. And I can
(45:13):
say without hesitation that the one person who has had
my back most in this world even more so, God
love you, mom. I know you're watching even more so
than my own mom.
Speaker 8 (45:25):
It's my husband.
Speaker 13 (45:27):
You might have seen him on social media sometimes he's
more loud mouthed than I am. But we've been through
everything together and I'm gonna tell you it's the little
things in life when you make those choices. I Uh,
several years ago, I had to have surgery. I had
a very I'd had major abdominal surgery. I had a
very serious issue that thank god it was benign. But
(45:49):
we went through a really scary year and I had
to know what was what it was going to look
like on the other side of it, if I was
going to be here on the other side of it.
And I remember after I woke from anesthesia and my
first child that I had, I didn't have an epidural,
and I regret that, but I didn't.
Speaker 8 (46:07):
I'm sorry, ladies, those of you who do. God bless you.
My grandmother looked at me and was like, girl, are
you stupid?
Speaker 10 (46:12):
Like I don't.
Speaker 8 (46:14):
But it was the most painful thing I've ever recovered from.
Speaker 13 (46:16):
And my husband was there with me in recovery, making
sure I could get to the restroom, making sure that
my clothes were comfortable, that I had ice water. I
like didn't even have to ask. It was like he
read my mind and being there for me, and I
know I would do the same.
Speaker 8 (46:31):
Thing for him. And that is commitment. Love is not
without comment. Commitment is not.
Speaker 13 (46:39):
Without love, and society fails to talk about this at
all whatsoever.
Speaker 8 (46:44):
That's why we see the divorce rate as it is. However,
with younger generations that is declining huge.
Speaker 13 (46:57):
Don't let it be lost in you that it's Father's
Day weekend. Dead the men who are here. God love
the men who are here, and God love the men
who I'll put this on those men are serving you,
ladies on Father's Day weekend.
Speaker 8 (47:11):
They are serving you.
Speaker 13 (47:13):
God love them. That is great, godly love. But I always,
you know, I think back and I'm gonna come back
to this. The Proverbs thirty one woman. One of the
lines that stood out to me is, you know her
husband is respected at the city gate.
Speaker 8 (47:28):
It's finding a man that you can go to war
with it, you can go to war four and that
commands that respect. That's power. And look around at some
of the stuff that society teaches us.
Speaker 13 (47:39):
My gosh, like some of the programming and some of
the people that are lifted up and made famous.
Speaker 8 (47:46):
It's sad to me.
Speaker 13 (47:47):
Family is so incredibly important. I'm so excited to see
that these younger generations, your generation.
Speaker 8 (47:53):
I'm baby gen X, so we got the millennials.
Speaker 13 (47:57):
My husband keeps trying to argue that I'm an elderly millennial,
and that's our big fight. He's not gatekeeping that, but
I'm The divorce rates are declining. Faith practice of faith
is increasing. I've never been more encouraged. Also in your work,
I've seen this become a big debate online, the whole
(48:20):
traad thing and if women should work. So I'm just
gonna rip the hair out of that right now. Some
women are called some women aren't. Some women want to
stay home. I'll tell you this, ladies, you cannot have
it all at the same time. Something will suffer. When
my husband and I first married, I made the varied
(48:42):
voice as a college educated woman to stay home with
my children. I did not want, and I was raised
by a single mom who had to rely on daycare.
So this is not an indignation of those choices. But
I wanted to stay home. I wanted to raise my kids.
I wanted to be the biggest influence in those children's lives,
me and our ideals. And then as they got older,
(49:05):
we homeschooled them. For a while, I was involved involved
in tea party activism. I helped found the Tea Party,
the modern day Tea Party that first rally that we had.
My kids had a very weird upbringing because they were
raised in church and also on the road at different rallies,
and they had like the Declaration of Independence memorized, and
they all this other and they're hardcore Christian conservatives. Now
(49:27):
I'm sure that's a big shock, but they grew up
seeing all of this play out in real time. And
then as they as we moved down here to Texas
and they attended a Christian school, it became obvious that
there was a certain pathway that God had intended for me.
I wanted to do certain things, and God closed every
(49:49):
door but one, so I listened. I didn't actually want
to come and do any of this. I didn't want
to be on radio, and I didn't want to be
on TV.
Speaker 8 (49:56):
I was a writer. I can't tell you how many
times I fought it.