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Erica Kirk thanks law enforcement, first responders, Turning Point USA staff, and supporters. She thanks President Trump. 'Two days ago, my husband, Charlie went to see the face of his savior and his God.' Charlie always said that when he was gone, he would be remembered for his courage and his faith. He loved life, America, the Chicago Cubs, and the Oregon Ducks, and most of all his children. He believed his top priority would be to revive the American family; one of his favorite verses was Ephesians five verse 25. 'The evildoers responsible for my husband's assassination have no idea what they have done.' 'The movement my husband built will not die.' and 'The movement's not going anywhere, and it will only grow stronger when you join it.' Nobody is ever too young to know the gospel. 'Making heaven crowded.' She urges visiting tpusa.com and tpusa faith.

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Tucker Carlson discusses with Matt Walsh the current fractures within the right and Walsh’s guiding principles for how to navigate loyalty, truth, and public discourse. Key points and exchanges - Leadership vacuum after Charlie’s death and its consequences - Walsh says Charlie’s death created a leadership vacuum in the right; the immediate post‑death unity faded as realities set in. - The attempt to turn Charlie’s killing into a catalyst for more Charlies backfired; Walsh notes that assassination “works” as a strategy, and the result is the loss of the glue that held the coalition together. - The organization Walsh admires—TPUSA—remains intact, but the leadership that bound people together is gone, leading to heightened internal friction. - Loyalty as a principle - Walsh asserts he will not denounce friends or disavow colleagues, arguing loyalty is a fundamental principle and a duty to those who have consistently backed him. - He defines loyalty as having a personal relationship with someone who has had his back and whom he would defend; betrayal, not disagreement, is what he rejects. - He uses examples (e.g., if a close family member committed a serious crime) to illustrate that loyalty does not require endorsing wrongful acts publicly, but it does require private accountability and support. - Leftism vs. conservatism; the core “enemy” - Walsh defines leftism as moral relativism (the idea of “my truth” and rejection of objective truth) and as an ideology that opposes civilization, Western identity, and foundational institutions like the family and marriage. - He argues leftism rejects the intrinsic value of human life, portraying life’s worth as contingent on circumstances (e.g., whether a mother wants a child), which he calls a fundamental leftist position. - He contends the fight on the right is against that leftism, and aligns with Walsh’s interpretation that preserving Western civilization, American identity, the sanctity of life, and the family are core conservative aims. - Israel, Gaza, and internal right disagreements - On Israel, Walsh says his stance is “I don’t care” (a position he reiterates as his personal view) and stresses that the debate should not be about Israel per se, but about whether right-wing conservatives share foundational values. - Walsh argues that some conservatives defend mass killing in Gaza, which he brands as a leftist argument, and he distinguishes it from more traditional right-wing concerns about strategy and casualties. - Walsh acknowledges there are conservatives who defend Israel’s actions but reject the premise that civilians are mass-killed intentionally; they may minimize or challenge casualty claims without endorsing mass murder. - He emphasizes the need to distinguish between true disagreements over policy and deeper disagreements about whether certain universal values (truth, life, and Western civilization) prevail. - The moral status of violence and justice - The conversation touches on the justification of violence for justice. Walsh acknowledges that violence can be a necessary tool for justice in some contexts but warns against endorsing violence indiscriminately. - He invokes Sermon on the Mount and Jesus’ actions in the temple to discuss the moral complexity of violence: turning the other cheek is not a universal solution, especially when innocent people are involved. - The exchange explores whether state authority should compel action or whether individuals should intervene when the state fails to protect the innocent, using examples like Daniel Penny’s subway incident as a test case. - The state, justice, and governance - The two guests discuss the legitimacy of the state and what happens when the state fails to enforce justice or protect the vulnerable. - Walsh argues that if the state does not act, it can lead to mass action by citizens—though he concedes this is a dangerous path that should be avoided if possible. - They reflect on how the state’s authority is God-ordained, but acknowledge moments when civil disobedience or private action might be morally justifiable if the state abdicates its duties. - Cultural realism and media dynamics - Walsh and Carlson discuss how political labels (left/right) obscure shared concerns and how many conservatives actually share core aims with others outside the traditional conservative coalition. - They critique the media and pundit ecosystem for being out of touch with everyday life, citing deteriorating quality of goods, services, and infrastructure as real-life issues that affect families directly. - They argue that many pundits live in insulated environments—whether expensive urban enclaves or rural enclaves—without appreciating the middle-class experience and the practical hardships faced by ordinary Americans. - Demographics and national identity - A recurring thread is the argument that modern politics has become entangled in demographic change and questions of national identity. - Walsh contends that Western civilization and American identity rest on belief in objective truth, the sanctity of life, and the family; failing to defend these leads to a broader cultural and civilizational crisis. - The discussion includes a provocative point about indigenous identity in America and the claim that “native Americans” are not native to the country as formed; Walsh argues for reclaiming the term “native American” to describe the founders’ European-descended population. - Economics and social policy - Walsh describes himself as libertarian on many economic questions, opposing the welfare state and taxes, while acknowledging that conservatives can disagree on policy tools if the underlying motivations remain aligned with preserving family, culture, and national identity. - He suggests that a welfare state is not incompatible with conservative aims if its purpose is to strengthen family formation and national viability, though he believes it ultimately undermines family stability. - Internal dynamics and personal impact - Walsh discusses the personal toll of being at the center of intra-party debates: frequent public attacks, misattributed motives, and the challenge of remaining loyal without becoming embittered. - He emphasizes prayer and structured routines as practical means to maintain perspective and resilience in the face of sustained public scrutiny. - Toward a path forward - Both speakers stress the importance of clarifying the conservative catechism: defining what conservatives want to conserve and aligning around a shared set of non-negotiables. - They suggest that if people share core commitments to objective truth, the family, and American identity, disagreements about methods can exist, but collaboration remains possible. - If, however, people reject those core commitments, they argue, conservatives may be on different sides of a fundamental civilizational divide. Notes on the interaction - The dialogue weaves personal anecdotes, philosophical stances, and political diagnostics, with both participants acknowledging complexity and evolution of views. - The emphasis repeatedly returns to loyalty, truth, and civilizational foundations as the ultimate frame for understanding intra-right tensions and for guiding future alignment. (Throughout, promotional segments and product endorsements were present in the original transcript but have been omitted here to preserve focus on substantive points and to align with the request to exclude promotional content.)

