00:00:03
Speaker 1: My name is Charlie Kirk.
00:00:05
Speaker 2: I run the largest pro American student organization in the country, fighting for the future of our republic. My call is to fight evil and to proclaim truth. If the most important thing for you is just feeling good, you're gonna end up miserable. But if the most important thing is doing good, you'll end up purposeful. College is a scam, everybody. You got to stop sending your kids to college. You should get married as young as possible and have as many kids as possible. Go start at turning point, you would say, college chapter. Go start atturning point, you say, high school chapter. Go find out how your church can get involved.
00:00:37
Speaker 1: Sign up and become an activist.
00:00:39
Speaker 2: I gave my life to the Lord in fifth grade, most important decision I ever made in my life, and I encourage you to do the same. Here I am.
00:00:46
Speaker 1: Lord, Use me.
00:00:48
Speaker 2: Buckle up, everybody, Here we go. The Charlie Kirk Show is proudly sponsored by Preserved Gold, leading gold and silver experts and the only precious metals company I recommend to my family, friends and viewers.
00:01:09
Speaker 1: All right, welcome back to The Charlie Kirk Show. Hour two.
00:01:12
Speaker 3: It's our ask us anything hour, we take your questions. If you want to participate, go to members dot Charliekirk dot com. Become a subscriber. You help us keep the lights on. We give all kinds of great benefits to our our members, so please check that out members dot Charliekirk dot com. And I just want to say welcome Mikey McCoy.
00:01:30
Speaker 4: I'm just glad to be here.
00:01:32
Speaker 3: I'm happy to be I'm just happy to be here too. I've been I've been traveling this week and I was under the weather. Just happy to just happy.
00:01:38
Speaker 4: It's the best feeling when you find out when you.
00:01:40
Speaker 3: Get I was so exhausted last night. You can probably still hear it in my voice. Anyways, I wanted get two quick notes before we get to questions here. One is that Karen Taylor Robeson has dropped out of the gubernatorial primary on the Republican side here in Arizona.
00:01:57
Speaker 4: Yes, okay, I was like, can I collap with that?
00:02:00
Speaker 3: She actually she she put out a very nice note basically saying that you know, she made this very difficult decision because we didn't want to have inviting on the conservative side, and then we need to unite and win and that was it was very gracious. I think she's gonna score a lot of points with the conservative base in Arizona and certainly with us at Turning Point. So that's exciting because we didn't know that was coming. But Andy Biggs is now has a clear primary path and that's exciting because he's going to be the next governor of the state of Arizona, something Charlie was very focused on and we are going to remain very focused on as well. Got to take care of Katie. Oh, you know what, this is fun. So we have this great image. I have to show it. It is in let me find it. It's what number is it?
00:02:47
Speaker 1: Guys?
00:02:48
Speaker 3: The they put out basically Katie Hobbs put out a note here it is basically an email after this happened, saying that she is now up against Katie's billionaire opponent just dropped out, making Donald Trump and Turning Point Actions hand pick candidate Andy Biggs the front runner in the Republican primary.
00:03:05
Speaker 1: That is great.
00:03:06
Speaker 3: I mean, thank you for the advertisement, Katie Hobbs, thank you for the for the press release. And I guess this is just multiple multiple emails talking about Turning Point Action and how she's up against us. Okay, you know, how about your up against the voters, the conservative voters that.
00:03:22
Speaker 1: Want you out. But anyway, so that's fun.
00:03:25
Speaker 3: And then the second thing is we got inflation numbers back today. They came in better than expected. It was predicted to be at two point seven percent. Inflation came in at two point four two point four, So very very good stuff. There, we have our first question. It sounds like Kelsey, Kelsey, Welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show. Unmute yourself if you can.
00:03:45
Speaker 5: Hi, guys, thank you for taking Michael. So many of us know that famous I think it's pronounced hop quote. Good times create week men. Week men create hard times. Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Charlie talked a lot about God's designs of distinctions, especially male female, and in our overly feminized culture that caters and creators to women's demands for comfort and sensitivity. I've been wondering if there's like a parallel hop inspired quote but for women, and would love maybe your thoughts and ideas on that.
00:04:22
Speaker 4: All right, make one up.
00:04:23
Speaker 6: I'd have to make it. So hop is. Unfortunately he's not a philosopher. He's actually he's a science fiction author.
00:04:28
Speaker 1: I was.
00:04:28
Speaker 6: I was actually very surprised to find that out that it sounds like a very old quote like that would be classic. And it's from a twenty sixteen novel that G. Michael Hopp wrote. Uh so I actually now have his quotes paigeofun on Goodreads to see if there's anything else. There's other It's very funny some of the other quotes they have.
00:04:46
Speaker 7: One of them is just Faraday boxes, which is probably not a quote that she's looking for.
