Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Jack GANA government sucks. The Suit of Happiness radio is DeLux.
Liberty and freedom will make you smile. A suit of
Happiness us on your radio toil, just as cheeseburg is
libery prize at the food.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
All right.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
NASA unveiled the ten newest members of their Astronaut Corps
and no, Katy Perry was not one of them. I know,
I'm surprised too. I thought she was a real astronaut.
What the heck? Guys, Hey, you know who's here this afternoon?
Two people are here today. One of them will be
Attorney General Ken Paxton. If you missed the morning show,
we are going to review what Ken Paxton, the Attorney General,
(00:46):
sent today during our morning broadcast. To stick around for that.
The other person joining us this afternoon is a teenager
named Jack. He's a high school student at Stratford High School.
It is part of the Spring Branch ISD School district.
And he was the kid that was him and his
school his classmates were dockxed. Apparently they were all docksed
by this left wing extremist nut job. Some woman who
(01:10):
wasn't born in America came to Spring Branch, which is
a community here in Houston and decided she wanted to
expose children on the internet who were trying to support
right wing ideology. Just terrible, right, really ugly thing to do.
Why would you do that? It's a good question. So
we'll be talking a lot about that today because this
(01:30):
afternoon we are rallying for those high school kids who
were docksed. We'll be getting together at City Center. It's
called Moran Hotel MLRN Hotel. It's part of the City
Center shopping district, which is basically right over by Memorial
City Mall. It's right in that general area, and if
you want to come join us at six thirty pm,
(01:50):
we will be there. We want to see you help
support young conservative thought leaders and their efforts to save
the country for future. I think it's a worthy cause
and Jack will be here shortly to tell the story. Now,
before we get to any of that, I want to
talk about New York City. Some of you are probably
going to be shocked by what I'm about to say,
but I hope zorhon Mom Donnie wins Zoran Mom Donnie
(02:14):
the very controversial socialist Marxist. You know, he won the
Democrat primary for the mayor and now a lot of
mainstream Democrats from around the country are reluctantly but grudgingly
dragging their feet to endorse him. But they're doing it,
and you get why they don't want to support him.
Right his policy is outside of New York City very
(02:35):
unpopular in the rest of the country. This is a
guy that thinks billionaires shouldn't exist. Now, in a city
like New York, which I think has more billionaires than
anywhere else in the western half of the world, getting
rid of billionaires is probably going to hurt the tax
revenue for the city, not to mention you just the
basic economy. Those billionaires spend a lot of money in town.
(02:57):
The guy wants to abolish elite heigh school exams. He
wants to end admission tests for New York City specialize
public schools because of equity. He says he's all about
getting rid of Israel. Not that the mayor in New
York City gets to side of Israel exists, but believe
it or not, there are a lot of Jewish people
living in the city that don't love that idea. He
(03:19):
wants to defund the police. Guess what happens when you
defund the police. Guess what happens when you have free
public transit, a lot of crime and a lot of homelessness.
He wants to end cash bail, more of the same
rent control expansion. You get what that is, right, You
own property, your property taxes go up, the cost of
(03:40):
living goes up. You want to raise rent for the
property that you're renting out to one of your tenants.
He's against it. He wants to get rid of ice
in the city. He doesn't want the federal government to
be able to come in and arrest child traffickers, for example.
So to say he's controversial as an understatement, I will
(04:01):
admit one of the policies, one of his more controversial
policies that I don't really care about, is one that
he's very quiet about. The New York Post has an
editorial today about how Zorhanmandani doesn't want you to know
he wants to legalize prostitution. Now, there is a difference
between criminalizing and legalizing. Obviously, legalizing something would mean the
(04:25):
government gets involved, they regulate it. You know, you need
a a occupational license to be a hooker in New
York City, that sort of thing. Decriminalizing it just means
they don't go out and arrest people for doing it anymore.
So it's different, right, But his campaign doesn't want to
talk about this right now, But they still can't escape
the fact that he co sponsors an Assembly bill to
(04:47):
decriminalize prostitution that means no arrest for hookers or john's
at most the occasional desk appearance ticket if police even
bother with that. That doesn't technically count as full on legalization,
but has the same result. Sex workers are able to
freely apply their trade wherever they choose, or, more to
the point, wherever their pimps demand, because prostitution actually is
(05:11):
not just an unusual career path, as progressives and says.
There's more to it than that, obviously, I actually think
legalizing it would be better than decriminalizing it. Decriminalizing means
the government's not involved at all. Legalizing it would mean
the government's still involved. They allow it, but they have
rules and regulations that actually might be better. I would
(05:33):
assume the overwhelming majority of people in an unregulated market.
I know it's weird to hear a libertarian say this,
but the overwhelming majority of sex workers in an unregulated
market were seduced coerced or outright trafficked. It's dehumanizing for
all the soft pedaling in these final weeks of the
mayoral race, Zorhan Mamdani has been four square for decriminalization
(05:58):
from his first race of offer office in twenty twenty
right up till now, right along with ending all cash bail,
complete drug decriminalization, massively defunding the police, closing Rikers Island
without building replacement channels, and he's got a fat lead
in the polls. It seems very unlikely he's going to
(06:18):
lose right now, which is part of the reason he
doesn't want to talk about his more controversial policies, because
then people might realize some of this stuff might actually happen.
