00:00:03
Speaker 1: My name is Charlie kirk 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 aturning point, yould say high school chapter. Go find out how your church can get involved. Sign up and become an activist. 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 Lord, Use me. Buckle up, everybody, Here we go. Noble Gold Investments is the official gold sponsor of the Charlie Kirkshaw, a company that specializes in gold I rays and physical delivery of precious metals. Learn how you could protect your wealth with Noble Gold Investments at noblegold investments dot Com. That is Noblegold Investments dot Com.
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Speaker 2: All right, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show. It's Monday. I hope you guys all had a very celebratory in if you were men out there servant minded Mother's Day. I hope you took care of the moms in your life. Blake, did you take care of the mom? And she sort of took care of herself. She went to my sisters in Georgia. Well there.
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Speaker 3: She was sort of being she was helping my sister celebrate Mother's Day, I suppose. But that's what she wants to do anyway. She wants to spend all the time with her grandkids.
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Speaker 2: You know, I can't blame your mom for not wanting to spend Mother's Day with you. That's her choice.
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Speaker 3: Well, what's funny is I ended up having a very long call with my dad because my dad was just he was alone back in South Dakota.
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Speaker 2: So we were just talking.
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Speaker 3: He was batching it up and we were talking about, uh, talk about the show and stuff.
00:01:59
Speaker 2: So good. I'd love to hear his perspective. It's May eleventh, and we are here at the y REFI Studios in Phoenix, Arizona, and I have my family in town. My father in law is in the studio watching on, which is a which is a treat. So welcome, welcome, Hope we don't disappoint. We're going to get the show started off the right way with Andrea Burkhart back by popular demand, we had her on. She is a legal commentator, experienced trial and a pel litigator. She you can also find her at substack at Andrea Burkhart dot substack dot com spelled b U r k h a r T that's how you find her. But we had a hearing obviously with the Tyler Robinson trial on Friday, and there is much to discuss, so we'll welcome her in right now. Andrew, welcome back to the show.
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Speaker 4: Hey, thank you so much for having me back.
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Speaker 2: Yeah, you know, I have to give you a little I have to chide you just a little bit because last time we had you on, you let us know that your prediction was that the trial was not going to happen until early twenty twenty eight. I saw you clip that, and we're making fun of our reaction. I think the whole world was groaning along with us. I would like to say, because it's sitting in this seat. I will tell you that is not what you want to hear. I know, you know, it's just the whole the wheels of justice move, in my opinion, almost a little bit too slow. But that's where we're at, and hopefully you are wrong and we get the under on that, not the over all. Right. So on Friday, we had a hearing that was basically to decide the issue of cameras in the courtroom as well as the defence's request for an extension before the I guess preliminary hearing evidentiary hearing. I've heard it referred to both ways. Tell us what did we learn. Obviously, there was a ruling on the cameras that they were the Judge Graft was going to deny their request. But it's more complicated than that.
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Speaker 5: Yeah, it's a little bit more nuanced than just the cameras are in or the cameras are out. What had happened with this motion was that the defense was seeking a categorical ban on cameras in the courtroom essentially for the rest of the case.
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Speaker 4: And that's in a bit of a.
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Speaker 5: Conflict with Utah law, which has some of the most camera favorable rules anywhere in the country, and so they have a number of procedures and requirements that you have to go through to get a camera in the courtroom.
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Speaker 4: But once assuming you follow those.
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Speaker 5: Procedures, they are extremely permissive and there's a presumption that they will allow it to happen. So what has happened is that Judge Graft denied the defense motion for a categorical bandy. So that is not consistent with what Utah law provides. However, because Utah law in its own procedure already allows for there to be objections or concerns about certain factors the judges to consider, such as the defendants effect on the defendant's right to a fair trial, that the defense can still continue to raise those issues, they're just going to have to do it on a hearing by hearing basis and not as a general overarching rule that cameras would not be allowed.
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Speaker 2: So there was a it's like a fourteen week or fourteen day advance, right, So if I am let's say I'm CBS News or any I let let me get centered up here, I get I have to present my request fourteen days in advance, and then there is an opportunity for the defense to basically object, and I saw a clip of yours basically saying the defense is now almost obligated to object to every single request for a media credential to this hearing. Is am I reading that right?
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Speaker 5: They may be if this is an issue that they are intending to preserve for future review down the road, which is kind of classic for defense lawyers to be doing, to be thinking, you know, through the appeal, through the post conviction process, and so forth. They have framed this issue as one of a federal constitutional magnitude, and so there are a lot of procedural hurdles that go along with potentially raising something like that in a federal court a long time down the road, and one of them is that you have to exhaust your remedies in the trial court and you have to fully preserve the issue. So there is I think a potential argument that a prosecutor on the other side would be able to make that if they did not object to cameras at any specific hearing, that the defense has essentially waived any kind of objection to cameras being in the courtroom for that at least for that particular proceeding. So I do think it puts a little bit of an onus on them if their objective is to have an opportunity for a future appellate court to look at whether cameras in general, as a big picture, specific to this case whatever, are a.
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Speaker 4: Problem with a fair trial.
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Speaker 5: They are kind of stuck now with having to do a little bit of extra work to make sure that they have not wave that right.
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Speaker 2: Yeah, they've just made more work for themselves, essentially. And one of the things I've learned from your commentary, Andrea, is just how much of these motions, these hearings and you call papering the record, are really done with the express intent of future appeals essentially, because then it will be appealed. If you make the presumption that this would end in a guilty verdict because of the evidence that you already are where exist against Tyler Robinson, then you're going to say, well, we're going to then appeal it at the state level, and then eventually the federal courts are going to get involved on a follow up appeal. And it seems like so much of these chess moves that we're seeing play out where you're like, what are they doing? What are they do? It's all playing down the line the long game assuming appeals. Is that fair?
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Speaker 4: Absolutely?
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Speaker 5: I mean that's always going to be part of the role of defense counsel, particularly in a case like this, a death penalty case. It's very consistent with the strategies that these particular defense lawyers kind of traditionally employ in the cases that they work on. And it's just it's one of the aspects of being effective as a defense attorney is having to think five years down the road, ten years down the road, which I know now we're throwing out numbers you guys really don't want to hear, but that, you know, just is the unfortunate reality of death penalty litigation. There's many many steps to it and many pitfalls along the way, and so that is what they're being attuned to as they go through this trial process.
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Speaker 2: So what about like just the court live stream that's not connected to a CBS or a local affiliate or anything like that. Is that that's going to be permitted or do we not know?
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Speaker 5: Well, so when the court has these WebEx hearings like they had on Friday, where they are just digitally present in court, they're not all there in the courtroom. Typically we have been able to view those and restream them. And so the cameras in the courtroom is generally referring to a media agency from the outside bringing a camera in. But if they are having live courtroom hearings, not clear to me if WebEx is available or some kind of alternative camera feed of the court's own system that they might be able to rely on.
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Speaker 2: Interesting, So a little bit TBD on the mechanics of this, but we know generally directionally we're going to probably have video of the actual trial. That's kind of what I'm gathering.
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Speaker 6: Okay, the Court Krantz defendance motion and reschedules the preliminary hearing for July sixth, July seventh, the afternoon of July eighth, July ninth, and July tenth, twenty twenty six in order to protect the defendant's constitutional rights while minimizing unnecessary delay and preserving the fair, pompt partial administration of justice.
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Speaker 7: This is the order of the court, all right.
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Speaker 2: So we have just played that clip from Judge Graff announcing the delay of the preliminary hearing to July sixth through the tenth. Andrea, what do you make of this type of delay? They were obviously asking for more time. He aired on the side of less than half of what they were asking for. What do you read into this?
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Speaker 5: This is, in many ways, I think the judge's equivalent of what we were just talking about with the attorneys looking down the road for future appeals and so forth. Generally speaking, the defense can only appeal rulings that go against them, and so in cases where you want to maybe just minimize unnecessary grounds to potentially argue that there was some type of problem in the process, you can just err on the side of granting the defense what they want, and so in this particular case, I think this.
