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January 21, 2023 34 mins

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Karoline leavitt talks about her run for Congress, the benefits of being a “Granite Stater,” and dating as a Right Wing Gen Z member. Karoline also dives into her time as Trump White House Staffer- even sharing a fun story about Donald himself- and what she learned for being the youngest person to ever be a major party’s Congressional candidate.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, everybody, welcome to another episode of the Buck Sexton Show.
We are joined by Caroline Levitt. She is a gen
Z conservative, a newly minted Newsmax contributor. She formerly worked
in the Trump White House and was deputy to our
friend Kaylee mcinanny. She also ran for New Hampshire's first
district that congressional seat up there was the youngest person

(00:23):
ever I believe to actually be the nominee for either party.
So pretty cool stuff. And Caroline joins us now talking
to talk to he about a whole bunch of things. Caroline, welcome,
Thank you so much for having me Buck. It's great
to be with you. So let's let's start with this.
So you're gonna run for congress right when you're when
you're in that mindset you're gonna run for Congress. What

(00:44):
was the stuff that you learned about that? Right? I mean,
just for everybody, you're you're in your mid twenties, you're
gen Z. So I'll have you know. I'm millennial technically,
and Clay, my co host, is gen X and so
we just the only thing we agree on is that
gen Z is definitely trying to destroy America. But you
are trying to save America. But back to Congress and running,

(01:06):
What's some of the stuff that you had to figure
out you had to learn along the way that maybe
you didn't anticipate. Yeah, well, first of all, I would
not disagree with you and Clay on that assessment. I
recently wrote a piece for Fox after running, and I
wrote that gen Z is the most faithless, brainwashed, anti
American generation in history. And I believe that to be true.

(01:28):
It's sad what has become of my generation. I live
amongst them like they're literally my former college roommates, my
former teammates who I played softball with grown up, they
are my friends, my former colleagues. And I'm watching this
indoctrination of my generation, which is what compelled me to
run for Congress in the first place. And I mean,
I could say here all night and tell you what

(01:49):
I learned throughout the experience of running for Congress. I
will say this, I had absolutely no idea what I
was getting into when I decided I wanted to run.
I thought I did at the time. I thought, you know,
I had the shops, I had worked on Capitol Hill,
I had worked in the White House. I did several
different internships and jobs for different campaigns throughout college. But

(02:11):
I have so much respect for candidates that put themselves
out there because it really is a whole different ballgame.
You have to be disciplined, you have to be on
your toes, You're always on. Like part of it is
like you almost feel like you're like an actor or
an actress. You are always on in the grocery store,
in the pharmacy, at the gas station, You're running into
constituents and voters, and you're constantly just pitching yourself, whether

(02:34):
it's to a donor or to a group of voters,
and never ends literally, So it's a ton of work
anyone who does it. Again, I have a lot of
respect in kudos to all those that won their racist.
Unfortunately I did not, for I think a litany of reasons.
But we were the nominee. We came out of a
really competitive primary field and pretty much shocked, definitely shocked

(02:56):
the establishment. They spent four million against me, and we
won by ten. It was a huge victory. Learned a lot,
and I'm looking to help other candidates that want to
step up and run because I know how difficult and
challenging it is. By the way, what do you think
if you were just giving the most honest after action
report you could of why you didn't win it this time.
I'm sure we'll have a different conversation in the future

(03:17):
if you decide to run again. You may decide you
like media a lot. People always ask me, They say,
would you run for office? I'm like, no, this job
is way too much fun. But anyway, if you do
run for office. But what do you think happened there?
Because I think that the after action in general for
the midterm election is really important and is still pretty
contentious among Republicans for sure, and I think, you know,

(03:38):
we could talk about it broadly speaking, but every race,
every district especially is really unique. I think for here
in New Hampshire, what happened was a couple of things.
First of all, we have this terrible same day registration
voting law and the Democrats capitalize on it. You know,
it sucks. You can show up in New Hampshire. You
don't have to show an ID. You can say I
live it for alms and I want to vote in