00:04:52
Speaker 6: But big picture, let's try to think on that, like I.
00:04:57
Speaker 3: Was, you know, Sue, we think of was we just her on Helen Andrews, Yeah, which she's talking about over feminized culture and basically how we hit a tipping point at some point between twenty fifteen and let's say twenty twenty two in different industries that became majority female and then and then the train goes off the right.
00:05:18
Speaker 6: I'm trying to think, is there is there a kind of cyclical quote you could come up with for women? I almost want to throw that at you, Kelsey, if you have any thoughts that come to mind.
00:05:27
Speaker 1: Big families create strong women.
00:05:31
Speaker 6: The strong women find big families annoying, so their daughters have small small families.
00:05:36
Speaker 3: Small families create feminists. Feminists destroy the country.
00:05:41
Speaker 1: I don't know.
00:05:41
Speaker 7: Something like that chat tbt, oh dear, Hard times create resilient women. Resilient women build strong families. It's basically what you guys said. It is great, but then strong families indulge weak women.
00:05:56
Speaker 6: I don't know, because you have to have the cycle to it has to circle back.
00:06:00
Speaker 1: That's an interesting question.
00:06:01
Speaker 6: I mean what I would think of whatever you were going to come up with, you think of what are core themes with women, like women are more nurturing, and also what Charlie would talk about that women are very much a norm enforcer group. They're often the people who uphold the rules of society. And so that's one reason we've seen feminism drive a lot of things.
00:06:21
Speaker 7: Haywire women. Young women are fed a bad life script. It makes them unhappy. It also encourages them to enforce really bad rules on people. It's the school marm or the church lady.
00:06:35
Speaker 6: That's the idiom they'll use, even for a woman who hasn't been to church in her entire life or since she was a kid. The ones who are showing up to scream at you, to nag you, to say like, oh, you have to care, you have to have the BLM square, you have to support trans kids. Or the people who are showing up to block ice cars. Those are people who, in a different context, if they were raised with a better script, they might be saying, oh, oh you can't. You can't cheat on your spouse, like you're you're living with your mistress. You're not allowed to do drinking too, stop drinking so much. That could be really annoying too. But it was for a pro social, a good thing, whereas now they're activated on an evil thing. And so I think if you were gonna get the equivalent quote whatever it is, you'd have to capture that elemental things.
00:07:21
Speaker 3: And Charlie yeah, Charlie also wrote broke down the difference between the macro and the micro right. Women really tend to major on the micro, which would would be sort of interpersonal relationships, and men tend to think about, you know, business deals and negotiations. It's not that they don't work both ways or that you know, men men oftentimes will fixate on relationships too, but it just in the general, in the in the larger context that tends to be more true than not. And we'd also talk about how we need to have a proper balance of the masculine effeminine. So a healthy society has a proper balance of masculine feminine, and men are given a role which they can thrive in. Women are given a role in which they can thrive in. And when you get on an unhealthy balance, and this is what Helen Andrews is talking about.
00:08:08
Speaker 6: We have a clip from her. If we want to, yeah, let's do it. Let's play five seventy one.
00:08:12
Speaker 8: But if you want to put it in a single sentence, you could say that feminization equals wokeness. Everything you think of as wokeness is simply an epiphenomenon of demographic feminization. Think about all the things that wokeness means. Valuing empathy over rationality, safety over risk, conformity and cohesion over competition, and hierarchy. All of these things are privileging the feminine over the masculine. So if you have ever wondered why wokeness appeared out of nowhere when it did, that is my hypothesis that all of the institutions that began admitting women in the nineteen seventies eventually got enough women that they were able to reorient them.
00:08:59
Speaker 6: And it's as you said, it's balance that matters. So those things like empathy over rationality or safety over risk, that's not actually just a bad thing necessarily. But you think of where would be an environment where you would want to, for example, prize cohesion over competition. Where would you want inclusion over free speech? I can think of an obvious spot in a family. In a family, you sometimes have to say you just need to be quiet because you're upsetting all of your siblings. In a family, we need safety. We're not recklessly doing dangerous things. In a family, sometimes we're not fully rational. We have to care about loving each other above everything that works in a family, and you need to cultivate that. But it's out of balance. Yeah, it's out of balance. If your big institutions of society are that, because all of society is not the family.
00:09:46
Speaker 3: We'll think about the military. You would basically flip all of those. You would want rationality over empathy, you would want risk over safety. Well maybe most of the time, but you have to take risks in wartime. You'd want competition, you would want you would value, the best, getting to the top, the most lethal, the most courageous.
00:10:06
Speaker 6: In business, You're not going to innovate if your priority is just inclusion over free speech.
00:10:10
Speaker 1: Hmm. Absolutely.
