Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:19):
The Charlie Kirk Show starts.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Now, why do you think other countries aren't judge revenue
strict immigration policy?
Speaker 3 (00:26):
Was born as a man and now I'm a woman.
Speaker 4 (00:28):
What do you think the biggest threat is to the
United States currently?
Speaker 5 (00:31):
There's a reason that a lot of the black community
doesn't have a father, and it's because of systemic racism.
Speaker 6 (00:36):
America is the only country where even those who hate
it refused to leave. That's how you know you live
in a great country. It's time that we start talking
to the next generation, not talking down to the next generation.
Speaker 7 (00:50):
And that's what we're doing.
Speaker 4 (00:58):
Here's the reality of the situation. There's one person we're
supposed to be listening to. That's President Trump and what
the American people mandated, which is what we're doing. People
need to be accountable. You need to be able to
answer the question. If you couldn't answer it yesterday.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
You have till today.
Speaker 4 (01:11):
But the reality is accountability is real.
Speaker 8 (01:15):
I can't not.
Speaker 4 (01:16):
Show up to work every day. I have to answer
to the president, and by answering to the President, I
answer to the American people.
Speaker 3 (01:22):
It's very simple.
Speaker 4 (01:23):
Would you want to pay somebody to do a job
and they don't show up to work. I don't think so.
I could name five things five bullets in about five
minutes of me coming into the office every day. If
you struggle to do that for a week, I have
no there's no excuse for that. Now you can have
an extra day to answer it, but you better be
able to answer it.
Speaker 5 (01:40):
I think what we see on stage with Joe Biden
Jay is very clearly a cognitive decline. That's what I'm
referring to. It makes me uncomfortable age.
Speaker 7 (01:50):
I think it was so amazing.
Speaker 5 (01:51):
It's so amazing to me that and try and figure
out an answer cognitive decline.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
You're trying to.
Speaker 5 (01:56):
Tell me that what I was suggesting was I think stutter.
Speaker 7 (02:01):
Yeah, I think you were mocking a stutter.
Speaker 6 (02:02):
And I think you have absolutely no standing to diagnose
somebody's cognitive decline.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
Is one of the things a lot of people are wondering,
because you said last week that you have the Epstein
files on your desk, is when can we see them
and what's taking so long to release them?
Speaker 9 (02:16):
I do Jesse, there are well over this will make
you sick two hundred victims two hundred, so we have
well over over two hundred and fifty actually, so we
have to make sure that their identity is protected and
their personal information. But other than that, I think tomorrow
(02:37):
you know, the personal information of victims. Other than that,
I think tomorrow Jesse breaking news. Right now you're going
to see some Epstein information being released by my office.
Speaker 10 (02:48):
For sagration, if they will over our man right.
Speaker 11 (02:51):
Thank you very much, Thank you much.
Speaker 10 (02:52):
Pray m'ch pray. Father, We thank you for this.
Speaker 12 (02:56):
Awesome privileged father, to be in your presence. God, thank
you that you've allowed us to see this day. The
Bible says that your mercies are new every morning. And Father, God,
would give you the glory and the honor, Father God,
as we serve the people of this country and every
prospective agency, every.
Speaker 10 (03:13):
Job that we have.
Speaker 12 (03:14):
Father, we would humble ourselves before you, and we would
lead in a manner that you've called us to lead
and to serve.
Speaker 8 (03:20):
Father.
Speaker 12 (03:20):
The Bible says, the blessed is a nation whose God
is the Lord. Will Father, we today honor you, the
Lord God. Today in our meeting, we pray to you
will be glorified in our conversation. And Jesus, I mean
there's a condition and tournament play and not talk about
the next step until you're claimber one in front of it.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
I'm sure going to the state finals is beyond.
Speaker 10 (03:44):
Your wildest dream, so let's just keep it right there
Forget about the crowds, the size of.
Speaker 12 (03:52):
The school, their fancy uniforms, and remember.
Speaker 10 (03:56):
What got you here.
Speaker 12 (03:59):
Focus on the fundamentals we've gone over time and time again,
and most important, don't get caught.
Speaker 10 (04:04):
Up thinking about winning or losing this game.
Speaker 13 (04:08):
If you put your effort and concentration into playing to your.
Speaker 14 (04:10):
Potential to be the best that you can be, I
don't care what the scoreboard says at the end of
the game.
Speaker 7 (04:15):
In my book, we're going to be winners.
Speaker 10 (04:20):
Okay, all right.
Speaker 12 (04:30):
Let's go.
Speaker 10 (04:32):
Let's go. Let me hear.
Speaker 15 (05:02):
Every day there is a battle for your mind, raging
information coming from every angle, but the will to the sea.
Speaker 7 (05:09):
I fear not.
Speaker 15 (05:10):
You found the place for truth, the voice which generation
that still has the will to believe in the greatest
country in the history of the world. This is the
Charlie Kirk Show. Fuck a lot, here we go.
Speaker 6 (05:26):
Okay, everybody, Radio stations across the country honored with you.
We are back in the chair today. Live from beautiful Gainesville, Florida.
I am just steps away from the University of Florida.
Speaker 7 (05:39):
I would say, go Gators, but I don't believe it.
Speaker 6 (05:41):
So best of luck, Gators, I should say, not that
we got anything to worry about. Haven't been good in
about twenty years. Ah, be more fair, it's like fifteen years.
There's lots of cover today. Thank you Andrew for filling
in yesterday. We have an exciting news day to go through.
As soon as I'm done, I'm going to go talk
(06:02):
to college kids for about two or three hours and
the clips are going to go very, very viral. There's
the story that we covered last week, and we had
Riley Gaines at Freedom Knight in America on Tuesday evening
that many of you know where President Donald Trump signed
the executive Order forbidding men from playing in women's sports.
(06:24):
Of course, the governor of Maine then got in a
little bit of a debate with President Trump at the
Governor's dinner and the Governor's luncheon. I should say saying, oh,
we'll see you in court. We're going to We're going
to fight you in the court to make sure that
men can participate in female sports. Now that is a
(06:45):
ninety ten issue, and you must wonder, how is it
that people get to the conclusion that men can give birth,
that men and women are basically the same, that men
should be able to compete in female sports. And it's
very simple. If people do not believe in God, they
will believe in anything, and man will do whatever is
(07:06):
right in his own eyes. Woe to those who call
good evil and evil good. As the scriptures say, if
you do not believe in a transcendent being, an almighty God,
divine providence, eternal power, then you're gonna have to fill
that void with something, and that void is postmodernist secular humanism.
(07:30):
Over the last couple of years we have talked about
how leftist ideology tries to fill an existential void. And
here on screen you see President Donald Trump jousting with
the governor of Maine. And it's directly tied together because
if you go look at the ten least religious states
in the country, all but one are deep blue states.
(07:54):
The least religious state in the country is Vermont, second
is main she's representing her, Third is New Hampshire. Fourth
is Massachusetts.
Speaker 7 (08:04):
Let me stop.
Speaker 6 (08:04):
That means that the four of the least religious states
in the country are all where the country was founded
by Christian pastors, covenentals, Covenanters, Presbyterians, Episcopalians. Four out of
(08:24):
ten of the least religious are all in that northeast quadrant.
It's amazing Number five, Washington, number six, Oregon, number seven, Alaska,
so that is the outlier. Number eight, Hawaii, nine, Rhode Island, ten, Colorado.
All of them Vermont two Democrat senators, Maine two Democrat senators,
(08:46):
New Hampshire to Democrat senators, Massachusetts, two Democrat senators, Washington, Oregon,
Alaska is the outlier, but you got Murkowski, who's her
own thing. Hawaii, Rhode Island, and Colorado. The ten most
religious states in the country Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Louisiana, Arkansas,
South Carolina, West Virginia, Georgia.
Speaker 7 (09:07):
Oklahoma, and North Carolina.
Speaker 6 (09:12):
If you take a step back, you realize that the
craziest ideas, the ones that are an affront to the
natural law and affront to our senses, come from the
most secular states. There has been a belief over the
last couple of years that America is becoming less churched,
(09:32):
and it is inevitable and there is nothing we can
do about it. One of the most promising pieces of
news to tie all of this together is a Pere
Research study the New York Times covered yesterday that shows
that America has actually leveled off and is becoming slightly
more religious. Pure Research has completed a very large survey
(09:54):
of American religious beliefs, and the results are fascinating. It's
one nation under God. American have stopped leaving Christianity and
the country is overwhelmingly spiritual. A new report has found
this is the best news that I can share post
Donald Trump's election in November. This is leading indicator that
is deeper than just politics. It's about meaning and purpose.
(10:18):
This is about stopping the spiritual bleeding that we have
been living through. America used to be overwhelming almost unanimously Christian,
even as recently as nineteen ninety more than ninety percent
of Americans identified as Christian, but it's been in decline
for a long time. From two thousand and seven to
the early twenty twenties, the sharef of Americans calling themselves
(10:39):
Christian fell from seventy eight percent to just sixty percent,
a drop of more than one percent.
Speaker 7 (10:46):
A year.
Speaker 6 (10:48):
Well, the decline is stopped, and it may have even
gone into reverse. The share of Americans who are Christian
has stabilized at about sixty three percent. The sharef of
Americans who pay say a daily has consistently been between
forty four and forty six percent since twenty twenty one.
In the new ROLS, forty four percent say they pray
(11:08):
at least one once a day. Similarly, since twenty twenty,
the percentage of US adults who say they attend religious
service monthly has hovered in the low thirties. This is
bad news for the Marxist. This chart right there, let
me show you since two thousand and seven, America is
becoming more secular, more secular, more secular. We are more religious,
(11:29):
according to this survey by the Peer Research Center, than
we were after twenty twenty. We have reversed the course
we flatlined. Now we are not seeing yet the revival
spike that we need. But the American body politic, the
American people are searching for something. They are living through
Victor Frankel's man search for meaning. They are looking for that.
(11:50):
They're looking for a purpose for being. They're looking to
the heavens. They want to go back to their roots,
and that chart right there is he's so fascinating. I
have to continue. By the way, those of you listening
on podcasting or on radio, we're gonna put this on
Charliekirk dot com. Essentially, it shows that America tried a
(12:10):
steep downturn post twenty twenty to become more secular, and
that has now been reversed. I think that's a perfect
picture of our politics as well. We looked over the
ABYSS and we saw them transing our kids, and we
saw white people being blamed for their existence, and we
saw our kids being medically kidnapped. We looked over the
(12:32):
ABYSS and we saw DEI and CRT. We saw an
open border. We saw suicide widespread, and alcohol addiction and
drug addiction, and we said, we don't want that. We're
going back to our roots, and we are finding our
way back home.
Speaker 7 (12:51):
Yesterday.
Speaker 6 (12:52):
And it's fitting because it ties all of this together.
At President Trump's first cabinet meeting, what is the first
thing he did? The first thing that President Trump did
was asked the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, a
great man who's also been a guest on this program,
to lead the room in prayer. What you are seeing
(13:16):
is a battle of those that believe that there is
a God and people that believe that they are God.
What you saw at the cabinet meeting was President Donald Trump,
who gets called as being egotistical and narcissistic and he's
the center of the universe, saying no, actually, there is
a God and we are not him. In fact, he says,
(13:37):
let's have Scott lead us in grace, and the whole room,
with the cameras rolling and hundreds of millions of people
worldwide watching, took a moment to humble themselves before Almighty God,
consistent with the national trend, and we are seeing that
distinction of good versus evil. We are bringing God back
(14:03):
into our government. And as we are seeing the battle
between those that wants to say that men can play
in female sports and those that want to say they
want to be able to chemically castrate their kids. They
believe that because they do not believe in a higher purpose,
and they do not believe in a higher power. And
if we are serious about saving our country, it is
the spiritual battle that is fundamental, first and foremost. Relieffactor
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Factor dot com. Email me directly Freedom at Charliekirk dot
com and subscribe to our podcast. Being a nation under God,
(15:26):
make sure we are not a nation under tyrannical government.
The Marxists have always said they want to eliminate three things,
the family, people's connection to faith or God, and private property.
