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Peachy Keenan
This is an iHeart podcast.
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Guaranteed Human support for the show comes from Public, the investing platform for those who take it seriously. On Public you can build a multi asset portfolio of stocks, bonds, options, crypto and now generated assets which allow you to turn any idea into an investable index with AI. It all starts with your prompt. From renewable energy companies with high free cash flow to semiconductor suppliers growing revenue over 20% year over year, you can literally type any prompt and put the AI to work. It screens thousands of stocks, builds a one of a kind index and lets you back test it against the S&P 500. Then you can invest in a few clicks. Generated assets are like ETFs with infinite possibilities, completely customizable and based on your thesis, not someone else's. Go to public.com podcast and earn an uncapped 1% bonus when you transfer your portfolio. That's public.com podcast paid for by Public Investing Brokerage Services by Open to the Public Investing Inc. Member FINRA and SIPC Advisory Services by Public Advisors llc, SEC Registered Advisor. Generated Assets is an interactive analysis tool. Output is for informational purposes only and is not an investment recommendation or advice. Complete disclosures available@public.com this is Martha Stewart
Martha Stewart
from the Martha Stewart Podcast. Ever wonder how to make hosting look effortless? Here's a secret Getting ahead of the mess with new Reynolds Kitchens Countertop Prep Paper Just lightly wet the counter beforehand so the paper grips and stays in place. Then lay down the Reynolds Kitchens countertop prep paper so drips and spills stay on the paper, not all over your kitchen counter. You can roll out dough, prep a party spread or cook alongside family. When you're done, cleanup is as simple as lifting the paper and revealing that clean counter underneath. Effortless. You can use it for cooking and baking, prep and even crafting, especially when you need extra working space. Because when the mess is already handled, you can focus on what matters the the food, the people and the moment. It may look effortless, but now you know It's Reynolds Kitchens countertop prep paper. Take a tip from me. Wet it, set it, prep it, done. Make it easy. Make it with Reynolds Kitchens Countertop prep paper available now in the Reynolds Wrap aisle in Walmart.
Blake
Ryan Reynolds here from Mint Mobile. I don't know if you knew this, but anyone can get the same Premium Wireless for $15 a month plan that I've been enjoying. It's not just for celebrities. Do like I did and have one of your assistant's assistants switch you to Mint Mobile today. I'm told it's super easy to do@mintmobile.com
Peachy Keenan
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then full price plan options available taxes
Peachy Keenan
and fees extra fee full terms@mintmobile.com people
Blake
at work supported me while I was
Peachy Keenan
going through treatment by not treating me like somebody who was going through treatment. Treatment sucks. Cancer sucks. Being engaged with work really helped to oh, I just knew I was going to beat this thing.
Blake
Research shows there is a significant connection
Terrence Bates
between the ability to continue to work and cancer recovery. We can make work a better place for healing.
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Blake
The Charlie Kirk show starts now.
Andrew
The President's warning if any Iranian ships come anywhere close to our blockade, they'll be immediately eliminated. U.S. marines are ready to board Iranian oil tankers and CENTCOMs ready to neutralize any Iranian fast attack boats that slip into the strait to cause mischief. One of Iran's surveillance drones flew too close to one of our destroyers and we blew it out of the sky. And two tankers flying under false flags on their way to China were already intercepted and turned away. This is completely reversing everything Iran did to the strait. Now every nation ship in the world can sail out except Iran's. Fifteen American warships are involved in the operation. And we're about to start clearing the strait of mines so oil tankers have a clear path out. The Iranians dropped some mines into the strait, but they forgot where they put them.
Jeremy Carl
Tell us what you know, what we've learned. What you expect from a mine clearing operation off the coast of Iran?
Blake
Well, first it's an assessment of the threat, knowing what they have for mines and we've been watching that for years. So we knew the numbers, we know the types. And I'm sure that was part of the initial targeting process. And as the President said, we've taken
Terrence Bates
out all their abilities to deliver it.
Blake
So we're really working off the threat here.
Andrew
So how does this work?
Blake
Let's walk through the process.
Jeremy Carl
It starts with detection, using sonar to scan the ocean floor. Next classification.
Andrew
Not every object that you detect is a threat.
Jeremy Carl
Then identification cameras go down or remotely operated vehicles getting eyes on the target
Andrew
and then it's possibly confirmed as a mine.
Jeremy Carl
And then finally neutralization. A small controlled explosive charge takes the mine out safely.
JD Vance
Whether we have further conversations, whether we ultimately get to a deal, I really think the ball is in the Iranian court because we put a lot on the table. We actually made very clear what our red lines were. We also made clear, Brett, that we actually would. Would be very happy. The president, United States has said he would be very happy if Iran was treated like a normal country, if it had a normal economy. Economy, if its people were able to prosper and thrive. But in order for Iran to be a normal country economically, it's going to have to be a normal country from the perspective of not pursuing a nuclear weapon, and it's going to have to be a normal country from not pursuing terrorism. And it's one thing for the Iranians to say that they're not going to have a nuclear weapon. It's another thing for us to put in place the mechanism to ensure that's not going to happen. Part of that is, of course, to ensure that they don't have the ability to enrich uranium, which is how they got so close to a nuclear weapon before. So those are really the two things where, frankly, the Iranians, I think, did make some progress. They moved in our direction, which is why I think we would say that we had some good signs, but they didn't move far enough.
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Eric Swalwell is resigning from Congress. He said this in a statement. I am deeply sorry to my family, staff and constituents for mistakes in judgment I've made in my past. I will fight the false, the serious false allegation made against me. However, I must take responsibility and ownership for the mistakes I did make. I am aware of efforts to bring an immediate expulsion vote against me and other members. Expelling anyone in Congress without due process within days of an allegation being made is wrong, but it's also wrong for my constituents to have me distracted from my duties. Therefore, I plan to resign my seat in Congress. I will work with my staff in the coming days to ensure they are able, in my absence, to serve the needs of the good people of the 14th congressional district.
Laura
Well, let's make no mistake, Laura. This escalated because they found out that I work for Turning Point usa. This isn't the first time that I have been confronted and assaulted at this point for journalism on the streets of the United States of America. But since Charlie Kirk's assassination, this is now the third time that people have come up to me after I have not been interviewing, not been engaging, but simply being on the street and filming a protest. Figured out I work for Turning Point USA and have made a point to confront me, to threaten me, to harass me, and now brutally assault me to prove a point. So that's why this escalated. Laura. I wasn't interviewing anybody. I wasn't engaging with anybody. I was and I apologize. This is the first time I'm talking about this salt and I I'm scared to report. Laura this is my job. It's what I've been doing for the last six years and I'm terrified to do my job.
Public Investing Platform Announcer
Charlie Support for the show comes from Public, the investing platform for those who take it seriously. On Public, you can build a multi asset portfolio of stocks, bonds, options, crypto and now generated assets which allow you to turn any idea into an investable index with AI. It all starts with your prompt. From renewable energy companies with high free cash flow to semiconductor suppliers growing revenue over 20% year over year, you can literally type any prompt and put the AI to work. It screens thousands of stocks, builds a one of a kind index and lets you back test it against the S&P 500. Then you can invest in a few clicks. Generated assets are like ETFs with infinite possibilities, completely customizable and based on your thesis, not someone else's. Go to public.com podcast and earn an uncapped 1% bonus when you transfer your portfolio. That's public.com podcast paid for by Public Investing Brokerage Services by Open to the Public Investing Inc. Member FINRA and SIPC Advisory Services by Public Advisors, llc, SEC Registered Advisor Generated Assets is an interactive analysis tool. Output is for informational purposes only and is not an investment recommendation or advice. Complete Disclosures available at public.comdisclosures Ever wonder
Martha Stewart
how to make hosting look effortless? Here's a secret. Getting ahead of the mess with new Reynolds Kitchens countertop prep Paper Just lightly wet the counter beforehand so the paper grips and stays in place. Then lay down the Reynolds Kitchen's countertop prep paper so drips and spills stay on the paper, not all over your kitchen counter. You can roll out dough, prep a party spread, or cook alongside family. When you're done, cleanup is as simple as lifting the paper and revealing that clean counter underneath. Effortless. You can use it for cooking and baking, prep and even crafting, especially when you need extra working space. Because when the mess is already handled, you can focus on what matters. The food, the people, and the moment. It may look effortless, but now you know. It's Reynolds Kitchen's countertop prep paper. Take a tip from me. Wet it, set it, prep it. Done. Make it easy. Make it with Reynolds Kitchens Countertop prep paper. Available now in the Reynolds wrap aisle in Walmart.
Peachy Keenan
People at work supported me while I was going through treatment by not treating me like somebody who was going through treatment. Treatment sucks. Cancer sucks. Being engaged with work really helped to. Oh, I just knew I was going to beat this thing.
Blake
Research shows there is a significant connection
Terrence Bates
between the ability to continue to work and cancer recovery. We can make work a better place for healing.
Ad Read Assistant
Learn more and sign the pledge@workingwithcancerpledge.com Every
Jacob Siegel
day there's a battle for your mind.
Blake
Raging information coming from every angle with the will to deceive. Fear not, you found the place for truth. The voice of a generation that still has the will to believe in the greatest country in the history of the world. This is the Charlie Kirk Show.
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Buckle up.
Blake
Here we go. All right.
Andrew
Welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show. I'm at the Mobile Y Refi Studios here in Palm Beach, Florida. The beautiful Palm Beach. Blake's holding it down in Phoenix. How we doing, Blake?
Blake
Oh, it's doing great. We're in the main y Refi studio. It's way cooler. You are than the Mobile y Refi studio.
Andrew
So, Blake, I'm in. No, that's not true. This is pretty cool. I will say, but either way, why Refi is great. Check them out. Investyrefi.com Blake, you're going to be my beard today. That's how I'm referring to it. You are our. You have a great beard. So it works. So we have lots of Catholic news. We're a bit in a state stasis point right now with the blockade. We're in day two. It does seem like most vessels are being blocked from that area around Iran. There's about two dozen ports, maybe up to 30 Iranian ports that are being blocked right now, which does hold long term significance. We will get into that as we know more. But vessels are being turned away. So as we're in this stasis in the Middle east, we want to turn our attention to some of this action that's happening with on multiple fronts now, not just between President Trump and the Pope, but with some of the cardinals. And now he's also. The Pope has visited Algeria, which comes with a whole bunch of added controversy. And since you are the resident Catholic here, Blake, let's let you take it away.
