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This is the most unbelievable thing I think I've ever seen. God is here and you can feel it. Charlie would have loved this. The story of Jesus shows the truth about those in power—‘the worst thing that you can do, is telling the truth about people and they hate it.’ ‘We’ve got to shut this guy up. Why don’t we just kill him? That’ll shut him up.’ ‘Blessed are those who mourn for they will be comforted.’ The main thing about Charlie’s message was that he was bringing the gospel and calling for repentance. ‘Politics is not the final answer.’ ‘The only real solution is Jesus.’ Christianity begins with repentance: ‘forgive us our sins… And then it becomes possible to forgive other people.’ That is the only way forward in this country. He was fearless; there was no hate in his heart. Thank you and God bless.

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Emotional reflections on Susie Wiles's tears and the sense that 'God is here' as the speaker hopes the country moves in this direction. He recalls a Jerusalem story about truth-tellers and power, noting that 'We must make him stop talking' and that 'Everything is inverted' and 'Blessed are those who mourn for they will be comforted.' The main message: Charlie Kirk 'bringing the gospel to the country' and 'calling for them to repent,' showing that 'Politics at its core is a process of critiquing other people and getting them to change' while 'the only real solution is Jesus.' He is 'Truly fearless to his last moment' and says, 'That's a sad person. That's a broken person. That's person who needs help' and 'That's a person who needs Jesus.' The gathering affirms 'This is the way' and the obvious presence of God in the room. 'Thank you and God bless.'

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- the truly earth shattering and transformative event of Charlie Kirk's assassination - one of the main controversies today as part of the fallout of that memorial service - to express forgiveness for the person who took her husband's life - Ultimately, he was a Christian evangelist. - to talk about Charlie's life and the values that he represented - This was not some scripted speech. - The phraseology wasn't constructed in advance. - Polling data shows support for Israel unraveling - They wrote a letter to Fox News to the Murdoch family, condemning Tucker Carlson's impassioned defense of a quote, race replacement theory, and demanding that he'd be fired. - Cut Tucker loose.

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In the video, Speaker 0 describes breaking through an imagined “wall of invisibility” to reveal a reality far beyond human understanding, suggesting that once this wall is penetrated, “there’s no putting it back up” and asserting that a naked truth is being concealed by allegations of nudity and sexual content in a vetoed video. He references an incident where a video was taken down on another channel for nudity and sexual content, claiming it exposed something so profound that “they’re in panic mode.” He promises to show something unbelievable, then plays an immortal Pink Floyd song and offers a supposed spiritual interpretation of the band’s name, linking Pink Floyd to Genesis imagery (Adam formed from dust, Eve from his side) and to the color pink as representing female genitalia, with Floyd meaning gray. He claims to demonstrate what lies behind the observed world, stating, “If you wanna find out what’s behind these cold eyes, you’ll have to claw your way through this disguise,” and asserts the disguise is the human host body. He points to why YouTube allegedly removes certain videos while allowing others, showing examples such as a Taylor Swift video flagged as nudity and sexual content, Ozzy Osbourne’s Ultimate Sin that remains on YouTube, and various other clips where he alleges similar content exists without strikes. He questions why the same content isn’t treated consistently across channels, suggesting a bias against his material while other channels’ content remains. Speaker 0 then introduces a political-eschatological thread, referencing Alyssa Slotkin and Pete Hegseth, discussing discussions about orders to shoot at unarmed protesters, and claiming that a Bible-based perspective is used to counter liberal narratives. He describes a dichotomy between a “demon Kratis” ruling certain systems and a counterforce of conversion through Jesus, insisting that the host body system is inverted and that those who awaken will be able to judge the earth as Elohim. He asserts that “the word of God” judges the systems and that those converted are forming a line of spiritual judgment. Throughout, he uses several symbolic images: Taylor Swift with scales inverting justice, a serpent transforming into butterflies, Ozzy Osbourne’s Locust imagery from Revelation, and references to the devil tarot card as evidence of a system he claims censors certain content while normalizing others. He repeatedly contrasts content that reveals alleged truth with content that is suppressed, arguing that “the host body system” is the true disguise and that awakening requires turning life’s realities upside down to see the truth about hidden forces. Towards the end, he emphasizes a personal, pastoral note: offering hugs to viewers who have been converted, describing his own past as connected to worldly friendships and explaining that conversion changed his life, leading to a perception of being an “angelic being in a host body hunted by a serpent race.” He closes by reiterating the paradoxical truth of the Lord’s reality, urging listeners to awaken, accept the Bible, and recognize the inverted system, with references to Psalm 82 and the concept of Elohim. He ends with a final call to hug, to awaken, and to observe that “Adam was stupefied with sleep” until he is made whole.