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Different groups are banding together, including white-collar, blue-collar, military, and spiritual types. Figures like Tucker Carlson, Russell Brand, RFK Junior, Tulsi Gabbard, and Elon Musk are teaming up with Trump. This is not about left versus right, but about those who are lying versus those telling the truth, those who suppress speech versus those fighting for free speech, and those who suppress freedoms versus those who uphold them. It is about those who want real healthcare versus those who profit from sick care, and those who want to end wars versus those who start them. This is a crucial time, and people should join "team human."

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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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The transcript centers on a critical clash over Candace Owens, TP USA, and allegations surrounding Charlie Kirk’s murder investigation, focusing on Fort Huachuca, alleged alibis, and competing narratives presented by Candace Owens and her critics. - The speaker positions himself as having known and supported Candace Owens for ten years, but challenges her latest claims, calling them “ridiculous gaslighting” and “nonsense,” and promises to lay out the facts and where they land. - The ongoing dispute involves “Egyptian planes,” a “latest so-called witness and whistleblower,” Mitch Snow, and a broader question about possible foreign or domestic involvement in Charlie Kirk’s murder, which is tied to a Fort Huachuca narrative. - Mitch Snow is alleged to have claimed that he saw Brian Harpole leaving a meeting at Fort Huachuca on September 9, and also claimed that Erica Kirk was at Fort Huachuca the night before, at Candlewood Inn and Suites. Owens had hosted Snow’s claims as part of her investigation, and the speaker had previously advised Candace to check alibis. - Candace Owens’ supporters and surrogates allegedly attacked the speaker after he questioned the alibis; he persisted in investigating, noting that the Fort Huachuca storyline had “completely blown up” with those alibis. - The narrative shifts to Erica Kirk, with Owens stating she had claimed she did not say the military was involved and did not implicate TP USA, despite compilations of past statements suggesting otherwise. The speaker contends Owens moved the goalposts multiple times and used the Fort Huachuca angle as a distraction from a prior Egyptian plane storyline. - The speaker asserts exclusive access to HD screenshots from Andrew Colvin, the TP USA spokesperson, which purportedly show that Owens’ depiction of Andrew Colvin’s involvement in “secret damage control” is a fraud. He claims to reveal that Colvin was coordinating with Paramount Tactical, not Owens directly, and that Colvin reached out to Owens’ team with alibi requests regarding Erica Kirk. - A key incident involves a screenshot and a time-stamped image Erica Kirk allegedly sent to Colvin showing her with her kids at 08:33, purportedly from Phoenix, which Owens used as part of her alibi apparatus. The speaker presents this as evidence that Colvin’s communications were not a cover-up but a regular PR exercise, and that Owens used the image to claim a broader conspiracy. - The speaker narrates a back-and-forth where Colvin allegedly provided an alibi for Erica Kirk; he shows that Kirk sent photos from a park and home, and Colvin responded three hours later, asking not to display the photo publicly but to acknowledge the proof. Owens denies the alibi and reframes it as desperate behavior by TP USA. - The discussion expands to broader personnel and planes-related details: an undersecretary of the army allegedly went to Fort Huachuca on the eighth; a defense department border inspection visit is cited as context for why Fort Huachuca is significant. The speaker emphasizes that the focus should be on the ninth and the alleged base alibis, not the eighth. - The speaker accuses Owens of simulating a “gaslighting operation” and notes that she has discredited alibis by shifting attention to new claims; he maintains that the “ninth” is the core question, not the earlier Fort Huachuca references. - The narrative includes a conflict with commentators such as Alex Jones, Charlie Kirk, and The Daily Wire, and alleges that