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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 at public.com disclosures sleeping
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Mark Halperin
The Charlie Kirk show starts now.
Danny
There's some new video out of Tehran, smoke rising once again over the city and over the skyline as we see
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just an intense, continued battle.
Podcast Host
We know that the mission right now
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is to take out these missile sites and to diminish the number of missiles that are still in existence across the country. So we'll obviously keep you posted as
Podcast Host
we get more coming in.
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The President is summoning these big defense contractors to the White House to talk about quickly replenishing stockpiles amid this war with Iran and open questions about how long the operation could last. Leaders From Lockheed Martin, RTX, L3Harris and others are expected to attend Today it follows this push for big defense companies to ramp up production of missile interceptors and reportedly coincides with new $50 billion supplemental budget request that the White is expected to send to Congress to replace weapons that are being used.
Danny
The Wall Street Journal is reporting that
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China is now accelerating production of submarines to attack the United States closer to home, writing, quote, china has been developing new submarine technology and a bigger, better fleet that is gaining on the United States and its allies, spurring a new undersea arms race in the Pacific.
Neal McCabe
It's safe to say there's no plan
Blake
for a wave of Middle Eastern refugees
Danny
to the United States of America.
Neal McCabe
I think, as the President has pointed out for a long time, there are a lot of countries in this, in
Danny
the region who would be capable of
Blake
providing that kind of support if need be.
Neal McCabe
But that's certainly not something we're planning.
Danny
We have a lot of heart for people. They came in illegally, but they're good
Terrence Bates
people, and they're working now on farms,
Danny
and they're working in luncheonettes and hotels.
Mark Halperin
And we're not looking. We're looking to get the criminals out right now.
Danny
The criminals. And I think. I think it's very important. I mean, every once in a while you see a story, we take somebody, he should be out because they came in illegally. So in theory, they should be, but we're focused on the murderers, the drug dealers. Do you know who's killed more people than ICE this year? Trans shooters. Do you know the majority of these high school shootings have been transgender people? I did not know that. Yeah. You know why? Because they're giving them psych medications. They're giving them a bunch of crazy
Neal McCabe
hormones, and a lot of them probably
Danny
have mental struggles already, and they're ostracized from society and fill in the blank. And then they're empowered by thinking that the world has done something bad to them and that there's, like, a genocide against trans people. Quit the tough guy act and these Senate hearings. You know where to find me.
Blake
Any place.
Danny
Anytime, cowboy. Sir, this is a time. This is a place you want to run your mouth. We can be two consenting adults. We can finish it here.
Terrence Bates
Okay, that's fine.
Danny
Perfect. You want to do it now? I'd love to do it right now. Well, stand your butt up, then. You stand your butt up. Oh, hold up.
Sponsor Announcer
Stop it.
Danny
Is that your solution every problem?
Neal McCabe
No, no. Sit down.
Terrence Bates
What's the Save Act?
Danny
That's not about id.
Neal McCabe
It's about registration.
Danny
It's about who gets to vote, who doesn't.
Neal McCabe
Get to vote. They are not screwing around. We will lose this country.
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Around 2016, you get this mandate to protect America's cyber infrastructure and there's this decision made that that includes America's cognitive infrastructure. So let that detonate in your brain for a moment. And under that nomenclature, I guess your brain is part of the power grid and the government gets to control what goes in and out of it. You know what's tricky is there are foreign narratives that get intentionally injected into and amplified by what appear to be domestic IP addresses. But instead of exposing and conducting counterspeech against those foreign narratives which the government was doing, they want to step further and a step too far. They would find like a guy in Idaho tweeting something that, you know, they thought Russia wanted him to tweet and they would tell Twitter to take it down. You had them suppressing what they called adverse narratives. So notice not foreign propaganda and not misstatements of fact and not deepfakes, but adverse narratives narratives we don't like to promote the wrong people outcome narratives like, for example, the COVID virus leaks from a lab. Well, we now know that people at the CIA thought that was more likely than not. Narratives like the vaccine isn't completely sterilizing. We now know that that was true. And narratives like there were irregularities surrounding the 2020 election, which happened under truly irregular circumstances. In private practice, I represented Charlie Kirk, who I promise you, was not a Russian bot. People might have disagreed with Charlie's views, but he was all American and he was on a top 20 censorship target list maintained by this NGO network. Needless to say, we've put a stop to that under President Trump.
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 it's cozy
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Terrence Bates
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Mark Halperin
Every day is a battle for your mind. Raging information coming from every angle.
Danny
With the will to deceive, Fear not.
Mark Halperin
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.
Danny
This is the Charlie Kirk Show.
Sponsor Announcer
Buckle up.
Danny
Here we go. All right, yesterday, some of you were,
Blake
they were spirited defenders of the president.
Danny
You were a little worried about us and I, you know, I'm just gonna say we totally redeemed ourselves. I'm just gonna stand up for ourselves.
Mark Halperin
We did.
Danny
Blake's even suspicious of that allegation. Anyways, welcome to the Bitcoin.com studio is March 6, 2026 here in Phoenix, Arizona. Bitcoin.com, your one stop shop to buy, sell and trade bitcoin. Check it out. Cryptocurrencies, all the above. So the yesterday show was quite the wild ride, especially in hour one. We talked about how young people were skeptical of the war effort, or whatever we're calling it. Strike against Iran, a decapitation effort. And then we went into Christineau and we were pretty blunt. We were upset about some of the contracting decisions. We were upset about her questioning with Senator Kennedy where she claimed that President Trump was aware of some of these contracting decisions and spending decisions, especially when it came to marketing that featured her prominently. And by hour two, Secretary Noem was out at dhs. And that was a huge, huge shockwave felt across the country, especially the Cabinet reshuffle of. Yeah.
Blake
Which much more stable Cabinet overall.
Danny
Much, much more administration. And I think Trump was loathe to do it. He placed her. He didn't fire her all the way from dhs, certainly, but he's put her in a new role, which is fine, I guess. So the next thing we need to talk about is who's going to be taking over for Kristi Noem. And that is Senator Mark Wayne Mullen, who's been a frequent guest on this show. Now, here's we want to lay out the stakes for you so that everybody understands properly the dynamics. And by the way, we're going to have Mark Halpern on second half of this hour talking more about this and then we're going to do our ask us anything in hour two. But Senator Mark Wayne Mullen is one of the most liked senators, especially on the Republican side of the aisle within Washington. He is a congenial guy. He's very affable. A lot of people like him, which
Blake
it's good to be all of those things. But we're well aware that those phrases do set off alarm bells for a lot of people.
Danny
Yeah. Well, you don't want to hear, you
Blake
usually don't want to hear someone described as one of the most popular people in Washington.
Danny
Being popular in D.C. is not necessarily complicated. But I will say my glass is half full. I have great respect for the senator. I think he's, you know, here's the thing. He's a former MMA guy. He's military guy. He's, you know, he's, I don't want to say he's mainstream, but he's kind of mainstream. Right. And again, alarm bells, alarm bells, alarm bells. Because say what you will about Kristi Noemi, the same type of woman that is willing to shoot her dog is not going to be as, let's say, vulnerable to emotional appeals. She was going to be ruthless when it came to deportations. Here is the trade that you make when you are ruthless. You're not going to get cooperation from blue states. They're going to dig their heels in and they're going to fight you with everything they've got. And that's what we saw with Kristi Noem's approach. And you kind of see this play out in Minneapolis. So we have this huge uproar, Renee Goode, Alex Preddy and people digging their heels in protests. Nobody wants to cooperate. And then Homan comes in, kind of settles things down. A lot of it starts going under the radar, you don't see the headlines as much. And things calm down. And the jails and the prisons and the counties and even Minneapolis start cooperating with ice, giving over criminal illegals with detention requests. That's a good thing.
Blake
It is a good thing if they cooperate. But we have to be this is. There's going to be a little bit of a skirmish here because with any change of the person at the top, there's an opportunity. And there are definitely going to be people who approach the president, approach the president's aides, and they say, you know, Kristi Noem, she had a lot of these problems because she was so tough. And midterms are coming up. Some people think it's time to head towards the middle a little bit and they'll try to sell the administration, oh, this is a time to pivot towards the middle on immigration, maybe dial back the ICE stuff, dial back deportations, dial back enforcement stuff. And, you know, this is your chance to do it. There's a new guy. He's pretty popular with Democrats. We can be. We can play nice with him. There will be this siren call to soften up, and I think the administration's got to resist this. Yeah, well, the president's signature promise and his signature success of his term so far is the effort. Not just that he's secured the border, but there's a bunch of other things he's done. They've cut the number of H1B visas that are being granted. They've cut the number of foreign students. The overall foreign population of the US Is going down.
Danny
They've basically stalled visas from a lot of countries.
Blake
I think 70 countries have a visa pause right now. These are all good things long term. It's stopping that. It's breaking that utter dependence on foreigners endlessly coming into America that's hollowed us out in so many ways. And they're going to pressure Trump to reverse course on this. And this is their chance to do it. They're new guy at dhs, new policies, midterm year, ease up on things. And as we said yesterday, there's going to be pushback on anything worth doing at ice. You don't want the stuff we had with Secretary noem where a $200 million ad buy should not be your source of controversy. The fact that you're not getting contracts signed because they're just sitting on your desk. Don't want any of that going on. But you do need to be prepared to fight out what really matters. And if Mark Wayne Mullen is able to get along with Democrats in a way that makes sure we still have enforcement going on. That's great. But they should not allow themselves to get tricked into selling out what they promised before the, before the election.