Speaker 4 (06:28):
Ken Webster's pursuit of happiness a radio show.
Speaker 3 (06:31):
That's I'm sorry, stop right there. I may not have
actually explained why I want him to win. I didn't
explain that, did I. It just occurred to me as
I was going to the whole point of this, Here's
why I want him to win, even though I hate
all his policies, even though I don't like the guy,
even though I don't believe in what he's doing. Once
in a while, Americans need to be reminded of why
socialism is bad. I don't have to live in New
(06:52):
York City. His terrible policies will destroy the city. They
will make it an unlivable place. Billionaires in New York
City will flee in droves to go to places like
Florida or Texas. Jewish Americans same thing. Multimillionaire is probably
the same thing. Anyone that could afford it, Anybody that
has the means will pick up their business, pick up
their families, sell off their property, and they'll get the
(07:14):
heck out of Dodge or in this case, New York City.
New York City will become worse and America will be
reminded as they watched this little experiment that socialism is poison.
Speaker 5 (07:26):
Yeah, let's get straight to discussion. Were here to talk
about something about politics and government and nice hit and
Codutch in this show.
Speaker 6 (07:35):
Hit, ain't you averbage?
Speaker 5 (07:36):
Because this podcast you gotta get it, you town. Damn
we can this this psuit of happiness.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
Okay. So a senior dog was rescued from a mud
pit in Utah. Christin Home calls it the feel bad
story of the year. Hi, everybody, welcome back in the meantime,
Michelobultra replaced Medello as America's top selling beer because everyone
who drinks Medello has been deported. Thanks so much for
(08:03):
tuning in. Coming up in just a little bit, a
high school kid from Stratford High School named Jack, a
very smart young man who wants to try to save
the world, make it a better place for his generation.
But he was doxed. His life was endangered by a
local leftist extremist, and he's going to be here to
tell his story. We will be rallying for him and
his classmates today at Moran Hotel at City Center in
(08:27):
the Houston area. Come join us six thirty pm. Be there.
Before we get to that, I want to talk about
this you all probably want. If you didn't at least
watch the entire memorial. I bet you've seen clips. At
this point, you'd be one of twenty million people who did.
Two hundred thousand people attended Charlie Kirk's memorial service on Sunday.
(08:48):
It is being called the largest evangelical event in global history.
More people tuned in for this funeral than the funeral is.
The most famous celebrities right the country witnessed many funerals
for national prominence. But I think it's fair to say
that few have carried the kind of attention or emotion
(09:09):
that this did, and for those with eyes to see
in ears to hear, it revealed a striking contrast between
humanity's two most influential faiths. Author Peter Hack recently pointed
this out. There are two women that have been all
over the news lately talking about their religion. Let's talk
(09:30):
about Charlie's wife first. In the wake of losing her
husband in the most brutal and public of ways, Erica
Kirk stood before a grieving crowd, and she said, I
forgive the man who killed my husband.
Speaker 7 (09:47):
Father, forgive them, for they not know what they do.
That man, that young man, I forgive him.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
Guys, that is powerful on the cross, our Savior said, Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do. That man,
that young man, I forgive him, she said, forgiveness in
the face of his assassination. That is grace. Grace extended
toward the very one who shattered her world. That's anything
but natural. It was nothing less than the supernatural, breaking
(10:34):
through a human fragility, frailty, and the impact didn't stop
in that room. It was the manifestation of Christ like
mercy rippling outward to millions of online viewers around the world,
hundreds of thousands in attendants. Meanwhile, that profound moment of
supernatural grace stood in stark contrast to what had appeared
(10:58):
just hours earlier on the national stage. Speaking during a
live televised interview on CNN, US representative congresswoman from Minneapolis,
Ilhan Omar mocked the very idea of honoring Kirk's life,
insisting his legacy should be in the dust bin of history.
(11:20):
She said, and amplifying a video that labeled him a
doctor Frankenstein who's monster turned on him and shot him
in the net.
Speaker 8 (11:28):
I just think it was the video where it called
him doctor Frankenstein and said his monster shot him through
the neck. I mean, obviously, this is a person, and
looking at this, this is someone who was a husband
and a father, and in the days after his shocking
death that happened as a result of his views, or
it happened as a result as he was sharing his
(11:48):
views publicly with people, that people found it jarring to
hear such criticism of that. In the immediate aftermath.
Speaker 9 (11:56):
Of what I find Jarring is that there's so many
people willing to excuse the most reprehensible things that he said,
that they agree with, that that they're willing to have
monuments for him, that they want to create a day
to honor him, and that they want to produce resolutions
in the House of Congress honoring his life and legacy.
(12:20):
It is one thing to care about his life, because
obviously so many people loved him, including his children and wife.
