| Time | Text |
|---|---|
|
Monday Questions and Support
00:03:20
|
|
| Hey everybody, today on the Charlie Kirk Show. | |
| It's Monday, so I'm taking your questions. | |
| Email us your questions, freedom at charliekirk.com. | |
| Consider supporting us at charliekirk.com/slash support. | |
| If you want to get involved with Turning Point USA, it's tpusa.com. | |
| And again, when you support us at charliekirk.com slash support, think of every dollar as a young person that will listen to this. | |
| Lives will be changed, minds will be turned, the country will be saved. | |
| Thanks to the work that we are doing here on this program, it's not just me. | |
| You're supporting our entire staff, our travel budget, you're supporting our production costs and the resources we need to bring you two podcasts a day, one on Saturday, one on Sunday. | |
| So pray about it, think about it, and say, you know, this podcast has made my life a little better. | |
| If it has, please support us at charliekirk.com slash support. | |
| So type in Charlie Kirk Show, hit subscribe, give us a five-star review, screenshot it, and email it to us at freedom at charliekirk.com. | |
| AMA Monday. | |
| Buckle up, everybody. | |
| 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. | |
| Look, you guys have heard me talk about Good Ranchers before. | |
| We have boxes of meat that got delivered to us from Good Ranchers, and we are eating it up, literally. | |
| Look, it began with the standard of bringing top-quality, 100% American-born, raised and harvested meat to families across America. | |
| This vision was instilled into them from their grandparents that owned community grocery stores and believed in trust, charity, and family values. | |
| Goodranchers.com partners directly with only American ranchers from across the United States to bring the highest quality meat straight to your door. | |
| So have the best Thanksgiving and Christmas ever with Good Ranchers. | |
| Free hickory, honey, holiday ham. | |
| Every new subscription gets a Berkshire Hickory Honey Smoke Ham for free. | |
| Our Berkshire hams are 100% no antibiotics ever, 100% hormone free, 100% born and raised in America. | |
| Hands down, the best ham you'll ever eat. | |
| Berkshire pork, which is a heritage breed, is known as the world's best pork. | |
| And the best part is it's 100% free with every new subscription. | |
| Sign up today to get yours before we run out. | |
| And as always, Good Ranchers is 100% American beef and chicken and now pork. | |
| Steaks are always USDA choice and higher, and chicken is 100% all-natural, no hormones added ever. | |
| So give the gift of steak and free hams this holiday season. | |
| Go to goodranchers.com, 100% American beef, chicken, and more. | |
| Goodranchers.com, promo code Charlie. | |
| Goodranchers.com. | |
| Promo code Charlie. | |
| Hey, everybody. | |
| Happy Monday. | |
| Thank you for listening and emailing us your questions in at freedom at charliekirk.com. | |
| As always, when you guys email us your questions in and we select your question, then you get a signed copy of the MAGA Doctrine. | |
| And I might have another book coming up very soon, so we might be able to add that to the list as well. | |
| You guys, when you email us, freedom at charliekirk.com, I read all the emails, and there's some really good ones. | |
| So let's dive right into it. | |
|
Rights From God Not Kings
00:13:57
|
|
| Charlie, you say often that Christianity helped form the basis of America. | |
| My teachers say this is incorrect. | |
| Can you help lead me to some history and resources that help build this out? | |
| Thanks so much, Hank from Rhode Island. | |
| Hank from Rhode Island, you bet. | |
| Well, thank you for the great question. | |
| This is a falsehood that has penetrated much of secular and even Christian education, that somehow the country was founded only on secular enlightenment influences. | |
| There's one person I think that everyone should be very familiar with. | |
| And some way to frame him is the father of America. | |
| He's a founding father before America was even formed. | |
| He did live through that period of time that is widely misrepresented by the New York Times and by left-wing academics right near 1619 and 1620. | |
| The man's name was Thomas Hooker. | |
| He was a prominent Puritan colonial leader. | |
| He was also a pastor and an outstanding speaker. | |
| He is known as the father of America. | |
| He helped found what is now known as Connecticut. | |
| The founder of Connecticut, and Connecticut, of course, is the Constitution state. | |
| But Thomas Hooker is someone that really helped establish the first words written that was a democratic constitution establishing a representative government, essentially establishing a fundamental order of Connecticut. | |