Danny
Well, and remember the context that we're in right now. And this is what I want all of you at home to kind of think about. We have Iran. Right? So I was on with Chris Cuomo last night and Chris Cuomo made this line. I didn't get a chance to respond to it and I texted him about it after because I was like, you know, that was, that was not cool. But he said that, you know, President Trump was this America first, that he ceded the America first mantle. I disagree with that. I know a lot of people that are skeptical about what's happening in Iran think that he has ceded the America first mantle. I don't agree with that at all. I actually think that, listen, I'm skeptical of what we're doing in Iran, but once we press go, we have our, we have our presidents back, we have our troops back. And I do think that there is an America first angle here. And I think you could message on it. I think that you could make that case. But DHS is central to the America first promise, reason why President Trump was elected in the first place. And this is the moment to seize that mantle and to make sure that we, we drive it home. All right, so this is not a time to listen to the voices that would tell President Trump and this administration to go soft, to get weak in the knees, to cede ground to the radical left and the activist base. No. But here's the middle ground. And this is why I think Mark Wayne Mullen could be potentially incredibly successful at dhs. DHS is really good. As our guest said yesterday, when there's no drama, there's commas, meaning we want millions out. The way you get no drama is you have a guy like Mark Wayne Mullen who can reach across the aisle, calm people's fears, put on an affable, congenial face to it, stay out of the headlines and just get the work done. If we start getting prison transfers of criminals that have already been taken off the streets by local police departments and they get deported seamlessly, easily with just a few agents. Not, not these raids all the time, that's going to be really key. And then the next key, employment enforcement. Employment enforcement. I want you to keep that at the top of your mind. That's how you get big time numbers. So there's different strategies we can employ Here that will get massive results without all the headlines, without all the drama. All right, I'm going to tell you guys about strong sell. Blake is currently growing his fro back. It's looking beautiful. There's a couple. I see it there. This is. This will not grow your hair back. I just want to be clear.
Blake
I already drank my strong cell when I came in.
Danny
Did you really?
Blake
Yes.
Danny
All right, it's that time again. StrongCell.com use promo code CHARLIE to save 20% at checkout. This was one of Charlie's favorite supplements. Absolutely powerful stuff. Brain fog, fatigue. If you have chronic illness, you gotta try this stuff. Why? Because it delivers nadh, which is the power source for all of your cells. Delivers them straight to your cells. Used to have to get an IV for this.
Mark Halperin
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Danny
They have figured it out. So strongcell.com promo code Charlie and you get 20% off at checkout and 90 day risk. Risk free money back guarantee. It's the stuff of legends. We love it around here. Great company, great product. Check it out. StrongCell.com we'll be right back. All right. Welcome back to the Charlie Kirk show. If you've been listening for a little while, you know that we love the guys over@why refi.com we're all in with them. Why Refi refinances distressed or defaulted private student loans that the other guys won't touch. All right, so if you find yourself in a position with mountains of private student loan debt piling up on your kitchen table, you do not have to put up with this anymore. It's a nightmare. A lot of you guys are depressed, distressed. You are sometimes even suicidal. And that was shocking to me. But it makes perfect sense because the college cabal has taken a chunk out of our youngest people, the graduates from college. Some. Some of you dropped out and you still got mountains of private student loan debt. It's not good. So give them a try to help. A chance to help you. 888-yrefy34 so that's 888-yrefi34 or visit them online@yrefi.com why refinance? Why refi Refinances distress and default to private student loans, which are different than federal student loans. Many clients aren't even able to make their minimum monthly payment on their private student loans when they first contact y refi. And then they get. They save thousands and they get a minimum monthly payment that they can make each and every month tailored specifically to their situation may not be available in all 50 states. But you got to check it out. You owe it to yourself to do that. So please call them yrefy.com all right, so send us your emails. Our first segment, we talked about Senator Mark Wayne Mullen. A lot of you in the audience seem to be skeptical that he's tough enough, that he's got the intestinal fortitude and the internal constitution to stand up against the attacks. So he doesn't, to use the parlance of our day, cuck out. So send us your emails. Freedom. Charliekirk.com freedomarliekirk.com I want to hear your thoughts. Are you worried that Mark Wayne Mullen doesn't have what it takes to stand up for mass deportations, to get them done?
Blake
I'm just picturing in my head that phrase you just use. And we'd have those discussions with Charlie where, you know, what is Riz.
Danny
Yeah.
Blake
What does that mean?
Danny
What does that term you just used means? Is he gonna fold? Is he gonna get soft?
Blake
Is he gonna get squishy?
Danny
Is he gonna get squish? We don't want.
Blake
No, we hope not. And we're gonna fight to make this happen.
Danny
Listen, I, I will. I will. Absolutely. I will. I will say this. I, I will put an aerial assault on his text. Getting weak in the knees. I will tell you that. And you guys hold me accountable as well. Freedom. Charliekirk.com, but I want to hear your thoughts. What do you think? Is the fact that he's friends with a bunch of Democrats, is that a bad thing or is that a good thing? I think time will tell, but I'm sure you guys have opinions. Freedom@charliekirk.com, we want to hear from you and pull those up as we get them there.
Blake
Of course.
Danny
Of course. I want to draw attention really quick to this story. We were gonna get to it yesterday, but things got away on us. But the House voted on basically whether or not they were gonna release ethics complaint about sexual misconduct against its own
Blake
members, which it's very funny how this goes because, of course, Congress has spent several months ripping itself apart over the files of Mr. Epstein and really blasting that all out there, which, as the president warned a lot of people are going to be, have, like, baseless allegations about them published. Not just, not just actual embarrassing stuff, but just stuff where people, you know, insane people were making claims about this because it was such a big story. You'd have cranks contacting the FBI, and that stuff's gone out. But there was a vote that I Think Nancy Mace was demanding in the House where there is an ethics committee at, in the House and it investigates claims of sexual misconduct by members. And this leads to reports, this leads to some cases, settlements that are funded by taxpayers, payments are made. And she proposed. Okay, let's, let's release all of those files. And the House voted rather overwhelmingly to
Danny
not do this, 357 to 65 to not release.
Blake
Yes. There were 38 Republicans and 27 Democrats voted in favor. So it wasn't even partisan. And who the minority was.
Danny
Yeah, some of the, some of the Republicans that voted to release him, we should say it would be Andy Biggs. Boebert from Colorado, Burchett from Tennessee, I believe.
Blake
Gill, Brandon Gill.
Danny
Brandon Gill. Yep.
Mark Halperin
Let's see.
Danny
Ro Khanna. That wouldn't surprise, I think many of you.
Blake
It's a lot of people we like and I will say given all the stuff that it's just very case they voted I think 400 and some to 1 to release the Epstein files when they did. And it is a funny image to have a lot of them now voting against that. Obviously I've made a lot of people irritated with my take on the files.
Danny
Oh, you guys are going to love Blake's take.
Mark Halperin
Yeah.
Blake
And it's just like I would say I'm getting more and more. I'm shaped a lot. I used to cover education and I would. So I would cover all those sexual harassment tribunals they would have at colleges. And that really solidified in me. I think we have a legal system for a reason. If you sexually assault or rape or, you know, do a crime to somebody, it should go to a court of law, period. Like, that's why we have judges, that's why we have lawyers, that's why we have juries.
Danny
Your whole take though is that this doesn't belong in the House.
Blake
Yeah, I don't, I, I'm gonna say this. I don't think Congress should be investigating claims related to like affairs of its members. If you are a victim of harassment, if someone is extorting you or you know, committing some sort of crime, you should report it to the police or you should sue them for it and it should be in a court of law. But what we see in Congress is the same thing we see in universities, which when you have these para, you know, these quasi courts, they're a way to shake people down. They're a way to sort of harangue people. They're a way to escalate personal drama into affairs of state.
Danny
Well, but it's different because Congress actually has a fund established to pay out these, which they also shouldn't, so. But this is why it caused some controversy. The drafted language allegedly would have revealed victims, disproven claims, etc. It was similar to the Epstein discharge. So why are they all right with doing one over the other? Does that make any sense?
Blake
Probably not.
Danny
Sounds like, consistent.
Blake
And I would say it would be satisfying Congress, just like with their stock trades. Congress is often a very greasy body, and I think there's a lot of ethical stuff to be desired. So in a sense, Congress would richly deserve having all of this stuff aired out. But I think if we did that, I would be. Okay, release all the files and then also just move this into a normal court.
Danny
You're just against it on principle. Yeah. Not that Congress deserves to be shielded from.
Blake
Yeah, Congress shouldn't be shielded, but Congress shouldn't be shielded. But I think the standard should be things should either be in the open court of law, something that is, you get sued over this, you get prosecuted over this, or it should be a private matter. We don't. It's weird to have these extrajudicial tribunals of this sort. And I don't like them in college campuses. I don't like them in companies. Companies do this now where, oh, someone has, you know, a relationship with an employee, and then these HR apparatus is investigating this. Just. No, this didn't exist when America was a great country 70 years ago. You had the courts and you had private life, and you don't want to mingle the two as much as you want.
Danny
You can understand some of the folks in the audience who probably feel frustrated with that answer simply because of the hypocrisy of it all. You've got, I mean, I will say Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie, Nancy May, some of the loudest members on the Epstein stuff were all voted in favor of releasing it. But the House did vote. What was it you said? 400 and something to one to release the Epstein documents and the transparency discharge. And guess what? A lot of those people, their principles only went so deep. And here's what I will say. There's a new big dump from the justice department. Almost 50,000 documents total. Nothing. Burger. We explained it last week. It's literally all of the things we explained last week. So maybe we'll explain it again if we have to. We'll be right back with Mark Halpern.
