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Caller/Listener
This is an I heart podcast.
Andrew Colvett
The Charlie Kirk show starts now.
Terrence Bates
It speaks volumes that tomorrow we have a communist coming to the White House because that's who the Democrat Party elected as the mayor of the largest city in the country. I think it's very telling, but I also think it speaks to the fact that President Trump is willing to meet with anyone and talk to anyone and to try to do what's right on behalf of the American people, whether they live in blue states or red states or blue cities.
Andrew Colvett
So our mom, Donnie, arrived in Washington, D.C. already asked, being asked for selfies. That is ahead of today's meeting with President Trump. The President also making some news. He previewed the sit down on Brian Kim Mead's radio show. He said it might be less hostile than people expect. Well, I was hitting him a little hard, too, in all fairness. I don't know exactly what he means by turn the volume up. Because Turn the volume up. He has to be careful when he says that to me. I mean, he was very nice and calling, as you know. And we're going to have a meeting, I guess we meet at 3 o' clock today. And I think it's going to be quite civil. We'll find out.
Josh Hammer
I can tell you there's a lot of people who have gone into the White House before and, you know, tried to make a scene and tried to have a big PR event, and I think most of the people got laughed out of it. I mean, we saw that with Zelinsky. I think I could probably name 25 people who went into the White House trying to be tough guys, and it didn't end up all that well for them. You know, my father's, I think, performs probably better than anybody in that moment, but we'll see. I mean, my father loves New York. He cares about New York. He wants to see the best for New York. So he would have an open door. And I'm proud of him for having an open door. I don't think this is the right direction from New York. I hope this guy is a lot more bravado than he is real action.
Blake Neff
Into the MCA if she's not for raising taxes.
Josh Hammer
You know, I think that the two clearest ways to raise that money is through the raising of the state's corporate tax to match New Jersey. I think that a lot of this is still a case to be made, whether it's the corporate tax or the personal income tax on those who make more than $1 million a year or more. I think that these are the clearest ways. I've also said that if there are other ways to raise this funding, the most important fact is that we fund it. Not the question of how we do it, but that we do it.
Terrence Bates
California Democrat Congressman Eric Swalwell has been criminally referred to the Department of Justice.
Andrew Colvett
Accused of mortgage fraud. Swalwell has not been charged with anything. This is a criminal referral. Basically, a government agency thinks that they.
Blake Neff
Spotted something that is possibly illegal on.
Andrew Colvett
Mortgage documents from Swalwell. The Justice Department will now review these documents to see if a prosecutor believes that charges are worthy in this case. And then we would go from there in the judicial process.
Josh Hammer
I first want to speak personally because there's nobody on this committee who has.
Andrew Colvett
Been a bigger victim of the weaponization.
Josh Hammer
Of the intelligence community than me.
Andrew Colvett
So I know what it's like when an administration misuses the intelligence community to go after an enemy. I know it, I felt it, paid the price for it.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
We have no other option. We have to deal with protecting God's.
Andrew Colvett
Green earth, but we also should deal with the climate crisis because the absence.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
Of doing it causes life in America to just continue to become more unaffordable.
Josh Hammer
It's terrible. Just as a murder of a young father, it's terrible that his family was there. I mean, it's just awful. It's additionally terrible because a political assassination is genuinely dangerous because we are so combustible as a society. And the fact that we're this combustible. A lot of the onus goes to, I mean, goes to both sides. But I would put most of the onus, as will not surprise you, on the president and his cult, all the people right of center were watching those awful videos of Gen Z Maniacs celebrate Kirk's murder. What you didn't have left of center were prominent people with big platforms, you know, prominent media figures or, you know, to say nothing of political figures like, you know, from Obama on down say anything. But this was horrible. There's no party left of center, real party for political assassination. And yet right of center, very prominent people from the president and Elon on down treated it like the first shot fired in the Civil War.
Andrew Colvett
Run a business and not thinking about radio, Think again. Cause more people are listening to the radio and iHeart today than they were 20 years ago. And only iHeart broadcast radio connects with more Americans than TV, digital, social, any other media. Even twice as many teens than TikTok. And that reach means everything. Just think about the universal marketing formula. The number of consumers who hear your message times the response rate is equals the results. Now let's get those results growing for your business. Radio's here now more than ever. And iheart's leading the way. Think radio can help your business. Think iheart streaming, podcasting, and radio where.
Terrence Bates
The reach is real.
Andrew Colvett
Let us show you@iheartadvertising.com that's iheartadvertising.com or call 844-844. Iheart one more time. Just call 844-844-Iheart and get radio working for you. Every day there's a battle for your mind raging information coming from every angle with the will to deceive. Fear not, you found the place for truth, the voice of a generation that still has the will to believe in the greatest country in the history of the world. This is the Charlie Kirk Show. Buckle up. Here we go. All right. Welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show. Andrew Colvett here, executive producer of this fine show, joined by Mikey McCoy. Sir, in the studio. Blake Neff also in the studio. We may or may not have Pastor Andrew Cedra. In spirit. In spirit. Coming up soon. It is Friday, which means it is an Ask US Anything Friday and hour two. So if you want to join us in hour two, ask your questions live on air. Please join us at members.charlie kirk.com. that's members.charlie kirk dot com. You guys are welcome to join there. And then you can ask us questions live on air, which seems to be a big hit. We always get a lot of people coming for that. So that's great. We got a lot to get to today. We are talking about the creeping Islamization of. Of the west or Islamification, debatable, which. Islamization, Islamization, Islamization of the West. And it's key today because we have, of course, Zoram Mamdani, arguably the most powerful Muslim in America, meeting President Trump at the White House today. Apparently, he reached out. Trump accepted the invitation, and they are meeting at the White House today. Also, we have, you know, lots of other news to get to, including a fake WaPo story. The state Department is coming out swinging. There's a lot to get to. But let's start here with Mamdani. Is this significant or is it not significant, Blake, that we have a Muslim, communist, socialist, whatever you want to call him, visiting the White House?
Blake Neff
I mean, we've mentioned the Islamic thing, but mostly with Mamdani. Mamdani's clearly not a devout Muslim in any meaningful way. He, like, just identifies with Islam. To say, I'm not American, I'm not Western, I follow this alien faith that is historically anti west, anti Western civilization, which I condemn all the time and want to rip down. That's the only way he's Muslim in a meaningful sense. Now, if you want to see real Islamic government, go to the uk where you straight up have, you know, Allahu Akbar guys who are running for office, where Gaza is their number one issue. You know, it's really bad. You go walk around Birmingham where the Industrial revolution began. That was the Silicon valley of the 19th century, and it's now tons of radical mosques, imams who say, we need Sharia, people just milling about like it's. It basically looks like it's Baghdad.
Mikey McCoy
Well, I do think this is still a step in that direction, though, even if he isn't as radical as some of these.
Blake Neff
Oh, for sure, for sure.
Mikey McCoy
But, yeah, Blake, you're right. There's actually someone literally ran in Manchester under the party umbrella of Palestine.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
Yeah.
Mikey McCoy
Like, not labor, not Conservative, just Palestine. And they actually won. Yeah. And so that.
Blake Neff
That's.
Mikey McCoy
That's kind of the representation Islam mindset that you get. But it's also interesting that Mamdani is going to meet with Trump. When I think he said, do we have that clip where he says that his. His administration is going to be the worst nightmare for Trump?
Blake Neff
They might.
Mikey McCoy
And then as soon as he gets elected, he's going.
Blake Neff
Well, it'll be really interesting to hear how it goes, because you can think of a few ways. One, Trump is a very proud New Yorker. He clearly has a ton of fondness for the city. So I can frankly see if the mayor makes noises about wanting to play ball with him. I feel like Trump could be won over surprisingly easily. But it could also be that Mayor Mamdani sees this as an opportunity to do a big stunt. He can get a story about how he had a throwdown argument with Trump in the Oval Office or wherever they're meeting and get a lot of attention that way. I feel. Yeah, either person could be going into that meeting with an agenda. Maybe both of them are, and we'll find out what that agenda.
Mikey McCoy
Yeah, 380 clips.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah, exactly. 380 is. Zoran changes his tune on Trump. Play it.
Josh Hammer
My administration would be Donald Trump's worst nightmare. I have many disagreements with the president, and I believe that we should be relentless and pursue all avenues and all meetings that could make our city affordable for every single New Yorker. I intend to make it clear, clear to President Trump that I will work with him on any agenda that benefits New Yorkers.
Andrew Colvett
It's always fun to watch People change their politics is great. And then. But by the way, this is, you know, we again, I can't stop thinking about Helen Andrews interview, which again, I encourage everybody to go check it out. The great feminization. But this is typical like dude behavior. Guys tend to like, they, they saber rattle, they say big things and then they're like, hey, let's hang out. Let's hear President Trump 392t talk about the tone that he expects within the White House meeting today. Well, I was hitting him a little hard too. In all fairness. I was. I don't know exactly what he means by turn the volume up. Because turn the volume up. He has to be careful when he says that to me. I mean, he was very nice in calling as you know. And we're going to have a meeting, I guess we meet at 3 o' clock today. And I think it's going to be quite civil. We'll find out. This is very Trumpian.
Mikey McCoy
Super Trumpian. Yeah. This is super Trump.
Blake Neff
Yeah, yeah, Super Trump. It's like super tramp. Oh, you're too young to know what that is.
Andrew Colvett
But. Well, but it is interesting because, you know, Mamdani, when we've said this, we've conceded this point that he's a talented politician in the sense that even his acceptance speech where he was like, turn the volume up. President Trump.
Blake Neff
A lot of sociopaths are good at politics.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah, well, no, exactly. And so, you know, he's smiling his way. But this is great is that when he gets challenged on things, he ends up really revealing that there's not a whole lot there. The emperor has no clothes. 378 how are you getting that money?
Josh Hammer
The 700 million to make the buses.
Blake Neff
Free into the MCA if she's not for raising taxes?