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Charlie Kirk—a patriot, conservative, leader, and warrior—was described as a true believer in freedom and the power of young people. "Only Christ is king, our lord and savior. Our sins are washed away by the blood of Jesus. Fear God and fear no man." He started Turning Point USA to change our politics, building a movement aimed at truth. He argued this is not a political or cultural war, but a spiritual war, with "Faith and family first." "There is a God, and as Charlie would say, it is not us. We're sinners saved only by grace in need of the gospel." He stressed that "we always did need less government" but "a lot more God." He died speaking the truth, waging war not with a weapon, but with a tent, a microphone, his mind, and the truth. "The gates of hell could not prevail against him."

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Charlie was murdered for boldly using his voice to stand up for the truth, for the bible, and for God. And silence from the pulpit is just not acceptable. The season of lukewarm Christianity is over. My church called it what it is, demonic and evil, and that's called leadership. I'm hoping that we see churches so flooded with people tomorrow like we've never before. But if your pastor is too afraid to even acknowledge what happened tomorrow or worse, too politically correct to take a stand, then I'm telling you, it's time to find a new church. This is not business as usual. This is spiritual warfare.

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Speaker describes a moment of divine presence and honors Charlie Kirk as a Christian evangelist. He recalls "two thousand years ago in Jerusalem" when Jesus tells the truth about power; "they hate it," and voices say, "we must make him stop talking" and, "Why don't we just kill him?"—"It doesn't work that way." He adds, "Everything is inverted, and the beatitudes tell it." He notes "Blessed are those who mourn for they will be comforted." Charlie’s message was to bring the gospel to the country and call for repentance: "the only real solution is Jesus." He contrasts "Politics at its core is a process of critiquing other people and getting them to change" with "Christianity... begins with repentance." The Lord's prayer idea: "forgive us our sins" and "change begins the only change that matters when we repent of our sins." Charlie was fearless: "There was no hate in his heart" and said of opponents, "That's a sad person. That's a broken person. That's a person who needs help. That's a person who needs Jesus." "This is the way."

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Susie Wiles’ tears and the room’s sense of God's presence are described. He recalls a scene from two thousand years ago in Jerusalem where Jesus tells the truth about power and others want to stop him. He notes 'Everything is inverted and the beatitudes tell it, I think the most crisply. Blessed are those who mourn for they will be comforted.' He says Charlie Kirk brought the gospel to the country, calling for repentance. 'Politics at its core is a process of critiquing other people and getting them to change. Christianity, the gospel message, the message of Jesus begins with repentance.' 'In other words, forgive us our sins, meditate on what we've done wrong, how we've fallen short.' 'That is the only way forward in this country.' 'This is the way. Right here. This is the way.' 'Thank you, and God bless.'

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Charlie Kirk's death is a dark moment for America and a turning point—a call to action. He founded Turning Point USA and was "the greatest man I've ever personally known" and "the least hypocritical man" who "practiced what he preached." I met him in a Chicago diner in 2012; he slept on couches while building the movement, and Rush Limbaugh said, "everywhere I go, I run into Charlie Kirk." He coached me through my darkest days, helped with payroll, and on stage urged pastors to pray for me. "The price for his message was his life." "Justice just isn't there for those who deserve it." Without accountability, we live under the illusion of freedom. "God was using Charlie to wake up this generation," and "A million more Charlie Kirks are gonna be born." The future of this nation will be determined by the choice you make.