But I Am not going to sit here and be
judged for not wanting to honor any legacy this man
has left behind that should be in the dust pen
of history and we should hopefully move on and forget
(12:44):
the hate that he's spewed every single day.
Speaker 3 (12:46):
Wow. You know, it's remarkable about that ilhan Omar, a
practicing Muslim wearing the hijab as she's appearing live during
this television broadcast, actually believes her religion believes the same
things that I mean, other than the Jesus is the
Son of God, Muslims believe all the same controversial conservative
(13:06):
things that Charlie Kirk believes, you know about gay marriage,
and I mean probably go even further with those things.
Does ilhan omer even believe her own religion. I'm curious
where Erica extended mercy. Ilhan Omar doubled down on contempt.
(13:27):
Perfect spokeswoman, if you will, for their respective faith traditions.
The juxtaposition could not be clearer. Christianity, at its truest,
runs against every human instinct. It announces a savior who
forgave his executioners and calls his people to do the same. Islam,
as it was represented in this moment during that live
(13:49):
TV broadcast, responded not with forgiveness but with fury. No
one articulated this contrast more powerfully than someone who has
lived in both sides of it. Is a woman named
Sanya Abrahimi, an ex Muslim from Iran, who affirmed the
reality of Islam demonstrated in the Bitterness of ilhan Omar.
(14:12):
Sana says, quote in Islam, even though we believe that
good people go to heaven, the relationship with God is
taught through fear. Funerals are overwhelmingly sad, often filled with
warnings of the terrifying first night in the grave. Growing
up hearing that and then witnessing people celebrate life, speak
of God's love and remember someone through the impact he
had on others. It felt so refreshing, so powerful. After
(14:37):
watching Erica Kirk's words ABRAHEMI was dunepounded offering this reflection quote.
I cannot fathom the strength it takes to stand and
deliver such a meaningful, powerful speech after losing the love
of your life, but even more than that, the grace
it takes to forgive the very person who destroyed your world.
I cannot imagine myself inviting others to spread God's love
(14:59):
in response, because, as she said, we do not respond
to hate with hate. That is powerful beyond words. If
this is what Christianity truly embodies, then I am envious
of those who get to experience that feeling. Yeah, that
is what Christianity represents. That is the difference on display.
Where one world view produces anger, the other produces forgiveness.
(15:24):
Where one instills fear, the other offers hope. Where one
clings to grievance, the other testifies to grace. The world
may debate what Charlie Kirk's politics or personality for years
to come may have actually been, but what no one
can ignore is that his memorial service revealed something bigger
than him. It put on full display the extraordinary difference
(15:47):
between Christianity and Islam, a difference measured not in arguments,
but in love and joy and forgiveness that the world
cannot explain.
Speaker 5 (15:56):
You're listening to Keen Webster's Pursuit of Happiness.
Speaker 3 (16:03):
All right. It's just a spokesperson for former President Joe
Biden claims he is struggling to raise money for his
presidential library. The good news is he's used to things
that trickle instead of flow, so he'll be fine. I think,
Hi everybody, I'm Kenny Webster. If you are listening to
me on the radio right now, that means you're probably
driving around Houston or you're at work, but some of
(16:25):
you are watching me on a live stream because we're
on the Internet. It's this new fangled contraption we have
where we can communicate with people from across the globe,
and that gives us the ability to connect with people
we wouldn't normally talk to, right people in other countries,
sometimes people in other generations, And that is exactly what
is happening right now. I am standing here in a
studio with a young man. Put that mic right in
(16:46):
front of your face, sir. His name is Jack Robertson
and Jack. You are the newest. Are you president of
your chapter? Explain what your position is at TPUSA.
Speaker 10 (16:56):
Now, I am helping organize our chapter and get it
stick arted with aslong with thirteen others students, we're helping
getting getting the chapter started at Shotford High School.
Speaker 3 (17:07):
You, sir, this is not a commercial for Paris, Texas,
but I shop there too. That's one of my favorite
clothing stores. On your shirt, I have thirty of those shirts.
It's all the same thing with different crap on the bed. Yeah,
I enjoy it great. Do you play golf sports? What
do you do?
Speaker 6 (17:20):
I am a swimmer.
Speaker 3 (17:21):
You're okay, right on. That's a good sport to be
involved in.
Speaker 6 (17:24):
That's fun.
Speaker 3 (17:24):
And somehow you decided to get interested in politics. What happened?
Speaker 10 (17:28):
It's just been my whole life kind of not that
I've been like indoctrinated, but my family. I've been raised
with good conservative parents and they've helped instilled values in
me that I value and I feel very strongly about
things of that sort and that nature.
Speaker 3 (17:44):
I'm a Christian. I noticed we're both wearing a cross
around her neck. I'm a sinner. That's why I go
to church. Are you are Catholic, Baptist, Methodist?
Speaker 6 (17:51):
I'm non denomination.
Speaker 3 (17:53):
Okay, but not Methodist, sir. Oh, thank God, cannot stand
the Methodist. That's important to me. It's not actually you are.
Speaker 6 (17:59):
How old are you, Jack, I'm seventeen years old, okay.
