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Clay Travis
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Clay Travis
And nothing in between. Fuel your day@chalk.com Bold, reverent, and occasionally random. The Sunday Hang with Clay and Buck podcast starts now. Sharing this data from Steve Kornacki and I was just laying it out. College educated white women, they hate Trump. They're the only group of of white voters that hates Trump. In fact, he has a positive review of everybody else. And the difference between white men with no college degree and white women with college degrees has probably never been more expansive. Huge difference. White women with college degrees hate Elon, they hate Doge, they hate the Republican Party, they love Zelensky, and they also Buck love dei. So basically, white women with college degrees as a group, I know there are many white women with college degrees that are listening to us right now are divergent from every other white person in America in a massive way. White men with college degrees are not similar to white women with college degrees. And certainly white women and men without college degrees are not similar at all either. A bunch of people want to weigh in. And let's start with Lois in Raleigh, North Carolina. What do you think is to explain this?
Caller
Hey guys, thanks for taking my call. I am an college educated woman with a master's degree in education administration. I worked until 39, got married and had my son. I love Trump. And I think maybe some of these women, because I know some are very angry, maybe they're even kind of intimidating. And so they kind of put people off a little. I don't know. But that's been my experience. So. But I love Trump and I'm a college educated woman and white.
Buck Sexton
Right? Well, we know, we know there are a lot of, we know there are a lot of you out there. I'm curious, I mean, when you say, did you have peers, you know, women who are in your program, let's say your master's program, like, what, what has their experience been? Because you said, I think you got married at 39, you had a kid, you know, it all worked out for you, right? But do you have a lot of people from your master's program who maybe never were able to start a family or feel like they spent too much time in the library or whatever? I'm curious what your general conception or perception is.
Caller
Well, I guess my perception is I felt they they sort of gave this go away. I'm, I'm strong, I'm tough, I'm not vulnerable, that type of thing.
Buck Sexton
Do you think that was because they were told that they should compete with men in the workplace in a way that was unhealthy? I mean, what, what's your analysis of it?
Caller
Oh, I think it's unhealthy because I wanted to be married and have a child and be a college educated woman. I wanted to have all of that and I did. I just had to wait.
Buck Sexton
Yeah.
Clay Travis
Okay, I've got a good email here. Thank you for the call. By the way, I can mention my wife has double graduate degrees and voted for Trump. So obviously there are a lot of people out there in that camp. But, but can I just, on the.
Buck Sexton
On the outlier thing, you know, Mark Zuckerberg didn't finish college and is one of the richest people on the planet. That doesn't mean that like people shouldn't get an education. Right? Like, it's just, you know, it doesn't. Or that you shouldn't finish college if you think that's going to be good for you.
Clay Travis
You know, the exception is not the rule. The outlier typically is an outlier for a reason. Good email here from Katie. She says howdy from San Antonio. College educated Giga Maggies. I mean, she's a Texas A and M grad. I'm a white woman here, voted for Trump. And what I'm interested in is why you think women, not what you did, but why you think these numbers do reflect the truth. There are a lot of people who disagree with you. Here's her explanation. Many of my childhood friends turned extremely liberal while in college. Then they moved into urban suburban areas around Dallas, Austin and Houston. All of my white college educated liberal friends are extremely vocal on social media about the same issues. Abortion, the Alphabet crew nonsense, and above all, pandering to the race. Social causes like blm. It's like they fall all over each other to show who is the most apologetic for being white and who adopts the most pets from their local shelter. Their need to feel morally superior is unmatched. I think that's a really great email that actually makes a lot of sense.
Buck Sexton
Yeah. Who? High five to who? Who was the author of that one?
Clay Travis
VIP Katie Giga Maggies. Good luck to Texas A and M in the tournament. Based on this, she, she also said, by the way, Texas A and M, one of the exceptions, mostly conservative school, especially compared to that orange school in Austin. Taking a little bit of a shot at University of Texas. But it is interesting that it's like for college educated women, their social stature is a competition to see who can appear the most emotionally empathetic. And social media may well drive it.
