Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Welcome.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
We are live here in Phoenix, Arizona, Day three at
AMFS twenty twenty four. Let's take it back to the
stage where Charlie Kirk has given some awards away to
some high school students.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
In Wyoming that we have robust free speech protections, but
for those of you that are in very conservative states,
you know that some of those conservative states can be.
Speaker 4 (00:28):
The worst for our values.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Some of those conservative states can have some of the
bluest cities and bluest administration. The TPUSA College Patriots Student
of the Year award recipient is Gabe st Gabe, a
senior at the University of Wyoming, is a trailblazer for
free speech and conservative values. Spotting an inactive TPUSA chapter
on campus, he single handedly revived it, transforming a four
(00:52):
member club into a powerhouse organization, hosting record breaking events
and reshaping university policy. Undeterred by backlash by displaying pro
life materials or his viral newsmas interview, Gabe turned obstacles
into opportunities. He became a champion for the First Amendment.
His leadership even ended up influencing the Wyoming State legislature
(01:14):
to get this to defund DEI and leading to University
of Wyoming's elimination of the DEI office. At the University
of Wyoming, a bold advocate gold Gabe fights for values
every day. Join me in celebrating Gabe Saint from the
University of Wyoming College Patriot of the.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:50):
Our final award goes to the tp USA College Legacy
College Chapter of the Year. Now, this one is very,
very competitive. As you know, I visited twenty five college
campuses this last semester and I saw a lot of things.
This chapter is extraordinary. This chapter had had so they
(02:10):
hosted me had the most students to attend of any
event that we did this last semester. The University of
Georgia's Turning Point USA chapter revolutionized college activism, driven by
their president's bold vision. After America Fest, they transformed University
of Georgia into a conservative stronghold, hosting Riley Gaines, doctor
Ben Carson, and me. Where get this, When they did
(02:33):
the event for US, five thousand students showed up in
the largest ever event at the University of Georgia. Their
impact goes beyond events. They helped serve their community. And
here's the one that I really love. They were the
first organization to step up, raise money and to help
Lake and Riley's family after she was murdered by that
illegal migrant. Joined me and welcoming and celebrating the award
(02:57):
winner for the Turning Point USA College Chef after the
year at the University of Georgia. One more time for
(03:29):
the Future of America High school and college chapters.
Speaker 4 (03:32):
How great is that you can one day be on
the stage?
Speaker 3 (03:38):
Go get involved, take back your campus, Get involved for
the future of America, and support your local Turning Point
USA chapter.
Speaker 5 (03:45):
Thank you guys so much.
Speaker 3 (03:46):
We'll be back soon and keep supporting your Turning Point
you say chapter near you?
Speaker 5 (03:50):
Thank you guys.
Speaker 6 (04:30):
What was the most alarming thing that you came across
during your review of internal Twitter documents?
Speaker 4 (04:35):
I think the most alarming thing that we saw was.
Speaker 7 (04:38):
The regular stream, organized stream of communication between the FBI,
the Department of Homeland Security, and the largest tech companies
in the country.
Speaker 4 (04:50):
This activity violates the first and then.
Speaker 8 (04:52):
And a new disturbing lawsuit against Meta, the parent company
with Facebook and Instagram, of enabling child sex abuse and traffic.
Speaker 4 (04:59):
Al help announced on Tuesday. It will cover your expenses
for their employees or their spouses who have to travel
out of state for access to abortion.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
All right, we are now joined with David and Blake
from We the Studios. You know, a lot of production
going on here, a lot of podcasters, a lot of
media Outlets's talk about We the Studios.
Speaker 4 (05:22):
Well, I'll tell you what. We the Studios is just
non woke entertainment. And there is a group of people.
Speaker 9 (05:27):
That got together and said, you know what, We're just
tired of turning on the TV and just seeing junk
all the time. We want to create a place for
people to take their kids, to take their families and
just do TV for normal people. So me and my
family was one of the lucky ones that got picked
to be.
Speaker 4 (05:43):
On a show.
Speaker 9 (05:44):
So we do a show about our family just it's
called Raising Renolds and it's just specifically.
Speaker 4 (05:49):
They're like, we like the way that you raise your kids.
Speaker 1 (05:51):
Do you mind showing the world?
Speaker 2 (05:52):
I've seen the trailer.
Speaker 4 (05:53):
Do you like get I have seen the trailer.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
Yes, now that i've kind of I'm putting everything together here,
I've seen it. I think it's great.
Speaker 9 (06:00):
Yeah, And it resonates with so many people because in
normal world, in Flyover Country, right, kids are raised the
way that I raise my kids, and it's like it's
time that we highlight that instead of the Hollywood junk
that we've been seeing.
Speaker 2 (06:11):
Yeah, and let's talk about your role in all of this.
You've got a show as well, right.
Speaker 10 (06:15):
Yeah, I'm the first podcast on the platform. So my
show is David Pollock Show. We have a puppet, the
puppet Carlson, and so, you know, we just try to
make we talk about serious politics, but we do it
in a way that connects with people because a lot
of people tune it out because it becomes it just
becomes too much noise and it becomes negative. So we
we like to just bring everybody into the conversation, have
some fun with it. But really what we just studio
(06:36):
is is is important because so much of Hollywood right now,
so much of Netflix, and look, we're gonna beat Netflix.
We're gona put them out of business with non woke entertainment.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
And the way it works is so much of.
Speaker 10 (06:45):
It is in doctrinating kids and doctrinating people. None of
it's clean, none of it's The messaging is on, you know,
is good for us, you know, and.
Speaker 2 (06:52):
It's really interesting to watch, not only the ticket sales
of the box office Hollywood. Oh yeah, if it's not
a blockbuster, you know, action figure, you know, type production,
it loses money. They need that, and of course they
can't pump that out, you know, every quarter. So the
niche that you guys are at right now I think
(07:12):
is very it's on the upside. There was definitely of
space that you guys can fill. Now, can you talk
about any of the projects that you're hearing coming down
the pipeline is more reality series like yours, more podcast production.