| Thomas Hooker was a lecturer and a preacher all throughout America. | |
| And this was America before America. | |
| He helped lead the Connecticut colony. | |
| Now, mind you, Thomas Hooker was inspired by the Code of Patrick, also derived from Alfred the Great, even Magna Carta, and of course the Mayflower Compact. | |
| All these documents and these beginning rumbles of what would eventually create Western civilization eventually found itself upon the shores of North America. | |
| Thomas Hooker was part of the pilgrims. | |
| Why would we call pilgrims pilgrims if they're going to a barren land America and not Israel? | |
| It's because they found themselves going to try to create the new Israel. | |
| If you really want to dive deep into why America is an exceptional country, go back into the sermons of the early colonial clergy. | |
| You will find sermons and pastors wrestling with the ideas of representative government. | |
| Who's in charge? | |
| The divine right of kings. | |
| Where do rights come from? | |
| And so much more. | |
| The basis of our country is one that, of course, was derived from England, the Magna Carta, from ancient Rome, where they had 600 senators, even from Athens, where that's where we get the word politics from. | |
| Politics meaning literally the business of the city. | |
| But also, we get our way of government from Israel. | |
| That particular period of time where there are 400 years of self-governance. | |
| Now, remember, back in the times of Israel, and this is why, for those of us that study the Bible, understand the Bible, we can see how it applies so much to the American system of governance. | |
| And anyone who denies this fact is trying to impart their own agenda to try to blur the lines and to try to put forward their own false narrative. | |
| Now, remember, the Republic of Israel stood for 400 years. | |
| It was 400 years of self-governance. | |
| It was really built on a couple major ideas, equality, tolerance, and of course, private land ownership. | |
| Israel was totally decentralized. | |
| No king, no ruler, no chieftain, no czar, no pharaoh, no dictator. | |
| Everyone knew the law, everyone followed the law, and everyone became their own form of law enforcement. | |
| No standing army, no police, yet they were able to flourish for a long period of time. | |
| You see, when you have a virtuous people, you don't need any form of government. | |
| Since everyone knew the law and it was passed down from one generation to the other, thou shalt not steal, thou shalt not murder, thou shall honor thy mother and father, thou shalt not covet. | |
| They understood the uploaded moral app that was given to them from Moses. | |
| There was really no need to have government forces. | |
| Now, this was far from a utopia. | |
| Still stole and they still cheated, they still sinned, they still rebelled from God. | |
| But the overwhelming majority of the country was studying what it meant to be virtuous, was trying to figure out what God's wish was for them on this planet. | |
| And because of this, there was really no need for a strong, centralized power. | |
| So, mind you, when you have no government, the only way civilization can succeed is if everyone is virtuous. | |
| But as people start to become less virtuous and they get away from this idea of God being accountable for their actions, the fear of God that God might judge you if you step out of line, if you steal something, if you lie, if you steal and you cheat, as people get away from that and start to sin or rebel from God, especially when it comes to civil and civic government, then government needs to get bigger. | |
| So, the bigger the government, the smaller the individual. | |
| But also, the more virtuous the people, the smaller government is able to be. | |
| And we see that a lot today in the lockdown. | |
| As people are fearful that they are not going to be able to make smart decisions themselves, they want government to go through and lock down businesses for them. | |
| They want government to go through and be the jury, judge, and pseudo, and metaphorical executioner. | |
| They want government to go through and enforce mask requirements. | |
| Instead of trusting a population to be informed, reason-based, logical, looking into every single issue independently and analytically, empirically and rationally, instead, we have a country that resorts to try and have government be the source of virtue. | |
| Plato used to say that we need to teach children, quote, noble lies. | |
| What did he mean by that? | |