President Donald Trump is restoring all three. Those three things
are the bedrock. They are a foundation of a civil
and free society. You cannot have a free society of
those three things. I would add free speech as a four.
(15:49):
Stay right there, less than spirited.
Speaker 11 (15:54):
You're listening to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 7 (15:58):
Okay, everybody, welcome back.
Speaker 6 (16:00):
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Speaker 7 (17:31):
This is profound.
Speaker 6 (17:32):
This is President Trump's first cabinet meeting, his first gathering
of his team. And let me just say, what an
all star cabinet that he has assembled. You look at
this cabinet, you say, huh, America is back.
Speaker 7 (17:44):
And it's not just the headline gatherers.
Speaker 6 (17:46):
It's not just the hag sets, it's not just the bessence,
It's not.
Speaker 7 (17:50):
Just the Marco Rubios who's doing amazing.
Speaker 6 (17:52):
By the way, it's not just those, it's the ones
that get less attention but deserve attention. Secretary of Transportation Duffy,
You've got Doug Bergham running all the energy stuff. He's
doing a great job.
Speaker 3 (18:03):
There.
Speaker 6 (18:03):
You've got Pam Bondi at DJ You' of course got
Tulsea Gabbert, Bobby Kennedy. Looking at that room was a manifestation,
was a physical embodiment of the political transformation that we
helped make possible last November, and that we are continuing
every single day. We had Maha, we had stopped the wars,
we had no more law fair. What you saw in
(18:24):
that room, can we get a picture of the cabinet room?
Was every campaign political slogan around the table, because it
wasn't just slogans, that is slogans into practice. Let me
show you right there, that's Mark Ruby, a piece through strength.
That is Pete Hegseth right there, which is no more
stupid wars and get woke out of our military. That
(18:44):
is Steve Whitcoff right there behind him, which is we
stand with Israel. I could point to every single person
in that room, and that is a promises made, promises
kept moment, every single person in that room. Bobby Kennedy,
make America healthy again. Howard Lutnick, We're gonna do tariffs
on our adversaries. Christy Noum, massive deportation force. Every single
(19:06):
person is there to fulfill a promise that President Trump
made on the campaign trail. Every single person Russ vote.
We're gonna stop the regulatory Agency. Lenna McMahon, We're going
to abolish the Department of Education. You got Elon Musk
covering above there, which is we're gonna do dose. We're
gonna cut the waste. We're gonna go out to the fourth,
fourth branch of government. You got jd Vance there, new
(19:28):
generation of leadership who's been doing an amazing rock star job.
And it would have been really easy. The first thing
to do is talk about how great of a job
everyone is going to I want you to understand the
humility here, the spiritual humility that we must submit and
repent to an almighty God. Understand it would have been
very easy to say, hey, aren't we doing the greatest
job ever. But now the first thing that Trump two
(19:50):
point zero wants to do. The first thing is to
humble themselves before our creator. You think Joe Biden would
ever do this? You think Joe the first thing that
Joe Biden would do is say that we are going
to acknowledge the Almighty. Maybe he did it his first
cabinet meeting and I missed it. I want you to
listen carefully. This is housing an urban development, housing an
(20:13):
urban development. Secretary Scott Turner leading the nation in prayer,
the world in prayer because as America puts God first,
the world to put God first, and we have cold
and stabilized the descent into secularism, and we need to
go back into believing that there is a God and
we are not him. This is a powerful, powerful moment.
(20:37):
Watch the world's most powerful room. This is the world's
most powerful room. Submit before their creator. Play cut two
two eight.
Speaker 10 (20:46):
Sage Grayson to say, one of our men, right, thank
you very much.
Speaker 12 (20:50):
Thank you.
Speaker 10 (20:51):
Let's prayer.
Speaker 12 (20:52):
Father, We thank you for this awesome, privileged father, to
be in your presence. Y'd thank you that you've allowed
us to see this day. The Bible says that's our
mercies are new every morning, and Father God would give
you the glory and the honor. Father God, as we
serve the people of this country in every prospective agency,
every job that we have, Father, we would humble ourselves
(21:14):
before you, and we would lead in a manner that
You've called us to lead. And to sir Father, the
Bible says the blessed is a nation whose God is
the Lord will Father. We today honor you and Lord God.
Today in our meeting, we pray to you would be
glorified in our conversation in Jesus' name.
Speaker 10 (21:29):
Amen.
Speaker 6 (21:32):
While the left bend's in knee before race, hate and
trans delusion, Trump and his team are kneeling before the
creator of the universe. The framers would be so proud
to see this, the framers of this country, Hamilton Madison, J.
Speaker 7 (21:47):
Washington.
Speaker 6 (21:50):
They would see that in the year of twenty twenty five,
we are opening a cabinet meeting, still submitting to God's grace.
We don't kneel over pride flags, but we will submit
to God. We will point the nation back to spiritual purposes.
Rome recovered from a near collapse after a spiritual revival.
(22:10):
Britain became a global superpower after a spiritual revival. The
American Revolution was led by a revival by Jonathan Edwards
by George Whitfield, by Jonathan Mayhew. It was the first
Great Reformation, and I just love seeing this that our
(22:33):
leaders that are in control of the nuclear arsenal that
could invade a nation whenever they want, the first thing
they do is to center themselves and orient themselves. And
let that be a lesson to all of us, is
to start all important things in prayer. First, in prayer,
as it says in the scriptures, to bring it before
the Lord. And you could imagine the secular, nasty, gremlin
(22:54):
filled media.
Speaker 7 (22:55):
Oh they're praying.
Speaker 6 (22:56):
Yeah, we are praying actually unapologetically, because we all know
that Donald Trump is only breathing and is only able
to be at that stage on that at that cabinet
meeting because a miracle happened on July thirteenth in Butler, Pennsylvania,
Elena Habba joined to start.
Speaker 8 (23:21):
Welcome back to this Real America's Voice news break. I'm
Terrence Bates, so good to have you along for the ride.
We're keeping an eye on another busy day at the
White House. I can tell you that Keir Starmer, the
UK's Prime Minister, is set to meet with President Trump
any moment now. Here's a live shot from outside the
White House where we're expecting the Prime Minister to arrive.
You see it there, the color guard on hand and
(23:43):
everything in place. We expect Prime Minister Starmer to arrive
here again in short order. The moment that happens, we
will take you there live and show you his arrival.
In the meantime, we are also awaiting Attorney General Pam
Bondi's release of the flight logs from Jeffrey Epstein's plane,
expected to make those public any moment now. We of course,
will also be monitoring that particular story. I can tell
(24:06):
you that she talked about this last night, and here's
what she had to say is she is dotting the
t's or dotting the eyes excuse me, and crossing the
t's when it comes to this release.
Speaker 9 (24:15):
There are well over this will make you sick, two
hundred victims.
Speaker 16 (24:21):
Two hundred, so.
Speaker 9 (24:23):
We have well over two hundred and fifty actually, so
we have to make sure that their identity is protected.
A lot of flight logs, a lot of names, a
lot of information, but pretty sick what that man did.
Speaker 8 (24:38):
Republican lawmakers have been pushing the new Attorney General to
release documents related to the Epstein case. President Trump has
also directed her to make that information public. As I
mentioned at the top, President Trump preparing to meet with
the UK's Prime Minister at the White House. Our Brian Glynn,
chief White House Correspondent, is at the White House anticipating
the arrival of the Prime Minister here. Starmer is the
(25:01):
Prime Minister there of the UK. So, Brian, what are
you expecting the conversation between the two to focus on today?
Speaker 17 (25:09):
Hey, Terrence, Well, just set the scene real quickly. We
have a color guard behind me. Let me step aside
as it looks like the Prime Minister is making his
way onto the grounds here at the White House. I
anticipate conversation heavily going on Ukraine and some of the
issues as far as providing security back up after this
kind of ceasefire and this ending of the war. Let
(25:31):
me just let you listen in real quickly as Prime
Minister Starmer makes your way here at the White House,
I'll step aside. We may have to pivot slightly. What
you're seeing now that is a press fan for the
Prime minister staffers. Well, then we'll get out of this,
out of that vehicle and make their way into the
(25:51):
West wing. I don't know if Tony, there's a way
we can even pivot this camera, if we can move
it out, maybe get you a better shot. The Prime
Minister should be exiting that lead vehicle here momentarily surrounded
by press. Now he's going to go into a brief,
short meeting with the President, and then a little bit
(26:12):
later this afternoon they're going to meet in the Oval
Office for just a short meeting and then a formal
meeting former press conference in the East Room that is
scheduled for two o'clock here local time. Of course, we'll
have that for you right here in real America's voice
as it has been, if you will, a conveyor belt
(26:32):
of world leaders here at the White House as we
come up on tomorrow, we have Vladimir's Alensky schedule to
make an appearance here at the White House to meet
with President Trump in regards to the minerals agreement. And
we'll see how that plays out and how the information
today might affect those activities tomorrow, Terrence. But always a
(26:55):
busy day here at the White House.
Speaker 8 (26:58):
Yeah, and we just saw the video there beneath you, Bryan,
of President Trump and the Prime minister ex exchanges some
pleasantries before entering the White House. I think it's important
to note that this is very likely the first meeting,
and please confirm this for me. This is the first
meeting between these two leaders. Starmer, of course, just voted
in the office in July, so he hasn't even been
on the job for an entire year, replacing Sunny Reshak,
(27:21):
who of course many people know as the former Prime
Minister now of the UK.
Speaker 17 (27:25):
Yeah, I think you're correct on that. This is the
first time obviously he has been here, and I think
this is the first time I believe they have met
in person. I know, yeah, I almost think that would
be confirmed, but I'll double check on that.
Speaker 7 (27:40):
But as you can.
Speaker 17 (27:40):
Imagine, sizeable presence of media here, we always see that
in terms of when foreign dignitaries come, they do bring
a sizeable press team with them. Obviously, with everything that's
going on in the world right now and all the
issues got tariffs as well, I mean President Trump rolled
out the tarriffs today and said, hey, we're going to
(28:01):
put another ten percent on China and twenty the tariffs
back on Canada in Mexico. Going back into fact, on
March fourth, so so much involved right now, so many issues.
This is a very busy time, and we've seen President
Trump just in a matter of what forty days or so,
really show a lot of world leadership in terms of
(28:24):
bringing these world leaders together to address the issues of
today and then tomorrow. I mean today, obviously it's about Ukraine,
it's about ending the war and really kind of a
struggle of providing a backup security for Ukraine when this
(28:44):
all ends, and of course Prime Minister is support of that,
and President Trump does not want to commit to that
yet and has not committed to that yet, but obviously
they'll be talking about it today.
Speaker 8 (28:55):
Brian, fifteen to twenty seconds. Does this feel like people
are showing up to the ring for lack of a
better word, Yeah.
Speaker 17 (29:04):
Yeah, that's yes. In less than twenty seconds, I can
do that. That's exactly what it is. At least that's
what appears to me. And we saw Macron do it
and everyone else has done it before him, so yeah.
Speaker 8 (29:19):
That's what I pree. Brian Glenn, our chief White House
will correspondent reporting for us from the White House. We'll
check in with you a little bit later on as well.
Brian appreciate it. All right, folks, let's get you back
to the Charlie kirkshell.
Speaker 1 (29:29):
Now this has been a live special report. We now
join our programming already in progress cabinet meeting.
Speaker 4 (29:36):
If people want to ask Elon questions, if people want
to slam Elon, he'll bring him into the cabinet. He'll
have him sit there and he'll tell him he needs
to address the questions from the president. He did that,
and he also made it clear that the President is
the one directing these initiatives, and the American people, if
you look at his approval ratings, they love it.
Speaker 3 (29:54):
Transparency is what we always do.
Speaker 4 (29:56):
I've been instructed by the President to answer as many
questions as possible. Well, do as many shows come on
talk to you, get as much reach to Americans so
that they can ask us from the White House what
is going on?
Speaker 3 (30:09):
And I'll answer those questions.
Speaker 7 (30:13):
I love that. I want to play a piece of
tape here.
Speaker 6 (30:15):
It's play cut two twenty where you are talking about
the five points from dose.
Speaker 7 (30:21):
Let's go to two twenty.