Speaker 9 (07:26):
Yeah, so we're about to be putting a lot of
podcasts on there. I'll have a podcast on there. He'll
have a podcast. But there's some cool stuff coming down
the pipeline. We got conservative An on there. We got
Jimmy Levy on there. I'm on there, Kendall and Kentucky's
on there, Barbie's on there. So there's a lot of
shows that are coming. I can't say everything, right, I
cannot say everything.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
Don't let the ket out of the bag here, I can't.
Speaker 9 (07:46):
But the projects are being worked on and there's a
few that I'm really excited. Tito Ortiz has a phishing
show on there. Amber Ortiz has a kitchen fight show
on there. So there's a lot on there for everybody.
Speaker 2 (07:55):
When you guys launched, I saw it all in social media.
I saw all these shows that you're talking about, and
it kind of made me go, wait a minute. We
the we the studios is what a novel idea because
we are in this new, this new branch of media
where you can start this thing. Look, you need a
little bit of creativity. Uh, and you need a little
(08:18):
bit of wheel power. Persistent, consistent content. That's what sticks consistent.
Speaker 9 (08:26):
Yeah, and it's that's that's kind of how we even
got noticed in the beginning, is because we get on
social media.
Speaker 4 (08:31):
And we stay consistent.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
Yeah right, all right, real quickly, website for someone to
get more information. We got tossed back on the stage.
Speaker 4 (08:37):
We the studios dot com.
Speaker 2 (08:39):
We the studios dot com. Now back to the stage.
Senator Mark Wayne Mullins is on stage.
Speaker 4 (08:45):
Let's listen in thanks for having mid So I'm a
husband of six kids. You can tell why she couldn't
leave me alone, right obviously, and she always reminds me, well,
Mark Wayne, six kids, well three King natcher On three
we chose and so what that means is we had
three beautiful adopted kids. And when I say three, we
chosen three, we got stuck with I tell them, which
(09:07):
one do you think we love the most? Right? Because
I didn't get any anyway. See that's a joke in there, guys.
So let me tell you a little bit about who
I am, because it's not I didn't come to politics
because it's something I ever wanted to do. In fact,
I was the last person you thought would ever be
involved in politics. My dad told me at seventeen that
(09:27):
I was either going to end up in prison or
end end up successful. And I joke because I watch
a movie one time about a prison scene and a
guy in a shower, and I was like, never going
to prison. I'm not going to do that. So I
decided I'd take a different path. Fortunately, this lady right
here came into my life in third grade and we
(09:47):
were boyfriend and girlfriend in third grade. In eighth grade,
I knew I was going to marry her. She didn't
know I was going to marry her. I knew I
was going to marry her. And then she'd get a
boyfriend and I'd run them off and we do all
the stuff, and then they would they should get mad
at me. For running them off, and I'd say, I,
they're not willing to fight for you, they don't love
you enough. And today that's called stalking. Back then it
(10:08):
was called determination. But it's who I am. So let
me tell you a little bit about myself. I grew
up in a little town called Westfield. It's a small
little country town. I'm Cherokee. My family actually got relocated
to Oklahoma back in the late eighteen thirties when I
was born. I was born with my feet in my hits.
(10:32):
Throughout I'd have multiple surgeries. I was never supposed to
be able to play a sport. I was there supposed
to be able to really walk without limp. On top
of that, I had a really bad speech impediment, and
I wore braces on my legs. As you can probably imagine,
when you go to school with a really bad speech
impediment and you have braces on your legs, there's a
few things that's going to happen. One you're going to
(10:53):
get picked on, and two either learn how to be
really nice because you can talk and talk your way
out of it. Or three because I couldn't run and
I couldn't argue with you, you learn to hit fast.
So I had a really bad temper. So by the
time I was in third grade, I was very well
(11:14):
known with the principle. I was in trouble all the time.
By the time I was in fifth grade, I was
behind in all my classes. I was behind in reading
because I couldn't hear syllables. I had no idea what
my speech impedant was. But I don't hear the breakdown
of the words, so you're still going to hear my
speech impediment. It doesn't bother me anymore. But when I
can't hear the word, I have to learn how to
speak by the placement of your tongue. So a lot
(11:36):
of times when people are talking to me and I'm
trying to learn a word, I'll be looking at you
because I can't just repeat it. I have to focus
on the way you place your tongue because the way
you hear a word and the way I hear word
is two different things. And so if I repeat it
the way that I hear it, since I don't hear
the syllables, it comes out all different. But because of that,
I was behind in class. And in fifth grade I
(11:56):
told my dad, I said, Dad, I'm going to go
to college and wrestle because I found a sport that
I was actually pretty good at. And he said, okay,
then what are you going to do about it? Because
my dad's not a guy that allows you to have excuses.
If you say you're going to do something, you're going
to do it, and he's going to make sure you
do it. And so he said, what are you going
to do about it? I? Okay, fine, that I don't
know what I'm going to do about it. He says, no,
(12:17):
if you say you're going to do it, you can't
do it and be behind the school. So he switched schools,
We switched speech pathologists. They figured out what was wrong.
We started working on it by the time I got
in eighth grade. Because I'll be honest with you, the
first time I was diagnosed with what was going on
is the first show on my head that I didn't
that I realized I wasn't stupid. Now I understand that
(12:38):
because I had to learning disability, and everybody else around
me was able to excel in classes, I wasn't. And
it was hitting me pretty hard, and it was bothering
me because I was good at everything else, but I
wasn't good at school. But when this teacher told me
what was wrong with me, I was like, Hey, I
got that. I can do something about that. Now that
I've identified what the problem is, what is it going
to take to fix it? Because no one can tell
(12:59):
you you can't fix a problem. You're the only one
that says either you're going to try hard enough to
fix it or you're going to walk away from it.