| Plato used to say that we need to teach children things that might not be true, but if everyone believes them, then you're able to have a civil society and a functioning, quote-unquote, republic. | |
| Now, Plato is very difficult to unpack in just one podcast. | |
| Plato, of course, learned from Socrates. | |
| Plato taught Aristotle. | |
| Aristotle taught Alexander the Great. | |
| Plato was an idealist. | |
| Aristotle was an empiricist. | |
| He was a scientist. | |
| Plato had the academy. | |
| Aristotle had the Lyceum. | |
| They agreed on some things, but they disagreed on a lot. | |
| But Plato believed in this idea of the philosopher king. | |
| He lived in the clouds. | |
| He was an idea guy, not a practical guy. | |
| He would not be someone that we would call a pragmatist in today's time. | |
| He is someone that would be spending his time debating with professors over who could best redistribute goods, services, wealth. | |
| Plato would argue that we need a small group of governing elites. | |
| Plato had a very specific idea of what he thought success was. | |
| Plato thought that everything was an idea, and without ideas, there is nothing. | |
| And there is some truth to Plato's idea here. | |
| Get it? | |
| However, I believe that without Aristotelian logic and the idea of being empirical and actually reasoned-based and testing your premise, something that René Descartes helped pioneer, who really started the Enlightenment, without that type of analysis, then we're nothing more than a bunch of professors tossing around theories that will have no applicability to modern life. | |
| And so to answer your question, or to get back to your question, I should say, is America really a Christian nation? | |
| Out of all the people that signed the Declaration of Independence, almost all of them could be identified as being outspoken Christians. | |
| There were 56 men who signed the Declaration of Independence. | |
| But what's so incredible is that if you actually read the Declaration, it reads almost like a religious and theological document that the laws of nature and nature's God. | |
| Who says something like that? | |
| That when in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and nature's God entitle them. | |
| A decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to separation. | |
| We hold these truths to be self-evident. | |
| This idea of self-evidentiary truths is a Christian and specifically Protestant Christian idea that all men are created equal, a biblical idea that we're all equal in the eyes of Christ. | |
| This is something that Paul talked about in Philippians, that they are endowed by their Creator, made in the image of God, imago day, something that's talked about in Jeremiah, I knew you before you're in the womb, with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. | |
| Life, God breathed you into existence. | |
| Liberty, the capacity to go pursue what is right and what is good, and the pursuit of happiness. | |
| It was previously private property. | |
| I wish they would have kept it as private property. | |
| It would have been more clear about the actual economic system that they would have argued for. | |
| However, that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. | |
| Well, where do we get this idea of the consent of the governed? | |
| Remember, 400 years of self-governance in Israel. | |
| The longest-lasting best example of true, bottom-up, republican form of government, not Republican Party, but a Republican form of government. | |
| Then it says, prudence indeed will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes. | |
| And accordingly, all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. | |
| But when a long train of abuses and usurptations, pursuing invariable the same object, evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty to throw off such government and to provide new guards for their future security. | |
| Such has been the patient sufferance of these colonies, and such is now the necessity which constrains to them their former systems of government, the history of the present. | |
| King of Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over these states. | |
| To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world that goes through all the facts. | |
| He has refused. | |
| He has quartered soldiers. | |
| Now, what drove the founding fathers to speak in such incendiary terms? | |
| It's because they started to realize that rights came from God, not from King George. | |
| And this is articulated in the Constitution of the United States, going back to Thomas Hooker, who is really one of the fathers of America or the father of the United States Constitution, who started this idea of articulating self-governance. | |