Josh Hammer
You know, I think that the two clearest ways to raise that money is through the raising of the state's corporate tax to match. But she said no Jersey. I think that a lot of this is still a case to be made, whether it's the corporate tax or that's the personal income tax on those who make more than a million dollars a year or more. I think that these are the clearest ways. I've also said that if there are other ways to raise this funding, the most important fact is that we fund it. Not the question of how we do it, but that we do it.
Andrew Colvett
So we don't have the money. The thing that I said we were gonna do to fund the free buses and the free stuff, socialism, the free stuff, populism, we can't do it. But it's fine. We're gonna figure it out. Blake, there's. You know, that's fair.
Blake Neff
We'll see. We'll see.
Mikey McCoy
But that's actually. I think that's okay. Like, we shouldn't be too scared because, like, look, I just think to the Biden administration, literally, as soon as he got elected, Turning Point got an audit, like, immediately. And, like, he. They went straight after the J. Sixers. They went straight after. And they were following up on all these.
Andrew Colvett
They went off to Tyler.
Mikey McCoy
Above and beyond. They went after Tyler, they went after our team.
Andrew Colvett
And so they spied on us.
Mikey McCoy
They spied on us.
Andrew Colvett
Turning Point was involved unknowingly in Arctic Frost, which means they were spying on this organization. Our own government spined spied on Turning Point. Yeah.
Mikey McCoy
So I'll just say I'll take this version of Momtani. There's a lot of saber rattling, but on top of that, I just. It shows how unserious of a person he is in a very serious city in the United States of America, where it's just, like, a lot of noise but not a lot of substance.
Andrew Colvett
Well, but here's the thing. I really believe that if there was not a President Trump in the White House, if we did not have control of Congress, both the House and the Senate, that these people would be unleashed to become their worst versions of themselves, and the tyranny would spread rapidly. So what you're seeing is you're seeing the rumblings of a beginning, and that will take full bloom if allowed. And I think that's why we talked about why Dearborn is important. What happened yesterday is it was. It's a precursor of this sectarian civil strife that, you know, eventually will and could erupt into actual violence in the streets between Christians and Muslims if this is allowed to fester. And I. And my case in point, historically, is Lebanon. Lebanon used to be basically 100% Christian. It was controlled by the French. Like, you're going to know the history better than I. But then they sort of cast off their colonial powers, and now Lebanon is. Lebanon was 30%.
Blake Neff
Lebanon was created to be the Christian country in the Middle East. It is no longer a Christian country. We don't know the percentage because it's too politically loaded with. Their demographics are. So nobody ever can conduct a census.
Mikey McCoy
Yeah.
Andrew Colvett
Estimated at about 30% Christian.
Blake Neff
That's what they always will say, that it's probably lower to be. Probably way less because the Christians are wealthier. And they got out of Dodge because there was a Civil war shocker. Because when your country becomes more Islamic, it becomes a violent dump.
Andrew Colvett
Well, and that's essentially what we all have to sort of brace for. And why. Why we are warning about the Islamization.
Blake Neff
Really remarkable. I can riff here, but like we just had Saudi Arabia visit D.C. and everything that's going on in the Gulf states is they are rapidly becoming less Islamist by offloading all of their radicals into the West. It's really glaring.
Andrew Colvett
Got to take a radio break. We'll be right in. Just a few minutes. From the campus to the car, the bullhorn to the microphone, it's the Charlie Kirk show. All right, welcome back. When your payment on your distressed or defaulted private student loans is so big that you can't ever get ahead in your finances, I want you to take a look at why Refi. They can help. Why Refi does not care what your credit score is. They refinance distressed or defaulted private student loans that others will not touch. They provide you with a custom loan payment. Based on what? On your ability to pay. That's the key. And they will guarantee an interest rate under 6%. And they will work within your means. That's the key. So if you find yourself in a situation where you have defaulted or distressed private student loans, you feel you're like you're up against it. The weight of the financial world is on your shoulders. It does not have to be. And that's the key. All this whole show is about really one thing, taking control of your own future. And that means control of your own financial future as well. So this is the way you do it. Y refi offers a 3 minute rate check without any credit impact. Bad credit is accepted. So there is no excuse, if this is your situation, to not call. Why Refi? They are good people, good patriots. They support this show. They've stood by us. They've stood by Turning Point usa and we just couldn't think any more highly of them. They're amazing people. So check out why refi by calling 888-Y-REFI 34. That's 888-Y-REFI34 or log on today at yrefi.com may not be available in all 50 states, but if it is in your state, you gotta check it out. Blake, you flag this for me? This is amazing. We're gonna get into it in the next segment. And this is the Department of State. It's not disconnected from mom, Donnie visit in the White House. And this rise of of Islam and Dearborn. The State Department is now extending an olive Branch to Europeans and basically saying hey, you are treating human rights in a two tiered system. You are giving favorability to migrants and rape gangs and you're turning another the other cheek to those people while you're also discriminating against your native born sons and daughters. And it is a very based tweet from the Department of State and we're going to get into it in just a second when we welcome back national radio in five seconds. All right, Blake Neff, walk us through this State Department tweet because it is in a word based.
Blake Neff
Yeah, no, no, that's just so. It's just a thread. I'll just read the whole thing.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah.
Blake Neff
State389 mass migration poses an existential threat to Western civilization and undermines the stability of key American allies. Today the State Department instructed U.S. embassies to report on the human rights implications and public safety impacts of mass migration. Mass migration is a human rights concern. Western nations have endured crime waves, terror attacks, sexual assaults and displacement of communities. U.S. officials will urge governments to take bold action and defend citizens against the threats posed by mass migration officials. Well, I'm just going to skip ahead to one. They cite some examples. In the United Kingdom, thousands of girls have been victimized in Rotherham, Oxford and Newcastle by grooming gangs involving migrant men. Many girls were left to suffer unspeakable abuse for years before authorities stepped in. In Sweden, an Eritrean migrant convicted of raping a 16 year old girl was allowed to remain in the country in after a judge ruled that the incident was not a quote, exceptionally serious, exceptionally serious crime and did not warrant deportation. In Germany, nine men, several of them migrants, were convicted for the gang rape of a 15 year old. A German woman who insulted one of the rapists online was given a harsher sentence than the perpetrators themselves. US officials will now scrutinize policies in Western nations that give leniency to migrant crime and and human rights abuses or that create two tiered systems that prioritize migrants at the expense of their own citizens. The US supports the sovereignty of our allies and calls on governments to engage with the growing number of citizens concerned about mass migration. We stand ready to assist our allies in solving the global crisis of migration.
Andrew Colvett
Wow.
Josh Hammer
Yes.
Blake Neff
I am pretty sure I haven't confirmed. I'm pretty sure our friend Sarah Rogers was involved in making that policy but she hasn't confirmed.
Andrew Colvett
We cannot confirm.
Blake Neff
As close to her heart as it is close to mine. It is sounds like something she and Charlie talked about.
Andrew Colvett
Should find that that meme the light switch meme because it really is. If you want to know what. And listen, I'm not scapegoating. There are good immigrants, I get it. And some of them are very patriotic and we're lucky to have them. However, a policy of mass migration. One of the things that really bothers me is this. This what it's mentioned in this tweet about the displacement of communities. I was just on a phone call with a friend last night who lives in Dallas and he said that his parents live in a neighborhood next to him and it used to be this neighborhood with Halloween trick or treating, that all the kids would go out and Christmas lights and they would have block parties. And now he said it's basically all Indians, that all the former residents of that neighborhood are, have been displaced, moved out. The, the way that they interact with their neighbors is really like uncomfortable. There's a lot of glaring that goes on with the women. I'm not saying that's all of them, but this, this I'm. This is a report from a friend that's saying, and by the way, you go to the malls there and it's basically all Indians. Now this is a neighborhood in Dallas, Texas, Red, Texas. And most of that is coming from H1BS. It's coming from legal immigration, it's coming from family reunification policies. And that displacement used to be a liberal value that they would bemoan in long thought pieces in the Atlantic and the New Yorker when it would come to inner city gentrification during the early 2000s, they would talk about the displacement in San Francisco, in Brooklyn and these types of places and they would. They write sympathetically about those communities that get displaced. Well now with mass migration, it's Americans that are getting displaced from their own communities. It's Americans of all stripes, of all colors, of all backgrounds, all economic levels. And there's not a drop of sympathy from the left.
Mikey McCoy
That's so well said. That was.
Blake Neff
Yeah, it's just. Well, so hopefully this is paving the way. I think what they might be setting up. It'd be very interesting if the U.S. for example, gave asylum to people who basically are persecuted for free speech. Reasons for saying, I don't want the country to become an Islamist hellhole. But you could do other stuff. It'd be interesting if we. Because you could also set up to say, oh well, the U.S. we have these mechanisms for caring about human rights abroad. So we're going to sanction a judge who issues something that indicates a two tier justice ruling in the UK or in Germany. There's a Lot of interesting things we could do to just start throwing our weight around a bit and saying, actually, it does matter a lot that all of our supposed NATO allies, our closest allies, are becoming places where they're replacing their own populations. They're making it illegal to complain about it. They're treating white people as inherent oppressors who should be punished more severely by the judicial system. They're not enforcing the law against migrants. They're letting Sharia courts take over their biggest cities.
Andrew Colvett
We see, we see a form of this in the United States, too, where criminals, if you happen to be of what a quote unquote marginalized class, are allowed to terrorize communities with impunity. You saw this in Chicago this week where maybe get me the facts on this, this case. But basically this gentleman had been arrested, what, like 40 priors, and then he sets a woman on fire. On endless. Yeah.
Blake Neff
And it really is throw it up now. I think it's the new whatever it is, the fix everything switch. It is so, so many of these things are so basically fixable. It's enforce the law in cities and it's stop importing 18 billion people. It's the fix everything easily switch. And everyone's like, no, we've never, we've never pressed that switch before. It can be that simple. But it is.