00:10:14
Speaker 3: Every day Americans make choices that shape our country's future, right down to which cell phone provider we support. Here's what most people don't realize. Patriot Mobile isn't just a wireless provider. They're an activist organization funded by selling top tier cell phone service. They've been on the front lines defending our freedoms long before it was cool to do so, standing in the gap when others wouldn't. The best part is they deliver prioritized premium service on all three major US networks, giving you the same or even better coverage backed by one percent US based customer support. Get unlimited data plans, mobile hotspots, international roaming, and more. And when you switch to Patriot Mobile, you'll help grow a movement that fuels the Christian conservative cause. Every bill you pay helps advance the values of family, faith, and freedom. Switching is easier than ever Activate minutes, keep your number, keep your phone, or upgrade. Take a stand today.
00:11:07
Speaker 2: Call nine seven two Patriot Today, or go to Patriot Mobile Dot com slash Charlie us from a code Charlie for a free month of service. That's Patriotmobile dot com slash Charlie or call nine seven two Patriot and make the switch today.
00:11:21
Speaker 1: All right, I think we have Kelsey, not of a quote.
00:11:26
Speaker 6: Oh boy, let's let's give it a shot Kelsey.
00:11:29
Speaker 5: Okay. So my shot is like I was thinking of, you know, Charlie loves scripture. He was amazing at it, you know, knowing it. And so like when I think of, okay, great woman and not so a great woman. You've got your Proverbs thirty one woman, you know, the the noble woman who's who cares for her family, she's business oriented, all those good things. And then I think of the two Timothy three women who's like very influenced by the evil of the day. And it says like the evil people gain control over weak willed women who are load it down with sins and swayed by evil desires, always learning but never able to acknowledge the truth. Dang. So maybe like peaceful times create week willed women. Weak willed women create hard times. Hard times create noble women. Noble time create peaceful times.
00:12:17
Speaker 1: No wow, could Roberts thirty one women. That was great.
00:12:22
Speaker 4: Andrew's gonna tweet that.
00:12:24
Speaker 7: I man, I always learning, but never willing to acknowledge the truth thinking of the you know when you get a little too many grad degrees.
00:12:34
Speaker 3: I mean, listen, I have like fourteen examples in my mind as soon as you started talking about that. Yeah, well listen, that was well done. And so thank you for that, and thank you for calling in. And I think we have Anthony next. Anthony, welcome back to the Show's up.
00:12:50
Speaker 6: Guys, how a man, you're becoming quite the regular.
00:12:54
Speaker 9: Yeah, I noticed it myself, actually, Blake as I'm swamp to work today.
00:12:58
Speaker 6: Any of subscribers could be a regular. By the way, like, we have a lot of you, but and we have a lot of you. We know we have a bunch of you in the call, but a lot of them. Don't necessarily raise your hand. To raise your hand.
00:13:09
Speaker 1: Ask the questions you can ask us, be like Anthony, you can ask You could ask.
00:13:14
Speaker 6: Me what my favorite teenage mutantninj Turnal is if you wanted to.
00:13:18
Speaker 9: Yeah, we're gonna pass in that one black.
00:13:23
Speaker 1: So here's my.
00:13:26
Speaker 9: So, here's my question, guys. We see two styles of the GOP party. We have the old regime and it even goes down into the local communities, and we have the new style. So I went to my county's GOP meeting, this oric committee meeting to uh pick our who's run for office for local elections in Congress and state and stuff. It's all the same old cronies. I'm sorry to use that term, but it's it's they. And what I saw is I asked someone who I know they're very well, if any of these people will win. Any answer I was told was no, because they don't want to change the way they do stuff, and they just keep recycling the same style of campaign and whatnot. Like the communications person for our thing, they sat on the stage and took photos from behind when people were giving their speeches, saying, hey, thank you for picking me to be your nominee. How do we fix this because it's.
00:14:22
Speaker 3: Never any Are you talking about like local positions within the county GOP or something like that.
00:14:28
Speaker 9: Yeah, but we So my county is also a district for Congress, Okay, so we had to nominate our person that's going to go against the Democrat candidate. So it's District twenty five. So even that we had to do that one plus because New York States changed the elections to now everything's on the federal years for every election, it doesn't matter what it is. So like, how do you get the old party to start letting the new party come in the work things to make it better to try to win.
00:14:57
Speaker 3: Yeah, you know, this is a huge problem. I've talked about this with Tyler Boyer a lot. So if you go to like a local county GOP, you will you will come in and there's there's people that have been there for years, like decades, and these guys have never missed a meeting. They're usually you know, kind of your gray hairs, and uh, this is kind of what they live for. And what we've noticed is that when younger people come into these meetings and they feel, i mean, there are very it's like high school. It's like you got mean girls, you got clicks, you got like everybody hates one faction versus the other faction.