Buck Sexton
I think that the, the emotional blackmail that we are all put through in college by the woke machinery is particularly effective on women. I just think that again, that doesn't mean that all women succumb to it. It just means that I think that women are more likely because they're more. Look, can we can speak about these things honestly, right? Women tend to be more empathetic. Women tend to be more in touch with their feelings. Women, you know, in general. Okay, I need some woman to call. Like I could bench press you, Buck. Like I'm sure you can. But generally speaking, women are more. Went full macho man. Randy Savage.
Clay Travis
Oh, that's, that's the, that's the lesbian woman from, from the Democrat party that picked Tim Walls as the, the man to appeal to the men.
Buck Sexton
You get what I'm, you get what I'm putting down, but I think that women want to be, and I'm talking about college women in college who are of that age, obviously they want to be empathetic, they want to be sympathetic, they want to do what they can for other people. And they are told that to be good people, to be good people, you have to identify with these causes. And clay, a perfect example of this Zelensky. The college educated women love little Zelensky. Give me more money. I am here for Donald Trump in my T shirt. Like the whole thing.
Clay Travis
Very strange.
Buck Sexton
Bizarre, bizarre when you think about this. Also, what are these college educated women know about what it means to be somewhere where you could get blown up by an IED or shot by a sniper rifle, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. And yet they're the ones that are so all in on this Ukraine war situation. Like, think about this for a second. The guys who has fought, who has fought a lot of Americans war. Now I have friends who come from very well off backgrounds who were in the army and in the Marines too. So I'm not, I'm not saying again, we're speaking generalities here, ok? Working class men are the ones who fight America's wars.
Clay Travis
Rich man's war, poor man's fight has been a phrase for hundreds of years and it's true across the world.
Buck Sexton
It is, you know, 18 year olds from working class backgrounds who are the ones signing up fighting our wars. I don't think anybody would find this a controversial statement. It is the truth. And it's interesting that they like Trump, the guy who's trying to end the war, and white college educated women are the ones who are like, Slava, Ukraine, like fight till the very end. The guys know that this stuff is nasty and you want to end it as fast as possible. This is not a video game.
Clay Travis
Mary in San Marcos, Texas, what's your theory on what's going on here?
Caller
I think they're spoiled brats. I think they think they're enabled and they think that they're better and they think that they're going to do whatever they think they want to do. They are using the female card. I'm in my 60s and it took me a while to get my degree, but I worked my butt off to get my degree, literally because we didn't have federal loans then, we had to pay it as we went. But I very much earned my degree. I am a degree from Texas A and M, which Corpus Christi, Texas. But I am a teacher. I retired after 25 years, but before that I was a mechanic in an oil refinery. I was a mechanic in Abbott Laboratories medical manufacturing system. As I said, I worked my butt off. And these ladies that are doing this, they couldn't be bothered by dirtying their hands doing menial work, waitressing or working in the kitchen or working in some kind of hands on product. They're little, you know, little miss tootsies doing what they want to do. Because I'm a female and I can do this and you know, you have to hire me because I'm entitled. No, you're not.
Clay Travis
Thank you for the call. I love it. Thank you for the call. I do think there's a generational divide here, right? Because a lot of women college graduates are recent women college graduates, meaning in the last 20 or 30 years as now, women get way more college degrees. Question for you, Buck. Are women, because of social media far more likely to be susceptible to what their friends do and say than men are? Like, I don't know about you, but I love that, really?
Buck Sexton
Clay and I. Clay and I hear experts on women. I just think it's kind of funny. Yes, I'm just having, I'm just having a go at you. Yes, I think that you are correct. I think that the. I see this all the time. Can I just tell you something? You know, I still have some friends who are single and I, and I love hearing about, you know, their story. It's great to hear their stories. Right. It's. It's like hearing about people who are out there in the jungle trying to find the tiger still, you know, like, I'm. I'm safe at home.
Clay Travis
You got a brother who's single. You got a brother.