Speaker 16 (30:22):
You have clarify for federal workers.
Speaker 3 (30:25):
Who might be confused to listen to you.
Speaker 5 (30:26):
Since Elon Musk's post is different from what OPM said.
Speaker 4 (30:30):
Hell, I don't think it's Look, here's the reality of
the situation.
Speaker 3 (30:34):
There's one person we're supposed to be listening to.
Speaker 4 (30:35):
That's President Trump and what the American people mandated, which
is what we're doing. People need to be accountable. You
need to be able to answer the question. If you
couldn't answer yesterday, you have till today. But the reality is,
the accountability is real.
Speaker 8 (30:49):
I can't not.
Speaker 3 (30:50):
Show up to work every day.
Speaker 4 (30:51):
I have to answer to the President, and by answering
to the President, I answer to the American people. It's
very simple. Would you want to pay somebody to do
a job and they don't show up to work? I
don't think so. I can name five things, five bullets
in about five minutes of me coming into the office
every day. If you struggle to do that for a week,
there's no excuse for that. Now you can have an
extra day to answer it, but you better be able
(31:13):
to answer it.
Speaker 7 (31:16):
Elena, elaborate, please.
Speaker 4 (31:21):
Oh I'm a savage sometimes. Look I am so frustrated
with why this is outrageous, Why this is such a
crazy thing, Charlie. I mean, imagine you and I work
hard right, we go to work, you don't even have
to answer to anybody, and you work hard because you're dedicated,
because you have ethics, because you have work ethics, something
that is lacking unfortunately. But imagine then taking taxpayer dollars,
(31:45):
your money, my money, American dollars, giving it to the government,
saying hire who you need to run our country and
make sure we are better, make sure we are safe,
and then they don't show up to work, and then
in some instances they don't go take another and double dip.
Imagine a world where we just allow that anybody that
knows President Trump or can see President Trump would not
(32:08):
be surprised by this mandate. You got to show up
to work, You got to work hard for the American people.
Speaker 3 (32:13):
And there is no.
Speaker 4 (32:14):
Better leader an example than that than President Trump.
Speaker 3 (32:16):
So I think I was in that moment.
Speaker 4 (32:19):
Just shocked by the stupidity of the questions that I
was being asked. You know, how about there are they
going to get fired? Well, isn't that basic knowledge? If
you don't do your job, if you aren't answering emails,
and if you can't articulate what it is that you do,
why should American people pay you.
Speaker 6 (32:40):
It is simple to us, but the federal government seems
to exist amongst different rules. Last night, three activist judges
put a national injunction on foreign aid, federal grants and
limiting refugees. And late last night scotus blocked a federal
judge from forcing two billion dollars in foreign aid payments.
Walk our audience through the status of the courts trying
(33:04):
to intervene and micro manage this administration.
Speaker 3 (33:08):
Yeah, that's a great way to describe it.
Speaker 4 (33:10):
We I think our last count with sixty five lawsuits
of people coming after initiatives by this administration. This is
the old tale of the Democrat Party. Unfortunately they didn't
get the memo that this doesn't work. American people get frustrated,
and if you look at the polling numbers, they literally
say that the American people like what we're doing. They
like doj they like the cuts, they like the transparency.
(33:30):
So these judges, you know, initially, what they do is
they try and get a temporary restraining order. It's called
to stop whatever actions the President has dictated need to happen,
executive orders and such. And eventually we have seen time
and time again since we've been here, that we win,
we get it up to another level, it gets reversed,
they appeal and now, in this instance, the Supreme Court,
(33:52):
which says a lot, because the Supreme Court takes cases infrequently,
they take the cases.
Speaker 3 (33:57):
That they feel are very important.
Speaker 4 (33:59):
They're busy, and they're deciding major constitutional issues, major American
issues that will always affect our country.
Speaker 3 (34:09):
Those are historic decisions.
Speaker 4 (34:10):
And last night, very late in the wee hours, they
said nope, sorry, you cannot say that. They cannot do it.
And I think this is going to be the first
of many. We know birthright citizenship is another issue that'll
probably end up with Scotus. And that's what we have
ethical judges for now. That doesn't mean they all are,
that doesn't mean they aren't politically motivated on the lower levels,
(34:30):
and that doesn't mean that you know, I know what
they do these ags and DA's I've seen it firsthand
for years. As you know, they pick judges, they select venues,
they forum shop, and then they file things so that
they can go and attack Trump and it's frankly not working.
Speaker 6 (34:49):
So yeah, I want to reiterate this though the current
left's plan is to overwhelm the Supreme Court workload issue
five hundred injunctions and Scotis can't quit undo all of them.
This is a theme that we've seen though of this
out of control judiciary in Brazil, Romania, Israel, and so
(35:10):
is the plan to escalate all of this to the
Supreme Court. You are a lawyer to walk me through it, please.
Speaker 4 (35:18):
Absolutely, we will take it as far as we need
to go. And it's unfortunately the reality is that they're
making us waste American taxpayer resources on this. But we
will take it, Charlie, as far as.
Speaker 3 (35:29):
We need to go.
Speaker 4 (35:30):
If that means Scotus, that means Scotus. We are not
going to quit and we are not going to stop fighting.
What we are doing is absolutely in the president's domain
in his job description. He is running the country and
he is doing so amazingly, and we have to continue
to fight any roadblock that they put in front of us,
and we will and we are committed to it. I
sit right next to White House Council's office.
Speaker 3 (35:52):
I speak with DOJ daily.
Speaker 4 (35:54):
You know, we are literally going to continue to a
tackle every single thing that they do.
Speaker 3 (36:00):
And Pam is the best person to leave that charge.
Speaker 6 (36:05):
So Elena, the rapid pace is making people have a
little bit of whiplash. Democrats can't even remember all the
things they're supposed to be mad about because Trump and
the team is moving so quickly.
Speaker 7 (36:16):
Finally the team was assembled.
Speaker 6 (36:18):
Can you tell us any other takeaways from the cabinet
meeting yesterday, this historic assembly of fighters and patriots in
President Trump's first cabinet meeting.
Speaker 4 (36:29):
Yeah, let me tell you something that I haven't shared,
which is when the cameras left the room. When the
camera's left the room, the cabinet sat and all discussed
what items they have been doing, briefed the president as
a cabinet does, and the President was engaged. He was
asking questions, He asked for action, He asked for swift action.
(36:49):
But there was not a one thing that was not turned.
There was not one thing that he forgot. There was
not one question he didn't ask from a cabinet member
that he needed to know so that he could make
sure we were on pace to do things the way
he wants to do it, but more importantly, to get
the American people results, and more importantly, Charlie, this is
what I love about this administration.
Speaker 3 (37:08):
There was support.
Speaker 4 (37:10):
If one cabinet member said they were working on something.
Another said, oh, I think I can help because I
know about this, And there was coordination and everybody was
giving their thoughts and being respectful and supportive.
Speaker 3 (37:20):
There was no knifing, there was no sleepy Joe.
Speaker 4 (37:23):
It was truly the way our republic is supposed to work.
Speaker 6 (37:29):
Elena, thank you so much for your great work. I
hope to see you on White House grounds soon. We
have your back one hundred percent. Any final thoughts for
our audience thirty seconds.
Speaker 4 (37:40):
I just think that you should be so proud and
know that whatever you see in the news is just
a minuscule amount of what we're doing. We are really
fighting hard for you, and we are going to continue
to do so.
Speaker 3 (37:50):
There's not a day we will.
Speaker 7 (37:53):
Thank you.
Speaker 6 (37:53):
Elena, talk too soon. God bless you, Thank you, Thank you, Charlie,
God bless Legacy box dot com. Slash Kirk is really great.
We use it in our family and you should too.
Speaker 7 (38:04):
Oh.
Speaker 6 (38:04):
Look, today, we're constantly taking photos and videos to remember
our favorite moments. But what about those captured before the smartphone?
What about the memories tucked away on aging vhf's tapes,
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fading away with time, vulnerable to things like heat, moisture,
and mold. But fear not, there's a solution to safeguard
(38:27):
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(38:47):
We've used it in our family to digitize old football memories,
basketball memories, you name it. Don't let your childhood fade
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(39:08):
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That is legacybox dot com slash k i r k.
It is a great way to be able to make
permanent what is temporary all of the photos you guys
got around all of this stuff. Maybe you had family
members serve in World War Two and you have it
(39:29):
on film reels, or you have it on physically printed
booklets that could all go away in a fire, in
a flood, in moving. So go to legacybox dot com
slash Kirk. That is legacybox dot com slash Kirk. Jake
Tapper is out with a new book. We'll be right back.
Speaker 7 (39:52):
In the CDC.
Speaker 11 (39:53):
Yeah, it may not be saying much.
Speaker 16 (39:55):
It's the Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 6 (39:58):
Okay, everybody, we are here on campus today. Right when
we are done, we walk over to the University of Florida.
Let's play cut twenty three place.
Speaker 2 (40:06):
Why do you think other countries aren't judged revenue strict
immigration policy.
Speaker 3 (40:10):
I was born as a man and now I'm a woman.
Speaker 18 (40:12):
What do you think the biggest threat is to the
United States currently?
Speaker 7 (40:16):
There's a reason that.
Speaker 19 (40:17):
A lot of the black community doesn't have a father,
and it's because of systemic racism.
Speaker 6 (40:21):
America is the only country where even those who hate
it refuse to leave. That's how you know you live
in a great country. It's time that we start talking
to the next generation, not talking down to the next generation.
Speaker 7 (40:34):
And that's what we're doing.
Speaker 6 (40:46):
Americancomeback tour dot com. That is Americancomeback Tour dot com.
We are traveling the country, having a great time. Excited
to see so many of you on the road here
that is Americancomeback tour dot com. I love hearing from
you Freedom at Charliekirk dot com. And when you subscribe
to our podcast, you can get all of our episodes
on demand, all of our conversations. We'll be right back. Okay, everybody,
(41:28):
welcome back. The Herzog Foundation is amazing. For years I
have been talking about our nation's public schools and how
they've been captured by progressive ideologies. They teach things that
directly contract the values of millions of Americans families, and
that's especially true if you are a Christian family.
Speaker 7 (41:44):
For those of you worried.
Speaker 6 (41:45):
About the best educational path for your kids and grandkids,
I'm pleased to announce our new partnership with the Herzog Foundation.
We work with them at Turning Point Academy. Hutson the
team do a great job. They are the trusted source
on American K through twelve education. From their online publication
The Lion to their new podcast, Making the Leap, the
Herzog Foundation offers a wide range of advice and information
(42:08):
for Christian parents to make the best education decision, go
to Herzog Foundation dot com. That is the Herzog Foundation
dot com. Herzog Foundation dot com. Portions of our program
are brought to in part by the Stanley M. Herzog Foundation.
So check it out right now Herzog Foundation dot com.
Email us as always freedom at Charliekirk dot com and
(42:31):
subscribe to our podcast that is the Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 7 (42:35):
Podcast and check it out.
Speaker 6 (42:37):
So Jake Tapper, who of course was largely responsible for
all of the Russia Gate stuff, is out with a
new book. I don't want to even plug his new book,
so in said, I'm gonna mock it. The book is
called Original Sin. President Biden's decline, its cover up, and
his disastrous choice to run again. Now, some ways, I'm
(42:57):
actually pleased this is the direction that Democrats are going.
It's not totally incorrect, it's just incomplete. Of course, Joe
Biden being a failed, dementia ridden senile individual who was
president and was going to run and then had Kamala run,
that played a role. But it's so much deeper than that,
(43:18):
and at its core, elections are about values, Elections are
about worldview, and the Democrats are going to go all
in saying, oh, we lost just because of Biden because
he had bad mental decline. However, do you remember when
you were not even allowed to mention that Joe Biden
had senility or mental decline, that Joe Biden was declined,
(43:40):
that Joe Biden was losing it. The same people who
helped cover up Joe Biden's senility are now writing books
about their own misconduct because there is money to be made.
