Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:20):
The Charlie Kirk Show starts. Now we have to show
up with guns we have.
Speaker 2 (00:27):
There's no other way around it. I don't care if
I don't have a Minnesota carry permit.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
I'm unarmed right now, but this is the last time
I show up to face these guys without a weapon.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
There's no way.
Speaker 4 (00:38):
The world is watching, and the world knows that America
has an issue with guns. I'm against a pulse, of course,
but the gun thing. The fact that she was shot
like this for what almost.
Speaker 5 (00:49):
Hitting this agent.
Speaker 4 (00:50):
I mean, the fact that guns were used and she
was shot and killed in this way, to me is
the most horrifying part. Why does an ICE agent have
a gun?
Speaker 3 (00:57):
This thirty seven year old woman drops her kid off
at school, not involved.
Speaker 5 (01:02):
In protect protests to activity or anything. Seems to be
in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Speaker 6 (01:07):
When that gentleman, when she she showed up that morning,
she did she weaponized that vehicle.
Speaker 7 (01:13):
Jake.
Speaker 6 (01:13):
She could have been standing there with a glock on
her hip. Okay, police wouldn't have fired at her. They said,
please get out of the car. She didn't go out
of the vehicle when she readed that vehicle engine, when
she read the engine and proceeded forward. She weaponized. That
officer did not have the hindsight of hours of watching videotape.
He had a microsecond, mega decision where that fired her
(01:34):
or not a fire? Do you think he wanted to
end somebody's life that tape.
Speaker 5 (01:37):
No.
Speaker 8 (01:37):
If they are saying that he has ten years on
service and is trained, he should know that you shouldn't
be trying to get in front of a moving car.
Speaker 9 (01:48):
As any of you know.
Speaker 10 (01:50):
They came to terrorize, obduct, and deport, so molly immigrants
here in Minnesota, Well, they could have any because majority
of us are legal residents and citizens. They decided to
terrorize our let's leadal immigrants.
Speaker 11 (02:08):
People are tired of these people coming into this city
masked up, basically all masked up and pulling people out
and causing hav it. This was supposed to be helping
cities out, This was supposed to be eliminating crime. But
yet you are committing them here. You are putting people
(02:31):
in fear. You are breaking up families.
Speaker 12 (02:34):
When a president endorses tearing families apart and attempts to
govern through fear and hate rather than shared values, you
foster an environment of lawlessness and recklessness.
Speaker 13 (02:48):
This is an aspiring fascist dictator tyrant trying to impose
by force, will and dominance on the population. That's what's happening,
and as soon as we all wake up to it,
the sooner we'll be able to be free of it.
Speaker 14 (03:05):
We know what the federal government says happened here. There
was a time when we could take them at their word.
Speaker 10 (03:13):
That time is long passed.
Speaker 14 (03:15):
That is why we are calling an ICE to hold
all operations in Portland until a full and independent investigation
can take place. Our community deserves answers, and I have.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
A message for ICE.
Speaker 15 (03:30):
Two.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
Ice, get out of Minneapolis.
Speaker 16 (03:35):
We do not want you here.
Speaker 17 (03:38):
Your stated reason for being in this city is to
create some kind of safety, and you are doing exactly
the opposite for which.
Speaker 9 (03:46):
The woman who was shot and killed is being labeled
as a domestic terrorism terrorist.
Speaker 18 (03:50):
Just to be clear, is anyone who protests ICE a domestic.
Speaker 19 (03:55):
Terrorist in the eyes of the administration.
Speaker 7 (03:57):
I can't say that.
Speaker 20 (03:58):
You know, it's a case by case base, but you know,
if you look up the definition of terrorism, is there violence?
Is there threat of violence based on an ideology that
wants to change the way the government does what we do.
Speaker 5 (04:11):
Look up the definicit terrorism with.
Speaker 9 (04:12):
The Secretary nome correct to label her a domestic terrorist.
Speaker 2 (04:16):
Mister Harman, look, we don't know what.
Speaker 20 (04:19):
I don't know if Secretary knows. In what I know
I can tell you is what they did is no
legal And if you look up as a definition of terrorism,
is certainly could fall within that definition.
Speaker 5 (04:28):
If you look at definition.
Speaker 2 (04:30):
Evidence, pardon you don't have evidence that she's a domestic terrorist.
Speaker 20 (04:34):
I don't know what Secretary has that. I don't I'm
not going to judge what the Secretary says. But if
you look up the definition of terrorism, I certainly can.
Speaker 5 (04:42):
Fall within that. Well. I think we all got to
agree there's no reason for this way to do what
she did. There's no reason to be there.
Speaker 20 (04:50):
If you want to protest, protest, but don't actively impede
and interfere, and certainly don't drive a four thousand pounds
vehicle toward an officer.
Speaker 21 (05:04):
Every day there's a battle for your mind, raging information
coming from every angle, but the will to deceive.
Speaker 5 (05:11):
I fear not.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
You found the place for truth, the.
Speaker 21 (05:14):
Voice of a generation that still has the will to
believe in the greatest country in the history of the world.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
This is the Charlie Kirk Show. Fuck a lot. Here
we go on. All right, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show.
It is Monday, January twelfth. Happy Monday, Blake, let's hope. Yeah,
fair enough. It's been a wild weekend protests across the
country protesting ice detainments, in raids and deportations, all the
(05:45):
things that we the people voted for. And right out
the gate here we've got Bo Diddle TPOSA front Lines
who's been in Minneapolis covering the story as it unfolds
to help us make sense of it.
Speaker 5 (05:56):
All.
Speaker 1 (05:56):
Bo, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show. Thank you so much.
It's great to be here.
Speaker 7 (06:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
So you've been on the front lines. As the name
would indicate. It's not TPUSA backlines. Yeah, it's TPSA front lines. Bo,
you were on the front lines in Minneapolis. I was watching,
as I'm sure you were, everything that was happening last
night with Nick Sorder. There was a lot of uh
drama there, protesters surrounding the car, throwing frozen bottles of
(06:23):
water at vehicles at ice agents.
Speaker 15 (06:26):
What did you see on the ground, Oh my gosh,
it was pure chaos, especially on Friday. A lot of
people were wanting to focus in on Saturday, But for
me personally, as soon as I landed in Minneapolis, we
went out on the streets to the Canopy Hotel, which
by the way, is allegedly not even where the ICE
(06:48):
agents are staying, so they're just disrupting hundreds of people
trying to get a good night rest. But as soon
as we got there, there was not a single police
man or woman in side. It's later there is, but
at the time there wasn't, and it was just pure chaos.
They were throwing stuff on dumpsters, there was fireworks being exploded.
(07:10):
It was just complete lawlessness until the riot police showed
up later.
Speaker 1 (07:15):
Yeah. You know what's interesting is it was that same
CNN reporter that the mister fiery but mostly peaceful himself,
that I saw covering it on CNN, and even he
was amazed that there wasn't more law enforcement presence around
this mass crowd of protesters. I remain convinced that the
only reason this has not boiled over into Floyda Paluza
(07:38):
two point zero full blown is because it's cold. I
genuinely believe that, and I will stick to my guns
on that because rioters love the summer. Rioters love the summer.
But this is Minneapolis. Blake disagrees with Now.
Speaker 22 (07:50):
I think we've discussed the other reason. I think it's different.
Speaker 1 (07:53):
Well fair enough, Yeah, yeah, there's obvious reasons with namely
Renee Good not being she doesn't she doesn't bear much
resemblance to George Floyd. Let's just put it that way.
Speaker 23 (08:05):
Bo.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
Are you staying safe out there? Are you keeping ahead
on your shoulders? You staying vigilant? I mean, like I said,
I was watching what happened with Nick Sorder. He got
into multiple scuffles. Just so we're clear, Nick's been on
the show before. Nick's a friend of ours. He got
into multiple scuffles with people in his face. It's it's
very unruly. What kind of behavior are you seeing from
(08:27):
these agitators. Yeah, I'm doing my best to stay out there.
Speaker 15 (08:32):
I always say a special prayer before I go out
in the field that the Lord will protect me. But
when I'm out there, there is a lot of hostility.
People do not like the media. The leftists do not
want what they are doing to be shown to the public,
and so anytime you have a camera, they are very
very skeptical of you. So I had multiple people coming
(08:54):
over to me saying what are you doing and then
looking over my shoulder and front lines. We're posting in
real time, and so it is something very scary for
me when I'm having to post and be one hundred
percent objective, but I'm saying what's going on right now,
and then they're looking over my shoulder seeing what is
(09:15):
what I'm saying about to be posted to the public.
They're getting very very hostile and they're not happy that
it's getting posted. So I get confronted quite a bit,
and they try and report me to the people in
the green jackets, saying to watch out for me, that
I'm like a right wing Nazi when all I'm doing
is just reporting what they're doing.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
Do you have any indication about just the level of
organization right We know a lot of these groups that
are protesting or communist front groups. We know that they're
you know, getting at least some level of funding organizations
Central command is dispatching them out. Are you getting a
sense of that when you're out on the streets. Are
you're hearing them talk or you're hearing them coordinate? Yes,
(10:00):
there is a lot of organization.
Speaker 15 (10:02):
So on Friday night, which was the by far the
most chaotic, when they were blocking the streets, you would
see them talking with one another and talking to the
people and the jackets.
Speaker 1 (10:12):
A lot of times, the.
Speaker 15 (10:13):
People that are more involved that are leading it have
some sort of identification, whether it's a yellow jacket or
a vest or a hat something, or a billboard or
not a billboard, but like a sheet that they're holding.
That kind of shows you who the leaders are and
those are the people that they're talking to to try
(10:34):
and figure out what the next move is. So when
the police were blocking them in when the riot police
showed up later, they were all going to them to
try and figure out where are we going, And that's
when they started started to run away because they saw
the police trying to get them in a corner and
that's when they ran away, and some of them actually
(10:54):
tried to get on the highway, so thankfully they got
stopped from doing that, but they were trying to.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
So, yeah, there is a level of coordination sophistication here,
and I want the audience to really understand that because
this isn't just a random group of you know, protesters,
that are out organically. Maybe there is some of that.
Certainly you do want to create critical mass so that
other people feel like they can come out and join you.
But this is coordinated. There are captains on the field,
they are marked, they are showing the others where to go,
(11:24):
and I think everybody needs to fully appreciate that. Now,
you recorded this video. It's gone pretty viral act about
two million views. There's protesters gathering beside Renee Goods memorial,
so there's been an impromptu memorial placed on the streets.
You recorded some video of what looks like shamans doing
some sort of ritual over Renee Goods memorial, this makeshift memorial.
(11:46):
What the heck is going on here? That is a
great question.
Speaker 16 (11:50):
And when I film that video, I was just.
Speaker 1 (11:55):
The comparison.