(04:01):
today's election. Well, okay, that's fine. They let you cast
your ballot and then you don't actually have to show
proof of your identification until like I think it's ninety
days after the election. Well, I mean it's already sat
in stone, like my opponent has already swore the oath
to office. But that's our law and the GOP. Frankly,
I think nationwide needs to understand our voting laws and

(04:23):
we have to play the game that the Democrats do
and we have to take advantage of these laws. And
unfortunately we didn't do that as a campaign. Well enough,
I think, and the RNC and the GOP and our
state just weren't there. And then I do think the
issue of abortion did hurt Republicans. I'm pro life proudly,
so I was never going to be a hypocrite. I
was never going to be a liar. So I took

(04:43):
my positions till the end, and we fought, and I
had a lot of tough discussions with people, but I
wasn't going to turn back on my convictions and you know,
the values that I really truly believe in. So unfortunately,
I do think people voted on emotion, not on fact,
and a lot of missing voters went to the polls
thinking that I was going to take away all their
rights when in fact it's just not true, and it's

(05:05):
time to have a lot of Republicans across the country. So,
having fought in this battle personally of the twenty twenty
two mid terms, would you just tell anybody listening that
this is a constant discussion we have on the radio
show a lot that if they want to win, the
Republicans have to get used to mail and balloting where

(05:25):
it's legal, early voting where it's legal, ballot harvesting where
it's legal. Not everywhere, of course. I mean, if that's
the laws, and we can't change the law because we
have a Democrat controlled legislature in your state or you
have a Democrat governor, I mean, look at California, right,
why aren't we doing the same thing. The Democrats are
so smart, they're planning, they're playing chess. We're playing checkers.

(05:48):
And it's time to change that. And one of the
things here in New Hampshire that we face is college
students voting in our election. Students that don't live here
full time, they don't pay taxes here, they don't property here,
but they are allowed to vote. Look that sucks. I
disagree with it. I hope that our governor changes that law.
I'm going to put some pressure on our legislature this

(06:08):
session to do it because I think it's a real
fault for both candidates on both sides of the aisle,
and it's disservice to the people that actually live here
and pay taxes and have jobs in New Hampshire, real
New Hampshire citizens. But nevertheless, until that laws changed, you know,
we got to get on board, and we should be
busting college students to the polls to vote for GOP
candidates because that's what the Democrats do. We haven't done

(06:29):
it in the past, and we should do that moving
forward in every single state. That has to be a
huge monumental foundational shift in the RNC strategy moving forward. Now,
I know you were a softball player speaking of college.
In college and right, which I'm sure that that was
a lot of fun. Were you were you a pitcher?

(06:49):
Where'd you play? No? I was a third basement, the
hot corner, third basement. Yeah, yeah, yeah, played softball and
field hockey my whole life, grow it up, and softball
is what led me to the D two school that
I went to. I went on a scholarship and it
was a very politically school, ironically, and that's how I
got my feet went in politics. If you will, well, yeah,

(07:11):
tell me about this because people ask me. I wanted
to ask you about the trans competition in college sports thing,
which we can get to you in a second. Yeah,
But but first, you know, people ask me like, when
did you become conservative? And I generally say to them
that it was like I showed up to college assuming
that other people were normal and found out that every
almost every and around me had been brainwashed and was crazy.