For me, I was going to dig into it. So
by the time I got to eighth grade, I was
caught up in all my classes. I was focused totally
on wrestling. We had switched schools three times just so
I could wrestle. We ended up going to going to
Stillwell High School because I'd moved away from the school
(13:22):
that I met this young young lady at. And of
course she followed me to that school because she's obsessed
with me. Right, Dave, that's not true. Oh did I
tell you one thing about twenty seven years of marriage?
You learn how to apologize quick. I'm sorry. See, that's
how you're successful in marriage. So I find myself at
(13:43):
the high school. Everything's going good. I'm caught up in
my classes, I'm excelling in some of my classes, not
all my classes. I'm still getting in trouble a lot.
I still have a really bad temper. At fifteen years old,
I decided I'm going to move out of the house
and I found a room in a barn. So people
say he wasn't raising a barn. I can say, yes,
I was, and so I found myself in a barn.
(14:07):
I'm paying all my own utilities. I'm working every day.
I'm getting up early, I'm milking for a neighbor. I'm
hauling sheet rot during the day. Yet I'm still going
to school on time. I'm cutting wood in the winter.
I'm doing everything I have to do to make money
and pay for myself at the same time making sure
I'm staying on top of my studies so I could
get a scholarship. And I'm wrestling and excelling in it. Man,
I'm focused, I'm all in, I'm going everything's going great.
(14:30):
Fast forward my senior year. I have an impeccable record.
I'm getting recruited by schools all over the country. I
finally found my way out of the situation. I'm in
my senior year. I'm wrestling at conference. I shoot in
on a guy, my shoulder pops out, can't fix it
without surgery. I find myself going underneath a knife on
(14:50):
Tuesday morning. I have regionals on Friday. I told the
doctor I'm wrestling at Regionals. He said, son, there's no
way you're wrestling, and I said, yes, I am. By
the way, I'm very stubborn, and I said, I'm wrestling
at the State. I hadn't lost a tournament or I
hadn't lost a match all year, And so I go
(15:13):
in and the surgery, and I wake up the next
morning and I can't even lift a can of soup,
and I think I'm still going to wrestle. So the
doctor says, okay, fine, if you're going to wrestle, then
I'm going with you. So we go to the tournament
on Friday. I'm at the tournament. I forfeited my last match,
so I technically take my first loss of the year.
(15:34):
I go on to State. I'm in the semi finals
at State and a kid jumps over the top of me,
grass my shoulder and rips it back out. And I
knew it was ripped out immediately. Now, mind you, for
six years, I'd sacrificed literally everything, including dating this girl.
Because in eighth grade, I said, after her and I
(15:55):
broke up, I said I wouldn't have another girl friend
until I signed my letter intent. And I was just devastated.
It broke me. And I'm sitting there and I'm in
the locker room, and one after one, one coach after
the next after the nax is coming in to me
and was telling me he wasn't going to give my
scholarship to me anymore because they couldn't give a heart
(16:17):
athlete a scholarship. But how many guys are Christians in here? Right?
How many guys know the Lord's got a plan for you? Right?
Jeremiah twenty nine eleven is very clear by that. And
I don't know the plan because I wasn't living for
the Lord. I had no idea. And instead I end
up going which is it's is all in the Lord's will.
I end up going to a small school called Missouri Valley.
(16:39):
I go out there, I'm wrestling for him. I make
the starting team. The coaches said, if you stay healthy,
will come out and bring bring out a D one
and probably end up at Oklahoma State. Christie's rest are
charing in college, and my dad calls and said he
needs some help. He had a small little plumbing company,
and the plumbing company wasn't doing so well and he
(17:00):
needed some help. And he was sick and wasn't work.
And so I came back home from college and Christy
was wrestling and Christie or Christy was cheering, and she
had an apartment. And I was nineteen years old and
she was eighteen years old, and I was like, hey, babe,
I got a great idea. Let's get married. Really, because
I was homeless and she had an apartment, but I
(17:20):
knew I was going to marry anyways, so let's just
go and get this over. And the crazy lady actually
agreed to that. I had no job. She was making
minimum wage. I was making seven bucks an hour. When
we got married. It was June fourteenth and ninety seven.
August and ninety seven. I gave my heart the Lord
(17:41):
September of Yeah, thank you, September September of that year.
Whatever the Tuesday was, after Labor Day. I just turned
twenty years old. She had just had her nineteenth birthday.
My dad came to me and said, hey, I'm done.
(18:01):
You can have the company or we're closing it down.
It's up to you. Now I'm mind's twenty years old.
We're married. I needed a job. She was working there,
said we needed a job. It only had a few
employees there, and I said yes. For the next three years,
Christy and I worked for three years straight without and
when I had one day off it was February fifteenth
(18:22):
and ninety eight. For three years we worked to build
that company. For three years, that company grew and grew
and grew, and by the time it was three years out,
we got ourselves out of debt because we had got
a lot of debt. Were things were moving pretty well.
We started growing the company. We started buying other different
other companies. Fast forward to what led me back into politics.
We had about one hundred and fifty employees going. We
(18:42):
were It was twenty eleven, and you guys remember Obama
put out and says you didn't build that by yourself.
You guys remember that. I was never mad at in
a politician until the end. It was like, I don't
remember you'd making payroll when my wife was doing payroll
on the kitchen table, because she was HR. She was payroll,
she was receivable, she was payables, she was dispatcher, she
(19:02):
was everything in the company. I was like, I don't
remember you doing that when we were building a company
like that. And then they came out with an Obamacare
and they said, you get penalized because you're successful if
you have more than fifty employees. You guys remember that. Well,
then the EPA and then then the president comes out
and he says, we're going to create jobs through regulation.