Speaker 15 (11:56):
If you look at the way that conservative Christian people
reacted to what happened on September tenth, and then compare
it to the lawlessness and the demonic activity that is
going on right now, the two aren't comparable. If you
ever question what side you should be on, just let
this be a reminder that we're not doing demonic rituals
(12:19):
over memorial sides.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
Wow. Yeah, I don't know, Blake, if you uh, you're
from that general vicinity of the world, that general area.
Is this just tries this normal? Is this just a
I can't say I ever saw it, but I guess
I can't rule it out. It's it's Minneapolis.
Speaker 24 (12:37):
It's a weird place, yeah, an evil place, a wicked place.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
Well, I mean, listen, there's good people up there, but
there is there is they should leave, Yeah, they probably should.
So here, I'm gonna play a video here of this
is again b role, so we can talk over it.
This is Nick Sorder getting attacked one to seventy five.
Go ahead and play this. This is a mob surrounding
so So trying to grab his phone and he's trying
(13:05):
to fight back and he's you know, he's pushing back.
Then we've got they a mob surrounds Nick's car one
seventy six right here. So now they're in a car
he's with Cam Higbee and Cam's done work with TPOSA
front lines before as well. So they surround the car
with Cam and they're they're spray painting the car. Later
(13:27):
we see that the windows are crashed out from these
frozen So this is him actually driving away. See you
can see him driving away. A protester attempted to get
on and I say protester, it's an agitator tried to
get on the hood of his car and was flung
off into a snowbank as he escapes the melee here
with Cam in the passenger seat. And then here's the aftermath.
(13:48):
Go to one seventy one eighty nine, one eighty nine.
You can actually see where the car as soon as
we show it to you. You can see the the
windows have been destroyed. You can see the spray painting.
These people are absolute thugs and they're intentionally agitating. We're
(14:10):
gonna get into more of that with borders. Are Tom Homan,
who's coming up later in the hour. Some of these
groups are training these people and they're putting it on
social media on how to do it. Yeah. See this
guy gets thrown into a snowbank. I'm just really glad
Nick's okay, because Nick is really really important, especially now Bo.
(14:31):
You stay safe, my friend. Good job TPSA front Lange.
You guys got millions and millions of views from this weekend.
Good job, my friend will stay in touch. Thank you
so much. Thanks for having me on all right, brother,
we'll be right back. All right, welcome back. Did you
(15:02):
know blake private student loan debt in the US totals
about uh.
Speaker 24 (15:08):
Four hundred million, four hundred billion dollars three hundred hundred billion,
forty five forty hundred billion, forty stressed?
Speaker 1 (15:16):
Blake is not a math guy. Words guy. I'm collapsing.
He's a words guy. Why ref ref refinance is just stressed?
You're what and a math guy? You're a math guy?
Speaker 15 (15:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (15:27):
No, kidding. Well, you know, I'm surprised because normally it's
like the the verbal guys are not the math guys,
and the math guys are not the verbal I got
a I got a sixteen hundred? S at did you
really get a sixteen hundred? I got it, which is
it's easier to get now, So wait, was that out
of twenty four hundred?
Speaker 24 (15:45):
Uh no no, so a lot of schools didn't count that.
So Nebraska sent me and I shouldn't distract from the ass. Wow,
I mean that's impressive. That's impressive. Uh okay, well listen,
we have a smart, smart Blake nef on the show.
That's why it's why we keep him around. He's what
did Charlie used to say about you or like the
oh whatever, whatever, wow, whatever.
Speaker 1 (16:04):
He was very complimentary. If your of your raw horsepower intelligence,
here we go. Y Refly refinance is distressed or defaulted
private student loans. That's what we're talking about that others
will not touch. And here is the key with y refly.
They give you a custom loan payment that you can
actually pay, So they're not just going to give you
one size fits all and say here's your new payment,
whether or not you can pay it every month or not.
(16:25):
They're actually going to work with you to find out
your expenses, your income, and then taylor a solution that
works for your financial situation. They do not care what
your credit score is, so if you've let this problem
go on too long you have a terrible credit situation,
they don't care. They will give you a three minute
rate check without any credit impact, but bad credit is accepted.
(16:46):
They even let you skip a payment every six months
up to twelve times without penalty. Nobody else is going
to do that. You do not have to ignore your
mountain of student loan debt anymore. You can get ahead
call eight eight eight y refight thirty four. That's eight
eight eight. Why are e F y thirty four? Or
visit them online? Why REFI dot com are? Why are
(17:07):
e f? Why dot com? Take advantage of what they're offering.
Get ahead. You do not have to live this way anymore,
all right? So I want to break this down in
kind of brass tacks. Again. We're going to have tom
Homing coming on next. There is multiple different videos here
when you ask why are they making Renee Good a
(17:29):
martyr when she was quite clearly obstructing ICE, putting herself
into a situation where bad things could happen. I'm not
celebrating her death, Let's be very clear. I think it's
a tragedy. But it's a tragedy that happened because she
put herself into a situation. Her and her lover partner,
whatever they were getting trained, they were getting they were
goading the ICE officers. But the question is why, Blake,
(17:51):
why are they so motivated to do this? And I
want to explore this in the next five minutes.
Speaker 24 (17:55):
I mean, I think they've just they're politically radicalized, so
they've been why they've been, Frank, I think we're seeing
kind of an n cascade of a lot of liberal
political mindsets like that's why we got open borders under Biden.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
That's the funny thing.
Speaker 24 (18:12):
Biden didn't even he didn't run on open borders, he
didn't promise open borders, even like internally, it's just that
once he took office, he picked these people and they'd
reached the stage where their moral universe was such that
they could not articulate any valid reason to keep a
person out of the United States. So they got policies
(18:33):
of oh, catch and release. Basically we got policies of, oh,
everyone gets their day in court, and oh, well, we
also say we don't want ice harassing people just because
they missed a court here, and we have to focus
on the criminals, but we also can't have them go
to jails to get people.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
And so you got open borders by default.
Speaker 24 (18:54):
And I think that's the left today, like they've reached
this point where they can't articulate a reason for anyone
to validly leave the country or be kept out of
the country. So anyone who would have a job to
do that is a gestapo, is a fascist, is a Nazi.
There's this escalation towards extreme responses, and then they're all
emotionally unwell, they say this in surveys. They're not really
(19:16):
mentally well calibrated people, and so they're easily whipped up
and driven insane. And then they have a culture of
protests that embraces attacking cops, attacking cop cars, helping people
evade arrest, unlike us.
Speaker 1 (19:29):
Yeah, and I think all of that is true. I
also think that they're doing this to rig elections, to
rig the census, to accumulate power politically. Chuck Schumer admits
this a couple of years ago. And then we have
a clip from Senator Mark Warner that came out this
weekend which doubles down on this premise two hundred Chuck Schumer,
(19:50):
only way.
Speaker 25 (19:50):
We're going to have a great future in America is
if we welcome and embrace immigrants, the Dreamers, and all
of them, because our ultimate goal is to help the dreamers,
but get a path to citizenship for all eleven million
or however many undocumented.
Speaker 7 (20:04):
There are here.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
That's actually hilarious or however many or however. And that's
the thing.
Speaker 22 (20:09):
It probably isn't eleven that's just the number they've used
for like twenty years.
Speaker 24 (20:13):
Yeah, Like it's they're basically like, oh, it hasn't gone
up despite us having basically open word that it's always
about equal, they just stopped checking basically.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Well, so this is what's fascinating. So that was from
a couple of years ago. They're admitting that they want
amnesty for all the undocumented's why because they incentivize them
with free giveaways, welfare flights to wherever they want, debit
cards filled with cash, and then they get them to vote.
So this was This was a really really I think
(20:42):
telling exchange between CNBC's Joe Kernan and Senator Mark Warner.
And I believe this is actually from this morning. Uh,
this has cut two o two. So watch this slide
of hand. Joe Kernan is asking Senator Mark Warner why
Democrats supported deportations under Obama but now they don't, and
Mark Warner refuses to sort of answer the question, but
(21:04):
then says, we need to legalize them. Two o two.
Speaker 3 (21:07):
Now I know Trump has deported or sent back three
hundred and fifty four hundred thousand people.
Speaker 5 (21:13):
Barack Obama, your guys, you called Trump my guy.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
It was five million. It was five million over eight years.
Speaker 2 (21:21):
Now we're at three hundred and fifty thousand what changed
with Democrats on it?
Speaker 1 (21:26):
I know Biden led in twelve million.
Speaker 5 (21:28):
Is it about votes?
Speaker 22 (21:29):
Why don't these people why isn't a crime to be here?
Speaker 1 (21:33):
Not that they haven't committed a crime.
Speaker 25 (21:35):
The border being as open as was under Biden was
one of the reasons Trump got elected.
Speaker 1 (21:43):
Okay, need to recut that clip because the end is
actually the most important part where he doesn't answer the question.
And then he gets to the end and he says
he says, there ought to be a path toward legality.
That's the key. There ought to be a path towards legality.
That is the whole endgame here is they want to
(22:04):
flood your country. They want to erase American European capitalist culture,
and they want to flood the country with illegal voters.
That's what they want to want to make this they
I mean, they do this with ice too.
Speaker 24 (22:17):
They make the situation as broken as possible so that
they can say, oh, well, the situation is really broken,
so you need to give in to us on all
of these things, like that we flooded in a gazillion people.
So they say, oh, there's just so many, we should
only focus on the worst criminals. But then they also
make it so you can't put a detainer on someone
in a prison, So they want to make it as
(22:37):
hard as possible to get the criminals too.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
Well, that's exactly right. The reason this is flooding into
the streets and why you see raids in the streets
is because sanctuary jurisdictions will not coordinate with ice officers
to get them out of the prisons when they get
pulled over when they commit a crime. And I just
want to be very clear, this is not about the
worst of the worst. Now, We're not going to settle
for the worst of the worst. We want all twenty
million or whatever the number is out. That is the deal.
(23:01):
That's the bargain. That's what we voted for, and none
of this worst to the wors stuff. We're gonna talk
about this with Tom Homan. Yeah, we're gonna focus on
them first, the pedophiles and the child rapists, but we're
getting them all out. That's the deal we made in November.
We'll be right back.
Speaker 18 (23:22):
Welcome back to this Real America's Voice News break. I'm
Terrence Bates. President Trump is weighing the potential for US
involvement in Iran, as that country is in the grips
of a violent and deadly government response to protests. Meantime,
there's also talking the White House about rebuilding Venezuela economically
but under US guidance. Real America's Voice White House corresponding
(23:44):
Brian Glenn is live at the White House right now
with the very latest. Brian has a lot to take in,
a lot to unpack.
Speaker 26 (23:52):
Yeah, yeah, there is.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
Let's start with Venezuela. President Trump the other day was very.
Speaker 26 (23:58):
Critical of the Excellon Mobile CEO, talking about how they
were a little resistant to go into Venezuela, and so
in reaction to that, President Trump said, well, maybe they
need to kind of ice him out on the sideline.
Speaker 1 (24:10):
And then, also about sixteen.