(07:34):
And then I found out that the term for this
is you're a conservative, and so you just went through
this process not that long ago? Is that what happened?
What school was it, by the way you're up It
was it up in New Hampshire, Yes it was. It's
called Saint Anselm College in Manchester, NY Mampshire to a
D two school, small school, but they have an Institute
of politics on their campus and I didn't even know

(07:55):
that until I went there. But because of the first
in the Nation primary that now Joe Biden the Democrats
are trying to rip away from us up here in
the good old Granite State. That's a huge part of
where I came into politics. My family is not political.
I mean, my brothers like still don't have any idea
what I just did. They're like, what is running for congress? Dude?
Like why are you doing this to yourself? You know,

(08:16):
we're a business family. We have a car dealership. We
had a nice group stand, so you know, I guess
I was raised on conservative values. My dad served in
the Marine Corps. You know, I was never allowed to
miss school. I was taught to work hard, you know,
basic common sense values that unfortunately have become conservative rather
than just American. But I was raised in a conservative household,
if you will. And then when I got to college,

(08:37):
same point as you, buck, I was like, why don't
other people feel this way? Like why does everyone hear
Donald Trump? It was the twenty sixteen election actually when
I was a college student, so I was I found
myself to be one of the few conservatives on campus,
and I was not shy about it. I wrote editorials
in the school newspaper blasting my liberal professors. I said,
it's insulting that they think that every kid in the

(08:59):
class hats Trump. There's kids. I actually I put an
op ed in the college paper way back in the
day defending Trump's travel band, which was really controversial at
the time, and so that was helpful in the GOP
primary when people were trying to knock my conservative credit,
I was like, no, no, no, I'm the conservative through
and through, always have been, and certainly I think even

(09:19):
more so now after running for Congress. I want to
get back into the college politics discussion in a second.
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(09:41):
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(10:02):
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(10:25):
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You don't want identity theft to happen, do you, Caroline?
It sucks all of a sudden, They're like, you owe
thousands of dollars for a cable company. I'd like, I'd
never even I didn't live in the state. I didn't
even have this cable Company's crazy what they can do
They get a hold of your Social Security number. Anyway,
So back to the college situation, did you ever have

(10:47):
to deal with I mean, I love you, just ask
did you ever compete against because this is a relatively
new phenomenon. But you were in school when these things
were coming becoming more commonplace. The trans athlete situation, like,
did you have to do you have to play against
the trans athlete in softball? Ever? Or is this not
something that you personally experienced? No? Never, And I thank

(11:10):
God every day that I didn't have to do that
because having played third base, right, like charging at the plate,
especially in softball, you have a lot of those slap hitters,
the lefties that come up and they fake bunt, but
then they actually take a full swing and hit a
line drive. I mean, I was fearless back one day.
I would literally charge at home plate to try and
scoop the bunt to get the out right. I cannot

(11:31):
imagine doing that with a full sized man like yourself, Buck,
a big, macho, masculine man getting up to the plate
and swinging away at me. I mean, my face would
not look like this if that were the case. So actually,
I'll tell you a true story from when I was
I went to Saint David's, I was a Catholic school

(11:51):
in Manhattan. I always remember this. My English teacher, mister Ryan,
was out for like a week or two and I
remember I saw him I was little kid. This really
stuck with me. His face. I couldn't believe it. I
mean it was just the whole thing was black and
swollen and completely messed up. He had to have I
think it was eye socket surgery because he was playing

(12:11):
in a men's mister Ryan, I remember this a men's
softball league, and he was the pitcher and he got
just wrecked right in the face. And that was softball.
But the ball is not soft, as you as you
will know, especially if it's hit really really hard. No,
it's not soft. And the field is actually smaller obviously
than a baseball field. I'll never forget. ESPN did a

(12:34):
documentary back in the day when Jenny Finch remember her,
she was like the pretty blonde very I guess famous
in the softball World pitcher. But anyway, they did they
did a scientific documentary improved ESPN did this is not
my words book, that it is actually harder to hit
a softball and a fast pitch softball game than a
baseball and an MLB baseball game. So there's your fun fact.