It's so perfect that Jake Tapper is writing this. He
is such a fraud. This is Jake Tapper. Oh, by
(44:01):
the way, Jake Tapper played into all of this, like, oh,
Charlie Kirk's an anti Semite thing. Over the summer at
the RNC, they were so close to crossing a line
where I could sue them, so close. You had all
these blowhards and they never apologized. I'll never forget that.
I was honored thanks to President Trump and Susie Wiles
(44:21):
and the whole team. They gave me a prime time
address at the RNC and I had the super honored.
It was amazing, one of the great moments of my life.
CNN didn't cover the speech.
Speaker 7 (44:33):
That's fine. I don't expect them to.
Speaker 6 (44:35):
Cover it, but instead, while I was speaking, they went
on a ten minute DIA tribe calling me an anti
semit Now, there are a lot of things that you
can call Charlie Kirk, but calling me an anti Semi
that's really rich.
Speaker 7 (44:50):
That Blake laughs.
Speaker 6 (44:52):
I said, of all the different things that you could
accuse Charlie Kirk of saying that I'm anti Semitic, I'm
a fileo Semite. I love I love Jews and Judaism
and Israel. It's really something coming from Jake Tapper. This
is the same guy who dated Monica Lewinsky. Not a
(45:14):
great decision maker. Play cut two twenty six.
Speaker 5 (45:18):
I think what we see on stage with Joe Biden
Jake is very clearly a cognitive decline. That's what I'm
referring to. It makes me uncomfortable you are.
Speaker 7 (45:28):
I think it's so amazing. It's so amazing to.
Speaker 5 (45:30):
Me that try and figure out an answer cognitive decline.
Speaker 16 (45:34):
You're trying to.
Speaker 5 (45:34):
Tell me that what I was suggesting was I think
that you were.
Speaker 7 (45:37):
Mocking his stutter. Yeah, I think you were mocking his stutter.
Speaker 6 (45:40):
And I think you have absolutely no standing to diagnose
somebody's cognitive decline.
Speaker 7 (45:44):
Is cognitive decline.
Speaker 6 (45:50):
And now he has an entire book dedicated to this
exact topic. This book will all be spin. It's gonna
be whtal bs obviously original sin. I will say that
I will do this. Jake Tapper, if you want to
sell books, you should come on the Charlie Kirkshow you
(46:12):
get a lot of clicks. If you really want attention
and you really want to move books, don't just do
the view and all that.
Speaker 7 (46:23):
You were part of the cover up.
Speaker 6 (46:26):
You were the ones that covered up the crime scene
and said that we were disinformation artists.
Speaker 7 (46:33):
People lost access.
Speaker 6 (46:34):
To their social media for saying that Joe Biden had
mental decline, and now it's oh, Joe Biden obviously has
mental decline.
Speaker 7 (46:41):
Here's an entire book on it.
Speaker 6 (46:43):
It's outrageous. These people have no shame whatsoever. Email us
Freedom at Charliekirk dot com. Coming up next hour is
Vivek Ramaswami alongside ADF Alliance Defending Freedom. Looking forward to it.
It's gonna be great.
Speaker 8 (46:56):
Stay right there, Welcome back to this Real America's Voice
(47:19):
and news break. I'm Terrence Bates sayings like thirty five
is a new thirty or life doesn't start until forty Well,
those are pretty commonplace these days, and that's largely because
the average American is living longer. The Sentence for Disease
Control and Prevention says, last year, life expectancy here in
the United States was seventy nine years old. However, for
many Americans, quality of life begins to decline around sixty
(47:42):
years old. My next guest has some ideas on how
to live longer and live better. His name is John Jubilee. John,
Good morning, good to see you.
Speaker 20 (47:50):
Good morning, Terren's great to see you, brother.
Speaker 8 (47:52):
All right, so tell us how we can start to
live life a little bit better, particularly once we get
past our sixties.
Speaker 10 (47:58):
Well, Terrence, you know I would encourage everybody.
Speaker 20 (48:01):
Yeah, just because people live longer is not necessarily a
good thing, Terrence. You know, and I had a situation where,
you know, I've actually been a caretaker. You know of
a couple different times where somebody was in their later
years in life and I had to carry him around
like a little child and put them on the toilet.
And you know, I'm just being for real, who wants
(48:23):
to have that kind of life where your last years
of life.
Speaker 10 (48:26):
You are a weight to your family.
Speaker 8 (48:28):
You're a weight to the people around you.
Speaker 20 (48:31):
But that's what happens to a lot of people, Terrence,
because they don't just take care of themselves when they can.
And so I would encourage people, listen, you need to
take care of yourself while you can. And then our
grandparents all teach us an ounce of prevention is worth
a pound of cures. So much better to gain your lean,
healthy muscle, get healthy at the cellular level, so that
(48:55):
in your older years you get to enjoy and live
your life life and not just be surviving and alive.
Speaker 8 (49:04):
Explain getting healthy at the cellular level. It seems to
be intuitive, but it's not necessarily explain that.
Speaker 20 (49:11):
Well, it's really not Terrence. And you know, so everybody
focuses outside in. They're trying to take supplements, they're trying
to drink more water, they maybe are trying to eat
a better diet. But all of those things are what
we call outside in. So it energize health. We teach
a scientific, patent pending science to get healthy at the
(49:31):
inside first. So everything in your body is made out
of cells, your thyroid, your heart, your brain, you're pancreas,
your kidneys, your lungs. Those are all made out of cells, Terence.
And as we get healthy at the cellular level, we
optimize each and every one of our organs. And all
of the scientific studies now have proven one thing is
(49:53):
tied to quality of life, and it is strength. It
is strength. And most people don't realize. They think muscles
made out of protein. And muscle is not made out
of protein. It's made out of twenty five percent protein,
but it's seventy five percent intracellular hydration. So when you
have intracellular hydration, you have three times the likelihood of
(50:18):
building lean muscle and building strength, which is tied to
quality of life and longitivity of life. Strength and muscle
is where it's at terrence for us to live long
and to live strong.
Speaker 8 (50:31):
And this isn't necessarily a Fountain of Youth kind of thing,
but it is something that you're saying can help how
you live and how well you live and how healthy
you are.
Speaker 20 (50:40):
Well, you know what I'm just going to respectfully say,
based on results, I would say it's the fountain of youth, Terence.
Speaker 10 (50:46):
Okay, I would say I would say.
Speaker 11 (50:48):
It's the fountain of youth.
Speaker 20 (50:50):
You know, I saw a guy that looked like he
is about eighty years old promoting these sixty five By
the way, he was sixty five years old, and he
was saying, I'm a healthy grandpa, and d do you
look like your grandpa?
Speaker 10 (51:02):
But you know, I'm going to.
Speaker 20 (51:03):
Be sixty five years old in September, you know, and
I'm lifting the heaviest weight I've ever lifted. I can
run up and down stadium bleachers for an hour. I'd
say that's the fountain of youth, and so I would
encourage people listen. Abraham was one hundred and twenty years old,
and the Bible says he was full strength, full strength at.
Speaker 10 (51:19):
One hundred and twenty.
Speaker 20 (51:20):
Joshua was in his nineties when he went and took
on all of Golias giant brothers, and he took a
mountain in his nineties.
Speaker 8 (51:29):
So I really do believe if we do.
Speaker 20 (51:31):
The right things at the sailor level how God created
us to live and to be, You'll be like a
tree pinted by the river of living water. You can
be like Moses, you can be like Joshua. Jacob lived
to one hundred and thirty eight years old. A lot
of these guys living way over one hundred and at
full strength.
Speaker 8 (51:48):
Well, if you'd like to tap into the fountain of youth,
as he says my five five to five challenge dot com,
you can go there, get more information, log on, and
who knows you might actually find that fountain for yourself. Well,
that's going to do it for us here on Real
America's once.
Speaker 21 (52:02):
We appreciate you being here with us.
Speaker 7 (52:24):
Okay, everybody, welcome back.
Speaker 6 (52:25):
Email us as always freedom at Charlie Kirk dot com
and subscribe to our podcast. We must be defenders of
free speech in all different venues, especially on college campuses,
including speech that you don't like. Joining us now is
Kristen Wagoner, President, CEO and General Counsel of Alliance defending freedom.
Kristen walk us through what's going on with the University
(52:47):
of Memphis, what happened last evening and the reason that
we decided to kind of call the bluff of University
of Memphis regarding Kyle Rittenhouse.
Speaker 16 (52:56):
Well, last night was.
Speaker 18 (52:57):
A tremendous victory for TPUSA, Kyle written House and the
right to speak freely on our college campuses. I think
we have to go back to really a year ago,
last March in twenty twenty four when the TPUSA chapter
at the University of Memphis decided to sponsor an event
with Kyle Rittenhouse, and they worked with the University of
Memphis officials, created a ticketing system through TPUSA and had
(53:21):
the event all planned out to host about three hundred
kids students and it was open to the public. But
what happened in that instance is that the university interfered
with the ticketing system. It allowed disruptors to virtually take
all of the tickets, and then it allowed a mob
rule to take over that event, and it had to
be shut down because the university officials and the police
(53:44):
refused to protect the speech of TPUSA and of Kyle Rittenhouse.
So last night, after Alliance Defending Freedom sent the legal
demand letter with very specific demands to the university, the
university complied with those demands and.
Speaker 16 (53:58):
TPUSA was able to move forward.
Speaker 18 (54:00):
So we're so grateful for their courage and glad that
they were welcome back to campus. We also got one
of the policies changed so that future students won't have
to endure this again.
Speaker 7 (54:13):
That is wonderful.
Speaker 6 (54:14):
Let's go to cut two thirty five and play the
news reports of this.
Speaker 16 (54:19):
Action.
Speaker 20 (54:19):
News stives Bria Bolden joining us Live now from the
University of Memphis to explain Bria why Rittenhouse.
Speaker 22 (54:25):
Has been allowed to be back on campus despite all
the pushback.
Speaker 23 (54:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 22 (54:32):
Well, last year called Rettenhouse abruptly left the stage at
the UC Theater after pushback from University of Memphis students.
Speaker 8 (54:38):
You know, Memphis.
Speaker 10 (54:39):
Excuse me.
Speaker 22 (54:40):
Members of Turning Point USA University of Memphis chapter, the
group that invited Rindhouse to campus, were escorted off campus
by Tennessee Highway Patrol troopers after being run off by students.
Turning Point USA is a nonprofit that advocates conservative views
on college campuses. Rettenhouse is set to make his return
here to the U of M tomorrow evening to discuss
(55:01):
his twenty twenty one trial and the Second Amendment.
Speaker 6 (55:05):
So Chris and tell us more about the encounter and
the victory here based on that news report.
Speaker 18 (55:11):
Yes, well, adf we have about four hundred and fifty
legal victories on college campuses, and I have to tell
you that in seeing many of those victories play out,
the circumstances of this particular campus incident are some of.
Speaker 16 (55:22):
The worst that we've seen.
Speaker 18 (55:24):
Where at the University of Memphis at this event a
year ago. Not only at the last minute did the
university essentially take over the ticketing system to allow even
more disruption to occur, but it didn't even provide reasonable
steps to protect the safety of TPUSA.
Speaker 16 (55:41):
Members as well as Kyle.
Speaker 18 (55:43):
Rittenhouse leading them out in front of a mob and
having that mob then chase those TPUSA members, threatened to
kill them, spit on their cars to pursue them. It
was just the circumstances were so deeply disturbing and fell
so far short of constitutional and state law requirements. The
university officials are not allowed to let mobs rule and
(56:07):
to essentially engage in a heckler's veto. So again, it
takes courage to stand up. But thank God for these
members who did, as well as for Kyle, and.
Speaker 6 (56:17):
Thank you for ADF for defending our students and doing
a great job there. In closing here, Christen, just tell
us more about the great work that ADF is doing
and how people can support it and get behind it.
Speaker 16 (56:28):
Oh, thanks for asking.
Speaker 18 (56:29):
Well, First, I would just say we have a student
who Rights handbook on our website ADF legal dot org.
We provide all of our services free of charge, and
we believe that censorship not only on campuses but in
our workplaces and through both government collusion with private collusion
online is the biggest issue that we have to fight today.