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Speaker 4: Is Judge Graft playing it safe.
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Speaker 5: He cited primarily the very large volume of discovery that has been produced in the case. I have to tell you, just from my perspective, the numbers that we have been talking about in terms of the terabytes of information that have been handed over are pretty mind boggling. And they kind of previewed this at the last hearing when the defense had been arguing that they wanted more opportunity to investigate some of the states underlying DNA evidence and firearms evidence and so forth, But the judge kind of cut them off and asked them very specifically about just the extent to which they'd been able to review the discovery so far, and all of the attorneys in turn indicated no, just given the volume, they haven't had time to review everything. So I think it's largely that that is driving this particular decision. That's why it was not the extended continuance that the defense was asking for. It's not for purposes of greater investigation or expanding the purpose of the preliminary hearing. It's just to make sure they've had an opportunity to be familiar with what is going to be presented and where it fits into the discovery picture.
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Speaker 3: So I think if I remember right the first time we had you on, Andrea, I think you predicted they wouldn't delay it. Does even this short continuance, does it adjust your expected timeline for the trial as a whole, or do you think we'll probably end up on the same timeline as before, which was already unfortunately quite long.
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Speaker 4: Yeah, you know, that's a very good question.
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Speaker 5: I mean, in general, I would say it gives us a little bit of insight into Judge Grafts just perspective on the case and the timelines, So it may show a little bit more lenience towards allowing the defense at the time that they need to develop their strategies and their case. Obviously, when you're getting ready for trial, it's a different situation in terms of what you actually have to do to prepare than getting ready for this preliminary hearing.
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Speaker 4: So it may be an indication that he will allow them, you know, a greater opportunity to pursue leads.
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Speaker 5: And like I mentioned last time, we already know there's going to be challenges to scientific evidence and so forth, and so it is possible that he may be more amenable to extending the trial date further down the road.
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Speaker 2: Yeah. Interesting. So you know, my basic gist of what happened was that, Hey, I'm grateful for the ruling on the cameras. That is something that Eric herself has through her legal team, expressed that she wants to happen. I agree with that Charlie's assassination was extraordinarily public, and it only follows that we would have a public trial where you know, sunlight is the best disinfected. I want to see everything. I think it's good for this entire conspiracy cottage industry that's emerged round this case for them to have to confront the actual evidence, the physical evidence, and I want everybody to see that, and they get to see that. The defense challenge it too. That's the system of laws we have, and we want that. We don't want this to be sort of jammed through the court system. We want the real process to play out. And I think it'll be good for the country to have an education on the way that a capital case like this could work. And by the way, if it had been reversed that there was no cameras and with no delay, I would have been upset about that. And so you know, okay, a little bit of an extension five six weeks whatever it is, as opposed to six month, and we're getting that sort of definitive ruling that the motion on cameras in the court room is being denied. I think that I take this on the whole, I guess is what I'm saying. You know, if I had to have it the other way, I wouldn't want it. So I'll be sort of begrudgingly satisfied with the judge's decisions here. It's kind of my basic take. It's the end result that matters. Yeah, it is ultimately what it is ultimately.
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Speaker 5: I mean, I judge graph has been extremely fair so far throughout this process. In many ways, he's been kind of a blessing of a judge for this particular case. He's just demonstrated a lot of patience, a lot of understanding, and they're very much skills that a judge is going to need over a long run case like this.
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Speaker 2: Yeah. I've seen that actually sort of across the board as people have been complementary of this judge. And it does seem like, you know, from my perspective, is somebody that does believe that Tyler Robinson is guilty in this case and that I want to see justice served. I may not like some of the hoops that have to be jumped through to sort of protect this on appeal, but it does seem that he's being prudent, he's being fair, and he's not giving a whole lot of opportunity. I mean, the appeals are going to happen. It's a capital case, right. This is how it's been explained to me. It's just going to happen. There's no way around it. Essentially with our system and so on. The whole. You do take it as a blessing that he seems to be cognizant of the fact that this is going to be drawn out over years, maybe a decade, and he's playing that long game already right now to make sure everything's on the up and up and doesn't give them unnecessary opportunity for getting this overturned on appeal. What are you looking for next? So is there additional hearings that we need to keep our eye out on between now and July sixth?
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Speaker 5: Yeah, so the next hearing that is coming up. Since they had already set aside the time the week of May eighteenth to do the preliminary hearing, they went ahead and rescheduled some pending motions to be heard. They're actually going to be heard on the nineteenth in the morning. And the primary one that I think is going to be of interest is that the defense is asking to hold one of the prosecuting attorneys in contempt of the court's gag order. And this is based on a series of public statements that the prosecutor made in response to headlines that were merely in the daily mail, but you know, got proliferated through other sources, and so forth that indicated kind of misleadingly that the FBI was unable to match the bullet recovered from from Charlie's autopsy, the bullet fragment.
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Speaker 4: To the rifle that was associated with with Tyler Robinson.
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Speaker 5: And so this had been reported as you know, being exonerating and no match and so forth. But that's not the that's not what that result means. And so the prosecutor had given some statements kind of clarifying here's what this result means, and the defenses arguing that that that's a problem.
00:17:41
Speaker 4: They should not have been allowed to do that.
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Speaker 2: So we're going to see that on May nineteenth. Yes, Andrew Burkhart, check out her sub stack and her live streams. Excellent work, Andrew. I'm sure we will see you soon.
00:17:53
Speaker 4: Thank you my pleasure.
00:17:56
Speaker 2: If you're about to turn sixty five and you're already on Medicare, this message is for you. Charlie cared about America seniors. He was outraged that so many were paying too much for their Medicare coverage and getting less than they deserved in return. That's why he partnered with Chapter and we're still partnered with Chapter Chapters Licensed Advisors Search every Medicare plan to find what's actually best for you. The call is one hundred percent free, no pressure, just honest help seniors save an average of eleven hundred dollars a year with Chapter They've already helped hundreds of our listeners enroll in better plans, and they can help you too. So if you're nearing sixty five or already on Medicare, make the call today now pound two fifty, pound two fifty and say Charlie Kirk to make sure you're in the best available plan. That's pound two fifty and say Charlie Kirk. Or go to ask Chapter dot org slash Kirk. We are joined on set by Daisy. Welcome back, Happy Mother's Day. Your first Mother's Day is a mother so congratulates. It was lovely good. Yes, you are sort of like officially unofficially back coming into the office.
00:19:07
Speaker 8: As much as I love my job, I do miss my baby.
00:19:11
Speaker 2: So we'll we figured we'd throw you in the deep end and put you on the show day one, So welcome back, all right. So I woke up this morning to a number of press inquiries. This was like TMZ Entertainment Weekly Fox. It was like the whole ran the whole gamut, and they were asking me about a particular comment by a particular we'll say, comedian actor that made a joke. I guess at I guess kill Tony's expense, but it was really sort of at Charlie's expense. And I don't want to go into detail, but many of you in the audience probably know about it. There was a roast of Kevin Hart on Netflix over the weekend, and it was sort of the follow up to the roast of Tom Brady, which I actually watched and thought was funny. It was a little bit raunchy at time. The tom Brady one was good. I did not watch the Kevin Hart one last night, but I watched the tom Brady one. I thought it was like pretty good all things considered, for a raunchy roast, which all roasts are pretty raunchy, but at least tom Brady's it felt light. It felt it felt genuinely happy. Everybody was kind of in good spirits. This just I didn't watch it, so maybe I should hold back my full opinion. But this just felt a little bit darker, a little bit more vicious. The jokes were less funny and more sort of like like cringe inducing. Anyways, Pete Davidson made a comment that referenced Charlie's assassination and apparently, I mean, it was all over my ex feed this morning. So we brought in our cultural commentator to help us address it. Well, I think we should say what the joke is. You want to say it. I don't even want to say it. I found it that distasteful. I get it.
00:20:54
Speaker 3: But if we're going to discuss that, I think we were not going to show the video. I think we should say what it was. So if you're if you're sensitive to this, mute this briefly. I'm just going to explain what the joke was. So Pete Davidson was at this rotes of Tony Hinchcliff and he.