(12:57):
I do think so that mentioned playing well, I was
going to say that that he also he said afterwards,
this teacher. I remember he was talking all the students
because we're all asking like, oh my god, what happened
in your face? That it's actually worse since if you're
men playing softball in the same kind of field with
up is worse because there's no reaction time if you're
the pitcher. That's what he said, at least that was

(13:18):
his claim. So anyway things could happen out there. They
always just I played a very little bit of baseball.
There are other sports that I played. I played a
very little bit of baseball, and they would always say
the ball is a going to hurt you if you're
afraid of it. I remember I was a kid. I
used to I was very inquisitive, you know, I was
like a little Socrates walking around. I was like, I
don't think that's true. I think you could get hurt
even if you're not afraid of it. I think if
you get clocked in the face, it's gonna hurt. So

(13:38):
that's just my theory. And that's when you knew you
were going to be an excellent podcast host. A tennis
tennis wrote a little crew in college, a little bit
of tennis, you know, things like that that was my
more and my speed. Nothing that nothing, Um that would
be you know, a danger to all this going on here.
So um college you didn't deal with that. But obviously

(14:01):
the arguments I'm just wondering, like, did that ever come
up among the athletes at your school? Did you guys
ever talk about having to compete against a biological mail?
Would your school have allowed it? You think? You know,
it's hard to say. You know, it's a small Catholic school,
but they've done things since I've graduated that I've been
disappointed in, like the vaccine mandate and other stuff. They
have a woke administration now, which is sad to see,

(14:23):
Like a lot of higher education universities across the country,
I never dealt with it. I played sports, like I said,
my entire life. This really is, I believe a new
phenomenon that's really just taken speed over the last two
or three years. And I've been really outspoken on it
because I know how hard I worked to receive that scholarship,
and you know, a D two for me, that was

(14:43):
the highest level I could play out, but it was
still a dream come true. And I spent every summer
with my dad, literally every summer for five, six, seven years,
traveling to tournaments around this country every single weekend. And
I know so many girls that I've had that same experience.
And to think that, you know, they could work so hard,
go to college, play on a team at the highest level,

(15:04):
and then have either their starting position taken from them
or be in a position where they're going to be
seriously injured or just completely destroyed. I mean, you look
at Leah Thomas just whipping these girls butts in the
swimming pool. It's like, no crap, Like, look at the
size of her hands, look at the size of her feet.
It's not a her, it's a hymn. It's a man.
And like, it's just mind boggling to me that this

(15:27):
is acceptable in our society, and as a young woman
in a former athlete, it infuriates me, and I know
it does for many other female athletes as well. So
how long are you working in the White House for
the Trump administration? So I got there in two and
eighteen and then unfortunately got my job stolen from me

(15:47):
in twenty twenty, so I stayed through the election. In
twenty twenty, I started in a real nitty gritty role.
I was literally writing letters and messages and proclamations for
the president with was like I mean, it was. It
was a ship job, if I excuse my French, if
I can say that, But it got my foot in
the door. We're a podcast. I think you could say

(16:07):
anything and people make fun of me because I still
don't they know me in real life, and I curse plenty,
but I never curse here. But you can so go
keep going. Well, thanks for their permission. You might regret that. No,
So I just worked really hard. And then Kaylee McNee
and he was brought in. She I had heard she
wanted to revamp her entire team. It was always my
goal to work in the press office. I had done

(16:28):
some media work in college at some local stations up here,
and so I felt like my skills were well suited
for that role. And one thing led to the next,
and I was one of the first hires on Kayley's
new team. So that was an amazing job. I certainly
would probably still be there, if you know, President Trump
was still more serious aspects of this I do want

(16:49):
to ask you about, But obviously you're in the Trump
White House. The big guy is there about every time
he sees me says, best hair and television. That's what
he says, which I was really appreciated. So he's very
He's now won me over forever. That's what the Trumpster says.
At Lias. He said it twice. I think he forgot that.
He said it'd be the first time. But you must
have a Trump story that you could share with us,

(17:11):
something just about what it's like to be around the
big guy in the big house, in the White House.
Give us, give us some Trump lore. Yeah. I have
plenty of stories. I'll tell one. First of all, I
was there through probably the most tumultuous time of the administration.
I mean we were there through COVID. I was there
through the Summer of Love as CNN called it aka