Blake
Ah, you're really, really. It's just a bad day for me. It's a bad day. It's always annoying when Catholic leaders are making me frustrated, but it's inevitable. It's a big tent. It's a big chur. Real quick, before I tee off, today is election day in Virginia. If you ignored all of our warnings that you needed to vote early there. Go vote. Now you have vote 5 or 6 hours left to go to vote. Normally you only get to vote in one House race. Every cycle you're voting in five effectively. And it matters even more because in Maryland, their bid to redraw their map actually just failed. Democrats couldn't work it out. They started arguing too much. Failed. So we saved a House seat there. We can save 5 seats today. Get out and vote. Anyway, back to the church. So we were talking a lot about the Pope, what he said about the conflict in Iran. He was saying, God doesn't listen to the prayers of those who wage war. And then the President said some stuff critical of the Pope, said he was soft on crime. And we didn't get to another topic that I think is equally important, which is we have a set of cardinals. Now there are the cardinals are the senior clergy of the Catholic Church. They elect the Pope. There are Several, about almost 200 of them around the world. There are 17 of them in the United States. But three of them went and did an interview with 60 Minutes on Sunday where they were saying stuff just very overtly critical, not just they weren't just complaining about the war, they were even complaining about about immigration enforcement in this country. And I'll be frank, that annoys me a good bit because it's one thing to say we should promote peace. Christianity's always promoted peace. It's one thing to weigh in on something like something so clear cut as, for example, abortion or assisted suicide, where the Church has always held the same view that for 2,000 years. But there are unfortunately Christian leaders who have come along and they've adopted this view that did not exist 100 years ago, certainly did not exist 2000 years ago, that it's actually immoral for nations to have borders. So we want to play some clips from that. So this is one of those Cardinals, Cardinal Joseph Tobin, and He's complaining about ICE doing their job. Let's play clip number 10.
Peachy Keenan
This past January, Cardinal Tobin called Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ice, a lawless organization. Cardinal, those are strong words to call ICE a lawless organization. Why did you do that?
Blake
I didn't say that they were people
Terrence Bates
without law, but when people act in this way, when they have to hide their identities to terrify people, when they can actually violate other guarantees of our Constitution and Bill of Rights. Well, I think somebody's got to call that out.
Blake
And I'm not the only one.
Andrew
Oh, man, I have so many notes, so many thoughts. First of all, first of all the masks, Mr. Cardinal, are because they're getting doxed and their lives are getting threatened. Second of all, what about your criticisms for the protesters, the agitators, those who run kamikaze missions with their cars trying to run over ICE agents? Any thoughts about that? And by the way, Blake, again, you are my cover today. But it strikes me because some of the same allegations, not to deviate too far from what you're talking about here, are leveled at the Pope himself because here he is in Algeria, which is a predominantly Muslim country, and he hasn't visited Nigeria, where the 7,000 Christians have been massacred in recent years. I mean, up to 50,000 since 2009. So it's the selective outrage that I find just the most troubling because then it just smacks of bias, of cognitive dissonance.
Blake
Well, yeah, we can be frank. The Pope runs a. He oversees a global organization. There is a limit to everything he can, certainly where he can travel, everything he can say. But that emphasizes the point you're making, which is you create a narrative by what you choose to emphasize the most, what you choose to talk about. Even with Algeria now, there actually are, there are persecuted Christians in Algeria. They are a small minority of a few thousand. And the Pope did talk about that. There have been martyrs in Algeria within the last 30 years. But at the same time, yeah, if he's going to broadcast loudly that immigration enforcement is a problem, but not the fact that, for example, in Algeria, in Algeria, churches get shut down by the government pretty often. They find excuses to hinder Christian worship. In Algeria, Christian proselytization is illegal. They have convicted people of this within the last decade. And when you're not talking as much about that, not as loudly about that, but you're very loudly. For example, having church leaders say members of a country's government enforcing that country's long standing immigration laws are a problem. We have another clip from that that I want to make sure we play. Let's play Clip number is that 11?
Peachy Keenan
One of the busiest stretches of the southern border for illegal crossings.
Blake
I feel it got to a point where it was getting out of control.
Peachy Keenan
Under Biden?
Blake
Under Biden, yes.
Peachy Keenan
You believe in strong borders?
Blake
Yes.
Peachy Keenan
So what's wrong then with the current policy?
Blake
This is a roundup of people throughout the country. People who have been living good, strong lives, been here a long time, raised their children here. Men, their children born here and are citizens. That's what our objection is.
Public Investing Platform Announcer
I would like to know what Catholics
Blake
feel about this indiscriminate mass deportation I think that it's very clear.
Public Investing Platform Announcer
The American people are saying, we really didn't vote for this.
Blake
That really upsets me because that is bad moral leadership from men. You're in a senior position. You should know better. It is not indiscriminate. What it is is. It is an enforcement of our country's laws. And, you know, it's actively immoral, enforcing laws only for some people and ignoring them for others. And this weird waffling where he says, well, it was out of control under Biden, but I don't like how it looks. Now they're grabbing people who are. Who are inside the country. You're not standing up for the laws of this country. If you wanted to be a good leader, you might say, hey, parishioners, you shouldn't break America's laws to come here. You should try to come here legally the way millions of other people in this country did. You can still go to mass in your home countries. Like this is not an attack by the Trump administration on the church. It's so frustrating to see this. I know Charlie would always call out bad pastors among Protestant Christians. I think it's our duty to call out bad cardinals among the Catholics.
Andrew
Well, and it strikes me, Blake, that he'll call out ice, I think, falsely false accusations against him, but says nothing about, you know, illegal sex trafficking and the murdering of American citizens at the hands of illegals. So. But I digress more on this. We're actually gonna see if we can get Kevin Bosovic to join us from Ireland. In the meantime, I want to tell you about Strong Cell Blake once again. It's later here on the east coast, so I've already drank my Strong Cell. Two ounces once a day will deliver nadh to your cells directly to the mitochondria in your cells. It is the power source for your cells, and nadh is the power source. This will deal with a whole host of things, including brain fog, fatigue, chronic illness, any of these things that you're like, I can't get over this. Try StrongCell today. I promise you. Give it four to six weeks. It will make a difference. At least that's been my experience. Check it out. StrongCell.com, use promo code CHARLIE at checkout to get 20 off. You gotta get on board with the nadh craze because it really does work. We'll be right back.
Peachy Keenan
All right.
Andrew
Welcome back to the Charlie Kirk Show. I believe we do in fact have Kevin Posobic, who is on assignment live from Dublin, Ireland. Kevin, can you hear me?
Kevin Posobic
Yes, I can. Andrew, can you hear me? Can you see me?
Andrew
Yeah, we got you, brother. All right, tell us, give us for a lot of people at home not paying attention to how this protest started. I know it's about gas prices sparked by Iran, but there's a lot of layers to this. Tell us what it's like there on the ground and how, how it came to be.
Kevin Posobic
Well, Andrew, so what happened is that Ireland is a nation of about 6 million people. And just imagine Kamala Harris had won the election and they imposed all these green New Deal policies. So the farmers are protesting here. That's what we're seeing with these tractor protests all along the countryside this weekend. So what has happened is that there's taxes on top of taxes being taxed 60% on the leader of petrol over here. And you know, we're seeing that they're protesting because that is unfair. And they're already being attacked. First off, for all asylum seekers, you know, refugees, this and that from last year. So now on top of it with the inflation from the Iran conflict, these people are fed up. These are blue collar people. This is going to pulse political dividend because this is not just immigrants. With the government out into today on a motion, so no confidence. Okay, and the fifth masses this evening at 7pm here, that would effectively mean that Patricia, the Prime Minister of Ireland would have to resign along with his cabinet. And you'll have to be reelections to get the Irish patriots here heard and effectively the fuel prices lowered to a affordable, efficient rate. So, you know, make a living.
Andrew
So. So Kevin, if I'm understanding this right, so you've got a nation that has been inundated with foreigners. A lot of signs out there saying Ireland's full, Ireland for Ireland for the Irish. Then you've got the Iran war that kicks off, which obviously has fuel shortages, fuel prices spiking, especially in Europe. This has added on top of the price increases that have come through green New Deal type taxes. And then there's already taxes that have been imposed because they need to pay for the social services for these new immigrants. So meanwhile the blue collar Irish are getting squeezed at all ends. They're sick of it. This kind of reminds me of the. Was it the Dutch tractor protest as well? This, this populous energy from the working class of the Europeans. So what, what are you seeing out there? Is it safe? Are they staying peaceful? Is it rowdy? What, like what do they hope to accomplish with this protest?
Kevin Posobic
Sure. So today. Yes, and exactly we saw it in the Netherlands and in Germany and in Canada a few years ago and even in America slightly. So they've taken the, the playbook here and they're doing slow rolling protests to show that they control the food supply. Basically. No food or no farmers, no food. Okay. So what it is here is that today it is peaceful. And you know, there are some, there are some chan. Old songs and they want to be basically overthrowing the government by lawful means. And, you know, there's no, there's no shame in that. There's a lot of Irish pride going around. But again, this crosses both political spectrums here. That's not about the left or the right. Liberal, conservative, because it affects everybody. And yeah, so far it's peaceful. I mean, by Irish standards, some of the most passionate people on earth here.
Andrew
Yeah, the audio's getting a little bit muddy. It reset when we, we, we paused for a second there, so maybe it'll reset here. The. I'm curious, is Conor McGregor. I've seen him be active on this issue. Are, you know, he, he speculated that he might want to run for office. Is he, is he involved in any of this?
Kevin Posobic
I think so. I haven't seen him around. I haven't heard his. Current updates online. And I think he's just more of a figurehead and he's posting his support. I don't think he's active involved.