| But it's as people started to dive deeper into the first great awakening. | |
| Jonathan Edwards, Whitfield, sinners in the hands of an angry God. | |
| Where do we get these rights from? | |
| We get these rights from God, not from King George. | |
| And in the United States Constitution, it says that titles of nobility mean nothing. | |
| That if you're a king, it does not give you anything. | |
| It's also known as the emoluments clause of the United States Constitution, the titles of nobility. | |
| And it says clearly in Article 1, Section 9, Clause 8: no title of nobility shall be granted by the United States, and no person holding any other office or profit or trust under them shall, without the consent of the Congress, accept any present, a monument, office, or title, or any kind whatsoever from any king, prince, or foreign state. | |
| So, what's the significance of that? | |
| The significance is that blood means nothing. | |
| Who your father was, who your grandfather was, I was the Earl of Winchester means nothing. | |
| I am the king of this land means nothing. | |
| We're in charge. | |
| We the people, not we, the King George, not we, the people of the ruling class. | |
| I think it's really important to remind ourselves of that. | |
| But where do we get that idea from? | |
| We get that idea from the Bible. | |
| Now, some of you might say, well, Charlie, England was Christian. | |
| Where did they go wrong? | |
| Well, England gave us quite a lot. | |
| Common law that we instituted seamlessly into the West. | |
| England deserves great credit for that. | |
| Thanks to the system of government that they implemented, inspired by the Bible. | |
| Due process, cross-examination of witnesses, the idea of a barrister, which is a lawyer. | |
| That all comes from biblical principles that built Western civilization as we know it. | |
| However, it wasn't enough. | |
| The idea of a bottom-up government, it was tried in Rome, it was tried in Athens, it was tried a little bit in the Mayflower Compact, but it was really mixing the best of the Enlightenment with the best of the Bible. | |
|
Power Seeking Democrats vs Peace Seekers
00:06:22
|
|
| That's what America was. | |
| Fusing together the discoveries of Newtonian physics, of Sir Francis Bacon, of Immanuel Kant, of John Locke, of Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine, even though they disagreed on quite a lot. | |
| Fusing all of those together, almost in a best hits buffet of thinkers, philosophers, ideas, and systems of government. | |
| But the thing that made America different and has made America different than any other country that has been founded since. | |
| The reason why we are the wealthiest, most generous, benevolent, fair, equitable, open-minded country ever to exist in the history of the world is that preamble to the United States Constitution is derived straight from Christian biblical principles. | |
| That's what makes our country different. | |
| And so, to your question, Hank from Rhode Island, I hope that gives you a little bit of ammunition. | |
| There's some other great resources I'd be happy to provide you with. | |
| If anyone's interested, you guys can email us about that freedom at charliekirk.com. | |
| Look, you guys know about Good Ranchers by now, but I could tell you, people that I recommend Good Ranchers to, they send me these beautiful pictures of these steaks, of these hams, of chicken, you name it. | |
| It's all in America, and it's from Good Ranchers. | |
| You guys want to have a good Christmas, then go to Good Ranchers, and you guys get a free hickory honey holiday ham. | |
| Every new subscription gets a Berkshire Hickory honey smoked ham for free. | |
| And the best part is it's 100% free with every subscription. | |
| That's the ham I'm talking about. | |
| Sign up today to get yours before we run out. | |
| And as always, Good Ranchers is 100% American beef, chicken, and now pork. | |
| Steaks are always USDA choice and higher. | |
| Give the gift of steak and free hams as holiday season. | |
| For the price of a family going out to dinner, you can fill your freezer with quality meats with goodranchers.com. | |
| Don't waste your money on cheap cuts and overseas beef. | |
| Buying from the other guys, get the American beef cuts your family needs. | |
| So look, if you guys are in charge of food or if you want to just give the gift of meat, what a beautiful gift to give. | |
| Everyone enjoys it. | |
| They'll remember it. | |
| You could taste it. | |
| And it's actually a Christmas gift you know they'll use. | |
| Go to goodranchers.com, promo code Charlie, to get your free Berkshire Hickory honey smoked ham. | |
| That is goodranchers.com, promo code Charlie. | |