Andrew Colvett
Here, here's my thing. It's great that the is doing this. It's unfortunate that we still have mass migration to the United States. That's a sad fact. Josh Hammer on what is an American joins us next.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
Welcome back to this real America's Voice news break. I'm Terrence Bates. The flies are probably gathering on the wall of the Oval Office as we speak. As President Trump will host New York's Mayor elect Zoran Mandami this afternoon. The president's schedule says the event is closed to the press, but we are hopeful that it does open up so that you can see and hear what the duo talks about. Today's meeting will bring together two men who are virtually on opposite ends of the political spectrum, as Mamdani is widely considered a communist, despite calling himself a Democratic socialist.
Josh Hammer
For tens of thousands of New Yorkers, this meeting is between two very different candidates who they voted for for the same reason. They wanted a leader who would take on the cost of living crisis that makes it impossible for working people to afford living in this city. I intend to make it clear to President Trump that I will work with him on any agenda that benefits New Yorkers. If an agenda hurts New Yorkers, I will also be the first to say so.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
Today, by the way, will mark the first time the duo talks face to face. With the midterm election on the horizon, Republicans are getting a breath of fresh air from the state of North Carolina. Several U.S. house districts drawn by North Carolina Republicans in 2023 have just been upheld by a panel of federal judges. The judges rejected accusations that the voting lines were created to weaken the voting power of black Americans and black voters specifically. However, the trio didn't rule on charges that North Carolina's 1st congressional district was specifically drawn to unseat Democrat Representative Don Davis next year. The ruling comes just weeks before candidate filing for next year's midterms opens up on December 1st. North Carolina's North Carolina's ruling is a bit of good news for Republicans after a federal court blocked Texas from using its new GOP drawn voting maps in an effort to shore up the Republican majority in the US House next year. Now to new information on that deadly UPS plane crash in Louisville, Kentucky. Federal investigators are out with brand new photos showing one of the plane's engines starting to detach from the plane before the wing catches fire. They also say there's evidence of cracks in the left wing's engine mount before takeoff. That's a quick check of your headlines. Foreign.
Andrew Colvett
Reset stops here. The CHARLIE KIRK show. All right, welcome back to THE Charlie Kirk show. We're going to tell you about Hillsdale really quick. One of Charlie's absolute favorite things in the world was Hillsdale College. He called it the beacon of the north, the best university, best college in the United States. And if you go to Charlie for Hillsdale, I just love it. It says learn like Charlie did. Charlie took 31 of the Hillsdale online courses. That's 31. I think it was basic. When he got to 31, it was all they had. Now they have 40. They have more than 40. And they have a new one on totalitarian novels topped by the legendary Dr. Larry Arn, who has been with us recently in this studio. He talks about The Totalitarian Novels, 1984, Brave New World, Darkness at Noon and that hideous Strength. In that course, you get to learn about these novels that were written in the 1930, 30s and 40s, but they are more relevant today than ever. You know, we're talking about Mom, Donnie, the rise of communism, the rise of Islam, of fascism. And they are extraordinarily important because they're going to come to us through a different iteration in this day and age. They show us these novels. They show us that faith, family, friends and this country are still worth fighting for. Maybe you read these books long ago in school, maybe you've heard others talk about them and they seem a little intimidating. Let Hillsdale College and Dr. Larry Orne make the most of them for you. Go right now to charlieforhillsdale.com to enroll. Charlieforhillsdale.com right now to enroll. They got so Many Good Things, Constitution 101, C.S. lewis on Christianity, the Federalist Papers, Introduction to Aristotle's Ethics and How to Lead a Good Life, the Great American Story, A Land of Hope. They got so many good online courses. You gotta check it out. Charlieforhillsdale.com all right. Joining us now is Josh Hammer, senior editor at large, Newsweek host of the Josh Hammer show, and he has a new piece out. This is fascinating and near and dear to Charlie's heart. And that is a question that he spent a lot of time thinking about and talking about in his final days. What is an American? JOSH hammer, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Josh Hammer
Andrew it's great to see you, my friend.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah, you too as well. So Charlie used to talk about the difference between a paperwork American versus a real American. And we were still sort of working on our working definition of what it was. I don't think we had settled the story yet or settled the debate internally, but we definitely knew that paperwork alone did not make one an American, at least in an important sense of where their loyalties are, where their, their values are at, even where their language is at. Yes, there is a piece of paperwork that will infer your legal right to be here to vote in our elections, that sort of thing for our audience. Josh, define what it, what, what the difference between the paperwork and a true American truly is.
Josh Hammer
Well, Andrew, I'll do the best I can. I'm not sure that I have a, an elevator pitch kind of 10 second answer to that question, but I will, I will do the best I can. Let me take a step back and say that this whole debate kind of reminds me of this piece that I read from a University of Virginia political science professor named James Caesar many, many years ago. He was talking about because, Andrew, as you know from my previous appearances here, I'm also a lawyer, so I think a lot about separation of powers, the Constitution. And Professor Caesar has this notion where he contrasts a literal violation of the separation of powers in a black letter, Article 1, Article 2, Article 3 of the Constitution sense versus kind of a more political violation of the separation of powers. So his point was that you could, even if you're not technically violating the separation of powers under the Supreme Court precedents or whatnot there, you could spiritually violate the overarching tenor of our separation of powers that is ultimately our number one safeguard for liberty in this country. So that's kind of the analogy that I take to this what is an American question, which I wrote about today and was really kind of prompted by Zormadani coming to visit Donald Trump. Is he an American? All these folks who are in Dearborn, Michigan who are chanting Allu Akbar, death to America. Is this what it means to be an American? Right. I mean, all sorts of just crazy, crazy stuff. And the most recent allegations of the fraud in Minnesota, when it comes to the Minnesota taxpayers being the number one subsidizer of Al Shabaab, the formerly Al Qaeda offshoot, now independent Sunni Islamic terrorist organization in Somalia, all this stuff, I think, really raises this question that indeed Charlie was thinking a lot, a lot about in those final months. It raised it to the forefront. So the paperweight definition of being a citizen that you are born nationalized into citizenship is necessary, but it is hardly sufficient. It is not sufficient, I think, to be an American in the sense of the term that we should think of being an American. American is someone who is acculturated into the inherited historical traditions, folkways, and general just ways of life of this country. And this country ever, ever since its founding days, Andrew, has been really shaped by its majority Protestant culture. You hear a lot about the, about the Protestant work ethic, things like that there. And, you know, I think about my own ancestors, right? My own ancestors, Jews from Eastern Europe who came during the Ellis island immigration wave, late 19th century, early 20th century. For them, it was fairly obvious that you don't just have to become a citizen. You don't just have to learn the language, you don't just have to pay your taxes, do all that there. But you really do have to become deeply involved in the, in the folkways, in the general way of life of the country. There. There's something thicker, we might say there's something morally and historically thicker than just paying your taxes and speaking the language. By the way, a lot of these folks are not doing that. They're not even paying the tax of speaking the language. But I think for previous generations of migrants, they understood that even that is enough, that you have to really kind of become a full participant in what John Jay in the Federalist Federalist Number Two, one of the first essays the Federalist Papers, famously starts writing about about how Americans were descended from a common sense stock and they had similar mannerisms and a similar religion there. And I'm not saying that everyone has to be a Protestant. I'm Jewish, of course. But whether you're a Jewish, Protestant, Catholic, or in theory, potentially if you're of a different religion there, you really do have to publicly acculturate yourself and publicly assimilate into the Protestant majority inherited culture that goes back hundreds of years, well before the American founding, frankly, into, into, into British culture. So that's kind of how I think about it, Andrew. And when I see things like, like Mission, Michigan, what I definitely do not see is acculturated Americanism. But look, me personally, I can be an observant Jew in my private life, which I am, and praise be to God for that, I'm very happy with that. But I am a very fully public facing American because I fully participate in this country's civic institutions. I am engaged in the act of trying to preserve and conserve our inherited traditions from one generation to the next. And I am deeply thankful indeed grateful for this country's long standing Protestant traditions with which really no one better I think embodied than our friend Charlie Kerr.
Blake Neff
We argued with Charlie, I remember we had one of our later thought crimes. We had that discussion, you know, it's like, are you basically more American if you are Protestant? And obviously I'm Catholic. Jack was Catholic.
Andrew Colvett
But we had that debate because I.
Blake Neff
Was like, America really is like, it is a Protestant country. That is what its founding is, that fractiousness, that hostility to a certain level of authority. So even American Catholics are actually a bit Protestant because they're always arguing with the Pope and finding him annoying.
Andrew Colvett
The most Protestant Catholics in the world are American.
Blake Neff
Yeah, it's very funny. And, and of course you see that with American Jews as well. They adopted a lot of that. And it's something I think about with the Islamization thing. Obviously in America we have the First Amendment, we have freedom of religion. But I've often had that thought, can even the freedom of American Muslims to practice their religion really survive? If America becomes too much of an Islamic country, I feel it will lose too much of that historical heritage.
Andrew Colvett
The historical heritage is. And really the founders of the country were talking about freedom of religion. You know, you could be a Quaker, you can be an Anglican, you can be. That's really what they were talking about.
Blake Neff
They weren't even sure if the Catholic.
Andrew Colvett
Part we had Maryland, you know, but not by then. Okay, yeah, but the point is that really, that's what they were thinking about. They were thinking about different Faith traditions, denominations within the Protestant patchwork, if you will, coming from, you know, Mother England. And I do think that, you know, Charlie said this very clearly. He said Islam is not compatible with the West. Islam is not compatible with the West. So what do we do, Josh? I mean, you say it really well here. You say, you kind of reflect on Dearborn and you say United States was never a blank slate society, like any nation, has a distinct inheritance. And you, you, you say this is the challenge of Dearborn. It is. Too many distinct cultural communities now reject this framework. So what do we do? Because a lot of these people, we can't get. We can't denaturalize some of these. We can't strip them of their citizenship. We're still dealing with birthright citizenship, which I think is completely farcical. What do we do?