Speaker 26 (24:11):
Hours ago, President Trump pushed out on his True Social
a basically doctored Wikipedia page that had President Trump being
the acting president of Venezuela. And of course that now
opens up the conversation, well, who is in charge of Venezuela.
Ever since that mcduro and his wife were extracted from
the country, that has many have been asking Terrence who
(24:34):
is in control of Venezuela. Well, according to the doctored
Wikipedia page, president Trump is in charge of Venezuela.
Speaker 18 (24:43):
We'll figure out the reality. But either way, it is
big business as it relates to Venezuelan and getting that
country back on track.
Speaker 1 (24:50):
That's what's gears do.
Speaker 18 (24:51):
And talk about Iran, which is really the global story
right now, as all eyes are on Iran and what
President Trump might do to intervene in that situation.
Speaker 26 (25:00):
Yeah, just hours ago, I saw a report that the
US was in the quote advanced stages of planning some
sort of attack on Iran. Now I know that they
have been ramping up resources in the area, and of
course that has been all of the talk here at
the White House as well, and if you look at
the protests and how they have really escalated just in
the last two three weeks. We just had some representative
(25:23):
on the morning show today and you and I talked
a little bit about that. It's certainly something that everyone
has their eyes on. So could this attack be intimate
the next couple of days.
Speaker 18 (25:33):
We'll find out absolutely, and we of course will be
checking back with you at the White House for the
very latest. Brian Glenn, Chief White House Chief White House Correspondent,
reporting this morning from the grinds there at the White House.
Speaker 5 (25:44):
That's going to do it for us.
Speaker 18 (25:45):
Now, let's get you back to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Speaker 1 (26:00):
This movement will not be silenced. You're listening to the
Charlie Kirk Show. All right, Welcome back to the Charlie
Kirk Show. We are honored to welcome now Tom Homan.
Borders are for the Trump administration, dear friend of the show.
And I believe in American folk hero. I think he
represents a lot more than he maybe understands, maybe he does.
(26:21):
Tom Homan, welcome back to the show. Honored to have you, sir.
Huge weekend that we saw lots of chaos in Minneapolis,
Los Angeles and elsewhere. Give us the state of play
right now. Are we feeling like our brave ICE agents
are safe? Do you feel like they're being protected? Tell
us what you can tell us, sir.
Speaker 20 (26:41):
Well, we're protecting them the best we can, and we've
encouriased resources in these locations. But as I said for
several months, the attacks on ICE, say hey for rhetoric,
especially by politicians, mayors and governors and members of Congress,
as it's just some flame detentions out there. And I
(27:02):
said for months, if the hateful Riddic continue to increase,
you know, it would be bloodshed, and there has been. Unfortunately,
and this past a few days with the shooting in Minneapolis,
with our thought it tamped the rhetoric down somewhat from
the politicians, but they doubled down and they want to
(27:23):
his car officer a murderer, which is going to further
inflame those that small percentage on the left that they're
already nuts, you know they are. They already don't make sense,
don't understand what's going on, and that's just some powers
them to do something stupid. So I think the job
of an ICE agent right now is more dangerous than
(27:44):
it ever has been. I mean, threats are you know,
assault themselves up over thirteen. So I spent a lot
of time this week on show. It's just begging for
you know, let's let's let's just stop the hateful rhetoric,
let this investigation play out, and we'll see where it
goes from there. But attacking ization and the work of
(28:05):
men and women ad buddys doesn't fix anything. It just
creates more chaos.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
Yeah, well absolutely, And here's here's where I'm getting concerned,
mister borders are is that we have you know, you've
got this Philadelphia sheriff, her name is Rochelle Bilaal. She says,
you don't want that smoke, and then she goes on
CNN is asked about it with Aaron Burnett and she
doubles down and I'm gonna play the clip and get
(28:32):
your reaction on the backside. Two or four.
Speaker 11 (28:35):
The sheriff's office, it deals with transportation. So basically I said,
you would not be able to hide. Nobody would whisked
you away, and if he.
Speaker 5 (28:45):
Charges you, then you can be arrested. What I was
saying is that when I.
Speaker 11 (28:52):
Said you come in this city to do a crime,
we will bring the smoke to you. People are tired
of these people coming into the city masked up, basically
all masked up and pulling people out and causing hav it.
Speaker 1 (29:13):
So she's going to bring the smoke at What you're
seeing now is you're seeing an increase of this rhetoric.
Whether it's Jacob Frey in Minneapolis saying, get the you
know f out of here, we don't want you here.
Are they trying to create a standoff between state and
local and federal officers, mister homand.
Speaker 20 (29:33):
Look absolutely and she a can't bring it the small,
don't bring the fire. I mean, bottom line is, you know,
her comments themselves speaks largely to her intelligence. So look,
we're going to continue doing this job. I don't know
who she is. Why whya a law enforcement official who
took a sworn oaf to enforce the laws and protect
(29:56):
her communities. We'll not want to work with ice who
are out there arresting the worst of the worst. We're
taking public safety threats out of her jurisdiction and not
just taking them off the street, taking them out of
the country because number one, they're here illegally. Number two,
they committed a crime against your citizen, some horrendous crimes.
So like in Minneapolis, you know, we look at the
(30:17):
number of the releases we are, a number of rest
we did the last couple of weeks, and there's numerous
people we arrested for child rape, child sodomy. When we're
making her community safer, so you know, you're welcome, so
she can continue attack make all the threats she wants.
I don't know what bringing smoke means, but we're can
continue to bring the fire to those people who are
(30:39):
public safety threats and in the country illegally we're coming
for them. We're going to keep doing what we're doing,
and we're going to remove them and make that community safer.
Speaker 7 (30:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
Well, and to your point, I throw up one eight six.
This is a list that DHS has provided, I think
first to Bill illusion over at Fox News of some
of these criminals that have been abducted from the streets, apprehended.
And these are I mean, these are a Luoisian illegal
alien convicted of strong arm sodomy of a boy and
(31:08):
of a girl with deportation order since twenty eighteen. Convicted
of sexual assault and sodomy of a girl under thirteen,
twelve year old, you know, strong arm rape of a
twelve year old girl. This list goes on. It's I mean,
these are these are bad, bad people, so many of them.
By the way, it's sexual assault of young young people
(31:30):
and convicted of homicide. Convicted of three counts of homicide
from El Salvador, Somalia, Mexico, Laos. What the heck is
the argument to keep these people on the streets. I mean,
you've got I watched this clip Tom of this young
mom out there saying, you know, I'm out here protesting
because we want Minneapolis to be a welcoming place for
(31:51):
my kids. These are child rapists on the street. What
did I mean? How ahead? Go ahead? Yes? Please?
Speaker 20 (32:00):
In my opinion, rape of a child. It doesn't get
more sickening and criminal than that. And we've ar wrestled
a lot of those people. And so for that, mom
says she wants to save street for her children. I
agree with her, and the way we make the streets
safer is to rest public safety treats criminal trusts and
take them office three. I mean, I really think a
(32:22):
lot of these politicians, and I'm meanness, I think they
don't want President Trump to have a win. They hate
this president so much, but they'd rather have these people
walking the street and not showing the ice is being
successful and keeping President trunks promised American people to make
these streets safe again. There's no other reason that common
(32:43):
sense just devies, you know, it devides logic for anybody
that would ulify the men and women who were taking
child rape us off the street. We're in a place
I've never seen before. We're the ones who protect community
safety are the bad guys, and the ones who rape
(33:04):
children are the victims. So again they can scream and
yell all they want, We'll keep doing what we're doing.
Matter of fact, we're going to double down since they
want to attack ICE officers in Minneapolis versus and I
have a lot more agents there to keep doing what
we're doing. I just wish that people will either go
to ICE dot gov, go to CBP dot gov and
look at the data. Don't believe the media releases say
(33:26):
that we're separating families and hitting schools and going into
the church's is ridiculous.
Speaker 5 (33:31):
I just you know, And that's why I'm out there.
Speaker 20 (33:33):
This administration's out there every day trying to explain to
the people exactly what we're doing, because a lot of
the media has given false information that further inflames beyond
the hate for rhetoric.
Speaker 24 (33:45):
So Zur Holman, I guess since we've seen these signs
from Philadelphia's police cheat whatever her officers please shareff you
and others, and there's just this rhetoric of, oh, we're
going to protect you from ICE might order police to
stop ICE.
Speaker 22 (34:03):
Do you have training on this? Do you have an advisory?
What are ICE agents told to do?
Speaker 1 (34:08):
If God forbid, they're trying to make an arrest and
police step in the way and say we will not
allow you to do that.
Speaker 20 (34:16):
Then he is Then he is impeding a federal law
enforcement officer, which is a felony. So you want to
rest aized station, try it because when we're not playing games,
I mean, if you impede, if you interfere, whether with
a federal officer and and and enforcing the law, that
is a family and there is there is zero zero
(34:40):
A number of people were not going to hold accountable
for that. It's it's it's the US Attorney's office. Thank guy,
we got Pam Bondis as the Attorney General. They made
a commitment they're going to prosecute these people. So I
can't believe I even have to say that that you know,
a law enforcement officer can a rest ICE agent because
(35:00):
that would be impedement. So, you know, I think their
shriffs talking a lot of you know, a lot of blunder.
I don't think she really knows what she's talking about.
But I think the President has been clear that ICE
officers will enforce US law without apology, and there is
and there is zero discretion on somebody's impedia. If you
imped an ICE officer.
Speaker 1 (35:20):
You're going to be prosecuted good Uh Tom, there's you know,
we're looking at this Minnesota ice watch. You know Renee
Goods Uh I guess partner or whatever wife in quotation
marks basically was was following this group. They they throw
these images up. This is from one to one ninety
five guys, and it's these are images that you can see.
(35:43):
Each d arrest is a shaking off, which is UH,
which is to say, each one is a micro intofada
which can spread and inspire others until we may finally
shake off this noxious ruling order altogether. The next one
UH tactic number four pressuring police to release the arrestee.
You know they're they're they're training people Tactic two pulling
and pushing an officer off of an arrestee and are
(36:05):
breaking their grip on an arrestee. Tactic one, using a
secure grip like a gable grip that's illustrated above, hug
the arreste and pull them out of danger. They are
instructing agitators on how to disrupt your law enforcement officials,
your federal law enforcement officials in the streets in the
middle of a law enforcement operation. I think the average
(36:27):
public in you know, especially a Trump supporter that supports
mass deportations wants to know why the heck are these
groups allowed to even operate? Why is this still a thing?
Are you coordinating with DOJ and PAMBONDI to root out
these these communist front groups?
Speaker 20 (36:43):
Absolutely? You know, HSI ICE is working very close to
the FBI, d OJ to find out who's funding this,
who's behind this, and they'll be all accountable too. So
this is not you know, this is not something we
haven't thought about, something we're not engaged in. But I
can tell you right now as I sit here, there
are numerous criminal investigations going on right now to uncover
(37:06):
who's behind all this, you know, and I get back
to you know, this is about President Trump. And know
they don't want President Trump have a wing because where
were they? And you know he's awesome? Twelve when the
Bombing administration the rest of they moved four hundred nine thousand,
where were they?