| Goodranchers.com, promo code, Charlie. | |
| Hey, Charlie, I'm really worried about this Texas Supreme Court lawsuit. | |
| Why was it tossed out? | |
| And what are the next steps? | |
| Thanks so much, Clark from Wisconsin. | |
| Well, Clark, you win a signed copy of the New York Times bestseller, The MAGA Doctrine. | |
| Thank you for your question. | |
| It means a lot. | |
| Look, I was disappointed, but not overly surprised. | |
| And here's why. | |
| Judges are human beings. | |
| They are. | |
| They don't want to interfere in an election. | |
| And I do want to give Texas and Ken Paxton, the Attorney General of Texas, credit for launching a best effort in more ways than one to try and at least give voice to the fraud that happened in this election. | |
| But if you dive deeper into actually what the lawsuit said and the complaint going to the U.S. Supreme Court, it wasn't even about election fraud. | |
| It was just the fact that this election was a fraud. | |
| Remember, conspiracy is not a theory. | |
| Conspiracy is a crime. | |
| This was a multi-level conspiracy against the American people through voter registration, ballot fraud, ballot laundering, signature verification, Center for Technology and Civic Life, | |
| media blackouts, Hunter Biden investigations that go unreported, all of it together, combined, created the greatest scam and scandal of an election that we have seen probably in American history, at least since 1876, definitely more so than in 2000. | |
| But the lawsuit wasn't about ballots or signatures. | |
| It was about how Raffensperger, the alleged Republican Secretary of State of Georgia, changed election law in a lawsuit settling civilly with Stacey Abrams, who came marching in with $40 million into Georgia, thanks to Hollywood elites and weak Republicans that didn't fight their entrance into Georgia. | |
| They came marching in together and Raffensperger changed the laws, the rules, and the regulations around voting without the consent of the state legislature. | |
| That is unconstitutional. | |
| That is illegal. | |
| Now, you might ask, or you might have the question is, well, if it's unconstitutional and it's illegal, why wasn't it stopped? | |
| The best answer I have for that is the judges, they did not want to get involved. | |
| They did not see that as the role of the U.S. Supreme Court, and they did not find as much validity to the complaint. | |
| Basically, they kicked it back down to the states. | |
| Now, that disappointed me, and it should disappoint you. | |
| But these judges are human beings. | |
| They do not want their legacy. | |
| They do not want their entire judicial portfolio to be marred by a highly contentious election. | |
| Judges like to think of themselves above politics. | |
| However, if it was a Democrat-controlled Supreme Court, they would have heard this case in a heartbeat. | |
| If this was a Democrat-controlled Supreme Court, if it was a Warren Court or a burger court, and it was Massachusetts or Oregon that was suing another state because of being disenfranchised because Democrats lost an election and Republicans changed a law that benefited Republicans, then the Supreme Court would have heard it. | |
| It's just that Republicans and conservatives, we do not fight as hard as Democrats do. | |
| We don't. | |
| We are more decent. | |
| We're more patient. | |
| We work through the process. | |
| Instead, we are much more likely to wait our turn. | |
| We are much more likely to let things play out. | |
| We are peace-seeking people. | |
| Democrats are not peace-seeking people. | |
|
The Real Threat Is China
00:06:40
|
|
| They are power-seeking people. | |
| Democrats want nothing to do with reconciliation, with trying to find common ground. | |
| Instead, Democrats will do whatever they possibly can at their disposal to assume the most amount of earthly power possible as quickly as possible. | |
| For them, the way they judge success is how much power can I get at one period of time for myself and for my political movement. | |
| They view everything in postmodern power struggle terms, oppressor and oppressed. | |
| The only currency that matters to the left is not persuasion. | |
| It's not argumentation. | |
| It's not dialogue. | |
| It's not debate. | |
| It's not who can win over the course of conversation better. | |
| It's not the pursuit of truth. | |
| It's not the appreciation of beauty. | |
| Instead, it's a blood sport. | |
| It is a long, drawn-out power struggle. | |
| It is a wrestling match for who controls the civilization. | |
| And the problem with this, the issue that all of us that understand what the country stands for and how you can lose a civilization so quickly, the reason that we are very worried about this is that if you only care about power, then you immediately descend into a Machiavellian paradigm, which is then the ends justify the means. | |