Terrence Bates
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Mark Halperin
The hardest working radio show in the
Danny
business, the Charlie Kirk Show. All right. Well, welcome back to the Bitcoin.com studios here in Phoenix, Arizona. I want to tell you guys about our friends over at Patriot Mobile, great people, Glenn and Jenny Story. Man, as we've been talking about Texas, you just got to remember there's great patriots on the ground like Glenn and Jenny Story from Patriot Mobile who are making a huge impact. And one of the reasons why they're able to do that is because you guys sign up for their phones and their cell service. That's the point. So when you give your money to woke wireless, your money's going all kinds of crazy places. When you give it to Patriot Mobile, they're going to be fighting for your 2A rights. They're going to be fighting for your Christian conservative values. And guess what? You still get the same coverage you become accustomed to. They can get you on all three major wireless networks and get you unlimited data plans, mobile hotspots, international roaming, all the things. Keep your number, keep your phone or upgrade. All options are on the table. Take a stand today. Stand with Patriot Mobile. Stand with Glenn and Jenny, the patriots down there in Texas that are working all across the country, by the way, and they support the work at Turning point and the show patriot mobile.com Charlie or call 972 Patriot patriot mobile.com Charlie or 972 Patriot. Use promo code Charlie for a free month of service. Do it today. There's literally no excuse not to. All right, it is that time again. We have Mark Halperin. He's editor in chief of two Way TV as well as host of nextup on the Megyn Kelly network. Welcome back to the show to the Charlie Kirk Show. Mark, how are you doing, gentlemen?
Mark Halperin
I'm good. In honor of intra maga conflict, I'm dressed like Steve Banden today with the three legs.
Danny
Oh, is that where we're going? Is that where we're going? All right, all right. This is. I tried to grow.
Mark Halperin
I tried to grow my beard in, but I couldn't do it fast.
Danny
Well, Blake's fro is growing some of our strong cell. Yeah.
Blake
Hair to sprout all over.
Danny
These are fake.
Mark Halperin
Mail it to me.
Danny
Fake allegations. All right, Mark, so is this where you tell us that the Iranian war or conflict or whatever we're calling it is causing intra maga fighting or what? What is your political analysis of where we're at?
Mark Halperin
It is. It is. And you could take a Tucker description of his opposition and graft a bunch of it onto a Bernie Sanders description, and it would look a lot alike. This is not a partisan issue as much as it is an attitude about America's role in the world. So I'm for a robust debate. I think people shouldn't shy away from the reality that there are people within both parties who disagree about whether this is a good idea. And I think it should be Less about personality and fighting and more about. Get on the national town square and explain your position. I think the President. I talked about this on NextUp last week. I don't think the why and the why now are ambiguous. And it frustrates me that people want to spend time debating the why and the why now. I think there are lots of debates to have Congress's role, the end game, regime change, how much it costs, the risks. But I don't think we need to debate why and why now. I think the President and Caroline Levitt have made that pretty clear.
Danny
Yeah, I actually was on with Chris Cuomo on his show last night, and I said, hey, originally I was very much in the camp that this has not been properly sold to the American people. I am no longer in that camp. I understand the why and the why now. I actually think they've done a pretty good job of that. Now we have questions, of course. How close were they really to enriching uranium to the point of making a nuclear bomb? We've been told that for decades, you know, but we had a nuclear scientist on the show yesterday who said, basically, it's the same amount of time going from 0 to 5% enrichment as it is 60 to 90. I mean, it ramps up very quickly how fast you can get it there. And so, I mean, listen, there's a lot of reasons, I think, that this can make sense from a national security perspective, from a geopolitical perspective. The truth, though, is that Trump could be 100% right from a national security perspective and an American first perspective, but it could be politically costly, and we need to be honest about that. Mark, we had students from some of our chapters on, and they said basically all the Trump voters on campus hate it too. Right. And this is something that Charlie was intimately aware of. My perspective on it is once you press go, you gotta be a patriot, you gotta root for our troops, pray for their safety, and you gotta pray that America's interests are advanced somehow, the world's interests, Iranians interests, are advanced somehow here. But politically, I think this gets dicier the longer it goes. Right? So we were told four to five weeks. Now we're told 100 days, maybe through September. That seems to be the central question of how do you get out as this thing drags on? I think that's where the political fallout is going to be felt most sharply, especially as we close into the midterms. So what messaging is working, what's not working, what's piercing, what's getting through? Line up the two sides, what do you think is working when the Democrats are attacking it? What do you think is working when the admin supports it?
Mark Halperin
Well, first, I know you guys must do this all the time, but I really do wonder what would have happened if the president called Charlie last week and said, hey, I'm thinking of doing this. What he would have said and then what he would have said if the president hadn't agreed with his advice but had done it anyway, assuming that might have been his advice. I really do wonder because as we all know, he was singular in thinking about these things from all dimensions. And I don't think he would have been exactly where Tucker is or exactly where the vice president is, but I do wonder where he would have been on this. Look, I think the politics overlap with the substance, but the substance is most important and the politics will flow from that. If this is successful, then I think it will help Republicans, although it may not save their majorities in Congress in the midterms. The Democrats, really surprising to me, even in, given how much they dislike the president, how polarized things are, it surprises me how far out there they are in just emphasizing the negatives about this and not even, sometimes even paying homage to the extraordinary performance of the US Military and the boldness of this. We've had decades of all presidents saying Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. Is it intolerable that Iran is developing intercontinental ballistic missiles? It's intolerable that Iran is the leading sponsor of terrorism around the world. Other presidents felt the same way about President Trump, not just that it was a bad thing, but that it was an intolerable thing. And yet Donald Trump's the one who's done something about it. Now. There are extraordinary risks. And you put your finger on for most. Well, for most Republicans who are worried about the election is the critical factor. How long will this last? And I believe that, that the president could stop now, right? There's nothing, there's no, there's no factor that keeps the president, except for maybe fighting with Netanyahu about it, from saying, hey, we just, we degraded on the fronts we wanted to. Missile technology, naval capacity, nuclear development and terrorist sponsorship. We've degraded all those. We're done. We're going to come back home and warn the Iranians that if they continue in those fronts to try to rebuild, we'll do it again. Or he can keep going and further degrading all four and hope that there becomes an opportunity for the Iranian people to rise up. So I think people who are worried that this is a quagmire or too much money or an endless war, I think are underestimating the flexibility the President has here to, if he wants to, for substantive and or political purposes, to just end it.
Blake
Well, I've heard that take. But do you think that holds up now that Iran has taken this sort of lash out approach where they are shooting missiles at Dubai, they're shooting missiles at Kuwait. We've had things popping up in Azerbaijan, Jordan, Cyprus, even that actually the president is sort of stuck as long as that's going on because he has so many of these relationships with Middle Eastern countries and he can't abandon all of them at once.
Mark Halperin
Well, I hear what you're saying, but if you believe the American military and it's right, if you've got my profession to be skeptical of what the government says during war, especially during war, when governments historically don't always tell the truth, they can keep going and continue to degrade those things. So could they stop if Iran still had capacity to send missiles or drones into other countries? Probably not. But if you look at the data of how many attacks they've engaged in in the last 24 hours versus the first 48 hours, it appears the Pentagon's telling the truth, that they've diminished their capacity. So can they, can they make it so Iran can never hit an American ally ever again? No, but they can degrade it pretty substantially, it appears. And again, that could be a natural stopping point. Even if we know little about whoever is governing Iran now will be any better for the world and for the Iranian people than what was there before the conflict began.
Danny
Yeah. And Mark, you're very good at looking at things dispassionately. You sort of call balls and strikes. You know, we're hardened partisans over here, obviously. But you know, the question that has sort of emerged in this conflict is how much of our immediate skepticism was rooted in muscle memory. Scar tissue from Iraq, from Afghanistan. And there is a countervailing sense that President Trump is really the first president that's really unleashed our military to just be completely lethal and precise. We're not tying their feet here in their hands. So I mean when you talk about we could actually do this relatively quickly. I mean, when you look at this, you're looking at the data, you're looking at how precise and lethal they're being. They really, this really could be a new model even in a country as big as Iran. Or do you think that that's cope. Do you think I'm full of opium here?
Mark Halperin
No, I think, I think it's full Use of force, but not boots on the ground. And no one's talking about building schools and hospitals in Tehran. So if you stay away from troops on the ground and boots on the ground, you stay away from nation building and you stay away from being responsible for the new government. Although the President yesterday suggested he was responsible for it, or at least he'd like to be. If you stay away from responsibility in those three areas. This is a new paradigm. And I find it amusing when people say there's never been a regime change forced by air power. Well, there's two things I think wrong with that. One is regime change doesn't have to happen for this to be a success. And number two, we've never had air power like we have now, particularly with drones, but also the sophistication and lethality of America's air power from Sealand and air. So I wouldn't be surprised if this, if this is actually what the President's brand on these things stand for. Well executed, which is overwhelming force mitigating the problems that have occurred in previous forever wars that he's still against and his constituents are against.
Danny
Yeah, and you got to remember like we, the reason we are even thinking in these terms, the reason Charlie became so clear eyed in these terms is because President Trump sort of of pioneered that, you know, Iraq was a dumb war. Right. I mean, he said that from the debate standards.
Blake
He was the first one to say it. The Republicans wouldn't say that for a decade.
