The Charlie Kirk Show - A Massive Red Flag for The Regime Is Raised in Nancy Pelosi's Backyard Aired: 2022-02-16 Duration: 33:58 === Parents Push Back Against Cartel (09:49) === [00:00:00] Hey, everybody, today's Charlie Kirk Show. [00:00:01] What's going on in San Francisco? [00:00:03] Parents are rising up and pushing back against the education cartel. [00:00:07] That and so much more, including a deep dive into the moral implications of inflation. [00:00:13] Email me directly, freedom at charliekirk.com. [00:00:15] If you want to support our show, go to charliekirk.com/slash support. [00:00:19] And if you want to get involved at Turning Point USA, where we start high school and college chapters across the country to spread American values where it matters most, go to tpusa.com, tpusa.com. [00:00:30] Email me directly, freedom at charliekirk.com. [00:00:33] And if you want to support our show, it's charliekirk.com/slash support. [00:00:36] Buckle up, everybody. [00:00:37] Here we go. [00:00:38] Charlie, what you've done is incredible here. [00:00:40] Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campuses. [00:00:42] I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk. [00:00:45] Charlie Kirk's running the White House, folks. [00:00:49] I want to thank Charlie. [00:00:50] He's an incredible guy. [00:00:51] 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. [00:00:59] 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. [00:01:08] That's why we are here. [00:01:11] Brought to you by Andrew and Todd at Sierra Pacific Mortgage. [00:01:14] For personalized loan services, you can count on. [00:01:16] Go to AndrewandTodd.com, the wonderfulandrewandtodd.com. [00:01:23] Chicago, Illinois, beautiful Chicago, Illinois. [00:01:26] It's been a while since I've been here. [00:01:27] I love Chicago, despite all of its terrible politics. [00:01:30] Great people, great memories. [00:01:31] It's where you grew up. [00:01:32] It's your home. [00:01:33] And tonight we're having a very big rally. [00:01:36] I don't think we're going to have seats for everybody. [00:01:38] So make sure you get your tickets against mandatory forced masks. [00:01:42] I guess that's redundant, mandatory forced masks. [00:01:45] And in St. Charles, Illinois, you guys can check it out at tpusa.com/slash rally. [00:01:50] And actually, they lifted a lot of the mask mandates last night, coincidentally, right before we come into town. [00:01:55] It's interesting how that works. [00:01:57] So, if you were to say, what is the most liberal or where is the most liberal city in America, or where is the stronghold of the Democrat Party? [00:02:08] So, you'd maybe say it's Malibu, California, or Manhattan, or Boston. [00:02:14] But definitely in the top five, if you just ask someone walking on the side of the street, hey, where is the epicenter? [00:02:20] Where is the capital of the liberal left-wing machine? [00:02:26] Without hesitation, most people would say, well, it's San Francisco, obviously. [00:02:30] And San Francisco has almost leaned in to the type of radical, out-of-control, woke orthodoxy, the woke industrial complex gets its fuel, even though they don't believe in fossil fuels, they get their funding, they get their energy, they get their credibility from San Jose, Oakland, and San Francisco. [00:02:52] So, California is a very, very liberal state, but the Bay Area is actually the bluest part of California. [00:03:01] San Francisco is so liberal, it's so left-wing. [00:03:05] Donald Trump lost to Joe Biden 85% to 12% in San Francisco. [00:03:13] Every Republican, it seems, has just left voluntarily, and the liberals are enjoying ruling over the ashes. [00:03:21] And so, in San Francisco, something shocking and stunning happened last night. [00:03:26] And it's part of a broader theme that we've been covering on this program. [00:03:31] As you know, parents are rising up to take control of their kids' education. [00:03:36] They're taking back control from the public sector teacher unions, from the powers that have been teaching this woke orthodoxy, this radical sexual education, mask mandates, vaccine mandates. [00:03:51] And quietly below the radar, there was a recall effort that was launched in San Francisco to recall school board members. [00:04:01] Last evening, San Francisco school board members, three of them, were ousted in a landslide recall vote, landslide. [00:04:10] San Francisco has successfully recalled three members of the city school board. [00:04:14] I'm reading from thepostmillennial.com after a vote Tuesday showing that residents of San Francisco were overwhelmingly in favor of removing the progressives from their posts. [00:04:25] And the demographic