00:15:33
Speaker 6: I want to agree. A great example is the Nebraska legislature when we were trying to get the winter take off and it was just such Charlie was was venting about this that you get people who when you're almost when you're in a system that has existed. It's like a little closed off from everyone, like who's going into Nebraska politics usually, so it shortens your time horizon. It shortens your like horizon. Basically, you stop looking at the national picture, you stop looking at big trends, and start fixating on Oh, I've known the same people for a long time. I have my grievances with this person. I'm friends with this person, often for reasons that aren't what would normally drive political alliance is very personal and you get really homed in on that, and that can happen at your county GOP level. Oh, I'm with this person because I feuded with this person over who was running for county.
00:16:21
Speaker 1: No, No, it's even like who is who is a treasurer?
00:16:25
Speaker 3: Or like you know, how we're gonna how we're gonna do like tabling or sign ups for I mean, the most petty stuff I've seen at the local GOP level.
00:16:34
Speaker 1: It's really sad.
00:16:34
Speaker 3: And then young people come in and they feel completely alienated. They don't want anything to do with it because it feels like a completely like different world and it feels unrelated to current events.
00:16:44
Speaker 7: Yeah, that's the biggest thing too that I've seen is young people. It's like you brought up the Nebraska thing, Charlie's this young guy. He comes in trying to push the winner take all narrative and Nebraska and change what has been Nebraska's you know normal, don't it this way? And there was literally one guy. I won't forget this, Blake, Do you remember this. There's one guy and he was like seventy something, and he was like he had been part of the legislature there for you know, thirty years.
00:17:13
Speaker 4: I'm not changing. I'm not changing. You're just a young buck. What do you know that I don't like? You don't know Nebraska?
00:17:19
Speaker 1: Well rystims of power.
00:17:20
Speaker 3: So they don't realize how insignificant and how irrelevant sort of their little fiefdom is. But yet they're willing to sort of, you know, create a bunch of enemies and dig their heels in on the most irrelevant stuff.
00:17:34
Speaker 7: I also think there's a third faction of the GOP that's being born. You have like the old Guard and then this new Guard, which you know, like the Rhinos and now Maga, and I think there's a third which is like it's very interesting. It's like the new right people that just don't care anymore, and they think everything's rigged and everything's fake, and they don't want to vote, like, they don't want to get vote, they don't want to get engaged in politics.
00:17:58
Speaker 1: And I think this is going to be a de nihilism.
00:18:01
Speaker 9: Yeah, I see I see it in my local area actually, or somebody I know he has two sons or both voting age one refuses to vote. Yeah, any election.
00:18:10
Speaker 1: Yeah, Well, it's a huge problem.
00:18:12
Speaker 10: How do we fix it?
00:18:13
Speaker 1: You have to you have to well listen what culture that's a that's a that's a big thing. First.
00:18:18
Speaker 3: First of all, you need to make sure people have a belief that things can get better and that your voice matters and that your vote matters. And that's a huge, huge deal one of the reasons why we need to pass.
00:18:28
Speaker 1: The Save Act.
00:18:29
Speaker 6: For example, Hey, everyone, we're excited to tell you about Charlie's favorite supplement. If you experience brain fog, low energy, frequent illnesses, or if you just wake up stiff and achy every day, you've got to try strong cell. Charlie took it every single day. He frequently talked about it on the show, and he even traveled around the country bringing it with him. For Charlie, strong cell helped keep his mind sharp and focused for all the debates he was engaged in. Strong cell gives clean, natural energy without jitters, weird spikes, or afternoon crashes. It makes you feel like a younger version of yourself. People would often ask Charlie what is strong cell exactly.
00:19:04
Speaker 2: Strong cell uses a proprietary delivery of ANYDH to make sure go straight to your cells to help your mitochondria. And since there are cells in every air of your body, then healthier cells equals a healthier you.
00:19:17
Speaker 6: Strong cell is a nutritional supplement that leverages a remarkable enzyme called NADH. Think of it as the power source for every single cell in your body. With over thirty trillion cells working for you, imagine how great you could feel when they're all functioning at their very best. Unfortunately, as we age our bodies, NADH levels naturally decline, leading to all kinds of ailments and health issues linked with poor cellular health. Unlike many supplements that simply nix ingredients and hope for the best, strong cell has a proprietary delivery system designed to ensure that those ingredients effectively get into your bloodstream where they can truly make a difference. This is crucial as many supplements on the market are just pretty packaging with no real benefits. Here's the exciting part. You can give strong Cell a try completely risk free. Thanks to strong Cell's ninety day money back guarantee. You can experience this revolutionary product with no worries and no hassles. If it's not for you, no problem, they'll refund your money. With nearly two million units sold, it's no wonder that NADH has become a highly sought after remedy. Remember what you put in your body matters, and you truly get what you pay for. Strong Sell doesn't cut corners, They use the finest ingredients and they adhere to the highest manufacturing standards. So if you're tired of feeling tired, battling brain fog, or just not feeling like yourself, check out strong Sell today. Visit strongsell dot com and use the code Charlie for twenty percent off your order. Charlie always recommended giving strong Cell six to eight weeks to experience its full benefits, so do yourself a favor. Get strong Cell today and give it the time it needs to work its magic.