(17:32):
the Black Lives Matter, Marxist terrorists destroying our country and
burning down DC. So that was wild. And again I'm
working in the Press office, right so I'm dealing with
the hacks in the mainstream media every single day criticizing
everything we were doing and everything the President was doing.
I was actually there through the COVID pandemic that swept
through the West Wing. Many said of my colleagues that

(17:54):
I was the one who started that. I don't can't
confirm nor deny, but I did have to stay out
of work for a couple of weeks. We all got
the VID at the time. But my favorite Trump story,
my favorite funny Trump story, was one day we were
getting ready for him to come down for his briefing.
He briefed like seventy something days in a row throughout COVID.

(18:15):
It was insane, like Saturday's Sundays. We were just briefing
every day. We had to stay until he was done,
so it was long, long days. And one day he
came down and he called us all kids in the
lower press office where you know, young younger staffers, and
he'd say, what's up, kids, and you know, going to
his rant about who was in the briefing room. What
he was gonna say. We'd tell him, you know, the
news of the day or whatever. And then he did

(18:36):
a little dance one day and he goes, I got
some new shiny shoes. And sure enough we looked down
and Donald Trump was there right in front of my desk,
dancing back and forth, showing off his new shiny black shoes,
and he loved it. And we all just looked at
each other for like, what nothing, and he was dancing,
he was having some fun, and then he went out

(18:56):
and just absolutely ripped the press and it was priceless.
Oh yeah, no, he's He's very charming and very funny.
I actually met him a couple of times when I
was a kid in New York City way back in
the day, because you know, his children were my peers
growing up in New York, so I I met, I
knew them, and I met him a couple of times
back in the day. And he's always been a larger
than life character. That much, is for sure, anything that

(19:20):
you would go back and tell yourself or actually, maybe
a better way of putting this for anyone who is
you know that it's amazing to be in your in
your twenties or thirties and take a job in the
White House, right, I mean, that's just the kind of
experience that I think anyone can see. It's just something
you want and you're you know, if you can do that,
if you can figure it out, you can get there somehow.

(19:40):
But is there anything that you would tell anyone considering that,
or just advice that you would give them. Having spent
two years in a white house that was effectively under siege. Yeah,
for sure. I mean the first piece of advice that
I always tell young folks that say, how did you
get that job? Like just put yourself out there. That's

(20:01):
like the best I know. It's like so generic and like,
I'm not Ironstein sharing news you've never heard. But you know,
I wouldn't have gotten into the White House if I
had not applied. I literally applied for the job. I
went on Whitehouse dot gov and like filed out this
twelve peaks long half. Yeah. I never in a million
years thought I was going to get it, but I
did it anyway. I remember where I was when I

(20:22):
filled out the application. I was in my college in
the dining hall and all my friends were out tailgating
at a football game, and I was like, no, I'm
going to sit here and apply for this job because
if I get it, it'll change my life. And it did,
like literally changed my life. So then when I got there,
you know, I got a promotion because I just met
everyone that I could and introduced myself to people. And

(20:43):
then the job with Kaylee came and I had a
friend who put my resume on her desk, and you know,
you just never know where the next opportunity is going
to lead you. And then obviously it led me to
running for Congress and now here I am with the
next step in my career. So you know, that's my
always been my advice. It's like put your self out there,
and then once you get there, like don't stop, don't

(21:03):
ever settle, don't be complacent, Like just keep grinding. Because
in a really high pressure environment like the White House,
especially the Trump White House, like the cream definitely does
rise to the top. There was very high turnover in
that White House, I think because a lot of people
just couldn't handle the heat and the pressure. And it's
a high pressure job and it's pretty cutthroat. So you
just have to understand that before taking a position, and

(21:26):
you know, hold yourself accountable. Yeah, no, I can I
can imagine that, especially having a press corps that is
really just there to be in opposition all the time
and try to cut people down and play the league's
game to the maximum effect. It's I could assume it
would be a pretty stress but also a pretty amazing,
historic and fascinating place to be. So you're you're a