| And you are willing to do whatever it takes then to assume total and complete political power. | |
| And the danger in that. | |
| If you're willing to do whatever it takes to assume total and complete political power, then all of a sudden any sort of moral guardrails that you might have disappear and evaporate. | |
| Think about what the Democrats were willing to do to Donald Trump. | |
| Spy on him, launch a coup, plant evidence, lie about it, launch an entire congressional deluge crusade against President Trump all around this idea of Russian interference. | |
| Look, I think Vladimir Putin is a thug. | |
| I think Russia is a soft enemy of the United States. | |
| I say soft enemy because they're not a clear and present danger to the United States. | |
| They have a declining population. | |
| They get all of their wealth from the petrodollar. | |
| The real threat to our country is China. | |
| The real threat to our country is the Chinese Communist Party. | |
| It actually would have done us some good, just as we did in World War II, to have a soft alliance with Russia like we did with the Soviet Union to crush China. | |
| Instead, the fearmongers that were compromised by Fang Fang, by secret drivers in the Bay Area, or Chinese Communist Party spies like Suawell, Harris, Pelosi, and Feinstein, all from the Bay Area of our country, compromised by the highest levels of the CCP. | |
| They wanted a Russian conflict. | |
| You see, the Chinese would love nothing more than for America to be solely focused and obsessed with Kremlin influence in our country. | |
| Every second we spend looking at Russia, China builds their global empire. | |
| China has one million Muslims in concentration camps right now in China. | |
| We say often, never again will we allow another concentration camp style genocide or Holocaust occur. | |
| That is a lie. | |
| Almost none of the groups that call Donald Trump the worst things you can call them, 1930s warmonger, 1930s style Benito Mussolini, none of them comment on the fact that China has one million Muslims in concentration camps. | |
| Meanwhile, the Chinese embassy puts on Twitter, quote, in Xinjiang, all citizens enjoy the same rights. | |
| It is completely independent choice of each citizen to believe in or not believe in any religion. | |
| That's from the Chinese embassy in the United States. | |
| That's such a pathological lie that should get them kicked off of social media. | |
| But again, the Chinese Communist Party has purchased our social media tech companies and data companies. | |
| How did this happen? | |
| This happened large in part because Republicans in particular did a dirty deal with the devil. | |
| They opened up the market of China to an extent that deindustrialized our economy, our labor force, where we worked with our hands. | |
| It got re-domiciled to Wuhan, to Shanghai, to Zhejiang, to Chongqing, to Kuming, to Taiwan, to Daatong, to Chongchun, to Harbin, to Shengyong, just to name some of the cities, to Fuzhou, all across China. | |
| Because our CEOs, who didn't have really any sort of patriotic loyalty to our country, they wanted to save 10 or 15 bucks on a t-shirt, and they went to China. | |
| Now, mind you, they could have gone to Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Honduras, Guatemala, Mexico, or Panama. | |
| If they really needed cheap labor, the reason they went to China is that, yes, it was cheaper, but the Chinese Communist Party treated these CEOs very, very well. | |
| They went into forced technology partnerships, and the only competitive advantage that China has is people. | |
| They don't invent anything. | |
| They steal everything. | |
| The Chinese Communist Party is an institutional group of gangsters and robber barons. | |
| They're not entrepreneurs. | |
| They're not artists. | |
| They're not creators. | |
| They're communist thugs. | |
| Everything that they consider to be valuable, they've stolen from somebody else. | |
| They don't build anything new. | |
| Anything that they have built has been engineered in the West and then retrofitted by someone in America or Europe or in Central or South America to satisfy the needs, wants, and interests of the Chinese Communist Party. | |
| And yet still to this day, we continue to trade with China. | |
| The longer that we trade with China unrestricted and they dump products into our country, the longer we tolerate this, the quicker and sooner China will take over the entire world and will break the back of America. | |
| China attacked us with an epidemiological Pearl Harbor from Wuhan. | |