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Speaker 1 describes Charlie Kirk’s Christianity as sincere, saying it informed every part of his life—from his marriage and the way he treated his children to how he approached disagreement and thought of others—always primarily as people. He was younger, which made him hard to take seriously at first, but over more than ten years the speaker learned from him, especially how to disagree with people on topics they take seriously without hating them or feeling bitterness. Behind-the-scenes tensions existed in foreign policy debates within the GOP, but Kirk liked people. He would say privately that he agreed with them on some points. The speaker was struck that there was a person behind the views, which inspired him, and he believes God commands that and that Kirk lived it. Speaker 0 adds that Kirk treated everybody with respect, loved people, wanted their salvation, and sought their relationship with God, when disagreeing.

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Charlie Kirk's death is a moment for America. It's also a turning point for you and me, a call to action. Charlie was Turning Point USA. He was the least hypocritical man I've ever known and he practiced what he preached. He was a Buckley-Limbaugh figure. Kierkegaard said, 'the most painful state of being is remembering the future, particularly the one that you'll never have.' I met him in a Chicago diner in 2012; he spoke about building a movement of young people. At the Turning Point Faith Conference, he summoned me on stage to pray for me, 'as if it depended on God.' He helped me make payroll. Charlie answered, 'courage from my faith.' He did not point left or right but up. The price for his message was his life. Without accountability, we live under the illusion of freedom. A million more Charlie Kirks are gonna be born.

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Emotional moment as Susie Wiles and others respond to what is happening, with a sense that 'God is here.' The speaker says Charlie Kirk would have loved this, calling him a Christian evangelist, and recalls a story of Jesus in Jerusalem truth-telling about those in power, noting the impulse to silence him, even kill him. He emphasizes the inversion of expectations in the Beatitudes, especially 'Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.' The message highlighted is that Charlie was bringing the gospel to the country, calling for repentance, contrasting politics as critique with Christianity, which begins with repentance. He argues that 'the only real solution is Jesus' and that 'politics at its core is a process of critiquing other people and getting them to change.' The speaker affirms Charlie's fearlessness and the divine presence, concluding with 'This is the way' and 'thank you, and God bless.'

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Speaker describes a gathering with God's presence, hoping for direction because God is here. He recalls Charlie Kirk as a Christian evangelist who loved groups and spoke truth about those in power, recalling Jerusalem and the impulse to silence truth, including 'Why don't we just kill him?' He notes 'Everything is inverted' and 'Blessed are those who mourn for they will be comforted.' Charlie's message brought the gospel to the country, calling for repentance; politics cannot be the final answer because the only real solution is Jesus. 'Politics at its core is a process of critiquing other people and getting them to change.' Christianity begins with repentance; 'forgive us our sins' precedes forgiving others. He was fearless, with no hate in his heart, and he said, 'That's a sad person, that's a broken person, that's a person who needs help, That's a person who needs Jesus.' This is the way.

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Speaker calls for a respectful conversation despite differences: "You guys for a respectful conversation even though we see things very differently." They say, "I think God has a better plan for you." They add, "maybe you have an encounter with God and Jesus loves all of you. And he'll he can transform your life. He transformed my life." They describe life as "And every day is a new day, and it's a hopeful, beautiful life ahead of you." They state, "God loves every single one of us. We're all sinners, and Jesus died I mean, you've definitely been the most respectful one that I've seen." They credit the Holy Spirit: "it's not me. If it was me, I'd be yelling and screaming. It's the holy spirit." They close with, "Jesus has gone to work on my life." "And so god bless you guys. Thank you for a great Charlie, thank you for coming."

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- Speaker 0: God is with us. He wants us on the right side of history, and everyone here has to do their part. God's got us. Trump's got us. God bless. Love you, Kentucky. - Speaker 1: Now he's a great guy. He's a courageous guy and a talented guy. He's a hell of a fighter too, by the way. And I just wanna say, I predict I'm gonna make a prediction that you will be in the not too distant future running for political office. Okay? And you have my complete and total endorsement. Okay? Now that's what we want. He's an incredible guy. What a courage and smarts.