00:21:09
Speaker 2: Was of Kevin Hart of the Yeah.
00:21:11
Speaker 3: So but as a roast, you're ridiculing a bunch of different people. Yeah, roasted Kevin Hart, but he was roasting Tony in the audience. And Pete Davidson, who's a comedian celebrity.
00:21:22
Speaker 2: Who just got all his tattoos, famous.
00:21:24
Speaker 3: For dating way out of his league a variety of things. He did get his tattoos removed, which we discussed positively on Thought Crime. I will note, but he said this joke going after Tony Hinchcliff. Tony is here looking like both a child molester and the doll they give to the child to show where he touched them. And then he continues, Tony reminds me of Charlie kirk in that he's definitely been on camera letting a guy unload in his throat. Now, I will note, the Hollywood reporter says, and I confirmed watching the video, the audience response is not positive to this.
00:22:00
Speaker 2: There's actually a very big groan in the audience.
00:22:02
Speaker 3: You see a couple of people laughing, but mostly the audience is not into that joke.
00:22:07
Speaker 2: So it is that's a good sign. I think a lot of see it went on and said right that it was too early.
00:22:14
Speaker 3: Yeah, the audience response suggested that it's too early for jokes about what happened to Charlie.
00:22:20
Speaker 2: Well, and I just want to say this, so when Charlie got I would say roasted by South Park. I remember my first and my first reaction was like, this is amazing, this is the coolest thing ever happened, like lean in, lean in Charlie, and he absolutely did it's not that we don't love humor and that we can't laugh along with actually funny jokes. I would make two observations. One, this is about somebody who was murdered and in really the most grotesque like public way imaginable, and he happens to be our close friend. And so for me, my perspective is just I can't obviously divorce myself from the immediacy of the person that we're you know, talking about here, Charlie. But two, you know, I just I don't think it was funny. And when I saw the clip this morning, I my instinct was my I just cringed because a kind of in the similar vein that the people in the audience like that grown because you know, I'm listen. I'm not here to tell comedians that they can't do. You can joke about whatever you want. I think comedy can be a really powerful outlet, especially when the culture was getting increasingly woke. Guys like Dave Chappelle or like this release valve on some of these these tense cultural moments. I thought they were really important. I think comedians can be very important. For this particular moment, I just just felt distasteful well, it's not.
00:23:45
Speaker 8: It's not a question of can you or can you not say something. Anyone can say what they want to say. It's more of a question of should we be saying all these things? And it's also just a question of morality. I feel like maybe we all need be called to a higher standard. I know that comedy is supposed to be crass, and it's supposed to, you know, be on the line.
00:24:07
Speaker 2: It's not supposed to be crass necessarily, it's supposed to be challenging.
00:24:11
Speaker 8: Comedy has more of an allowance to be crass, you can lean that way. But the issue that I have with this, more so than anything, is that we were talking about Pete Davidson's roast that they did of him. Pete Davidson's dad died in nine to eleven. He was a firefighter in New York. He died going up one of the towers and then the tower collapsed. And his roast was filled with jokes about that, which I equally think is disgusting, like not just as people who are Was he upset.
00:24:39
Speaker 2: About it or he laughed along with it? I'm pretty sure.
00:24:42
Speaker 8: I'm sure Like well, because he was he was seven.
00:24:44
Speaker 2: So a little context here though, is just before that, kill Tony had gone on stage and made a joke about his dad being in the rubble or something. Uh, And instantly I sort of wondered, was Pete Davidson's response a reaction to that? Maybe, like he had the joke on standby and he was thinking about use it. Maybe wasn't. But then once kill Tony did that, he was like, I'm definitely doing it now. One Maybe I don't think so, because ten years ago, in the rows of Pete Davidson, it was already such a topic. It was very public. This is ground that's been tread before, so it probably didn't shock him.
00:25:17
Speaker 8: And I do wonder if maybe not even just a reaction specifically to Tony's joke, but just a reaction over all that. You know, Pete Davidson was seven when his dad died. He has been in comedy, so I think he is a lot more used to these kinds of jokes, which I think are gross, But maybe for him they're not as personal because he's had to separate himself from that. But I would have loved for him to have thought about, Hey, I grew up without my dad. There are two kids out there who are growing up without their dad right now, and the less difficult I could make this on them throughout their lives, the better. Like I think that it's I think it's gross too. Well, yes, it's so close, like I think that's what the Hollywood reporter said.
00:25:56
Speaker 2: Or it was.
00:25:59
Speaker 8: To make these jokes. The audience didn't care for it. But I think, like I said, it's not a question. Sure, you're allowed to say these things, but I think we should all be thinking about should we say these things when they are One, so many people that are affected by this too. It was so public, and three there is a family bring up there without their dad, and this is not going to be helpful or ageable at all.
00:26:19
Speaker 2: This I have a few thoughts on this.
00:26:22
Speaker 3: I would say, as far as getting upset about it, I think there's other humor I've seen from other people that makes me a lot more upset. Like I would say stuff that happened basically right away, dunking on Erica over like while she's very clearly grieving. I found that a lot more appalling than this.
00:26:44
Speaker 2: I didn't like this.
00:26:45
Speaker 3: I'm not gonna laugh at it, but in a sense, what we are being reminded of is Charlie is an iconic figure, a very famous figure. He Even people who didn't follow Charlie's stuff while he was alive, his death was basically the biggest news story in the country for that entire arguably the entire year, and so a lot of people are going to have knowledge of that or reaction to that and understanding of that moment, and that's going to lead to comedy. If you want an example, people make jokes about the jfk assassination, and they've been doing making humor out of that for a long time, and I don't think those jokes will ever be funny if you're RFK junior or if you're someone from his family, But it's just it's inevitable because they're such a cultural touchstone.
00:27:35
Speaker 2: And yeah, I agree, I think this is inevitable. At some point, I feel sort of just bound to the fact that I am now facing in existence where I'm gonna get media inquiries for the foreseeable future because people in a dark way.
00:27:48
Speaker 3: I am happy that Charlie is an iconic figure because he deserves to be, and it's going to have a lot of upside for faith, for revival, for setting a role model for concertos. But the downside is he's going to be a subject of humor, because anything great is subject to humor.
00:28:05
Speaker 9: Show.
00:28:06
Speaker 2: So there we were sort of talking about how kill Tony and Charlie. I don't I wouldn't say they were friends or anything close, but they didn't know each other.
00:28:14
Speaker 8: Mutuals there were there was a time, especially before the election win, comedy and the conservative movement were kind of conjoining forces.
00:28:25
Speaker 2: Podcast right, well, yeah, at the Madison Square Garden he made the joke about Puerto Rico that went by, Oh gosh, yes.
00:28:32
Speaker 8: So we have a picture from our inaugural ball and there you can see Arlie.
00:28:39
Speaker 3: The other thing I would know is it did happen at a roast, And I think Roast set apart in terms of this is where comedy is really offensive and anything goes and if you don't want.
00:28:49
Speaker 2: To see it, you should not watch roast. Yeah. I mean you also can't escape the clips on the Monday morning.
00:28:55
Speaker 9: Yeah.
00:28:56
Speaker 3: I just still like it. I still don't like it, but that's where this is going to happen.
00:28:59
Speaker 2: My my full reaction is did I like it? No? Of course I didn't. Do I find it distasteful, of course, I found it distasteful. Am I shocked? Not at all. Hollywood is a pretty dark place and they make pretty raunchy, bad inappropriate jokes. A lot of these guys are just gonna do that. So what are you gonna do? To your point, he is an icon, he is a he is a figure of history now and that has upside, that has downside, So it is what it is.
00:29:27
Speaker 3: I want to close the real quick on the topic just now because Producer Angelo had some very good thoughts on it, which he just pointed out because we said it was that a roasts our offensive humor, and he says, the point of a roast is to cross the line, but you keep receipts on everyone who crossed those lines and the people who laughed at it. Those are the stakes, those are the rules.