Speaker 5 (37:23):
You know? And where were they?
Speaker 20 (37:24):
The last four years when the Biden administration, you know,
had over five hundred thousand children smogkling in this country,
they lost track of three hundred.
Speaker 2 (37:32):
Thousand of them.
Speaker 5 (37:33):
Where were they? Where were they?
Speaker 20 (37:34):
When a courted main Americans died from Fountain all overdoses
that came across an open border, or were they when
sex trafficking on women and children hit an all time
pie an open border. I mean they're picking and choosing
their anger. I say, the most humane thing that we
can do is secure the boarder. Secure the boarder saves lives.
(37:54):
And one of the reasons we have the most secure
border in the history of this nation is because Ice
is out there showing there's consequences. There's no free ride.
So we're saving lives by the thousands, and they don't
recognize that. So again, this is politics over public safety,
politics over common sense. These people need to be educated.
(38:15):
But again on your question, there are gonna be people
held accountable. A lot of criminal investigations going on. We
will find who's behind this and who's funding it, and
they'll be hold accountable and they'll be prosecuted.
Speaker 1 (38:27):
Good well, I mean, mister Homan, we have your back
one hundred percent. I know you know that, but you
know we've got to root out these communist front groups,
the funding networks, working with Treasury, the DOJ. We have
you guys. You're back. We're praying for you. God bless you.
We'll talk to you again soon.
Speaker 16 (38:45):
You got to think, all right, welcome back to Charlie Show.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
So we had the Golden Globes this weekend. I'm sure
you didn't notice, because I didn't either until I started
a show prep for today's show. Likes laughing already.
Speaker 24 (39:10):
Golden globes, golden Q Q laughing Q laugh track the
thing besides the Oscars, which you don't watch either anymore.
Speaker 1 (39:18):
Yeah, I mean, I mean it is kind of a
weird deal. When I was growing up, this was always
like a huge deal, was a huge press moment, and
they've just completely fallen off a cliff. Well, I think
I think COVID ruined it. Really is what it was.
Speaker 22 (39:28):
Well, woke stuff made it bad, but then COVID.
Speaker 24 (39:30):
It's just people don't go to as many movies and
now there's like Netflix movies that get It's just it's
not the same.
Speaker 1 (39:35):
It's not the same. But one of the things that
made news is because it's not about movies. It's not
about entertaining people. It's about political activism and all these
lefties that live behind their gated communities and their mansions
in Beverly Hills and elsewhere, This is their opportunity to
act like we're just one of you. We're just one
(39:56):
of the people. We care about the little guy. So
throw up two nine, an image of that's going around
ice out. Be good. Two nine, We've got it. Another
one here to ten. You're just seeing all these celebrities
wearing the be good sticker. Here's Mark Ruffalo, the communist actor,
(40:17):
who chimes in two eleven, be good.
Speaker 24 (40:20):
It reminds me, you know those tweets you'll oh oh
two eleven clips Sorry, yeah, two eleven.
Speaker 23 (40:27):
This is for the people in the United States who
are terrorized and scared today. I know I'm one of them.
I love this country, and what I'm seeing here happening
is not America.
Speaker 18 (40:38):
This is not Mark.
Speaker 3 (40:39):
Why do you feel that this platform is still useful
to spread a message like this?
Speaker 23 (40:42):
Listen, I want to pretend like this is I want
to be here to celebrate, and I am here to celebrate,
and I'm proud to have a Golden Globe nomination. But
also this is not normal anymore, and so I don't
know how how I could be quiet, and I'm feeling
a little sick, so it's hard to bs right now.
Speaker 1 (40:59):
So sounds like he's about to cry. Well, he's he's
a baba, he's a beta male, and he's a total
he's a total floozy. I cannot stand this guy because
he acts like he's so in touch with we, the
people at this grassroots level where the be good listen.
Nobody is celebrating her death, Renee Good's death. Nobody is,
(41:22):
as far as I can tell. And yet you have
Jasmine Frickin Crockett, this woman. This happened last week, we
talked about it. Then this is just insane. One ninety seven.
Speaker 9 (41:32):
Remember when Charlie Kirk got killed?
Speaker 27 (41:35):
Do you do you remember what our response was. Our
response wasn't to sit there and pretend like it was okay?
Is it okay because you have a badge? Because the
last time I checked, allegedly no one is above the law.
Speaker 2 (41:53):
Can y'all not just have a little bit of courage
and humanity?
Speaker 1 (42:02):
A child, dear Good? If I see anybody else compare
what happened with Renee Good to Charlie, I'm gonna lose it.
Those clips we played with Bo Didd'll perfectly capture it.
Speaker 24 (42:17):
Which is, after what happened to Charlie, you could not
have found a single clip anywhere in the country that
resembled that mob surrounding that car, attacking the windows, menacing people.
Speaker 1 (42:29):
It just didn't happen. It did not happen.
Speaker 5 (42:31):
We had one.
Speaker 24 (42:33):
Hundred thousand people, We had eighty thousand people in the
stadium and two hundred thousand people outside in the area.
Speaker 22 (42:39):
In Phoenix, and I don't know that there was a
single arrest. I don't know that there was this issue.
Speaker 1 (42:44):
It was a well run event. Ever, we had.
Speaker 24 (42:47):
Plenty of We had people come to our memorial, We
had people whole memorials around the woods, and all of
them were completely law abiding, prayerful, loving affairs. We got
all the testimonies that people had their spiritual revival, and
here we're getting instead of people posting spiritual revival stuff,
they're posting, here's how you can avoid help people avoid
(43:08):
getting arrested after they attack a police officer. Here's how
you can help undermine the laws of this country. Here's
why you should shoot an ice officer in the phase
like that's what they're doing. And that contrast, it needs
to be highlighted over and over and over again because
it's probably the most fundamental part of our political divide
(43:28):
at this point, you have to really highlight that gap.
Speaker 22 (43:32):
Frankly, it's just it's just so outrageous and.
Speaker 1 (43:36):
It's it's absolutely infuriating. If I see it happen again,
I'm gonna lose it on air. I promise you I
will lose it on air. Because Charlie died talking to
college students and debating sharing ideas, using his own words
with their own words. She died by confronting a police officer. Well,
(43:56):
he's an ice agents, police officer's law ENFLCE. Yeah, he's
not a local, he's arrest he empowered exactly. She did
it by goading him, by taunting him, by getting in
the middle of the street and trying to impede law enforcement. Now,
I do not celebrate her death, but you play stupid games,
you win stupid prizes, and unfortunately for Renee Good, she
(44:19):
found out that you found that out the hard way.
And I do again, I do not celebrate it. I
don't like it. I think it's a tragedy. But you
do not get in the way of a law enforcement
officer who's trying to enforce the law. You don't taunt them.
You get pulled over by a cop. You put your
hands at ten and two, you put the keys on
the dash, you roll down the window, you say yes, officer, no, officer,
(44:40):
whatever you say, officer. That's the way you interact with
law enforcement. And the fact that we've gotten away from
that as a country where the left things they can
just go in and taunt them and harass them and
train other agitators to avoid arrest is insanity. Those those
buttons they had.
Speaker 24 (44:57):
At the Golden Globes. Be good, it says it all.
It reminds me of that tweet or or whatever. I've
heard several different versions of it where it's like the
left will say like kindness is everything, and what they
really mean is they like want to shoot your entire family.
The people who say be good. That like the people
who say be good would make excuses for Tyler Robinson.
Speaker 1 (45:17):
Yeah, no, it was. I think that's a great insight. Actually,
by the way, it's be best. Okay, we all know
it's be best. Shout out Millennia. I guess syrammatically questionable
whether you can make you can change grammar if you're Trump.
If you're a Trump, you're allowed to make up your
own grammar. As we've established. Listen, we're pro immigrants. We
love Millennia, Okay, but this is this is what's insane
(45:38):
about this is we would not have these situations to
begin with if sanctuary cities would simply coordinate everybody. There's
a changing definition of what a deportation is, by the way,
under Clinton and Obama, because you know, you had a
Democrat in office, and they hadn't completely lost their mind yet.
They mostly lost it, but they hadn't completely lost their
minds yet, they would coordinate with local municipalities and hand
(46:01):
over illegals to Ice and they would get deported right,
simple as that. Now they force us to go out
in the streets and have these confrontations and these rundowns
like what happened in Portland where you got a trende
ragua prostitution ring. You know, runner, it's been bad for
a while. True story.
Speaker 24 (46:19):
When I was in middle school, we got like a
propaganda video show to us in my public middle school
which like implied it was evil to call Ice on
somebody who was an illegal immigrant in.
Speaker 22 (46:29):
Public schoolda in South Dakota public school in South Dakota.
Speaker 1 (46:32):
Well, I mean that just shows the level of rot
I mean the level of indoctrination. I'm just I'm so
sick of these moral hypocrites like Mark Ruffalo who lives
behind their freaking gated mansions in Los Angeles wherever he lives,
and he has the gall to chime in and say,
be good, don't know, do not be like Renee Good.
Be the opposite of Renee Good. Coordinate, be respectful with
(46:56):
law enforcement, Do not impede, do not obstruct, do not
taunt law enforcement. Do not be like Renee Good. Jay
Feeley joins us. Next.
Speaker 7 (47:20):
Welcome back to this.
Speaker 18 (47:21):
Real America's Voice news break. I'm Terrence Bates. As always,
it's nice to have you along for the ride.
Speaker 5 (47:26):
Hydration maybe just what the.
Speaker 18 (47:28):
Doctor ordered when it comes to curing your obesity and
your depression. My next guest is a believer, and he's
in fact making his clients believers as well.
Speaker 19 (47:36):
I was at my doctor's office. I was in a
bad state of depression. She said in that you're going
to have to lose weight. I started out in November
at one hundred and ninety four pounds. My final check
in weight the other day was one hundred and thirty
five point four. Talk about pant size. I am constant
(48:00):
going out and buying new pants.
Speaker 18 (48:03):
The man that helped make that a reality, Energized Health
founder John Jubilie.
Speaker 5 (48:07):
John, Good to see you. Great to see you, Terrence.
Speaker 18 (48:09):
All right, so let's talk about how BCT in depression
may be related.
Speaker 3 (48:15):
Yeah, well, there's a lot of there's a lot of
reasons and a lot of medical studies for that, Terrence.
Speaker 5 (48:19):
And you know, of course, when when somebody you know grows.
Speaker 3 (48:23):
Up and they're in a normal size, there's just a
natural side of it, right, like none of us want
to have to go.
Speaker 5 (48:29):
Keep buying bigger and bigger and bigger clothes.
Speaker 3 (48:33):
But physiologically, Terrence, what happens is all that visceral and
subcutaneous fat, it's suffocating our organs.
Speaker 5 (48:41):
And when our organs are.