(21:51):
granite stater. As I've learned, this is what right that's
that's what the cool kids say, granite state or right, yes, yeah,
thank you learn new things. I've learned some things from
Caroline when she came on radio. She explained to me
it's granite State. So because why do you remember? Why?
Oh gosh, I don't know. Because you guys have a
lot of granted, I can't remember. We have an abundance

(22:14):
of granted, it's our number one national There we go.
Sometimes you just gotta go with your guts. So that's
what I did there. Sell me on New Hampshire a
little bit. I've spent you know, I'm a New Yorker
board and rate I of all of New England, I think,
actually I've spent less time in Maine, but the rest
of New England, I've spent a fair amount of time
in New Hampshire. I think I've been in once for

(22:36):
politics to interview a bunch of Republican candidates. What are
the best things about New Hampshire. New Hampshire is the
most underrated state in the country. Okay, let me just
start there. First of all, this is where America began. Okay,
we are like the birthplace of the American Revolution, pall Revere.
We are right north of Massachusetts. Okay, bear with me.

(22:59):
So we have all of this beautiful history here that
you just simply don't get out west. We have four seasons.
There's never you never lack anything to do in New Hampshire.
In the summer, we have ten miles of coastline, beautiful beaches. Okay, honestly,
the New Hampshire tourism industry should hire me, right with you.
How many people listening to this or watching this even

(23:20):
knew that New Hampshire had beaches. The answer is not
super high. I'm just gonna put that out. One of
the smallest coastlines in the country. Okay, I'm blessed to
live in a little town right off that. The beaches
right behind the outside this window. Ten miles of coast
New Hampshire's beaches are beautiful. We have the mountains. Okay,
if you like to ski, snowboard, hike, zipline, come on

(23:40):
up in the fall. Most beautiful foliage in the world.
We have buses and buses buses. We call them up
here leaf keepers. Leaf keepers. They are like peeping toms
that come up here just to look at our leaves.
It's kind of weird. If you grow up here, but
got our respected. It helps our economy. So we get
that in the fall spring kind of crowd be not
gonna lie winters a little too long, but we do

(24:02):
get the full four seasons. Always something to do. We
have beautiful lakes, like I said, beaches where I live
forty five minutes. I'm just happy to leaf peeper was
very pg. I don't know what is literally they literally
come here to peep at our leaves. That's got you.
There's some good stuff going on up there. See, this

(24:23):
is the thing there. We're New England, so like we've
had this is title town like, So can I bring
up what I want to the reason I'm asking about
this in part other than just to get to know
a little bit about it and for the audience to
get to know you and where you come from. We
should flip New Hampshire red, and we should. We should
Florida New Hampshire. How hard would it be. It's not
that big a population state. Look what the Commies have

(24:44):
done to Vermont. Vermont is a beautiful state. I know
there's probably some Vermont New Hampshire beef, but Vermont is
a gorgeous state. Amazing food, great in winter. Great in
the summer, I'm sure very similar New Hampshire in terms
of activities and a lot of other things going on.
The Commies from New York and a lesser extent, you know,
Connecticut have made it a just super blue Bernie Sanders place.

(25:05):
Can't we make New Hampshire like red? Can't we make
New Hampshire the Oklahoma of the Northeast. Yeah, I am
a little insulted first of all that you said Vermont
is so beautiful and amazing, but then you've never been
to New Hampshire, Like Vermont is like the C version
of the New Hampshire. It's like the B team. We're

(25:26):
the A team over here, Okay, because we do have
the beach that we're close to Maine, which is a
great state, great lobster, and we're closer to Massachusetts. So
if you want to zip down to Boston, catch a
Celtics game, go to Fenway Park, go to a Pat's
game down in Foxboro, you're very close to that. So
let me let me just start by saying Vermont sucks

(25:47):
and New Hampshire is way better. Can we make it red?
To the heart of your question? I mean, I just
tried to do this. I literally just dedicated two years
of my life to trying to flip this district that
I live in red. The sad at truth about New
Hampshire right now is and a lot of people have
called me and said, please run again. You were great,
blah blah blah, and like I'm very flattered by that.