Danny
Yeah. And so the fact we're even here is because of Trump's leadership. I don't think he gets enough credit for that. Honestly, even some of my skepticisms I've been probably too slow to give him credit for even where we're at currently. More with Mark Halperin. Stay right there, Mark. Gotta tell our audience about one of our friends here, All Family Pharmacy. Love these guys because they're giving you a solution to a problem you probably didn't even realize you had. And that's that healthcare is reactive. You get sick, then you wait in line, you go to the doctor, you wait in line again. No, get ahead of it. Take control of your healthcare. With All Family Pharmacy, you order prescriptions before you get sick, keep them at home and have them ready when you need them most. Everything is done online. A licensed doctor reviews your requests and your medication ships straight to your door. They offer antibiotics, antiviral, Tamiflu, Ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine, indazole. Got it. Methyl and blue and even your daily maintenance Medications. This is about access. It's about prepar preparation and personal responsibility. Choose freedom. Choose the right pharmacy. You don't need to do the old model anymore. There's a whole new model out there. It's way easier. Go to allfamilypharmacy.com Kirk allfamilypharmacy.com KIRK Use Kirk 10 at checkout for 10% off. We'll be right back. All right, Mark. I don't want to say we called our shot yesterday, but we kind of called our shot. We spent a lot of hour one getting absolutely lambasted by some of you in this audience for our criticisms of Chrissy Gnome. We didn't like the luxury jets. We didn't like the marketing buys with her prominently featured. We didn't like her putting that on President Trump. I knew a line had been crossed. And then, sure enough, by the end of hour two, Mark, she was out. And that was a huge tectonic shift in the admin that was felt across the country. Politically, I think this is a huge win for President Trump. I think deportations, the promises on immigration, just too central to his election and his prospects going forward. I think we needed a change at the top. What say you?
Mark Halperin
Well, I was surprised when she was picked originally because it wasn't clear to me what her qualifications were for this job. And she caused a lot of problems for the administration. It's a really big agency, really big department, really hard to run.
Danny
Yep.
Mark Halperin
And both she and Corey Lewandowski, her advisor, had a lot of enemies in the administration. That's just objective. That's not, that's not gossip. It's not anti maga or anti Christine Ome and Corey Lewandowski. It's just an objective. In fact, they had made enemies for most of the year, including among some of the most important and impressive and powerful members of the Trump team. So their capacity to stay in the positions as long as they did is quite an achievement.
Danny
And at the same time, that's so harsh. I love it. It's really harsh.
Mark Halperin
True.
Danny
The surprising aspect for you is not that she was ousted. It was the fact she lasted as long as she did. Yeah. Yes.
Blake
That's terrible.
Mark Halperin
But, but, but again, I go back to the politics and he's in our talking about these things, I think I say respectfully and in, and in the real lives of real people, the politics needs to follow from the substance. She was involved in helping control the border. That's one of the greatest achievements of this president. So she gets credit for that. But but you can't go to Congress under oath and say the President signed off on something he didn't sign off on. That's a no brainer in terms of a fireable offense. At the same time, she did about a dozen other things that a normal president and a normal cabinet member would have put her on. At least the nice. So I just think as an American, we need this department to be run really well and without this level of controversy.
Danny
So I have sort of been hearing whispers, Mark, I'm curious if you've heard the same whispers. Two things. I'll let you react to them in whichever order you want. Democrats were already planning impeachment proceedings using and leveraging some of this that when she said Trump was, you know, he had approved some of these contract, these no big contracts, things like that when he hadn't. Secondly, I am concerned moving forward about what, let's just say softness might come out of the dhs. I like Senator Mark Wayne Mullen, but I'm concerned that he's going to be offering up negotiating pieces that might be, let's say, unsavory for the base that wants to see, you know, everybody deported, all illegals deported, take those in whichever order you want. But he's going to try and get blue states to cooperate just like we've seen in Minneapolis. And I'm just concerned about the negotiation process there between.
Mark Halperin
Between Secretary Mullen and Democrats.
Danny
Yep. Yeah.
Mark Halperin
First of all, I feel, you know, it's. Usually I treat stuff that said during the break as private, but I do feel duty bound to tell the listeners and the viewers that during the break Blake said that he could kick Mark Wayne Mullen's ass.
Danny
It's a strong self. Disavow. Disavow.
Mark Halperin
I feel I need to share that because there's a kind of a bold claim.
Danny
Well, we know where to find that cowboy, I'm pretty sure. Yeah, exactly. There's that great clip of going around viral of Mark Wayne.
Blake
What I saw yesterday about him was someone joked that his office gets mad if you call and ask for Markowayne Mullen.
Danny
Mark Quain. Yeah, exactly. I actually sent him, I sent him a meme. He laughed at it anyways.
Mark Halperin
Yeah, so everybody loves that guy. Look, I like the fact that he said yesterday he hopes to get Democratic support, you know, in the confirmation process and he might. Senators tend to, you know, be more inclined to vote for other senators. And he's, you know, widely considered one of the nicest members of the Congress. So fresh start and a possibility to keep up the policies that are popular and consistent with the president, president's agenda and his pledge as a candidate and to maybe win over some Democratic support, which would be good for everybody, be good politically for the Republicans, I think, but it'd be good for the country. The president and Tom Homans doesn't appear to be going, so we'll have to see what that relationship's like. But the president has a pretty robust agenda about deportation that I think would win broad support. Maybe not amongst the squad, but a lot of Democrats would support it. He still has to deal. And this will be part of what a Secretary Mullen has to address. What about cracking down on employers? What about deporting people who are in the country legally but haven't been convicted of other crimes? That needs to be worked out. Still. What exactly is the next three years look like in terms of who gets deported? But a fresh start is a good thing because whether she would have been impeached or not, I don't know. I think the Democrats are going to have to think long and hard, hard about how much they want to talk about impeachment now and how much they want to address it if they do win the majority. But, but, but I don't pay much attention to it because if they impeached everybody who they talked about impeachment, it's all they would do. And I don't think they would want to use their newfound majority to just run a bunch of impeachment probes.
Danny
So to dig one level deeper, let's just say daca, let's say amnesty of some sort. Let's say more, you know, work, visa, whatever, whatever the offering is. What I'm trying to get at here, Mark, is I am an all they all need to go guy, right? You hear this, this kind of bifurcation within the messaging that the worst first when I get the criminals and then there's the base, which a lot of us are. A lot of them are like me. They all need to go. And what I'm, what I'm trying to calibrate with you dispassionately. So take you're not in maga, you're kind of sitting outside of it. But what would you brace us for accepting? If we're going to get Blue City, sanctuary cities to cooperate and hand over their criminals at jails, what do we need? What is actually the most popular center cut of this?
Mark Halperin
Yeah, well, you're on the wrong side of public opinion on that question, as I know, you know, and there's a practical, a practical reality. And I used to ask people before MAGA, back in like 20, you know, 2012, 2016, before the president won the nomination, do you what do you want to do with the 15 million or so who are here illegally? And most politicians in the Republican Party wouldn't answer the question because they know not just what a heavy lift it is and how expensive it would be on the front end, but a lot of those people are integral to the the economy, particularly in two sectors. The president has a lot of friends who, who are owners of hospitality and agriculture. So if you guys want to take the president on, on deporting people who work in agriculture and hospitality, go at it. But I don't think he has any intention of doing that because every time it comes up, some of his friends in hospitality and ag call him and say, you'd put us out of business.
Danny
Yeah.
Mark Halperin
So they might, they might have broken the law. They might be a drain on America tax dollars in one way or another. Some of them might commit crimes. But they're an integral part of the economy. And I'm not saying they shouldn't be removed from the country.
Neal McCabe
Yeah.
Mark Halperin
I'm just saying there are a lot of people in the Republican Party who don't want them removed.
Danny
Well, I don't like that answer, but that's why I asked it, because I want to know what you think. Mark Halperin, thank you for making the time for us today. Always love being here. Hour two up next.
Terrence Bates
Welcome back to this Real America's Voice news break. I'm Terry. It has been an eventful week at the White House, punctuated by Thursday's firing of Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. In the meantime, the war in Iran continues and the US Boots are on the ground in Ecuador, even if just in an advisory capacity. Plus, the Department of Homeland Security still isn't funded with TSA agents and others working without a paycheck. Let's bring in Rav national political reporter Neal McCabe for the very latest happenings there at the White House. Neal, good to see you, my friend. Let's just get right to it. President Trump set to meet with defense contractors today at the White House. That's probably the latest headline coming out of 1600 Pennsylvania.
Neal McCabe
Yeah. What they're looking for is they're looking to really energize the defense industrial base. I don't want we saw some of this like a precursor in Trump, 45, when he was able to motivate industry using this defense language, defense laws to get ventilators and other things to respond to. COVID19 but this is obviously very serious because American lives are at stake. And so it's the Thaad missiles, it's the Tomahawks and other munitions. They want to make sure that those production lines are up and running. And they also want to look over the horizon because a lot of these defense contracts are not delivering on time. And we've seen that with the troubled F35. And obviously the USS Gerald R. Ford has had a very troubled, troubled tenure so far. It's doing great work now, but there have been problems with that, with that contractor also. So this is a way of pulling these guys into the room and saying, okay, this is what I want and this is what you're going to give me or I'll find somebody else.
Terrence Bates
TERRENCE Putting the pressure on them for sure. Tomorrow the president expected to Travel north on 95 to go to Dover Air Force Base for the dignified transfer. The bodies of those six American soldiers who were killed in Kuwait expected to come back. You have a unique perspective about where they were killed. You actually served in that facility. Can you give us some more info?