Josh Hammer
Yeah. So let me just briefly, before I answer that question, Andrew, echo your point, which is that the American founding was really going. Was supposed to be a patchwork essentially of different Protestant. In fact, the original meaning of the establishment clause of the First Amendment, Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion does not mean, quote unquote, separation of church and state. Rather, it was actually just a federalism provision. Congress shall make the law because the states can make laws. In fact, they literally did that for decades and decades after the founding. For instance, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts had the established church of congregationalism until the 1830s. There's many other examples there. So your point is actually, is it very well taken? There also were Jews and Catholics who were there at the time of the founding. It was definitely heavily Protestant, but Jews and Catholics were very much there. For instance, the no religious test clause in the Constitution where there will be no test for office, no oath of a certain religion. And that was Alexander Hamilton's work. He put that in there. Historians typically say on behalf of his Jewish friends and colleagues there. Some people debate that, but there was definitely an element there of trying to look out for the Jews and Catholics. So they were definitely there. But it really was this Protestant patchworks. Your point is very well taken. Look, Charlie is essentially, or he was essentially correct, that Islam is not compatible with Western civilization. I define Western civilization, Andrew. I define it as the ecumenical biblical inheritance. Now, there is a role, certainly for Greco Roman reason. There is a big role, frankly, for Greco Roman reason. But we talk about what the west is. At its core, it is the outgrowth of the Bible. It is the outgrowth of the two biblical religions of Judaism and Christianity. That is how I define the West. And that is how I consider conceive it. So is Islam compatible with that? Well, at a theoretical level, no. I mean, it seems pretty obvious, frankly that it is not. Islam has been at war with Christianity and obviously Judaism more modern times, but really historically at war with Christianity essentially since, since Islam was founded. So I mean, the historical record, whether it's the siege of vienna in the 17th century, whether it's the first and second Barbary wars under the Jefferson and Madison presidency, there is a long historical track record even saying that Islam is not broadly compatible with Western Western civilization. Here's what I will say. Here's the caveat to that. That is not that that blanket categorical statement is not to say that there are not individual dispensations. That's not to say that each and every individual Muslim cannot be a good American. So Abe Hamada right there in Arizona, Judy Jasser, also in Arizona, any number of other individuals I can think of, there are any number of patriotic, great American citizen Muslims, but at a categorical scale. At a categorical scale, no, I do not think Islam is compatible with Western civilization or frankly with, with the American.
Andrew Colvett
So what do we do? Do we stop mass immigration from Islamic countries?
Josh Hammer
So stopping mass immigration, I think is the lowest hanging fruit. We should obviously do that. Personally, Andrew, I have to subscribe to a short term, full scale immigration moratorium. Period, full stop, end of story. But definitely, definitely a moratorium when it comes to every Muslim majority.
Andrew Colvett
I want a 10 year moratorium. That's what I, that's what I want to push. There just doesn't seem to be an appetite for that yet in Washington to even address the legal question.
Josh Hammer
There's not, I mean, Trump, Trump to his credit, got behind this with the Raise act back in the, in his first term.
Andrew Colvett
We had a lot of issues with Tom Cotton, but Tom Cotton was right about the Raise act and it would have, I guess it would remind me of the details. It would have been like 50%. It would have been 500,000 green cards a year as opposed to 1.2 that we do now. And it would have been merit based. Hang right there, Josh. We got to take a quick, quick timeout here. I'm going to tell you guys about Good Ranchers. The good folks at Good Ranchers, they are running a special with the holidays coming up. Here's the deal. Good Ranchers is 100American. What is an American? What does American meat? Well, Good Ranchers has only American meat raised on local farms and ranches delivered right to your door. Truly incredible Quality. I'm a subscriber and the benefits are amazing. You get 25 off every box, free shipping and a free gift in every order for life. You get their chicken thighs, bacon, Italian sausage. You can swap the free meat gift each month so you can try something new each time without, you know, having to to purchase it. And if you're worried about committing to a subscription, don't be. You can pause it at any time. With the holidays, holidays right around the corner, this is the perfect time to start your subscription. This is the kind of gift your friends and family are going to love and they're actually going to get excited about. So please consider going to goodranchers.com order by December 1st. Use the code Kirk and you get an extra $100 off your first three orders. This is their best deal ever. So good. Ranchers.com promo code Kirk, Ben and Corley are amazing people. Support their business as they support America. We'll be right back. The Charlie Kirk show where talk meets action. All right, welcome back to the Charlie Kirk Show. I'm gonna play a clip from Charlie talking about the. What is that American question. Let's go ahead and play cut 403. We have reduced Americanism down to. Well, have you filled out your paperwork? And the left doesn't even believe that they believe Americans is the presence of being in the United States of America.
Josh Hammer
So what is an American?
Andrew Colvett
The best way I can answer it, it is someone that has demonstrated through.
Josh Hammer
Objective measurements and markers that this is.
Andrew Colvett
Home, that you have more than respect.
Josh Hammer
Or reverence, that you're willing to die.
Andrew Colvett
That you are all in that this is a place that you're willing to.
Josh Hammer
Bleed for and sacrifice for.
Andrew Colvett
This is not a dumping ground for the third world.
Josh Hammer
This is not a social experiment. You had a tear in your eye on July 4th.
Andrew Colvett
That you worship God, not Allah, that you have, you have a. You have a sense of weight and responsibility that you care about your fellow neighbor. An American is more than just someone that has U.S. passport. I think it's fair to say that Charlie Kirk is the literal embodiment of what America. Yeah.
Blake Neff
Not the least because he basically looks like he fell out of like 1775. But I mean, what's funny?
Andrew Colvett
Oh, yeah. Let's welcome back national radio in three minutes. Three second. So we'll be right back. All right, welcome back. Final segment of hour one with Josh Hammer, host of the Josh Hammer show and editor at large at Newsweek. New piece, what is in America? We just played that clip of Charlie describing like an American and It's, it just comes out of his pores, man, and I just love it. You get a tear in your eye on July 4th. Do you worship God? Not Allah, Blake?
Blake Neff
Yeah, just what's funny is at this point it's almost that clip we just played doesn't go far enough because it's not even the left thinks you're American if you live here. The left actually is pretty much inverted it where you're only an American if you are not from here. If you're actually from America, you're somehow not a real American because you're lesser. You don't hold the right views on this or that thing. The superior American is always the American who hasn't been found yet. We need to have spent hundreds of billions of dollars to go and find all the Americans scattered throughout the entire world and bring them here to give them welfare.
Andrew Colvett
No, it's true. I mean, Democrats and their socialist and communist coalition partners, I mean, they essentially want an America where borders are open, drugs pour in from abroad, crime is allowed because, you know, racism. Foreigners rule over native born citizens, white people are taxed into subjugation, men are compliant, quiet and castrated. Little girls share bathrooms with perverted men. Christianity is outlawed. Why Muslim call to prayer rings out in the streets, truth is censored. And you know, the military can coup a sitting president if they think that he's doing something that they don't like. Josh, I want to flip the conversation a little bit to that direction. You're a lawyer and there's a lot of argument about this video that the Seditious Six, as they're calling them now, have put out. Basically saying, hey, you don't, you shouldn't obey the President. President comes out and says, hey, guess what? The penalty for sedition, seditious conspiracy is death. And then all hell breaks loose. And so that's our current moment. What is sedition? Define it for us, Josh, in legal terms. And did it, did this meet the threshold?
Josh Hammer
Well, sedition, Andrew, would be a plot to overthrow the regime, a plot to, to overthrow the American, to potentially to assassinate the President, to try to do what you can illegally, to essentially destroy the very existence of the House representatives. Absent a constitutional amendment, these would be possible grounds for sedition. Now this video was disgusting. I mean, I did a whole episode on it on my own show. I said, this is clearly incitement to insurrection. Is it literally sedition? I mean, the reason I'm hesitating, Andrew, is because when you have elected officials like this, it seems to me like There is potentially another remedy in place rather than trying to prosecute on grounds of sedition, which is that you could also just try to expel these members of Congress. You could try to expel Senator Kelly, Senator Slotkin, people like that there. That is something that. That's one possible remedy. You know, as a lawyer, I think not just about the possible crime, but about remedies as well. So one remedy could just be expelling is also, of course, the remedy of the ballot box. Look, I definitely would not be upset. I mean, if the DOJ really decides to pursue this thing and actually decides to say that this is a literal seditious crisis, seditious conspiracy. It's a total cell phone in the politics, by the way. I mean, who are they playing to? I mean, literally, who are they playing to other than the most radical elements of the Mandani coalition? It's absolutely nuts.
Andrew Colvett
It came out of nowhere, too. And then, and then you've got this Representative Crow basically saying, well, I wasn't calling for them to disobey anything just yet. Well, we have three years left of Trump. And I just wanted to, you know, I wanted to bring up the possibility. I mean, it's so that's. You're absolutely right. The politics of it were insane. So they've cell phoned themselves. But I think what President Trump was rightfully doing, I'll be honest, like, the first time I saw it, I thought I was like, okay, you guys are trying to be cute with illegal orders. Like, who's to define what's illegal? Is drug boats in the international water, bombing those, Is that illegal to you? Is National Guard troops in Chicago or Portland, Is that illegal to you? So I knew they were being cute, but then when President Trump got really upset about it, I was like, you know what the. He's right. Like, these people are playing with fire and they need to be like, warned. They need a brush back pitch. I don't think that. I agree. I don't think the remedy necessarily needs to be immediately, let's like, you know, try them for treason. But at the same time, they needed a brush bat pitch. Brush back pitch. Josh Hammer, final word to you, one minute.