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- and say that she forgives the assassin who killed her husband, Charlie Kirk. - The people standing next to me also wept. - the only solution is exposure, journalism, sunlight as the best disinfectant. - Please note, this isn't about him or Glenn Prager. - There are many more out there like Glenn Prager. - Be a hero and do the right thing. - But these reports are going to continue coming out and they will not be partisan or political. - They're gonna cut across the political divide because this is not a political mission, and I am not a political person. - It is my mission to clean up society through transparency, accountability, and the truth. - Charlie Kirk's last words to me were, James, you should be a journalist first.

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"Christians need to step up." "As someone who's Jewish, you know, Jews are point o 2% of the world." "We're 2% of America." "We're not trying to take over anything." "I would love to see Christians return back to the church." "I would love to see Christians get back to Jesus." "So Charlie Kirk was a Christian." "Don't get it twisted, but he honored both books, the Old Testament, which are the five books of of Moses, and the New Testament, the teachings of Jesus." "So it doesn't have to be mutually exclusive." "There's no better role model for young men than Charlie Kirk."

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We had our disagreements. Where we did agree is that he would go to these college campuses and proclaim the name of Jesus Christ. And ultimately, that is why he was killed. The gunmen that killed him, they hated him because of his defense of Christian morality. Charlie Kirk cannot call himself a Christian anymore. Sorry, you forfeited that. I do not wanna hear and you cannot allow Charlie Kirk to go to one more public event, one more question and answer, one more ask me anything without being protested, without being shouted down, without being interrogated about this. This guy goes around from campus to campus in the most artificial and phony and fake way talking about, oh, God, God made me very blessed that I control $500,000,000. And then you go around from campus to campus making excuses for a famine?

The Megyn Kelly Show

Tucker, Shapiro, Don Jr., Erika Kirk and More - Megyn Kelly Looks Back at Memorable Tour Moments
Guests: Tucker, Shapiro, Don Jr., Erika Kirk
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Megyn Kelly’s Megyn Kelly Show episode curates a tapestry of late‑year tour memories, blending backstage warmth with hard‑hitting conversations that illuminate the current state of American conservatism. The discussion centers on the live tour’s closing moments and the prominent personalities who shaped it: Donald Trump Jr. recounts the intensity of the 2016–20 political arc, reflecting on the appetite, volatility, and relentless pace that defined Trump’s national campaigns while revealing the personal toll of constant public exposure. Tucker Carlson emerges as a focal point of debate, with Megyn probing the ethics and impact of his interview approach, particularly regarding Nick Fuentes, and Jr. weighs in on whether Carlson’s tactic was a genuine attempt to steer a dangerous conversation or a risky normalization of extremist voices. The pair volley over whether and how to aggressively confront candidates and commentators who push fringe ideas, juxtaposed against a broader skepticism of how the right navigates media power and platforming in an era of polarized discourse. A substantial portion of the episode returns to Erica Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow, whose intimate reflections anchor a larger meditation on faith, resilience, and leadership after tragedy. Erica recounts the couple’s faith-driven approach to suffering, the courage to forgive the accused shooter, and the ongoing task of guiding two young children through grief. Her testimony emphasizes the theological frame that rests at the core of Turning Point’s mission: conviction married to compassion, endurance to rest, and restoration through a communal faith that seeks to convert heartbreak into public service. Across the conversations, the episode threads themes of betrayal and loyalty, the fragility and resilience of democracy, and the responsibility of public figures to model moral clarity in a media environment saturated with competing narratives. The show closes with a candid, faith‑grounded reckoning of what leadership looks like in a time when questions about morality, obligation, and the future of the conservative movement feel both urgent and unsettled, inviting listeners to examine their own commitments and how they respond to the hard truths discussed on stage and off. topics - Megyn Kelly Show tour highlights,- Tucker Carlson interview ethics,- Donald Trump Jr. reflections on politics and media,- Erica Kirk and Charlie Kirk’s legacy,- Nick Fuentes controversy and platforming, - Faith, forgiveness, and public leadership, - The future of American conservatism, - Media fragmentation and moral clarity, - Rest, Sabbath, and purpose in public life