Speaker 3 (18:02):
So you're a senior or junior. I'm a junior okay,
and you're just getting into junior year right now. So
let's tell the story about why you're suddenly in the
national spotlight. There's a lot of pressure for a sixteen
year old, seventeen year old kid. You were going to
start this Turning Point USA chapter with your friends. You
heard the story about Charlie Kirk. What did you and
your friends think when you heard? I mean just you know,
(18:23):
so initially I was in disbelief. I was shocked when
it happened. My friends all texted about it. I was
taking a test when the news lead dropped. So I
was in my car on the way home and everything
felt just like quiet, and it was like there's a
stillness kind of. I couldn't believe he had he was gone,
(18:44):
you know.
Speaker 10 (18:45):
And my friends throughout the week, rest of the week
at school and over the weekend. We had talked about
what he stood for, who he was, what was happening
with the situation revolving him, his assassin, and things of
that nature, and we just none of us could believe
that something like that could have happened to someone like Charlie.
Speaker 3 (19:05):
I go to the gym in the late afternoon. I
do this in the morning, obviously, and so sometimes I'll
take a midday nap. And I woke up to about
a dozen people texting me with links to that video.
I wish I'd never seen that video. That video haunts me.
Did you see it?
Speaker 10 (19:23):
Yes, sir, I did, and I can still in it.
I can still see the image in my mind.
Speaker 3 (19:27):
It's terrible, right, but it's almost I mean, it changed
you forever after you saw it, and that's what motivated
you and your friends to go start this club, Yes, sir.
And then a woman whose name doesn't matter, people on
the internet, let's just say, caught win to the fact
that you teenagers, kids miners were going to start a club,
and they tried to prevent you. They doxed you, they
(19:48):
published your personal information online, your full name, and they
tried to prevent people from sponsoring your group. And I
get the impression that it didn't work.
Speaker 6 (19:57):
No, sorry did not. Initially.
Speaker 10 (20:00):
Our original sponsors did back out, and we understand that
and we respect their decision. We want the best for them,
but it did not stop us as a team and
as a group.
Speaker 6 (20:10):
We felt motivated.
Speaker 10 (20:12):
We were unsure where to go at first, but we
knew that we could not stop with just this Facebook
post about us.
Speaker 6 (20:20):
We had to keep pushing.
Speaker 10 (20:21):
We had to keep fighting for what we believe in,
because stuff like that's important.
Speaker 3 (20:25):
Of all the conservative issues, you know, gun rights, lower taxes,
less war, all the things at border patrol, that sort
of thing, which of these things to someone in your
age group? For you part, I mean, I can't expect
you to speak for your generation, but for you, which
of those resonates the most?
Speaker 10 (20:38):
You know, freedom of speech, especially with everything going around
right now about our club specifically, But it's just it's
an issue.
Speaker 6 (20:47):
That needs to be fixed.
Speaker 10 (20:50):
Our founding fathers worked to give us freedom of speech,
and it's one of the main principles our country was
built on, and I think that's so important and it
should not be violated or taken away.
Speaker 3 (21:01):
Censorship is one of the most vulgar things in existence censoring.
Years ago, there was this TV show on MTV. It
was called The Osbourne So it was a reality show
about Ozzy Osbourne and his family and the British people,
and they swear a lot, so for the show to
air on TV, they had to bleep everything. And when
you watch the TV show bleeped, it almost seemed more
(21:21):
vulgar than it actually was. All the bleeps made it
seem worse, and then when you watch the actual thing,
it's just a bunch of British people mumbling swear words.
You barely understand what they're saying. There was this study
that was conducted. I always thought this was fascinating. Years ago.
They did this study to figure out what it was
that made men about your age decide to join isis.
You get what isis? Is is Alamic terrorism? Right, And
(21:43):
what they found when they went out and they talked
to them and they interviewed them, they found these they'd
been arrested or detained or whatever. They'd asked them all,
what was it that inspired you to join this group?
And overwhelmingly the answer that every one of them gave
was that their emam, their religious leader, somebody that they
believed in was sense, and that it upset them enough
to motivate them to go out and join this religion,
(22:04):
join this, not just they were already part of the religion,
to go out and join this movement to violence. And
you know, it's such a strange thing to think. Liberals
believe that they can stop conservatives or whatever they consider
the far right to be, neo Nazis, whatever it is,
whatever they think it is, they think they can stop
them by censoring them. Weirdly enough, censoring people overwhelmingly motivates
(22:25):
them to go out and believe these things harder, to
fight for them more. Whatever it is, whether it's something
nefarious or something wholesome. I think that you're on a
good quest. But regardless of whether or not you have
good beliefs or not, when somebody tries to censor you,
it doesn't make you want to stop, does it.
Speaker 10 (22:41):
No, sir, It makes you want to go and fight more.
So you experience that yourself firsthand, Yes, sir. All right,
So now you're in this club, and I've made this
point on the air. I don't know any of you, guys,
I don't know you, but I'd made the point on
the radio that if this woman had just done nothing.