Buck Sexton
I got an older brother who's. Who's a fantastic guy and a very elegant bachelor. Great catch. Just throwing it out there. Great catch. Mason, my older brother, and. And he's still single. But, you know, I've got a bunch of friends down here as well who are all single guys. And, Clay, the number of women who think it's really appealing to tell guys that their great life. Life aspiration is to travel is insane to me. This is. This is entirely a product of Instagram culture and getting the likes. And I'm in Tulum and I'm in Barcelona, and I'm in all these places, and all my friends think I'm living this great life. Traveling is a thing you do once in a while to do a reset from your actual life.
Clay Travis
And, yeah, I'm going to sound like an Instagram influencer chick right now. I kind of think they're right. I love to travel. I want to go everywhere. That's what I want to do. No, I want to just travel all over the place. You got to see me, like, on the edge of a cliff, taking a selfie. Like, look at the sea in the background.
Buck Sexton
We need Dr. Laura. Where's Dr. Laura? We need her to weigh in on this.
Clay Travis
I. But I do think that, first of all, I have no idea what my friends say on social media. Like, I use social media.
Buck Sexton
You were trying to find. See, you found. You found a great woman and built a beautiful family in a real world.
Clay Travis
Where you meet face to face. Like in law school, like, most people used to meet face to face, but so the whole dating on the Internet thing was, like, predates me so back.
Buck Sexton
But I'm saying if you. If you met a girl in, you know, not. Not Laura. If you had met somebody before you met Laura and you said, hey, like, you know, what do you want to do? She's like, I just want to travel. No. You think that's a. You think. No, not. Not. I want to build a family.
Clay Travis
I like to travel. Now, what I wanted to hear, you're.
Buck Sexton
A rich old man. You don't count. Now, I'm talking about when you were single.
Clay Travis
Oh, yeah. No, what I wanted to hear was I want to have a ton of kids. Yeah, that's what I would want to hear.
Buck Sexton
Now you agree with me. Your whole I love to travel thing, Clay. Yeah, like, because you're you know, I've already totally different.
Clay Travis
But, but I do think the thing that I wanted to hear was hey, I want to have a bunch of kids. And that's what had appeal to me. And if you're, I guess I'm thinking like 25 year olds. If you're like 35 and you meet somebody and like what do you want to do with your life? Like I want to travel. That's a little bit weird. There's a lot of that.
Buck Sexton
This is what I'm telling you. There are a lot of women in their 30s who their aspiration is their life aspiration again as they're presenting it on social media and on dating apps or whatever is I want to travel. And I just think that this is this mindset of this the self actualization through selfies is really damaging.
Clay Travis
I think it's totally true. Here's another question for you. Do you think women are more impacted by negativity on social media? Like in other words, anything that we post. If you want to go into the mentions, you can find five or six people that are like kill yourself, I hope you die. Right? I mean that is very common on social media, particularly Twitter compared to Instagram. How much of this is just a fear of anybody disagreeing with them in a desperate way? Women are far more socially savvy than men are. Like I don't know when I'm getting the cold shoulder, I don't notice because I'm not, I'm not savvy enough to notice it in many respects. And I do think women are more, far more tuned. And I wonder, my thought on this is what would Trump have been like in a non social media era?
Buck Sexton
We are fired up here on this topic, as are so many of you. You're calling in, you're writing in all over the place. We have. Is this a call? Christine and Cape Cod. Christine and Cape Cod Cod. What's going on? Hi.
Caller
Well, I am, I have two children in their 20s. I raised them in affluent Newton, Massachusetts. I have a master's degree to successful companies, although I'm a Republican. All of my best friends that I raised my children with were crazy liberals. And to the point of where what I think is going on and what I saw in our community is that boys have been totally emasculated as well as men. And for the most part, most of the men in our community were raised to be very effeminate, to not be aggressive, to not be real men, to not be do sexual advances advances for concern over being aggressive or for it to be looked at as, you know, rapists or whatever. And so I think young boys are told not to be that way. And so when all these women are confronted with a real man who is aggressive, who is playing outside and wrestling and all of that, they are, like, aghast. Boys shouldn't be that way. Men shouldn't be that way. So Trump's real man, I think. I think, is looked upon as that. And so I think in. And certainly like my daughter who is in Cambridge and went to school in Boston, all of the men were very effeminate. So you have all of these women who. And the women in my community, we were all lucky enough to raise our children at home, so they were leading very feminine roles within their households. How, you know, staying home, taking care of their kids, kids, all of that. Yet we were telling our kids to not be that way. Don't assume those roles, girl. You, you know, get that abortion if you want that abortion. And. And boys, don't be. Don't wrestle, don't do that.