Josh Hammer
Yeah, no, look, I mean, but this is who they are, Andrew. I think the point that I will leave the audience on is this. We are now almost a year and a half since Butler, Pennsylvania. We are now over a year since the second attempted assassination in West Palm Beach, Florida. And there's obviously here we are two and a half months or two plus months after the assassination of our friend Charlie Kirk. And they're still doing this. They're still talking about Trump as a Hitlerite tyrannical figure. They're still talking about the American government as a bunch of Nazis. They're still talking about playing fast and loose with sedition. All the while, they're flooding this country with people who hate America, who are not really Americans in a thicker, meaningful sense of the term. It's all just totally dystopian and is yet another reminder we have to do everything we can possibly do to keep these wretched harridans out of power in these United States.
Andrew Colvett
Well said. Well said. Josh Hammer, host of the Josh Hammer Show, Editor at Large, Newsweek, a great new piece on what is an American. Check it out. Josh, thanks for joining us, my friend.
Josh Hammer
My pleasure. Thanks, Andrew.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
All right.
Andrew Colvett
Hour two coming up next. And that's when we get into Ask US anything. If you are want to join that, please send your questions in. We're going to bring you in live on air. Members.charliekirk.com Sign up right now. Join us members.charliekirk.Com Hour 2 Ask us anything. Mikey McCoy, Blake Neff and myself. We'll be right back.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
Welcome back to the welcome to this REAL America's Voice news break. I'm Terrence Bates. President Trump ending this week with a bang as he is set to host New York's mayor elect Zoran Mamdani at the White House here in just a few hours. Mamdani is a self proclaimed democratic socialist, but the president calls him an outright communist. Today will mark their first face to face meeting. Ralph. Congressional correspondent Benny Ray Harmony joining us from Capitol Hill this morning with the very latest. So what's the reaction there on Capitol Hill to the president getting ready to host Mamdani?
Terrence Bates
Yeah, I think overall it's a good day. It shows the both sides coming together, you know, in unity. Terrence, these two, Zoran Mamdani as well as President Trump, they have been active in opposition to each other from, from Zoran's acceptance speech when he, when he became mayor electric saying, telling President Trump to turn the volume up that he wants to fight President Trump. And then you have President Trump saying that he thinks they will get along just fine. So this meeting is set to kick off Today here at 3pm in the Oval Office. And as of now it is closed to press. But we know how President Trump likes to give members of the press that inside look. So we do expect potentially that they will open that up to two members of the press and hopefully Our Brian Glenn will get some questions in.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
As with the rest of the country, affordability is an issue that New Yorkers are struggling with right now. It's also something that members of Congress are going to be talking about and trying to deal with once they return from the holiday break.
Terrence Bates
Yeah, and Terrence, this, this past week it was very heavy on the Epstein Transparency act and we talked a lot about this. And so when, when members get back on December 1, they have adjourned today where they actually did pass a bill that is against socialism. So it's all about denouncing socialism. But, but when they come back December 1st, we expect the conversation to be all about health care and affordability. Everything from SNAP benefits to Medicaid. These will be addressed, Terrence, because we're coming up on that December 31 deadline of tax credits ending, as well as the potential another government shutdown that could be happening at the end of January. So affordability, health care, those are the two top things we expect in December to really, really hit the ground running with.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
Just really quickly want to get back to that bill that was just passed. That's interesting, the House passing a bill to denounce socialism as Zoran Mondami will be in the Oval Office. Is this the House sending a message.
Terrence Bates
Terence? Absolutely. I think Speaker Johnson had had a reason for this. I mean, this, this past just three short hours before we have a socialist, self described socialist and communist coming right to the White House to discuss this. And so I believe that Zo Ron is going to be coming and people here, here in Washington, it's going to be very interesting because we don't really know what's going through those lawmakers heads, but we know what they're doing.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
No, absolutely. That's interesting. That's definitely a developing storyline. Again, we are coming up against that Jan. 20 deadline. Lawmakers are going to be heading home over the next day or so for the Thanksgiving holiday. But once they do return in December, there's just not a whole lot of legislative days to get a lot of work done.
Terrence Bates
No, there's not. And Terence, one of the biggest things this week, we really expected some sort of conversation on affordability, but it was so skewed to these Epstein files and the Democrats trying to, to push back against Trump with, with them insisting that these Epstein files, you know, get released. But, but it's, it's, it's hard because this deadline is coming very, very fast. And like you said, there's not enough time in December, a couple weeks of legislative session and then you also have the subpoenas that went out to Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton. They have to report to the Oversight Committee December 17 and December 18. So is this Evidence Epstein thing going to continue to get dragged out, or are we really going to focus on affordability and fixing some of these major issues that Americans are talking about?
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
Not a lot of gift giving in December for folks there on Capitol Hill as it will be more work than fun, for sure. We appreciate you being here. Always good to see you. If I don't see you before Thanksgiving, enjoy your holiday.
Terrence Bates
Thank you, Terrence. You too. Talk.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
Of course, we'll talk about soon. And once again, we'll continue to cover all the happenings in Washington, D.C. particularly New York's mayor elect Zoran Mondomini meeting with President Trump in the Oval Office. If, in fact, it does open up to the meeting, count on Rav to be there for you.
Caller/Listener
Foreign.
Andrew Colvett
Welcome back. Hour two of the Charlie Kirk Show. Andrew Colvett here, executive producer of this show, joined by Mikey McCoy and Blake Neff in studio. We're going to be taking your questions this hour. So please join us. Members.charliekirk.com members.charliekirk.com we have a written one here if we want to start with that.
Blake Neff
Let's start let's start with, let's start with Jen, I think.
Caller/Listener
All right.
Andrew Colvett
Let's start with Jen.
Josh Hammer
Jen, hi.
Terrence Bates
Good afternoon.
Andrew Colvett
Hey, Jen. How are you? Good.
Terrence Bates
How are you?
Andrew Colvett
I'm great. What's your question?
Terrence Bates
So I'm a homeschool mom who basically saw an issue in our community. I've tried to step up and find a different solution. We're in Florida, so basically we have county commissioners who voted to pass a new tax and none of them live in our actual area. So we don't it's literal. What I've been teaching in our homeschool is taxation without representation. Right. So I started an initiative that took this solution. It's a little bit outside of the box. I've spent a lot of time researching and talking to people in the community. And this week our local newspaper did a report on it, on our effort. And they it was very negative and kind of mocked me for it. People really can't get past it, the headline. And it is it's a little radical to some. But I'm proposing a new county for our area to give us a little bit more representation and naming it after President Trump. So my question kind of is how do you guys, you know, how did Charlie because there's a lot of Negativity surrounding my effort. Just push through and persevere. You know, when this negativity comes, like, how do you. You know, I've got kids, we're just a regular family. We homeschool. You know, how do you kind of push through that?
Andrew Colvett
Yeah, I mean, I'm happy to. Happy to take this one, you know, because I will tell you that Charlie was no stranger to negative headlines and to being taken out of context, to smear pieces, hit pieces, all the things. And it got to the point where we literally would just. We would put them in the chat. I would drop the new article in the chat that was, you know, completely taking something he said out of context. And he would literally go, lol. And, you know, obviously Charlie had a big microphone. He had this show, he had his social media. So I don't wanna. I don't wanna say that it's one to one, but you said it yourself. What he would do is he would just push through and he would advance the points he was making, he would advance positive lines, he would advance the actual mission that he was on, not the representation that somebody would give him or paint a picture of him. That was a lie. But you call a lie a lie, you confront your accusers, you call it a lie, and you push forward and you continue building and building and building. And I mean, Charlie's whole POV on this was that we were gonna outwork you, we were gonna out hustle you, we were gonna out message you. And so that's the point. We built positive lines where we could, we built coalitions where we couldn't, allies where we could, and we pushed through it. Mikey.
Mikey McCoy
Yeah, great question. Jen, nice to meet you. I saw this video this morning and I thought it was so awesome. It was Charlie and Erica. Charlie sitting here, Erica sitting right there.
Andrew Colvett
I think we have it.
Mikey McCoy
Yeah, it's a long clip, so maybe we don't want to play it. But he. Basically the question was to Erica, do you get the same hate messages and headlines and attacks that Charlie does? And she said, yeah. And I thought that was really interesting question because you don't always think maybe Erica is not receiving this, but she was. She said, honestly, I've lost family members, I've had people attack me, I've lost friends, but it's my pruning season. She goes, and I'm figuring out in this season who's my friend and who's not.
Andrew Colvett
She said.
Mikey McCoy
And then on top of that, she goes, I have a velvet spine of steel. And she goes, you can't let anything get to you. She's like, you're soft on the outside, but nobody can get to you on the inside.
Blake Neff
I think a really important thing to always emphasize, I think here is the faith angle. If you really are meditating on that part of it, if you're praying a lot, if you're always thinking, how, how can I serve God with my actions? What would God want me to do? I think that helps a lot in these situation. That gives you a lot of strength when you're under attack.
Mikey McCoy
Yeah.
Blake Neff
Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I shall fear.
Mikey McCoy
And you have truth on your side. Yeah, you have truth on your side. And so if truth is for you, nobody can be against you. But then at the same time, if you're always living for God, you have not, you have nothing to fear.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah, you know, it's interesting, I will say, and we should play this clip. We're going to play it for you, Jen, because I do think it's inspiring. But you know, we've lived in this weird post Charlie world and you know, there's conspiracies, there's, you know, allegations. I mean, there's a whole bunch of crazy stuff. But I will tell you because I've gotten a few friends that'll be like, how are you doing with all this? And I'm like, I literally don't feel it. I do not feel it. I don't sense it. It doesn't affect my life because I live with the understanding that what God has unleashed, man cannot stop. The haters cannot stop. They can harass you, they can torment you, they can kind of make your day miserable, I'm sure. But God is doing a work. God is doing a pruning. I think in our movement. God is doing a pruning in the country. And Erica says it really, really well. 4 oh, 8. You ever get hate from Charlie's work? How do you handle it? Charlie, do you ever feel guilt or do you ever deal with guilt when Erica gets hated? No, I, I don't.