(56:50):
So a lot of our resources are going towards that
as well as fighting gender identity ideology and expanding parnal rights,
because we do believe that gender ideology has been a
trojan to essentially compel speech by the government and to
take away our rights. And when we allow censorship to continue.
We know that most countries around the world have free
(57:11):
speech protections. It's only a matter of whether citizens insist
that the government provided. So we love being able to
serve organizations like yours and the good work you're doing.
Speaker 6 (57:21):
Yeah, so tell us just quickly more about the transgender
identity fight. How is that proceeding in the courts men,
women's sports locker rooms. I know that some of the
proponents of the more radical gender ideology use the Civil
Rights Act. How are you guys thinking about this legally
at ADF.
Speaker 18 (57:40):
Well, we're thinking we're going to win, and we're going
to keep at it until we do win. It feels
like we're starting to turn a corner. But man, Charlie,
I think it's so important to go back to the
beginning because it does dovetail closely with the work that
you're doing on campuses. And really, the very first case
that was filed in the United States was a CASEADF file,
but it was on behalf of three young girls who.
Speaker 16 (58:02):
Were in high school.
Speaker 18 (58:03):
They were freshmen and sophomore, and two boys had come in.
They were previously competing three weeks earlier as boys, three
weeks later, they're competing as girls, and they ended up
displacing essentially eighty five opportunities for girls to advance to
other competitions and took fifteen different state titles in just
like a three year period.
Speaker 16 (58:23):
So that's where it started.
Speaker 18 (58:24):
And it's nearly ten years that we've been fighting this battle.
Speaker 16 (58:28):
We have seen twists and turns along.
Speaker 18 (58:30):
The way, and I'm thrilled to see President Trump kind
of finish what he started in the first term to
again stand for equal opportunities for girls. But we have
a lot of fighting still to do, as you can
probably tell with the cases that have been filed, and
we know that the issue isn't just solved.
Speaker 16 (58:47):
At the federal level.
Speaker 18 (58:49):
We have to have Congress past legislation, and we also
need to have states fall in line to protect the
rights of women and girls.
Speaker 16 (58:56):
So there's a long legal battle ahead.
Speaker 18 (58:58):
Let me just say this, We have two petitions at
the US Supreme Court right now on this issue, and
we need the Court to take the issue up because
twenty five states have passed laws to protect girls and
the ACLU is challenging the rights of these states to
protect the rights of girls.
Speaker 6 (59:17):
Has has the Supreme Court yet weighed in on this
topic in history or they just kind of punted and
delayed so.
Speaker 18 (59:24):
Far largely punted and delayed. I would say that there's
a decision called the boss Stok decision which involved whether
sex included gender identity in the employment context, and that
was several years ago, and I would say activists on
the left are trying to use that decision to say
somehow that that means that women don't have equal rights.
Speaker 16 (59:45):
They're misusing that.
Speaker 18 (59:46):
And in that boss Stok decision, the Supreme Court carved
out essentially and said we're not saying that this applies
in any other way. So we believe that the Court
is going to affirm these rights when it does take
this case. The last thing I would say on what
the Supreme Court doing right now is, first of all,
they're considering whether to take the women's sports issue. We
have two petitions that are asking them to take these cases.
Speaker 16 (01:00:08):
And then the second thing is in June.
Speaker 18 (01:00:09):
Probably about June, we will see the Supreme Court decide
a case called Scurmeti, which involves whether states can pass
laws to protect young children from undergoing cross sex hormones
and permanent, irreversible harm in this area, that decision could
also impact the rights of women and girls moving forward,
and we're thrilled to be able to have helped pass
(01:00:31):
legislation in twenty six states where states have passed the
laws to protect minors. So we have to think about
this both in terms of a political issue getting good
people in office, then in terms of a public policy
issue getting them to pass good laws, and then also
defending those laws in court and preserving the rights of
families to be able to raise their children consistent with
(01:00:52):
their values.
Speaker 7 (01:00:55):
This is a good way to end.
Speaker 6 (01:00:56):
Let's play cut three of President Trump and the governor
of Maine going back in fourth around this very topic.
Speaker 7 (01:01:01):
Let's play cut three.
Speaker 10 (01:01:03):
I understand Maine is the Maine here, the governor of Maine.
Speaker 14 (01:01:08):
Are you not going to comply with it? Well, we
are the federal law. Well you better do it. You
better do it because you're not going to get any
federal funding at.
Speaker 10 (01:01:19):
All if you don't.
Speaker 14 (01:01:19):
And by the way, your population, even though it's somewhat liberal,
alo I did very well there.
Speaker 10 (01:01:24):
Your population doesn't want men playing in women's sports.
Speaker 14 (01:01:28):
So you better you better comply because otherwise you're not
getting any any federal funding.
Speaker 10 (01:01:33):
See every state. Good, I'll see you, and good. I
look forward to that.
Speaker 14 (01:01:36):
That should be a really easy one.
Speaker 6 (01:01:41):
He's ready to fight on it. I know EIGHTYF is
as well. Kristen, thank you so.
Speaker 16 (01:01:44):
Much, Thank you. I appreciate it.
Speaker 7 (01:01:48):
EIGHTF does great work.
Speaker 6 (01:01:50):
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Speaker 7 (01:02:50):
We'll be right back.
Speaker 19 (01:02:51):
Everybody, make sense of the insane.
Speaker 11 (01:03:07):
You're listening to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 6 (01:03:10):
Everyone listen carefully. Are you a private student loan borrower?
You might be, so listen carefully. It is why Refly.
Why Refly is a great support of the show. In fact,
they are the sponsor of this campus tour. I'm going
to walk right outside these doors and head to campus
here Gainesville, Florida, University of Florida, literally one hundred feet
away from here is the campus.
Speaker 7 (01:03:30):
Why refly is supporting.
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It, Why Refly is not a debt settlement company, and
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at it right now, Why refi dot com. Why are
e f y dot com great supporters, phenomenal people Why
refi dot com? Email us as always Freedom at Charliekirk
dot com and subscribe to the Charlie Kirkshow podcast page.
Speaker 7 (01:04:29):
We'll be right back.
Speaker 10 (01:04:35):
On the back.
Speaker 6 (01:04:40):
Everybody, Email us Freedom at Charliekirk dot com. As you know,
I am moments away from going on campus here at
University of Florida. Tomorrow is Florida State University, Monday is
University of Southern California. Next Thursday is cal Northridge. That
is four in one week.
Speaker 7 (01:04:56):
It's a lot.
Speaker 6 (01:04:56):
We're covering a lot of space, a lot of terrain.
I can asked frequently, Charlie, what are you know? What
are the dialogues look like? And these videos get seen
millions millions of times. This video in particular has already
been seen I think ten to twelve million times on
TikTok and Instagram combined.
Speaker 7 (01:05:10):
It's going super viral.
Speaker 6 (01:05:12):
But it was a really interesting window here because when
people saw this clip that I'm about to apply for you,
it connected some gods. I got asked all the time, Charlie,
what is the next generation of teachers look like? And
every single one of you that are sending your kids
(01:05:32):
or grandkids to public schools have a moral obligation to
watch this one minute and twenty three second clip. This
one minute clip shows you exactly the type of person
that has become a teacher and wants to teach your child,
that is teaching your kid when you send your kid
(01:05:54):
to grade school that is publicly funded or government funded,
to middle school, high school, or college. They are at
risk of being influenced by people like this. You are
handing over your children to a pseudo indoctrination state. You're
handing over your most prized possession to a enterprise that
(01:06:15):
believes things that are directly contradictory to your values, that
are adverse to your worldview. This is not just a
random college student that came up to me. This was
at the University of South Florida. This is a current
teacher and also was a candidate for state Senate. And
(01:06:36):
might I add sometimes people say, oh, Charlie, you know
you're only debating college kids. First of all, people will
no longer say that after next week, based on a
certain program that I'm going on. Secondly, no, it's an
open mic. Professors have come up before teacher's assistance. This
guy is a former candidate state rep and a current teacher.
Speaker 7 (01:06:55):
Anybody is welcome up to the mic. Anybody.
Speaker 6 (01:06:58):
Just so happens, college kids tend to overwhelm the population,
and most college kids are voters. Can we stop acting
as if that it's some sort of protected species. They're
eighteen years old, they can buy a gun, they can vote.
Let's stop acting as if that they need to kind
of be Oh, you're not allowed to talk to college kids. Oh,
only professors can talk to college kids. God, so professors
(01:07:20):
are allowed to talk to college kids, but Charlie Kirk
can't talk to college kids. Why am I such a
threat talking to college kids? Didn't even go to college. Okay, listen,
drop what you're doing. If you have a kid in
public school, I hope you understand that they are likely
to have a teacher like this. They are likely to
have someone like this influencing their worldview. Play cut one, oh.
Speaker 7 (01:07:39):
One, you're a teacher? Yes? What is a woman? What
is a woman?
Speaker 24 (01:07:47):
Oh?
Speaker 10 (01:07:47):
Buddy?
Speaker 24 (01:07:48):
Hi.
Speaker 25 (01:07:49):
So we define gender as a set of preferences that
you have excuse me, gender, gender the set of preferences
we have. Woh. Woman is a social construct that we've
agreed upon. Typically, we imagine womanhood as makeup or whatever
(01:08:12):
it is. There is a difference between the word woman
and being a biological female. Woman is a social construct
that we use. Listen for a sec I'm telling you
what it means. Woman is a social construct. We agree
on these set of preferences. If I tell you that
(01:08:34):
I'm a man is because I want you to know
that I like these set of preferences. If I tell
you I'm a woman, is because I want you to
know that I agree with these set of preferences.
Speaker 7 (01:08:41):
Can men give birth?
Speaker 10 (01:08:44):
Can men?
Speaker 7 (01:08:45):
Or can males?
Speaker 25 (01:08:46):
Because males can't be Listen for a second, if you
listen to your bio professors, you would understand there's a
difference between biology and what we think.
Speaker 6 (01:08:57):
I want to thank you for proving a great point.
You are whe we should eliminate the Department of Education.
Speaker 7 (01:09:02):
Thank you very much. So a couple things.
Speaker 6 (01:09:08):
Normally I tell the crowd to chill, but him being
a teacher and a state representative candidate and it being
such an outrageous thing he was saying, I let him go,
and I think for a good reason. I wasn't encouraging it.
I wasn't saying, you know, continue, I was just being neutral.
I was listening because I also wanted to demonstrate on
(01:09:29):
video how much things have changed.
Speaker 7 (01:09:33):
Four years ago. If a teacher.
Speaker 6 (01:09:35):
Would have come up and given an explanation, all the
kids would have just been listening.
Speaker 7 (01:09:38):
What's Charlie going to say? What's going on now? They
have the self confidence to say that is complete.
Speaker 10 (01:09:44):
BS.
Speaker 7 (01:09:44):
Stop it. You're a teacher.
Speaker 6 (01:09:46):
One of the kids said, you're not getting my hands
on my kids. And so typically I want to give
everybody the opportunity to speak, and of course he did.
He had the mic, but a little bit of that
background background chatter, a little bit of a clamoring. I
think it was actually healthy here. I think it made
(01:10:06):
for a better a better video, and a better dialogue.
Speaker 7 (01:10:12):
Okay.
Speaker 6 (01:10:13):
Vivek Ramaswami, the next governor of Ohio, joins us next
email US Freedom at Charliekirk dot com will be right back.
Speaker 8 (01:10:27):
Welcome back to this Real America's Voice news break. I'm
Terrence Bates. Happening right now at the White House. President
Trump is meeting with British Prime Minister Kure Starmer. This
is Starmer arriving at the White House about an hour
hour and a half ago. The two are meeting privately
right now and are expected to hold a news conference
here in short order. You see President Trump there Starmer
getting out of the truck, the two exchanging pleasantries and
(01:10:50):
then entering the White House. We will have full coverage
of their press conference together here on Real America's voice
as soon as it happens, make sure you stay tuned
for that. I also happening in Washington. Lots of anticipation
as the Justice Department will likely release flight logs from
Jeffrey Epstein's plane that could happen within the next couple
of hours. Those logs will include the names of people
(01:11:11):
who flew with Epstein, who is accused of sex trafficking
and using his plane to do it. Attorney General Pam
Bondi says she's simply dotting eyes and crossing t's before
she releases those documents.