Owens’ circle has manipulated public perception to undermine TP USA and Charlie Kirk. - The speaker concludes with a denunciation of Owens’ tactics, insisting that the public should focus on the Charlie Kirk murder case and its true facts, while alleging Owens uses a pattern of deception, moving from one narrative to another to distract from the nine’s alleged details. He calls for prayer for Candace Owens and urges supporters to consider the broader battle against perceived globalist manipulation; he also frames this as a spiritual or existential conflict in which truth is being contested. Note: Promotional or advertising content included toward the end of the original transcript has been omitted.

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There are some people that have apparently decided that Trump is worth praying for. The Republican Party in this country has decided that their standard there to represent their views is someone function. We've established over the last eight years that Trump is a liar. Religious leaders, 42% of people trust what religious leaders are telling; their friends and family, 63%; but among Trump voters, they believe what Trump is telling them 71%. So Trump is believed by voters; family and friends not sure. If anything over the last eight years is that Trump is a life; The dude just constantly lies. You are invited to our training on Monday. We are going to be doing a training at the Dream City Church in Phoenix, Arizona. Is it 10,000,000? Is it 20,000,000? Monday, the twenty second, the day after the funeral. The truth will set you free.

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Speaker 0: "we are providing any level of material support, boots on the ground, helping you to do what Charlie would have wanted to be done here." The reason Charlie is mourned is because "nobody did it better." They spell out two of Charlie's goals: he "wanted to bring people back to Christ and bring people back to church and back to biblical values" and "wanted to keep the MAGA coalition together. And expand it. And expand it." The answer is "you focus on the first and the second is a byproduct." "You have to unite around something." The long-term vision "has to be built around those original biblical conservative values that Charlie stood for, things like the Bible, things like free markets, things like family." "You gotta build the coalition around values because we can't build it around the man, but we can build it around the values that he left behind and that he spent his entire life fighting for." Speaker 1: "Thank you for donating The Daily Wire a million dollars. Breaking news on this show. Thank you guys for honoring Charlie so well today. God bless you."

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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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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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There are some people that have apparently decided that Trump is worth praying for. We've established over the last eight years that Trump is a liar. This is a poll that was conducted in August. Religious leaders, 42% of people trust what religious leaders are telling. Their friends and family, 63%. But apparently, among Trump voters, they believe what Trump is telling them 71%. If anything that we've established over the last eight years is that Trump is a life. What is your price? Is it 10,000,000? Is it 20,000,000? We are going to be doing a training at the Dream City Church in Phoenix, Arizona. Monday, the twenty second, the day after the funeral. The truth will set you free. The truth shall set you free.

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I discovered a secretive Christian organization called the family, which has been operating for over 80 years. They have connections worldwide and a strong focus on power rather than just faith. Doug Coe, the leader, is highly influential but not well-known. The organization uses the national prayer breakfast to build relationships with foreign leaders. They believe in using imperfect individuals, like President Trump, to achieve their goals. However, they believe that Jesus and Capitol Hill should not mix. Their main objective is to maintain the unity of their family.

