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Aug. 10, 2020 - The Charlie Kirk Show
31:52
Banned from Fordham University, Austin Tong Fights Back
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Time Text
The Outrageous University Ban 00:03:09
Thank you for listening to this podcast one production.
Now available on Apple Podcasts, Podcast One, Spotify, and anywhere else you get your podcast.
Hey, everybody.
Wow.
You are going to be blown away by this interview we have today.
For weeks, I talked about a young man that has been banned from university because he commemorated a slaughter of innocent civilians in his home country, China.
He's standing up and now suing Fordham University.
He's articulate.
He loves our country, honestly, as an immigrant to our country more than most of our own natural-born citizens do.
His name is Austin Tong.
He is suing Fordham University.
And you're not going to believe this story.
You will not think that we are living in America by the end of this story.
I want to thank those of you that are supporting our program at charliekirk.com slash support, charliekirk.com slash support by supporting our program.
You allow us to have guests like Austin.
We work nights and weekends to deliver you the best news in the business.
Listen to our sister episode, The Ask Me Anything.
Austin Tong, he's a Chinese American immigrant.
He came here when he's six years old.
They tried to kick him out of school.
He's fighting back and he is suing all because he said something that the university disagreed with.
Buckle up, everybody.
Time to fight.
Here we go.
Charlie, what you've done is incredible here.
Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus.
I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk.
Charlie Kirk's running the White House, folks.
I want to thank Charlie.
He's an incredible guy.
His spirit, his love of this country.
He's done an amazing job building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created.
Turning point USA.
We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives, and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country.
That's why we are here.
Hey, everybody.
Welcome to this episode of the Charlie Kirk Show.
I have been talking for weeks about an outrageous story.
A young man from Fordham University did an Instagram post commemorating Tiananmen Square.
If you know anything about Tiananmen Square, it's when the Maoists decided to try to continue their brutalization of innocent civilians.
And it was a freedom of speech retaliation by the citizens of China.
A young man posted in commemoration of that.
And the people that run Fordham University decided that individual should no longer be allowed to attend that school.
That young man joins us right now, Austin Tong.
Austin, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Thank you, Charlie.
Thank you for having me.
It's really a big pleasure.
You bet.
So tell us your story.
Tell us what you posted and why you posted it.
Walk us through this outrageous story.
So what happened was on June 3rd, I posted about Officer David Dorn, who was sadly killed.
He shouldn't have died.
I was very angry and not happy about what happened, which is nobody cared about him.
And I found that very hypocritical.
So I posted a picture of him and I said, they are a bunch of hypocrites, which they are.
And that got a little backlash.
People weren't happy about that.
And it was mostly the bad people from my school.
Backlash Over Public Safety Posts 00:06:06
And the next day, I had a post, which was myself in my backyard with my legally owned AR-15, a rifle.
And I said, don't tread on me, a hashtag 198964, which for the people who didn't pass history class, that's something that happened many years ago that really matters in a lot of hearts of many people, especially people who care about democracy, which the bad people don't care about.
And obviously, Fordham doesn't care about.
And that got a huge backlash the same day.
And when I saw that, you know, without the need to explain, I still explained that it has nothing to do with recent events.
The two posts aren't even connected.
It was just, you know, June 4th was the day of the anniversary.
And I was proud to have the rifle.
I was proud to express myself.
And I was very appreciative of the rights we have in this country.
And that's what happened.
And I explained the comments.
I said that, you know, it's just my appreciation we have the right to bear arms in this country.
And with everything that's unfolded since then, it's also the First Amendment that we should appreciate.
And that's something you talk about, Charlie, almost every day.
And what happened was, despite my explanation, the Fordham University even commented on my post.
I don't know if that's give me credit, but they commented on the post.
And then that night, around 10 o'clock, okay, and everyone's either sleeping or enjoying with their family.
I got a call from Fordham University.
I got a call from them saying, we're outside your door.
And that's what happened.
And I was like, what's going on?
I wasn't sure who was that.
He said, he's the public safety of the school and he wants to check up.
And yeah, I was shaking my head.
I was shocked.
We were completely shocked.
And that's the right word.
It was shocking.
And what happened was, you know, not sure why, without a criminal mindset, I was, we're good people.
We saw him.
He was outside.
And then it was two public safety officers.
And one of them came in.
And what happened was he questioned me on the firearm.
He questioned me and he asked me about all of this.
He said, why did I post my intentions?
He was a nice gentleman, to be fair, but really, what happened was really a traumatizing moment.