Because when you have a politician that's never done anything
(19:23):
except been a community organizer, he doesn't understand what entrepreneurs do.
He doesn't understand that Washington, DC isn't designed to create jobs.
It's a it's a place where they're supposed to provide
an environment for entrepreneurs to create jobs. And so anytime
the government says we got a five thousand person packaged
job out there or job package out there, you go, no,
(19:45):
you don't. You never created a job in your life.
Government doesn't create jobs, And are I supposed to create jobs? Right?
It doesn't. It doesn't make any sense. But yet they
were saying this, and what they did is they created
jobs through regulation, which regulated one of our businesses out
out of business. And we have a saint in our family.
You're never going to change anything you're willing to tolerate.
(20:07):
Now I understand what I said there. You guys aren't gripers.
You guys are doers because you're here and you're wanting
to learn more. But the rest of the country had
to wake up to that. And that what took us
putting Biden in office. Not us, forgive me, It took
some people putting Biden in office, and it took them
four years to find out what happens when you take
(20:28):
a businessman out of office and you put a woke,
left career politician in office. But you guys are here
because you guys understand you are going to be able
to change things if you get involved. And so when
I say we're never going to change anything, you're willing
to tolerate. They literally shut down a business that Christy
and I had been building and had been growing and
(20:50):
growing and growing, and we're going to have to lay
employees off for the first time at that time in
fifteen years of business. And I remember coming home and
talking to Christy about it, and she looked at me,
she says, you're going to run for office, And I
was like, Lord, no, I'm not running for office. I
do not run anything from anything but the police. And
(21:11):
I wasn't actually very successful at that. And she says,
she says, she says, Mark, when you're going to run
for office. I was like, I'm not running for office.
I need on the suit. I didn't know how to
tie tie. I had no idea how to do that stuff.
Well fast forward. She was right because three months later
our first political event we ever went to in her life,
I stood up and said I was running for Congress.
(21:39):
And it hasn't been easy. I made some stupid mistakes.
I'm gonna try wrapping up so I can get some
some questions here pretty quick. I made some mistakes because
the first thing I had to learn is how to breathe.
You know, in politics you got to choose an attitude
every day because how many you guys wake up every
single day and say, I cannot wait I get in
(22:00):
an argument today. Well, guys, can I tell you? That's politics?
And I'm actually a guy that likes to have fun.
I mean, I get pretty aggressive sometimes, like I can
tell people to stand their butt up and stuff like that,
but the end of the day, I really joke and
I really like to have fun, and I don't like
arguing every day. I like getting along, but in politics,
(22:23):
it's all we were doing. We're griping and arguing and
fussing and fighting. And the biggest lesson I learned in
politics is one time I'm at a I'm at a
townhall meeting, and this group of people have been following
me for days at every townholl meeting I went to,
and they would just gripe and gripe and gripe and
gripe and gripe and gripe and gripe. And she was
trying to take over the townhall meeting and I said, man,
(22:44):
sit down, this isn't your townholl. And she says, you're
going to listen to me. I pay your salary. And
I made the one of the biggest mistakes I've ever
made in politics, and I said, that's bull crap. You
don't pay my salary. I pay enough in taxes to
pay my own salary, which technically is true, but it
was wrong because see, when I used to fight professionally
(23:07):
and when I used to compete in jiu jitsu internationally,
when I used to wrestle at high levels, I used
to try to make my opponent mad, and if I
could make my opponent mad I could get in their
head and I would win every single time. And I
let her get in my head and I spout it
off something that wasn't something I should have said. It
was all over the news, and I was just done
(23:27):
with politics. And Christian and I actually got away for
a little bit and I was going to get out
of politics. I was done. This is in twenty sixteen,
and I was like, I'm done. I'm done with politics.
I don't have to have this. It's a blessing to get.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
To do it.
Speaker 4 (23:38):
I don't have to do it. It's life is better.
I'm going to retire on the ranch. I'm never going
to complain about my Baylor ever breaking down again. I'm
just done. And the Lord and I were having an argument,
and I never win those arguments, but I thought it'd
be good to try one more time. And Christian and
I are out by the water and we're having a devotion,
(24:00):
and the Lord just hit me like this and said,
love the people love the call. Love the people love
the call. I've repeated that to myself one hundred times
daily since then. We were on the pier together and
we had looked at each other because we were going
(24:20):
to run again? Were we We were done?
Speaker 1 (24:24):
And she looked at me.
Speaker 4 (24:24):
She says, we're running again, aren't we? And I said yes.
And guys, it hasn't been perfect since then. But I'm
so blessed to be part of this fight. I'm blessed
to be able to stand in front of you and
just talk to so many patriots. I mean, who am
I to even had this opportunity except God put us
here because we live in the greatest country in the world,
(24:45):
because who else could do that. It doesn't happen in
any other country. It only happens in America. It doesn't
happen to anyplace else. You can't be a little kid
with a bad speech impediment growing up in a country town,
not even going to talk right, have a bad attitude,
fight all the time, get in all the types of trouble,
and still become a US Senator. How does that happen?
It's not because I fooled everybody in from Oklahoma's because
(25:07):
they trust me and they bless me to be able
to do that. And now I get to call President
Trump my friend. Who does that except God? And if
we have the right attitude in this country and we
don't allow things to get underny of our skin, and
we remind ourselves love that people love to call every
(25:28):
single day. We can also win this country back because
it's worth fighting for. I don't fight to lose, and
there's no way I'm getting involved in something that tells
me we can't win. One thing I can't stand. And
when somebody tells me I feel the country's too far gone,
don't tell me that losing's not an option. Failure is
(25:52):
not an option. And you guys being here to day
tells us we got a bright future. So I'm gonna say,
God bless you all, and then I'm going to open
up for questions real quick. So may God bless you.