Buck Sexton
Yeah, they masculinize the women. Actually. The young women are being told to act more like men, and men are being told to act more like women. It's part of the whole gender confusion in this country. Great call. Great call. Thank you so much.
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Buck Sexton
Dr. Laura Schlesinger, who recently celebrated 50 years on the radio. She is a best selling author. She's also auctioning off some handmade items to support children of fallen patriots. Go to Dr. Laura.com for more of that. Again, Dr. Laura.com Dr. Laura, I just say it's an honor to speak to you because I've been hearing your voice ever since I got married because my wife is a longtime Dr. Laura listener and let me tell you, I am very thankful. I am very thankful for it.
Dr. Laura Schlesinger
Well then she's your girlfriend.
Buck Sexton
She's the best. She's fantastic. You know, I come home and we got married and I came home and there's dinner on the table and I say, honey, I want to go to the shooting range with the guy. She says you need guy time. You know all these rules and lessons. And then I found this book, the Proper Care and Feeding of Husbands, which is dog eared and underlined and everything else. I tell you, I'm very, I got married a little later in life. Dr. Laura. So I got married around 40, I think it was 41. And my wife is absolutely love my life. She's absolutely fantastic. We're about to have a baby in, in a couple of weeks. So everything is going and I, I really wanted to have you on in part just to thank you because, and I, this comes from my, my wife as well. I think you give so many women such incredibly important and powerful advice for them to have great, meaningful lives as wives, as mothers, as. So I'm always. Whenever Kerry starts saying Dr. Laura says, I start nodding my head. Yup, that's. That's great. She sent in my wife's. So I just gotta tell you this. It's the truth. My wife sent in a question for you. And Clay's wife, Laura has a question too. She says, Hi, Dr. Laura. I'm a longtime listener and read the Proper Care and Feeding of Husbands. I also took the online course. Your wisdom has not only made me the wife I am today, but also led me to find an incredible husband who adores me. Fact check. True. In a couple of weeks, we will be welcoming our first child. We're so thrilled to grow our family. But what is your advice for ensuring our solid and healthy marriage stays intact after the first baby comes? Thank you for all you do.
Dr. Laura Schlesinger
You don't stop having your hands all over each other. That means when you're walking around, that means when one of you takes. Takes a shower, maybe we could, you know, save on water. We could both be in the shower. It's really the physicality and the silliness. Everybody thinks it's got to be marital therapy and heavy duty conversations, which you and I both know guys don't enjoy. So the more physical you are with each other and the more cute you are with each other, that's really all you need.
Buck Sexton
I love it.
Clay Travis
That's really good advice. Now, I don't even know what my wife has sent in, but there is audio. She went and used the app and then she needed more space, so she.
Buck Sexton
Said, just give context. Clay, how long, how long have you been married? Tell Dr. Laura how long.
Clay Travis
Yeah, so I've been married. Oh, man, 21 years will be August. So I've been married over 20 years. Now we have three boys, 17, 14 and 10 year old. And here is what my wife, Laura wanted to ask you.
Caller
Listen, Clay and I are parents of boys, and thus far, I think think we have weathered adolescence fairly well. However, some of our friends who have daughters, their experiences, the way they talk about it, sound very different. In fact, some of them say raising daughters through adolescence is a complete nightmare. I had a friend this morning tell me that she feels she's coming home to a bag of snakes every day when she comes home to her adolescent daughters, which is funny, but harsh. So in general, do you have some great advice for parents going through adolescence with their children? Obviously, the children are going through adolescence. And do you have different advice for parents of girls? Weathering adolescence vs parents of boys weathering adolescence. Thank you.
Dr. Laura Schlesinger
I thought you were just going to have me on for a few minutes. That's going to take me about half.