Okay.
You wouldn't expect that to happen in America.
And police wouldn't even do that, not to say a private university.
And, you know, I had to write a report on what happened.
I had to write a report, like a police report.
And I had to give him the receipt of the gun to prove everything, which was interesting, very interesting, right?
And what's more interesting is he said to me, okay, and for people who don't know about this, I was charged with threat intimidation and hate crime and bias.
Okay, that's the final, the result of it.
But he told me, the public safety of the school told me that I was not a threat and I was not intimidating in the meeting, okay, when he was at my house.
He told me that.
And he represents the school.
So what does that mean for the school?
They're liars.
They're crooked.
And that's what happened.
And obviously, beyond the gun that they were going at, it's probably some political ties to certain people that might not like what I posted.
And what happened was right after he left, okay, I thought everything was fine.
And then he called me, the public safety officer.
He called me.
And he said, Austin, you should take down the posts.
And I said, which one?
I said, the gun one or the officer one.
And he said, both.
I said, I have my free speech.
You can't do that.
Right?
We have that in this country, supposedly, right?
And he said, yes, you do, but I'm representing a university and we would suggest you do that.
And we wouldn't want, you know, the people, you know, he thought, he said, those people are mean, whatever, whatever.
And at the time, you know, was it worth it for an Instagram post, two Instagram posts?
But, you know, that just tells you, Charlie, what they mean.
It's not a concern about safety or security with the rifle, which I was completely like a fine gentleman in the picture.
Okay.
I was smiling.
You saw the picture.
My hair was nice.
Everything was nice.
And it was great.
But I thought to myself and my family, we didn't want to have trouble.
Okay.
So we were very cordial for the whole process until now we're fighting.
But what happened was we took it down and life went on despite the traumatized.
And what happened was two days later, we got a call from the dean of students, Keith Eldridge, who's a real beauty.
And his name is everywhere now.
But we really made him famous, but now we'll make him a defendant in court.
Okay, that's what's going to happen.
And we had that.
And he called me saying, Austin, I'm calling you because we're going to sanction you to a disciplinary hearing.
And he said, we usually don't call people.
He said, we call you because we wouldn't suggest you posting it everywhere without a heads up.
Like he was scared that I will post.
If it's a good thing he's doing, he wouldn't be scared.
He's guilty, okay?
He was guilty from the beginning.
All of them are.
And, you know, at the time, I was thinking, it's so unfair.
It's illegal.
Why am I having a hearing for something I've posted online, not even on campus, in my backyard, and it's totally legal.
And the FBI didn't even come to me, okay?
Or the Instagram police didn't come to me and they came to me.
Okay.
And what happened was we had a hearing after a few days.
I have the letter.
It's everywhere.
And what happened was before I even spoke during the hearing, which was on Zoom, and before I even spoke about my side, he was very conclusive about what they think, which is I'm a danger.
And it's not a danger on the gun.
Okay.
I'm a danger psychologically or politically in their eyes because I posted something commemorating and honoring what happened many years ago for democracy.
And also David Dorne, who frankly, I mean, I said they're hypocrites, but really they're just evil because obviously they think that if I post that, I'm a white supremacist.
Tearing Down Big Government 00:12:34
How does that even make sense?
But that's what happened.
And before all of that, he was very conclusive.
And then I made a statement telling him very cordially, okay?
And I said, you know, this is just my appreciation of the rights.
And don't tread on me does not mean I'm going to do violent things.
It's a phrase people use for against big government.
And that's exactly what I was doing.
And that's what we think.
But they were acting like the big government.
And they were threatened not by my gun, not by my smile.
They were threatened that I was against possibly the interest that they're tied with.
And, you know, what happened was I made a very long statement.
And despite so, he made very weird annotations.
Okay.
He was like, you know, maybe your intentions weren't bad, but you've made an impact.
Have you heard about that?
Have you heard about that kind of analogy?
I said, no.
I said, I can't control what they think.
The Constitution and the free speech codes of Fordham University protect me.
And who cares about what they think?
And even so, I explained myself.
And despite so, I was still charged.
After a month of waiting, Charlie, I had to wait a month for them to come out with their stupid results, which was totally legal.
Not just the results, but the hearing.
It was totally legal.
And it was traumatizing.
Okay.
I'm 21 years old.
Yeah.
What were the findings?
Are you allowed back on school?
So I was banned from campus.
Okay.
I had to take implicit bias training.
And I call that political re-education.