Let's open up for questions. If we have mics around,
I don't know how we're planning on doing that. We'll
go right here. Please, I'll repeat your question if you'll
(26:15):
tell me who you are?
Speaker 7 (26:18):
Have you there?
Speaker 4 (26:19):
Do you say moors like m O R R R?
I s oh, shoot, we may be ken. My side
of the family is better looking though. Okay, go ahead, you.
Speaker 5 (26:36):
Got your question, man, stay right there, speak.
Speaker 4 (26:44):
You got this right, don't back. So his question is
(27:05):
what do we do here? He's getting her rests on
his campus. He was suspended from school, he appealed it.
Now he won the U pill. Now he's constant getting
arrests at his college. Stay in a fight. The best
example we have is Charlie Kirk. Right, Charlie gets her
rests all the time. The guy sits there with knowledge constantly,
and when he's sitting there, he's fighting with knowledge. She
doesn't get anger. Does he get upset. The people at
(27:27):
the mic are just furious at him. He says, calm, collective,
and he fights with facts. Stay in the fight, don't
back down. Don't let anger get over you at all,
because right's on your side. Let me get these questions
over Eric.
Speaker 1 (27:43):
Yes, so my name's Jenna.
Speaker 8 (27:45):
I'm from Cincinnati, Northern Kentucky area, and I love the hat.
Speaker 4 (27:48):
By the way, thank you.
Speaker 8 (27:50):
I actually was a former wrestler for five years.
Speaker 4 (27:54):
Yeah. My daughter's are wrestling right now at a tournament.
In fact, they just won. To just won the tournament.
We just told and my sixteen year old's refin. And
then my three boys ones wrestling the University of Oklahoma,
two's wrestling Oklahoma State. We're praying for the one at Oklahoma,
we're thinking God might save you one day. Go ahead.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
That's awesome. But I was just wondering what your favorite
move was.
Speaker 4 (28:15):
What mine was. Yes, I was a high crotch technician.
I could hit so many series off that. So you
can go to the duck, I go to the high crutch,
hit the fireman's. I could go high crouch, mid single.
I go high crouch double egg. I could do all
kinds of things on it, and I loved it. That
was my favorite. That was absolutely my favorite. The second
thing is this isn't this is what I'm already to say.
(28:37):
We'll prove to you I should never be in office.
Speaker 5 (28:39):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (28:40):
My second Baron move was is there's not a guy
wrestled that I couldn't tell you his cup size. So,
but it was a way to make a really really
mad and so if I made a mat on one. Yes,
this will be the last question.
Speaker 11 (28:55):
Hi, my name's Anthony from Boise, Idaho.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
Go broncos. My question is.
Speaker 11 (29:01):
Actually about social security, and my guess is that the
majority of people in this room probably make less than
one hundred and seventy six thousand dollars a year, which
is the limit for social security in twenty twenty five,
which means the majority of the people in this room
will pay six point two percent on one hundred percent
of their income next year. Right, but those making over
will make well, we'll not have to pay that extra
(29:23):
six point two percent. Would you be in favor of
reforming Social Security so that those making under could potentially
pay less than the six point two percent?
Speaker 4 (29:34):
The question is in my favor of reforming Social Security.
We're going to be forced to because if we don't
reform Socialecurity, it's going to go bankrupt. Now, that doesn't
mean we take benefits away from people that's paying in it.
What it means is we kick people off that didn't
pay anything into it. The last time I checked. That's
(29:54):
what's social Security for was for if you pay into it,
you're guaranteed to receive back. But we have we have
one hundred of thousands, maybe millions, because we haven't done
a full audit, and the Social Security Office won't send
it to us. But I bet you Evan will figure
it out. We have a tremendous amount of false payments
going out. We have to do something to it. We
(30:15):
can't balance a budget, we can't get our house back
in order if we don't get into some type of
mandatory spending. Seventy six percent of our of our entire
budget is on mandatory spending, and yet we bicker over
twenty four percent. Now, how are we ever going to
balance a budget off the twelve propriation bills? If only,
(30:37):
if we're only going to be able to touch twenty
four percent and get a one point eight trillion dollar
spending deficit under control, it's not going to happen. But
if we actually get into these programs and audit them
and actually get them doing what they're intended to do,
like Social Security, we can keep everybody's benefits where they're at.
(30:58):
We don't have to put anybody to worry. He's thinking
it's not going to be there for them, because it
should be there for them. But we have to As
I said, I'll repeat myself and then I'll end the question.
We have to get people off of it that never
paid a dime into it. Now I am three minutes
and twenty four seconds over, so I'm going to end
(31:19):
it with this, guys, thank you. I am the most
blessed man, with a blessed wife, with the blessed kids,
with a blessed life and to be able to serve
in the United States Senate and as my honor to
serve there. So may God bless you, and may God
bless the.
Speaker 12 (31:37):
United States of America.
Speaker 6 (32:06):
I take great comfort in knowing that America will be
made great a get and that's good because that's what.
Speaker 1 (32:12):
The American people deserve.
Speaker 6 (32:14):
You deserve a secure border, a prosperous economy, safe streets,
and free and fair elections.
Speaker 1 (32:22):
Every American wants peace and prosperity.
Speaker 6 (32:25):
But our families are strong, our country as strong as
tough as times.
Speaker 1 (32:29):
Are, put us here for this moment for a reason.
It is to save the country that he helped create. Hello, boy,
(33:10):
that was quite an entrance.
Speaker 6 (33:11):
I gotta thank Charlie Kirk for that one. That is amazing. Hello,
how are you guys doing. How do you like Arizona
in the winter? This is great. I want to say
to you all, Welcome to the Golden Age in America.
It starts right now, right now, and it starts right now.