(26:08):
But I think electorally speaking, New Hampshire has gone so
like we had so many migrants move here from New York,
from Massachusetts, from californiaa people buying up property left in right,
our housing market is like depleted because of all these
very wealthy out of staters that moved here throughout COVID
and now they're Democrats. See this isle, See this is

(26:30):
what I mean. The red. The reds are rather the
the red. Refugees from places like New York and New
York California have gone to Texas, Tennessee in Florida. So
New Hampshire has gotten a lot of Democrat refugees from
just the high taxes and the close close quarters, etc.
Right because we are in New England state, so they

(26:50):
think that their politics are safe here, but they should
not be. We are the live free or die state.
We have no sales tax, no income tax, very business friendly,
and vironment great Second Amendment culture here as well. We
have constitutional carry, so you know you can carry your
gun around on you. You go in to Walmart, you're
going to see a lot of people packing. So therefore
it's a very safe state as well. So it's sad

(27:13):
to see all these Dems move here, which is part
of the reason I do want to run again because
I want to turn it around. But I also think
the chances of a Republican winning a statewide office or
a federal seat here it's tough. It's really tough, and
it's it's sad to see to our beautiful, live for
your die state. So as a oh wait, actually important

(27:35):
question for you, do you have a my Pillow because
we need to send you one if your dog. Yeah,
you do because they're amazing, Because you know, Caroline knows
the My Pillows are phenomenal. People like Caroline and all
of you have helped build My Pillow into an amazing company.
You got to check out the geez dream Sheets. Super soft, luxurious.
You will love the Geeza dream sheets. Made from the

(27:55):
world's best cotton. They're ultrasoft and breathable, but extremely durable.
Right now, the Geeza Dream sheet are at their lowest
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the Geeza Dreamsheets. All you have to do, let's go
to my pillow dot com. Click on the Radio Listener

(28:15):
special square and check out this flash sail on the
Geeza Dreamsheets. When you click on this square, you'll also
find deals on other my pillow products. I love the slippers,
for example, but only for a short period of time.
You to get this price, go to my pillow dot
com promo code buck. I don't even I don't even
ask her for this before, and she already has on
my pillow because she knows my pillows are amazing. Everyone
who tries these things love them. I have several my pillows,

(28:36):
and I do brilliant. I love I legitimate. I see
Mike Landell and I get excited because I've always like,
oh my god, I get to have a great time
and I get to talk to Mike and catch up
and everything. He's such a cool such a cool dude,
so fun to talk to. So um. Speaking of fun
to talk to, you are a Republican former Trump White
House gen z Lady, do what is there? Do you ever?

(29:00):
Are you able to sift out the sort of beta
male MSNBC watching guys from your orbit or if they
find out your past? Do they play the game a
little bit? They pretend to like Hey, like I like
the Constitution too, Like let's go get a drink? How
does that work? Like? What's that? Like these? Because, for example,
I realized later on in life, can't I could you know?

(29:23):
I'm getting married in a few weeks. She's conservative, she
works for Fox News. I can't handle the libs. It
just it wasn't gonna work. What do you tell me
what that's like with you? And if you have any
anecdotes you want to share? By all means, I mean
I do have an anecdote. I could never data lib
will never data live. I'm sorry, I just I could
never ever do it. I grew up with two older brothers.