Speaker 9 (01:11:23):
There are well over this will make you sick, two
hundred victims, two hundred, So we have well over two
hundred and fifty actually, so we have to make sure
that their identity is protected. A lot of flight logs,
a lot of names, a lot of information, but pretty
(01:11:43):
sick what that man did.
Speaker 8 (01:11:46):
Republican lawmakers have been pushing the new Attorney General to
release excuse me, documents related to the Epstein case. President
Trump has also directed her to make that information public.
Remember President Trump's tariffs on good from Mexico, Canada, and China. Well,
the Commander in chief definitely does and he plans to
move forward with them next Tuesday. The President says the
(01:12:08):
terriffs for our North American neighbors will go into effect
because drugs are still pouring into the United States from
across the border. Both countries will face twenty five percent
tariffs until the flow of drugs either stops or is
seriously limited. Mister Trump also plans to slap China with
a ten percent tariff. Actor Gene Hackman, his wife, Betsy Arakawa,
(01:12:30):
and their dog are dead. The bodies were found at
their home in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The Santa Fe
Sheriff's office says nothing appears to be suspicious about the death,
but at this point the exact cause of death has
not been determined. Sheriff's officials say the investigation remains active
and ongoing. Hackman was ninety five years old. That's a
(01:12:52):
great check off your headlines. I'm Terrance Bads.
Speaker 15 (01:13:07):
No one else has the guts to say the Charlie Kirkshow.
Speaker 6 (01:13:13):
Okay, everybody, welcome back. I want to tell you guys
about the Conservatives for lower health care. Great organization. You
should listen. With President Trump making massive strides in his
first month in office, alone to deliver on his campaign
promises to make America great again. It's clear his administration
is committed to driving down the costs and unleashing prosperity
across our beautiful nation. But Big Pharma is standing in
(01:13:36):
the way. They have raised prices on over five hundred
and seventy five brand named drugs in January alone, blocked competition,
and spent millions pushing overpriced meds on hard working Americans.
Now they're pressuring Congress to implement mandates that will undermine
the one reel check against drug companies and ban the
(01:13:57):
very market based incentives that help employers and family save
on prescriptions and healthcare costs. Even worse, Big Pharma wants
to strip American employers of the freedom to choose health
benefits that work best for them. Their proposals could hand
Big Pharma a thirty two billion dollar money grab at
(01:14:18):
the expense of American employers and families. Conservatives for lower
healthcare costs warn that Big Pharma is not on our side.
They fought against solutions to lower drug prices during Trump's
first term. They opposed Bobby Kennedy's nomination to HHS to MAHA,
and now the even want more control over the private
(01:14:39):
healthcare market, interfering with President Trump's promise to cut prescription
drug prices. Big Parma is no friend to the American people.
Go to pharma windfall dot com and demand fair healthcare practices,
protect the private market, and fight big farmer's greed. Congress
can put a stop to this. You can make a difference.
(01:14:59):
Let's fight that is Pharma windfall dot com. Pharma windfall
dot com. Portions of Charlie kirkshow are brought to in
part by conservatives for lower healthcare costs. Do we have
a vacer Are we still waiting for Viveke right now?
Speaker 24 (01:15:12):
He?
Speaker 7 (01:15:13):
In the meantime we have him.
Speaker 6 (01:15:15):
Okay, joining us now is the next governor of Ohio.
Congratulations to my friend and great patriot Viveke Ramaswami.
Speaker 7 (01:15:22):
Viveke, welcome to the program. It's good to see Charlie.
Speaker 10 (01:15:25):
Hey been.
Speaker 6 (01:15:28):
I have been great. Tell us why you are running
for governor and your vision for an excellent Ohio.
Speaker 13 (01:15:36):
Well, President Trump is going to do a great job
in the next two years. But what that means, Charlie,
is that a lot of programs, from education to healthcare
are now going to go back down to the states
and to the people where they belong. That's true federalism,
that's what our founders and vision. But that means we're
going to need strong governors prepared to take those programs
and do the right thing with them. I look at
(01:15:57):
my home state of Ohio. I was born and raised
here most of my life. Here, I'm raising my two
sons here. We're a conservative state in our electorate. We
need to actually be governed like a conservative state. And
if we are, this can be not just one of
the better states in the Midwest, I think it can
be the best state in the country to raise a family,
to start a new business. And also something I'm passionate about.
(01:16:19):
You know this, Charlie has given our kids a world
class education, starting at a young age, so that we're
beaten China and the rest of the world in leadership,
and I want Ohio to be the model for showing
how that's actually done. So in some sense, the federal
job's already getting done. I'm happy to see that's happening
in spades. But now we need strong leaders at the states.
And I was proud to get President Trump's and Blans
(01:16:42):
and others endorsements at.
Speaker 11 (01:16:43):
The national level.
Speaker 7 (01:16:43):
Out of the gate.
Speaker 13 (01:16:45):
What I want to do is show the rest of
the country what's possible with a good state leader.
Speaker 3 (01:16:48):
It's what we're in this for.
Speaker 6 (01:16:51):
Let's dive into that. Ohio is uniquely geographically positioned. It's
in the heartland yep, nice access to Lake Erie, the
Appalachia Appalachians mountains, amazing oil and natural gas opportunities. In
certain podcasts, an industrious people, an industrious people, the hardest
(01:17:12):
working people in the country.
Speaker 7 (01:17:14):
I believe our Midwesterners.
Speaker 6 (01:17:16):
I say that as a Chicagoan myself, talk about the
assets that Ohio has, because far too often in our
politics we talk about the negatives. Ohio has been the
industrialized OPIOI addicted. We know that, but it has phenomenal upsides.
What are they sure?
Speaker 19 (01:17:33):
So?
Speaker 13 (01:17:34):
Ohio actually led the way in the First Industrial Revolution
and at the turn of the last century, Ohio was
the wealthiest state in the Union and was the third
most populous state in the country because of those great
natural resources and gifts, fertile farmland, great natural resources including
oil and natural gas and other minerals underneath our ground.
(01:17:54):
We've got sixty percent of North America's population, not just
America's population, Erica's population within a single day's drive of
where I'm sitting right now in Columbus, Ohio. Those were
the advantages we had back then. Six of the top
fifteen wealthiest cities in the nineteen fifties.
Speaker 11 (01:18:12):
Now that's not long ago.
Speaker 13 (01:18:12):
I'm not even talking about the Industrial Revolution. I'm talking
about in the nineteen fifties, six of the top fifteen
were right here in Ohio. Toledo was the glass capital,
Akron was the rubber capital. Youngstown and Cleveland were the
steel capitals of the world. Dayton was the computing power capital.
Cincinnati was the leader in consumer products, Porkopolis powering the
food supply of the country. From known around the world
(01:18:34):
as the Queen City, that was my hometown. This was
the place of the pioneers, the explorers, Neil Armstrong and
John Glenn gained the self confidence here as kids to
go down space. The state of the Wright Brothers. So
we were the state of excellence in America. I think
we can be again because we have all of those
same advantages. Fertile farmland, same erie canal to New York City,
(01:18:56):
Ohio river to the Mississippi, same location at the heart
of the country. It's also pretty representative of the rest
of the country. It's not a monolithic place. You got
from the inner cities to suburban communities, to rural communities
to the.
Speaker 1 (01:19:10):
We're interrupting this program for a special live report.
Speaker 8 (01:19:13):
Welcome to this Real America's Voice special report. President Trump
meeting with Keir Starmer, the UK Prime Minister right now
with the White House.
Speaker 24 (01:19:23):
Could you be persuaded as part of a peace settlement
and kind to provide a cover, a backstop security position
to the contributions that you have a might make as well.
Speaker 10 (01:19:33):
Well.
Speaker 14 (01:19:33):
So President Zelinski's calling to see me on Friday, Friday morning,
and we're going to be shiying really a very important
agreement for both sides because it's really going to get
us into that country. We'll be working there, We'll have
a lot of people working there, and so in that sense,
it's very good. It's a backstop. You could say, I
don't think anybody's going to play around if we're there
(01:19:54):
with a lot of workers and having to do with
rare earths and other things which we need for our country.
And we appreciate it very much, and I look forward
to seeing him we'll be talking about it, and we'll
also be talking about that today with the Prime Minister.
Speaker 10 (01:20:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 26 (01:20:10):
I mean, as you know, we've already indicated that we'll
play out full part in making sure that any deal
with there is one, and I hope there is, and
I think this is a historic moment to make sure
it's a lasting deal and about have a discussion about how.
Speaker 11 (01:20:24):
We can make that work.
Speaker 14 (01:20:25):
But I have to say this, as I said yesterday,
you're talking about peacekeeping force. We have to make a
deal first. Right now, we don't have a deal. We
have Russia, we have Ukraine. I think we're very well advanced.
I think Russia has been acting very well. We have
representatives Seve Woodcoff and Scott and Marco and JD. We're
(01:20:48):
all involved, every one of us, and a lot more.
But I think we're very well advanced on a deal.
But we have not made a deal yet. So I
don't like to talk about peacekeeping until we have a deal.
I like to things done. I don't want to give
it the bad luck sign.
Speaker 10 (01:21:04):
We don't want to do that.
Speaker 14 (01:21:04):
But we've had very good talks with Russia. We've had
very good talks, as you know, with Ukraine. Yes, sir,
I'm just Prime Minister.
Speaker 24 (01:21:10):
I have to choose a closer relationship with the EU
as he is seeking, and a good trade relationship with you,
which one can go for.
Speaker 14 (01:21:16):
Well, I think we have just a great relationship. We
actually had a good relationship before. We've met a couple
of times, and I'm very impressed with him, and I'm
very impressed with his wife.
Speaker 10 (01:21:26):
I must say, she's a beautiful, great woman.
Speaker 14 (01:21:30):
And I said, I said, you're very lucky.
Speaker 10 (01:21:34):
He's very lucky. And no, we've had a very good relationship.
Speaker 24 (01:21:40):
Potentially, I'm doing some of the benefits of Brexit by
seeking a closer time with the EU, who you said
was set.
Speaker 10 (01:21:45):
Up to now, I don't worry about that.
Speaker 14 (01:21:46):
And I thought, you know, frankly, what they did was
the right thing at the time, and I think that'll
probably prove out over the centuries.
Speaker 10 (01:21:54):
You know, you have a long time to go.
Speaker 14 (01:21:55):
But I think I predicted that was going to happen,
and it did happen, and it'll work itself out.
Speaker 10 (01:22:02):
It's it's I think it's already worked itself out.
Speaker 27 (01:22:07):
Kare Starmer has signed the deal to give away the
take as silence to Mauritius, will you approve that deal?
Speaker 14 (01:22:13):
Well, we're going to have some discussions about that very soon,
and I have a.
Speaker 10 (01:22:16):
Feeling it's going to work out very well.
Speaker 14 (01:22:18):
They're talking about a very long term, powerful lease, a
very strong lease, about one hundred and forty years. Actually,
it's a long time, and I think we'll be inclined
to go along with your country.
Speaker 10 (01:22:32):
Yeah. I think it's sounds a little bit earlier.
Speaker 14 (01:22:35):
We have to be given the details, but it doesn't
sound bad.
Speaker 27 (01:22:38):
Yeah, please, President, You obviously can do business with our
Prime minister.
Speaker 10 (01:22:42):
Kiss Starmer.
Speaker 27 (01:22:44):
You said yesterday that the EU was constructed to screw
the US when it comes to trade.
Speaker 3 (01:22:50):
What can our prime.
Speaker 27 (01:22:51):
Minister say to you to persuade you not to impostor?
Speaker 14 (01:22:55):
I think, well, I think that the EU. Yeah, I've
had problems with the EU because and we're not talking
about we happen to have a great relationship with you,
but we did have and we do have problems with
the EU because they've tariffed us. They do it in
the form of a vet tax, which is about twenty percent,
and many other taxes.
Speaker 10 (01:23:17):
They sue our companies.