Speaker 1 (33:35):
Because of you. Think about all of the work you did.
Speaker 6 (33:38):
I'm looking out and even though some of you are
way far back there, I recognize the faces in this crowd,
the people who knocked on doors, the people who went
out and handed out campaign flyers for me and other
campaigns across the country. The people who put on miles
and miles of walking to help President Trump get over
(33:58):
the finish line.
Speaker 1 (33:59):
This is it's your victory.
Speaker 6 (34:01):
Thank you for bringing President Trump back into the White House.
I love that this is going to be called the
Golden Age, because it really is. And when you think
about it, it started about a decade ago when many
of you were maybe ten years old, maybe in fourth
or fifth grade, and now you're going to be reaping
(34:21):
the benefits of the Golden Age. But it started when
a man with golden hair came down a golden escalator.
How many of you remember that in the summer of
twenty fifteen.
Speaker 1 (34:33):
And now it's.
Speaker 6 (34:33):
Culminated to what we've been waiting for all of this time.
It's culminated into we will no longer see a two
tier justice system anymore in America.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
Under the Golden Era.
Speaker 6 (34:45):
We will no longer see a weaponized government going after
we the people in the Golden era, and we will
no longer see open borders in the Golden Era. I
think you're all happy about that, and you think about
what President Trump has accomplished. He has literally brought down
(35:06):
all of the obstructionists. He brought down the fake news media.
He revealed what they are all about. He brought down
the obstructionists in Washington, DC. Now, the bad news is
we still have a few obstructionists. Have we seen that
in the last week or so? And unfortunately some of
them are right here in our own party. And I
(35:28):
hate to say that. I wish we could say all
of the trouble was over with the Democrats, but we've
seen how a few people with ours behind their name
are trying to actually hurt we the people as we
go into this next era where America First policies are
going to be implemented to make our life better once again,
and we need to bring down those obstructionists and help
(35:49):
President Trump.
Speaker 1 (35:50):
Are you up for that?
Speaker 6 (35:56):
I think about what has happened in just the last week.
How much has been revealed in the last week in Washington,
d C. Did you guys vote because you want President
Trump's America First policies to be brought forth in this country?
Speaker 1 (36:09):
Is that what you voted for? Did you vote to
make America great again? Okay? I thought so.
Speaker 6 (36:19):
So we need to make sure that those obstructions, whether
they have a.
Speaker 13 (36:23):
D behind their name or an R, are not going.
Speaker 6 (36:26):
To stomp we the people, because President Trump is giving
we the people back our government and we're not going
to let them stop him.
Speaker 1 (36:34):
Right.
Speaker 6 (36:39):
I think back to when I was running for governor
and one of the weak people that I ran against
was interviewed many many months after that race, and I'm
going to read the quote he said, opposing Carrie Lake
is a suicide mission. She doesn't run to win, she
runs to destroy. Well, we got to win because they're
(37:03):
trying to destroy our country.
Speaker 1 (37:04):
So we've got to win no matter what.
Speaker 6 (37:07):
And that means when President Trump is going there to
implement his policies, we must destroy any person who is
trying to stop those policies from making their way into
our lives.
Speaker 1 (37:20):
Are you up for that? Good?
Speaker 6 (37:25):
And when I say destroy, I'm not talking about violence.
I'm talking about with our strong voice and our vote,
we prove that in this election we made it too
big to rig for President Trump.
Speaker 1 (37:38):
We proved that. We saw it this week when many.
Speaker 6 (37:42):
Of you got on the phone and started calling you
lawmakers and your congressman and said, what the hell is
going on.
Speaker 1 (37:49):
What are you thinking.
Speaker 6 (37:50):
We need to use the same energy that we've used
for the last couple of years to make sure that
in the next four years we make America great again. Okay,
I think about I think about how we want to
take a little bit of time off.
Speaker 2 (38:07):
Right.
Speaker 6 (38:07):
It's tempting because we work so hard. How many of
you just a show of hand knocked doors, got involved,
chased ballast.
Speaker 1 (38:14):
Let me see a show of hand hands keep them up.
Speaker 6 (38:17):
You guys are heroes. You guys are heroes, and I
want to see you take that same energy that you
did when you in Arizona went out one hundred and
fifteen degree heat and knocked on five hundred doors in
one weekend.
Speaker 1 (38:33):
And I want to take that same energy.
Speaker 6 (38:35):
That's how we're going to defeat the obstructionists who are
going to try to stop President Trump because the work
is really just starting now. It's just starting now. And
while we are here to celebrate this huge victory of
President Trump getting into the White House, we have to
realize that the work is just beginning and he can't
do it alone. It's going to take him with his muscle,
(38:58):
and that's all of you to make sure that we
truly make America great again. I know you're up for it.
I used to say this on the campaign trail.
Speaker 1 (39:08):
And I meant it.
Speaker 6 (39:09):
I'm so impressed by this young generation of patriots. My
kids are in this generation, and I would say to people,
you got to get involved because your generation has the
most to win, the most to.
Speaker 1 (39:23):
Gain, or the most to lose.
Speaker 6 (39:24):
If we weren't successful, then your generation would be, as
Ronald Reagan said, plunged into a thousand years of darkness.
But because we were successful, we actually have an opportunity
to see the Golden Age, peace and prosperity for the
rest of your lives. And so I thank you for
all that you've done. This generation impresses the Heckotomy.
Speaker 1 (39:45):
It really does.
Speaker 6 (39:50):
But we need to make a promise to President Trump
right now that the energy that we put in to
helping him and fighting for him to get him back
in the White House that will never stop and will
never succumb to the Left again and their absolute horrible
ideology that has put us into the situation we're in
right now. Can you make that promise to President Trump
(40:12):
that you will get out there and stay involved in
his presidency and in this administration, whether it's volunteering, getting involved,
or working for the administration.