Speaker 3 (48:42):
Getting suffocated, it is depressing. I mean, it's physically depressing
because the body is being put in trauma.
Speaker 15 (48:50):
You know.
Speaker 3 (48:51):
It's like if somebody put, you know, a one hundred
pound weight on your chest when you're trying to sleep.
That's what that weight feels on all day long, and
so that mentally becomes very.
Speaker 5 (49:02):
Draining to us, just that extra weight.
Speaker 3 (49:05):
There's even a scripture in the Bible, Terrence, it said,
let us lay aside the weight that does so easily
beset us.
Speaker 18 (49:14):
Oh wow, I never knew that scripture, but I can
use that now as an excuse for why I may
be adding some pounds. So talk about intracellul hydration and
how it factors into this conversation and helping to pull
back on the depression and on the obesity that might
beset us.
Speaker 5 (49:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (49:31):
So we have clients Terance that And by the way,
one out of four, Terrence, one out of four people
watching us right now is taking a medication for either
depression or anxiety. It is an absolute epidemic in the
United States of America because of all of our oxidative
(49:52):
stress and our hurriedness, our busyness in life. One out
of four people Terance is on a mood altering to
try to alter their mood in a good way medication.
And I want to encourage people that we have had thousands,
if not tens of thousands of people that were on one, two, three,
(50:12):
even we have one client was on five and they
get off all their medication. Why Because innsalar hydration hydrates
the biggest hydrated necessity hydrated organ.
Speaker 5 (50:26):
In your body, which is your brain.
Speaker 3 (50:28):
When your brain is hydrated, you create new neural pathways
and new brain synapsis activity.
Speaker 5 (50:34):
You basically supercharge.
Speaker 3 (50:36):
And then you do not need the medication and cool
side effect. Like this lady, she lost sixty pounds of fat,
but more importantly for her tarents, she got rid of
her depression and she got rid of the weight.
Speaker 18 (50:48):
So how do people start the process. Hearing about it
is one thing, Actually starting the protocol is another.
Speaker 3 (50:55):
Yeah, listen, let me encourage people. Look, just book a call, guys,
go on our website. There is a little masterclass. You
could watch Chelsea and I for about fifteen minutes and
then just book your call.
Speaker 5 (51:06):
You have nothing to lose.
Speaker 3 (51:08):
But when you have depression or anxiety, or you have
a weight problem, this is the solution. So when you
find a solution, all you got to do is pick
up your phone. You know, actually today, all you got
to do is click on your website. First, click on
a website, watch a little masterclass, and then book your call.
Speaker 5 (51:26):
The solution is right there. It's a couple clicks and
a phone call away, and all of.
Speaker 18 (51:32):
Those initial things you talked about are free.
Speaker 1 (51:34):
It's at no cost.
Speaker 18 (51:35):
Other than time.
Speaker 3 (51:36):
It is no cost it just guys, just go log
on energizehealth dot com, watch a masterclass book, your call,
there's no obligation, doesn't cost you a penny.
Speaker 18 (51:46):
Totally free, all right, that's what I'd like to hear.
If it's free, it's for me always. Good to see you,
my friend. Great to see it, Terrence.
Speaker 5 (51:54):
Appreciate it.
Speaker 18 (51:54):
And once again, folks, the information is there on your
screen Energized health dot com. Log on, go ahead and
watch the mask, your class book, your call, and at
least take a first step towards health.
Speaker 1 (52:36):
All right, welcome back our two of the Charlie Kirk Show.
We are very honored to have a guest in studio now.
He is going to be the next congressman from Arizona's
first congressional district, and that is Jay Feely. J Feely,
longtime NFL kicker, then NFL broadcaster, and you are now
(52:57):
Trump indorsed speaker, Mike Johnson endorsed. Welcome to the show.
Speaker 2 (53:00):
Thank you.
Speaker 17 (53:01):
It's awesome to be on here. Huge fan of Charlie,
just watching him. His heart for people. He cared about people,
regardless of their political persuasion. I just love the way
he communicated, how effective he was, and you know, just
honored to be on this show.
Speaker 1 (53:15):
Well, it's great to have you here. And I we've
been watching the developments of your race as they've kind
of come and you know, there's been a few twists
and turns, but now you're Trump indoors speaker Mike Johnson
just endorsed you. We've got the graphics there. You are
running for Arizona's first congressional district. So give give the
audience that's Nash. We have a national audience, but we
(53:37):
also have a big Arizona audience. Give them kind of
a feel of what geographical district is.
Speaker 17 (53:44):
Well, it's Scott's If you think of Scottsdale, it's Scottsdale.
It's Fountain Hills, It's Paradise Valley, a little bit of Phoenix.
It's that area of kind of North Phoenix. It's a
very affluent district that cares about the economy. You know,
they over fifty percent of the people in that district
have a college degree or more than a BA vast
majority are employed by private companies, and they cared dramatically
(54:07):
about the economy and where the economy is going.
Speaker 2 (54:09):
I think if you look at.
Speaker 17 (54:10):
What President Trump is doing, just the numbers that have
come out recently, they're going to love that. Over four
percent GDP, almost two and a half percent inflation, bringing
down inflation, continuing to get jobs, investment into our country.
You know, you go back and you look in the
in the eighties, you know, we had positive net investment
in other countries and at minus one trillion, Warren Buffett
(54:32):
said it was unsustainable. You know, in twenty twenty four,
we had minus twenty six trillion in investment into our
country versus out of our country, and no one talked
about it. And President Trump is doing the work to
bring that investment, using tariffs as the threat to make
countries invest back in our country, bringing trillions back into
our country and continue to make an economy that's going
(54:53):
to help everybody. And you know, you listen to Lutnik
the other day on the All In podcast, he was
very positive. They think we could have over five send
GDP in the fourth quarter and going forward maybe six
percent throughout twenty twenty six. That would be enormous for
not only the mid terms and Republicans going into the midterms,
but for the American people in General.
Speaker 1 (55:10):
Yeah, the Atlanta Fed had it. I think it was
five point three their estimated. They revise their estimate for
Q four, So we're waiting to see what that number
ultimately is. But that's a huge number that we haven't
even dreamed of in this country for a while, you know.
And then we've got the Supreme Court is probably going
to come down with a ruling on Wednesday, is what
I'm hearing. As far as the tariff ruling, which we'll see,
(55:32):
we'll see, we'll see there. Because I agree with you.
I believe that President Trump, I I you know, I
believe economic warfare is. You may not like it, you
may not like those words, but it is a reality. Right,
we have to have Western hemispheric dominance. We are You're
seeing that in Venezuela. You're seeing it with the way
that President Trump is using tariffs as a not only
(55:53):
a political or an economic tool, but as a foreign
policy tool. Right. And these things ultimately are meant to
enrich the homeland and enrich your residence in places like Scottsdale,
Paradise Valley. It's a close district, right, Schweiker holds it,
so it's an our seat, now, you know, tell us
about some of that. It's the market to I mean, it's.
Speaker 2 (56:13):
Like plus two plus one.
Speaker 17 (56:15):
That's what he's won by when he's held a seat,
you know, and it's going to be one of the
most important swing seats in the country, and it'll probably
be the seat that the Democrats.
Speaker 2 (56:23):
Spend the most money in the country trying to go
out and flip that.
Speaker 17 (56:27):
And it's why I decided to move. Ideally, you don't
want to move districts, you know. I lived in Gilbert.
That's why I originally was running President asked me to move.
Then Republican leadership asked me to move. They didn't feel
that we had anybody running for that seat that could
hold a seat, that could win it. So they all
called me and say, hey, Jay, we need you to
move into CD one and run in that district. And
I said yes, for the good of the party. The
(56:48):
whole reason I decided to leave broadcasting. Listen, I love
my job. I only had to work five months of
the year. I got paid really well. I got to
do football, you know, That's.
Speaker 2 (56:56):
What I'd done the last ten years after playing for
fourteen years.
Speaker 17 (56:59):
And it was a tremendous blessing and I decided to
leave broadcasting because, you know, because I felt like.
Speaker 2 (57:05):
God was pressing me to do it, to do something
with more meeting.
Speaker 17 (57:08):
I think back to something that Charlie always said that
really resonated with me, which was, you know, I'm much
more concerned about what God.
Speaker 2 (57:15):
Wants from me than I am with what I want
from God, you know.
Speaker 17 (57:18):
And and if I was selfish, I would have just said,
I'm gonna keep my broadcasting job and it's fun and
it's easy, and I don't risk anything. But but I've
always been more concerned about trying to follow the path
of where I think I.
Speaker 2 (57:29):
Can help people.
Speaker 17 (57:29):
When we were when we were playing, my wife and
I always wanted to use the platform that God gave
us to have an impact on people.
Speaker 2 (57:36):
You know, and I view politics the same way.
Speaker 17 (57:38):
Maybe somewhat idealistic, but your job is to create those
equal opportunities.
Speaker 2 (57:42):
Those pathways to success for everybody.
Speaker 23 (57:45):
You know.
Speaker 17 (57:45):
I think that's what President Trump is doing. You know,
it was not the easy decision to try to go
after and rebalance trade. You know, he could have just
extended the tax cuts, tried to create energy dominance and
more energy production, which is going to bring down and
flow should bring down costs and kind of coasted into
the midterms, but they took the hard path, which was, no,
we have to bring investment back into this country.
Speaker 2 (58:07):
We have to reset trade parameters, and we got to
look at the long term.
Speaker 17 (58:10):
Perspective because we have thirty eight trillion in debt grown
out a trillion every one hundred days, and nobody talks
about it. You know, those are the issues that I think,
you know that sit out there and Congress doesn't do
anything about either side. You know, this massive debt growing,
the lack of investment into our country, and who pays
the price. And Charlie always talked about it.
Speaker 2 (58:28):
It was the average working, everyday man and woman. That's
who pays the price.
Speaker 17 (58:31):
And that's who paid the price of the Biden policies,
you know, with the nine percent inflation and the printing
of money.
Speaker 2 (58:38):
And they didn't care about the impact on America.
Speaker 17 (58:41):
They cared about the impact on their politics despite the
impact on Americans.
Speaker 1 (58:45):
Well, and when you have that inflationary environment, to guess
who gets hurt. It's the workingmen and women. It's a
muscular class, the people that don't have investments and you know,
stocks and equities they're getting out. The value of those
equities is outstripping the ability to earn and get into
the financial ladder, get that first run in the ladder.
I want to just make sure our audience is aware
(59:06):
of this. So you know, I've been asking around about you, Jay,
you know, everybody who knows that we were going to
have you on. And one of the things that came
back again and again, and you alluded to this in
kind of what you were talking about why you're running,
is that you're just a strong Christian man and your
kids are You have four children, right.