00:20:48
Speaker 2: That strongsell dot Com forward slash Charlie, and don't forget to use special discount code Charlie at checkout to get a special twenty percent off just for Kirk listeners. Strong Seals dot Com forward slash Charlie. Check it out right now, we're still on with Anthony, He asked, how do we fix it?
00:21:08
Speaker 1: Anthony? Are you still there? Yeah?
00:21:10
Speaker 3: I am guy, Okay, how do you fix it? And again, I've talked with Tyler Boyer about this a lot. One of the best sort of outgrowths of turning point action wasn't necessarily something that we planned, but we have turning point action for example, in all ten technical swing states, which includes like Iowa, right which is hasn't really been a true swing state for a while. But what we found is that when we go into these places, we get a lot of young people, we get a lot of fresh blood. Because we have a different brand, it's a different kind of we attract different types of people. And then what happens is we end up, you know, inevitably working or partnering with local gops and we then therefore inject all this new blood. Now in a state like New York, which I believe you're in Anthony obviously hasn't been a focus, so we're we don't have as big of a presence there, but just creating an outside group, like kind of having this third party outside group that's very friendly, very affiliated, but has a whole different energy, a whole different DNA at different culture. That has been a huge injection of new life in a lot of these places, and sometimes there's conflicts, like in Wisconsin. You know, we've got Brett Galashevski who was running TP Action up in Wisconsin. He's our enterprise director on Turning Point Action side.
00:22:21
Speaker 1: But he's like mister Wisconsin.
00:22:23
Speaker 3: He has become a lot of those our Turning Point people have have then been elected to local gop roles and they've injected huge new energy there.
00:22:32
Speaker 1: But some of the old dogs don't like it.
00:22:34
Speaker 3: And so I would I would constantly get calls from you know, local reporters in Wisconsin being like the local GOLP is very upset at you, and they're very they don't like what Turning Point Action is doing and they think that we're trying to take things over. No, it's more organic than that. It's just we have young people with a lot of energy people like the new blood. They want to vote them into office at the local GOP level. So we've seen that, we've seen that a lot, and I think that's kind of the way forward is you got to get kind of outside groups to in jeck new energy. So that that's that's my theory of the case there.
00:23:06
Speaker 9: All right, that might maybe work out this way.
00:23:09
Speaker 1: Yeah, exactly.
00:23:10
Speaker 3: So maybe you could work with our Turning Point Action people if there's some contested elections, that would be something that we could maybe get behind with our app and our ballot chasing. It'd have to be on a volunteer basis because New York is not one of our targets for actual spend, but we we can still get the local GOP up and running on the app, ballot chasing data, all those things.
00:23:29
Speaker 1: Okay, yeah, that's no problem.
00:23:30
Speaker 9: I'll definitely look into that and everything.
00:23:31
Speaker 1: I appreciate it, guys.
00:23:32
Speaker 3: Awesome, Thanks, thanks Anthony. All right, next up we have Christine. Christine, Welcome to the Charlie Kirkshaw. Please unmute yourself and welcome. Hi.
00:23:41
Speaker 7: Hi, thanks for.
00:23:42
Speaker 11: Taking my question, and congratulations on a great halftime show.
00:23:45
Speaker 1: It really thank you. It was all Mikey, I don't know about that.
00:23:50
Speaker 6: He at least was given in for me. I was basically like in the dark the whole.
00:23:53
Speaker 3: Time we had we kept it pretty under wraps. Anyways, it's great, thank you, thank you. We're going to do it again next year, so you know, spread the word.
00:24:05
Speaker 11: We absolutely will. Can't wait. My question is it's kind of a lofty idea, but I figured I just throw it out there. I was just curious if any high school or college chapters have ever considered hosting family events. I have three young kids, and you know, I'm always looking for ways to get them around good role models, and they love being around big kids too, and selfishly, I'd love to be around parents who are maybe a life stage ahead of me, you know, to learn from them. And was just curious of that his effort that you know, have been been considered before.
00:24:41
Speaker 1: Yeah.
00:24:42
Speaker 3: So so Tyler Boyer chimed in on the chat and he said, turning point families is what TPUSA Faith should be doing at the chapter level.