Neal McCabe
Yeah. That port is, it's been described as an army base. It's not really an army base. It's a full on industrial seaport where major container ships come in. And there is an army component there because the US army is actually in charge of port operations, not the Navy. And so those soldiers who are serving with the 103rd ESC, or sustainment command Expeditionary based in Iowa, they would have been at that facility. But it's not really an up armored hardened facility. There are, there are t walls that sort of, you know, walls, cement walls that would go up, say 10 or 12ft. But there's not really that sort of hardened presence that you would see, say, when we were in Iraq. But that attack was not only on US Soldiers, but was also on the capacity for the US army to use that port to bring in supplies. And frankly, servicemen can come in and out of there also.
Terrence Bates
Neil, there's so much to unpack about what's been going on there at the White House most recently. Yesterday, specifically, there was a Kristi Noem situation. The president basically firing her and then kind of reassigning her. I'm not even so sure if it's a firing because she has been reassigned to a different position, but firing is the word that everyone's using. What can you tell us about that? And even reaction today as this is all sinking in for everyone?
Neal McCabe
Well, in Trump 45 there were a lot of cases where Trump appoint appointees were railroaded out of office by Democrats, establishment Republicans and the media would create this sort of fury and and then the person would be let go. Now, there were a lot of people who deserved to be let go. But in Trump 47, they've decided to take a pause. And the policy is called no scalps. And we saw that with Mike Walt, who has moved from national security advisor to the UN and we're seeing it with Ed Martin, who was the U.S. attorney in D.C. and he is now at he is now the U.S. pardon attorney with Kristi Noem. Her camp was really surprised they didn't see it coming. They were treating it like March Madness, like, let's just advance to the next round. But after Senator Kennedy asked those questions and really put her on the spot, there was no next round.
Terrence Bates
Tennis Terrence Neil, we appreciate the reporting there from the White House. Always good to see you. Enjoy the rest of your weekend. That's going to do it for this news break. Quick break now and then we'll get you back to your regularly scheduled programming.
Danny
All right. Welcome back. Hour two of the Charlie Kirk show is underway. This is our Ask Us Anything hour. It's the final hour of the final show of the week. So you can participate by joining us@members.charlie kirk.com that's members.charliekirk.com There it is right at the bottom part of your screen right there. Join the show Ask Us Questions live on Friday, Hour two. But we did did ask you for questions in our one about and what do you think about Mark Halpern?
Blake
And we got a lot. We got a lot very quickly. A lot is a lot of people are angry about what he said and did about January 6th.
Danny
Yep.
Blake
Said the fact he called Ashley Babbitt's murderer a hero is a problem for me. Another one said that she's I believe he like embraced the he hugged him. Yes. Hugged him.
Danny
He hugged Michael Bird, I think is what he said.
Blake
Let's see. But Mullen, over the years, Charlie would make mention about his concerns with certain people. But he says he's worried that Mark Wayne might say whatever he needs to ingratiate himself because we know Charlie had Mark Wayne on a lot. He said positive things about him. So I think, I think there's a lot of kind of maybe Missouri attitude show me with Mullen that, yeah, you can get the job done.
Danny
That's fair and XOXO wild.
Blake
On the other hand, Patty says we're ready for A change and he's great regarding deportation. We live in Oklahoma. He has done well for our state. That Stan and Patty.
Danny
XOXO Wildfire says hallelujah. Spot on. Mark Halperin. Bingo. Please you to stop patting yourselves on the back for her ouster. Fair enough. We probably had very little to do with it, although. So it was time to. It was time to address it.
Blake
Another says, I'm not a fan for in the past years, he verbally attacked Matt Gaetz long before Matt was proposed as ag But I hope he proves me wrong and I trust President Trump implicitly. That's from Mary. So I, like I said, a lot of prove it sort of attitude, which that's why we said they got it. The administration's got to make sure that they don't go for. They don't fall for the siren call to soften up on. On immigration just because Nome is out. You want. You still want the tough attitude. You just want less of the. Less of the distractions.
Danny
Yeah. Fair enough. All right, so we are on our Ask Us Anything hour, and we have first up, looks like Ellie. Ellie, you are on the Charlie Kirk Show. Welcome. Please unmute yourself.
Sponsor Announcer
Hey, can you guys hear me okay?
Danny
Yes.
Sponsor Announcer
Hey, thanks for letting me call in. It's my first time.
Blake
Oh, well, hopefully not the last.
Sponsor Announcer
Yeah. So unfortunately, I've lost a few close family members in this last year. And then of course, with losing Charlie as well. I know they believed in Jesus and they're in heaven now, but with all of the grief, my question to you guys is, I know all of you have different opinions on faith, but what are some ways that you have all strengthened your faith through dealing with the grief?
Danny
I mean, our situation is so unique in the sense that we found ourselves at the middle of this really global news story. And I said it a bunch of times, and I'll say it again, because it bears repeating. I was sustained by the prayers of strangers, obviously. I had a ton of people praying for me and for us and for the organization, for Erica that we knew. But. But we just had so many people. I've got a mountain of mail in the office here, actually, that Riley's just looking through. And it's like the third wave that has come to me because they hold it in some of our shipment area until they can check it out. And then it comes to me, and it's just this mountain of people saying, we're praying for you and we love you and we have your back. And I will tell you, I could feel it. I Genuinely could feel the prayers of strangers. And all of a sudden, it was kind of. It was almost like a Road to Damascus moment for me. Even when I. After Charlie was assassinated. And I realized, so many days we were just hunkered down, working so hard, just trying to save the country, trying to get President Trump elected, whatever, build the show. And all of a sudden, Charlie was gone. And I realized, looking back and I said this at the memorial, that I realized, Charlie, we called them campus tour stops and Prove Me Wrongs, but they were really tent revivals. I saw that Charlie wasn't just a political activist, he was a prophet to the people. And those kind of realizations felt like revelations from the Lord. And that strengthened my faith because I just felt like it wasn't a concept, it wasn't abstract. It was so deeply personal. And you can just feel the Holy Spirit in that moment. I could feel the Holy Spirit in and around us and in around what was happening and in around the vigils and everything we saw at the memorial. It was such a tangible manifestation of the presence of God for me personally, but for the country. And when you have those moments, it's important to remember them because, you know, they're clarifying moments. They're moments of vision. And if you look into scriptures, the stories of the great people in the Bible, they had these moments of beautiful vision, and then the vision would get clouded. And so. And that's just. That's just what happens in life. God gives you a revelation, and then the revelation is challenged and the vision gets cloudy. And so I hold that with that memorial in my heart deeply and closely. And I hold those moments of just the tangible presence of God in and around us closely. And I remember it because I truly believe what God has unleashed, man cannot stop. And I believe God is active in our midst. I believe God is doing a great work. I believe that revival continues on. And so I just. I hold close to the promises of God. I hold close to what God has revealed to us, and I hold close to the legacy that Charlie left us. I think about it all the time. I don't know about you, Danny, but I find myself reflecting on those moments. Danny spent a lot of time with Charlie in private. Yeah, I think what I've been doing a lot is just like praying. Reading the Bible, as Charlie would say, is very important and just staying grounded in your beliefs and really just taking time, just reading scripture instead of just listening to everything online and everything like that. I think that's really helped. Just sticking true to my beliefs. And God's word.
Blake
Yeah, this is one of Charlie. One of Charlie's better takes that he repeated on here a lot is that faith is a. Is a practice. And so I like that you say, how do you cultivate it daily? Well, are you doing a faith related thing daily? Because that is how you will cultivate it daily. I think some. This is going to be a weird comparison, but I remember when I started lifting weights, a friend of mine pointed out a lot of people would go online and they would obsess over, like, what's the right regimen of weights to do? And like, what should I lift? What should my schedule be? And they'd obsess over that. And they would never start until they felt they were on the perfect thing.
Danny
And.
Blake
And he would point out to me, the best exercise is the one you do, Blake, and do something. And if you want me to change it, you can just change it as you go. And I think a similar thing can happen with faith stuff sometimes where people wonder about doing it the right way when the correct take is like, are you praying daily? Are you reading scripture daily? Are you going to church on Sunday?
Danny
Are you doing something?
Blake
Are you doing those basic things? And the extra stuff will naturally come
Danny
out of that involvement. I had a pastor that told me, Ellie, that you can't turn a park car. So the first thing you do when you're cultivating your faith is you just go. And you can adjust the direction as you go. I think to myself all the time, doing the show, working with Turning Point is a massive blessing because every day is an act of faith. Every day I have to test my faith. I have to have courage. I have to step forward into something that feels uncomfortable. And so the question for you at home is, what are you doing that makes you uncomfortable? What is it that you're doing on a daily basis that makes you step out of your comfort zone and step into faith? Faith is spelled R I S K. What are you doing to take a risk for the Lord? And I'm blessed. And we're blessed around here because every day is a faith walk and a faith journey. Hopefully that made sense. Ellie, we can talk in the break. If you have follow ups here. I'm going to tell you guys about Hillsdale. I love Hillsdale. I was just texting with the Hillsdale team. We're gonna get a great Hillsdale professor on the show next week, Dr. Ray, who is a. He's a historian on Iran and on regime change and on war. It's gonna be amazing. I'M trying. I'm gonna try and set that up for Monday, actually, because I think it's important at this stage of the journey. One of the courses that Charlie actually took is the Genesis Story. And you can get it at charlieforhillsdale.com the Genesis Story is an actual college course. It's rigorous, it's challenging, it's thoughtful, it's accessible. It's taught by Hillsdale professor Dr. Justin Jackson, and it's free. So if you want to be like Charlie, if you want to learn like Charlie, go to charlieforhillsdale.com so much of the greatness of Charlie Kirk is because he started learning. He took learning extraordinarily seriously. And you can do it, too. Charlieforhillsdale.com Charlieforhillsdale.com if you want to lead boldly, if you wanna live a life of great, great faith, it has to start with filling your mind with the great ideas that are all around. If you look for them, CharlieFillsdale.com will be right there. All right, so actually have a friend at Hillsdale who I was just texting with, who I mentioned. He's listening in. He said, I used to live in Aurora. If Ellie needs church recommendations, I'm happy to help. Help. So, Ellie, if you need church recommendations, email us freedom charliekirk.com and I'll connect you with my buddy over at Hillsdale. I want to tell you guys about why refi private student loan. I'm going to quiz you again. It's that how much private student loan debt is there in the United States?