Andrew
All right, Kevin, I'm having trouble, we're having trouble with your audio here. So as far, Blake, if you, if you're hearing something different, I, I'm, I'm having.
Blake
Same, same issue, unfortunately.
Andrew
Yeah, Kevin Pasovic. Let's. We're going to call it right there, my friend. Good job. Stay safe. And we'll check in for more updates as this story develops. But there is a potential election that would be a vote of no confidence within the Irish parliament. Thank you, Kevin. Which would obviously spark a huge change in that nation's government, sparked in part by the conflict in Iran. Blake?
Blake
Well, I mean, Andrew, we're just gonna have to figure out whether the demonstrators, if the demonstrators want less migration, that means it's a riot and an outburst and they need to crack down and seize their bank accounts. Whereas if they want a far left government to overthrow and they want to overthrow the government that way, that means, you know, they're marching for democracy.
Andrew
Good trouble versus bad trouble. Yeah. Do you see? Yeah, you're obviously being a little bit sarcastic there, but I do think that's important. A note you're making is that the same tactics could be deployed from the right or the left. But the media will paint one as virtuous, the other as sinister, illegal.
Blake
Yeah. And frankly, let's circle back to what we were saying in part one. Like, you know, it's such a great point with those cardinals where supposedly one of them complains, oh, ICE is a lawless organization. Well, first of all, that's not true. But second, you know what else is lawless? Millions of people coming into your country, living here illegally, working here illegally, stealing people's identities, all sorts of things. It's, you know, remember a few months ago, there was that New York Times profile of the guy who stole this other person's identity. And they tried to frame like it was a tragedy affecting two families. The guy whose identity got stolen and who got blamed for a bunch of crimes he didn't commit and got harassed by the irs. And the guy who stole his identity. It talks about that guy going to church in the article. And you know what I'd always wonder? Why doesn't that guy's priest ever say, hey, you should find a way to go back to the country you're legally allowed to be in. Hey, are you stealing someone's identity? You shouldn't be doing that. It's so frustrating what these religious leaders do.
Andrew
Well, and, you know, to kind of make a further point. What you're saying, Blake, is that, you know, today there was a big breaking news story. We're actually gonna have Mary Margaret Olhan tomorrow on it. But this, the DOJ has released a 800 page report how the Biden administration and the Biden DOJ were targeting pro lifers, many of whom are Catholic, simply for their views that are long standing church positions on life and unborn babies. But you don't see a lot of noise being made about that. So that makes me wonder. Again, the selective outrage is very, very frustrating. And again, I'm not a Catholic. Blake, you are a Catholic. Putting President Trump's beef with Pope Leo aside, these are massive, massive glaring inconsistencies. And I think they need to be called out. And we're gonna continue doing that with Peache Keenan, who joins.
JD Vance
How is it that people get to
Terrence Bates
the conclusion that convertibility into gold ended in 1971? Gold was fixed at $35 an ounce. Fast forward to today. And the US dollars lost over 85% of its purchasing power. Gold, on the other hand, has increased in value by over 12,000%. And that's why central banks are buying gold at record levels. It's also why major firms like Vanguard and BlackRock hold significant positions in gold, and it's why we encourage you to consider diversifying a part of your savings with physical gold from the Birch Gold Group. It starts with education though. The Birch Gold Group just announced their Learn and Earn Precious Metals. Eventually. This free online event rewards you for learning the basics of investing in precious metals. Sign up to get free silver on your next purchase. Get even larger incentives as you go. The more you learn, the more you earn. But you have to act fast as this special event only runs through April 30th. The dollar lost its anchor in 1971, but you don't have to lose yours today. Text the word America to the number 989-898 to join the Birch Gold Group's Learn and Earn Precious Metals event by April 30th. Text the word America to 989898 today. Terrence Bates here with your Real America's Voice news break. Thanks for being here with us. Congress is back in session following a two week Easter and spring recession. Monday's return came with a shakeup in both parties as embattled California Democrat Congressman Eric Swalwell resigned filing sexual assault and misconduct allegations. The move comes after the seven term representative dropped out of the California gubernatorial race and then caved a bipartisan pressure to give up his seat. The House Ethics Committee had also launched an investigation into the California Democrat. While the resignation would have been a win for Republicans when it comes to the balance of power in the House, it was short lived and a stalemate as Texas Republican Congressman Tony Gonzalez announced his retirement from office on Monday. Gonzalez had already said that he would not seek re election. That's a quick check of your headlines.
Blake
Relentless in spirit. You're listening to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Kevin Posobic
All right.
Andrew
Did you know that Patriot Mobile, they're the good guys. Glenn and Jenny Story, we love them. Great activists, great business owners. Did you know that they have access to all three major US Carriers already? So when you sign up with Patriot Mobile, you get the same great service you've always come to expect. But instead of paying your money to Woke Wireless, which then uses it to film fund the Alphabet Mafia groups or whatever, you are funding Christian conservative causes that stand up for your values. Stand up for Christian conservative values across the country. They help this show. They help Turning Point usa and so much so support this show. Support the cause. Support this movement that is the last firewall to freedom in the Western world, which is the conservative movement in the United States. Support Patriot Mobile. You can do so right now by going to patriotmobile.com charlie or call 972 Patriot today. Use promo code Charlie for a free month of service. So you have two ways. Patriotmobile.com Charlie or call 972 Patriot. Use the promo code Charlie for a free month of service. We love Patriot Mobile. They are the good guys. There is no excuse left not to make the switch. So please do it. I have two networks on one phone and that is the way I recommend doing it if you can. That way you're always with service and. And we just love those guys.
Terrence Bates
So.
Andrew
Patriot mobile.com Charlie all right, without further ado, we have the great Peachy Keenan. It's been a little while since she's been back on the show. Welcome back, Peach Keenan.
Peachy Keenan
Thank you so much. Great to see you guys again.
Blake
You're one of the holdouts in California. That's why we wanted to get you on. There's been dramatic events afoot in that state. We have a lot of fans in California. They're always asking if we can save their state. We're always pretty honest. It's going to be tough, but it does create a lot of entertainment and content and lessons for all of us at least.
Peachy Keenan
Yeah, it's a content gold mine, but, yeah, please, please, Blake, save me. Get me out of here.
Blake
So, yes, the big news. The big news, of course, yesterday. Yesterday we talked about Eric Swalwell's unfolding scandal that forced him to drop out of the governor's race, where he was the front runner. Now Eric Swalwell's done. He went from two weeks ago. He was gonna be the next governor of California, probably. And now he's out of the race, out of Congress, out of American life, possibly out of the public if they end up indicting him. He sort of issued a strange statement where he apologized to everyone he hurt while also saying the allegations against him are false. We can't really make much of that. We also have very entertaining responses from his rivals for the governorship. I think this one sent me by the team Katie Porter, where she says the allegations against Congressman Swalwell are horrifying. I'm thinking of the courageous women who have come forward to share their stories. We believe you and stand with you. And then, thanks to Elon Musk's ex, we have the lovely reader's note. Katie Porter is an alleged domestic abuser who poured scalding potatoes on her ex husband's head. She has been seen on camera verbally berating staff for minor slights and has been described as abusive herself.
Peachy Keenan
Yeah, we're so Blessed by the copious wonders of the Democrats in California. And unfortunately, now we're looking at. I mean, I'm happy to see Swalwell go down. You know, he was such a thorn on everyone's side, but it was so strategic. It would have been great if this had come out when it was just him versus Steve Hilton after the primary. And then she would have been, you know, kind of just swept into office. So of course they had to drop it now. And it was very strategic. They all had the same talking points. And now, unfortunately, as happy as I am to see Swalwell go down and hopefully he'll go to jail, which is where all California Democrats actually belong. Unfortunately, now we're looking at Tom Steyer, which is like worse than news stuff.
Andrew
Like, I don't, I don't know what
Peachy Keenan
it's like when you're drowning, someone hands
Blake
you an anchor as a California lifer, kind of.
JD Vance
Yeah.
Blake
Lay out. What does this. We were discussing yesterday, what does this really tell you about the California Democrat Party, where it's that mixture of ineptitude, you might say, because the state isn't well run yet. Also, there's this real killer instinct in how they execute political hit jobs on their own people and of course, how they keep a stranglehold on their state, no matter how messed up it is.
Peachy Keenan
Yeah, I mean, they're ruthless. And, you know, Sacramento has been run for, I think, decades now by a kind of cabal of, you know, far left, almost like Marxists. You see some of these with like Scott Wiener, the San Francisco state senator, who's looking like he'll replace easily replace Nancy Pelosi seat in the House. And he's the one who made it legal to give someone, knowingly give someone hiv, that is no longer a felony in California. That is a misdemeanor. He also made it okay for grown men to sleep with 16 year olds. That is no longer a felony. That is just kind of not something you should probably. You shouldn't do, but it's fine if you do. And so here's California. We're getting rid of Gavin Newsom, which is a blessing, but I am very nervous about the future. We could be looking at knockout punch of Tom Steyer as governor and Nithya Rahman as mayor of Los Angeles, who I know it's hard to believe, but she's actually worse than Karen Newsom. Karen Best.
Blake
How is that possible? What would we get? Would we. Is she Mamdani, but on the west coast or what would be the changes?
Peachy Keenan
Yeah, I'd say she's probably worse than Mamdani. I think she's a lot smarter than him. Very clever. She's actually a multimillionaire kind of Hollywood elite. Her husband is a very well known, very successful television writer. He's. He was one of the executive producers of Modern Family and all these big TV shows. But she pitches herself as this woman of the people. She's an open communist. And during COVID she was a thorn in the side of every small business in la. She was draconian in the when it came to Covid regulations for businesses reopening. And now she's presenting herself as this woman of the people's populace. We're going to fix everything. We're going to finally get the homelessness off the street by building homes for them. And street medicine teams are going to go in and you know what, give them all methadone and keep them in their tents. So it's going to be a lot more of the same. And the thing is that she's a lot smarter than Karen Beck, so not a good combination for us.
Andrew
What about Spencer Pratt? Are we feeling that there's any possibility that he could surprise us?