(29:45):
I'm the youngest of three. I'm the only girl. I
have a like, I said a father who served in
the Marine Corps. So I grew up around alpha males.
I feel more comfortable around alpha males than I do
beta males. I just the femininity that is taking over
my generation of males especially is deeply concerning to me
for a lot of reasons, but personally as well. I

(30:07):
went on a date, this was a couple of years ago,
thankfully hasn't happened since, with a guy, and he was
actually in law enforcement. So I thought that it was
going to be go smooth. You know. I thought, all right,
guy serves that's great, that's cool. And he said he knew,
he knew where I worked, and he said, you know,

(30:30):
I thought, I, you know, I've liked what Trump has done,
but I thought Obama was a great president. I really
thought he was great. Yeah, And this was We hadn't
even order to appetizers yet, so I am like, not
even halfway through my drink, and I was like, how
do I get out of this? It was a long night,
safe to say, literally never replied to texts again. Never.

(30:53):
I've never even told this did he ever? Did he
ever tell you that he's a male feminist? I always
wonder how that goes over. I completely stopped the political
conversation in its tracks. Because I just I could even
go there. So I just asked him a million questions
about what it's like to be a cop to try
and fill time. I ate my I literally remember I

(31:13):
ordered lasagna very quickly and I was like, nope, don't
he dessert? Want me to walk into your car? I
was like, nope, I'm good, Thank you so much for dinner.
Ideological alignment. You know, people I think like people. I
mean I put myself as category in their twenties, they're
kind of just like, oh, it's fine, like you can
be friends with anybody, but if you're gonna spend a
lot of time with somebody, um, it's if you're if

(31:34):
you love freedom, if you're a live, free or die
kind of person. The comedies are probably not going to
be the way for anyone at home. And I'll tell
you dc like dating pool there is, it's non existent.
Like any everyone is either you know, not not looking
for women if I could say that, or they're just

(31:57):
they're not not masculine men. I'm male feminist, Like I said,
a lot of guys who think that a lot of
guys think that weeping at the Biden inauguration gets them
gets them phone numbers and lots of left from ladies.
So you're a new Newsmax contributor. I'm a little, like
I say, I'm bitter about this, but I'm little because,
like I had invited you to come on here on

(32:17):
the show before this was announced. So now it's like, oh,
Newsmax has found this new star. But like, excuse me,
excuse me, Newsmax I asked for her before I even
knew that she was a Newsmax contributor. But they made
an excellent hire by bringing you on there. Where where
can people find you? What show is you going to
be doing? And what are some of your plans going

(32:38):
forward here? Yeah, well, I'm looking forward to doing a
few different things. One of them is joining the Newsmax team,
so I'm excited. I'll be on frankly whenever they need
me to talk about the transgender athlete issue, to talk
about campaigns as they start to heat up again already
twenty twenty four, what that looks like here in New
Hampshire for the first of the nation primary state. I'm

(32:59):
talk about President Trump's run, having worked for him, and
hopefully that in the White House in twenty four we'll
see it's going to be interesting to watch. But nevertheless,
I'll be on quite often, and then I'm looking forward
to doing some radio work. Maybe I'll even start my
own podcast too. I don't know. I think using a
little project and working on and then, like I said,

(33:21):
I want to continue my personal mission and passion to
help other gen Z, specifically conservative candidates step up and
run for office, whether that's school board, for their state, senate,
state representative, or for Congress. We have to get involved.
We have to start speaking truth to our generation because
it's going down the tubes. And if we don't start

(33:42):
this now, we're not only as a party, going to
continue to lose elections. As the gen Zers gain more
ground in our electorate. People are turned in eighteen every day.
It's not going to stop. We're gonna lose elections. We're
gonna lose America. I fundamentally believe that's my core. So
I'll be picking up some projects to help other candidates
in their own races and take what I learned and

(34:02):
hopefully change some hearts and minds. My friend, but if
I start a podcast, perhaps you can come on and
we'll do some role reversal here. Would be happy to
come on the Granite State or Number One podcast or
whatever you call it. By all means, Caroline would love
to join. Thank you for coming out hanging out here
on the Bucks Acton Show. We'll get you back on

(34:23):
radio soon and everybody will look for you on Newsmax
and that's going to be a for us here. So
we will talk to you later on this week. She'll
tie

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