The Rubin Report

Crowd Stunned by Trump’s Brutally Honest Remark at Charlie Kirk’s Funeral
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An ocean of attendees gathered in Phoenix for Charlie Kirk’s memorial, a day Rubin calls one of the most meaningful of his life. He describes Charlie’s ties to Rumble, the Longboat Key studio, and how Charlie helped shape the platform’s beginnings. The service featured scores of speeches and a message of open debate blended with faith, aiming to honor Kirk’s approach to politics as a call for persuasion rather than demonization. Rubin notes millions watched online; the moment underscored how Charlie’s death has become a focal point for a broader political conversation. Trump’s address dominated the Memorial, with Rubin highlighting its emotional scale. Trump criticized media celebration of the killing and argued that speech is the democracy’s heart and the left’s attempt to weaponize violence against opponents is the real danger. He mixed promptered remarks with off-script jabs, acknowledging the pain while insisting on open debate. He contrasted Charlie’s belief in persuading opponents with his own willingness to voice strong feelings about adversaries, concluding that Charlie’s legacy was a blend of political conviction and a demand for civil discourse, not animosity. Erica Kirk’s speech, delivered ten days after the assassination, moved the room to tears as she forgave her husband’s killer, invoking Christ’s own forgiveness. The segment was framed as a healing cornerstone; Rubin notes the significance of her forgiveness for a national audience. Other speakers followed: JD RFK Jr. spoke of a revival surrounding Charlie Kirk and Christianity; Bobby Kennedy emphasized liberty; Pete Hegseth framed Charlie as a warrior for freedom and faith. The emphasis on faith and freedom, Rubin argues, signals a likely widening of the conservative movement’s tent. The event also mounted a social-media and cable-news counter-narrative. Ilhan Omar and Jasmine Crockett criticized the memorial and alleged Charlie’s rhetoric targeted people of color, while CNN pundits and the host push back. The segment broadened into a critique of leftist vs liberal, with Kirk’s own remarks about macro Islam and Western values fueling debates about immigration, assimilation, and national identity. Elon Musk joined the scene, shaking hands with Trump in a moment Rubin calls a possible sign of political reconciliation. The broadcast closes with Charlie’s warning that this moment is sticky, urging unity and faith in the Constitution.