00:29:49
Speaker 2: So Pete Davidson, you cross the line.
00:29:51
Speaker 3: So anything goes with Pete Davidson jokes and the yeah we're gonna.
00:29:56
Speaker 2: Do We're gonna do a roast of Pete Davidson. Oh dear, he should come in studio. I bet that would actually be great to get Davidson and kill Tony.
00:30:04
Speaker 3: Well right here, we'll have to make sure that we are capable of making funny funny jokes first, but.
00:30:08
Speaker 2: I could make some funny jokes about Pete Davidson, all.
00:30:11
Speaker 8: Right, he did just have a baby, like around the same time I did, really yeah for Elsie and have babies him and I believe it's his wife. But him and Elsie Hewitt had a baby.
00:30:24
Speaker 2: And yeah, he's married.
00:30:26
Speaker 8: I don't know if they got married, but I know that they he was.
00:30:32
Speaker 2: They have obviously done married things with babies.
00:30:37
Speaker 8: With his partner. Welcome their first child on December twelfth, twenty twelve.
00:30:41
Speaker 2: Anyway, we'll keep that. Yeah, we we have the receipts there, mister Davidson, and we probably will use them because why not. You did? All right, So I want to get into this story. We haven't talked much about it. President Trump gave and I do feel obligated to sort of give the you know necessary. We're going to get into it with Citizen Kane in the next segment. But Iran is in a stalemate still. They sense a I guess a counter proposal to President Trump. He didn't like it over the weekend, so we're monitoring that story. We're keeping tabs on the Iran story. But in the meantime, there is a Haunt divider virus outbreak and we have not talked about it at all because you know, it's kind of like we don't want to feed the next Yeah, we don't want masks, and we don't want like mass hysteria anyway, weeks to control the spread.
00:31:28
Speaker 8: I will tell you people on TikTok are getting PTSD already.
00:31:31
Speaker 2: Yeah, you know, it's like, I totally agree. This is why I'm bringing it up because I've seen some ridiculous I guess reactions online and so we want to deal with that. Let's go ahead and play top twenty.
00:31:43
Speaker 10: Two CDC teams are working side by side with ASPER, with un MC, and with state and local officials to conduct assessments and provide ongoing monitoring and care.
00:31:54
Speaker 7: This this is.
00:31:56
Speaker 10: What strong public health system looks like. Experienced, professional, little, seamless coordination, and a shared commitment to protecting.
00:32:03
Speaker 7: The American people.
00:32:05
Speaker 10: We'll continue to follow the science, we will stay vigilant, and we will keep the public informed every step of the way.
00:32:12
Speaker 2: All right, So there, I mean, obviously this is you know, we've got We've got the Assistant Secretary of our Health, Admiral Brian Christine on the CDC's response to the Haunta virus. That means they're bringing out, you know, official people and making sure everybody feels safe and secure. So there was a cruise ship. This is another example of why cruise ships can be problematic. Actually, a lot of people love cruise ships. I'm not saying you shouldn't do them, but this does seem to be Remember when we well, coronavirus was a cruise ship. Remember we had I forget what the name of that cruise ship was. It was stuck out there and it was kind of like the first Petrie dish for people to study befive. Were six people on that ship died, didn't they People died?
00:32:54
Speaker 8: We're stuck on the ship with the dead passengers.
00:32:57
Speaker 2: Yeah, yeah, they were, And it was kind of like a test case to see what the survival rate was, what, you know, how it was going. But so here's the truth about hauntavirus is that it can be passed person to person, but it's very rare, and I've heard the description of it is that it is inefficient. And then so I get into the office and Daisy's like, well, it's in Arizona. Now I'm like, wait, what we have confirmed cases. That's not quite the case.
00:33:22
Speaker 8: There are I think five states that they're monitoring. It was New Mexico, California, California, Arizona, Washington, New Jersey, in Virginia. Yes. Oh and it says Georgia as a May twenty six. Okay, so sorry, not Washington.
00:33:37
Speaker 2: Yeah, no, not Washington. So okay. That what this means is there were people on board the cruise ship that have been flown back. They went to I believe Nebraska, and they're being monitored for if they exhibit any signs of the haunt of virus. Yes.
00:33:53
Speaker 8: Also, I just need to apologize. I was reading the previous highest states that had it. The current states Arizona, California, Georgia, New Jersey, Texas, and Virginia. Those are the states serving monitored.
00:34:03
Speaker 2: Monitored monitors. They don't have some huge outbreak.
00:34:06
Speaker 8: Okay, they're tracking residents from the cruise shop.
00:34:08
Speaker 2: The hauntavirus is about thirty to forty percent fatal.
00:34:13
Speaker 8: So I've never even heard of it. Have you guys heard of it?
00:34:15
Speaker 2: Yeah, I've heard of it. I've heard of it, but it's not a very common disease. It's just I don't know if they have any intel yet on where this originated from, but we will get the Assistant Secretary in his own words again explaining comforting you out there that this is not COVID two point zero to twenty one.
00:34:35
Speaker 10: And let me be clear, let me be crystal clear, the risk of hantavirus to the general public remains very very low. The Andes variant of this virus does not spread easily, and it requires prolonged close contact with someone who is already symptomatic. Even so, we have taken this situation very seriously.
00:34:57
Speaker 2: Yeah, so that's usually how it is.
00:35:00
Speaker 3: Disease is going to have that high of a fatality, it does at least spread more slowly with more difficulty.
00:35:07
Speaker 2: It's like ebola.
00:35:08
Speaker 3: Ebola is absolutely horrible virus, but you only got it by direct contact with body.
00:35:14
Speaker 2: Fluids as opposed to like SNAr asol. Yeah, exactly. That was what made COVID particularly challenge, is the way it's spread. Yeah, you know, and by the way I got the og COVID because I went to Florida.
00:35:24
Speaker 8: Way, I never had it, never had it, husband's gotten every single.
00:35:28
Speaker 2: Effect you've had, never had it. Thought it was a cold, but now, now you know COVID coronavirus is U. It's like basically the common cold at this point. Uh, it's weakened over time. But the og was was the original COVID was legitimately not the panic was.
00:35:45
Speaker 3: The panic was it was the Diamond Princess and seven hundred people on the ship got infected and as many as fourteen of them died. They says seven to fourteen. I don't know how they have that big of a range for this discrete group of people, but that's what happened.
00:35:57
Speaker 2: The panicking.
00:35:58
Speaker 8: They made a documentary about it, COVID Cruise.
00:36:01
Speaker 2: Yeah, COVID Cruise. Goodness, it's gonna be a what I need more documentary? Yeah, exactly. All right, but here's the bottom line. Do not panic. This is an inefficient human to human spreader. This is not COVID two point zero. And even if they tried to start doing that stuff, we will fight back. We will leave the charge. Okay. I want to talk to you about an issue so many Americans face, and that's health insurance. There's an organization I really really appreciate called Christian Healthcare Ministries CHM is a faith based alternative to health insurance. And this is real stuff. Folks like you've gotta listen in with HM. You're not paying into a company's profit margin. You're investing in a community with less overhead than the competition. You get reliable support through the giving and prayer of fellow members. Members contribute every month to help pay for each other's medical bills, allowing believers to afford the care they need. Because they're not insurance, you get access to your preferred doctor or hospital without networks. You heard that right. If you want to see massive savings in your healthcare budget, c HM has four low cost programs for every stage of life, starting at just one hundred and fifteen dollars a month plus. You can enroll or switch your program at any time. See why so many believers are taking a leap of faith. Start today by visiting Shministries dot org slash Charlie and use promo code Charlie for a fifty percent credit towards your first month. That's Shministries dot org slash Charlie and use promo code Charlie. Cain from Citizen Free Press who joins us now. Cain, welcome back to the show.
00:37:39
Speaker 9: Happy to be here.