Blake
$400 billion.
Danny
300 billion. $300 billion.
Blake
45 billion of that is distressed.
Danny
And the 30 you transposed the first digit. Yes. 45 billion of that is labeled as distressed. Here's a crazy fact, by the way. In the 90s, your parents were making a hundred thousand dollars. Do you know how much you need to make now to. For the equivalent of that? I think like 350. $325,000. So put that in perspective. $325,000 is the new hundred thousand. That's bananas. Okay, anyways, so when we're talking about how we are struggling to pay back hundreds of thousands of dollars student loan debt, it all starts to make sense. So this is why refi. Why refi is so important. Because they will help people with student loan situations, predicaments that other people just simply will not touch. They don't care what your credit score is. They don't care what your past financial history is. They're going to assess Each individual individually and they're going to tailor a solution for you. And you're not calling some faceless call center. You're going to talk with somebody in their office that can help you get to the bottom of your problem, save you thousands, even let you skip a payment every six months up to 12 times. That's yrefi yrefy.com or call them today. 888-yrefi34 We' with these guys because they are wonderful patriots and good people. Our next caller is Christine. Christine, welcome to the show. Please unmute yourself.
Podcast Host
Hey, guys, how are you doing today?
Danny
Really well, it's Friday. How are you?
Podcast Host
Yeah, right. I have a whole thing. So many conservatives, I know what the strict enforcement on immigration. But I feel like we should have some way to bring people in. For example, maybe we could if someone's paid their taxes consistently and had no crimes for the past five years, they could apply for citizenship and be forgiven for the illegal entry. Or like my father, who is came over after World War II, he had a sponsor who was financially responsible for him until he met criterias like language proficiency, employment and good conduct. So do you think it has to be zero tolerance or shouldn't we find a way through to these people who are good of heart, who just need to be here for other reasons, you know, than crime?
Blake
Bluntly, I mean. So first of all, in practice, we may end up with some sort of compromise like that. But my personal opinion is we should fight pretty hard for zero tolerance because we've gone through this routine multiple times. And I'll be frank. I think a lot of good intentions like yours that you express have been taken advantage of. So as an example, as you say, how, you know, be responsible until they show language proficiency? Well, you're already supposed to have language proficiency in America, for example, to become a citizen to get things like those truck driving licenses. And as we see, we just hand them out anyway, it's not really enforced. A friend of mine who did become a naturalized citizen, he was at the,
Danny
you know, he went there and he
Blake
was observing the checks they were doing. And he says the test for English proficiency was on the level of pointing at somebody's left hand and saying, raise your left hand. Well, okay, you're pointing at their hand. And okay, they, they hold up their hand because you're pointing out, they're like, oh, oh, they're fluent. They're, they're, they're going to be a ready contributor to the American life. And, you know, same thing, you know, commit no crimes well, okay. Well, we have states already where because if you commit a crime, result like a felony is supposed to result in deportation, they deliberately lower the charges they bring against illegal immigrants to keep them in jail for less time. Or they take a felony and make it a misdemeanor to make sure that a person is not deported. There's endless ways that this gets manipulated and used against us. And often they'll say, oh, this amnesty, it'll affect 500,000 people and it'll end up being far more than that.
Danny
Just in Spain, they said it'd be
Blake
a few hundred thousand and it's going to be over a million. When we did this with REAGAN in the 80s, it was supposed to be farm workers. It was going to be, I think, a few hundred thousand again.
Danny
Or critically, we were going to get enforcement as part of the deal. We got amnesty, no enforcement.
Blake
It ended up being millions of people instead of hundreds of thousands. They're still having people trickle in where anyone who says, oh, I did farm work in the 80s, basically, they're eligible for an amnesty. So how do you prove this? There's just so many ways the system gets manipulated. We've been taken advantage of. And Charlie's response to that, My response to that, A lot of people's response to that is we're tired of getting messed with. We're tired of being lied to. People who broke into this country illegally have to have accountability for what they did. They broke the law, they broke into America. And I think if.
Danny
If.
Blake
Think about your own home. If someone was just living in your home for a prolonged period illegally, would you want to just give them amnesty? I think we should treat our nation like that.
Danny
Point is, listen, I love your heart. And there is such a. Like, a place for that in this whole conversation. I think Mark Wayne is going to inject that, at least on the face. And. But. But here's. Here's what I would say to Blake's point. It's been abused, manipulated. You start making exceptions for some, they're going to make exceptions for all. And we've seen it happen time and time again. And I think we're just. We're just. We don't have an appetite for it. All of them gotta go. But listen, I think in practice, we're probably gonna end up somewhere in the middle, but if we start with already, you know, making exceptions, we're not gonna get much at all. So you gotta. You just gotta kind of stay firm. And I hope that's okay for an answer for you, Christine. Cause I It's okay for an answer.
Podcast Host
Yeah, it's okay for an answer. It is, it is a heart question for that, especially since my father was an immigrant. Of course he came in on his regular paperwork. I mean, he didn't sneak into the country. But it was a different country back then. I feel bad for those. I'm sorry.
Danny
It was a different country back then. We actually mandated people assimilate. We had pride of our own culture, pride of our own convictions and values. We made people fit in here. And we've had such a, I liken it to a meal. We've had such a giant meal, Christine. We need time to digest and we're not capable of doing that if you just keep pouring more and more fuel on that fire.
Podcast Host
I think that's a good metaphor. I just even the zero tolerance, I don't think we're going to get there, I think once politics shift and all. So, I mean, it's the same mess, though. So I think we need to have answers. I'll give you an example. You were talking to Matt yesterday and you were talking about checking off race or ethnicity on crime things when.
Danny
Oh, yeah. Matt Van Swall, huh?
Podcast Host
Right. So I looked that up and our paperwork mandated by the government only has white, Hispanic, Asian. It doesn't have the rest. I mean, that's literally they only changed it recently to add Middle Eastern and North African. And it's phasing in, but it'll take years and years and years for that to happen. Right. So that's just one tiny administrative thing that we can't get the needle to move on. I don't know how we're going to get the needle to move on something as big and large as immigration.
Blake
Well, we've been moving the needle pretty well with this administration. We've been getting a lot of people out and I think pushing hard that if you're here illegally, you'll go back is really the first step to any sort of amnesty has to be get the situation truly under control. But thank you very much for your question. Yeah. No amnesty.
Danny
We'll be right back.
Terrence Bates
Welcome back to this Real america's VOICE news break. I'm Terrence Bates. In case you happen to miss it, White House press Secretary Caroline Levitt just wrapped up a media availability discussing everything from President Trump, Trump meeting with defense contractors at the White House today to the war in Iran to Kristi Noem. Here's some of what she had to say.
Mark Halperin
Thank you, Caroline.
Danny
The president had a July 4 deadline for the one big beautiful bill does
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he see a deadline for the Save America act, as I know that's a priority of his, to get passed. Ms. As soon as possible. I know the president would say this is a huge priority for the president. It remains one. I know he has added on some priorities to the Save America act in recent days, namely no transgender transition surgeries for minors. We are not going to tolerate the mutilation of young children in this country, and no men in women's sports. And the president putting these all of these priorities together, it speaks to just how common sense they are. These are all common sense priorities of this president that are backed by the vast majority of Americans, and he wants Republicans to act on them as quickly as possible.
Terrence Bates
Meantime, the shakeup in the president's Cabinet still has the nation's Capitol buzzing. Now former Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem is off the job after being fired, and Oklahoma Senator Mark Wayne Mullen is the president's pick to replace her. The move to pink slip Noem comes after she faced two days of intense grilling before the House and Senate Judiciary Committees. It's not all bad news for the former South Dakota governor, though, as 47 has tapped her to be a special envoy for the Shield of the Americas. That is a new security initiative that's focused on the Western Hemisphere. On her way out the door, Noem touted what she described as historic accomplishments at the Department of Homeland Security. She also talked about making America safe again and how effective she was in that respect. Meantime, White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt says the administration will work to get Senator Mullen confirmed. She describes him as, quote, extraordinarily qualified. That's a quick check of your headlines.
Mark Halperin
The voice of generations is the Charlie Kirk Show.