Buck Sexton
An hour to get through.
Dr. Laura Schlesinger
Let me try to bring it down. Number one, whether it's a boy or a girl, that it's a tight family that does things together, that is sweet with each other, that the father spends time with the daughter, the father spends time with the son, the mother spends time, and the family is always together for dinner if they have to go do sports things or what have you. That, you know, that's a very important part of the family. People keep divvying it up. Yeah, there are differences in how you raise girls from boys, and I'd have to come back another time to go through that. But the first and foremost thing, just like I spoke about husbands and wives and the physical and the cuteness, the. I was with a family and I thought, and I talked about them on my air, that this was the best family I had seen in decades. Anytime anybody got something, may I. Would you send me. Could I have. Yes, please. Thank you. Everybody was so concerned and polite to one another. That is not something that families do. You have two career families. You have all kinds of other stuff going on in the house. And it's not a family, it's mother and father and kids. But when it's a family, when people are always saying please and thank you and show concern for each other and discipline in kind ways with understanding and compassion, you'd be surprised how it minimizes how crazy it gets. And also take your kids out of public school.
Buck Sexton
Wow. Dr. Laura, we're definitely going to have to have you back. And I'm really looking forward to all the questions and comments we're going to get from the audience about you coming on and just beginning this arc of, of wisdom. And like I said, as, as a husband and a very happy husband who does completely adore his wife. And I know, you know, it's. It's so important that I think women get a lot of the messaging and, and men. And men, but that we both get a lot of the messaging that you're putting out there. And I wanted you to address something that's more just sort of general for the country right now. You know, we talk here about politics and national security and education, all these different things, but the importance of family and marriage is central. Should be. Central. Maybe should be is a better word these days. You know, there's a story just out today and it says, and the headline is American women are giving up on marriage. And one of the lines from it is, American women have never been this resigned to staying signal single. They are responding to major demographic shifts, including huge and growing gender gaps in economic and education attainment and beliefs about what a family should look like. What is going on and how do we fix it?
Dr. Laura Schlesinger
Not enough fathers in the home, raising sons to be men of honor and courage and principle. And that's basically, again, the women have gone through the feminist thing where men are the evil empire, and all this negativity toward masculinity. It's all toxic. I think it's wonderful. Give me a guy with a cowboy hat and boots and I pay attention because there's a sense that there's a strength there. And women like to feel protected. That's probably the number one thing Women don't admit. They want to feel protected. And that's why they like those silly books where there's this ripped guy on the COVID and she's being carried, you know, into safety. Why do they read those things at such large amounts? Because ultimately, as smart and incompetent as we can be, we want to be protected. And men have not been brought up to be that anymore.
Clay Travis
Are you more. You've been doing this for 50 years and buck just laid out. Marriage is becoming less common. A lot of men are not present in homes, unfortunately, the overall birth rate in many Western civilizations is collapsing. Are you more or less optimistic about the future of the family unit today than when you started? How would you analyze the scope of relationship that you've seen over 50 years?
Dr. Laura Schlesinger
Oh, no, I'm. I was more optimistic than that. I am now because there have been so many forces. We have, like one or two generations now, I think are lost. These are young people who are not being brought up, that you finish school and you aim to be and do things and you make a family and you raise kids and you have communities. And that was how I was brought up. And it was all this optimism. Now you have throngs of kids who have no idea where they can go and what they can be. And so they get involved in all of these cliques, like non binary. And, you know, I belong now to a group of people who are equally lost and don't have an identity and don't have a direction and don't have a sense of self other than I can belong to this community. It's like what we used to look at with groupies with rock stars. This is what's happening. So I'm worried. Be honest with you. I'm worried. But the one little piece of optimism I have is I'm still here. People are still calling. Somebody wants the help to pull it back together again and make life meaningful and something you can feel comfortable and safe with and productive and loving and receive all of that. So as long as I still get that response, I keep my optimism up.
Clay Travis
Dr. War, that's a great line. You just laid out some of the challenges. How much do you think it has to do with kids getting phones too young? What advice would you give parents out there? My wife asked a question about adolescents, but what advice would you give to parents about social media and about what they allow their kids to be exposed to, particularly on the Internet?