Terrence Bates
I honestly, this is so, I got.
Caller/Listener
I.
Terrence Bates
This is how I know God made us for each other. Because anytime I do get, quote, unquote, hate, it's the same stuff you get.
Andrew Colvett
Like, I don't even want to say.
Terrence Bates
It's not even worth saying it or repeating the things that we're called or the names that we're called. But yes, I do. I've lost family members, I've lost friends.
Andrew Colvett
But I actually am kind of grateful.
Terrence Bates
That that's happened because God has pruned my life in a way where I am surrounded in a circle now by people who love us, support us, pray with us, encourage us.
Andrew Colvett
Small, mighty circle. And that's what I would much rather.
Terrence Bates
Have a small, mighty circle than a massive one. It's the people that you know that you can trust and pour into. And yes, do I get hate?
Andrew Colvett
Bring it on. I'll have a. I'll have a.
Terrence Bates
Velvet steel spine by the end of, end of my life. So bring it on.
Andrew Colvett
I have nothing to fear. Based. Such a good clip that.
Mikey McCoy
That fired me up this morning and I hope it fires you too, Jen. I mean, I was ready. I was ready for the day.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah. Next question. Isn't that a good line? Right? It's a good one.
Terrence Bates
I mean, that's such a good line. So thank you for that. I, I have not seen that one and I am. I' putting that up in my bedroom.
Josh Hammer
I love it.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah. Good for you, Jen. Thanks for, thanks for being a member. We're gonna go to Rain next. Rain, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Caller/Listener
Hello.
Andrew Colvett
Hi, Rain.
Caller/Listener
Hey, how are you guys?
Andrew Colvett
We're hanging in. How are you? What can we do for you? What's your question?
Caller/Listener
So my question is. Well, I have two. First question is, what do you think is going to become of this Mandami meeting at the White House today with Trump?
Blake Neff
I think.
Caller/Listener
That Trump is even allowing him in his orbit.
Blake Neff
Well, keep in mind, Trump is a real estate guy. He, frankly, he loves having meetings. He will meet.
Mikey McCoy
Yeah.
Blake Neff
It's so funny that so many people are so appalled. They're like, I will never meet with him. Trump is clearly a person who will meet with anyone.
Andrew Colvett
Met with Kim Jong Un.
Blake Neff
He met with, you know, Mitt Romney, all these Republicans. Yeah, he met.
Mikey McCoy
Yeah.
Caller/Listener
But this guy is like the head of a movement that is trying to overthrow everything about what our, our country is about.
Blake Neff
For sure. For sure. But as they said, he, he met with Kim Jong Un. He wants to meet with Putin. He wants to meet with Putin again. He met with Democrats all the time during his first term, even though they were trying to topple him. If, you know, I've heard people on our own side, they've complained that Trump almost takes too many of these meetings. But, but that's just what you're getting with the type of person Trump is. He is. He think of what he is. He's a businessman, real estate developer. He comes from a world where you resolve disputes, where you resolve impasses through direct face to face contact, through direct Conversation.
Caller/Listener
But do you think that some of that contact, like, on a spiritual level, that some of that contact can affect. Can affect a person? I think it can. And I think that limiting your. Your involvement with, like, you know, spiritual.
Andrew Colvett
Well, that's true. You got to be careful what you let in into the house. I actually really agree with you, Rain, but I would say Trump will meet with anybody. I'm not worried about. Trump is so hardened in his. His ways. Like, I don't think he's. It's hard to teach an old dog new tricks, if you will. I'm not worried about.
Blake Neff
No one's tackling up new habits.
Andrew Colvett
No, nobody's. Nobody's rubbing off on Trump here. What he's doing is he's going to size up his. His opponent. I think it's going to go both ways. I think there's going to be some warning shots fired being like, handshake, don't. Don't mess with me in this way. You stay out of my way in this way. We're going to be okay. And we are coming with ice. That's what's going to happen. That's in my opinion, that's what's.
Caller/Listener
You have to be. You have to be that way to be like, diplomatic and.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah, yeah.
Caller/Listener
When.
Hearts and minds.
Andrew Colvett
I get it, Rain, hang right there.
Caller/Listener
One more question.
Andrew Colvett
Well, hang right there, Rain. We'll go in the break. I got to tell everybody about Tick Tock connection, open dialogue. These are the things that build communities. Charlie and Tick Tock share in that knowledge. That's why Tick Tock has built a space where that kind of listening actually happens. You'll see a teacher simplifying a tough lesson so it finally clicks. Or a gardener sharing a trick that saved their crop. But what matters most isn't the video. It's what comes next. It's the conversation. It's the posting of a question, and then somebody answers that when people listen and understand, shifts can actually happen. That's what listening does. It remind us that we're not all as different as we may think that we are. And that's what makes Tic Tac a power. A TikTok a powerful platform to have conversations. Charlie believed in it. Charlie had billions and billions and billions of views. One could argue that TikTok saved the country in November. So check it out. A Converse. That's where conversations and communities are built with TikTok. We'll be right back.
Caller/Listener
Foreign.
Andrew Colvett
Democracy lives in light. The Charlie Kirk Show. All right. Private student loan debt in the United states. Totals about $300 billion. About 45 billion of that is labeled as distressed. Why refi? What they do is they refinance distressed or defaulted private student loans that others simply will not touch. They provide you with a custom loan payment based on your ability to pay and that is the key. So they don't just give you a one size fits all. They're going to work with you and talk with you to find out what you can actually accomplish financially. And they will custom tailor a solution for you why refi does not care what your credit score is. So when that payment on your distress or default to private student loan is so big that you can never get ahead, that's when you need to talk to the good folks at Y Refi so you can get rid of that co borrower. You can even skip a payment every six months up to 12 times without penalties. You do not have to ignore that mountain of student loan debt that's piling up on the kitchen table anymore. Just call 888-Y-REFI 34-888-Y-REFI 34 or visit them online at yrefy.com that's why refi.com may not be available in all 50 states. But if it is available in your state, you need to check it out. All right, we're going to welcome back radio in about 10 seconds. We'll be right back. All right, so we had a great question from Rain and about it's kind of largely about the, the conspiracy theories and you know, and I think Blake, you said it. Well, it's like, like we have to give space for people to grieve. There is a trial coming up. We understand that sometimes when we don't speak on every topic, it creates a bit of a vacuum. And there is just so, you know, there's a reason for some of the silence on certain things and the choosing not to engage in certain things. But I loved Rayn's heart and you could tell that she is grieved just by Charlie not being with us and the anchor that Charlie was in her life, but also the fact that, that, you know, she wants to carry his mission forward and she wants everybody to be unified and on the same page. So, Mikey, I don't know if you want to add anything to that.
Mikey McCoy
Yeah, I mean, Andrew, you said it. If there's silence on something, oftentimes people say that silent because it's true. That's not why. Like one. There's so many accusations out there against so many people. Even one of them are like a sermon that my dad gave, where he said that I had, you know, blood on me. And for the record, like, he gave that sermon. I called my dad moments after everything happened, and I was screaming.
Blake Neff
I. I was. I was listening to that.
Mikey McCoy
Blake was next to me. I was screaming on the phone. I said, charlie was shot in the neck and he had blood all over him.
Blake Neff
He said. And I was thinking that there was a lot of blood.
Mikey McCoy
And I said, call every pastor and pray. Pray for a miracle. And he thought for some reason that I said I had blood on me. So he gives a sermon 72 hours later where he addresses that conspiracy, and.
Andrew Colvett
He says that I had blood on me.
Mikey McCoy
Okay. I didn't see that sermon. And then about a month later, that was, like, trending all over social media. And I called my dad and I was like, did you actually say this? And he was like, yeah, I just found out it's not true. So, like, behind every single one of these are a human being. For an entire month, my dad had to live with nightmares every night that his son actually did have blood all over.
Andrew Colvett
Didn't you say he got emotional when he found.
Mikey McCoy
He got emotional when I was on the phone with him, being like, that's not why. Why did you say that?
Andrew Colvett
He was so glad to hear it wasn't true.
Mikey McCoy
Yeah. Like that. Not everything is some grand scheme. And just because someone's not answering all of your questions when you want them to answer your questions does not mean.
Blake Neff
I want to close the loop on this. I think. I think. But there's a lot of people. A lot of people are deeply affected by this.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah.
Blake Neff
And for some people, the temptation of something very emotionally upsetting is they want to, like, frankly, sometimes there's a temptation to lash out. And I would remember that. I would encourage you to remember all of us love Charlie. All of us care deeply about Charlie. It is fundamentally. I'll just say it is fundamentally outrageous and insane to say that any of us would have wanted Charlie dead or wanted anything bad to happen to him. And when we get emails where people just say, you killed Charlie or, like, you're lying about everything, I would strongly encourage those people to reflect on what is motivating them to do these things.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah. I wanna also say there is a point where, you know, it's deeply frustrating that somebody like Mikey would have to even dignify some of, like, you know, this story that you just. You'd have to even dignify that with a response. I mean, it's so insane. But by the way, I love that Rainn is wearing a. She was talking about her bracelet from the memorial. And it was funny because just this morning I saw a bunch of like, we are Charlie Kirk bracelets on Mikey's desk. I was like, I want one of these. I never wear these kind of bracelets. Not really my thing, but I'll wear it for Charlie. So I thought that was. That was great. Jonathan, you're next. Jonathan, welcome to the Charlie Kirk show. Unmute yourself, please.
Mikey McCoy
We could rediscover.
Blake Neff
There we go. There we go. Hey, Jonathan.
Andrew Colvett
So my question is, what are the big races in 2026? How can we get involved in those races?