that turned out in large numbers to remove the school board members were Asian American voters. [00:04:34] One of the main reasons were they saw the policies of the school board to be anti-Asian, and they're right, because CRT was starting to be used for admission policies and public comments. [00:04:45] For example, Asian Americans were being explicitly discriminated against in admissions to schools across San Francisco. [00:04:54] We already know that's been happening in colleges. [00:04:57] State Senator Melissa Melendez shared the results, which revealed the school board vice president Allison Collins, school board president Gabriella Lopez, and Fagua Maliga would all be removed from the school board, with those in favor compromising over 70% of the vote. [00:05:18] So when they were actually put up on a ballot, 70% of the people in the local area wanted these school board members removed. [00:05:30] San Francisco Mayor London Breed, I think she was the one that was in the nightclub where she said she was feeling the energy for not wearing a mask. [00:05:38] She said, quote, the voters of this city have delivered a clear message that the school board must focus on the essentials of delivering a well-run school system above all else. [00:05:48] She has previously slammed the school board for being too concerned with political agendas. [00:05:53] This is the same school board. [00:05:54] I don't know if it's a specific school board, but it's part of the whole kind of geographic educational complex that wanted to rename the Abraham Lincoln School because Abraham Lincoln was a white supremacist. [00:06:09] Allison Collins, she's now been recalled, said the concept of angry parents is a right-wing dog whistle. [00:06:18] Collins has come under fire from tweets back to 2016, where she said that, quote, she was looking to combat anti-black racism in the Asian community, saying her daughter's at mostly Asian schools, adding that Asians, quote, won't engage in critical race conversations unless they see how they're impacted by white supremacy. [00:06:36] You see, here's the thing. [00:06:37] Most Asians in America, they work hard, play by the rules, they want to educate their kids, and they're actually not political. [00:06:46] They're not activists. [00:06:47] There have been many attempts by NGOs and left-wing media organizations to try and create activists out of Asian Americans through the Stop Asian Hate Movement and others. [00:07:00] But believe it or not, Asian Americans, they want to live the American dream. [00:07:04] They came here for a purpose, and many of them fled communism, Marxism, or some form of brutal, murderous authoritarianism. [00:07:12] Now, the left doesn't like when you say this, but Asian Americans are actually the richest racial group in America by far. [00:07:22] Now, one of the reasons is that Asian Americans take education really seriously. [00:07:26] It's part of their culture. [00:07:28] And they have succeeded in America even more than white Americans, Asian Americans, Indonesian Americans, Chinese Americans, Korean Americans, Japanese Americans. [00:07:37] And they were the main group that has now displaced these school board members. [00:07:44] This could be a canary in the coal mine, the likes of which we have, we really don't understand the implications of it. [00:07:51] We already know that 30 Democrats across the country are not running for re-election. [00:07:56] We know that in the House of Representatives. [00:07:58] We know that Democrats are largely losing the narrative when it comes to every critical issue. [00:08:04] But if incumbent school board members in San Francisco are starting to be displaced by landslides, what does that spell for the midterms of the Democrat Party? [00:08:12] This would be like in Tupelo, Mississippi, if all of a sudden a bunch of Republican school board members were recalled in the reddest part of the country. [00:08:22] I mean, you could pick whatever area you want, it could be rural Kansas or Iowa or North Dakota. [00:08:32] This is the blue of the blue. [00:08:35] San Francisco is supposed to be an untouchable community of left-wing radicals and activists. [00:08:43] I continue reading from this article: the parents showed up in record numbers and shocked the local community. [00:08:51] And there's also really bad taste in the mouth of parents in April 2021 when they were trying to rename 44 injustice-linked school names from theguardian.com. [00:09:02] Now, they finally dropped the plan. [00:09:05] Whoever would have thought that renaming an Abraham Lincoln school was not necessarily very popular. [00:09:14] Among the schools named for