Peachy Keenan
I think there is. I mean, I think there's always a chance, right? There always has to be hope. But when you look at la, I think, you know, Kamala Harris won Los Angeles city by like, you know, 70, 70, 75%. And so if it's down to two people, it's likely going to be a Democrat. Unfortunately, now the only saving grace is potentially enough people were burned by, literally burned by the fire, burned by Covid have seen the decay of the city. They drive by the tents every day. They're being attacked by vagrants where they go to work in businesses being closed down. Maybe enough people will see the light. But I've thought this every time I keep thinking, oh, the Gavin Newsom recall, finally. And it never quite works. Just because of the demographics in the city. They're not looking good.
Andrew
Well, that's unfortunate. Pg, I saw that you. Yeah, exactly. So you're saying that there's basically no hope. I mean, I will say that there's always hope.
Peachy Keenan
We have to hope.
Andrew
Yeah. I will say that my whole take on Gavin Newsom, and it's an unpopular one, is that as bad as he is, and he is very, very bad, that there's always worse. Right. Gavin Newsom is still sort of cut from an older mold. He's. He kind of still ascribes to certain norms. I think Tom Steyer, if He becomes your governor, paint a picture of what that could be, especially if he has a communist as mayor in Los Angeles. What kind of policies are you like really looking at as a possibility?
Peachy Keenan
And I don't know tons about Tom Steyer because he's always thought of as some kind of like joke, you know, when he props pops up in every presidential campaign. But from the what I've seen so far, just from his tweets and his posts, you know, Newsom was always mindful of running for president so he never kind of wanted to look too far left. He's, he's canceled some of the crazy things that have come out of out of Sacramento actually, because I think he was trying to make himself plausible as a president. Dyer had such boundaries or guidelines. He came out yesterday with a post that is the end of California, which is getting rid of Prop 13, which is what keeps people's property tax, you know, basically kind of quote unquote affordable. And they've been trying to overturn Prop 13 for decades, which would jump everyone's property taxes, you know, by, you know, 10x your property tax. It would kill the state. The tweet yesterday was about getting rid of the property tax just for corporations. And so I mean, if you're a small business, goodbye. If you're a huge, if you're Google in Santa Monica, maybe you can survive that. So I don't really know all the implications of that, but he's just like a stock, you know, commie light. But again, California is not run by the governor, it's run by the kind of deep state of California out of Sacramento. And these people will never be budged. Like even, you know, Schwarzenegger couldn't crack that nut. Styro will just be their puppet and we will just get, you know, more high speed train trains to nowhere.
Andrew
Sounds depressing.
Blake
I feel like with the story, with California is it's sort of, it's always about the same as it was before, but a bit worse. There's a certain consistency to it that. Well, it's not admirable, but there's something.
Andrew
And pg, I know we're gonna get to the Catholic topic here as well, but you know, how much of this, just as a sort of cautionary tale to the rest of the country, how much of this is because of population displacement, immigration policies and by the way, if you talk about Prop 13, the only thing holding that state together right now is these old core families in these old core neighborhoods that make the communities work that are a lot of them only Able to afford California because they are priced in and grandfathered into Prop 13. What happens, the displacement of California that you've already experienced and what you could experience if Prop 13 is removed?
Peachy Keenan
Yeah, I mean, every year I have to say goodbye to friends who move. I think we're losing another family this year going to Tennessee. In Covid, our small Catholic school lost, you know, almost 20 families left for various other states. Idaho, Tennessee and a lot went to Texas. These are Catholics who fled. Some people can't leave. I can't leave yet. My husband's job is sort of like chained in here. So we're stuck for the moment. All our family is here for now. And so, I mean, when I grew up here, I grew up in Pacific Palisades. You know, my childhood home burned down in the fire. And when I was a kid, this was a red state, bright red state. I remember Ronald Reagan and Nancy Reagan lived up my street. And when they, when he went, I was a very little girl, we were on the front lawn when he drove to the airport to take office in D.C. and my mother had us all waving flags and all the neighbors came out to like wave goodbye to the Reagan's, you know, in the early 80s. And I mean, if you did that now, I mean, imagine that happening now in Pacific Palisades, people being pro Reagan. Like it was just. And so. And it is 100% due to the demographic change. I mean this was like what, an 80, 70% white state. And now it's, I think it's reversed now. It's I think 30% white. So. And LA county is like, I mean, under 30 is probably like maybe 16% white. So everything, you know, just, it's just, you know, it is. The great replacement isn't a, isn't a theory. It's over. So that's just what it is. That's. Sorry, that's just like what, what we're dealing with here. And so you have all the, all the consequences of that. And so, yes, California will spread. We're seeing it in California. The Californication of New York City and all these sort of big cities. It's frightening and I hope people. Sorry, go ahead.
Andrew
Oh, we got, we got a break here really quick. In about five seconds, we're gonna pick it up on the other side of the break. More with Peachy Keenan. We'll be right back. All right, let's talk about why Refi Investment. You've heard us talking about why Refi for a while on this show, but if you are an accredited investor, then you can earn up to 10.25%, 10 and a quarter percent interest. And that is fixed. That interest rate is fixed. You can invest from one to five years, whatever suits your specific needs. And when you invest in Y Refi, your interest is calculated daily and paid out monthly. And then just because this is the way they are, they give you the option to then reinvest that interest in the investment or you can take it off as profit. So the choice is yours. And they give maximum transparency and optionality. It's great. So just a word about why refi. These are great people, great patriots to support the work we do at the Charlie Kirk show at tpusa, so many other causes across the country. And they care about students that care about investors and they care about this country. So please give them a look. Check them out. For more information, call 87780 invest, that's 87780 invest or investyrefi.com for complete details. Make sure you scan that QR code right there on your screen for the private placement memorandum and you can view the disclosures at your leisure. Why Refi? Investing in America's Future? Okay, Pichi, I know we're going to get to this Catholic story in just a second, but who knows, we might have just got sidetracked here. This is a new story of a woman accusing Eric Swalwell of rape. It just dropped.
Peachy Keenan
I only had one glass of wine. He we were supposed to go to a political event and he said he needed to get paperwork from his hotel room. When I arrived at his hotel room, I was already incapacitated and I couldn't move my arms or my body. He raped me and he choked me. And while he was choking me, I lost consciousness.
Andrew
PG your reaction to that clip?
Peachy Keenan
Well, they're really going for. They're really going for him. If that's true, that's. That's obviously horrible. I'm sure she's not the only one. He seems like he was a real dirtbag. I mean, there's a ton. There's like infinity, infinity dirtbag and perverts in the Democrat Party. But he feels like a special case, like he was really, really out of control. What does that say about the Democrat Party that they are just like producing so many and now Ruben Gallego might be going down, right? Was he maybe potentially one of the guys in that gross video? How many racists are there?
Andrew
Unconfirmed about Ruben Gallego. But, but there are a lot of people looking into that. They are known to be close associates Close friends, but unconfirmed either way. I just want to be clear about that. But yes, that they are close associates, by the way. Yeah, go ahead.
Blake
I was saying, I'll be frank. I think I'm skeptical of the vast majority of allegations like this. I think it's all. It always should raise an eyebrow when someone's coming forward years later to make an allegation that's effectively impossible to prove or disprove after that amount of time. And this is so clearly a politically related hit job as well. It raises an eyebrow, that's all I'll say. I have no doubt he's a bad dude. He almost certainly is cheating on his wife a bunch, but they're there. That's not in itself illegal. But I will say he has done a lot to bring this upon himself. Because Eric Swalwell, it's always, there's a certain, there's a certain good feeling that comes when people who egged on every left wing hysteria, every single moral panic of the past decade fall victim to it themselves. And so to that extent, it is richly deserved.
Andrew
Yeah. I will say there's no more shameless. Yeah, there's been no more shameless. Plugger of the Me too believe all victims. Victims deserve to be heard. President Trump's a bad guy. Let's get in with Schiff and lie about the president. Paint him as some villain. And so it couldn't have happened to a nicer guy, certainly. But that is an explosive video. Peachy. I didn't mean to cut you off.
Peachy Keenan
No, not at all. I mean, I just wonder how, you know, really the crime here is I know they're all terrible, but the real crime is the COVID up. Because obviously everyone, all of his colleagues knew, all of them knew that at the very least he was doing, you know, unspeakable things and being a very, like, naughty boy. Did they know he was actually committing potentially assaulting crimes and rape? I don't know. But the COVID up is really the disturbing part, that all these women and all these Democrat liberal women who wear white to the State of the Union and me too, pins and called Trump a rapist and all this. They know who Swalwell is, but they don't want to say anything because he's a reliable vote and he's very popular with the media, speaking out against Trump. And so that is just like disgusting. You know, if you're going to come out and, you know, bash Republicans for being, you know, whatever you think they're like, being bad for women, but you're Protecting actual rapists who are like your buddies, and you're just hanging out with them in the Democrat parties. What does that say about feminism?
Andrew
Yeah, well said. Well said. And Nancy Pelosi, for what it's worth, is denied any knowledge of these accusations against Eric Swalwell, which is noteworthy because even I had heard about them. And so if even I heard about them, how has Nancy Pelosi. Pelosi, one of the leading Democrats in California, not heard about it?
Peachy Keenan
Right, exactly.
Andrew
By the way, if you can't have it, take it. Is his senior quote. Think about that. Eric Swalwell senior yearbook quote. You can't have it, take it. That's unfortunate. Milk.
Blake
That's unchecked.