Speaker 17 (59:25):
We have four of our own, and then we have
two that we kind of adopted from Haiti. We didn't
legally adopt him, but I started going down and doing
projects after the earthquake, rebuilding homes with a group called
Mission of Hope down there, awesome organization. And you know,
two guys that were our translators that we just kind
of fell in love with, and you know, I decided,
my wife and I that we could help them, and
legally they went through they got an education visa Wedner
(59:47):
did and he came here, moved into our house. Was
the hardest thing I ever did to be honest with you,
because as a dad of four young kids, you don't
want to do anything that may put them at jeoffardy
and have a negative impact. But he moved into our house.
We got him into Grand Cannon University. Oh good, he
got a agree, did awesome well.
Speaker 1 (01:00:02):
And it's I just I wanted to highlight that because
it's something that everybody everybody said about you that I
asked was that he's a really solid Christian guy and
we need more of that we you know, I believe,
as Charlie believed, that this nation will fail if we
lose sight of our Christian roost. Western civilization is Christendom,
whether or not people follow it or not. I mean
(01:00:24):
that is our foundation, you know, the we we we
need to keep our eyes centered and a fixed on God.
This is a God has his providential hand on this nation,
I believe it. We need leaders that acknowledge that. So
I just want to give you a shout out there.
But also when we were coordinating the memorial for Charlie,
you had a hand in that and you helped us
(01:00:44):
get in touch with the people, help us coordinate the stadium, well,
we were heartbroken.
Speaker 2 (01:00:50):
My wife and I literally were walking out of the
White House.
Speaker 17 (01:00:52):
When we found out about Charlie, she burst into tears.
I was just gutted. And we laid in bed that
night and she said, you know, are you sure you
want to do this? And I said, I have more
resolved now. I know that God has put me in
this place at this time for this reason. And I
just reached out to, Hey, what can we do to help?
You know, we wanted to donate to you help the
first some of the costs of the memorial. I wanted
(01:01:12):
to bring people that may donate to your organization and
just try to support him.
Speaker 2 (01:01:17):
Because I loved what he stood for.
Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
I loved that he was.
Speaker 17 (01:01:20):
Willing to have conversations with people that completely disagreed with him,
that he mandated the people there give them the respect
to be able to communicate, and then he communicated with
a heart for people. It wasn't just let me tell
you why you're wrong, and I'm so smart and I
know all the things to be able to counter your argument.
But he had a heart to try to help people
change their viewpoint. And really everything started with his faith
(01:01:43):
and his trust in Jesus and trying to have an
impact on people for Christ.
Speaker 1 (01:01:47):
And you helped us secure the venue, or at least
help connect some of the dots behind the scenes. So
if you want to know how we were able to
pull that off, look no further than Jay Feely and
connect some of the dots there to get the State
Farm Stadium and get access to that. So more with
Jay Feely, who's running for Arizona's first congressional district. When
we get right back, all right, welcome back to the
(01:02:18):
Charlie Kirkshow Caroline Levitt is live from It looks like
Pebble Beach giving an impromptu gaggle for the press. We
will monitor that and see if there's any news made.
Our audience doesn't know what Pebble Beach is. She's not
the White House. Oh at Pebble Beach at the White
House's that's what they call it.
Speaker 2 (01:02:38):
I absolutely love her.
Speaker 17 (01:02:39):
I love watching how she handles the media there and
puts them in their place and does it with a smile.
Speaker 26 (01:02:44):
She does it.
Speaker 1 (01:02:45):
She does do it with a smile. You know who
else does it with a smile?
Speaker 3 (01:02:47):
Is you?
Speaker 20 (01:02:48):
Jay?
Speaker 14 (01:02:48):
You?
Speaker 1 (01:02:48):
So I want this. This Your background is great. So
you walk in the office and my first question was, like,
not about politics? And I was like, what's the longest
field goal?
Speaker 2 (01:02:56):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (01:02:56):
And what was the answer.
Speaker 5 (01:02:58):
It was sixty one.
Speaker 2 (01:02:58):
It was long when I was playing. Now they're making
you know, all the way back though, seventy yard field goals.
Speaker 1 (01:03:03):
Sixty one is a really long waist to kick a
field goal. And then you so then you you went
into broadcasting. I did, and you broadcasted four super Bowls
for Super Bowls.
Speaker 2 (01:03:13):
Kind of crazy.
Speaker 1 (01:03:14):
You were doing sideline and analysis at that point, right.
Speaker 17 (01:03:17):
Sideline in the playoffs for like for the Super Bowl
up in the booth. I was the second kicker ever
in the booth after Pat Summer, all the legendary Pat Summer,
Susie Wiles's father. H So the connection to the White House,
which is great, and just honored to be able to
do that like it was.
Speaker 2 (01:03:30):
It was a challenge. You know, people are like, what
does a kicker know about football?
Speaker 14 (01:03:34):
You know?
Speaker 17 (01:03:34):
So I love that challenge aspect of it to go
in there and say, hey, I actually know the game,
understand the game.
Speaker 2 (01:03:39):
I studied the game and I can communicate it on air.
Speaker 22 (01:03:42):
And you also told us I didn't know this. You
lived with Tom Brady for a while.
Speaker 2 (01:03:47):
Well, we did it like in the summers.
Speaker 1 (01:03:48):
Yeah, at Michigan.
Speaker 2 (01:03:48):
We were at Michigan for four years ago. He was
my holder for one year, which is great.
Speaker 17 (01:03:52):
I got him, you know, a picture of him holding
the balls and I was kicking and Tom is a
great guy and somebody that you know, just so those
real leaders, you know, when you have a heart for
service and you care about people and you put them
above yourself. That's why the Patriots were so successful when
he was there. You know, I hope to bring that
into politics. You know, I care about people. I want
to have an impact for people. I think we need
(01:04:13):
people that have the ability to communicate. I think is
one of the things that translates directly into politics from broadcasting.
I was on live on air for three hours, you know,
every Sunday on National TV. When we lost Charlie, we
lost one of the great, if not the great, communicator
for conservative causes. No one can step up and fill
the void that he's left, but we need people willing
to step into that void and try to be able
(01:04:35):
to communicate and do it effectively and do it with
a heart for people.
Speaker 1 (01:04:38):
I really mean this that you know, Charlie was desperate
for a Republican Party that was as conservative as its voters.
And to hear you, you know, bring that up as
an inspiration and then just knowing kind of your reaction
to when Charlie was assassinated and the things you did
to help behind the scenes. You know, it's funny. I
(01:05:01):
was telling Tyler, there's all these conspiracy theories that we
like planned the memorial six months out or something like that. No,
the reason we were able to do it is because
we had friends like you that had connections within with
NFL ownership to help open up the stadium. It wasn't
just you, there was other people helping. I don't want
to overstate things, but I mean it was really amazing.
And I just I keep hearing you say this, you know,
(01:05:23):
this note about how you were inspired by Charlie, and
it really warms the heart because what Charlie's enduring legacy
is going to be at Republican Party that's remade and
inspired by the things that he did, by the message.
Speaker 17 (01:05:34):
That he My biggest disappointment has been the way the
Republican Party has acted after his death, that we haven't
coalesced together.
Speaker 2 (01:05:43):
When you look at the parties, they've never been further apart.
Speaker 17 (01:05:45):
Ideologically, we have so much to go after to show
the distinct differences in beliefs and what our vision is
for this country between the left and the right.
Speaker 2 (01:05:55):
And there's been so much.
Speaker 17 (01:05:56):
Infighting on the Republican Party to try to, I don't know,
fill the void of Charlie and where he was. And
you know, we need to come together and not not
fight against each other, but fight against you know, the
people on the other side when you listen to Jasmine
Crockett and Congressman Omar Elan and the things that they believe,
and you look at Mandami and why he was elected.
(01:06:18):
You know, Charlie talked about affordability all the time and
the fact that we need young people to have invested
interests in this country.
Speaker 2 (01:06:24):
They have to have ownership in this country.
Speaker 17 (01:06:26):
If they don't own a home, they don't have internship ownership,
they're not invested in this country. That's why somebody like
Mandami can get elected in New York's why you know
so many young people are disillusioned with the political process
because they throw their hands up. They're like, I got
massive debt from college, I can't get a great job,
and interest rates are crazy Hi, I can't buy a home,
so I just want the government to do it for me.
Speaker 24 (01:06:47):
We've had a very interesting swerve from the President just
these last couple of weeks.
Speaker 1 (01:06:51):
He's on homes. He says he doesn't want large.
Speaker 22 (01:06:54):
Institutional love it to own it. And also he's calling
for a ten percent interest cap on credit cards as well.
Speaker 1 (01:07:00):
Which is potentially problematic, but otherwise, but he's signaling in
the right direction that he's worried about affordability, is worried
about you know, so much of our economic system benefits
economic incumbents, right, and so we have That was the
message that Charlie had for gen Z. It's like, listen,
the American dream is alive, and well we have to
(01:07:21):
focus on it because yeah, we had major gains in
twenty twenty four with the next generation, but we got
to stay on it. This is not you know, the
cement is not dry. Yet.
Speaker 17 (01:07:29):
He brought hope to young people and that's what our
politicians need to do. It's a Republicans need to do.
We needed to give them a vision of why they
should believe in our policies and how they're going to
give them opportunity. You can't dictate outcomes because you can't
control into visual behaviors, but you can give the right
opportunities to people and say, if you work hard and
you make the right decisions, here's your pathway to success.
(01:07:50):
I think so many young people right now don't see that.
They don't have hope that if I do the right
things that I'm going to be successful. That's our job
as a Republican Party is to make that argument and
make it understandable for young people and listen and for everybody.
Most people are just trying to work their job, provide
for their family. They want the government to stay out
of their business, you know, and they want the right
(01:08:11):
economic environment to be able to be successful. That's what
most people want, you know. They don't want their government
in their lives telling them what to do, how to
live their lives, what decision to make. They just want
you to do the right things. Unfortunately, we had four
years of a Bide administration. They let ten to twenty
million illegals come in that raise the price of rent,
that raised the cost of affordability. You had prices go
(01:08:32):
up because they got under snap and they're using those
snaps raising grocery prices, you know, and then the interest
rates go up because they're printing money. You know, we're
just going to drive up inflation, you know, and you
get nine percent inflation all of a sudden. The average
person's going what happened? Like, I can't afford even the things.
Speaker 2 (01:08:48):
I used to be able to afford, and I don't
have hope for a future.
Speaker 1 (01:08:51):
Well, and I think ultimately you're talking about giving up
on the system of young people. You're seeing this in Minneapolis.
I think a lot of people have given up on America,
up on the idea of America. They want to see
it all burned.
Speaker 24 (01:09:02):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:09:03):
These communist front groups are getting funded, and the protesters
are organizing, and and you know, you got the Golden
globes wearing be good buttons when so hypocritical.
Speaker 2 (01:09:11):
I heard you guys talking about earlier.
Speaker 17 (01:09:13):
I loved what you said, because when you look back
at Obama and what he did with deportations, eighty percent
of which were out due process. They talk about due
process all the time. His deportations were not with due process,
but nobody complained. The only person even said anything was ACLU.
They wrote like four articles about it, but nobody in
the mainstream media had any issue it because it was
a Democrat president.