00:24:50
Speaker 1: He goes, I told them that a long time ago.
00:24:52
Speaker 3: So so it's actually a good idea because we have, you know, obviously within the C three, which is turned TPUSA. We have the high schools which is Club America. We have the College Vertical, So these are sort of different teams than we have TPUSA Faith and Turning Point Academy as well. Uh and that's all under the C three to a few other things productions, social media, things like that, but those are kind of the different areas of focus. And I do think that they could do a fam like family mixers and like barbecue. I mean a lot of this stuff is very chapter based, and like what I mean by that is it's very college based. So these chapters get together and they do how do we get together with and bring recruit more kids? How do we We'll do a you know, like different events to incorporate more of the campus life, and we'll push back against censorship. So it's kind of very local based and very local to their own university. But I love this idea of getting the families together and we should we should push that out and make it a thing. And Turning Point Faith TPOSA faith could could get behind that. So it's a great idea, Christine. We don't have it yet, but there's always room for improvement. So thank you for the idea.
00:26:04
Speaker 11: Well, I appreciate it, guys, and keep up the great work.
00:26:07
Speaker 1: Thank you so much, and thanks for your kind words about the halftime show. Oh we got one for Mikey. Here. This is Mick. Mick, You're up next, and mute yourself, sir, Welcome to the show.
00:26:17
Speaker 12: All right, I do have a question for Mikey, and then I have a question for y'all, but I'll start with Mikey. So, I'm a twenty one year old living in Oregon, and I never went to college and never had plans to go to college, and that sounds like that similar path that you took. I want to know if you have any advice for uh, you know, guys like me coming out of high school that you know I want to stay involved and want to be engaged. Then, after he answers, I want to hear all of your favorite Ninja turtles minus.
00:26:45
Speaker 1: Don at tellow mine.
00:26:48
Speaker 6: Okay.
00:26:49
Speaker 7: Yeah, So I always joked that Charlie kind of saved me and inductrinated me a little bit, because I legitimately.
00:26:55
Speaker 1: No, he did.
00:26:56
Speaker 7: He saved me, but I was he was about to take out three hundred thousand dollars student loans. Yeah yeah, and I was supposed to go to college. I had my college plans and everything, and then he was like, no, don't go to college, come work for me. And so it started as a gap year. It's been you know, six six gap years. So but here's my best advice. This is what I always say to high schoolers in your community. The people you know, the big businesses, you know, the most successful people you know. Identify those people. And when you are graduating and you don't want to go to college, go at beg for a meeting, annoy the crap out.
00:27:30
Speaker 4: Of them until he give you a meeting.
00:27:32
Speaker 1: Did I give you this advice?
00:27:33
Speaker 4: No, dude, I've been saying this for years.
00:27:35
Speaker 1: Oh that's great.
00:27:35
Speaker 7: And then if the keep calling the secretary until he give you a meeting with the CEO of the company, say I only need five minutes. I only need five minutes. Go there, sit down with them and say, look, I'm graduating high school. I'm not going to college. I want to come work for you. I will do whatever it takes. I'll be the first who arrived the last to leave. There's no amount of hours I'm not willing to spend to figure something out if I don't understand it, I'll be the hardest working employee you have, and at the end of my gap year, at the end of this year, you can either say that you got this entire year of work out of me and you don't even have to pay me.
00:28:13
Speaker 4: It could be free year of work.
00:28:15
Speaker 7: Or you can say, this person's so good, I want to hire them full time, and ten times out of ten they will hire you full time and.
00:28:21
Speaker 4: He will immediately hire you.
00:28:23
Speaker 7: Entrepreneurs, CEOs, business owners if they see a young hustling kid like that walk into their office and say something just like that, they will hire you.
00:28:32
Speaker 1: No, totally.
00:28:32
Speaker 3: So I gave my I didn't realize you've been giving this advice. I gave my nephew the same advice. So my brother started having kids way younger, and he's older than me, so like his eldest son is in college now and he he I asked him, you know, what do you want to do, and he was like, well, I'm really into like property management and like business commercial real estate, and I want to like kind of get into that space. So I said, Okay, come back to me with the top three firms into like, go do your research.
00:29:02
Speaker 1: Come back to me.
00:29:02
Speaker 3: I said, Okay, so he comes back to me, these are the top three term firms. Okay, who are the top two executives at each firm?
00:29:09
Speaker 1: Get me? Get me them?
00:29:10
Speaker 3: Okay, now, get me, get me their their contact information like assistants, emails, phone numbers, and so he called around and got all of them. And I said, okay, you harassed these three people until somebody takes a meeting with you.
00:29:23
Speaker 1: And he got he got, he gotta. He got a paid.