Speaker 14 (01:23:19):
They sued Apple got sixteen or seventeen billion dollars, which
was I think totally a ridiculous decision, and they're suing
Google for a lot of money, they're suing a lot
of other companies, and we don't like the way they're
treating our people. Now, we don't like the way they're
treating our companies. They sell us cars, we don't sell
(01:23:42):
them cars. They don't take our cars, they don't take
much of our agriculture. And we have a deficit with
them of about three hundred and fifty billion dollars. So
I wouldn't say it's been such a great relationship personally,
but other people did because it's politically correct to say
that it's been good.
Speaker 10 (01:23:58):
But it hasn't been good, and we're going to change that.
Speaker 14 (01:24:01):
And we are going to have reciprocal terroriffs, so we're
not gonna have terror We're gonna have reciprocal Whatever they
charge us, we're going to charge them, which for many years,
fullishly I would have done that, but then all of
a sudden, we had COVID and we had other things
to think about, So it took me a little while
to get that on and we but we had in
my first four years, we had the greatest economy in
the history of I think the world, but certainly in
(01:24:24):
the history of our country.
Speaker 10 (01:24:25):
I think we're going to have that again. But the
EU was.
Speaker 14 (01:24:28):
Very, very tough on us, and from the standpoint of trade.
Then you could take it a step further and go
into NATO, and that was a very tough.
Speaker 10 (01:24:38):
Situation for US.
Speaker 14 (01:24:39):
I mean, that's been a very tough situation because we
were paying a disproportionate share and it wasn't good. So,
as you know, they paid hundreds of billions of dollars
after I got involved, and they evened it out a
little bit, but.
Speaker 10 (01:24:54):
Not very much.
Speaker 14 (01:24:55):
And then if you look at the war, we're in
for three hundred billion dollars plus US and they're in
for one hundred billion. They get their money back, and
now we'll get our money back also.
Speaker 10 (01:25:05):
But under Biden, you wouldn't have done that. Biden did
a terrible job, I have to say.
Speaker 14 (01:25:10):
I hate to say that about somebody that sat here
just before me, but he did a terrible, terrible job.
That war should have never happened, The war between Russia Ukraine, frankly,
October seventh should have never happened Israel, that should have
never happened. What happened there should have never Inflation should
have never happened. Afghanistan should have never happened. The way
(01:25:31):
they got out, not getting out, but the way they
got out. But I can say that as far as
we're for a different reason, we're talking about a very
different place, and this is some place that I have
investments there. I own Turnbury, I have an Aberdeen, and
I own a great place called Donebeg in Ireland, So
you know, I have a great warm spot for your.
Speaker 26 (01:25:56):
Country is fire balanced and you've got a bit of
a surplus.
Speaker 11 (01:26:01):
So we're in a different position. And obviously we.
Speaker 26 (01:26:04):
Contributed utially in relation to Ukraine and taken together with
Europe about fifty percent.
Speaker 11 (01:26:15):
So does that mean there won't be any sanctions on
the UK.
Speaker 10 (01:26:17):
Then well I have to take a look.
Speaker 14 (01:26:19):
I mean, we're going to have a good discussion today
and we have some very talented people on the other side,
and we have some people that probably are as talented
in them, but they're pretty good.
Speaker 10 (01:26:29):
Marco, what do you think our people are pretty good?
Speaker 14 (01:26:33):
And now we're going to have a good discussion and
we'll be talking about mister Starmer.
Speaker 24 (01:26:39):
The Prime Minister has said that he believes that Vladimir
Putin would be at risk of invading Ukraine again without
a sufficient backstop. Do you think that Vladimir Putin would
be likely to invade again in the event.
Speaker 10 (01:26:51):
I don't think so. I think, well, we have a deal.
It's going to be the deal.
Speaker 14 (01:26:54):
I don't think if I didn't win the election, I
don't think we'd be even talking to put right now
or anybody else. I think it would just you know,
I don't know if you're looking at the stats, but
thousands of people are being killed. A weak soldiers, mostly
because the towns have been destroyed, but thousands of soldiers.
Speaker 10 (01:27:14):
This was a very bad week, by the way. I get.
I get the status and you're talking about human life.
Speaker 14 (01:27:19):
Number one, I want to see that, and it doesn't
involve American soldiers, but it's Russian and Ukrainian soldiers, and
I can think.
Speaker 10 (01:27:26):
I think I'm speaking for both.
Speaker 14 (01:27:28):
Number one, we want to see that stop, and number two,
I want to stop paying the kind.
Speaker 10 (01:27:32):
Of money that we're talking about.
Speaker 14 (01:27:34):
You know, we're helping, and we're helping NATO, but we're
helping a lot more than anybody else by far, and
I want that to stop Wells Chef, go ahead.
Speaker 10 (01:27:44):
Thank you, sir.
Speaker 2 (01:27:45):
You talked about Trey tariffs this morning on your side.
Just a question about China tariffs has already been implemented
on China.
Speaker 10 (01:27:54):
Are you planning to do a ten above?
Speaker 11 (01:27:56):
This will be an additional ten.
Speaker 2 (01:27:57):
Of of and is there from the talks with canad
and Mexico so far? Are you not seeing the progress
that you wanted in order?
Speaker 10 (01:28:04):
I don't see it at all now. Not on drugs.
We've done a great job.
Speaker 14 (01:28:10):
If you look at Tom Holman, he's been incredible and Christie,
they've done a great job.
Speaker 10 (01:28:14):
In terms of the border.
Speaker 14 (01:28:16):
But the drugs continue to pour into a country, killing
hundreds of thousands of people. We're losing substantially more than
one hundred thousand people.
Speaker 10 (01:28:24):
I mean they're dead. The families are destroyed.
Speaker 14 (01:28:28):
After that happened, So it's you know, it's not just
that that's the ultimate, but the families are absolutely destroyed.
Speaker 10 (01:28:35):
The drugs come in through Mexico.
Speaker 14 (01:28:37):
They come a lot of them, not all of them,
but a lot of them come from China. And that's
why we did that ten. It's ten plus ten, Okay.
Was there confusion on that Okay, ten plus ten, it's
a second ten. And I think you'll I think you're
going to see eventually, you're going to see drugs stopping
because the country should not be allowing those drugs to
(01:28:59):
come into the United States of American.
Speaker 10 (01:29:02):
We're not going to allow it to happen. So that
goes on.
Speaker 14 (01:29:05):
On the fourth of March and then on the second
of April.
Speaker 10 (01:29:09):
We have reciprocal tariffs.
Speaker 14 (01:29:12):
That's reciprocal where we charge countries what they're charging us,
and nobody should have a problem with that. We have reciprocal.
It's reciprocity. It's something that I think.
Speaker 10 (01:29:23):
Everybody I've spoken to said that's fair, and it is.
Speaker 14 (01:29:26):
If somebody charges us twenty five percent, we charge them
twenty five. If somebody charges us ten or fifteen or
thirty or seventy, we charge them an exact like amount.
And it's pretty simple. But it's reciprocal tariffs. Because the
United States has been taken advantage of by many many
different countries, including our friends, friend and foe, and in
(01:29:49):
many cases our friends took bigger advantage of. And when
you talk about the EU, we're talking about the EU.
The EU has been really very bad to US in
terms of trade, and I'm a different kind of a president.
Speaker 10 (01:30:02):
I can't let that happen. Thank you. What would you
be willing to do if Ladimir Putin did not stick
to the.
Speaker 3 (01:30:12):
Terms of any deal on Ukraine?
Speaker 28 (01:30:13):
If you know what, he did not stick to the
terms of any deal on Ukraine, because he's a street
of not sticking to his word when it comes to
international people.
Speaker 14 (01:30:20):
I think he'll keep his word. I think I think
he's I've spoken to him. I've known him for a
long time now. You know, I've known him. We had
we had to go through the Russian hooks together. That
was not a good thing. It's not fair. That was
a rigged deal and had nothing to do with Russia.
I was a rig deal with inside the country. And
they had to put up with that too. They put
up with a lot.
Speaker 10 (01:30:40):
It wasn't just us. They had to put up.
Speaker 14 (01:30:41):
With it with a phony story that was made up.
I've known him for a long time now, and I
think he will. I don't believe he's going to violate
his word. I don't think he'll be back when we
make a deal. I think the deal is going to
hold now, They're gonna have security you're gonna have security,
You're gonna have soldiers.
Speaker 10 (01:30:58):
I know France wants to be there.
Speaker 14 (01:30:59):
He's the president has said he wants to have soldiers there.
Speaker 10 (01:31:04):
I don't think we're going to even be necessary.
Speaker 14 (01:31:06):
But I don't think there'll be any problem with keeping
the deal.
Speaker 10 (01:31:08):
With the security you.
Speaker 26 (01:31:12):
Want to say, I'm just going to say, I mean,
the deal, if we get it, is going to be
hugely important. I don't think it would have happened if
the space hadn't been created for it by yourself. But
if there's a deal in, we've got to make sure
it's a deal that lasts, that is not temporary, that lasts,
and that's why we need to make sure that it's secure.
And we've lent in and said we'll play our part,
(01:31:34):
and we've talked and we will talk about how we
work with yourself, mister President, to ensure that this deal
is something which is not violated.
Speaker 10 (01:31:41):
Because it's very important.
Speaker 11 (01:31:42):
But if there is a deal, we.
Speaker 10 (01:31:44):
Keep it, and.
Speaker 14 (01:31:46):
I think I can say that would be the easy part.
That's the part we look forward to, because putting security there,
that's the part we all look forward to. That's easy.
The difficult part is getting the deal made. So, but
I think we've come a long way.
Speaker 10 (01:32:00):
Do you have something else on the post? Have such
a he's got such a nice face, he's smiling.
Speaker 14 (01:32:05):
But what she'll ask a total killer for us. Yeah,
the ones that get you know, he looks like aneusalt
Ones President.
Speaker 10 (01:32:13):
What do you get on most what's your common ground
with the Keystoma?
Speaker 11 (01:32:16):
Because you're both from different political backgrounds.
Speaker 22 (01:32:18):
It's true.
Speaker 10 (01:32:18):
I think.
Speaker 14 (01:32:20):
I can say this because we've known each other now
really for a little while. This is not our first meeting.
As you know, he loves his country and so do I.
That's our common our common theme. He loves his country
and I love our country. And we also have two
countries that have gotten along for the longest period of time,
(01:32:40):
number one ally on each side, and we.
Speaker 10 (01:32:43):
Have good France and Australia. We have a lot of
good ones.
Speaker 14 (01:32:47):
But we've had a long time relationship, a long time,
hundreds of years, and we like each other frankly, and
we like each other's country and we love our country.
And I think that's how common thread place on Terraffs.
Speaker 29 (01:33:07):
You just said with China you were I'm with the Independent.
Well that's good, Uh, it's on teriff. Just said recharged down.
He charged them as a charged China. But the tariffs
are paid eventually by American importers and consumers know that.
Speaker 10 (01:33:24):
No, I think they're paid for it by the country.
But you know, look, we can get into that. I had.
I put a lot of.
Speaker 14 (01:33:30):
Tariffs on in my first term, and we made tremendous
amounts of progress because of those tariffs. China paid US
hundreds of billions of dollars, billions we never had because
they took advantage. And President she's a friend of mine,
but he knows better than anybody, took advantage.
Speaker 10 (01:33:45):
Of our country.
Speaker 14 (01:33:46):
He took advantage of presidents and didn't know what they
were doing. And they expect them, They actually expect them.
The smart countries expect them from me because they know
me and they know our country. But they got away
with they got away with murder for for decades, and
we just can't let that happen anymore.
Speaker 10 (01:34:04):
Behind you pledged, it.
Speaker 27 (01:34:06):
Sounds as that one of you completely trusts president and
one of you doesn't trust him.
Speaker 10 (01:34:11):
In English, I got that right. Why do you trust?
Speaker 14 (01:34:13):
Look, you know it's trust and verify. Let's call it that.
And and I think we both can be that way.
It's you have to verify because you never know what's
going to happen. I know, I know a lot of
people that you would say, no chance that they would
ever deceive you, and they're the worst people in the world.
I know others that you would guarantee they would deceive you,
and you know what, they are one hundred percent honorable.