Blake Neff
All right, I can take the first part. The biggest races, obviously, the one Charlie would have cared the most about and the one that's very near to our heart. Arizona governor is up this next year. We want to get Andy Biggs into, I always want to say, the governor's mansion. Arizona doesn't have a governor's mansion. They're too cool for that. We want him to get into the governor's office. There's a lot of good we can do in this state, but we need the governorship back. We need to undo the grievous injustice of four years ago, three years ago, I guess. But that is one of the most important. A lot of other governorships are up and a lot of them are term limited guys. So we have to, you know, Ron DeSantis is term limited out in Florida. We need to make sure a Republican wins that one. That might sound super easy, but remember, eight years ago or six, seven years ago, we only won that by, what, 30,000, 40,000 votes? It was very close. Florida is never a lock. It's a big state. Ohio is going to be an open seat. Texas, we have Abbott running for another term. They're going to put a lot into trying to flip that one. And then in the Senate, we have. Frankly, it's going to be a. It's a defensive map. We have 22 Republicans up and only 13 Democrats. We need to defend the Florida Senate seat. We need to defend the Texas Senate seat. We have an open seat in North Carolina that we need to defend. Our best chance for a pickup is probably going to be Georgia or Michigan.
Mikey McCoy
Meh.
Blake Neff
We're going to need a pretty strong showing for Michigan to go away. But we'll talk about getting involved in the break here.
Andrew Colvett
Yep. We'll be right back.
Radio Host (Terrence Bates or similar)
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Andrew Colvett
Forging an all new greatest American generation. It's the Charlie Kirk Show. All right. Welcome back to the Charlie Kirk Show. This is the final hour of Friday show which means it's an Ask us anything if you are part of our members member@members.charliekirk.com you can join it live. We are taking your questions live. Next up is Elizabeth. Elizabeth, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show. What is your question?
Caller/Listener
Yes, hi, first one. Like I said, I'm still praying for all of you. You're doing an amazing job.
Andrew Colvett
Thank you.
Caller/Listener
Continuing Charlie's legacy. And you should just be so proud. And everyone thinks that. And can I just digress on my question for one second? And when people are listening to maybe other individuals who claim to be in the conservative space, they should remember that Charlie was a godly man who surrounded himself with godly men, who thought of him as a son, that his friends thought of him as a brother, that he was a leader and a role model in his community. And he built an organization where, like senators and congressmen were like, dying to get on the show because they were proud to be associated with him. So if you are listening to someone who was not like that, you should turn off their podcast and turn back on Charlie Kirk Show.
Andrew Colvett
Hear, hear. Well said.
Blake Neff
Okay, what's your other question?
Andrew Colvett
Yeah, no, well said. Thank you for that and thank you for the kind words. Genuinely. That means a lot to us. Thank you.
Caller/Listener
You're very welcome and very well earned. The reason that I was calling, and this isn't about financial support to Israel, because that can be debated one way or the other. And that's fine. But what has been bothering me lately are the absolute disgusting lies being told about Israel. And I just wanted to sort of give a small example. Population growth in the West bank in 1967 was 700,000 people. In 2025, it was 3,400. That's a population growth of 2.7 million. That's 4.9 more Palestinians. There were since 1967. In the Gaza Strip, it was 350,000. Now it's over 2.1 million. And that's a 5.2 times increase. My point is they're lying about Israel committing a genocide.
Blake Neff
I mean, there's definitely a funny line I saw. Do you know the humorous Dave Barry? He's been in newspapers a long time. He's pretty old now, but the humorous Dave Barry. Someone showed me an article he wrote in 1990, and it was about the U.N. and he says because the U.N. general assembly exists to allow ever. It allows every like, random third world nation into it. And it exists primarily to pass resolutions condemning Israel for everything, including sunspots. And it really is. There's an like. It's like. It's exactly like you say. There is perfectly valid grounds to criticize the exact nature of our relationship. With Israel, should we fund them? Should we give them this or that weapon? Do we need to have unconditional support for any specific political action? Should the US Ambassador be meeting with a convicted traitor?
Caller/Listener
No.
Blake Neff
Exactly. Exactly. So you can discuss all of those things, but it's also the case that a lot of people just, they have an obsession with it that clearly transcends anything that is reasonable. And they have this intense dislike vergin on hate. And some of that will just become telling lies about it. And it. What I like to emphasize is there's something about it that it goes beyond its actual importance to America as an issue for a lot of people. How you feel about Israel has become this symbol of how you feel about the wider world. And it's perhaps specifically because it is actually a place so far away from America, it allows people to get really amped up in their emotional and moral energy about it while at the same time not having direct skin in the game on what the outcome is. And I think that really allows people to just say whatever, like if you tell a lie about your neighbor, that neighbor might punch you in the face. But if you tell a lie about a country on the other side of the world, probably nothing is going to happen to you.
Andrew Colvett
Correct.
Caller/Listener
I think also did you guys know that, that their Supreme Court justice, they have an Arab Muslim on their Supreme Court.
Josh Hammer
They have.
Blake Neff
Did they pass that bill? I remember we talked about that a couple of years ago. Israel's supreme entire court system is pretty wild. It's. They're one of those countries where the judges can appoint their own successors. Can you imagine how terrible America would be if judges in this country just could appoint like you'd have super liberal supreme court of the 70s, the court that did Roe v. Wade, and they would just be appointing their own successors. You can't have Reagan or Trump or you know, appointing more conservative justices to change it. Just appointing liberals forever. That is actually how they ran things or they definitely did run things in Israel. I'm not sure if that bill passed. I haven't closely followed it, but there's just a lot of wild things. It important thing to remember, it is a real country. It is not just a thing that exists on tick tock. It is not just a thing that exists on social media. It is a real country with its own internal divisions, its own issues. It's not this monolith. That's what drives a lot of weird conspiracy theories about it that like all Jews or all Israelis have the same opinion and operate in concert. All I can say is if you think all Jews have the same opinions, you've clearly never met any of them because they don't live in rapid, go to one Shabbat dinner. They'll, they argue with each other all the time.
Andrew Colvett
Well, and I always think, you know, the allegation, you know, the Jewish people run the world or something like that. It's like, have you ever seen the UN and how much, how much, how many sanctions and you know, have been leveled against Israel? And it's basically, you know, so if they can control the world, they would control the U.N. but they, they don't. But to your point, you know, I mean, I was looking up the numbers with your question about the Palestinian birth rates. And you know, they do have a very high birth rate. Their population has actually increased, albeit at a slower rate than it otherwise would have during the war. And that again is probably because of people emigrating out. There's over 100,000 people that got out through the Rafah crossing. They suggest that about 50,000 have died in the conflict. So I mean, listen, when they say.
Caller/Listener
About killing children, they use child soldiers and that has been documented by the United Nations.
Andrew Colvett
Well, and they use, they use, they do a lot of bad stuff.
Blake Neff
They're a terrorist that seized a control of a territory. They're bad dudes.
Andrew Colvett
Here's the thing. I hope that we can pray for peace. I hope that we talk about this issue much, much less because the peace holds and it becomes a long term peace. And I think I speak for a lot of us when we say it would be wonderful not to have to talk about this area of the world nearly as much moving forward. Thank you so much for your question, Laura. Welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Caller/Listener
Hi folks, can you hear me okay?
Andrew Colvett
Yes, we can.
Caller/Listener
Wonderful. Well, thank you. I want to be brief so I can be considerate of others times. But I do want to say I am so sorry for your loss of Charlie. I think that you guys have been doing the absolute best you can to move forward and carry his mission. And that's so clear to me and so many of us and we feel very, I can speak for myself here, but feel very comforted when we come to join the show every day because it feels like we're interacting with parts and pieces of Charlie.
Andrew Colvett
Thank you so much.
Caller/Listener
Through all of you.
Andrew Colvett
It's very sweet. Lord. Thank you.
Caller/Listener
Thank you. So something that I actually, I was building up the courage to maybe join a live before Charlie was killed was to talk about the, the hiring processes right now. So obviously Charlie was a bit big advocate for, you know, college is a scam. And I myself, I have a very successful degree and not, or I'm sorry, career and not having a degree. And many people that I know have, you know, worked their way up in life and just become, you know, self learners and have done the same. But when you know, something happens and they need to go and look for a job, they're hit with automatic rejections because these, I guess it's the hiring systems have this nice little check mark of you know, four year degree or master's degree and if you're not hitting that then you're automatically getting thrown out. So these well and overqualified candidates are getting completely, they're not even passing a person's desk, it's just automatically getting filtered out. They're putting in over 200 applications and getting absolutely nowhere and not able to talk to a real person about it. So just, and you know, in feeling empowered and not needing a degree to be successful, how do you guys recommend, you know, people that don't but are having a hard time getting a job? How do we navigate the employment search?
Blake Neff
First of all, I just want to empathize greatly with how horrible it is. I think applying for a job was annoying and frustrating five years ago. It's gotten an order of magnitude worse with frankly artificial intelligence because now there are people who can spam essentially unlimited applications. They can use AI to write their cover letters, write their custom, like instantly customize your resume towards this page and they can endlessly spam. And then you have similar AI robots evaluating the applications. It's made the entire process just that much more horrible. And I think it's going to lead to probably a resurgence of what would be very old fashioned, which is the need to really leverage personal relationship, build personal relationships and leverage those to find employment. I guess I can only speak to myself. I can't give a lot of specific job advice on how to get a job in a specific field. What I can say is that professionally it's the friendships I've had, the close conversations I've had with those I know that have panned out the most in giving me opportunities.
Mikey McCoy
I remember you bragging one time that you've never had a job that you've applied for.
Blake Neff
Yeah, and that's, that's, I don't really want to say that with some when people are struggling because I know that's a very tough thing to say.
Mikey McCoy
Just kind of network what I could.
Blake Neff
Say like so as an example, it's sort of weird to say, but getting involved, like in the elections, for example, and not just getting involved, talking to all of the people that you volunteer alongside about what they do, what their work is. None of that is going to specifically get you a job, but knowing lots of people, it will increase your ability to be lucky. Yeah, you think of those people who have that story, oh, I was just having that conversation and it turned out it totally changed my life. Or you've heard that story where you talk to someone in the line at the grocery store and oh, 40 years later we're married and we have eight kids. Yeah, everyone's heard those stories. You increase your ability to be lucky by being out there, by knowing more people and also by acquiring skills. You think, what is something you could be better at that has a possible professional use?