Tucker Carlson

Full Speech: Tucker’s Charlie Kirk Memorial & Their Best Moments on God, Christianity, and Hope
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An emotive room becomes a platform for a fierce blend of faith, liberty, and accountability. The tribute to Charlie Kirk presents him as a Christian evangelist whose work fused political engagement with the gospel, insisting that the deepest solution is Jesus and that true change begins with repentance. Tucker Carlson notes Kirk’s fearlessness and his habit of turning conversations toward humility, forgiveness, and the belief that politics cannot bear the weight of ultimate answers. The message emphasizes that personal transformation precedes public reforms and that truth requires a conscience awakened by faith. Discussion then moves to the nature of civilization itself: God’s order and distinctives—between male and female, sacred and secular, good and evil—form the backbone of Western life, and erasing these lines threatens chaos. The speakers argue for an informed, active citizenry who study, read deeply, and resist being passive. They describe college campuses as battlegrounds where conservatives face restrictions, yet Gen Z men are described as among the most conservative in decades. A spiritual revival is presented as a supernatural move, not merely a reaction to material conditions. Across the dialogue runs a call to action: sign up for ballot-chasing, write to swing voters, homeschool your children, and promote a society that values truth, faith, and liberty. The premise is that liberty without learning deteriorates, and an informed, faithful populace is the strongest defense against tyranny. Scriptural references anchor the argument—Jeremiah, Psalms—and the speakers insist that a culture must live out its faith through courageous public participation. In closing, the hosts express cautious hope, grounded in faith, for a future shaped by prayer, study, and active citizenship.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Charlie Kirk's Moving Memorial, the Power of Forgiveness, and Van Jones' Smear, with Michael Knowles
Guests: Michael Knowles
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Charlie’s memorial drew as many as 200,000 people to a stadium in Phoenix, a moment many described as a state funeral and a spiritual milestone beyond politics. Megyn Kelly and Michael Knowles reflect on how, at 18, Charlie started Turning Point USA with a donor insisting on the first half before funding, raising $50,000 in two days. He had no elite connections, no wealthy family—yet he built a national platform by reaching out to people he disagreed with and by seeing public service as a calling to save the country. Erica Kirk delivered a standstill moment: she forgave her husband’s killer, echoing the gospel with the line, 'Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.' The crowd rose, moved by a gesture many described as superhuman. Michael Knowles highlights that Trump’s memorial remarks framed forgiveness as a core gospel value, even while acknowledging human anger. Speakers like Steven Miller intensified the call to defend civilization, and some attendees used pyro to honor Charlie’s life in a celebratory, not morbid, way. A visiting observer, Sana Ibrahimi, a PhD candidate, contrasted Christianity’s forgiveness with Islam’s fear-based theology, noting the distinct paths to the divine Logos and the possibility of God turning evil to good. Across media coverage, voices from the left were accused of inflaming hatred and minimizing Charlie Kirk’s legacy. Pacman described the memorial as a 'rage fest' to be denied; Karen Atia of the Washington Post faced backlash for dehumanizing remarks about dead babies and lost her job. Matthew Dow faced termination for remarks about Kirk; others lamented chilling effects on journalists; Van Jones moved from an attack on Kirk to a later op-ed claiming a pathway to dialogue, while still defending his earlier stance. The discussion framed political violence as a left-driven hazard, with calls to punish incitement and to fire or ostracize those who celebrate violence. Ultimately the dialogue wrestles with whether scorched-earth tactics or constructive engagement will prevail. The host argues that order and liberty are compatible and necessary for a healthy public square, citing Plato's Gorgias to illustrate rehabilitating wrongdoers and protecting the innocent. A nationwide poll cited on air shows Democrats misperceiving who bears responsibility for the violence, underscoring the challenge of reaching across the aisle. The takeaway is accountability, open debate, and a willingness to stand firm while continuing to speak truth, as the tour resumes coast-to-coast.

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat

Is Anything Holding MAGA Together? | Interesting Times with Ross Douthat
Guests: Andrew Kolvet
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The podcast delves into the aftermath of Charlie Kirk's assassination, exploring its profound impact on the conservative movement and the challenges faced by his close confidant, Andrew Kolvet, who has stepped into a stewardship role for Kirk's organizations, Turning Point USA and The Charlie Kirk Show. Kolvet describes Turning Point USA's evolution from a campus activism group to a vast conservative infrastructure encompassing social media, political arms, and content production, highlighting Kirk's significant, often unseen, role in unifying disparate factions of the right through personal relationships and constant communication. A major theme is the proliferation of conspiracy theories surrounding Kirk's death, particularly those implicating his team, Israel, and figures like Candace Owens. Kolvet expresses sympathy for the underlying distrust of institutions but criticizes the intellectually lazy leaps to unfounded conclusions, which he now views more critically after being on the receiving end. The discussion also covers the conservative stance on Israel, noting a generational divide where younger conservatives are increasingly skeptical of unconditional U.S. support, favoring an America First approach that prioritizes domestic concerns over foreign entanglements. Immigration emerges as a unifying issue for the populist right, with Kolvet detailing Charlie Kirk's own evolution from a more moderate stance to a strong anti-immigration position, driven by observed cultural cohesion issues and the Biden-era border crisis. He argues that the issue resonates deeply across the base, including with new immigrant communities, who understand the downsides of unfettered migration. Looking ahead, the conversation identifies economic affordability, particularly housing, as a crucial animating issue for the right, advocating for policies to increase homeownership and supply while curbing institutional and foreign buyers. Finally, the podcast explores the role of faith and Christianity in conservative politics. Kolvet emphasizes Kirk's growing commitment to Christianity, viewing him as a Christian martyr who believed America was founded as a Christian nation. He discusses the tension between Christian principles of forgiveness, exemplified by Kirk's wife Erica, and the more confrontational, fight your enemies ethos often associated with Trumpian politics. While acknowledging the need for a backbone in the Christian movement, Kolvet suggests that a more conciliatory, yet firm, approach rooted in love for community could be beneficial for conservative policies, even when implementing tough measures like deportation.