That doesn't really sound like a Catholic school to me.
Okay.
It's a Catholic school.
And actually, you know, President Trump, he went to the school for two years.
And he made a better decision than me.
He left.
And I didn't leave.
But I'm stuck in this right now.
And it was traumatizing.
Okay.
I was studying for grad school.
I was a rising senior.
And professionally, academically, everything was going fine.
And then they hit me with this.
But you know, now we're hitting them back hard.
I'm on the Charlie Kirk show.
And that's what happened.
He charged me without any explanation why.
He charged me with, like I said, hate crime bias and threats, intimidations.
Threats who?
Threats their power maybe.
And what happened was I'm back from campus.
Okay.
The re-education course, which I have to meet with the multicultural director of the school, who is also a real beauty.
I don't really want to meet him.
And, you know, that's why I'm fighting back.
I don't want to meet him.
And what happened was I have to apologize to the school for hurting the feelings.
I'm not kidding about that.
Now I have to apologize to the school.
No, no way.
No way I'm apologizing.
And I have to give you credit because I watched all of your videos and you really changed my mindset a lot.
So a lot of what I'm saying is thanks to your education.
And frankly, your education is free.
And there isn't.
And so they're robbers.
Thank you for saying that.
And no, really, it's true.
And, you know, what happened was I didn't back down, as you can see.
And I wrote a public letter to Joseph McShane, the principal of the school.
And they didn't respond to that.
And I had many groups come to me to help, like FHIR, like NRA, Fox News, a lot of Instagrammers, and like Vince Dow, everyone.
And they all came to me.
And then we made this a sensation.
And then I have a great lawyer team right now, the JMPLP.
They're very great lawyers.
And we're fighting back.
And we filed a lawsuit.
Well, good for you.
God bless you.
I have a couple questions.
So you're not allowed on campus.
They're putting through this Maoist re-education program.
The first question I have, you're an immigrant, aren't you?
A Chinese immigrant?
I am.
So they're very insensitive.
They should take the training.
Yeah.
So explain to us, did you grow up in China?
Are your parents from China?
Can you walk us through that?
Right.
So I came here when I was six to the United States, to New York.
Okay.
And my parents came a little before me.
And I still speak very good Mandarin.
Okay.
And I still have the cultural background, but I'm very proud to be a U.S. citizen.
And I'm proud of my heritage.
But apparently, both of those things, being American or being Chinese, it's offensive to Fordham University because they probably side with dictatorships rather than people.
Yeah, so you take a stand in pro-Tian Square, which basically means pro-democracy, pro-speech, pro-people.
The three T's you can't mention in China are Taiwan, Tiananmen Square, and Tibet.
You can't do that.
They lose their mind.
Do you think that had something to do with this, Austin?
Do you think that Fordham is upset that you mentioned Tiananmen Square?
And maybe there's a Chinese connection here we're missing?
Well, you know, I'm not a lawyer.
I'm not God.
I can't see through the things that I can't see, but I have good intuition.
Okay.
And I think we all do.
And that's pretty much an answer.
Okay.
I do think they possibly have financial, political ties to things they shouldn't have.
And for sure, that's a big reason because they said I'm not a threat.
Then why did they charge me as a threat?
And they also, I missed the point.
They said they won't punish me if I take down the posts.
They punish me anyway.
So all of that doesn't add up unless they have some money going into their pockets.
And that's probably what's going on.
And that's the CCP way.
And it's disgusting.
And so let's, so what are you suing on?
What are the grounds you're suing on?
This is a private institution, right?
What is your complaint?
Right.
So, you know, they're a private university, but they're not completely unbound by the constitution because they have public funding.
Okay.
So we're suing them on many things.
For now, we're suing them on the punishments I have, which is totally illegal.
And can you believe I'm paying tuition to be punished and being banned from campus?
So I'm paying for this.
It's not a good deal.
As Trump says, it's not a good deal.
And we're suing them on Article 78 in the New York Supreme Court for now.
We're going to have additional things come up, big things, and everyone will hear about them.
And frankly, we're probably suing them on more than just free speech.
I think there was a hate crime going on against me, not me against them.
And they were against their own code of speech, which is a breach of contract.
I learned that in the legal class of Fordham, which is helpful.
And also, I have a marketing major in Fordham, and I'm using that.
So, you know, but I'm just saying this: it's defamation, it's screwing up my rest of my youth, and that's why I'm fighting right now because they screwed up my life.
And what can I do besides YOLO?