Mikey McCoy
Yeah.
Blake Neff
And that might be a handyman type skill. Those are always in demand. It might be computer programming, except now that's getting displaced by AI. It is genuinely go be a plumber.
Andrew Colvett
That's.
Mikey McCoy
I don't think AI will displace that anymore.
Blake Neff
I don't want to be too smug about that because we've got emails.
Mikey McCoy
We should not shame that.
Blake Neff
We shouldn't. We go to shame them. But we've gotten emails from people who say, I went to trade school and I've struggled there. A lot of trade stuff is actually quite insular. There will be family shops and they're somewhat hostile to union barriers. You don't want to just say, oh, it's easy. Go to trade school. You'll automatically get a job. We never want to dismissively say, it's super easy. Do you guys have any other thoughts?
Andrew Colvett
I mean, I agree with the part about relationships. Relationships are the absolute key. And I would, I would also say that for young people. What I often tell young people is find somebody that you really, really look up to respect in the field that you're interested in pursuing and call them to ask them to take you out for coffee. Say, I'll work for you for free. Can I get an internship? Anything. I'll, I'll just, I'll just get coffee. I'll do. Be the, the donut and coffee runner guy. Just offer to get your foot in the door and then work your tail off. That is, I think, the most wonderful thing for young people that they can do. Find somebody you respect, that you look up to, who's the best in their field and just do everything you can to get in their way and good things tend to happen. My, my nephew, I gave that advice to My nephew and it worked out very, very well for him. Listen, I want to tell you guys quickly about our friends over at Patriot Mobile. Patriot Mobile is a company that is founded and run by true patriots. Glenn and the team are amazing. Like truly amazing. They stand up for all the things that we stand up for. All the values, right to life, second amendment, first amendment. They support our first responders and our veterans. Truly, truly amazing people. And they have patriotmobile.com where you can switch over right now. Make it very easy get to keep your phone, keep your number or upgrade. You can get all the three major wireless providers or have two on your phone like I do. You gotta check them out. They are defending the values that we care about. So every dollar you spend with them goes to a good place. So call them 972 Patriot 972 Patriot or go to patriotmobile.com Charlie. Use Charlie as a promo code for one month free service. We will be right back. Stop watching the news and start making some the Charlie Kirk show. Yeah. So welcome back to the Charlie Kirk show to our real America's Voice. We're talking to Sarah, we're talking about TP Canada, Turning point Canada. And this idea of inter is he's taking the brand international.
Blake Neff
What's so important is we were really realizing this in the last few months, you know, when Charlie went to the uk, Charlie went to Korea, went to Japan, that he had become actually this global hero to so many people, so many it's easy to forget. So many people around the world look up to America because we have this assertive conservative movement that is not that we have real freedom of speech. We can really confront big issues. It inspires a lot of people. And so while we are America first, he certainly did not think American values were exclusive to America or Christian values.
Andrew Colvett
That they were God given. We believe that they're innate and so.
Blake Neff
We would want to promote those things. So as we've talked about on this show, we had Sarah Rogers from the State Department on the other day. We're still in discussions on what this might look like, but there's a lot of hope. We could use the Turning Point brand, Charlie's personal memory to promote those values, especially free speech, you know, the Christian west and so on around the world. We're not sure what that might look like, but it might include some sort of global turning point.
Andrew Colvett
Canada. Canada would be an obvious place to plant that. They need it. So we're going to welcome back radio in five seconds. We'll be right back.
Blake Neff
All right.
Andrew Colvett
Welcome Back to the Charlie Kirk show, final segment of the final hour of the week. We have a question from Kimberly. Kimberly, please unmute yourself. Welcome to the show. Kimberly, there you are. I love how excited we all get.
Caller/Listener
I didn't know how to do this. This is my first time, so I didn't know what's going on.
Andrew Colvett
No, thank you. Welcome.
Mikey McCoy
Thank you.
Caller/Listener
Okay. I'm sorry to say that I never had heard of Charlie Kirk before he died. And that day, that's when I heard of him, of course, because it was all over the news that he died, you know, and I just. I just wish I would have heard of him a long time ago because he's like. He's. He's saying everything that I. I've done. I. Okay. I got married when I was 17. I have 11 children. My oldest son is his age, Charlie Kirk's age. But my oldest son died three years ago, and eight of my children were born at home. All of my children are homeschooled. I have eight grandchildren that are. That were born at home. And I was. I gotta say, when I was very young, I was four years old. Anyway, I just. I listen to Charlie Crook all the time now, of course, every day. Like, I listen to his shows and to you guys, and it's just amazing what he did in the short time that he was here, you know?
Andrew Colvett
Yeah, it is.
Blake Neff
It is.
Andrew Colvett
I think, Kimberly, just something.
Blake Neff
First of all, 11 kids is amazing. That is a legendary.
Andrew Colvett
Charlie would be applauding you right now and saying, well done, well done, well done. But also, I just want to say, you know, it's something I've actually talked about with E. I don't think she would. Erica, I don't think she would be offended that I bring it up here. But I've talked about it with you as well, looking back on Charlie's life. And he would get so impatient, like, about little things, and it was actually really endearing about him. He just moved at such a rapid clip with everything, everything. And I look back on it, and I kind of realized it's like he knew. It's like he knew. He knew his time was going to be short, and he maximized so much of his life every day. He squeezed so much out of it. It was really amazing.
Mikey McCoy
And how much content he banked. I remember we used to have conversations and he, like, truthfully, I think we're banking too much content.
Andrew Colvett
No.
Mikey McCoy
But now there's such a rich archive of history for us to look back on. But there's also something beautiful this is an example of the macro, which is Charlie was a good faith based human being. And you share your story about how you discovered him after, after, and you feel like maybe it was just a little too late and you wanted to discover him when he was still alive and you just are learning more about him and the deeper you go, you have such a love for him. But that's how we feel as Christians too, that there's just once you start that relationship with Christ. And this is something I just feel like Charlie would be saying right now is you go deeper and you get to know him more. And like that Charlie was amazing because he lived for something greater than himself and that that was.
Blake Neff
Died for something greater than him and.
Mikey McCoy
He died for something greater than himself. And I just think that's, that's, you're, you're giving such a beautiful analogy right now of what we as Christians feel, that, that Charlie died for something bigger than himself and that we one day, hopefully, hopefully we too can die for something greater than ourselves.
Andrew Colvett
Yeah. And Kimberly, I don't know if you got to your question yet or not, so I want to make sure I give you a chance to, to ask what you wanted to, to ask.
Caller/Listener
I didn't. Well, I didn't really have a question. I mean, I wanted to say stuff that's totally fine.
Blake Neff
Totally fine. That was a beautiful testimony, you know.
Andrew Colvett
And Kimberly, like something I said actually at the memorial that I think is important is just that, you know, we don't grieve the way the world grieves. You know, I. Obviously losing Charlie was probably the hardest thing that I've ever been through, that this organization has ever gone through, obviously, but we don't grieve the way the world grieves. And I feel like God has given me all of these beautiful little just clues and moments of realization. Whether it was we weren't doing a campus tour, we were doing a tent revival. And Charlie wasn't just a political figure or podcaster. He was a prophet to a whole generation of Americans. He's a modern day founding father. And, and he died a martyr. And I miss him. He's the first thing I think about when I wake up. He's the last thing I think about when I go to sleep. But I'm so grateful that I got to spend so much time so close to him. Genuinely amazing.
Mikey McCoy
Kimberly, are you, are you, are you a Catholic? 11 kids?
Caller/Listener
No, I was. That's one thing I do want to say is I don't. Catholics are not Christians and I don't oh.
Andrew Colvett
Oh, that's. We're gonna have to go over.
Blake Neff
It's all right. It's all right. We'll discuss.
Andrew Colvett
Hey, by the way, we're gonna have a debate at AM Fest. That's a heck of a way. What is that?
Blake Neff
AM Festival.
Caller/Listener
No.
Mikey McCoy
Thank you for.
Andrew Colvett
We'll see you all next week. Have a great weekend.
Caller/Listener
This is an I heart podcast.
Episode Theme: “Real News, Honest Views”—Unfiltered discussions on politics, culture, and the meaning of American identity
Date: November 21, 2025
Hosts: Andrew Colvett (Executive Producer), Blake Neff, Mikey McCoy
Featured Guest: Josh Hammer (Senior Editor-at-Large, Newsweek)
Notable Topics: Islamization of the West, Trump–Mamdani White House meeting, mass migration, American identity, listener Q&A
This installment of The Charlie Kirk Show centers on the political, cultural, and demographic shifts occurring in America, with a focus on the perceived “Islamization” of the West, the role and definition of American identity, and the impact of mass migration. The episode also analyzes the high-profile meeting between President Donald Trump and New York City’s Muslim, self-described socialist mayor-elect, Zoran Mamdani. Alongside discussions dissecting these pressing issues, the episode features robust listener questions and commentary that speaks to the anxieties and aspirations of the show’s engaged audience. Throughout, the tone is direct, urgent, and at times combative, reflecting the hosts’ mission to challenge what they describe as mainstream narratives.
This episode is a comprehensive, impassioned exchange on the most pressing political and cultural anxieties among the show’s core audience. The Trump–Mamdani meeting serves as a triggering event to discuss trends around Islamization, mass migration, and the struggle to define—and defend—the cultural and spiritual essence of America. Through guest insights, historical analogies, concrete policy suggestions, personal testimonies, and a lively Q&A, the episode captures the fervor and sense of embattlement among American conservatives, while drawing on faith and perseverance as the means to weather both external threats and personal attacks. The tone is resolute, sometimes combative, but always aimed at bolstering an embattled community perceived to be at the front lines of civilizational change.