00:37:40
Speaker 2: Well, we appreciate it. I think we should start just calling this segment vibes or vibe Check with Kin, Vibe check with Kin Cain. You have your finger on the pulse of the conservative movement, the base, probably better than anybody else around. You get this constant feedback loop with your audience, millions and millions of peep every day checking Citizen Free Press for their news and updates. So the question came, what are the vibes.
00:38:08
Speaker 9: Well, it's they're very positive.
00:38:10
Speaker 11: After the end of last week, obviously we had some really nice you know, Virginia Supreme Court decision and the US Supreme Court decision, so it was a really good weekend. Yeah, people are you know, I think a lot of as we look forward to midterms, obviously, you know, we don't really even know the issues.
00:38:28
Speaker 9: That are going to be in play in you know, in late October.
00:38:31
Speaker 11: Early November, but a lot of it is excitement and getting you know, and getting millions of voters. That was actually that was actually my mom. I just hung up on our We'll see how she responds to.
00:38:49
Speaker 2: That right after Mother's Day. Hopefully, hopefully you you got a lot of credit for for a job well done Yesterday I did.
00:38:58
Speaker 9: It was a huge amount.
00:38:59
Speaker 11: I think she actually that's about a bathroom cabinet that she needs moved that was delivered this morning. But yeah, look it's I'm gonna go ahead and predict it. I don't think I'm really going out on a limb, really going out on a limb here. But I think we're gonna have record turnout for midterms.
00:39:17
Speaker 9: I don't.
00:39:18
Speaker 11: I think these midterms are gonna be the highest turnout at least of the modern era. I'm not sure what you know, turnout used to be like before the internet. But so that's sort of the vibe. You know, we're already kind of getting into that mode.
00:39:32
Speaker 9: You've got Texas.
00:39:33
Speaker 11: You know, May twenty six is that Texas runoff election, and the early voting for that actually begins on the eighteenth, which is next Monday, and so people will, people will, you know, they need to get it right because Texas has sort of a weird thing.
00:39:51
Speaker 9: They have an open primary.
00:39:52
Speaker 11: So if you haven't, I if someone didn't vote in the earlier part of the or in the first primary, not the runoff, they're actually able to come in and vote for either party. So there's a danger that Democrats could sort of sneak in in in Texas and try to vote, you know, try to vote and and affect that race and vote for Cornan and prevent us from getting Paxton. Although I'll say last thing, there's a chance, you know, if Democrats.
00:40:21
Speaker 9: Actually believe I don't believe it myself.
00:40:23
Speaker 11: I think that if Cornan's the nominee, I think it depresses turnout on the Republican side.
00:40:29
Speaker 2: So I don't buy, yeah.
00:40:31
Speaker 11: That that electing Paxton is dangerous. I think if so so anyway, but Democrats at least they're spewing that, so you know, I'm not sure how they would get involved, you know, what they would do to you know, in that open primary if they would try to vote for Cornan or Paxton.
00:40:46
Speaker 9: But anyway, people need to be aware.
00:40:48
Speaker 11: If you're in Texas, you can start voting early on the eighteenth, and then we have the Virginia Sneaky plan. I don't know if you guys talked about none of them.
00:40:56
Speaker 3: We should because that's very fascinating, and I guess they have to do it by tomorrow. If they're going to do anything, I don't think they're likely.
00:41:03
Speaker 2: To explain what it is. So this happened to the service over the weekend.
00:41:06
Speaker 3: As you remember, last Friday, we got the great ruling from the Virginia Supreme Court struck down the referendum with their map.
00:41:11
Speaker 2: Because it was illegal.
00:41:12
Speaker 3: They flagrantly broke the constitution to do it, and Virginia Democrats started to flip out and over the weekend reported in the New York Times as a real idea that was passing around. They were contemplating convening the legislature and rush passing a bill to lower the mandatory retirement age on the Virginia Supreme Court because they have one from mid seventies to I believe fifty three, which would.
00:41:35
Speaker 2: Be younger than all the current justices.
00:41:37
Speaker 3: The force retire all of them, replace the entire Supreme Court with people who will just instantly bring back the referendum, let them do whatever they want. An insane constitutional coupdeta if they do that. And I was thinking what you said about turnout getting amped up, and it's you know, there's two ways to read this. On the one hand, we hear people think, oh, Democrats are doing well, they're pulling well, they might have a good midterm, but they seem to be flipping out. They are in constant panic. But the other the flip side of that is they seem so agitated that would be a sign they're probably going to turn out in big numbers.
00:42:13
Speaker 2: Yeah, you know, you're right. So here's the headline from the New York Times. It says, a private call reveals Democrats desperation over tossing of map a conversation involving House members from Virginia and the top House Democrat. We do have this image, guys. Top House Democrat reflected the fury and desperation that has gripped the party after Friday's ruling in the state. And of course that's Hakeem the bad Dream Jeffries there. And I will just let's let's play this clip just because Cain. I think this gives a good indication of the current mental state of the Democrat Party. You know, Hakeem Jeffries, you got to imagine, given his role is, you know, within the leader of the minority party in the House, He's getting incoming from everybody. You need to look like you're fighting. You need to fight back. This is a bloodbath. You guys are losing the tradition. You can imagine the pressure from the Act of as base is going to be is going to be tremendous. SOT sixteen.
00:43:10
Speaker 12: Republicans are in panic mode. Remember Ali, when we took the House back in twenty eighteen, we were twenty four seats short. We crossed over that hurdle, and in fact, in twenty eighteen we flipped a total of forty seats. So we're going to take back control of the House of Representatives. We're going to continue to make clear to the American people that we will lower their high cost of living, fix a broken healthcare system, and clean up the corruption that we're seeing in the country in the Congress, certainly with the Supreme Court, and deal with the most corrupt administration in American history.
00:43:43
Speaker 2: Now, we're going to need.
00:43:44
Speaker 12: Nationwide judicial reform. We're gonna need nationwide electoral reform.
00:43:49
Speaker 1: We're gonna need.
00:43:49
Speaker 12: Nationwide campaign finance reform, which is why we have to take the House back, take the Senate back, keep pressing forward, and then in twenty twenty eight take the President see back as well.
00:44:01
Speaker 2: Do you hear what he's calling for? Kane? Their electoral reform, nationwide judicial reform. They they what they're trying to do in Virginia with you know, mass retiring forcing the mass retirement of the bench. There is exactly what they would try and do, uh, dramatic, dramatic probably, I would say unconstitutional steps really certainly beyond the pale of our norms and customs and traditions as a country and as a body politic. They would do this nationwide.
00:44:33
Speaker 9: Yeah, they would, And I think they would.
00:44:35
Speaker 11: I think they would end the fill of US and they would pack the US Supreme Court, of course. I think that's yeah, I think that's pretty obvious. Hakeem Jeffries. Yeah, I mean Blake explained it pretty well. They had their freaking out in Virginia. They had they had you know, conference calls and meetings all weekend long trying to look at what alternatives there might be to kind of, you know, to kind of flip this again. I don't see I don't see Spanberger agreeing to it.
00:45:00
Speaker 9: I think there are a lot of sort of constitutional issues and I think.
00:45:03
Speaker 11: It would it would just be such blatant, naked, naked hypocrisy if they were to do it. But you know, one thing, I watched a lot of CNB, excuse me, a lot of MSNBC and CNN this weekend. You know, they're all freaking out about the Supreme Court Louisiana is the Kalay decision. But what they're not talking about is the fact that they were perfectly happy, and they're perfectly happy right now to have the Northeast have zero. You know, thirteen states in the Northeast have zero Republicans, and yet they freak out about what, you know, what may happen in the South.
00:45:32
Speaker 9: So it's blatant hypocrisy. I enjoy listening to them cry.
00:45:35
Speaker 11: Getting back to Blake's point about about turnout, I think it's going to drive their turnout though. That's why I think Trump's going to really turn this in to try to make this a presidential mid terms, really do a lot of rallies. So we're gonna need it. We're gonna need turnout.