Speaker 1 (40:21):
Are you guys up for that? That's awesome.
Speaker 6 (40:28):
You know, we watched as President Trump has revealed so
much to us about the truths about how corrupt Washington,
DC is. I actually enjoyed his efforts when he was
taking down the fake news. I mean, he's the one
who first showed us how much lying was happening in
the fake news, so much so that I decided, I'm
getting out of the fake news, and I'm going to
(40:49):
be honest.
Speaker 1 (40:49):
I'm an optimist.
Speaker 6 (40:51):
I actually had I had a thought that maybe the
fake news would reform themselves after what they've done the
past ten years, lie about President Trump, committing character assassination
against President Trump and frankly other people who are fighting
for our country. I actually thought that with this victory,
(41:11):
they might come to their senses and wake up and
reform themselves.
Speaker 1 (41:16):
But I don't think they're going to do that.
Speaker 6 (41:18):
But you know what, it doesn't matter, because, as Elon
Musk says, we are the news now.
Speaker 1 (41:24):
You are the news, not the fake news.
Speaker 6 (41:29):
And we've had some great people take the stage, people
like Charlie Kirk, people like Benny Johnson. We've had some
great people who have incredible podcasts, and their podcasts in
one day will have more viewership than the entirety of
the fake news in one day. That's how powerful this
movement is. The fake news has become the mainstream media
(41:52):
has just become obsolete. But I did think of one
thing that they're good for.
Speaker 13 (41:57):
I know, I'm hearing a gasp in the audience.
Speaker 6 (41:59):
What, Yes, they're good for one thing. They're kind of
like a barometer. If you see the fake news attacking someone,
what you should do is say, I got to support
that person.
Speaker 11 (42:13):
Right.
Speaker 6 (42:15):
When they attack President Trump relentlessly lying about him, it
only made people.
Speaker 13 (42:20):
Want to support him more and more.
Speaker 6 (42:22):
When they attack great fighters like Eli Crane here in Arizona,
that just makes me want to support him more and more.
Speaker 1 (42:30):
And I've always.
Speaker 6 (42:31):
Said, whoever the fake news is the loudest and attacking
the most, that's who we need to get behind. So
they're good for telling us, really who the good guys are.
The fake news is good for telling us who the.
Speaker 1 (42:43):
Good guys are.
Speaker 6 (42:44):
So keep that in mind if you do ever find
yourself watching them. There's so much history that's going to
be made in the next four years. Can you even
do you lay awake at night just so excited about
what is coming in the next four years.
Speaker 13 (42:59):
I can't be the only one.
Speaker 6 (43:01):
I can't be the only one. It's funny because I
used to lay awake at night, wake up at three am,
and worry about you know, where this world is going.
And while an election didn't immediately take away all the problems,
we know that the solutions are coming, and we know
that things are going to get better. We know that
Tom Holman, who's going to be speaking in the next
couple of days, is is going to get busy deporting
(43:27):
people who come here illegally and freeing up this country
so that we the people can take our country back.
Speaker 1 (43:33):
And I'm excited about that.
Speaker 6 (43:34):
I know you are as well. And we're going to
have to watch it because the fake news is going
to try to make that look like the worst thing.
Speaker 1 (43:41):
In the world.
Speaker 6 (43:42):
We will watch as we create millions of homecomings around
the globe. We're sending people back to their homeland and
we're going to be freeing up our country for the
citizens of this country. But we got to make sure
that they don't spin it. You know, they're going to
try to spin it, and they're going to try.
Speaker 13 (44:00):
To make it look like the worst thing in the world.
Speaker 6 (44:02):
I see it as human beings heading back to their homeland.
They will go there and make their homeland better, and
we will make our homeland better. And so I'm excited
for people like Tom Holman, and we're gonna have to
push back when the fake news tries to take everything
President Trump is going to try to do to make
our country great and they're going to try to spin
(44:23):
it in the opposite way. That's when we have to
stand up and be that voice, and be the media
and get out on social media and push back against
that narrative because that narrative is a false narrative.
Speaker 1 (44:35):
We know the truth.
Speaker 6 (44:36):
That truth is President Trump will make America great again.
Speaker 1 (44:46):
So as I get.
Speaker 6 (44:47):
Ready to wrap this up, I guess I'm going to
do questions. I've never done questions at a turning point event.
This could be dangerous. I want to let you know
that I'm looking forward to going and joining the President
Trump and President Trump and DC and the Trump I'm honored.
(45:08):
Isn't it crazy how they're already trying to bring down everybody.
President Trump is appointing. Did they do this with Joe
Biden when he had a cross dressing kleptomaniac who stole
luggage at the airport in charge of our nuclear waste.
I didn't hear any complaining really from Congress and from Washington,
d C.
Speaker 13 (45:28):
And the media. I didn't hear any complaining.
Speaker 6 (45:31):
But now when he's putting out true patriots who want
to help make America great, the media is going berserk.
And that tells you that he's really putting out some
great fighters who are not in it for themselves, They're
in it for America. So I'm looking forward to it
because where I am going, we're going to make sure
that the American story is told in an.
Speaker 1 (45:53):
Accurate and fair manner.
Speaker 6 (45:55):
We're going to get back to real journalism describing what's
happening as we make history for the next four years
in the President Trump administration. So I'm looking forward to it.
I'm looking forward to joining you and this incredible young
generation that I admire so much in making America great
again with President Trump. So I thank you so much,
And let's do some questions, guys, any questions out there.
Speaker 1 (46:20):
Right here? Are you the first one? Heather how does
she know?
Speaker 6 (46:27):
How can we get a microphone for her? Anybody or
the Oh I'm sorry, I didn't follow the first rule,
which is the questions are back there. Do you want
to have her ask a question while we wait for Heather?