presidents, Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and revolutionary hero Paul Revere. [00:09:21] A school named for longtime California Senator Diane Feinstein was also on the list. [00:09:27] They rescinded their vote because they started to see angry parents rise up against them. [00:09:32] But this is part of the theme that we have been hitting daily on this show: the citizen is rising. [00:09:39] Normal, everyday parents are starting to consolidate their political power, reassert themselves as the sovereign, and say, Okay, Allison Collins, we're kicking you out. === Political Earthquake Coming Soon (07:14) === [00:09:50] It's not going to happen anymore. [00:09:52] And if the Democrat machine is starting to show fault lines in San Francisco, then there might be a political earthquake coming. [00:10:00] And guess what? [00:10:00] San Francisco's used to earthquakes. [00:10:05] So, how's your new year going so far? [00:10:07] Pretty good, I hope. [00:10:08] But it's been tough, hasn't it? [00:10:10] Lots of us have begun to wake up and smell the roses, and some of us have smelt coffee instead. [00:10:17] All of us are now realizing how quick time is rushing past. [00:10:21] You're that much closer to retirement and that much closer to not earning. [00:10:25] But in the meantime, you've got some catching up to do. [00:10:27] With crypto and markets very risky right now, and inflation running anywhere between 8% to 20%, and conservatively, it's 8%. [00:10:35] Where are you going to keep your money to keep up and beat it? [00:10:38] You might want to talk to an expert at Noble Gold and run through the options for keeping your money safe. [00:10:43] No pressure, no hassle, and no call centers. [00:10:47] This month, Noble Gold is giving away a free one-tenth of an ounce solid gold American Eagle coin with any qualifying plan that you start. [00:10:55] So, to speak to someone who knows what they're talking about for once, how good would that feel? [00:10:59] Call us at 877-646-5347 or visit our website at noblegoldinvestments.com. [00:11:05] That's noblegoldinvestments.com. [00:11:10] Rarely do you get to see the creation of new political parties. [00:11:14] And we talked yesterday about how Canada has decided to change its form of government from a liberal democracy, they actually are a democracy, not a republic, to an authoritarian dictatorship. [00:11:24] There are many moments when political parties spring up. [00:11:28] One of the ones I think of, of course, is the creation of the Republican Party, which had a time, place, and location. [00:11:34] We're not far from it right now. [00:11:36] Ripon, Wisconsin, is where the Republican Party was founded in a little schoolhouse right next to a church in downtown Ripon. [00:11:45] And it was started as an anti-slavery party. [00:11:47] They had one issue, anti-slavery. [00:11:50] And that was basically post-Federalist anti-federalist Whig Party. [00:11:55] All of a sudden, you started to see this new party called the Republican Party be created. [00:12:00] And the Republican Party is called the GOP Grand Old Party because it's been around longer than what we would know as the Democrat Party. [00:12:07] When new parties are created, it's new and it's exciting. [00:12:11] And usually, here's a good takeaway: they're focused on one or two issues. [00:12:17] Now, I'm not saying that we're starting a party that will replace the Republican Party, but the Republican Party has basically become a R-I-N-O party anyway, Republican the name only. [00:12:26] What does it mean? [00:12:27] We use that term rhino a lot. [00:12:29] But at a deeper, more fundamental level, the Republican Party really is becoming the parents' party, the party of normal, working-class, muscular labor, people that have responsibility. [00:12:40] It's the party of people that have things they are tasked to look after, and they want to make sure those things do not get destroyed, disintegrated, or taken from them. [00:12:51] The Republican Party is the party of preservation right now. [00:12:55] The Democrat Party is the party of confiscation and revolution. [00:12:59] Everyone who's voting Republican right now or is interested in voting Republican, they have something they love, they have something they admire, they have something they're tasked morally to look after. [00:13:09] Their children, their school, their community, their education, their business, and they're afraid of, let's say, influences to come and take that from them. [00:13:22] And they're openly admitting it. [00:13:24] So, here's a clip that I wanted to take, you know, kind of play on this show for quite some time, a couple days, just haven't found the right opportunity to do it, but