If these people that went and docksed you guys had
done nothing, probably at least it's a handful of your
friends would have gotten board with the club after a
(23:03):
couple of months, Christmas would have rolled around. They might
not have been interested by spring semester.
Speaker 3 (23:08):
By censoring you guys, it feels like it had the
exact opposite effect. You guys are going to be involved
in this for the rest of your lives.
Speaker 10 (23:14):
Truly, I think it's been a blessing disguise for us.
I think it's given us a purpose, a goal, is
given us overwhelming support online, and it's funny something like
this should be something that hurts us and helps demotivate us,
but instead it's a blessing disguise and we're everyone in
(23:36):
on my team. And then the group recognizes that to
some extent.
Speaker 3 (23:38):
You saw the memorial with Erica Kirk speaking about her husband, Sir,
it's hard to ignore, very hard, the fact that there
are some similarities between how Charlie Kirk lived his life
and how christ I mean, how they both died. It's
hard to ignore that. I don't think the Left understands that.
I don't think they understand that by doing that, by
martyring him, they actually proved our point. I mean, they'd
(24:00):
killed Jesus because they didn't want him to talk. They
did the same thing to Charlie Kirk. For somebody in
your position, how did that affect you seeing that.
Speaker 6 (24:08):
You know, seeing.
Speaker 10 (24:11):
Just everything about his life in his death the past
week and a half two weeks now, is it three weeks?
Speaker 3 (24:19):
Yeah, it's about two weeks. Yeah, that was a couple
of weeks ago.
Speaker 10 (24:21):
Yeah, It's just it's been crazy, and it's there are
so many parallels to Christ.
Speaker 6 (24:30):
And obviously he was not Christ.
Speaker 10 (24:32):
We were all sinners, but he tried to share the
love of Christ with everyone, and I think that there's
a lot of inspiration that can be taken from that,
because it threatens people feel threatened by that.
Speaker 3 (24:42):
You're in an age group where life is confusing, when
you're a teenager, when you're a college kid. I mean,
even without the news media out there inundating you with
information all the time, life is confusing. It's not going
to change. I'm a middle aged I'm an elder millennial.
You're a young gen z, right, So I'm a generation
older than the news media is constantly confusing. We're constantly
(25:03):
inundated with misleading information. Even as you and I are
sitting here having this conversation, I can read the comments section,
and I could in one of the play one of
the platforms where we're streaming right now, and I could
see there's some confused person who's trying to blame Charlie
Kirk's murder on MAGA and overwhelmingly text messages family witnesses.
There's a mountain of evidence suggesting we knew this guy's ideology.
(25:27):
And I'm not suggesting all democrats or murderers or anything
like that, but there's so much misinformation out there just
about this one thing that we're talking about right now.
How do you, as somebody young, confused, you're just starting
to get your life going, how do you figure out
who's telling you the truth and who's not when you
look at information in the mainstream media.
Speaker 10 (25:47):
Ultimately, I mean, I go to the people I trust,
my parents, my grandparents, family and mentors, and I run
things by them. I ask them questions about our country
and different things like that in the news cycle because
they're more informed than I am. Yeah, And it's just
it helps so much to have people around you that
can hold you not accountable, but fill you in on
(26:10):
information and keep you level headed with what's all the
mess that's are on the internet.
Speaker 6 (26:15):
There is so much misinformation.
Speaker 3 (26:18):
Tons all the time. Especially, it's more important to be
first than to be accurate when someone's reporting the news.
How have your parents reacted to this? Have their support it?
Obviously I won't out your mom, but she gave you
a ride here today, didn't she?
Speaker 6 (26:29):
Yes, sir, she did. Support of the club and all that.
Speaker 3 (26:32):
Yeah, the parents of you and your friends, how are
they reacting to the news. Obviously, you guys are excited
to get this club started, and the fact that that
adults are now four or against you has probably made
it vastly more interesting. But how do the adults around
surrounding you guys? How have they reacted to it?
Speaker 10 (26:48):
From what I understand, it's been numerous texts and emails
and reposts on Twitter of people supporting us and encouraging
us to keep us heads high. And I know the
parents of everyone involved want us to succeed, and they
don't like their kids being called out. No one does,
and so they want us to do our job and
(27:11):
not our job. But they want us to keep pushing
and keep fighting and keep our heads up and stay mature.
Speaker 3 (27:16):
You were not originally intending to become a public figure
when this happened. That wasn't the plane. But now you
are one. Now you've got the Attorney General and local
talk radio show hosts tagging you on Twitter talking about
an event you guys are doing today. You became a
public figure, not really by choice, but because somebody out there,
some bad actor on the left, forced you to become one.
(27:37):
And now you seem to be embracing it and you
seem to be handling it pretty well. What's that like?
Speaker 10 (27:42):
I mean, it's just taking every day one step at
a time. Of course, there's getting tagged in posts and
things like that. It's really fun and cool, but it's
just making sure that I keep giving credit to my
team because it's not just myself, but there's a whole
team of people, and there's a whole group of students
interested in the club outside of just the team helping
push it forward.