We have to fight back.
And we're going to sue them on everything that we can.
And we're going to sue not just them, also the president of the school, McShane, and also the dean, Keith Eldridge, because these people need to be taught a lesson because they always hide behind the schools.
And you know that these people need to be held accountable.
Yes.
And I'm so pleased someone is finally fighting these people on their terrain.
You are taking a very courageous stand by doing what you're doing.
These tyrants are basically betting on the idea that you will just sit down and obey.
So you filed your lawsuit officially.
I'm sure your lawyers believe you have a good chance and you have a great legal team.
I'm familiar with that.
And they wouldn't take the case if they didn't think you had a chance.
Have they tried to calm this down?
Have they tried to tell, hey, Austin, maybe we can come meet in the middle?
Or what is their reaction now?
They're very arrogant.
They're robbers.
They're thieves.
They're crooked.
I can say all kinds of adjectives, but I wouldn't.
And they even restricted their Instagram comments.
So I think that's pretty obvious what they're thinking.
And they're not backing down so far.
So I do think this will be a very long lawsuit.
Okay.
I personally think I'm not a lawyer, but I think that because they've had a terrible record in the past, which maybe you covered in free speech.
And a lot of them, they were backing down.
A lot of them, they are, you know, scared.
But that's why we're suing the people too.
So maybe they'll be more scared.
But we have to keep putting pressure on them.
And hopefully, the Trump government intervenes because obviously they violated the executive order that President Trump passed, which is on free speech in campuses.
So hopefully this thing goes the opposite of their benefit.
As soon as we're done here, I'm going to tweet out that President Trump should defund Fordham because if there's ever an example of free speech rights being violated, he should just completely defund it.
So you are an immigrant from China to America.
You care more about what our country stands for than our own natural-born Americans.
Do you find the people that were at Fordham that were really upset?
Were they immigrants or are they mostly white liberals from the Northeast?
And I don't mean to generalize.
I'm just curious.
Well, I think that's a good answer.
It's not a generalization.
That was mostly true.
And they're the bad people.
I've been calling them the bad people.
And we're fighting for them too.
And you're fighting for these people too, because they can't see the appreciation of what they have in this country.
And it was them, okay, when I posted it.
They called me a white supremacist.
They told me to die.
They told me, look, I'm more yellow than anyone else.
Okay.
And they call me white, which is not a bad thing.
Okay.
And white supremacy is the farthest thing we can have in this.
This is freedom.
This is appreciation.
This is being grateful in a time when the country is going to hell.
Okay.
And I do feel that what I did is not just a personal statement.
It's also a response responsibility as a citizen to voice a different opinion against the mob.
And that's who they are.
So I love this country more than they do.
And they don't like this country.
Frankly, they should get out of here.
Yes, you do.
You actually believe in what you, I mean, you had a legally acquired firearm.
You didn't threaten anyone.
Fordham is not the government.
And they sent, I just want to reiterate what you said, Austin.
They sent some sort of federale to your home to basically investigate you as if it's a Roger Stone raid, right?
At 10 p.m. at night.
And then you were nice enough to actually show him the certification of your firearm legally acquired.
And you said he was a nice guy.
That's fine.
I'm sure some of these people are nice, but he was still an instrument for tyranny.
And then he goes and calls you and tells you to take down the posts.
And then they put you through some tribunal, right?
Some sort of Maoist re-educational tribunal.
Your parents grew up in China, right?
They lived probably through the Cultural Revolution or right after it, right?
They are familiar with Mao's little red book.
They know the Red Guard.
They must just be so confused by this, Austin, right?
I mean, they must say like, what is going on in this country?
I think you really made a great point, Charlie.
And that's the perspective of immigrants.
And the people that the left says they care about, which is immigrants, they don't care about us, okay?
Frankly, this is a lesson for me.
They don't care about me or anyone else.
They brand you something they don't like.
And it is a confusing time for myself, my parents.
And that is confusing.
It's a sad, traumatizing time.
And for all immigrants, because most immigrants come from countries where they don't have the freedoms in the countries that they have here.
And they really crush that.
What's going on in this country right now is a revolution that's tearing down the culture of this country.
It's tearing down the constitution.
And all in the name of social justice, I don't see justice being done.
We need justice against them.
We need to cancel them.
Okay.
So it's very confusing.
And when before all of this, I was watching your show.
I was a viewer.
Okay.
Now I'm experiencing this.
I really feel it.
And I feel it's a disgrace because they shouldn't be doing this.