Dr. Laura Schlesinger
Well, everybody tells me I'm insane to think, you know, you can push up against a tsunami, but it takes just everybody lining up. I tell people that they're irresponsible parents if they give smartphones to their kids, any minor child, period. Get them a flip phone that takes calls. That's it. No texting, no Internet. And instead of spending one's time with screenshots, how about we actually have families that do stuff together? I mean, when my kid was talk about a screen, though, we would watch Law and Order as a whole family. And then we would sit here and we would go, I think he did it. No, I think she did it. And so it was all of this thinking through, using pieces of information. And I just read today that our children are really suffering the inability to have fine motor skills because they're not playing with crayons, they're not playing with scissors. They're just sitting there like that. And so we're actually losing physicality. I mean, is that not shocking?
Buck Sexton
It's, it's amazing. I mean, think about all the influences that are on kids these days and what they're being told and, and how I think a lot of them are being set up for, for misery. I mean, Dr. Laura, you know, you have the, the, the metrics these days, the metrics for young women in particular in terms of happiness, self described happiness. It's terrifying. In terms of how bad it is, how do we start to turn again? You're going up against a tsunami, but how do we start to turn that around?
Dr. Laura Schlesinger
Well, it popped into my head as you were asking me the question, look at all the very intelligent and very attractive women that are now in positions of power in our government. I am so enthralled with that. And I think that's wonderful for young women to have something to aspire to, keep my act clean. No more shacking up, using drugs, this and that and the other thing. I want to be like that lady who's now running the whatever it is. So having role models like that, you know, I have people calling who say, I was in a car seat in the back of my parents car listening to you and now I have kids and I'm using what I've learned. So any time you can be a positive influence, do it.
Buck Sexton
My, my wife makes fun of me because I just always sit there in the car when she turns you on. I'm just like, Dr. Laura's right. So I'm telling you, I was like, we have to have Dr. Lawrence. I'm like, Dr. Laura is right. And Carrie looks at me, she goes, oh, I know, Clay, go ahead.
Clay Travis
Last question for you. And we appreciate your time and you're certainly a radio legend. You've been so influential for so long. When you. The modern era. Like I was reading the other day, the number of successful women that are choosing to go find a sperm donor to have a child with instead of an actual man is staggering to me. What kind of world are we? Okay, I wanted to get your take.
Dr. Laura Schlesinger
On this makes me angry because kids need a dad and I just say to these women, oh, that's not. Well, I have money and I can take care of. I don't care about that. You had a mommy and a daddy and I'm sure that meant something to you. Now you're going to rob a kid of a dad because it's convenient for you not to commit and give of yourself and be vulnerable to another human being and be invested in each other's lives beautifully. That's a real shame. That's a real shame. That is so selfish.
Buck Sexton
Yeah, I don't like it. Dr. Laura, we gotta have you back. Because you know, for you to solve all problems of relationships and family and child rearing in about 10 minutes is. Is asking a lot. But you did a remarkable job. Guys. There's so many books. I mean, the Proper Care and Feeding of Husbands. I've actually got Carrie's very dog eared and underlined copy in my hand. Great book. And go to Dr. Laura.com because she's doing some great charity work too. Dr. Laura, we'd love to have you back and thanks for being here.
Dr. Laura Schlesinger
I would love it. Thank you guys. And I love listening to you too.
Unknown Host
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Buck Sexton
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Dr. Laura Schlesinger
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Unknown Host
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Buck Sexton
Let's be honest, building wealth doesn't look the same for everyone. I feel like sometimes being broke is.
Caller
A cycle and that we might have.
Buck Sexton
To revisit that and we're not stopping at success stories. What happens when it doesn't go right?
Caller
How do you cope with it?