00:45:47
Speaker 2: So yes, this the vibe check is positive. I'm still worried about our turnout. I agree with you that the the gutting of Section two of the Voting Rights Act will definitely inspire them to get out. They're they're already doing the Jim Crow two point zero and the this is why supremacy stuff, and I mean it's it's literally sanity, it's pure insanity, and they're they're doing all that stuff. I'm still worried. I have not seen proof yet that our turnout is going to be robust, and that's my concern. And no, and again I'm I'm worried about the Iran stuff. I think Iran is going to be depressing a lot of turnout. I think there's a lot of support in this audience for the President's action in Iran, but I'm worried that some of that coalition that we built head of twenty twenty four is not as enthusiastic. Your your your check, your your vibe check.
00:46:38
Speaker 11: Kine, Well, I think that you know, the last statement you made is correct. There's no doubt that a certain percentage, you know, a certain part of the of the Trump based vehemently opposed to this war. And so it's gonna hurt us a little. My you know, Look, I'm trying to be optimistic, but I also know that Susie Wiles has set a goal that that this You know that Trump is going to campaign for the for these mid terms like no president, no sitting president, has ever done before.
00:47:06
Speaker 9: So I'm sort of counting on that I'm counting.
00:47:09
Speaker 11: On lots of rallies in August and September and October, and I'm counting on sort of, you know, people understanding what's at stake, that impeachments at stake that you know, certainly I guess, you know, packing the Supreme Court. I think to do that, that's a complicated thing. I haven't really looked into. Let's say, the Senate word to pass that right and and the House. Let's say they won both. You know, they won both both houses of Congress. I'm not sure if that's something that has to be signed by the president, so Trump would still be able to veto, So maybe they won't be able to pack it until you know, maybe you guys can do that research really quick. But either way, you know, I think we need to scare our base. We need to scare the elector the Republican electorate at the mag electorate and let them know how important this is.
00:47:55
Speaker 9: You know, we are talking about the maps.
00:47:57
Speaker 11: I'm still all weekend long, I've been pissed off about the maps. There's that meme going around where it says like it shows, you know, the northeast with no Republican seats in thirteen states and they call that protecting democracy. And then they show the South where there would still be a few Democrat seats and they call that, you know, treason us to the Constitution. And I want to remind people because I wanted to know the numbers in Texas.
00:48:23
Speaker 9: So Texas used.
00:48:23
Speaker 11: To be twenty five thirteen in congressional seats before the change made three or four months ago.
00:48:30
Speaker 9: Now it's thirty to eight.
00:48:32
Speaker 11: So I think, you know, this is getting a little bit longer term, but once the new census kicks in in twenty thirty, maybe even in twenty twenty eight, Texas can change their map again. I mean, if Virginia is willing to go to eleven or excuse me, ten to one and all these Northeast states can be zero Republicans, I'm not sure that Texas.
00:48:50
Speaker 9: You know, we'll see, we'll see how rough it gets.
00:48:53
Speaker 11: But I just want to remind Democrats that we've got eight seats, or they have eight seats in Texas that we don't necessarily have to allow them to have.
00:49:00
Speaker 9: They really want to play hardball.
00:49:02
Speaker 3: Yeah, and I love how we've seen examples where they're discussing, oh, should we Jerrymander Illinois. Even more, they have that map what they call it, is it time to computer chip Illinois because it literally looks like circuits on a computer chip. And they do all of that to pick up two seats in Illinois. And then you look at Florida and you know a similarly aggressive, deranged Gerrymander, and it's just like normal looking districts. They all like nice squares and blocks, and then every Democrat Jerrymander looks like it was dropped from a Tron movie.
00:49:29
Speaker 2: Yeah, it's literally spaghetti wherever they have a proposed map ky and I don't know if you've seen it, where every single spiderweb goes right up to Chicago. So you could be in the south of Illinois and you'd be sharing a district with some portion of Chicago, because that's just it's so dominated by Democrats.
00:49:46
Speaker 3: On the question of turn out, I just had the bizarre thought, because we're saying Trump needs to do a bunch of rallies. Can the GOP turnout if President Trump isn't on the ballot? And I did just have the deranged thought enter my head. What if every Senate and House candidate change their name to Donald Trump. So then Trump would be on the ballot.
00:50:02
Speaker 2: That would be extreme. That would be extreme. All right, I gotta play. This is Mark Elias. He is erupting, He's in rage mode. Kine. This is of course the Democrats dirty trickster lawyer who says he's fighting for election integrity and for fairness and election. Really he's just trying to rig the game further for the Democrats. Top fourteen. I've not heard you this angry in a long time.
00:50:28
Speaker 9: Have we learned nothing? I mean, have we learned nothing?
00:50:31
Speaker 10: Has the broader legal community not learned anything?
00:50:34
Speaker 13: Have the have the brought other than the civil rights groups?
00:50:37
Speaker 10: Have people not learned that when you do this to block voters, it turns out bad for democracy for everybody.
00:50:45
Speaker 7: So yeah, I'm angry.
00:50:46
Speaker 13: I'm angry because of the appalling silence that's going on right now around this case.
00:50:52
Speaker 2: I am here for Cain, right into my veins. If Mark Elias is that upset, then something good is happening. Something good is definitely happening. Mark Olia is freaking out like that. Man, I'm gonna put that. That's gonna be like my wake up tone, uh, like my alarm in the morning. That will get you right up out of bed. Caine your reaction, Yeah.
00:51:14
Speaker 9: It's I enjoyed it. I can't remember what headline I put with that.
00:51:17
Speaker 11: Maybe wah wah wah, Mark OLiS It's yeah, I mean you can. You can just watch him and judge how you know, the far left socialist base is reacting. But I wanted I wanted to comment on a few things you guys mentioned. So one of you mentioned the Florida map. That's another remind that's kind of like the Texas map. Like even after the four seats that just switch, Democrats still have a large number of seats in Florida, and that can be that can be for you know, if they want to mess with this, they just need to know that we can mess back, that we could take you know, we could take more of their seats in Florida.
00:51:48
Speaker 9: You mentioned the Illinois thing.
00:51:50
Speaker 11: Everything stretching up to Chicago, you know, as a guy in southern Indiana, Bloomington, Indiana University. And by the way, Signetti and IU is going to the White House today at four pm, So.
00:52:00
Speaker 9: People want to if they're a Signetti and I. You think.
00:52:04
Speaker 2: There's football trying great Indiana football triumph.
00:52:07
Speaker 9: Yeah, that's correct.
00:52:09
Speaker 11: But so my point is, you know, southern Indiana is all rural, there's Indianapolis, and then you don't get anything until Evansville in a deep south. Southern Illinois is exactly the same way that state. Most of Illinois votes seventy percent Republican, seventy percent for Trump, but they get you know, they get over. Their numbers are canceled out by just crazy Cook County numbers and who knows well how much cheating.
00:52:32
Speaker 2: Actually yeah, yeah, I mean, listen, if the Democrats eating happens, Yeah, if the Democrats end up trying to push through this Puerto Rico and DC is a state and all this garbage, I mean, I think we need to I think we need to go full full boar ahead with like eastern Washington, eastern Oregon. We need to like break California into like three to five states. We need to get southern Indiana. We need to get southern Illinois as a as a its own state. I mean we I mean candidly, it's like if we have no rules and norms anymore, then we have no rules and norms anymore. And by the way, yeah, we've made other states in the past, but it wasn't her partisan purposes. I'd love to make Hawaii a territory again. My goodness, that'd be great. I'm not kidding, like this is where I'm at right now. Caine, Citizen Free Press. It's a must go to site. The stack is always active and he's updating it every day. Citizen Kane. Thank you so much, my friend. We'll talk to you soon.
00:53:29
Speaker 9: Enjoyed it. Thanks guys.
