Human Events Daily with Jack Posobiec – Episode Summary
Episode Title: Trump Weighs in on Netflix Deal and the DOJ's New Commitment to Upholding 2nd Amendment Rights
Date: December 8, 2025
Host: Jack Posobiec
Guests:
- Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, Harmeet Dhillon
- Senator Colton Moore (GA)
Overview
This episode of Human Events Daily delves into three major current events:
- President Trump’s stance on the massive Netflix-Warner Brothers deal and ongoing media scandals, especially involving allegations about programming influence and board connections with Barack and Michelle Obama.
- Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon's announcement of a historic new Second Amendment section within the DOJ Civil Rights Division—the first of its kind, detailing active litigation and enforcement efforts to uphold 2A rights nationwide.
- Georgia State Senator Colton Moore formally announces his campaign for the state's 14th Congressional District (vacated by Marjorie Taylor Greene), sharing his "America First" platform, approach to immigration, and experiences fighting both state and national GOP establishment.
The episode weaves these stories with broader themes of political violence, civil rights, and traditional values, presented in Jack Posobiec’s direct, activist tone.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
1. President Trump, the Netflix–Warner Brothers Bid, and the “Stranger Things” Scandal
[03:36–07:14]
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Trump Critiques Netflix-Warner Brothers Merger: Posobiec explains that Trump spoke out at the Kennedy Center, raising antitrust concerns over Netflix’s $83 billion bid for Warner Brothers—and further critiques Paramount’s $108 billion hostile offer, criticizing their conduct with CBS/60 Minutes and ties to “woke lefties.”
“President Trump… said the deal could have big problems because of the antitrust issues… Plus he even came out today and said he’s not too happy with Paramount either because of what they’re doing with CBS and 60 Minutes.” — Jack Posobiec [06:43]
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"Stranger Things" & Alleged “Pedo Programming”: Posobiec links a recent controversy in Netflix’s “Stranger Things” to the Obama-Netflix relationship, tracing a timeline from their initial 2018 deal, Susan Rice’s board seat, and “woke” programming priorities.
“Netflix put pedo programming in Stranger Things.… Why did every single thing they do have to turn into gay race communism? Why did every single adaptation have to become racial and LGBT?” — Jack Posobiec [04:23]
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Obama’s Influence: Frequent allusions to the Obama family and high-level coordination on Netflix’s programming and company direction.
2. The DOJ’s New Second Amendment Division: An Historic Move
[09:22–19:14]
Guest: Harmeet Dhillon, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights
DOJ Action on Voter Rolls
- Multi-state Litigation: DOJ demanding, and suing for, access to voter rolls from resistant blue states; resolved successfully in several (e.g., North Carolina).
"We have demanded the voter rolls from all 50 states… four states we sued one and won a settlement… 14 states in 15 lawsuits." — Harmeet Dhillon [10:00]
Launching the 2nd Amendment Section
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Landmark Development: DOJ creates its first-ever dedicated Second Amendment section, enabled by the Supreme Court’s Bruen ruling.
“This is historic… This Attorney General did it and approved it, and I’m so proud to be part of it.” — Harmeet Dhillon [14:34]
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Active Court Challenges: Lawsuits and arguments against assault weapon bans, permitting delays (e.g., in Illinois, Hawaii, Los Angeles County), and excessive fees for concealed carry permits.
"Personally argued against Illinois’s so-called assault weapons ban… successfully sued LA County for unreasonable delays issuing concealed carry permits." — Harmeet Dhillon [11:50]
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Pushback from Dems: Internal skepticism from Congressional Democrats about necessity of a Second Amendment section.
“And to ask the question shows you why we need it.” — Harmeet Dhillon [12:53]
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Significance of Equal Civil Rights: Discussion on how 2A has historically lagged behind 1A in active legal protection.
“The Supreme Court has had seven times the number of decisions on First Amendment cases versus Second Amendment.” — Harmeet Dhillon [17:01]
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Outlook and Commitment: Vows ongoing vigilance, bipartisan outreach, and protection of self-defense as fundamental right.
"For the balance of this administration, this is going to be a top priority for the Civil Rights Division, Department of Justice." — Harmeet Dhillon [17:46]
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Memorable Reflection by Posobiec:
“The right to self-defense is the outward expression of the right to life of the individual. If you have that right, then you ought to be able to defend it.” — Jack Posobiec [17:59]
3. Rising Political Violence and DOJ/Civil Rights Response
[22:20–26:53]
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National Security Memos: Trump’s directive for the JTTF to prioritize domestic political extremism and violence, particularly after Charlie Kirk’s assassination and high-profile cases like the Luigi Mangione shooting.
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Youth Acceptance of Violence: Polls show up to 39% of young Americans accept some form of political violence; deep concerns about generational cultural shifts, lack of civic education, and law enforcement’s dwindling deterrent effect.