| What has our response been? | |
| Trying to over-police and over-censor our speech because people are getting offended that you call it the China virus, which it is. | |
| It started in China. | |
| It was covered up by China. | |
| It was developed in China. | |
| They lied about it and they spread it around the world in typical Chinese Communist Party fashion with no moral compass whatsoever. | |
| They had no regard for the world, for the life of the rest of the world. | |
|
Lightstream Credit Card Discount
00:03:46
|
|
| Now, we should make China pay. | |
| We should make them pay multi-trillions of dollars for what they've done with the Chinese coronavirus. | |
| Instead, if Joe Biden becomes president, China will have unrestricted access to the highest levels of our government. | |
| And yet we're supposed to believe that 80 million people voted for a Chinese agent to become president of the United States. | |
| Very hard to believe. | |
| Do you want to erase your credit card bills? | |
| A credit card consolidation loan from my friends at Lightstream can help you mark them paid in full. | |
| Lightstream believes that people with good credit deserve a better loan experience, and that's exactly what they deliver. | |
| Quickly roll balances from multiple credit cards into one single monthly loan payment, get a low fixed interest rate, and free up more money in your monthly budget. | |
| Say goodbye to credit card bills and take even more control of your money. | |
| Lightstream's credit card consolidation loans have rates from up just to 5.95% APR with autopay and there are absolutely no fees. | |
| You can even get your money as soon as the day you apply. | |
| Just for my listeners, apply now to get an additional interest rate discount to save even more. | |
| The only way to get this discount is to go to lightstream.com slash Kirk. | |
| That's lightstream.com slash Kirk for an additional discount. | |
| L-I-G-H-T-S-T-R-E-A-M dot com slash Kirk. | |
| Subject to credit approval. | |
| Rate includes 0.50% auto pay, discount, terms, and conditions apply, and offers are subject to change without notice. | |
| Visit lightstream.com/slash Kirk for more information. | |
| Before I get to the final question, I want to thank those of you that support us at charliekirk.com/slash support. | |
| When you guys chip in $50, $10, $500, or even some of you are supporting us at the $1,000 level, it's unbelievable. | |
| You make this show possible. | |
| You allow us to reach hundreds of thousands of young people a week, millions of young people a month, with truth, facts, data, information. | |
| That's what we are able to do here at the Charlie Kirk Show. | |
| If you find this show compelling, if you want more young people to hear what we are talking about here, help us towards the end of the year here at charliekirk.com/slash support. | |
| It helps more than I can put in words, and it really strengthens the backbone of everything that we do here at the Charlie Kirk Show. | |
| It's really incredible. | |
| So, thank you for that. | |
| Last question: Daryl from North Carolina asks: Hey, what show are you currently watching? | |
| Thanks so much. | |
| I'm actually watching a show, not on my Netflix account, I refuse to have a Netflix account, but on my fiancé's Netflix account. | |
| We have been watching The Last Kingdom, which is a really interesting show that takes place many hundreds of years ago in England. | |
| It's true, and it's also acted very, very well about the Anglo-Saxon influence in Europe and in England in particular, and the Danish invasions. | |
| I highly recommend it. | |
| It's very interesting. | |
| I like it because it's very historical. | |
| It's not just kind of meaningless television watching. | |
| I'm actually learning a lot about different areas, how they developed, different parts of England that used to be called different things, and how over the years they've really and how things have changed and not changed, quite honestly. | |
| And the Danish influence in England is very interesting to see. | |
| So, please continue to email us your questions, everybody. | |
| Freedom at charliekirk.com. | |
| Thank you for supporting us at charliekirk.com/slash support. | |
| When you guys get behind us, it means the world. | |
| It really helps us continue to grow to new heights. | |
| I mean that. | |
| And so, thank you guys. | |
| If you want to get involved with Turning Point USA, go to tpusa.com. | |
| Make sure you listen to our episode yesterday where my fiancé and I chat for a little bit. | |
| It's really fun. | |
| And also, check out our sister episode today. | |
| God bless you guys. | |
| Thanks so much. | |
| Talk to you soon. | |