00:53:33
Speaker 2: The war in Iran is having a devastating effect on the people living there locally. What most people don't realize is it's affecting everyone on the global scale as well, even if we aren't there physically. Every time a missile is launched or bomb goes off, tiny microplastic particles are being spread into our atmosphere, leaching into our soil and water. And guess what They eventually end up in our body, causing harm. They cross the gut lining, leach into your blood and disrupt everything. It had been shown to alter gut bacterias, suppress your immune response, and increase your risk for heart attack, stroke, cognitive diseases, and cancer. There's now a plastic spoons worth of microplastics in the average human brain, but your gut can help fight back. Kimchi one from bright Core Nutrition is a potent ally in this toxic world. It's packed with over nine hundred probiotic strains unique to kimchi and proven to bind in excreet microplastics, helping you detox from the inside out. Your body was never designed to handle plastic, but your gut was designed to protect you. You must give it the right tools. Today. You can get an exclusive offer by visiting brightcore dot com slash Charlie, or for an even better deal, call bright Core for up to fifty percent off your order and free shipping. Give them a call now at eight eight eight three one seven nine to two five eight. So if you call them, you get an even better deal. So again, that's eight eight eight three one seven nine nine two five eight. Or you can visit them and get twenty five percent off at bright core dot com slash Charlie. Purchase only directly from bright Core Nutrition to ensure product integrity. They do not authorize resellers. So again brightcore dot com slash Charlie for twenty five percent off, or call them to get fifty percent off at eight eight eight three point seven nine two five eight. All right, without further ado, I want to bring in Stephen Moore, author of the Trump Economic Miracle and chairman and co founder of Unleash Prosperity. I sign up for his newsletter You should too, every day, solid as a rock, consistent. Last time we had you on, Stephen, youre like, do you get your the newsletter? And I was like, no, what are you talking about? What newsletter? And now I get it every day and I read it every day because you always have interesting insights and a new vantage point on kind of how to think about the economy. All right, we're we're hearing that Iran is kind of at it's not going well like we were hoping there's gonna be this peace deal. President Trump is saying the the ceasefire is essentially on life support. What does that mean for the economy? Energy prices in particular, obviously twenty percent of the oil goes through the straight there, straight at horror moves. What are you looking at? What are you expecting?
00:56:12
Speaker 7: Well, great to be with you again.
00:56:13
Speaker 14: And by the way, if people would like to get the what we call the hotline, just go to Unleash Prosperity dot com and sign up and is absolutely free costs nothing.
00:56:22
Speaker 7: So there's no reason why people wouldn't get it.
00:56:24
Speaker 14: And if you want to be the smartest person in the room, listen to the Charlie Kirk Show.
00:56:28
Speaker 7: And get the hotline every day.
00:56:29
Speaker 2: Thank you.
00:56:31
Speaker 7: So, look, it has been proven.
00:56:33
Speaker 14: It's been harder than we thought it would be, I think, harder than I think the President thought it would be to get the situation the supply chains open for the oil to flow through the through the strait of horm moves. And we're now paying nationally about four twenty five a gallon for gas. That's up from less than three dollars a gallon a few months ago. And that's like a tax on the US economy. So it's one of the reasons that you know, people are angry about prices. But I still remain confident that within a month or so, we're going to get the straight open. We're going to get gas prices back down as low as they were.
00:57:11
Speaker 7: I mean, people forget that back.
00:57:13
Speaker 14: You go back to January February, gas prices adjusted for inflation under Trump were as low as they'd been in fifty years.
00:57:19
Speaker 7: Everybody would love to see a return of that.
00:57:22
Speaker 2: Yeah, and so obviously that has trickle down effects across the economy. But the upshot here is that we have got a great jobs report from April and then we adjusted up March. So I don't know how that's all working. I'm going to play a clip here and you can tell me what you make of it. Top four.
00:57:42
Speaker 13: This is a payroll for the last two months dominated by private payrolls.
00:57:48
Speaker 2: How do I know, Nicole?
00:57:50
Speaker 13: Another nine thousand federal jobs lost. That means since the peak in October twenty four. October twenty four, remember that date, the federal government has done three hundred and forty eight thousand jobs. That's eleven and a half percent cut in the federal workforce. Despite that, jobs are gaining. It's all private sector.
00:58:12
Speaker 2: It's quite amazing, actually, all right, So federal government is its smallest that has been since nineteen sixty six. It's a huge accomplishment when we had this bloated federal bureaucracy, and yet jobs we're still gaining despite what's happening in Iran. What do you make of it? What's driving this?
00:58:30
Speaker 14: Well, that phenomenon that you just talked about, the short way of describing this is to say that Donald Trump is doing what he promised to do, which is to drain the swamp. And we have three million civilian government federal government workers.
00:58:44
Speaker 7: It should be about half that number.
00:58:47
Speaker 14: And so Trump has done an amazing job of against huge amounts of resistance in Washington c to reduce the massively the size of the federal workforce.
00:58:57
Speaker 7: And so kudos to Trump for doing that.
00:59:00
Speaker 14: All of these presidents who come in, they promise they're going to downsize the government.
00:59:04
Speaker 7: Trump has actually done it.
00:59:06
Speaker 14: So what we've seen is virtually not virtually, but every single job that has been created under Donald Trump in a second term, every one of them has been a private sector job. When remember when Biden was president, we get these pretty good jobs before saying, oh two hundred and fifty thousand jobs were created and like half of them were government.
00:59:24
Speaker 2: Yep. Yeah, I wonder how long it's going to take actually just to like chip away at what Biden added to the federal workforce, Like when do we get to parity there? Just to reset back to twenty twenty.
00:59:36
Speaker 14: He's Trump has almost fired as many federal workers as Biden has added them.
00:59:42
Speaker 7: So this is very good news.
00:59:44
Speaker 14: Now we have to start cutting the you know, the expenditures because it's a good thing to reduce the number of federal workers and regulators. And now we've got to get the spending down. I mean, look, we're facing a deficit of about two trillion dollars.
00:59:59
Speaker 7: As you know, our national death this is a disgrace, is.
01:00:02
Speaker 14: Now larger than our annual GDP, and that is that is a prescription for economic disaster. That's why I love Doge. We need Doge Part two, Part three, part four. Keep finding it. And by the way, if you notice, the liberals do not want to expose the fraud in the programs. The new report just came out last week from the General Accounting Office to the auditor is finding two hundred billion dollars of fraudulent payments in these income transfer programs. And that's just the fraud that they know about. So the real number is probably four times higher than that.
01:00:33
Speaker 2: Yeah, it's it's obscene. Actually, I want to talk about this issue of the federal deficit because affordability is such a huge topic of conversation, and rightly so, Steve, how do you make the point because listen, I understand that Iran is not helping things when it looked when you when you go to the gas pump and you realize gases at five dollars a gallon. But a lot of this came under Biden. Right, we are still dealing with structurable, actual affordability issues that we inherited from Biden. Yet the attention span of the average voter is pretty short. They're just going to put that on the economic power that's in office now. They're going to blame Trump as opposed to understanding this. Biden, how do you make the case when you're asked about affordability, whether that's housing, energy, what have you? Explain it in layman's terms so people can understand it. A lot of us had to do with the massive spending that we experienced under Biden, and in general, the affordability crisis is the lords of easy money. This printing of money now in the thirty trillion plus.
01:01:34
Speaker 14: So that's a great question, and we just ran these numbers on leashed prosperity. We estimate over the last roughly six years since the end of COVID, eighty are ready for this eighty percent of the increase in prices for things like groceries, things like housing, things like healthcare, eighty percent of that happened under Biden, not Trump. Now they've the prices have trickled up a bit in the Lafe last a few months because the higher energy prices. But I always say, yeah, are you angry about prices? Are you angry about what it costs to go to the grocery store? You should be, and you should be blaming Biden for that, not Trump. In fact, in Trump's first term, we had record low inflation. So it's really important for Republicans to make that message all the time and to connect the dots between It didn't just happen by coincidence.
01:02:25
Speaker 7: Why did we.
01:02:25
Speaker 14: See the inflation grow up go up to as high as nine percent under Biden, the worst record since Jimmy Carter was in office. And that happened because Biden came in and spent and borrowed and printed four trillion dollars period, hard stop. And when you do that, when you spend that kind of money and you print that kind of money, what's going to happen to prices? They're going to go up. Milton Friedman taught us that what is inflation? Too many dollars chasing too few goods. That's what we had under Biden.