Andrew
All right, peachy. We don't have any time here for your deep thoughts, which is really frustrating for me. But the Catholic controversy with Pope Leo. The cardinals weigh in. We've been talking about this hour. Please, your perspective. We have about a minute and a
Peachy Keenan
half, by the way. Okay, yeah. So very quickly, you know, Pope Leo, you know, I'm a devout Catholic. I respect the Pope. People were excited about him. He's obviously what everyone assumed. He was sort of like a stock boomer lib, which all boomers in the church are. All the boomer priests are the same as him. He's anti war. That's fine. Okay. He's allowed to be anti war. That's fine. Totally within bounds. But I want to talk about those three cardinals who are on 60 Minutes. Really quick. Stupich Tobin and what's his name? McClary. These guys were, you know, they're Obama Ice. They're. They're far left. They are basically, they were very close. They were proteges of Uncle Ted McCarrick, who was the disgrace, you know, rapist, actual rapist in the D.C. area, that he was handpicked. These two were handpicked by Francis to be elevated as these, like, liberal. Look at them. These. They represented Pope Francis as, like, ideals. They wanted to tamp down conservative Catholics. And so the rise in organic converts this year was in spite of these guys, not because of them, and not even because of Leo. I mean, I would argue that Donald Trump was more. Should get more credit for drawing people into the church. People want tradition, and the church is still the only place you can really get that Latin and all the rest. And there are certain parishes where people are being drawn not to those guys. Parishes.
Andrew
Blake, I'll let you take it. Take it away here.
Blake
Well, we have 30 seconds. We should shout out. You have a book that's Already out. And you have another that is coming up. We should 20 seconds.
Andrew
There you go.
Blake
Tell your line.
Peachy Keenan
Okay, great. Thank you. Thank you, Blake. Yeah, my first book, domestic Extremists is still available. It's about basically why you all should be more trad. And then my new book is called Super Villains. It comes out September 1st. You can pre order it today at Passage Press or on Amazon.
Blake
Thank you very much.
Andrew
Thank you. Peachy.
Blake
We'll have you on.
Andrew
I'm gonna say goodbye. I'm gonna say goodbye for this hour. Blake is gonna take it away an hour two.
Terrence Bates
Welcome back to this Real America's Voice network. Welcome back to newsbreak. I'm Terrence Bates. We appreciate you being here with us. Vice President J.D. vance headed south this afternoon. He's going to be speaking in Athens, Georgia. It is one of a couple of stops that are going to be happening. Coming up for Turning Point usa. This is the Turning Point Tour. The event is designed to engage college students in political discussion and to continue the mission of the late Charlie Kirk. Organizers say the tour is going to hit multiple college towns across the across the country. Joining me now from Athens, Georgia right now is Rav chief White House correspondent Brian Glenn. He's already on the ground waiting for the vice president to arrive. Brian, good afternoon.
Brian Glenn
Good afternoon, Terrence.
Terrence Bates
All right, so layout for us. What to expect here in Athens, Georgia, UGA probably not where most people would expect Turning Point USA to be showing up.
Brian Glenn
Well, you know, UGA is one of those small places in the state of Georgia that's extremely liberal. Athens, Georgia, considered a very Democratic star and hole. Matter of fact, the mayor here won big time in the last election. Kamala Harris got 68% of the vote and Joe Biden got 70% of the vote here in this area. But today's focus will be on Charlie Kirk's and his mission with Turning Point USA Vice President J.D. vance and Erica Kirk joining together on stage to talk to what is expected to be Terrence, a jam packed house a little bit later tonight. Now doors don't officially open until for a few more hours, but local authorities expect large crowd plus a small demonstration as you would expect outside the venue by local Democrat organizers from the university.
Terrence Bates
There's so much to talk about. Where do you think the focus will be during remarks from the vice president and then of course, Erica Kirk as well.
Brian Glenn
I think it's going to focus on putting the priorities of this younger generation and of course the cost of living, the job market, the future of the job market in these emerging sectors like AI and affordability for first time, first time homebuyers. I think the focus is going to be on that. And of course, I would imagine coming off these very high level meetings that JD Vance sat in over the weekend to try and get these, the war ended between, you know, Iran and Israel. We'll try to work some of that out as well. So a little bit touch on foreign policy, but I think Terrence is going to stay pretty domestic and speak to the kids this next generation that's coming up.
Terrence Bates
Of course, you mentioned those high level talks between the United States and Iran over the weekend. Those negotiations didn't really yield much fruit. Now, Brian, there's talk about the possibility of a second and encore negotiation. What are you hearing about the likelihood of that happening? And with all of that said, the red line is the red line. President Trump and the Trump administration have already laid out their demands. They're not going to budge.
Brian Glenn
Yeah, I do anticipate another level of talks and even as we speak Today in Washington, D.C. you have representatives from Israel and Lebanon for the first time those talks have happened in decades. So those talks continue today. And I do anticipate another round of high level negotiations like we saw this past weekend. And if you look at the Strait of Harboos and the commitment that the Trump administration has made to making sure that vessels can go in and out of the Strait and deliver that much needed energy and oil that the world relies on, I see that being a focus as well coming up. But we'll see if that two week ceasefire, Terrence, that expires on April 22nd. We'll see if that's able to go through to April 22nd without any type of exhalation. But all eyes are on the Middle east talks and also here in Athens, Georgia.
Terrence Bates
Absolutely. Brian, before I let you go, want to talk a bit about Capitol Hill, the two names that come up, Eric Swalwell, Tony Gonzalez. I almost want to play a little game with you. What comes to mind initially, but obviously both of them, Democrat and a Republican, are going to be leaving the US House and hopefully bringing some more transparency to some of what's happening there in that chamber. Quickly.
Brian Glenn
Yeah, I think it's, I think it's a good call for both of those individuals to step forward and resign before they put pressure and a little bit of embarrassment coming from their colleagues to have to vote against them. But we'll see what the next round now, I mean, I am hearing we will see additional names added or to least be pressured to step down from their leadership positions in Congress and in Senate. Terrence.
Terrence Bates
Okay, well, I've got my eyes peeled. Can't wait to hear who might be next. Brian Glenn reporting for us on the ground in Athens, Georgia.
Blake
Welcome back to our two of the Charlie Kirk Show. Andrew had to step away, so I'm Blake here, flying solo for the next hour, but I think we'll have a good time. I'm very excited about this next guest. It's a topic I think will be very interesting. So I want us to welcome Jacob Siegel. He is an editor at Tablet magazine and he's also the author of a new book called the Information Politics in the Age of Total Control. Jacob, welcome to the program.
Jacob Siegel
Thanks for having me. Good to be here.
Blake
All right, let's dive right into it. That's a very ominous cover. Looks a lot like a cover of a Kafka novel. At a glance, I'm guessing that's deliberate. What is the information state?
Jacob Siegel
It's a new kind of political regime that rules not through the consent of the governed in the way that we expect a democracy to rule. It doesn't rule through the formal procedures of law and constitutional procedure. Instead, it rules through control of digital code. So it essentially moves decision making power from the recognizable centers that we know from the the framers intention from the history of America. It takes sovereignty and decision making power from there and it relocates it essentially into the digital infrastructure. So debanking is an example of how the information state exercises power. Mass information operations, mass censorship, all of these are the sort of tools of the trade of what I'm saying is really not just an abuse of government power, but an entirely new kind of political regime that's coming into being. And we're watching it be born now.
Blake
Yeah. And I guess as laid out, you know, I looked through a summary of the book and it looks like we're kind of seeing what we were warned about 25 years ago with the launch of the war on terrorism with the Patriot act, we started to get concerned about extremism online, terrorist activities online, tracking those things online. And now we're seeing it turn around where they're built. Like the hunt for terrorists abroad has turned into this hunt for terrorists in the United States. And that's turned into, as you say, debanking, but also especially the censorship apparatus, correct?
Jacob Siegel
Yeah, that's right. And there really is a straight line from this massive expansion of surveillance powers and not only governmental surveillance powers. You know, the Patriot act was part of it. But what also happened after 9, 11 is that the social media companies and the telecommunications companies were essentially turned into kind of private surveillance units that were doing the work that the government couldn't do because it was unconstitutional. So they were pulling all of this data in. They were harvesting this data through programs like PRISM that we found out about through the Snowden Leaks. And so the entire commercial side of the Internet was also essentially functioning as a kind of mass dragnet. Now, what ended up happening after the war on terror started to wind down, or as it entered its second decade, was that entire apparatus for surveillance, counterterrorism, was redirected from targets abroad to targets at home. So that huge machinery of repression and surveillance started to get targeted against Americans inside the United States, first through programs like what was called Countering Violent Extremism, that were monitoring the Internet for extremist behavior in the US Ostensibly tied to terrorism, and then finally through this new counter disinformation establishment.
Blake
All right, and so this counter disinformation establishment, can you describe what it is? Because the sense from the book, it's not even just government, it's almost this. It's this alliance that exists between government agencies like the FBI, but also this NGO blob complex. And that's a very important part of this information state, correct?
Jacob Siegel
Yeah, that's right. Because right now, as I'm saying, there's this new thing coming into being, which is this kind of informational power that essentially takes over, governs through control of the digital platforms. But you know, we still have a constitution in the United States. There's still laws that prohibit spying on American citizens. And so the government is aware that it can't carry out all of these functions it might like to carry out. And so it outsources this work through NGOs, through these sort of cutouts that it creates, and it establishes these convoluted institutional networks. And this really. It kicked into high gear in 2016 with the creation of something called the Global Engagement center, which Obama chartered just as he was leaving office. And it was really the premier government run counter disinformation establishment. But the way it worked in its own mission statement was not just to carry out actions on its own as a federal agency, it was to affect what it called the whole of society effort. So the whole purpose was to align different powerful institutions, what they called stakeholder institutions, across American society that could be media, it could be financial institutions, universities, et cetera. Get all of them on the same page, get all of them bought into this new mandate to not only counter foreign disinformation but this expanding laundry list of bad forms of information. So foreign disinformation grew to domestic misinformation, which then eventually included mal information, which became an actual term within another government agency called cisa, under the Department of Homeland Security, made part of its mission monitoring the Internet for mal information, which referred to true statements, factually correct statements that were perceived to cause harm.
Blake
Can you give us examples of that? Malinformation. And was this actually censored? Suppressed, I suppose. What are some good examples of that?