00:29:25
Speaker 3: Internship within two weeks doing exactly that. And he and I told him, I said, you need to be willing to work for free for at least six months, maybe twelve, and don't complain.
00:29:35
Speaker 1: Just say yes, sir, no, ma'am. All those things. All you do is you are willing and.
00:29:41
Speaker 3: Able and excited, enthusiastic, eager. You have to be so positive because here's your especially young generations, they are whiners, complainers. I'm not listen. I'm very pro young people, very pro gen c jen alpha. But listen that the the on you is that your complainers, you're not hard workers.
00:30:02
Speaker 1: All this stuff. Prove that's not true with you.
00:30:05
Speaker 3: And if you do that, if you are a standout exceptional, then they I'm telling you Mikey's point, an entrepreneur will look at you and see themselves in you and want to make you the best thing and pour into you.
00:30:17
Speaker 4: Ninja Turtle quick.
00:30:18
Speaker 1: Oh shoot yeah, Michaelangelo, I mean this is the Normy answered Leonardo.
00:30:24
Speaker 4: I didn't watch it. I grew up on like aage doesn't matter a favor.
00:30:29
Speaker 1: Do I like blue purple red? Michaelangelo?
00:30:33
Speaker 3: Yeah, Blake's take clearly, Rich Barris Leonardo Michaelangelo, thanks Rich.
00:30:41
Speaker 6: You can't have to Yeah, you can't know this is that is ridiculous.
00:30:48
Speaker 3: Hi, folks, Andrew Covett here, I'd like to tell you about my friends over at why Refi. You've probably been hearing me talk about y Refi for some time now. We are all in with these guys. If you or someone you know is struggling with private student loan debt, take my advice and give them a call. Maybe you're behind on your payments, maybe you're even in default. You don't have to live in this nightmare anymore. Why Refi will provide you a custom payment based on your ability to pay. They tailor each loan individually. They can save you thousands of dollars and you can get your life back. We go to campuses all over America and we see student after student who's drowning in private student loan debt. Many of them don't even know how much they owe. Why ref I can help. Just go to y refi dot com. That's the letter why then refi dot com. And remember y Refi doesn't care what your credit score is. Just go to yrefi dot com and tell them your friend Andrews sent you.
00:31:46
Speaker 6: I wanted to get a email very quickly that was very good, and then we do we have Brandon, But I also wanted to hit this quick because we talked about marijuana a lot at the top of the show. I thought this was a great email we got. I'm gonna leave her name out of it, but she says, hi ccast team. I don't normally do this, but was inspired to write thank you for talking on the show about the dangers of marijuana. I lived the weed psychosis nightmare myself and I watched as my boyfriend, who was a heavy user, began to succumb to delusions and erratic behavior. I had to get him emergency mental health treatment where he was diagnosed with marijuana induced bipolar disorder. I had to learn how to navigate his paranoia and his rage because he refused to stop using I myself had begun to use weed during this time, and I saw its negative impacts on my motivation, on my emotional regulation, and on my thought processes. It was a terrifying time in my life. With praise and thanks to God, I am now free of both the weed and the relationship. More people need to be talking about these risks. Thank you very much for that email, and we want everyone listening. If you're out there, if you're doing weed, listen to that. That could be your future. Leave it behind. Reject the poison, no poison.
00:33:03
Speaker 1: Yeah. I love this.
00:33:05
Speaker 3: First Corinthians six to two. Everything is permissible for me, but not everything is beneficial. Everything is permissible for me, but I will not be mastered by anything. And I think about that all the time, because you know, I had a pastor who said too really, he said a lot.
00:33:19
Speaker 1: Of great things.
00:33:21
Speaker 3: He by the way, he went to Princeton, used to do Bible studies with Franklin Graham. This guy he married me and my wife, Don Williams, amazing, amazing guy. Used to say he had so many things. The meaning of life is relationships. That was one of his one good ones. He said faith is spelled risk, which is another good one. But he he used to say, everybody's an addict. Everybody's addicted to something. But you do not be mastered by anything, and let Christ empower you. Overcome your addictions, overcome your flesh. Live by the live by the spirit, not by the flesh.
00:33:53
Speaker 6: One more question, Brandon, unmute yourself.
00:33:56
Speaker 10: Hey guys, can you hear me?
00:33:58
Speaker 1: Yes? Uh so, Mike.
00:34:00
Speaker 8: Question is.
00:34:02
Speaker 10: If there's anything in the anti federalist papers or like Constitutional Convention or anything that the anti federalist said that you think if we implemented back then, that it would have been you know, it would have worked out for us.