They're tearing down the freedoms that give them the freedom to tear down this country.
Join the Revolution Now 00:10:02
Okay.
And that's probably the most shameful thing that anyone can say.
Amen.
And you're doing the next incredible heroic thing is you're actually fighting these tyrants.
How easy would it have been, Austin, to sit down and obey, go through their re-education program, go take a knee, plead for mercy, get your degree, and then go back into it?
Did that cross your radar at all?
What compels you to fight?
And I appreciate the kind words.
Thank you.
But you're a fighter now.
You're a fighter not just for yourself, but for what's good and right in our country.
And our listeners and our viewers are going to look to you as inspiration.
Why did you decide to fight?
Well, you know, I'm not a hero.
I'm just a regular guy.
Okay.
And in the beginning, when they said, if you take down the posts, we won't charge you anything because you're not a threat.
You know, you're a good guy.
And they told me that.
I thought, okay, let's just back down.
And that's probably the worst thing you can do for whoever's listening to this.
That's the worst thing you can do.
You got to be like Charlie and maybe like Austin, but you can't be like that.
Okay.
And what happened is if you do that, if I did that, if I go by their terms, if I apologize, that'll all be my record.
And as a person that's graduating from a very good business school, I mean, it's good for what they produce, me, but for what they have in the record, it's terrible.
But for me, I had a bright future coming up and they just covered it, okay, with dirt.
And if you do that, you know, you're going to be ruined for the rest of your life.
Everyone's going to know you're a racist.
All the jobs that you seek will know you're not someone to hire.
So don't do that.
If you do that, you think you're getting away with it.
You're not getting away with it.
They're getting away with it.
You just got to fight back.
And that's what I'm doing.
I'm betting the rest of my youth into this.
Okay.
And it's not just for myself now.
And it's not just for my lawyer team now.
For all people, all Americans, all college students, people from across the world who are so confused by this because they think America is a free country, which is deteriorating right now.
So, this is a fight for, yeah, right.
I hope this can be a president, a legal president for the country.
Well, Austin, I'm going to do what I can through Divest You at Turning Point to get every donor to pull their gifts from Fordham University.
I mean, what an unacceptable set of circumstances.
And I don't mean to belabor this point at all, but I want to repeat exactly what's happening here for impact.
You're a Chinese immigrant who came here at six years old.
You got very good grades and went to Fordham University.
You minded your own business.
You made a singular post to commemorate the death of a black police officer and called the general community that didn't mourn him a hypocrite.
Then, to commemorate something that happened to your country of origination, Tiananmen Square, when people were slaughtered, you commemorated it, which is a pro-democracy moment.
And you happen to hold a legally acquired AR-15.
Nothing controversial about that at all.
Because of that, they send in the Gestapo or the Red Guard to go after you.
They search your firearm, they write you up, and they say, in order for you to still stay at our university, you must apologize, go through a tribunal, and all this.
And even worse, they kick you off campus and you're not allowed.
And what you do in response is you say, This is not why I came to this country.
I'm suing you.
That's pretty awesome, Austin.
How can people help you?
Well, people can speak up.
People have to stand up for themselves.
And people should know more about this.
People should know that they're not alone.
And I meant to be a hero, but now I'm here for everyone.
And people need to speak up.
That's all I can say.
If everyone spoke up a little more about their opinions, they don't back down, this country will be in much better shape.
And frankly, what's just as scary as the virus is the lack of talking by people.
People are, you can't be the silent majority anymore.
You got to speak up.
And that doesn't matter if you're a Democrat or Republican.
You just got to speak up.
And that's the American way.
And that's all I can say: how you can help me and help everyone in the country.
Well, we are 100% behind you, Austin.
And, you know, I think the university, they're going to try all their tricks they can to get this thing thrown out in court.
However, a public pressure campaign of people listening to this right now, they haven't turned off comments on everything.
To all my listeners and viewers, email Fordham.
It's Fordham.edu.
Go to their website and flood their inbox and talk about the tyranny that they are doing to Austin.
Be relentless.
Be respectful, but be relentless because this is autocratic behavior.
And what really, you know, it's really interesting, Austin, in the couple minutes we have remaining, I've been studying how Mao came to power.
And your parents grew up in this.
If they didn't have, you know, and I don't know the age of your parents, but they were probably right around.
If they didn't have the little red book, you could get in a lot of trouble.
If you dare disagree with Mao, they put a bullet in your head.
And here they come to seek freedom and opportunity so that their child can then go be stomped out by Maoist tactics.