Speaker 1 (01:09:32):
Doing it well. And I want to reiterate a point
you made. This is going to be one of the
most expensive congressional races in the country Arizona one. Your
website is Jfeelyfourcongress dot com. Jfeely for Congress dot Com.
Please put that up on the lower please, everybody that
can chip in. Jay's a good guy, good Christian man,
very I mean, we're gonna keep this seat. We're gonna
(01:09:54):
keep this seat because a guy like you has has
taken the hard route and it's throwing your hat in
the ring, and you're doing the hard thing for the
sake of your country.
Speaker 17 (01:10:02):
More importantly than keeping the seat, We're gonna keep the
house in twenty twenty six. I'm gonna do everything I
can to make sure we do that.
Speaker 1 (01:10:07):
Okay, hardest question yet. Tony Romo or Tom Brady. Who's
the better broadcaster?
Speaker 17 (01:10:12):
Who's a better broadcasting Yeah, Romo, who's a better quarterback?
Speaker 7 (01:10:15):
Brady?
Speaker 1 (01:10:17):
I really liked Brady over this weekend.
Speaker 5 (01:10:20):
Tea's getting better.
Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Tom's getting better.
Speaker 2 (01:10:22):
That's for sure.
Speaker 1 (01:10:22):
Oh, but these are controversial, right, I might get a
tax after that one, exactly. Jay feely. Uh, thankful, awesome
to be here.
Speaker 2 (01:10:32):
Thank you guys for what you do. I'm standing up
for conservative causes.
Speaker 1 (01:10:35):
We'll be right back.
Speaker 18 (01:10:45):
Welcome back to this Real America's Voice news break. I'm
Terrence Bates. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell is under criminal
investigation related to the Central Banks renovation of its Washington,
DC headquarters. The US Attorney's Office in the District of
Columbia is looking into whether Powell was being honest during
his congressional testimony about that project. The New York Times
(01:11:06):
reporting at issue is whether the Fed chair accurately characterized
the scope and the cost of the renovation project. The
price tag for the renovation is climbed to about two
and a half billion with the B dollars. You probably
remember the infamous face off between President Trump and Powell
over the project's cost overrun. The Commander in Chief publicly
(01:11:27):
dress Powell down over the funding while touring.
Speaker 1 (01:11:30):
The construction site.
Speaker 18 (01:11:32):
Aroan is threatening both the US and Israel, saying that
they are quote legitimate targets if the United States uses
force to protect demonstrators in the Islamic Republic. However, it
appears the Islamic Republic now may be rethinking it's tough talk.
Speaker 6 (01:11:47):
Some people who did from a rhyme san Gain, Skotball,
batically Pamplio for forgot negotiating what you.
Speaker 7 (01:11:53):
Whether yeahs act.
Speaker 1 (01:11:56):
They do they call?
Speaker 2 (01:11:59):
They call yesterday, I call to negotiate, yeah, to take them.
Speaker 7 (01:12:04):
Yesterday the leaders of a ROD called.
Speaker 2 (01:12:06):
They wanted to negoti ship what I think They're dared
of being beat up.
Speaker 17 (01:12:09):
By the United States strikes Taran wants to negotiate this negotiate.
Speaker 7 (01:12:17):
They may meet with them. I mean, the beating is
being set up, but we may have to back truth
because of what's happening before the meeting. But a beating
is being set up.
Speaker 1 (01:12:28):
Iron called.
Speaker 7 (01:12:29):
They want to negotiate.
Speaker 18 (01:12:31):
Meantime, the ongoing government crackdown on demonstrators and Iran has
killed at least five hundred and thirty eight people at
last check. Many more are feared to be dead. More
than ten six hundred people have reportedly been detained over
the last two weeks of the protest, and making matters worse,
the internet across that country is down. Phone lines have
been cut, causing an information blackout and making it difficult
(01:12:53):
to gauge just how bad. The government crackdown truly is.
President Trump and his national security team are said to
be weighing a range of options in response to what's
happening there, including cyber attacks and direct strikes. That's a
great check of your headlines.
Speaker 1 (01:13:20):
The next Great Awakening is here. Welcome back to the
Charlie Kirk Show. All right, welcome back to the Charlie
Kirk Show. We are turning our attention to Iran now
that we talked about this on Friday, and we're gonna
have Alika Lebon who is an Iranian in the United
States and she's been a strong activist advocate for a
(01:13:44):
free Iran, free of the Mullahs and Kameani. And so
there's a lot going on, and it's very hard to
understand exactly what's going on because there is an internet blackout.
We've got ai, We've got a almost complete media blackout
from the West. Has been very little coverage, but there
is a lot of you know, activists.
Speaker 22 (01:14:06):
We have reports of hundreds some people claiming thousands.
Speaker 24 (01:14:09):
I've seen reports in around five hundred some supposed deaths
from clashes between demonstrators and security forces. President Trump has
been weighing in on this he said about a week
and a half ago. He was saying if Iran strikes on,
protesters were ready to step in, and then he said
this weekend quote, Iran is looking at freedom, perhaps like
(01:14:33):
never before.
Speaker 22 (01:14:34):
The USA stands ready to help three exclamation points.
Speaker 24 (01:14:38):
And so there is this sense that President Trump, I
guess you might say, he might see this as an
opportunity similar to Venezuela, where in a normal war you
need a lot of force, but he may see this
as an opportunity where a couple strikes.
Speaker 1 (01:14:53):
And he can knock over the Iranian regime. Well can
you imagine the psychological impact of the protesters now, I
want to be very clear, currently am against UH intervention,
military intervention. I don't see it as America first at
this point, but you know, I am hearing reports that
there could be carriers headed to the region straight at Hormose,
(01:15:15):
that kind of thing. If we are doing economic warfare,
I think you could topple the Irani regime plus the
protests with a barricade embargo, if you will, a blockade
of the oil coming out of Iran that's usually headed
straight to the CCP. So it's a good it's good
and two different on two different fronts. Right, You're you're
(01:15:37):
going to choke off the oil flow to the CCP.
You're also going to choke off revenues to the MULLUS. Okay,
so those those two things I would be in support of.
I do not want to see as militarily get involved.
But it does seem like the Lady G's and that
sort of thing is it's happening. They're they're pushing for
a final blow against the ranium bowl is right now.
(01:16:01):
So that's that's we are monitoring that closely. Let's do
you have a clip you want to play? Sorry, I
want to play a clip here real quick. This is
a I think like a fairly dispassionate setting of the
table before Elka joins US two twenty eight.
Speaker 28 (01:16:18):
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatola Ali Romene on Friday accused protesters
of acting on behalf of US President Donald Trump. Kramene
said rioters were attacking public property and warned that Tehran
would not tolerate people acting as quote mercenaries for foreigners.
Videos uploaded to social media on Thursday showed hundreds of
people marching in Tehran streets at night as anti government
(01:16:41):
protests continued triggered by frustration with the country's economy and
rampant inflation. Witnesses in the capitol and major cities of
Mashad and Isfahan told Reuters that protesters gathered in the streets,
chanting slogans against the Islamic Republic's clerical rulers. Protesters to
an Iranian flag in half. Internet monitoring group netblox said
(01:17:01):
a nationwide internet blackout was reported on Thursday.
Speaker 1 (01:17:05):
All right, and it looks like we have Elika Labon,
who is now ready. Elica, welcome to the Charlie Kirks Show.
Speaker 9 (01:17:12):
Thank you, thanks for having me.
Speaker 1 (01:17:13):
Absolutely so. One of the struggles with the Iranian story
right now is it's hard to get accurate information. So
you are connected with people insidern you are Iranian, tell
us what the truth is, what's really going on the
extent of the protest please.
Speaker 29 (01:17:31):
Yeah, Well, I mean, first of all, a lot of
what the media says is that this is, you know,
protests that are instigated because of economic conditions. But the
reality is that what these people, what the people of
Iran are protesting is the oppressive regime that has sort
of had its foot on their next for the past
forty seven years. It's true that that sometimes things happen
(01:17:53):
that instigate a new series of protests, which is exactly
what's happened right now.
Speaker 9 (01:17:57):
With the economic conditions since then.
Speaker 29 (01:18:00):
It's just impossible to count how many Iranians have taken
to the streets from what we're hearing, from what we're
hearing from people inside Iran, essentially everybody and their neighbor,
and their parents and even their children have taken to
the streets, and it is a total nationwide protest to.
Speaker 9 (01:18:15):
Try and ouse the regime.
Speaker 29 (01:18:17):
At the same time, the regime's narrative, which we have
to remember, the regime are in control of the entire
propaganda operation. They're in charge of the media. There's no
free speech, there's no free journalism. And their story that
they're returning back to the world while the Internet has
been shut down is that, you know, this is a
Zionist operation, a Zionist psyop, a form of American imperialism.
(01:18:41):
But what most people don't know is that that is
the lie that drove the nineteen seventy nine revolution, and
it is the very lie that Iranian people have woken
up from and are now protesting again against today.
Speaker 1 (01:18:54):
And how big are the protests and how widespread.
Speaker 9 (01:19:00):
I mean every city, every it's it's across the entire nation.
Speaker 29 (01:19:04):
Obviously, you know, it's not like the regime is going
to be itallying numbers and sending us back figures to
let us know. It's not like Gaza Health Ministry where
they're going to send us, you know, accurate reporting. But essentially,
from what we've heard from inside Iran, every single city
in Iran is basically has detonated with these protests.
Speaker 1 (01:19:25):
So there is a galonline. I'm not sure if you're
familiar with her. It's Tamina de Bazorgi. I apologies apologies
for butchering that, but she had this viral tweet that
it looks at five point three million engagements right now.
So she says the Western liberal media is ignoring the
(01:19:46):
Iranian uprising because explaining it would force an admission it
is desperate to avoid. The Iranian people are rebelling against
Islam itself and the fact that shatters the moral framework
through which these institutions understand the world. So she's basically
saying this is different than what happened in Palestine or
with Hermas. It doesn't fit the moral framework of Western media.
(01:20:08):
Therefore Western media is not going to cover it. Do
you think that's what's happening. Is that what's causing this
media blackout from the CNNs and the ms nows of
the world.
Speaker 29 (01:20:19):
Yeah, I mean, I've posted a similar tweet in similar
videos talking about the moral color code, which is essentially
that in Western academia, especially leftist academia. And I say
this as a former leftist myself, there's this sort of
framework that has been taught to American youth about who
the good people and who the bad people are, who
the oppressed, and who the oppressors are. And we've so
(01:20:40):
many decades we've spent educating our youth that the good
people in the world are the you know, the global
South or the people of color, and the evil people
in the world are the white people, right, And so
their rebellion, according to that moral color code, is against
all things white. And that is why you saw them
coming out in droves to you know, protest against Israel,
(01:21:01):
which had been named a white nation of white Jews
from Poland, right, And that was absolutely deliberate. But when
you see these when you see what's happening in Iran,
at the hands of an Islamist regime. Well, let's not
forget that violates the moral color code, because now you're
talking about Islamists who are coded as brown, and they
cannot defy the moral color code and go against.