Jacob Siegel
So mal information could include somebody questioning the efficacy of coronavirus vaccines. It could include somebody questioning climate change, climate change skepticism, opposition to the war in Ukraine, opposition to the withdrawal from Afghanistan. All of these were on the list of issues that the. Both the government agency CISA and the related institutions that were working with it, like the Election Integrity Partnership and other sort of related NGOs. These were the kinds of narratives that they were monitoring that they, in coordination with the social media companies were looking at. It's very hard to say exactly how many posts online were censored. You know, I went to Washington, D.C. i interviewed more than a dozen people who worked directly on this kind of thing, and I didn't get a single, you know, solid estimate from anybody. It just in the millions is all anyone could tell me. Because there were deliberate firewalls created between the social media companies and the sort of NGO partners and the federal agencies. So it was set up in such a way that they were trying to create a denial of liability for everybody involved. Now, some of this came out through the Twitter files and other reporting. But just to give you an example of how it worked, if, for example, the Election Integrity Partnership informed the social media platforms, Twitter, Facebook, that they were concerned about a particular narrative online, they didn't necessarily need to then tell Facebook or Twitter every post that they wanted censored. Yeah, the social media platform could just dial it down on its own. Yeah, it's to suppress the visibility.
Blake
It's sort of a perfect censorship machine because you just say, oh, as the government, we're concerned about this, we dislike it. And they do all of the censorship for you, but it's not ordered, so, you know, it's not violating the First Amendment. I want to dive more into this in the next segment, so stick there for a second, Jacob. But just now we need to talk to you about blackout coffee. I'm hearing about blackout coffee all the time from Andrew. He is a massive fan. And Andrew, he's a lot. He's quite picky about the stuff he puts in his body. He's very picky about his foods. He's a lot like Charlie in that way. And he really likes the boxes that Blackout Coffee checks. Blackout Coffee is a family run American company that roasts fresh coffee here in the United States. It's built by people who believe in hard work, freedom. And in this country, there's no global corporations, no fake activism, no lectures, just excellent coffee made by Americans for Americans. And it's coffee that stands for something. They have some amazing names for their coffee, Morning Reaper, Brutal awakening and the 1776 dark roast, as well as the Second Amendment medium roast. They have something for everyone. Check out blackoutcoffee.com Charlie promo code Charlie for 20 off your first order blackout coffee. Check it out. We'll be right back with Jacob Siegel. Welcome back to the Charlie Kirk show. We're going to talk about why Refi Investment. We've been talking about why Refi's student loan business for a long time, but that's not all that they're involved in. Accredited investors can earn up to 10.25% and that interest rate is fixed. You can invest from one to five years and you can spread your investment over those terms to best suit your needs at Y Refi Investment. When you invest in Y Refi, your interest is calculated daily and you get paid monthly. You have the freedom to take your monthly interest as income or you can reinvestment, whatever you want. And just a word about why Refi. We've been all in with them. As Andrew likes to say, they are a great company. They are run by great people. They stand for the values we believe in. Charlie loved them. Erica loves them. We love them. They have been tremendously generous with this program and they richly deserve to have this studio named after them. For more information on why Refi Invest, you can call 87780 INVEST. That's 87780 INVEST. Or log into investrefi.com that is investrefi.com that's R E F Y. For complete details, make sure to review the private placement memorandum and scan the QR code that is visible on the screen to view the disclosures at your leisure. Why Refi Investing in America's Future? We're here with Jacob Siegel of Tablet magazine. We're talking about his book the Information State. I want to take an excerpt from this. It's getting at one of the most extreme cases of this censorship apparatus that exists indirectly in American life. And everyone's going to remember this story on the eve of the 2020 presidential race. The New York Times published a frontal attack on the principle of free speech. On the COVID of its Sunday magazine, there was an essay, the First Amendment in the Age of Disinformation. The author, Emily Bazelon, a graduate of Yale Law School, made the case basically that free speech, only free speech, threatens democracy as much as it also provides for its flourishing. And just days after this article came out, we got the Hunter Biden laptop story. And if you've forgotten how heavily that was suppressed, we've heard a lot of that. The intel agents, I believe 50 of them, came out and said, this shows the hallmarks of Russian disinformation. But it wasn't just that they smeared it as disinformation on Facebook, you were not allowed, not merely not to post the article, you could not message the article to people in a private message. The New York Post had its Twitter account blocked because they were publishing a true story that their reporter had. Research. This is really the. This is the information state, as you're describing it, in full flower. It's government and NGOs and news publications creating this miasma that just justifies the suppression of true information. Isn't that correct?
Jacob Siegel
Yeah, that's absolutely correct. And it's actually even worse than that in the sense that the FBI had obtained those laptops in, I believe it was December of 2019. So for months prior to the scandal over the laptops becoming public, they were in the FBI's possession, which means that the bureau had already certified that they were authentic. They knew that they weren't Russian plants of some sort. And yet the FBI went to the social media platforms prior to the leaked documents based on the laptops, and prior to the New York Post reporting on the laptops and told the social media companies, hey, we expect there to be another Russian hack and dump operation in the lead up to the election. This time, we think it's going to target Hunter Biden. So the FBI actually colluded in what was really an information operation to suppress legitimate reporting on the laptops, despite knowing that the laptops were authentic because they were in the FBI's possession.
Blake
Outrageous. Outrageous. But let's follow up to, I guess, the obvious question. So they've built this apparatus and it managed to exist throughout, frankly, the first Trump administration, even though it was often actively hostile to it. And this apparatus still exists in our government. How do we go about breaking this information state? How do we. How do we take it apart and bring back normal functioning media environment, normal functioning information environment? How do we get as free as we were in the 1990s.
Jacob Siegel
Well, I think one of the things we need to look at is data ownership. And this is something I've been talking about for a while, But I think that it's an important idea to get out to the public. Essentially, when we're on the Internet, all of our data is being harvested from us. It's free as it's leaving us. Right. We don't get anything for it. As we're producing this data, it's treated as if it's free, but then it's bundled in ways that monetize it. So it becomes extremely valuable. And because there's this sort of mass data harvesting at scale, it makes it possible to create these sort of manipulated mass media environments. Now, if you had to actually pay people for their data that you're using, I think it would disincentivize a lot of the collection of data, which would disincentivize some of these mass surveillance efforts, and that in turn, it would have a kind of cascade effect where it would also disincentivize censorship, because the censorship relies on the mass surveillance. So essentially creating something like a property rights structure for people's data is a step in the right direction. The other thing I would say, and I come at this less in the sense of immediate political solutions and more in terms of what I think is wrong with the environment in a kind of bigger picture way, because the policy stuff is just not my specialty, but I would say in a big picture sense, one of the things that the Internet has done and that social media has done is that it's really eroded national borders and boundaries. So if you're somebody who believes in border enforcement, we have to carry that same sensibility over to online spaces. We have to think about what does it mean to create an environment on social media, for instance, where Americans can enter into a political conversation with other Americans that's not going to be inundated by people who are not Americans stepping into that political conversation. I think Equal has taken a good step in that direction by, you know, adding to the user data of posters on that site where they're posting from. But there's more that can be done in that direction.
Blake
All right, what about. So that's data ownership, private sector, one minute. Is there something we can do to really. What should. For example, what could the Trump administration do to dismantle this if it was of a mind to do so in the three years it has, I mean,
Jacob Siegel
it's taken some very serious steps. I would say seriously rolled back both CISA and the gec. So the two primary federal agencies that were involved in this were immediately targeted by the Trump administration. It doesn't mean they can't be reconstituted at some point in the future or that the duties of those offices can't be moved elsewhere. But the other thing is to start to introduce legislation that a bit like the settlement we just saw come out of the Missouri versus the Biden case, that prohibits coordination between the federal government and social media companies about posts to censor. So that settlement, which was just reached in this big case that went to the Supreme Court and then got kicked down, it only lasts for 10 years and it only prohibits some of that activity. But there remains the problem that we know about. You know, for instance, the Biden administration, as soon as it took office.
Blake
Sorry to do this. Thank you very much. We're actually out of time on our segment. Jacob siegel, the INFORMATION State. Check it out. Thank you very much for coming on. We'll be right back.
Terrence Bates
Welcome to this REAL America's VOICE news break. I'm Terrence Bates. Pakistan is calling for a second round of talks between the United States and Iran. All of this after the initial talks didn't yield much. In fact, Vice President J.D. vance saying that he believes the Pakistani, excuse me, the Iranians are willing to negotiate with the, with the United States. In fact, he also said that they moved in the right direction during this weekend's talks. The Republic, however, has failed to agree to remove nuclear material and mechanisms to enrich uranium. And that's part of the ongoing problem. He believes that the negotiators have to now go back to Tehran and ask for permission to move forward. In the meantime, President Trump being a bit more optimistic about any upcoming talks.
Blake
Iran will not have a nuclear weapon and we agreed to a lot of things, but they didn't agree to that. And I think they will agree to it. I'm almost sure of it. In fact, I am sure of it. If they don't agree, there's no deal. There'll never be a deal. Iran will not have a nuclear weapon and we're going to get the dust back. We'll get it back. Either we'll get it back from them or we'll take it. Mr. President, as far as the naval
Terrence Bates
blockade is concerned and happening today in the nation's capital, Israeli and Lebanese negotiators are scheduled to begin ceasefire talks. However, Hezbollah is encouraging Lebanese leaders to cancel those talks. Congress is back in D.C. following a two week Easter and spring recess. Monday's return came with the shakeup in both parties as embattled California Democrat Congressman Eric Swalwell resigned following sexual assault misconduct allegations. The move comes after the seven term representative dropped out of the California gubernatorial race and then caved a bipartisan pressure to give up his seat. The House Ethics Committee had also launched an investigation into the California Democrat. While the resignation would have been a win for Republicans when it comes to the balance of power in the House, turns out that it's a stalemate as Texas Republican Congressman Tony Gonzalez announced his retirement from office on Monday. Gonzalez had already said that he wouldn't seek reelection after acknowledging an affair with a staff member who later killed herself. That's a quick check in.