Speaker 4 (46:43):
Okay, I want to say.
Speaker 1 (46:43):
My name is Judy said Avant this. I'm here because
of my nieces and my nephew. But we want to
ask you. Are you running for governor again? Oh? My gosh.
Speaker 6 (46:53):
You know what, guys, I am going to go help President.
Speaker 1 (46:57):
Trump in Washington, DC. That's what I'm going to do.
I'm going to help President Trump.
Speaker 6 (47:07):
That's where I want to do as much as I
can to make sure that we get this country turned around.
Speaker 1 (47:12):
So thank you for the question. Heather.
Speaker 8 (47:14):
All right, So you know one thing I love about you, Carrie,
is you know so many people run for office, but
you ran beyond election day and you fought in the
courts when they stole the election from you, and I
believe they.
Speaker 1 (47:27):
Did it twice.
Speaker 8 (47:28):
So my question is is what do we have to
do to restore election.
Speaker 1 (47:32):
Integrity in Arizona?
Speaker 8 (47:34):
Because if election integrity is a state issue, how can
the Trump administration now that we have the federal government
impact election integrity on a state level.
Speaker 1 (47:46):
Thank you for that question.
Speaker 6 (47:47):
Yeah, you know, we're not where we need to be
on elections, and that's one of the reasons I don't
want to run again. To be honest, Why put yourself
through that torture again. We know the movement that we
have in Arizona. If you live in Arizona, you get
what's going on. And we're not there yet. Thankfully President
Trump's victory it was too big to rig. It was
too big to rig. I have not given up on
(48:08):
election integrity. I want you all to know that I haven't.
But it's really really hard to fight for election integrity
when you've got corruption that is so deep as it
is in Arizona. We know that our elections have not
been run properly, and there's massive corruption there, and there's
(48:28):
massive corruption in the court system. And we know and
nobody can say I did not work hard to push
for big changes in elections. What I think we need
to do is make sure that we don't stop, and
we keep telling our local and our state lawmakers this
is priority number one. And we don't want just some
fake election integrity. We want real election reform. We got
(48:52):
to stay on these Arizona lawmakers to get real election reform.
Speaker 1 (48:58):
And then.
Speaker 6 (49:00):
I'm counting on I'm counting on President Trump to live
up to his promise to get to the bottom of
election fraud, and I believe he will. And I'm counting
on actually the federal government when it comes to federal races,
demanding accountability, transparency, and something closer to election day paper
(49:20):
ballot snow machines, right, especially when hey, especially when it
comes to federal races, so they can call the shots
on federal races, and then we'll make sure that those
federal races are run well. And hopefully when there's a
federal a candidate on the ballot, that means everybody will
benefit from those kind of reforms.
Speaker 1 (49:43):
We got a cowboy over here.
Speaker 14 (49:44):
Hello him, It's Carry Lake. I met you back at
America Fest twenty twenty one, and you actually approached me,
and so I wanted to say, I love your character.
You loved to I remember were you running for governor
back then or when did you start running?
Speaker 6 (50:00):
That must have been way back on my very first
turning point event.
Speaker 1 (50:04):
I remember it was during.
Speaker 6 (50:05):
COVID, so they had to have just a few people
in the room, right, and you.
Speaker 1 (50:08):
Must have been like this big yeah, yep, yep.
Speaker 6 (50:11):
I don't think I had announced that I was running
for governor. I was mulling it over at the time. Yes,
I'm so glad to see that you are a patriot
and involved and thank you. I mean, really, this generation,
I am so impressed with his young generation.
Speaker 14 (50:25):
I actually do have your signature on this hat as well,
from all the way back then.
Speaker 1 (50:29):
I missed what you just said.
Speaker 14 (50:30):
I have your signature on my hat from all the
way back then too.
Speaker 1 (50:34):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 14 (50:35):
I just wanted to say, at what age did you
feel God's calling to do what you are doing now?
Like what age, like way back when did you feel that.
Speaker 6 (50:45):
To get into politics, just becoming a leader?
Speaker 1 (50:48):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (50:49):
Well, you know, I've always felt God's calling, that God
made me to be special, just like He made each
and every one of us to be special. But it
was really during COVID that I had a huge wake
up call and I realized we have to do more.
We can't sit silent, as painful as it is to
be canceled and have the media attack you and to
(51:11):
you know, just what we've all been going through since then,
if we don't stand up and step into that thing
that we're afraid of, whether it was getting called out,
being canceled, running for office, if we don't stand out
and step into our fear, will never overcome our fear, and.
Speaker 1 (51:27):
We'll never save our country.
Speaker 6 (51:28):
So I think for a lot of people, COVID was
a big wake up call. That's when I felt God
urging me and pushing me into a different direction in
my life. And it has not been easy. But I
would not change a thing. And if I'm out of
time now. But if the powers that be, the corrupt
powers that be, think that I'm going away, I'm going
(51:49):
to disappear because of the highjinks they've been up to.
I'm never going away. I'm never going away.
Speaker 1 (51:56):
We're going to keep fighting.
Speaker 6 (51:57):
We're going to keep fighting for America. We're going to
kee keep fighting for Arizona. We're going to keep fighting
for this young generation. And together we're going to save
America and save the world.
Speaker 1 (52:07):
God bless you, Turning Point. Thank you, Charlie and Tyler
and I love all of you very much. Thank you
so much.
Speaker 7 (52:29):
Thanks Jubisert, Excusert, Oh God gro good, thank you, thank you,
Yes you.
Speaker 4 (52:39):
Astors.
Speaker 3 (52:39):
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Speaker 4 (53:01):
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Speaker 2 (53:32):
All right, we will continue our coverage for Day three
here at Amfest twenty twenty four in the beautiful Phoenix
Convention Center.
Speaker 5 (53:40):
A few minutes and we will come right back.