Danny
All right, I'm sorry. So excited to tell you because, listen, I am a subscriber to Good Ranchers, and my new shipment just came in, the mail came, arrived beautifully frozen, all the cuts just perfectly in alignment. And now I'm all stocked up. So you gotta do what I do, become a subscriber to goodranchers.com today. And the beautiful thing about this, we've been working with Good Ranchers since they launched the company, and they're so much better now. I mean, I know I'm probably not supposed to say that, but basically, the way that I didn't know this, the way the meat industry works is the bigger your purchasing power, the more you're able to, you know, get a corner on the market with the best quality meat. And now they're they're one of the biggest in the country, that it's perfect. It's beautiful meat, perfectly frozen, ready for you. You get to pick your different cuts, all from America's farms and ranches. And it's America 250. So we got to support our ranchers and our farmers. Go to goodranchers.com American meat delivered if you use promo code Kirk, you get 25 off your first order and you get to pick a free cut that will show up in every box. So if you know what cut of meat that is your favorite, you can select that and it will come with every subscription that arrives at your doorstep. Goodranchers.com American meat delivered all right, I just want to add one more other thing to Chrissy's because I feel bad. We were kind of. We kind of dashed her hopes here because she's more. More sensitive, maybe, or whatever. However, I'm not saying we don't need a branding change, but underlying that branding change can't be. We can't be getting squish. All right? That's the, that's the whole point. So I think Mark Wayne's going to be a very good mix of the congenial, but he's tough as nails, too. That's my theory. All right, next up is John. John, you. Welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show. You're next up. Please unmute yourself. Welcome.
Caller from Tulsa
Good afternoon. How are you?
Danny
Doing great. It's Friday. How are you, sir?
Caller from Tulsa
Doing great. My wife and I are sitting here in Tulsa, and I'll tell you, we live half a mile from Senator Mullen. So I've got a question and maybe a couple comments if we have time.
Danny
So I'm curious if you have any
Caller from Tulsa
thoughts on who Governor Stitt might appoint to replace Senator Mullins?
Danny
Well, some people are saying Governor Stitt might appoint Governor Stitt, but I, I hope that that doesn't happen, actually, because I think it's a little. It's not a good look. You know, they have. They need to appoint somebody because. And they don't need to do a special runoff election because it's technically already an election year for the 2027 term. So that's seamless. There's a lot of candidates that, whose names are getting floated out there. You got Nick Hankins, Ron Meinhardt, Tammy Swearengen, Wayne Washington, Kevin Hearn. Yeah. And it's important to note that there's an Oklahoma statute that whoever he appoints cannot actually run. Really?
Neal McCabe
Yeah.
Danny
They have. If a U.S. senate seat becomes vacant, the governor appoints someone to temporarily fill it. The appointed person is not eligible to run in the special election.
Blake
Wow, that's interesting.
Danny
But that's in the special election. What have been it. But what about in a normal election? That I'm not sure. But they said there's no special election.
Blake
This is why My guess is they would have to be able to run in the special. This gets a little complicated, but
Danny
states
Blake
can't really control who runs for their office past for federal office past a certain point. That's why term limits are not allowed on federal offices because the Supreme Court says eligibility is governed by the Constitution and there's just the age and citizenship requirements. So they might only be able to control special election, but not the general.
Danny
Yeah. The Hill said that Bice and Hearn considering Senate runs to replace Mullen. So these are House Republicans from Oklahoma. You probably know this better, but I've met Stephanie Bice before and then Kevin Hearn so that they're considering it. So they both posted on social media that they're considering it. Let's see here.
Blake
I asked Tyler if he had any thoughts and he hasn't replied yet. I think he might still be fighting in the Spice wars as we discussed yesterday on on Thought Crime. So he's probably distracted.
Danny
Yeah, you're right though. That person will not be able to run in the election.
Blake
But the key thing is no more Lankfords. So you have to make sure it's not a Lankford.
Danny
My vote is for ideologically as far apart from Lankford as we can get. Yeah. So whoever he appoints will only be there for what, six months or so? Yeah. Pretty short. Yeah. Who do you want?
Caller from Tulsa
So we have a lieutenant governor here, Matt Pinell, and he is a very conservative Christian, has four kids, went to a Christian school here in Tulsa and then actually graduated from my alma mater, which is Oral Roberts University. So very conservative Christian has done a great job as Lieutenant governor of Oklahoma and I think he would be a great option. But we do have that unusual law where whomever Governor Stitt appointment points cannot run for the next election. And so I think potentially what Stitt's going to do is appoint someone more as a placeholder, maybe the second best choice and then have someone like Lieutenant Governor Pinell run. But you know, buys Hearn. I've heard all of the same ones. But I think the key thing is we do not want another Lankford. We do not want another Rhino. We need someone else in the mold of Mark Wayne Mullen. By the way, someone said we need to move the needle on Mass Deportations. Mullins will move the needle.
Danny
Yeah. Why do you say that? I'm curious. Somebody from Oklahoma.
Caller from Tulsa
Yeah. He is a fighter and he, he will be very diplomatic. He will try to make friends, but when it comes down to it, he will do what needs to be done and he will back up what he thinks needs to be done with words and deeds and actions.
Danny
Well, that's coming from an Oklahoma voter there that lives just down the street from Senator Mark Wayne Mollen. So let's hope for the best. Let's hope that that is absolutely the case. And I tend to agree with you. I think he's got a. I think he knows not to cross the base in this way, but, yeah, I think he's going to try and work across the aisle and be diplomatic, but when it comes down to it, I think he's going to be stiff as nails.
Blake
Alrighty, Ian. I think our next guy is. Ian, Unmute yourself. And what's your question?
Danny
Hi, guys. Can you hear me?
Blake
Yes, we can.
Danny
Awesome. Lord bless you all. I've been praying for you guys every day.
Blake
Thank you.
Danny
Absolutely. But, yeah, I just wanted to. I had two questions, but my main one is how can these people be, you know, like, saying they stand with the Ayatollah when they're with their rainbow flags behind them, when they're talking like those people, like the Ayatollah and the Islamic regime would literally kill them if they even set foot in the country. So I just, I find it mind blowing. I thought it was AI at first, but it's. People are actually, you know, buying Iranian flags and trying to say they stood with the Ayatollah and that Trump was a bad person for it. Is it just Trump derangement syndrome or did they just hate Trump more than they hate, you know, like, murder? I'm not sure.
Blake
It is a little deeper than that. I. There's, there's this deep thing to it.
Danny
It.
Blake
I talk about it with some friends. We call it kind of the Calibanism, which is an obscure reference to make, but it's. There's a character in Shakespeare's the Tempest, Coliban. He's like a savage and he's trying to rebel against his master. And he's this cartoon figure and he's become this symbol for third world academics, the kind of people who push literal, critical race theory, post colonial theory. And what I really think it is, is, is there's a type of person who, pathologically, they, they genuinely, they hate the west, they hate its success, they hate its traditions, they Hate everything about it. And as a result, they'll just end up bonding to everything that is against it, no matter how incoherent that is. And so sometimes that means embracing all of the most radical LGBT stuff, because they're, of course, against, you know, Christianity, that's part of the West. They're against traditional Western morality, as was understood for a long time. And so they want to tear all of that down from the left. But then, oh, well, we also have this Islamic republic that hates the west and it wants to blow up Israel and it wants to flood Europe and Islamify it. And so we're going to side with that too, because it's also against the West. It is a true pan ideological coalition of resentment, of hate. It's not quite nihilistic. Some of these have quite strong beliefs, but it's that what really does lie at the heart of so much of what drives them is resentment of what is beautiful. It's like this love of ugliness.
Danny
Well, I agree with Blake that there is sort of an intersectionality to it, all, right, where they, the oppressed peoples of the world, link arms, even though their underlying ideologies, you know, conflict with one another. I'm trying to pull this clip. I meant to do it earlier, but I found it when Blake was talking, so maybe the team can bring it up. But there is, you know, the Islamic regime paid a 47 year old Pakistani national to assassinate President Trump. And apparently this. I think they arrested him like the day before. Butler. It was really, really close. The FBI has him under a surveillance video, so he was actually working with somebody. Turned out to be an FBI informant. They arrested him, and now he. He's singing like a sparrow here. And this was all in retaliation for President Trump taking out Soleimani. But what was interesting about it is his instructions were very simple. Take him out at a political rally and then start a protest. Hear me again. And I logged this as soon as it happened because it made me think of October 7th. It made me think about what happened to Charlie. And instantly there was a contingent online that started. Started getting loud and sort of protesting, celebrating. You see this with Iran, you see this with the next thing. And what they learned after October 7th is that you could be the aggressor. You could be the people that launch a terrorist attack and kill 1200 people and then launch a protest, and that the two go hand in hand. Do you see how sinister that is? That you could be in the wrong, you could be evil, you could commit evil and then still launch A protest in support of that evil. And there will be a contingent that thinks that that's good, they'll get behind it. And you saw that again. I think the most stark example of that is October 7th. It's a new model, and they basically can be the villains and yet gain sympathy through that model. And so I think it's really sinister. It's something we need to be aware of, but we also need to be aware that there's paid protesters. And we know that the next new thing, right, the same people that are protesting BLM are gonna be protesting for the Palestinians, are gonna be protesting for Iran. Meanwhile, you've got Iranian diaspora all over the world saying, thank you, President Trump. We support you, President Trump. We love this President Trump. So, you know, it's just these are sinister forces that want to destabilize Western democracies. They want to destabilize America. America. And it's sick. I don't know if I rambled on there, but, Danny, everything they can do to make Trump look bad, they're gonna make sure. Go ahead. How do we, how do we even work with these people in our own country then? Like, how do. How do we move forward? It's just like this, this brick wall that seems to be building, you know, that's like, I want them politically challenge, deport, don't give any more visas. Lots of different things like that. Gotta tell you guys about StrongCell really quick. Strong Cell's the best. It was. Danny, do you have any memories of this going around with Charlie? And they would ask him about Strong Cell.
Neal McCabe
Yeah.