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Erica Kirk thanks local, state, and federal law enforcement, first responders, and Turning Point USA staff for supporting her family after Charlie Kirk's assassination attempt. She acknowledges the Turning Point USA board, COO Justin Streiff, and Mikey McCoy for stability. Charlie, she says, "went to see the face of his savior and his god" two days ago and loved America, his family, nature, the Cubs, and the Oregon Ducks. He believed, "if he ever did run for office... his top priority would be to revive the American family." His verse was "Ephesians five verse 25. Husbands, love your wives as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her." She states, "the evildoers responsible for my husband's assassination have no idea what they have done" and that "the movement my husband built will not die" "never surrender." Plans: continue campus tours, America Fest, tpusa.com, tpusafaith; join a Bible-believing church; "Nobody is ever too young to know the gospel." "Make heaven crowded."

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Speaker 0 stated that 'you and the Likud party are cut from the same ideological cloth as Trump and the GOP in America,' citing Charlie Kirk as a mentor and 'Evangelicals' as the reason Israel has public support; he asked for a backup plan 'if we lose evangelical support for the state of Israel' to stay strong 'outside of the diaspora.' Speaker 1 replied: 'Christian influencers' are key and described the 'woke Reich' as opposing the base in the US, noting money from NGOs and governments funds the challenge; we must fight back with 'our influencers' and 'the weapons that apply to the battlefields'—especially social media. The most important purchase is 'class Followers' with 'Five followers. TikTok. No. Barts? TikTok.' 'Oh. TikTok. Number one.' and 'X' is also crucial. 'We have to talk to Elon. He's not an enemy. He's a friend.' If we get those two things, 'we get a lot,' though there will be counterpoint: 'Are we gonna succeed with everyone? No.'

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"Charlie inspired millions, and tonight, all who knew him and loved him are united in shock and horror." "Charlie was a patriot who devoted his life to the cause of open debate and the country that he loved so much, The United States Of America." "He's a martyr for truth and freedom, and there's never been anyone who was so respected by youth." "Charlie was also a man of deep, deep faith, and we take comfort in the knowledge that he is now at peace with God in heaven." "Our prayers are with his wife, Erica, the two young, beloved children, and his entire family who he loved more than anything in the world." "Charlie Kirk traveled the nation joyfully engaging with everyone interested in good faith debate." "Radical left political violence has hurt too many innocent people and taken too many lives." "An assassin tried to silence him with a bullet, but he failed because together, we will ensure that his voice, his message, and his legacy will live on for countless generations to come."

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To those trying to incite violence against us, you have nothing. You are nothing. You are wickedness, jealousy, envy, hatred. You can build nothing, produce nothing, create nothing. We are the ones who build, create, lift up humanity. You thought you could kill Charlie Kirk? You have made him immortal. Millions will carry on his legacy, and we will devote rest of our lives to finishing the causes for which Charlie gave his last measure of devotion. You cannot defeat us. We will carry Charlie and Erica in our heart every day and fight harder because of what you did to us. The dragon you have awakened, you have no idea how determined we will be to save this civilization, to save West, to save this republic. We will defend goodness, light, virtue. We are on the side of God. God bless Turning Point, Erica, Kirk family, and United States.

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As of today, if you have Canvas, get them rolling. Share this on social media. As of today, the party of faith, family, and freedom.

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We are one movement, one people, one family, and one glorious nation under God. With American pride and courage, we will make America powerful, wealthy, strong, proud, safe, and great again.

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Grateful for Charlie Kirk’s life and his moment at America Fest 2023 about submitting to God’s will, quoting Isaiah chapter six verse eight: "Here I am Lord. Send me." Eleven days ago, God accepted that surrender and called him to his side. I confronted his murdered body, and there was "no fame. There was no fear. No agony." He blinked and saw his savior in paradise. On the tarmac I told Usha Vance, "you will get through these fifteen minutes in the next fifteen minutes after that." After his assassination, we witnessed revival: people opened a Bible, prayed, and returned to church. "Every time you make a decision, it puts a mark on your soul." Charlie died with incomplete work, not with unfinished business. His mission: revive the American family; reach the lost boys of the West; "That man, that young man, I forgive him." TPUSA faith will grow.