I mean, this is something that Americans better wake up to very quickly.
And you're a hero.
And I know you don't want that label, but that's fine.
I'm going to say it anyway.
Because I can't tell you how many people that would have just took down, just took it themselves.
And here you are, an immigrant to our country.
We need more immigrants like you, by the way, that actually love our country.
Like, what a concept that actually stand and fight.
Any closing thoughts, Austin, about the direction of the country politically and where you think what would happen if good people decide not to fight?
We need good people to fight.
We need more Charlie Kirks and Austins.
I have to say this.
Don't say ever that what happens in other countries won't happen in America.
Okay, this has been my mind for a while.
Why we have everything we have in this country right now is because people are fighting, people were fighting for the constitutional rights that they have in this country.
And that's why we have everything we have now.
It's not because it's granted for free.
Freedom is not free.
And people have to realize that.
And that's all I can say.
You got to stand up for your country.
And standing for your country first starts with standing up for yourself.
And we got to keep doing that.
Amen.
I know I talk about on the podcast, Austin.
Find the tyrant in your life and find up against that tyrant.
And for the people watching this that are a little bit in the middle, like, I don't know if I can fight, you're putting everything on the line.
You're deciding to sue your university.
Your name is now a national news name.
It's a partisan name for doing nothing wrong.
And they were the ones that did something wrong.
And I hope that our listeners draw inspiration.
But also, everyone listening or watching to this, communicate with either a tweet, a Facebook post, or an email to Fordham.
You must have so much incoming to this university right now.
Rally the support so that they hear from decent and reasonable Americans about how they have become basically a Maoist institution.
Austin, is there any social media way that people can contact you or support you?
Is there any way that our listeners can follow and learn more about your lawsuit?
Yes, they can follow me on Twitter or Instagram.
My Instagram is a funny name.
It's Comrade Meow.
It's a cute name.
Comrade Meow.
Meow as an a cat.
Comrade Meow.
Meow.
M-E-O-W.
So not Comrade Mao, but Comrade Meow.
Comrade Meow.
And that's a slap to them.
And it's funny.
And I like it.
And it's not scary at all.
I don't know why Fordham is being such a, I can't say the word, I'll say, such a little baby.
So I'll say that.
And you can follow me on Twitter, which is real Austin Tong.
I want to make it Comrade Meow, but someone already took it, unfortunately.
Comrade Meow, not Comrade Mao, but Comrade Meow.
Fordham is just one example of the tyranny in our country.
You know, Austin, can you finish by one thing?
Can you tell us about Tiananmen Square?
A lot of people don't know it.
One man stood up against a tank and it changed a lot, didn't it?
Yes.
It's a sign that Americans and Westerners have never seen before because they're privileged to be in a country that gives them freedom.
And that picture and everything we're doing, everything that's happened is a wake-up call, even if it's many years ago.
It's a wake-up call every day for Americans to preserve their rights and stand up against tyranny, as you say.
And we have to remember that.
Maybe you are the man standing up against the tank.
That changed a lot.
So you're an inspiration.
So keep fighting.
Austin, we have your back.
It is Comrade Meow on Instagram.
Everyone follow it and contact Fordham.
Those apparatchiks must be contacted.
Keep fighting.
We have your back.
Thank you, Austin.
God bless you.
Thank you, Charlie.
You too.
What an incredible interview with Austin Tong.
I was inspired, honestly, by interviewing him.
If you guys want to get involved with Turning Point USA, go to tpusa.com, tpusa.com.
Email me your thoughts at freedom at charliekirk.com.
Stand and fight right now, everybody.
If that interview with Austin Tong does not make you animated to do something, email me at freedom at charliekirk.com.
Your thoughts on that interview.
Contact Fordham.
Do something about it.
For 10 people that can show me that you have contacted Fordham, I am going to give you a signed copy of the New York Times bestseller, The MAGA Doctrine.
It is despicable what this school is making this young man go through.
They are anti-immigrant.
They're anti-other cultures.
I think Fordham is a xenophobic institution that is run by white liberals that want to destroy America.
Austin Tong is fighting for America more than most Americans are.
Thank you guys for listening to us.
Email us your questions, freedom at charliekirk.com and support our program at charliekirk.com slash support.
Become a monthly supporter.
And if you do, we have a monthly supporter call, once-a-month video call.
You guys are going to love it.
It's coming up very soon.
Thanks so much for listening.
Time to fight.
God bless.
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