“There has been a trend of Marxism in our schools... anarchy and nihilism and this belief that our fundamental principles are not important anymore.” — Harmeet Dhillon [22:49]
“All Americans need to work together to, I think, really agree that political violence is never acceptable in our country, whether you’re right or whether you’re left, and insist on that and enforce that norm.” — Harmeet Dhillon [26:01]
4. Announcement: Colton Moore Runs for Congress, Georgia’s 14th District
[30:14–47:47]
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Formal Announcement: State Sen. Colton Moore launches campaign for MTG's seat, hailing his Trump-aligned record and early calls for 2020 election fraud review and actions against Fulton County DA Fani Willis.
“We are running for Congress in Georgia’s 14th congressional district… 100% pro-Trump. Remember we were the very first to call for a special session to review the fraud in the 2020 election.” — Colton Moore [30:15]
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Personal and Political Fight: Recalls his removal from the GOP caucus and forced ejection from the House floor for defending free speech.
“President Trump and I have a mug shot from the exact same camera at the Fulton County Jail, both of us, for defending freedom of speech.” — Colton Moore [31:05]
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Campaign Mechanics:
- Awaiting special election date from Gov. Kemp; could be as soon as February.
- Confirms conversation with Trump’s team—expects neutrality but hopes for endorsement due to his loyal "Trump’s floor leader" reputation.
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District Priorities:
- Anti-war/America First: Voters are focused on “kitchen table issues”—affordability, inflation, health care costs—not foreign wars.
- Group Healthcare Purchases: Advocates allowing large associations (e.g., Costco, Realtors) to negotiate insurance rates.
“Let Costco, let Amazon…put together a big group and buy health insurance… would bring in the free enterprise system.” — Colton Moore [39:53]
- Illegal Immigration: Speaks of local impacts, ICE raids, and support for Trump’s efforts, citing direct impact on local jobs.
- Crime and Public Safety: Supports deploying National Guard in Atlanta, blunt on need for law and order.
“We have to do things that lower the cost for everyday consumers… illegal immigration is another big issue for northwest Georgia.” — Colton Moore [39:53]
- Opposes Expanding Legal Immigration: Flatly says he would ban H1B/H2B visa programs, citing negative effects on local Americans.
"Would you ban the program?" – Jack Posobiec
"Yes." – Colton Moore [47:28] -
Conservative Platform and Sense of Urgency
“These freedoms are slipping away and we never get them back, Jack. So if we don’t defend now, then the next generation—they’re not even going to know what these freedoms were to defend them. Tyranny is only one generation away…” — Colton Moore [37:07]
Notable Quotes & Memorable Moments
-
On Netflix "Stranger Things" and Obama’s Influence:
"Netflix put pedo programming in Stranger Things… Barack Obama, Michelle Obama signed a massive deal with Netflix… do you wonder, when did Netflix get so woke? Why did every single thing they do have to turn into gay race communism?"
— Jack Posobiec [04:23] -
On DOJ’s New Second Amendment Division:
"For the balance of this administration, this is going to be a top priority for the Civil Rights Division, Department of Justice."
— Harmeet Dhillon [17:46] -
On Civil Rights Parity:
"The right to self-defense is the outward expression of the right to life of the individual, that if you have that right, then you ought to be able to defend it."
— Jack Posobiec [17:59] -
On Political Violence Among Youth:
"There has been a trend of Marxism in our schools… if you were to ask someone, what is the 13th amendment, what does that guarantee? What is equal protection? … They don’t even learn anything relevant."
— Harmeet Dhillon [22:49] -
On His Run for Congress:
"President Trump and I have a mug shot from the exact same camera at the Fulton County Jail, both of us, for defending freedom of speech."
— Colton Moore [31:05]
Important Timestamps
- [03:36–07:14] – Analysis of the Netflix–Warner Brothers deal, Obama influence, “Stranger Things” scandal
- [09:22–19:14] – Harmeet Dhillon on DOJ’s Second Amendment section, litigation updates, blue states’ resistance
- [22:20–26:53] – Political violence trends, DOJ Civil Rights response, youth poll data, cultural analysis
- [30:14–47:47] – Senator Colton Moore’s campaign announcement, local/national issues, Trump connections, policy stances
Tone & Style
- Posobiec’s Tone: Combative, unapologetically conservative, media-critical (“Real America’s Voice,” “fake news”), emphasis on “unfiltered” and activist reporting.
- Guest Tone: Direct, legalistic (Dhillon); a blend of populist, combative, and personal (Moore).
- Recurring Themes: “America First,” erosion of freedoms, concern about cultural and educational trends, repeated references to faith and traditional values.
Conclusion
This episode blends hard-hitting political commentary with breaking announcements—most notably the DOJ’s new Second Amendment section and a major congressional campaign launch. Listeners are given both a macro (national legal and cultural trends) and micro (local district campaign) perspective, unified by the episode’s insistent call to action for defending traditional rights and opposing both elite and leftist threats, as articulated by host and guests alike.