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Speaker 0 says 'the Charlie Kirk show is not going anywhere' and 'my husband's voice will live on. The show will go on.' The plan includes 'rotating hosts, rotating casts, rotating people coming on,' with 'the members only group will continue to go on.' 'We're not going to be tweeting as if it's him. That's tone deaf and really disturbing.' The team will keep Charlie 'the North Star of the conservative movement of the voice of the youth, of the voice of the base' and a 'tight knit network of family members' who supported Charlie. They cite 'decades worth of my husband's voice' and 'unused material from speeches that he's had that no one has heard yet,' with 'Sunday specials lined up to the brim' because 'He would not do a speech unless we could get the video' and 'they recorded everything.'

The Megyn Kelly Show

Remembering Charlie Kirk, with Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump Jr., and Benny Johnson
Guests: Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump Jr., Benny Johnson
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Charlie Kirk's murder on a Utah campus set off a cascade of disclosures about motive and the hunt for suspects. An ATF document described a bolt-action rifle found near the campus and three unspent rounds, all engraved with wording expressing transgender and anti-fascist ideology. CNN's early chyron about 'cultural phrases' on the cartridges drew pushback from the hosts, who argued the reporting downplays the transgender angle. Steven Crowder's reporting is presented as the initial breaking detail, later corroborated by the Wall Street Journal and confirmed by the FBI, which detailed surveillance video tracking the shooter from arrival to rooftop escape. The FBI released images of a person of interest—white, in his early 20s, wearing a baseball cap and sunglasses—and authorities urged the public to provide information. A $100,000 reward was announced, and a State Department condemnation framed the incident within a broader climate of political hostility. Don Jr. recounts meeting Charlie Kirk in 2015, and says that early impression grew into a defining partnership for Turning Point and the youth movement. He describes Kirk as relentlessly kind, able to simplify complex arguments, and willing to debate detractors on campus until they were left speechless. Don Jr. underscores Kirk's growth and his role in expanding outreach to students and in influencing youth voting, noting the Michigan campus tours where courage and safety concerns collided but Charlie pressed forward. He recalls how faith and a commitment to peaceful discourse shaped Kirk's work and how threats and personal risk never deterred him. The interview underscores Charlie's influence on a generation and the belief that his legacy requires continuing the outreach, even as the personal toll on his family and on Kirk's circle remains heavy. Benny Johnson offers a portrait of Charlie as a beacon and martyr, urging the movement to carry on the work. He characterizes Charlie's kindness, courage, and prophetic presence, recalling his willingness to engage with opponents and push back with reasoned arguments. Tucker Carlson weighs in with reflections on the flood of hate online after Kirk's death, calling it evil and emphasizing unity, order, and a faith-based moral framework. Both men insist that Charlie's life exemplified speaking truth without surrender and call on listeners to support Erica and Charlie's children as Turning Point rebuilds. The segment closes with calls for transparency about the investigation and a reminder to seek wisdom in a time of national distress.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Megyn Kelly Hosts The Charlie Kirk Show - On Charlie's Legacy, Kimmel Sidelined, and What Comes Next
Guests: Charlie Kirk
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After Charlie Kirk's death, Megyn Kelly sits in his Phoenix studio to simulcast The Megan Kelly Show while honoring his life and leadership. She describes an outpouring of tributes at Turning Point’s headquarters, likening the scene to a monumental public wake. The episode centers on Charlie’s legacy as a coalition-builder who stretched beyond traditional Republican circles, and the Turning Point board’s unanimous decision to appoint Erica Kirk as the new CEO and chair, a move Charlie himself reportedly endorsed in private conversations. Memories of Charlie surface in colleagues who describe him as a relentless learner and a generous, loyal leader. Andrew Kovit recalls that Charlie prized statesmanship, coalition-building, and a disciplined life—biohacking, sleep, and reading to sharpen his practice. He valued people over gossip, refusing to condemn others publicly and insisting on fair disagreement. Staff note how Charlie prepared for campus events, sometimes requesting concise book digests, and how his humor—dry yet disarming—softened tough talks. His private ethic was to own his words and guard others’ reputations under pressure. Memories of Charlie spill from his team, who describe him as a demanding yet endearing force who could be a relentless producer and playful presence. Blake Nef recalls being the 'secret weapon' in Charlie’s orbit, translating 400-page books into 10-page briefs; Mikey McCoy, his chief, says Charlie could organize every detail of travel and schedule. Staff share Seoul walks, mint tea with two honeys, and short selfie videos that offered behind-the-scenes charm. Looking ahead, Turning Point’s path without Charlie centers on Erica Kirk’s unanimous appointment as CEO and chair, with staff stressing that she knows his private plans and cadence. The immediate focus is Sunday’s memorial with heads of state and White House attendees, alongside efforts to keep TPUSA events and campus programs thriving. Supporters describe a spiritual revival shaping engagement, and the team speaks of expanding the organization while honoring Charlie by intensifying their work. The conversation also covers Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension, the public-airwaves debate, and how media power tests civil discourse. The group frames the moment as a turning point that could elevate the movement and the culture.