Blake
We will not comply. You're listening to the Sound of freedom. It's the Charlie Kirk show. Welcome back to the Charlie Kirk show. One of the nicest things about Arizona, it's basically always grilling season here. You can always do stuff outdoors. But for you cursed people in the rest of the country, it is finally getting warm enough to have your first cookouts, your first barbecues of the season. And if you need some meat, you know where you can turn. If you watch this show, it is Good Ranchers. Good Ranchers partners with local farmers and ranchers to make to deliver 100% American meat right to your door. Their meat is pasture raised, antibiotic free and has no added hormones. It's the kind of quality you can actually feel good about serving to the people around your table. And Good Ranchers has just launched custom boxes so you can build your own box with the cuts that your family loves the most. You can have steaks for grilling, chicken for weeknight dinners or just whatever floats your boat. You can start your plan today and you'll get free meat included with every order. And that is with the code. Oh, it's not on this sheet. What's the code? It is Kirk K I R K. The code is, Kirk, to get free meat with your order, $25 off your first one. Free meat with every order and $25 off with the code. Kirk when you visit goodranchers.com American Meat Delivered. All right. We haven't talked about it yet, but there was something very unfortunate that happened on Sunday to people who care about Christianity, people who care about conservatism, who care about nationalism around the world, you might already know what I'm talking about. There was an election in the small European country of Hungary. And to talk about it, we're going to be joined by Jeremy Carl. He's a fellow at the Claremont Institute. He's the author of the Unprotected Class, and he was one of Charlie's favorite nominees to this administration. Unfortunately, the Senate was not playing ball. Jeremy, are you there with us?
Jeremy Carl
I am here with you. It's a pleasure to be with you.
Blake
All right, thanks for joining us. So, yeah, just to set the stage here, Viktor Orban was the prime minister of Hungary for the past 16 years. He Definitely, when you reach around and you try to find a leader who you'd say, like, who's the guy you think is doing everything right or mostly everything right? And I think you and I would both agree. Viktor Orban is a guy we would look to. While every other European country was bringing in immigrants by the millions, he was saying, Hungary is above all for Hungarians. We're going to preserve our national character. While every other country was racing towards secularism, he was promoting Christianity in his country. And especially while everyone else is annihilating the family, they took a lot of steps to protect the family. But 16 years is a long time to hold power, and they were defeated in Sunday's election. Jeremy, can you explain to us how did this come to pass?
Jeremy Carl
Yeah, well, I spent a couple different fellowships in Hungary for a few weeks each over the last few years. So I have had some time to sort of spend there and understand a little bit about kind of what's going on. I think you kind of hit on the key thing, which is 16 years is just a long time. Helmut Kohl, who was the prime minister who unified Germany after communism, it was in for 16 years, and eventually he just got bounced. Now, do I think that there were things that were problems? Yes. The economy was still sluggish. I think ongoing corruption, while sometimes perhaps overstated, was still a real issue. I think that there were people who were not happy about the way that Russia, Ukraine relations were being handled by Orban, although there were equally many who were happy that he was keeping Hungary out of that. But I just think that combined with a huge amount of pressure from the European Union, standing on media outlets, withholding funds, doing everything they could to help Orban's opponent, and this time it just turned out to be too much to overcome.
Blake
Yeah, it really. I think one of the. I wanted to talk about this because there's important lessons from it, which is even if you really deliver, if you deliver on the border, if you deliver on family stuff, if you deliver on a lot of your red meat issues, it's. It's almost. It's. It's politically unforgiving. Because you still also have to deliver on the core stuff, which is you have to make sure the economy is growing, and you have to make sure that you're not seen as corrupt, shady. If that. If that reputation gets embedded, it can destroy even the best policies. And I think that's a big takeaway to take from here. But I also wanted to bring it up because I've seen a lot of defeatism about it, because, let's be frank, a lot of. A lot of bad stuff might be about to happen in Hungary. If you want proof that it's a bad sign, we have a tweet by Barack Obama on Sunday night, which got 65 million views, where he says, the victory of the opposition in Hungary yesterday is a victory for democracy, not just in Europe, but around the world. It's a testament to the resilience and determination of the Hungarian people. A reminder to all of us to keep striving for fairness, equality and the rule of law, which, as you and I know, it's 100% bunk. Hungary is a good example of. It's a good example to look towards for all the attacks that they'll bring against you, which we've certainly seen play out here in America, that you can hold every election, you can campaign fairly in every election, you can literally win four elections in a row and then finally lose one. And they'll just say, you're not democracy. Because for them, democracy doesn't mean holding elections, doesn't mean winning elections, doesn't mean listening to what the people want. It means listening to what we've decided needs to happen in Brussels or at Davos or at the United nations or wherever Barack Obama happens to be.
Jeremy Carl
No, that's exactly right. And I think it's notable, however, if you want to look for some bright spots, and I do think that there are a few, amidst the gloom here, Magyar, who was the candidate who beat him, is a former member, actually very recently a fairly senior member of Orban's party, who essentially almost ran to his right on some issues. Certainly he did not give any ground on immigration or national identity or some of these things. And he basically said, you know, I'm going to kind of do a lot of the same things that Orban was doing, but I'm going to sort of improve relationships with the EU and maybe, you know, alter a little bit vis a vis Ukraine and Russia, and I'm going to cut down on corruption now. I think there's reasons to be pessimistic. If you look at George soros son and Obama sending out celebratory tweets that this is, in fact, what's going to happen. But the fact that at least he was, you know, that's how he felt he needed to do to win is indicative of the fact that Orban really has set the political tone in Hungary, in a way. And so that's a pretty big achievement.
Blake
Yeah, well, that's another warning, as you say, his opponent, it's pretty funny, his name was Peter Magyar, which is kind of like having a guy run for president named John American. But this guy, as you said he had to run as, oh, I'm also tough on immigration. In fact, I believe he even claimed that a handful of migrants who had come into Hungary had eaten animals in one of the city's zoos. So that attack still has currency. He said he's actually a squish on immigration. I'll be just as tough. He used Ukraine. I had a friend who was just in Budapest, and he said the ads he saw really made it look like the election was a referendum on Ukraine and on Russia. But you have to be wary because we've already seen reporting the European Union is really celebrating this because Orban was by far the gutsiest leader in standing against them. They were cutting off European Union funds, saying, you're an autocracy, you're acting anti democratically. And they've already been saying, we'll release these funds if you get on board with the euro, if you get on board with immigration, if you get on board with a lot of our foreign policy agenda. And so a lesson here is you have to be ready for these guys who are going to promise you, I'm not going to change any of the big stuff you like with this guy. But if they're more vulnerable to pressure from the outside, from globalists, from Soros World, from the European Union, from, you know, the global American empire, as it were, you're going to lose your country eventually.
Jeremy Carl
Yeah, I think that's the concern. And actually, the other aspect of this that I think is very interesting that I'm actually writing about right now is the degree to which it showed how much, to be frank, a number of our key senators still hate Trump's foreign policy. Now, J.D. vance went all the way to Hungary to campaign for Orban in the waning days, which shows how much of an emphasis we put on this as an administration. Trump and Orban have been very close, good friends. You had in the wake of this election immediately, McConnell had a sort of celebratory Op ed on Fox News, which kind of was indistinguishable from somebody, something that would have been tweeted by Hillary Clinton. You had Roger Wicker, who's the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, from very deep.
Blake
I want to read that because it's, think of what we read from Obama earlier. There's a similar tweet from Hillary Clinton. And now we have this Senator Roger Wicker, a Republican from a Republican state. The freedom loving people of Hungary have voted decisively in favor of democracy and the rule of law. I congratulate them. And Peter Magyar, the next prime minister of Hungary. They have rejected the malign influence of Vladimir Putin, the world's most malicious dictator, and decided their own future. So contrast this by a Republican senator and what was stated by Obama. They're practically indistinguishable. This is a guy who's saying this about a country that stopped mass immigration, a country that gave, I believe they gave a lifetime tax exemption to any mother who has four children. They would give loans to newly married couples and it would be fully forgiven if you had three kids. This is a country that did it right. And they did it while holding and winning elections. This is a country that dismantled their NGO deep state. They did it right. And if we have Republican senators who can't see what an asset that was, what an ally that was, and all they see is Vladimir Putin everywhere, they, they shouldn't be leaders in our party, period.
Jeremy Carl
Yeah, well, obviously I agree with you. And again, I think the shocking thing is not so much that he thinks this. I mean, I know, frankly, a number of Republican senators who, based on my own experience through the Senate, either think this or to a first approximation, you know, at least will entertain it. But that he felt comfortable enough to just say it. And again, he didn't even frame it in terms of, well, I'm glad that I'd like to see us be more pro Ukraine. And I think the opposition will let us do that. And that's great. I mean, that would be still pretty bad in my view, because you could just be silent. But he literally repeats the left's talking points on rule of law, on democracy that are just false. And so it's just, it's a shocking example. And there's a couple other senators who also chimed in of just how much Trump continues to fight with his own party to set the direction of his foreign policy.
Blake
All right. Yeah, it's just lamentable. We've gotta be able to recognize who our allies are. We'll Be right back with Jeremy Karl for more in a sec. But we're gonna talk about Strong Cell. If you experience brain fog, low energy, frequent illnesses, or if you wake up feeling stiff and achy, you've got to try Strong Cell. Andrew has been having it every day. I've been having it every day. Someone commented that I have a little wince on my face when I take it. It's just, it has actually a pretty strong orange flavor, which is good. Something that has a powerful effect on your body should have a strong flavor. And Strong Cell has that. Strong Cell helps keep your mind focused and sharp. It provides clean, natural energy without jitters, without weird spikes, without afternoon crashes. It can make you feel like a younger version of yourself, perhaps a version with slightly more hair. With nearly 2 million units sold, it's no wonder that NADH has become a highly sought after remedy through StrongCell. Visit strongcell.com and use code CHARLIE for 20% off your order. That's strongcell.com promo code CHARLIE. Give it six to eight weeks to experience the full effects. Get Strong Cell today and let it work out its magic. We'll be right back. Welcome back to the Charlie Kirk Show. We're here with Jeremy Carl of the Claremont Institute and author of the Unprotected Class. I want to close the loop on Hungary, which we were just talking about. Viktor Orban, a leader a lot of us admire. People around the world admire. He kind of set the template for what a populist right leader was capable of doing. As a result, Vice President Vance was actually showing some support for him before the election. Obviously didn't work out, but as the vice President explained, he knew it was unlikely to save him, but you had to try because he was an ally of ours who deserved it. Let's play clip 8.