The Rubin Report

Listen to the Fear in Whoopi Goldberg’s Voice on 'The View' as She Gives a Chilling Warning
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A shocking week unfolds as Dave Rubin reflects on Charlie Kirk’s shooting and the ensuing media frenzy. He describes their years of friendship, the pain of a public figure’s violence, and the challenge of processing political disagreement in real time. The episode pivots to Whoopi Goldberg’s stance that assassinating someone over politics is unacceptable, and to Alyssa Farah Griffin’s attempt to frame it as a 50/50 issue. Rubin notes that the controversy has reshaped the show’s approach, underscoring the fragility of civil dialogue in a divided America. Further in the program, Rubin cites a YouGov poll to quantify how audiences view political violence, noting that a large share of adults condemn violence while specific liberal groups express more nuance. He highlights online figures such as Hassan, who posted a nine-second clip calling for violence on Twitch, and Destiny, who discusses threats and the idea of streets filled with fear. The discussion then moves to media framing, arguing that mainstream outlets often present a ‘both sides’ narrative even as evidence points to unequal rhetoric, including President Trump’s response. Rubin then threads crime, immigration, and media narratives, invoking Arena Zerutska’s murder to illustrate how policy debates intersect with violent acts. He contrasts Charlie Kirk’s border-focused advocacy with the administration’s messaging and notes coverage gaps when victims’ stories cross race or identity lines. The segment also catalogs online content that fans the flames, from a meme about free speech by Elon Musk to activists who call for mob-like actions. JD Vance’s later segment emphasizes personal responsibility and a nonpartisan legacy, urging better husbands and fathers as a conduit for unity. Toward the end, Rubin contends that an awakening must be grounded in truth and constructive action rather than vengeance. He points to Tommy Robinson’s rally in Britain as an example of citizen mobilization, and to the possibility of expanding dialogue through reform rather than silencing dissent. The show returns to Charlie Kirk’s legacy, highlighting his focus on family, faith, and public safety, and urging viewers to translate the fervor into practical, everyday commitments. The closing message centers on unity through personal responsibility and a future shaped by civil discourse and principled leadership.

Tucker Carlson

Ryan Zink on What It’s Like to Disappear Into the American Gulag for Political Crimes
Guests: Ryan Zink
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Ryan Zinc recounts a turbulent sequence of events stemming from his J6 confrontation and its aftermath, focusing on how his experience shaped his decision to run for Congress in Texas. He describes joining his father on a campaign trip to Washington, how a mix of personal injury, insurance gaps, and a desire to document political events led him to film and observe on-site, and how the day escalated from a protest to a confrontation with police and an inside view of the Capitol’s chaos. Zinc asserts that he did not enter the building, did not assault anyone, and instead attempted to document actions by police and protesters, while noting the presence of federal agents, possible infiltrators, and disputed police conduct. He details the moments when barricades were opened, when a violent window incident occurred, and when he was allegedly targeted by prosecutors and witnesses who later perjured themselves in court, according to his testimony. The interview shifts to the legal and penal aftermath, describing his arrest, several transfers, alleged mistreatment, and what he calls “diesel therapy,” including isolation, poor sanitation, and denied medical care. Zinc frames his conviction as politically motivated, emphasizing his faith, his family’s struggles, and the ongoing fight to clear his name while continuing to advocate for a constitutional, Bible-based governance. He situates his political goals around transparency, American sovereignty, and opposition to what he views as overreach by federal agencies, while expressing commitment to restore rights, reform media accountability, and pursue a Congress focused on national values and religious principles. The episode ends with his vision for campaign messaging, the importance of faith in leadership, and a call for grassroots support as he continues his bid for public office, underscoring a belief that the country’s future hinges on courage, truth, and adherence to foundational documents.
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