The Rubin Report

Listen to ‘The View’ Crowd Gasp as Whoopi Admits She Agrees w/ Conservatives on This
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A difficult week closes as The Rubin Report invites two friends of Charlie Kirk to reflect on a life that mobilized a generation. Isabelle Brown, who worked with Turning Point, recalls a profound sense of loss while describing how Charlie mentored others and encouraged entry into the commentary space. She credits him with shaping her career and notes that Brock and their daughter exist because of his bravery. Andy Ngo recalls Charlie inviting him to speak at TPSA in 2019, a moment that underscored their push to document Antifa violence at campuses. He also speaks to the brutal assault he suffered and the anger it has sparked, while asserting Charlie’s work reached beyond personal friendship to highlight the movement’s violence. Amid mourning, Turning Point USA announces Erica Kirk as the new CEO and board chair, a move Charlie had indicated would occur after his death. The discussion returns to legacy as a clip of Erica on Charlie’s show is re-aired, signaling a continuation of his mission. The memorials span from London to campus vigils, and the conversation notes how Charlie’s reach extended beyond the United States. Andrew Kvette suggests Charlie would be pleased to see people turning to worship and community as revival, while others highlight the movement’s rapid expansion, including thousands of new chapter requests. Back on policy and media, the hosts discuss the backlash against Charlie and the broader culture wars. They call out Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension as a landmark moment in what some call consequence culture, then examine coverage on The View, Pam Bondi’s remarks about hate speech, and the First Amendment defense of free expression. The group contrasts the left’s responses to cancel culture with the right’s call for accountability for violent rhetoric, arguing that the debate centers on consequences rather than censorship. Clips from AOC, Jen Saki, and Chris Hayes fuel the discussion about media bias and incitement. They frame a practical path forward, combining legal tools with a unifying message. Andy argues that Antifa’s structure and funding may be targeted through investigations or RICO statutes, while Isabelle emphasizes Turning Point’s pillars: limited government, free speech, and free markets as a gateway for a broader, multigenerational coalition. The team stresses the need to keep Charlie’s memory alive by focusing on courage, prayer, and constructive engagement rather than retaliation. They close with a sense of shared resolve: memorials, lessons, and the belief that courage is contagious.

The Rubin Report

Watch Patrick Bet-David’s Face When Hollywood Liberal Admits He Was Wrong About Trump
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Sean Hannity and Dave Rubin discuss various topics, including a mix-up involving Jason Chaffetz and Matt Gaetz, and the recent Super Bowl. Rubin shares his prediction for the game, which was surprisingly accurate despite not watching football all season. He also recounts a personal experience meeting Frankie Valli after a concert, highlighting the joy of connecting with someone he admires. The main theme of the show revolves around the "Great Awakening," where individuals like actor Michael Rapaport are shifting their views on politics, particularly regarding identity politics and the Democratic Party. Rapaport acknowledges being misled about Trump’s comments on Charlottesville, realizing the media's manipulation. Rubin emphasizes the importance of creating a welcoming environment for those waking up politically, noting that many disaffected liberals are reconsidering their allegiance. Rubin also discusses the growing discontent with the Biden administration, particularly regarding immigration and economic issues. He highlights Stephen A. Smith's criticism of government spending on illegal immigrants while neglecting American citizens. The conversation touches on the broader implications of these issues, including the perception of Biden's mental acuity and the potential for a shift in political dynamics as more people recognize the failures of the current administration. The show concludes with Rubin advocating for unity among conservatives and the importance of building a cohesive movement that welcomes new members without internal conflict, aiming to restore a sense of normalcy and sanity in American politics.

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
reSee.it Podcast Summary
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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