Buck Sexton
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Unknown Host
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Buck Sexton
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Podcast Information:
In this episode of "Sunday Hang," Clay Travis and Buck Sexton delve into the complex dynamics between college-educated white women and their political affiliations, particularly their apparent disfavor toward former President Donald Trump. The discussion navigates through societal influences, the impact of social media, gender roles, and the evolving landscape of masculinity. Additionally, the show features an insightful interview with Dr. Laura Schlesinger, a renowned relationship expert, who provides advice on maintaining strong family units amidst modern challenges.
Clay Travis initiates the conversation by presenting data from Steve Kornacki, highlighting that "college educated white women, they hate Trump" (02:49). He underscores the significance of this demographic shift and its implications on the political landscape.
Notable Quote:
"College educated white women, they hate Trump. They're the only group of white voters that hates Trump."
— Clay Travis 02:49
Several callers contribute to the discussion, offering diverse viewpoints that challenge or support Clay and Buck's initial assertions.
Caller from Raleigh, North Carolina (04:20): A college-educated woman who supports Trump, sharing her experience of being an outlier among her peers.
Notable Quote:
"I love Trump and I'm a college educated woman and white."
— Caller 04:20
Email from Katie in San Antonio (06:00): Katie provides an analysis of her liberal friends' behavior on social media, attributing their activism to a desire for moral superiority.
Notable Quote:
"Their need to feel morally superior is unmatched."
— Clay Travis 06:00
Caller from Corpus Christi, Texas (10:41): An older woman criticizes college-educated women for perceived entitlement and reluctance to engage in traditionally male-dominated work.
Notable Quote:
"They're little miss tootsies doing what they want to do... They're using the female card."
— Caller 10:47
Buck Sexton and Clay Travis discuss the profound impact of social media on shaping women's behaviors and aspirations.
Notable Quotes:
"The self-actualization through selfies is really damaging."
— Buck Sexton 15:11
"Women are more tuned [to social cues] and I wonder, my thought on this is what would Trump have been like in a non-social media era?"
— Clay Travis 12:23
The hosts explore the erosion of traditional masculinity and the resulting confusion in gender identity among men and women.
Notable Quotes:
"Working class men are the ones who fight America's wars... It's rich man's war, poor man's fight."
— Buck Sexton 10:04
"The young women are being told to act more like men, and men are being told to act more like women."
— Buck Sexton 18:40
The show features Dr. Laura Schlesinger, a prominent relationship expert, who discusses the state of modern families, marriage, and parenting in an era dominated by social media and shifting societal norms.
Dr. Laura emphasizes the importance of physical affection and maintaining a strong emotional connection between spouses to ensure a healthy marriage, especially after having children.
Notable Quote:
"The more physical you are with each other and the more cute you are with each other, that's really all you need."
— Dr. Laura Schlesinger 26:04
Addressing challenges in raising teenagers, Dr. Laura advises fostering a tight-knit family atmosphere, encouraging respectful communication, and limiting exposure to social media to mitigate behavioral issues.
Notable Quote:
"Just have families that do stuff together... show concern for each other and discipline in kind ways with understanding and compassion."
— Dr. Laura Schlesinger 29:43
Dr. Laura expresses concerns over the detrimental effects of early smartphone usage and excessive screen time on children's physical and social development.
Notable Quote:
"I tell people that they're irresponsible parents if they give smartphones to their kids, any minor child, period. Get them a flip phone that takes calls. That's it."
— Dr. Laura Schlesinger 34:02
Discussing the trend of women choosing sperm donors over traditional partnerships, Dr. Laura criticizes this choice, emphasizing the importance of paternal involvement in child-rearing.
Notable Quote:
"Kids need a dad... You're going to rob a kid of a dad because it's convenient for you not to commit."
— Dr. Laura Schlesinger 36:58
Clay and Buck wrap up the episode by reiterating the significance of strong family units and the pivotal role of fathers in nurturing and guiding the next generation. They express gratitude to Dr. Laura for her invaluable insights and encourage listeners to implement her advice to foster healthier relationships and communities.
Final Notable Quote:
"Having role models like that... I'm still here. People are still calling... we keep our optimism up."
— Dr. Laura Schlesinger 32:14
Note: Timestamps correspond to specific points in the podcast transcript, offering listeners a guide to locate particular discussions and quotes within the episode.