Speaker 6 (28:03):
And it's not just me.
Speaker 3 (28:04):
You were not originally choosing to be like this, the
none of your friends were, and some other, some bad
actor made that decision for you. That person ultimately endangered
your life, but you're handling it really well. You seem
to have a good attitude about it. Erica Kirk forgave
the the man who murdered her husband. Do you forgive
the person that did that?
Speaker 10 (28:24):
Of course, you know, as Christians were called to forgive,
and that's one of the most important things, is love.
And while I don't think it's right, I don't think
that what's happened to her, with her being docs and
things like that, is necessarily good. I think we should
move past it and be the bigger people and forgive her.
Speaker 3 (28:41):
Well, I want people to follow you on X. Your
name is Jack Robertson. You're at handle is Jay rob
Underscore six to one three? What does this six one
three stand for?
Speaker 6 (28:49):
Six thirteen? It's my birthday?
Speaker 3 (28:51):
Oh cool?
Speaker 4 (28:51):
Right?
Speaker 3 (28:51):
It makes not like air area code. It's not like
a rap not a rap thing or something like that. Sir,
all right, I'm Kenny Webster. We are going to be
at six thirty PM today. We are going to be
at Ran Hotel. That's at City Center in Houston, Texas.
It's not far from Memorial City Mall. It's easy to find.
Get there at six thirty pm me. Michael Berry's going
to be there. Were you on his show too?
Speaker 6 (29:10):
Yes, sir, I was Monday Morning.
Speaker 3 (29:11):
It's not a contest, but whose show is more fun
minor his?
Speaker 6 (29:13):
Both? I had so much fun on both.
Speaker 3 (29:16):
Michael's one of my mentors. I'm just jogging around. Ken Paxton,
the Attorney General, even more important than local knucklehead podcasters
and radio show hosts. And of course the high school
kids from Turning Point, USA are gonna be there join us. Jack,
I'm gonna let you get the last remark, any closing thoughts.
God bless God, bless America, God blessed Texas. I like it. Man, Hey,
if everybody could share this video. If you've enjoyed watching this,
(29:38):
we appreciate you. If you're listening to the radio, don't
go anywhere. We'll be right back. Stop it, government, get
out of my life. You're listening to the Pursuit of
Happiness radio. I don't know, ever since I was a
little kid, this song always gets me fired up.
Speaker 4 (29:53):
Man it Yeah, that's a good song, the Stripes theme.
I mean, what's the first thing you think of when
you hear that song?
Speaker 3 (30:00):
Start army business? Sir?
Speaker 1 (30:02):
Was that it?
Speaker 4 (30:02):
That's a good one.
Speaker 3 (30:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (30:04):
I think of the response they gave. BOYD asked, what
happened to your drill? Instructor blowed up? For Ulka Hulk,
he got blowed up. That was a good movie stripes.
It was a different time, though. Why are you playing
it just because it's fun?
Speaker 3 (30:20):
Well, we needed some bumper music. I wanted something inspirational,
something to get people fired up because we have the
general on hold right now.
Speaker 4 (30:26):
The General. Yeah, General Paxton, Oh Ken Paxton Texas. Yeah,
the guy.
Speaker 3 (30:32):
It was our friend Tony Busby who explained to us
that the Attorney General is referred to traditionally in a
legal environment as see even though we've hung out with
him before in general past, we might refer to him
as Ken because you know, I think he's a buddy
of ours. Technically, his professional name is General Paxton. Yes,
and let's use the proper decorum. General.
Speaker 11 (30:52):
Are you there, I'm here, good morning.
Speaker 4 (30:55):
Did you get the stars on your collar? Or I
don't think it works like that.
Speaker 2 (30:59):
You know, it's funny you say that. My daughter was
in the Air Force. She was a captain and I
kept telling her I ranked her general and she said,
you're not a real general. I said, I'm the full monthy,
I'm all in, I'm four star.
Speaker 3 (31:11):
I love it. I love it too.
Speaker 2 (31:13):
I try to get it to salute me, but I
never got that.
Speaker 4 (31:16):
Yeah, kids, huh, funny that way.
Speaker 3 (31:18):
Well, speaking of kids, we have something really big happening
today with high school students young conservatives. But before we
get to any of that, I got to ask General
Paxton Ken Paxton about his political race right now for
the Senate. I think John Cornyn is probably the worst
Republican in the Senate. I mean between him and Tim Scott.
At the same time, I think of Ken Paxton as
probably the best attorney general in America. And still I
(31:41):
feel like most of our listeners probably agree at this
moment Ken Paxton is the right guy to replace John Cornyn.
How is it going to general?
Speaker 5 (31:48):
Thing?
Speaker 3 (31:48):
So too? How is it going with your race right now?
General Paxson?
Speaker 11 (31:51):
You know good?
Speaker 2 (31:52):
I mean, I'm all over the place and I'm out
talking to regular people, and I don't find I've been
in so many meetings while I will ask this question,
and I will say, can you name one remarkable thing
that John corn has accomplished in the last forty years
since I've been in college and I'm now sixty two.