01:02:52
Speaker 2: When you look back to the late seventies and eighties, Steven Moore unleash prosperity. When did that affordability crisis, that inflation crisis, When did people actually start feeling the relief? How long did it take?
01:03:09
Speaker 14: Well, so you know, I was I was in my teens in the seventies and I arrived in Washington in the early eighties when Reagan was president. And it took Reagan about eighteen months to get the I mean, he succeeded three of the worst presidents of American history, Nixon, Ford, and.
01:03:26
Speaker 7: Carter, and so it took it takes up a while.
01:03:30
Speaker 14: But here's the thing, and I think this is exactly what's going to happen to Trump.
01:03:34
Speaker 7: So I'm glad you asked this question.
01:03:36
Speaker 14: You know, by the end of about the middle of nineteen eighty two, everybody's oh, Reaganomics is a catastrophe. It's a failure. We have to change course. And Reagan's saying, no, stay the course, stay the course, stay the course. And by the beginning of nineteen eighty three, we had the biggest economic boom in American history, was what the Wall Street Journal called the seven Year Boom. And I think we could see that under Trump as soon as we get oil prices down, I think you could see one of the great economic booms like we had in the eighties. When I came to Washington, the Dow Jones was at a thousand. As soon as the Reagan boom started. You know, here we are at Dow fifty thousand. So I'm very bullish on the US economy if we can get a victorious and peaceful settlement there in the Middle East.
01:04:25
Speaker 2: Well, and Stephen, a lot of the reports right now is that corporate earnings are remaining high. That's why you're seeing the stock market go up. Are you seeing the economic underlying data that says that data is getting to the people that we're seeing that in higher wages whatever.
01:04:42
Speaker 7: Yeah, we are.
01:04:42
Speaker 14: In fact, you know, we do a report every month at Unleashed Prosperity that we give the data about six months before anybody else reports it. So in Trump's first term, we saw a six thousand dollars after inflation increase in median income in the United State. That was the fastest growth of median income in terms of dollar amount in history. And then through twenty twenty five, Trump's first year of a second term.
01:05:10
Speaker 7: We saw a twenty five hundred.
01:05:12
Speaker 14: Dollars increase in real medium income above inflation. So yeah, Trump is now in the last couple of months, inflation has gone up, so it's wages have fallen a little bit behind. But once we get inflation back down to two percent, I think you're going to see a real boom what Reagan used to call rising tide that will lift all boats.
01:05:33
Speaker 2: Steven Moore, co founder, and I mean honestly, at least prosperity is a great resource. Everybody needs to check it out, get that get that daily email in your inbox, and get educated. Be the smartest guy in the room. Stephen Moore, Thank you, God bless you.
01:05:48
Speaker 7: We'll thanks guys, have a gree week, you too.
01:05:51
Speaker 2: All right, Blake, It is Monday, and we've had a lot of news here, and so much of it is now hinging upon on President Trump's next move in Iran. We just talked about it with Steven Moore. So much of the economy, this inflation, this uptick in inflation, is hinging on this, The midterms hinge on this. It doesn't seem like we're about to get out of this anytime soon. That's my read on it, it seems like the blockade is working, but the Iranians are not just bailing on their aspirations to maintain a grip on power or to stop being a thorn in America's side. Yeah, I mean, it's the fundamental split of this war.
01:06:31
Speaker 3: Actually, when you read about it, it's we obviously have way more resources, we have way more weapons. We can essentially bomb them at will, we can kill their leadership at will. But it's one of the most asymmetric conflicts ever in terms of I think commitment on each side, so and that's what balances out that we have vastly more ability to project force on them, but actual enthusiasm for the conflict is.
01:06:59
Speaker 2: Very low with half the country, and even with the part that's in favor of it.
01:07:02
Speaker 3: It's not that they were chomping at the bit for the conflict, it seems. And then on the flip side, Iran they're dying in large numbers. They're not really able to strike us. But it's an ideological conflict of such intensity that it does seem a lot of them have decided they'll just handle whatever pain it takes and they'll just hope, you know, maybe we'll get a better deal in a year, or a better deal in three years, or maybe it just doesn't matter if we die, it's in Allat's hands.
01:07:28
Speaker 2: Well, and here's the issue. We have to remember, they killed forty two thousand protesters in the streets in January in Iran. So I'm beginning to become convinced that this conflict will not come to any sort of pure, clear, clean resolution with the regime that's currently in power remaining in power. I'm not advocating for regime change. I'm simply saying that this regime was deeply entrenched into the power structure of this country, and the citizenry is not armed. Now. Trump has hinted that they could arm the Iranians, that they might be getting weapons, and maybe that changes the calculation, but it doesn't seem like we're prepared to take out the regime, and probably rightly so. I think that would be a quagmire of incredible, incredible depth and duration that we do not want to enter into right now. So the citizenry is terrified, they're frightened, they're probably traumatized from forty two thousand other protesters being killed, and then on top of all of this, we have the Chinese aspect, right, So President Trump is going to be traveling to meet with Gi Over in China, and apparently he's going to be bringing fink Elon Musk, Tim Cook in about fifteen other industries titans from the United States talking about AI, talking about trade. There's an out new Wall Street Journal report that President Trump might be importing more beef to help lower prices and be It is a very tricky set of variables that President Trump is trying to navigate because on the one hand, he's got to bring down prices for affordability, he's got to show economic advancements in progress. But he's got these international I guess you know, issues that we still have to work out in order to get forward progress in those.
01:09:16
Speaker 3: World It's such an interesting with him bringing those industry leaders because it gets at the double edged nature of this, which is President Trump wants to bring up American industry. He wants America to be economically powerful and not just rich, but specifically productive. That's why we have all the tariffs. That he wants to bring manufacturing back to the United States. He wants things made in America done in America. Very old fashioned but in my opinion, I think you would agree correct view that a nation is not strong unless it is actually wielding the elements of strength. We can't just import everything from China. And yet those business leaders who are the best manifestations we have of that are probably the ones who are also lobbying him the hardest to lower those tariff barriers, because it's always that temptation. It'll actually work out better for us if we have more trade with China, if we offshore more things to China, if we build more things in China, it will work out better for everyone. That was the sales pitch we were made in the nineties and two thousands, and we now know that that was kind of a sucker's play.
01:10:17
Speaker 2: Yeah. Well, it's a very interesting thing because again, you Trump is balancing multiple inputs all at the same time. So we want to lower the affordability issue. Again, Stephen Moore just said that eighty percent of the affordability issue was created because of Joe Biden's terrible policies. I think that's a really important talking point, and I want you all to log that eighty percent of the affordability crisis that we are currently experiencing for blue collar, working class people in this country was created as a direct result of Biden's policies. But so then you inherit these problems where your population is suffering under a mountain of affordability issues, housing, healthcare, education. How much can you push the envelope to achieve long term beneficial goals, namely tariffs? Right, if you're tariffing goods that are hollowing out your working class, your industrial base, how much pain can the population take to achieve a long term end? That is the conundrum that you're in when you inherit such a mess from the previous administration without getting saddled with it politically.
01:11:16
Speaker 3: And and it's interesting because President Trump is he is a man of tremendous political instincts, and so he put it lightly like he often is a guy who's very focused on how does this play in the next few weeks, in the next few months. He's a guy who he often takes the short term view of politics, which I think.
01:11:35
Speaker 2: Is innate to his attitude.
01:11:36
Speaker 3: If you read the Art of the Deal, he says, I don't I don't get too high or too low because everything can change in a moment. And so I think he thinks I should focus on short term stuff because I have no idea what the future is going to be, so you might as well do what makes sense now, and tariffs are actually one of the big exceptions to that, where he really is taking the LONGI it's the thing he's most committed to. It's the thing that he plows ahead on despite opposition, uh from his own party, from his own base, from his own economic advisors. He's most fervently committed to that. It's like the thing he believes.
01:12:07
Speaker 2: In the most. For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to Charliekirk dot com