Danny
And he used to carry in his go bag some of the strong cells that he would take too. Yeah, no, exactly. I'm literally not throwing it out there because it's some like, it's just literal truth. It happened often and it stayed with me. So when they wanted to come back on the show, so excited because Charlie loved it and it works. And I was telling Blake, I was like, I've been taking this consistently for a while now, and I'm convinced that I have more energy, more word recall. I don't have the morning fog, so check it out. StrongCell.com StrongCell.com 90 day risk free money back guarantee. And if you use Charlie at checkout, you will save 20%. Get that Nadh, that power source for every cell in your body straight into your. Where it needs to go to your cell. StrongCell.com promo code Charlie. We'll be right back. All right. Welcome back to the Charlie Kirk Show. David, you're up next. Please unmute yourself. Hey, Gentide viewers. Hey, David. Good, good to hear from you. My question is we're in, we're in California. We're in California. And you know, here you hear a lot about this legislature. The legislature. So I want to know, I, I try to call these people because especially those that are not in my district because I want them to hear from me. Am I wasting my time calling them? Because it doesn't seem, it seemed like they're going rogue, that they, they do what they want to, but they always hide behind the label of the legislature. Well, are you calling conservatives? You call Republicans, you calling Democrats? I call mostly Democrats. Most of them are Democrats that are all in lockstep. Yeah, I mean, I mean, I hate to say it. I don't think you're wasting your time. It's good that they know that they have people in and around, you know, their, their district that disagree with them. But they're still going to do one thing. They're going to look and they're going to say, I live in a D 20 district, go pound sand, because they know that they're just going to get reelected. And that's a sad truth of California being a very radical state in many ways with many radical far left districts. And they're just going to do the simple math and disregard you. I hate to, I hate to be that blunt, but, but that's oftentimes as deep as they're thinking.
Blake
It's never bad to make your voice heard, but in general with contacting your representatives, it is sort of a proximity thing, which is you'll have the most impact if they are your representative. And then if you're in their state, they'll maybe kind of hear it because, you know, they have aspirations to run for Senate or something. And then if you're from across the country, it's just going to matter less. But sometimes you just call in and you'll still shape the sentiment, maybe on a controversial issue and their staff are going to tell their members, oh yeah, we've been getting tons of calls on this issue and they think xyz. But there's other ways to get involved if you're concerned about political stuff. There's show up at town halls, show up at your local city council events, show up where you can make your voice heard in other ways. And I love that we're not the early Republic anymore. It is sadly harder always to really have a direct impact on politics. Politics.
Danny
But honestly, this is a great idea. That Blake has. Show up at city council meetings. You can apply to get to address the city council, make your voice heard that way. Those get clipped a lot. Those end up going viral if you make some really good points. And that's a great way to generate popular support locally. You can also go to the town halls, ask questions, push back those clips. So use the power of the Internet, use the power of video. So also turning point action. You know, if you want to get involved, one of the best ways to get involved is at your local precinct level. And also there's ways to contact your representatives online. You can get out mass mail, mass email campaigns, you can get mass call campaigns. So there's different ways to do this. But then, you know, become a ballot chaser. Volunteer work with your local GOP to help drive out low propensity Republican votes. Votes. Those are, those are all really important ways to get involved. I would say that might, that might be just genuinely a better return on investment. Who got next?
Blake
I think we have. We have at least one more here. Sorry, I don't have the right.
Danny
Mick. Open. Mick.
Blake
Yeah, let's.
Caller from Tulsa
Sir.
Danny
Hey, Mick. I want to say God bless that caller earlier in the show who has a heart. I don't have it. I'm Gen Z. I'm fading. I've seen my town turn, and I want things to change. And so I'm glad that we have Noam on our way out and Senator Mullen on his way in. And I have some high expectations. I want to see numbers go up.
Blake
I.
Danny
In an ideal world, I'd like to see a million interior removals a year. Do you think that's possible? And what other expectations should we set?
Mark Halperin
Excuse me?
Danny
Should we set for Senator Mullen as he goes into the cabinet? Oh, well, so I'd love to see
Blake
a million a year.
Danny
Yeah. So.
Terrence Bates
Or more.
Danny
Charlie's thing was Project 10 million. Right. So just so you know that right now DHS is operating with a 3,000 arrest quota a day. 3,000. So that would take you to 1 million, basically. 1,100,000 if you would. So. So that's, that's a benchmark that they're. They're shooting for for now. There's an argument to be made that you should get rid of the quota because you actually might get more. The argument is that the quota system basically mandates that these guys are having to go out into the community and raid local businesses, raid whatever and people. That tends to be where a lot of the drama is happening. And there's another theory of the case that you could do it more discreetly. And again this, this expression, maybe it's just an expression, but commas meaning millions, not drama, comma, not drama. So you know, the theory is that you could go in, work with local municipalities if you sort of take that quota system off the table and end up with a bigger number at the end of the year. I think it's all tbd, right. What I can tell you is that here's why I feel bullish on this whole thing. Stephen Miller is still operating at the White House. He's still lurking in the shadows, haunting all the Democrats dreams. And I'm telling you it's wonderful because he's gonna be working directly with Senator Mark Wayne Wallen. He is the architect of this interior enforcement in many ways. And he has, through the one big beautiful bill, this funding has created a whole system. You gotta understand, when Obama was getting all these numbers it was just handoff at the local jail. We have never equipped ICE agents to go out in the field like we have equipped them now to do this interior enforcement. We've never had this large of a wave of illegals come in before. And so yes, there's going to be a change in leadership and there's going to be probably a change in tone, a change in collegiality and all of these things which could be really helpful. We saw this with Tom Homan in Minneapolis. But ultimately you have to maintain a posture that everybody who's here illegally is on the table to be deported. Deported. And that we are going to be working with Stephen Miller, the architect of the interior enforcement to get over a million a year. Plus you're gonna get self deportations. That's another thing. You know, one of the things that I found extraordinarily frustrating was that they were advertising on Fox News. You gotta do Spanish ads where Spanish speakers want.
Blake
That's what she got in trouble for. It was a market. She was advertising herself. And kind of, in truth I think she was trying to make herself look good to the President. Cuz she knows the President watches Fox News News. And I mean I heard it on the radio here and I was on some country station, probably listened to by Republican voters. Same idea. It's almost, it's marketing to the base and so it's politically oriented rather than deportations oriented.
Danny
Yeah.
Blake
And if Mark Wayne Mullen comes in and says I'm not going to be making myself famous except as the bane of the left's existence, I'll be very happy with that outcome. As you say. Commas, not drama.
Danny
And I would just, I'm just gonna to put this out there because I want people to be bracing for this. They could do something like DACA on the table in exchange for blue cities to play ball. And we have to. I don't want for that because that,
Blake
I don't want it.
Danny
That's going to be the new battle line. And if you get blue cities, though, Los Angeles, New York, all of these cities to sort of come to heal, then, you know, you could get more. And I just, it's going to be the next debate, I'm telling you.
Mark Halperin
I'm warning you.
Danny
So, so put that on your, put that on your crystal ball, if you will. This was a great show. Thank you, everybody. We'll see you on Monday. Have a great and blessed weekend.
Podcast Host
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Podcast: Real America’s Voice | Host: iHeartPodcasts
Date: March 6, 2026
This episode of The Charlie Kirk Show is a deep-dive into the evolving U.S. political landscape during a high-stakes moment: the ongoing American-Iran conflict, a significant Department of Homeland Security (DHS) leadership shakeup, and the passionate debates on immigration, national security, and American values. The hosts—Danny, Blake, Mark Halperin, and contributors—tackle breaking news, reflect on intra-MAGA (Make America Great Again) divisions, and engage with callers in a lively Ask Me Anything segment. The tone is frank, sometimes combative, and consistently focused on defending an “America First” agenda.
On War Rationale:
"I don't think the why and the why now are ambiguous. The President and Caroline Levitt have made that pretty clear."
— Mark Halperin (32:06)
On Political Risks of War:
"Politically, I think this gets dicier the longer it goes...the central question is, how do you get out as this thing drags on? I think that's where the political fallout is going to be felt most sharply..."
— Danny (34:19)
On Mullen's Appointment:
"Is the fact that he's friends with a bunch of Democrats, is that a bad thing or is that a good thing? I think time will tell, but I'm sure you guys have opinions."
— Danny (21:08)
On DHS Shakeup:
"The surprising aspect for you is not that she was ousted. It was the fact she lasted as long as she did."
— Mark Halperin (44:34)
On Immigration Enforcement:
"Employment enforcement. I want you to keep that at the top of your mind. That's how you get big time numbers."
— Danny (16:59)
On Amnesty:
"People who broke into this country illegally have to have accountability for what they did...Think about your own home. If someone was just living in your home for a prolonged period illegally, would you want to just give them amnesty? I think we should treat our nation like that."
— Blake (70:35)
On Faith in Grief:
"I could feel it. I Genuinely could feel the prayers of strangers. And all of a sudden, it was almost like a Road to Damascus moment for me...I hold those moments of just the tangible presence of God in and around us closely."
— Danny (59:36)
On MAGA Divisions:
"This is not a partisan issue as much as it is an attitude about America's role in the world. So I'm for a robust debate..."
— Mark Halperin (32:06)
On Responding to Political Advocacy:
"Show up at city council meetings. You can apply to get to address the city council, make your voice heard that way. Those get clipped a lot...a great way to generate popular support locally."
— Danny (92:37)
The show moves briskly from breaking news to personal reflections to caller engagement. The hosts are self-aware about movement divisions and the need for clear communication during fraught times. The tone alternates between combative (especially on immigration), analytical (war and political strategy), and at times, vulnerable and inspirational (discussing grief and faith).