He's been in office that long. And if you take
it all the way back to even when he was
(32:12):
in the judiciary, he was on the Supreme Court, he
was Attorney General, I can't find things even as attorney
general that he did that were remarkable. So his list
of accomplishments are so far no one has spoken of
and given.
Speaker 4 (32:25):
Me more, not a list at all.
Speaker 2 (32:28):
There's a list, there's no list.
Speaker 11 (32:30):
I think we have a list just from this week.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
So yeah, it's hard to believe. And it's ridiculous that
we put up with it for that long. I just
don't think people were aware. They just, you know, you
don't really notice that they don't. People don't do things
you notice more than bad things. So we can talk
about some of the bad things, but people don't really
always notice that.
Speaker 11 (32:48):
There aren't good things.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
And in this case, John Cornan is not delivered from
Texas in his entire career.
Speaker 3 (32:53):
Well, he delivered red flag laws. I mean there was that,
but I don't know if that plays well in a
Republican primary with all that he had said.
Speaker 2 (33:00):
Or fighting or fighting Donald Trump on putting up a
border wall, and I think it's very explicit that he
thought it was a bad idea and maybe amnesty was
the way to go. And the only person guilty of
any crimes may be Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (33:12):
Oh boy. And wasn't he endorsed by Jasmine Crockett Couch.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
Oh she loves them. She says that's the kind of
Republican we need, and so did Sylvia Garcia, who's a
liberal Democrat from Houston.
Speaker 11 (33:23):
She loves them too.
Speaker 2 (33:23):
I know that the Democrats want them. We all know
that he's there kind of Republican and I don't blame
him for saying that.
Speaker 3 (33:29):
Donald Trump's movement has brought a lot of people from
the other side over to this side, particularly with the
MAHA movement at a lot of Hollywood liberals who were
skeptical about chemicals and our drugs and things like that
now support Donald Trump because of RFK Junior. You're famous
for going after Pfizer for suing the pharmaceutical companies. You're
one of the only people that was bold enough to
(33:49):
do that. And now this week there's a lot of
brew haha about whether or not pregnant ladies should take
Tayland all. I know, you're an attorney, You're not a doctor,
but you have any thoughts on that.
Speaker 2 (33:59):
Well, I know, we've also been really focused on some
of these food manufacturers which SWEE in agreements with Kellogg's
to stop They're going to stop putting dyes and cereals
which are harmful to kids. So we're really focused on
going off some of these food manufacturers. But as far
as Toland, I don't know the studies on that, but
I applaud I love Bobby Kinning. I think what he's
doing is courageous and it's I don't understand why somebody
(34:22):
before him hasn't taken up this mantle of making sure
that our food is safe. That there's there's one thing
I want the government doing is making sure that you know,
we're eating food that's not killing us.
Speaker 3 (34:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (34:33):
Well, we just found out today for sure that there
is a warning to pregnant women on the models of
Thailand all and that they say there's nothing to be
warned about. So who's right on that?
Speaker 11 (34:46):
Yeah, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (34:48):
All I know is that I'm glad that they're they're
taking this this food thing seriously. And of course he
was one of the first persons to speak out about
the the vaccine that was pushed on us related to COVID,
and then we, of course suit fires are pretty convinced
that they lied to us about the whole efficacy of
it and that they never talked about side effects. And
(35:08):
of course there's no consequence to them because they are
protected by federal law because they call it a vaccine.
Speaker 11 (35:14):
They're not. They're not. You can't sue them under federal law.
Speaker 3 (35:17):
Clever, they're clever that you know what I just thought of.
You're the one that got Kellogg to take all the
food dies out of their their foods. And isn't John
Cornyn famous for making a ketchup brisket? I mean without
food die? How's he how's how's he going to make brisket? Now?
Attorney General cun.
Speaker 2 (35:32):
Pacson poor good questions, But I have to say I
saw that brisket. I was not thinking that was much
of a Texas brisket, not something out of like from
another country, maybe, uh, California.
Speaker 4 (35:43):
I don't know California.
Speaker 3 (35:45):
Who was a Canadian brisket? All right, let's talk about
what's going on today, right, and they're going to get
together tonight. Right, there's a big deal for those that
don't understand what happened and at uh Spring branch Ion
D can you explain it to people?
Speaker 2 (35:57):
Yeah, so apparently they're you know, there was a group
of students, high school students at Strafford. They were trying
to put together a Turning Point USA chapter there and
this liberal Democrat, she's apparently some higher up in the
Democratic Party got information that they were doing that and
basically got information from the students because they were chatting
(36:19):
with each other on some social media and the one,
I guess her son gave it to her. So then
she she basically docked them and started trying to pressure
parents that were associated with it and putting the kids'
names out.
Speaker 11 (36:33):
Pretty wild.
Speaker 2 (36:34):
We're talking about free speech here, we're talking about freedom
of associate, We're talking about fundamental constitutional rights that this woman.
Speaker 11 (36:40):
In a Democratic party.