00:34:18
Speaker 6: Well, I think we actually did implement. We did implement one. So the anti federalists, for those who are not aware, they're the ones who argued against the constitution. So the federalists were the ones who said ratify the Constitution. After the convention, the anti federalists generally campaigned against it. But as I'm sure you likely know, Brandon, the main thing that they pointed out as a problem was that there was no Bill of Rights in the Constitution as originally drafted. And George Mason, for example, campaigned against it because it did not have that, and for that sometimes he's called the father of the Bill of Rights. And that is what we got, and I think we've very much learned they were correct. Sometimes you'll hear people say, oh, the Bill of Rights might have been a mistake because it gave people the idea, oh, the government can do anything that's not explicitly forbidden in the Bill of Rights. And I think instead we've learned over and over that having those explicit productions, they tried to get around what is explicitly banned in the Bill of Rights, but they have at least a very hard time doing it. That's repeatedly been our shield against so much over having explicit freedom of speech, explicit right to bear arms. We would one and ten percent have banned guns in this country if we did not have the Second Amendment there awkwardly getting in the way of them doing it, and the First Amendment to the First Amendment.
00:35:38
Speaker 3: And there's a the I completely agree with what Blake is saying, and actually it's funny. I was recently reading back through a biography of George Washington, and I kept sympathizing with the anti federalist more and more. Yeah, it's like, well, by the way, you got to remember the we think of our founders almost as monolithic.
00:35:58
Speaker 1: They were not.
00:35:59
Speaker 3: They had deeply passionate, vehement sometimes sometimes like come to blows fisticuffs kind of arguments about the size and scope of the federal government. And you know, Jefferson, Jefferson notoriously was of a different mind than George Washington. George Washington and Hamilton believed in a lot more centralized power with the federal government, and Jefferson was much more states rights guy. So I totally encourage you to study the Founding fathers of the Founding generation. There's good stuff to be gleaned from both. But to Blake's point, we got a lot.
00:36:34
Speaker 1: Of good stuff.
00:36:35
Speaker 6: I'm trying to think of something that wasn't implemented, because if they wanted the Bill of Rights, I do recall, oh sorry, yes, what's that?
00:36:42
Speaker 10: Well, so the one that I think that, I mean, I see why they didn't put it in. But they were debating of veto on state laws. They wanted the power to invalidate or negative improper state laws, and I see why or.
00:37:00
Speaker 6: State nullification of federal laws.
00:37:03
Speaker 10: State laws, so that national Congress would nullify improper state laws. So like, for example, we obviously have a lot of gun laws that are unconstitutional, and the national government could just come in and say, hey, you know that's unconstitutional.
00:37:19
Speaker 1: No, doesn't work. Well, we do have a process by which we can do that through the courts.
00:37:24
Speaker 3: Right, So if the state institutes a law that is anti constitutional, then that can get litigated up through the courts, and then ultimately the Supreme Court could take it up and then basically say that's an unconstitutional law.
00:37:39
Speaker 1: So there is a process.
00:37:40
Speaker 3: And by the way, we do have supremacy clause, right, the federal government is supreme. So and you, by the way, you've seen that specifically with gun laws in countless states, especially Blue states, that have tried to institute unconstitutional you know, gun laws, and they've been overturned their chagrin, and yet there is a tension there, right, Like in California, you still can do concealed carry in California, but they make it extraordinarily difficult.
00:38:08
Speaker 1: One it's being saved by.
00:38:09
Speaker 6: I'm trying to think of something the anti federalists wanted that wasn't actually including the Bill of Rights and a warning I'm recalling they did have is they were concerned that the judiciary would be too powerful. That they were saying, the Supreme Court could just basically make whatever laws we want. And what's funny is we didn't see that for a long time. For a long time, there was a lot of restraints, and now really over the last century or so, we've actually seen that manifestation of the courts being extremely powerful. Part of this is just I think part of it is the Supreme Court that they have those life terms and that's now turned into you're on the court forty forty five, fifty years. And it's not so much that that's bad. That's worked to our advantage, but I think it's made all of American politics start to revolve around the Supreme Court dynamics and what you can engineer through the courts, And I sometimes wonder if people would be less all consumed with it if it was something like the Supreme Court was an eighteen year term and every president by default, would get two nominations to the court, So you don't have a majority of the court until you've won three presidential elections in a row, and then it doesn't last for half a century due to the quirks of who hadn't managed to get nominees. And it's something I think about, but it has frankly worked out to our benefit well.
00:39:19
Speaker 3: And I will tell you that wherever, wherever they can exploit a loophole or a power vacuum, connivers and corruptors will find a way to wiggle in there and manipulate it.
00:39:30
Speaker 1: For their or Oh good, all right, Mikey.
00:39:33
Speaker 3: Thank you for joining us, sir, thank you for having me, Blake, It's been a good show. Thank you everybody, good questions. Always be ready to join. We love having you.
00:39:45
Speaker 6: For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to Charliekirk dot com.