Speaker 9 (01:21:23):
The Islamist because that on us their entire story.
Speaker 29 (01:21:27):
It exposes the contradiction that what they've been protesting for,
or what they've been standing for this entire time, has
never been humanity. It has been abiding by Orthodox abiding
by a moral color code which is.
Speaker 9 (01:21:40):
Built on a farce.
Speaker 24 (01:21:43):
So, Elika, I was wondering if you could, I've seen
some discussion. What type of alternative government do you think
the people on the ground want. There's been obviously the
son of the former Shah has made himself a very
prominent figure in all of this.
Speaker 22 (01:21:58):
Do people want the Shah or how do they feel
on the ground there?
Speaker 1 (01:22:03):
Do you believe?
Speaker 29 (01:22:06):
Yeah, So, when we're looking at these protests, these nationwide protests,
from city to city, the one thing that is unanimous
is that they are calling back for the shot.
Speaker 9 (01:22:15):
They're saying Jovishah, which means long live the King.
Speaker 29 (01:22:17):
They're saying in a bad migadha, which means this is
the last battle in Paplavi will return. There's a very
specific reason for this, and the reason is that they
ousted his father in nineteen seventy nine based on what
I call the Great Lie, and that great lie was
the the ideology by the Marxists and the leftists that
(01:22:38):
convinced them that some utopia was going to come if
they just ousted you know, Western imperialism. They called the
Shah an American puppet, the American elite, and once we
would be done with all of this, and you know,
we could usher in some Marxist utopia of equality for.
Speaker 5 (01:22:55):
All, right.
Speaker 9 (01:22:56):
And so the Iranian people very soon discovered that there
was no utopia.
Speaker 5 (01:23:00):
It was just hell.
Speaker 29 (01:23:03):
And because of that lie, there is a very specific
return that they're calling for right now. It's essentially an apology. First,
we made a mistake. We want the Shah's sun back,
We want the crown Prince Reza Patlavi back. He will
act as a transitional leader. He's not coming as a
dictator and authoritarian. He's coming back as an interim leader
(01:23:23):
to transition the country into democracy. At that point, a
referendum will be opened up where the people will decide
who it is that they want to lead the country,
what type of system, whether it will be a constitutional monarchy,
a republic, a democratic republic. But I will say that
the polls that have come out of Iran over the
past couple of years have already revealed that their number
(01:23:45):
one choice for a leader is the Crown Prince Reza
path Lavi, because he is the only person that they
trust against everything, all of the betrayals.
Speaker 9 (01:23:52):
And all of the lies that they've experienced here too.
Speaker 1 (01:23:55):
For well, and you feel like that is widely shared
on the ground and run absolute.
Speaker 9 (01:24:01):
I mean, just listen to their words. We we don't
have to get we just we listened to their way.
Speaker 1 (01:24:05):
That was a that was that was a big question
we had. It was this was he representative? Yeah? Was
he representative of a larger voice? Or was he trying
to insinuate himself and to be opportunistic? It was an
honest question. H So that's actually good to know because yeah, no, that.
Speaker 9 (01:24:23):
You don't speak the language.
Speaker 2 (01:24:25):
Well, I was like, why don't you hear that?
Speaker 1 (01:24:26):
Yeah, yeah, we don't speak it. Uh So the next
question here is about US involvement intervention play two twenty six.
Speaker 7 (01:24:37):
Yes, the leaders of Iran called. They wanted to go
to show. I think they're tired of being beat up
by the United States. Iran wants to negotiate. Guess we
may meet with them. I mean it's a meeting is
being set up, but we may have to act because
what's happening before the meeting.
Speaker 24 (01:25:03):
So I guess a general thing I'm wondering is how
fragile does the regime seem to be? Like Trump is
threatening to possibly get involved. We see the people on
the streets, we see the regime shooting back. Is it
the sort of thing that could be shoved over that
too much effort?
Speaker 1 (01:25:24):
We're going to keep you on the next segment too helica.
Speaker 9 (01:25:27):
Okay, should I answer?
Speaker 7 (01:25:29):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:25:29):
Twenty second answer real quick, and then we'll go to
break and bring you back.
Speaker 29 (01:25:32):
I think the fragility of the regime is directly proportional
to how much it can withstand. And if there's intervention
that's coming from the United States, that's coming from the outside,
they're not going to be able to withstand the uprising
within Iran and the intervention from outside, So that will
absolutely be the thing that topples the regime over. Without intervention, No,
the regime will not collapse because there's already been a
(01:25:53):
massive shutdown and they're saying that the regime are starting
to take control.
Speaker 1 (01:25:57):
Interesting, Yeah, and I want to get your perspective on
how many casualties there've been because there's conflicting reports. We'll
be right back, all right. So we are talking about
(01:26:22):
young people because young people are leading a lot of
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I did so.
Speaker 24 (01:27:50):
We've heard about the Internet blackout, but to get a
sense of how dire the situation is for the government,
I'm being told they've also blocked out landline phones, they're
blocking out online banking, they're blocking out basically anything requiring a.
Speaker 22 (01:28:04):
GPS signal or like location at all.
Speaker 1 (01:28:07):
It is just getting shut down. Jeez wow. Elka I
want to show this image really quick. Two thirty four.
This has become an iconic image of this young woman
lighting fire to the supreme ruler and leader whatever his
name is, Kamenie and using it to light her cigarette.
(01:28:30):
And I mean it's really like it's become this touch
point of the youth led movement. Explain that how are
young people playing a central role in this Iranian protest movement?
Speaker 7 (01:28:45):
Yeah, well, I.
Speaker 29 (01:28:45):
Mean it's essentially entirely driven by the youth, because we
have to remember that, you know, our youth in Iran,
they have access to the internet, They're on TikTok, they're
on Instagram, they're on social media, and what they're doing
all day is a ventially comparing their lives to the
lives of people who are living with the rights and
(01:29:05):
freedoms and privileges that we enjoy.
Speaker 9 (01:29:07):
And it makes no sense to them why they don't
have those things.
Speaker 29 (01:29:10):
It makes no sense to them why they have to,
you know, have hair coverings, why they're not allowed to
sing or dance in public, why they're not allowed to
essentially do anything, and they have to follow these laws
of these clerics that are completely removed and completely out
of touch from the youth of that generation. And it's
also important to remember that many people think that Iran
(01:29:33):
is a Muslim country, and technically.
Speaker 9 (01:29:35):
It is, but because of the regime.
Speaker 29 (01:29:37):
But the Iranian people are not religious, They've never been religious,
because Islam is not something that came to us, our original,
our indigenous religion. You can say is Zerastrianism and Islam
came to us by conquest, and it's not something that
the Iranian people ever fully adopted. And so there's an
aspect of it that is still foreign to the Iranian
(01:29:58):
people and most especially to the Ironnian youth. So when
they're seeing the way that the rest of the world
is living on TikTok, they're making their dance videos too,
but they're not allowed to make their dance videos. They're
getting penalized for making dance videos, and they're tired of
living under these restrictions.
Speaker 1 (01:30:15):
Yeah, it's very interesting what you're getting at. I don't
think that that feels, I guess logical to the average American. Right,
we've been told our whole lives. You know, the Iranian
Muslim is very repressive. This is what we've known. But
there is this undercurrent within Persian culture right. The Persian
(01:30:37):
people I interacted with them when I was living in
Los Angeles, amazingly industrious people. I think a lot of
them are pretty devoutly Muslim. I would say my experience.
You would know better than I, of course, but my interaction,
this is my first hand experience. They weren't devoutly must IRGC.
Speaker 9 (01:30:55):
I don't think I've ever met a Persian that was
a Muslim unless they were.
Speaker 1 (01:31:00):
And that No, that's really interesting insight and listen, you're
the subject matter expert here. But what I will say
is there does seem to be this. You see these
videos from the nineteen seventies of Iranian culture before, and
it feels very western, it feels very liberal, and I
do think that that is a promising sign if we're
(01:31:21):
going to see Iran change and leadership change. Do you
believe that the country would be well poised to sort
of be reintegrated into the international community.
Speaker 7 (01:31:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 29 (01:31:32):
And you know, I tweeted something about this the other
day because people talk about this concept of westernization, right,
and they forget that we, the Iranian people, are the
descendants of Cyrus the Great, who basically penned the Cyrus cylinder,
and that was the first declaration of human rights in history.
And people forget that the Middle East was once considered
(01:31:55):
the cradle of civilization, and so.
Speaker 9 (01:31:57):
A lot of what we consider, you know, live rule
right now.
Speaker 29 (01:32:01):
These concepts of human rights, they did originate with with
people like our ancestors Cyrus the Great and so Iran
is sort of like a downstream effect of that type
of culture and those types of norms. And that's why
it's so important to understand that the way that Islamism
has been sort of put on Iran, it contradicts our
(01:32:22):
true underlying values and our underlying values. It's not that
we are Western are we are Persian, but our Persian
values mirror Western values very closely. And that's also why
you've seen such a close alliance between the Iranian people
and the United States and Israel and Western countries, because
(01:32:42):
we share the same values. And pre nineteen seventy nine,
that's exactly what you were seeing in Iran. The Shah,
the last the Shah of Iran, he actually instigated something
called the White Revolution, which was a modernization project that
gave women's women's rights, women's suffrage. It was about expansion
of literacy, industrial growth, all of these things. And it
(01:33:04):
was actually that exact modernization that caused the Islamists and
the Marxists in silently ran to ally to overthrow the
shot because they called it westernization, what it really was
was Persianization. It was a return to our Persian values
that are very very closely mirrored with the West, the
(01:33:25):
Judeo Christian values.
Speaker 1 (01:33:27):
Yeah, I mean it certainly seems that I think we.
I mean, this is why these videos go viral online
about the nineteen seventies Iran that there is no more
and hopefully will be again.
Speaker 24 (01:33:37):
But yeah, go ahead, Blake, if it's just it's it's
a remarkable thing to watch. I think all of us
would be very happy if. I mean, Araund's been an
enemy of the United States my entire life. If we
were able to topple that without needing a giant regime
change war, without needing you know, two hundred thousand US troops,
I think that would be an amazing thing.
Speaker 1 (01:33:57):
Yeah, and it I mean, Flora is yours, Elka final
fifteen seconds here. What's your message to the American people
about Iran?
Speaker 29 (01:34:09):
My message to the American people is that it has
never been more important to stand behind the people of Iran.
Speaker 9 (01:34:14):
Liberated Iran from the regime will free not just the regime.
Speaker 29 (01:34:17):
It will free Israel and Gaza from Hamas, Lebanon from Hezbola.
It will Yemen from the Houthis, and the West from Nucliff.
It will be a massive, cascading liberation for all.
Speaker 1 (01:34:29):
Thank you, Thank you, Elka really well said. Thank you.
We'll see you tomorrow.