(01:34:35):
So you never know what you're getting. H No, I
have confidence that if we make a deal, it's going.
Speaker 10 (01:34:40):
To hold.
Speaker 3 (01:34:44):
Mister President.
Speaker 22 (01:34:45):
Less than one percent of all sentanel that comes into
the US is apprehended at.
Speaker 3 (01:34:49):
The Canadian quarter, So why use ventanal.
Speaker 14 (01:34:52):
As a reas be apprehending much more. They're only apprehending
one percent. You're right about that. It's a little more
than that, but they should be apprehending much more because
a lot comes through Canada, and as Mexico gets stronger
in terms of the border, it goes up to Canada
and a lot of drugs are coming in through Canada.
Speaker 10 (01:35:11):
We can't have that.
Speaker 14 (01:35:12):
Please, is there anything you can say tomorrow to President
Zelenski to reassure him that his country's war hasn't been in.
Speaker 3 (01:35:21):
Vain and its sovereignty is not going to be threatened
by any deals.
Speaker 10 (01:35:25):
Well, you know he's coming.
Speaker 14 (01:35:28):
Uh, perhaps he's already on his way, and we're going
to be signing the deal together, probably in front of
the media, and we're going to be having a good conversation. No,
we want to work with him, President Zelenski, she said before.
Speaker 10 (01:35:43):
We want to work with him, and we will work
with him.
Speaker 14 (01:35:45):
I think the President and I actually have had a
very good relationship. It maybe got a little bit testy
because we wanted to have a little bit of what
the European nation said. You know, they get their money
back by giving money. We don't get the money back.
Biden made a deal. He put in three hundred and
fifty billion dollars, and I thought it was a very
(01:36:07):
unfair situation.
Speaker 11 (01:36:09):
We're not getting all of ours, I mean quite a
bit of ours. Was was was gifted. It was given.
There were some lens, but maybe it was gifted. Actually, the.
Speaker 24 (01:36:18):
Europeans wants and Ukraine to be parts of native as
parts of this deal.
Speaker 10 (01:36:22):
Are you willing to budget not at all? Or is
it a food Well I could be.
Speaker 14 (01:36:26):
Very nice and say, oh, well, we'll work to it.
Speaker 10 (01:36:29):
It's not going to happen. This is not going to happen.
Speaker 14 (01:36:32):
That's what started this whole thing, and Biden Biden said that,
and all of a sudden the gun started. That was
one of the primary reasons that started. And this was
long before President Putin. They never said it was an impossibility,
so we can say, oh, gee, well we'll try, but that's.
Speaker 10 (01:36:51):
Something that's just not going to happen.
Speaker 14 (01:36:52):
And then the other question that he asked us about
the land, will you get your land back? Well, they
fought long and hard on the land, and you and
I will be discussing that. We're going to certainly try
and get as much as we can back, but on
the NATO, it's just not that's not going to happen.
Speaker 28 (01:37:08):
Yeah, about having common ground with Kista, there are things
you disagree on as well. You describe Zelensky as a dictator.
He describes President Puston as a dictator. Do you see
that as a problem.
Speaker 14 (01:37:21):
The relationship between President Zelenski and President Putin is.
Speaker 10 (01:37:26):
Not a good one. You've noticed, right, it's not a
good one.
Speaker 14 (01:37:29):
It's not a good relationship, and we're gonna have to
try and work something out. Sometimes that happens I get
along with both. I have a very good relationship with
President Putin. I think I have a very good relationship
with President Zolensky.
Speaker 10 (01:37:44):
And now we're you know, we're doing the deal, then
we're going to be in there.
Speaker 14 (01:37:48):
We're going to be actually in there, digging, digging our
hearts out and hopefully you know, we need the rare
earth and we have some here, but we don't have
enough where are. Our economy is very strong, and we
need a lot of things that in some cases we
don't have here.
Speaker 10 (01:38:05):
So I think we're gonna have a very good relationship.
Speaker 14 (01:38:08):
But the relationship between them is not the best thing.
Speaker 10 (01:38:12):
That the lenscape. Did I say that. I can't believe
I said that. Next way, yeah, please go ahead.
Speaker 30 (01:38:25):
Yeah, from Financial Times, can you see any situation where
the US forces can be deployed as a backstop in
the peace in operation in direct confrontation with Russian booth?
Speaker 10 (01:38:36):
Well, there is a backstop thing. You know.
Speaker 14 (01:38:37):
First, you're going to have European countries because they're right there.
We're very far away. We have an ocean between us,
but we want to make sure it works. So I
don't know when you say backstop, you mean a backstop
psychologically or militarily or what.
Speaker 10 (01:38:50):
But we are a backstop because we'll be over there,
we'll be working in the country zone we're going to be.
Speaker 14 (01:38:55):
That's a great thing economically for them because you know,
when you're talking economic development, we're gonna have a lot
of people over there, so we'll be working in the country.
Speaker 10 (01:39:05):
So I just don't think you're gonna have a problem.
Speaker 14 (01:39:08):
I think when we have an agreement, you could say
whatever you want about security, who's going to do it
or own? And that's going to be a very pleasant conversation.
The hard conversation is will we have an agreement? And
I think the answer is yes. I think Russia will agree,
and I think that I really believe Ukraine will agree.
Speaker 10 (01:39:25):
Also, just move.
Speaker 27 (01:39:28):
If British troops are in Ukraine keeping the peace and
get attacked by Russia, will you come to their.
Speaker 14 (01:39:32):
Aid If the British people are in your Greek and
they get attacked. You know, I've always found about the British,
they don't need much help. They can take care of
themselves very well.
Speaker 10 (01:39:43):
You know what.
Speaker 14 (01:39:44):
Now it sounds like it's vasive, but it's study vasive.
You know, the British have been an incredible soldiers, incredible
military and they can take care of themselves.
Speaker 10 (01:39:56):
But if they need help, I'll always be with the British. Okay,
I'll always be with them, but they.
Speaker 14 (01:40:00):
Don't need help. You look at their career. You have
done very well over the years. Avage, we have. I'm
very proud of our country and we have.
Speaker 26 (01:40:09):
But we've also always been bucking each other up between
our two countries. That is why this is the greatest
alliance of prosperity and security. I think the world has
ever seen. Whatever necessary, we absolutely backed each other up,
but not something.
Speaker 10 (01:40:22):
Could you take a one and Russia about yourselves? Well,
all right, one or two more.
Speaker 4 (01:40:29):
Yesterday Age remarks at the Munich Security Conference. Vice President
Vance condemned free speech violations in the UK, particularly, could
you respond, what is your miss I.
Speaker 10 (01:40:39):
Have an idea. We have the man right here. Come on,
let's go, Jay Dalitz. We're putting you on stage. Great.
Speaker 23 (01:40:46):
Yeah, Look I said what I said, which is that
we do, have, of course a special relationship with our
friends in the UK and also with some of our
European allies, but we also know that there have been
infringements on free speech that actually affect not just the British,
of course what the British do in their own country
is up to them, but also affect American technology companies
(01:41:07):
and by extension, American citizens. So that is something that
we'll talk about today at launching.
Speaker 26 (01:41:11):
We've had great speech for a very very long time
in the United Kingdom and it will last for a
very very long time. Well no, I mean certainly we
wouldn't want to reach across US citizens and we don't
know that's absolutely right.
Speaker 11 (01:41:24):
But in relation to pre speech in the UK, I'm
very proud of our history there.
Speaker 27 (01:41:28):
We discuss in August with the Australians and the Brits.
Speaker 11 (01:41:33):
Were you discussing discussing August with the Prime Minister?
Speaker 17 (01:41:35):
Sun?
Speaker 14 (01:41:36):
But what does that mean August the Australia US defense line.
So well, we'll did be discussing there and we've had
another great relationship and you have too with Australia.
Speaker 10 (01:41:46):
Yeah, we've had a very good relationship with the Australia.
Speaker 24 (01:41:48):
Plas it's a president while we have the vice president here.
Are you both disappointed that the AfD didn't come first
in the German elections given your previous support for me?
Speaker 14 (01:41:58):
Now whatever happens Germany. Look, the relationship has been very
strong with Germany. But we'll have to see what happens.
Have a lot of things going on right now. We'll
have to say. No, I'm not disappointed about anything. If anything,
you would say that the group that we would be
most opposed to lost, but we got along with them. Also,
(01:42:19):
we have a very good relationship with all groups in Germany.
Speaker 3 (01:42:23):
Well, the CEO, Eric Prince was on our Channel News Nation.
Speaker 22 (01:42:27):
He was talking about his proposal to use private forces
to assist in deportations.
Speaker 3 (01:42:32):
Have you read that proposal and do you support it?
Speaker 10 (01:42:34):
No, I haven't seen it. I don't think it's necessary.
Speaker 14 (01:42:36):
Our people are doing a phenomenal job. I wouldn't be
opposed to it necessarily, but I'd go to our military
people and I'd go to Tom Holman and Christy, I
go to the very and ask.
Speaker 10 (01:42:45):
But I don't see it as being.
Speaker 14 (01:42:49):
We're doing unbelievable, unbelievably and getting people out, getting criminals out,
people that should have never been here, that the Biden
administration with a stupid open border sh that have never allowed.
They came in from prisons and jails and mental institutions
and gang members and drug dealers coming into our country
like this.
Speaker 10 (01:43:08):
We're getting them out and we're doing really well.
Speaker 14 (01:43:10):
I mean, the level of effectiveness has been incredible.
Speaker 10 (01:43:14):
Everybody's talking about it.
Speaker 14 (01:43:15):
How about one more, you asked.
Speaker 7 (01:43:19):
Mister President on the Middle East?
Speaker 10 (01:43:20):
Go ahead, you look so nice. Here we go. Here's
the gill.
Speaker 18 (01:43:26):
Are areas specifically of Ukraine that you're talking about in
giving back specifically crimea.
Speaker 11 (01:43:33):
Have you gotten to those details yet on such.
Speaker 14 (01:43:35):
A well, we you mean the areas that were taken.
There are a lot of areas that were taken. We've
talked about it. A lot of the Sea Lion has
been taken, and we'll be talking about that and we're
going to see if we can get it back or
get a lot of it back for Ukraine, if that's possible,
we'll be seeing about that. Okay, Well, thank you very much, everybody,
(01:43:57):
Thank you.
Speaker 10 (01:43:59):
Thanks.
Speaker 2 (01:43:59):
Notice he's answered one thousand.
Speaker 29 (01:44:05):
And nine questions the first thirty days, number twos of Momba,
one of the nadies.
Speaker 8 (01:44:15):
You've been latching live coverage of President Trump and UK's
Prime minister holding a joint news conference.
Speaker 10 (01:44:20):
Here.
Speaker 8 (01:44:20):
The two are set to go speak privately in just
a couple of moments. We of course will continue to
cover it for you here on Real America's Voice. It
was a wide ranging conversation, of course, many of the
questions had to do with the situation between Ukraine and Russia.
President Trump saying that he is going to be meeting
with Voladimir Zelinski, the President of Ukraine, at the White
House tomorrow. The two are set to sign a deal
(01:44:43):
tomorrow discussing rare minerals and the way to move forward,
if you will, as it relates to that were there
between Ukraine and Russia. Also President Trump talking about upcoming
tariffs that he's going to levy, not only on Canada
and Mexico and China, but also so the upcoming reciprocal
(01:45:03):
tariffs that he is meeting the president there are the
Prime Minister excuse me, of the uk saying that right
now the trade agreements between the United States and his
country seem to be very equitable, so he wasn't concerned
about that. But the two again are set to meet
over lunch, even with the Vice President. You saw jd
Vance there in the room. They will all sit over
lunch and talk about a number of these issues that
(01:45:24):
are key issues, and then later on. We expect them
to hold another news conference following that meeting. We'll be
covering all of it for you here on Real America's Voice,
so make sure that you stay tuned for live coverage
of all of that. In the meantime, we are going
to get you back to your regularly scheduled programming here
on Real America's Voice. Yeah, we're going to get you
back to your regularly scheduled programming here on Real America's Voice.
(01:45:47):
As always, we appreciate you being here with us for
our coverage