Speaker 2 (36:42):
Yeah, kids, come on, it's crazy, especially after what we
already saw with Charlie Kirk being assassinated.
Speaker 4 (36:48):
And we should point out that this is not coming
from somebody within the school district that you Spring Grand
should have been a school district didn't startle this. This
is a mom, a parent who is going after her
son's classmates. Basically, I was wondering if she was even
a mom. She was the vice president of the Spring
Branch Democrats. Apparently she works at UNICEF and she's a
(37:08):
naturalized citizen from Belgium.
Speaker 3 (37:10):
This woman's not even from America.
Speaker 4 (37:12):
She has to go.
Speaker 11 (37:14):
Yeah, I don't know much about it.
Speaker 2 (37:16):
I'm just it's I mean, we're talking about maybe she
doesn't because she's from Belgium. She doesn't understand the Constitution
and fundamental rights, the First Amendment, and certainly you would
want kids. They're talking about conservative constitutional issues in these groups,
and somehow that's a bad thing according to her.
Speaker 3 (37:34):
Yeah, it's an interesting question. I don't know if you
guys are history buffs or not. But apparently back in
the mid twentieth century, these these Belgium people got oh
that was the Germans, well nearby, it was a different country.
Speaker 4 (37:45):
Okay, Well, so you're going to be there, right, Kenny
and the General Paxton will be there, And what is
actually going to happen? I mean, you're not going to
give talks. Will something take place?
Speaker 3 (37:55):
I feel like this is going to be a continuation
of what we did last weekend. Last weekend we had
thousands of people get together up in the Woodlands for
the Texas Youth. Sham made a remarkable memorial for Charlie
Kirk obviously, and a lot of these kids were there,
and Ken Paxton spoke, He gave an amazing speech. I'm
you know, I don't think I was too shabby myself,
and uh, General Paxton, I guess tonight could this evening
(38:17):
will continue that? Right?
Speaker 11 (38:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (38:19):
Look, this is a continuation of Charlie kirks legacy. I mean,
his his vision for freedom in this country and for
educating our youth about freedom is only going to be
expanded now that they've assassinated them.
Speaker 11 (38:31):
And we're part of that.
Speaker 2 (38:32):
We're just, you know, we're one little piece of that,
but we're going to be a part of that, and
we're going to spread the word and we're not going
to let the fact that some you know, really evil
person killed him stop us.
Speaker 3 (38:42):
Yeah, and you've got kids.
Speaker 4 (38:44):
I got kids, and I'm assuming these high school kids
at Stratford are pretty much like all the other kids.
There's about seven hundred and thirty of them that we're
trying to put this together. And this woman came out
and said, no, you can't do it. So that probably
means about two thousand now probably want to be a
part of this. It always seems to backfire on them
(39:05):
when they want to tell people no, yeah, scarcity principle.
Speaker 2 (39:08):
Right well yeah, well also when you suppress freedom, it erupts.
You know, people people are they're born with a I
think in the desire to be free and be able
to control their own decisions and not have government limit
how they live, what they can do, what they can say,
how they worship. And that's certainly it seems to me
(39:28):
the radical lap that's what they want to limit. They
want to they want to control what we think, what
we say, and what we do.
Speaker 3 (39:33):
All right, so all are welcome. Get there at six
point thirty the Moran Hotel at City Center. That's basically
the Memorial City part of the just past Memorial City
up to the beltwayh Yeah, it's right over there. Any
anything you want people to be aware of before they
get there today, general passion.
Speaker 11 (39:47):
Yeah, just to come ready to to support the cause
of these students.
Speaker 2 (39:53):
And obviously we approach things very differently than the other side.
We don't we don't promote violence. We are we are
about peaceful and open speech and transparent speech. And that's
what we're going to be there to promote and let's
just encourage these kids as they're being attacked by this
Democratic Party.
Speaker 4 (40:11):
So is the Oh sorry, where is the lady today
that did all the doxing? Shouldn't we have more information
on her whereabouts and what's going on with her?
Speaker 11 (40:23):
Tell me, I don't know where she went.
Speaker 2 (40:25):
She is out there somewhere stirring out trouble, but I
have actually met her or seen her.
Speaker 3 (40:30):
Well from what we could tell, she scrubbed any existence
of herself from the Internet. She removed her profile from
the Spring Branch Democrats website. She'd made all of her.
Speaker 4 (40:38):
She was afraid somebody was going to docks her like
she docks the kids.
Speaker 3 (40:43):
It's insane. But you're right, we don't use violence. I
agree with Ken Paxton. But this is a figurative war.
It's a culture war. And I might remind people next
spring when you're voting in the primaries, who was on
the front line fighting this figurative battle and who wasn't there?
You go something to think about, Ken Paxton. We really
appreciate your time today, Sarah. We'll see you this evening.
Speaker 2 (41:02):
Absolutely look forward to seeing you to night and a
bunch of our friends there.
Speaker 3 (41:05):
Hey, God bless Texas. Sounds like from Texas justice to me. Lockett,
Walton and Johnson Radio Network