JD Vance
I think that Viktor Bond's a great guy who's done a very good job. I think that his legacy in Hungary is transformational. 16 years fundamentally changing that country. But one of the reasons why we decided to do that, Brett, is not because, you know, we can't read polls. We certainly knew there was a very good chance that Victor would lose that election. We did it because he's one of the few European leaders we've seen who's been willing to stand up to the bureaucracy in Brussels. That has been very, very bad for the United States. We didn't go because we expected Victor to cruise to an election victory. We went because it was the right thing to do, to stand behind a person who had stood by us. For a very long time. So this wasn't about Russia, and fundamentally, it wasn't about Europe. It was about the United States. And the fact that he's been a good partner to both me and the president personally, but also to the United States. I'm sad that he lost.
Blake
I really admire that from the vice president. I think that message of standing with those who stand with us, who stand for what we believe in, is a very positive one. And I think it's. It was gutsy of him to go because he had to know it was likely that he would lose and they'd do the whole, oh, Vance, kiss of death on this guy. It's nonsense. We stood up for someone who was worth standing up for.
Jeremy Carl
Yeah, no, I mean, I agree. And I thought it was admirable. It was admirable of Trump to send him. It was obviously admirable of Vance to go and, you know, wasn't able to change the outcome. But I do think that it sent a good message to our allies that if you're with us, that we are going to stand with you. And I think over the long term, obviously, that's a very good message to send. And then obviously, we'll see what happens with the new guy. I think it'll be interesting to see whether he really tacks to the left or whether he attempts to sort of continue at least some of Orban's legacy, but maybe play a little nicer with the European Union. So we'll just have to see how that develops.
Blake
All right, and one final thought on that. He's out of office after 16 years and he lost. Bad. But that does not make him a failure. It doesn't make any leader a failure. Politics is all about buying your country time. And while London looks unrecognizable compared to just 20 years ago, Budapest is still a great city. I've been there. It's lovely to visit. I encourage everyone to do so. And that's a testament he can always be proud of. I want to hit another topic in these last five minutes, Jeremy. The White House published an economic report from for 2026, and it's very much after your own heart. You wrote the book the Unprotected Class. It's all about how white Americans, especially straight, white male young Americans, that classic persecuted group, they're unprotected, they're discriminated against by our businesses, by our governments, by academia. And the justification for all of this, of course, is that with dei, we would unleash massive amounts of growth. And the white House says they looked at the numbers and not so much. They released numbers on Monday that said industries that heavily pursued DEI programs were about 2 1/2% less, excuse me, 2 1/2% less productive than those that did not. So DEI, in addition to being racist and discriminatory, is making us all poorer.
Jeremy Carl
Yeah, I mean, I think it's totally plausible. I always do approach these large macroeconomic studies. As somebody who's done a little graduate training in economics with a little bit of. Of skepticism. I think that you're kind of trying to deal with large multi causal things and it's hard to just pinpoint them. But that having been said, what they're really saying and trying to quantify is just something that should be screamingly obvious to everybody. Because if you do array with the propaganda words around dei, all we're basically saying is when you hire people who are less qualified based on the color of their skin or some other, you know, characteristic of theirs other than their competence, you're going to wind up with a less efficient, less powerful business. That is almost a tautology. I mean, it should be obvious to everybody. And I, you know, I salute them for at least trying to put a number on that that turns out to maybe not be so insignificant.
Blake
Yeah, it really highlights kind of the outrageousness. It's good that we've mainstreamed DEI almost as a negative thing, but it's also ridiculous that we use terms like DEI when we could just say racial discrimination is actually bad and we are constantly accused of it. Yet it is the left that has built their entire political ideology on discrimination that we need to put a thumb on the scale for hiring, whether it's based on race, based on sex, based on sexual orientation, based on any number of things. And they just, they basically just lie about it and they tell us this is fairness, when we should be able to stand up and say, very obviously that's not true.
Jeremy Carl
Yeah, I mean, absolutely. And again, I think part of their control of language is how they keep political power. And it's one of the reasons why when I put anti white racism in the title of the subtitle of the Unprotected Class, even guys like Chris Ruffo, who've done great work on this and endorsed the book, sort of did a intake of breath like, are we allowed to say that? And my view, which I think you now see a lot more politicians saying that since the book came out, is that it's very important to just be really clear about what we're talking about and not let them hide behind terms like affirmative action or dei. What they're doing is racial discrimination, or they're doing gender or sex discrimination. And we should just be really clear that what they're doing is un American and we should call it by its name.
Blake
Absolutely, absolutely. Man, it's just such a ridiculous thing. They've been able to run this scam. I'm sure you monitor this because you're such the expert on it. Can you give us a sense how much progress has the, besides this report, has the administration been making on dismantling this apparatus, both within government and within the private sector?
Jeremy Carl
I think they've done a great job, all things considered. I'm a huge fan of Harmeet Dhillon, who is our Assistant Attorney General for Civil rights at the Justice Department. She and her team, I think, have been doing outstanding work. They had to backfill a huge amount of staff because when she came in and said, hey, guess what? Our definition of civil rights is actually that you're going to treat everybody equally, a lot of the existing attorneys had no interest in that. And so she lost about 70% of her attorneys. She had to build that staff back up. But from everything from getting rid of disparate impact to getting rid of dei, to everything from. I mean, they're kind of suing on. They've created a Second Amendment division, They've pursued religious freedom issues that have been very favorable. So I think we've done a lot. On the other hand, this problem was not made in a year. And I think sometimes people on our side get a little too impatient in just thinking we can snap our fingers and undo it in a year. There is a whole host of executive orders, laws, et cetera, that have to be undone, and then there's a bunch of lawsuits that need to be filed against people who continue to break the law. So we've made a lot of good progress, but there's still a lot of work to do.
Blake
That's absolutely right. Jeremy. Again, you can check out his work. He's with the Claremont Institute and he's the author of the Unprotected Class. Thank you for coming on, Jeremy. I know we had to bring you on on short notice, so thank you again, and you take care. We'll see all of you tomorrow.
Podcast: Real America’s Voice (iHeartPodcasts)
Date: April 14, 2026
This episode of The Charlie Kirk Show featured a robust analysis of breaking political news, global events, and cultural debates, continuing in the spirit of Charlie Kirk’s legacy after his assassination. The hosts, including Andrew, Blake, and guest commentators like Peachy Keenan, discussed breaking developments in the Middle East, turmoil and government shakeups in the U.S., the intersection of Catholic Church politics and American immigration, Europe’s populist protests, and mounting allegations against prominent Democrats. Notably, the episode explored the defeat of Viktor Orban in Hungary, the weaponization of information in the United States, and the recent fall from grace of Congressman Eric Swalwell.
[03:39–06:30]
Notable Quote:
“We made very clear what our red lines were...the president...would be very happy if Iran was treated like a normal country...But in order for Iran to be a normal country economically, it’s going to have to be a normal country from the perspective of not pursuing a nuclear weapon, and...not pursuing terrorism.” — JD Vance [05:22]
[06:30; 33:54–50:52]
Notable Quote:
“Unfortunately, now we’re looking at Tom Steyer, which is like worse than Newsom...It’s like when you’re drowning, someone hands you an anchor.” — Peachy Keenan [35:51]
“If you can’t have it, take it.” (Eric Swalwell's infamous yearbook quote, referenced by Andrew as foreshadowing) [50:40]
[11:24–19:41; 50:53–52:34]
Notable Quotes:
“It is not indiscriminate. What it is, is enforcement of our country’s laws...it’s actively immoral to enforce laws only for some people and ignore them for others.” — Blake [18:43]
“The rise in organic converts this year was in spite of these guys, not because of them...People want tradition, and the church is still the only place you can really get that.” — Peachy Keenan [51:08]
[21:08–26:20]
Notable Quote:
“If the demonstrators want less migration, that means it’s a riot...If they want a far left government to overthrow...they’re marching for democracy.” — Blake [26:46]
[33:17–44:33]
Notable Quotes:
“The great replacement isn’t a theory. It’s over. That’s just what it is.” — Peachy Keenan [44:24]
“California is not run by the governor, it’s run by the kind of deep state of California out of Sacramento. These people will never be budged.” — Peachy Keenan [41:49]
[58:24–76:19]
Notable Quotes:
“Instead of the formal procedures of law...it rules through control of digital code. So it essentially moves decision-making power from the recognizable centers...and relocates it into the digital infrastructure.” — Jacob Siegel [59:10]
“The censorship relies on mass surveillance...so creating something like a property rights structure for people’s data is a step in the right direction.” — Jacob Siegel [72:44]
[81:15–94:39]
Notable Quotes:
“When you do away with the propaganda words around DEI...when you hire people who are less qualified based on the color of their skin...you’re going to wind up with a less efficient, less powerful business. That is almost a tautology.” — Jeremy Carl [95:58]
“If you want proof that it’s a bad sign, we have a tweet by Barack Obama...It’s a good example for all the attacks that they’ll bring against you...you can literally win four elections in a row and they’ll just say, ‘You’re not democracy.’” — Blake [85:13]
[94:39–100:02]
Notable Quotes:
“When I put anti-white racism in the subtitle of The Unprotected Class...even Chris Rufo, who’s done great work, did a sharp intake of breath, like, are we allowed to say that?” — Jeremy Carl [97:32]
“Our definition of civil rights is actually that you’re going to treat everybody equally...they had to backfill a huge amount of staff.” — Jeremy Carl [98:46]
This episode of The Charlie Kirk Show provided uncompromising coverage of current events from a conservative and populist perspective, focusing on the dangers of elite hypocrisy, bureaucratic overreach, information control, and demographic transformation. Guests such as Peachy Keenan and Jacob Siegel brought personal insight and intellectual firepower to issues ranging from California’s political future and Vatican politicking to U.S. government censorship and European populism. The tone was urgent, skeptical of mainstream narratives, and determined to expose double standards—fulfilling the show’s promise of “real news, honest views.”