I think it's perfect right now. [00:13:33] Why is it that San Francisco school board members are losing in a shocking landslide fashion? [00:13:41] Well, this was not in San Francisco. [00:13:44] I believe this was in Washington, D.C. We'll find out where this was, but this is an extraordinary video of kindergarten and first-grade kids walking through the halls chanting Black Lives Matter, Black Lives Matter, play cut 28. [00:14:09] And the video goes on, that was in Washington, D.C. [00:14:12] And most parents, especially Asian American parents, they see that. [00:14:16] Wait a second, why are you hyper-racializing my kids' education? [00:14:20] I know that you say I'm supposed to be oppressed, but actually, we're doing quite well in America and a lot better than we were in Ho Chi Minh City or in Seoul or in Tokyo. [00:14:32] I see a huge opportunity for Republicans to win over the Asian American vote, a community that traditionally votes very, very Democrat. [00:14:40] Now, why do they vote Democrat? [00:14:42] Well, the left-wingers, they're really good at capturing and communicating immigrant groups to convince them that that's what you do. [00:14:51] Well, I think there's an opportunity here, especially within communities that were raised and saw the danger of authoritarian and collectivist governments. [00:15:04] Education is an issue that Democrats traditionally dominate on. [00:15:09] Now, to be perfectly honest, you know, producer Andrew and producer Connor will tell you for years, we on this program and in our private conversations with congressmen and senators were trying to get Republicans to make education a primary issue. [00:15:27] And they're like, oh, people don't understand it. [00:15:29] School choice, whatever. [00:15:30] We're going to focus on jobs, economy, and whatever else, you know, invading some foreign country. [00:15:35] One of the reasons why Republicans are leading in the generic ballot is an issue that Democrats used to do really, really well on is now completely and totally falling apart. [00:15:46] An issue where they said, oh, yeah, we're just going to give more funding to schools. [00:15:50] Most parents say, why would we give more funding to the schools that I just took my kid out of because he was forced to wear a mask and segregate it into a gymnasium and also learn all this nonsense? 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[00:16:46] Join myself and other organizations such as Turning Point USA, nonprofits, and churches by adopting SquadPod as your collaboration platform. [00:16:54] Take back control of your privacy by visiting squadpod.com/slash Charlie. [00:16:58] That is squadpod.com/slash Charlie. === Currency Control and Inflation (15:05) === [00:17:04] We're starting to see mask mandates rescind it. [00:17:07] Now, local school districts are still keeping them in place in Illinois, but it seems as if we announce an event at Turning Point USA. [00:17:16] We're going to do an event almost overnight. [00:17:18] They rescind all the mask mandates, which we're pleased to see. [00:17:21] But at the same time, we know that they are still going to try to keep the mask mandates here and there at a local level. [00:17:31] So, Nancy Pelosi was asked about inflation, and she even admitted that wages are not keeping up with prices. [00:17:39] Play Cut 46. [00:17:41] Talk about the situation here at home. [00:17:42] Families are feeling a hit from the highest inflation in 40 years. [00:17:46] The fact that people have jobs always contributes to an increase in inflation, and that's a good thing. [00:17:52] Wages are not keeping up with prices. [00:17:54] That's right. [00:17:55] Yeah, that's right. [00:17:56] Wages are not keeping up with prices. [00:17:58] Now, here's the issue: when you have an inflation curve, you have to adjust everything for inflation. [00:18:06] And most Americans have not yet felt the second or third part of inflation. [00:18:12] Let me tell you what that means. [00:18:14] So, within the law of many city and local governments, is what is called inflation-adjusted salaries. [00:18:23] So, for example, for local city clerks or for a mosquito abatement district. [00:18:30] Now, police officers and firefighters might be exempt from this. [00:18:34] But in most city governments, they have it built into the contracts that their salaries must keep up with inflation. [00:18:44] So, a city council, let's take Schaumburg, Illinois, or Peoria, Arizona, many of them have hundreds of people on the local city payroll. [00:18:58] And so they have to raise salaries now by 10%. [00:19:02] Now, many of these cities are already teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. [00:19:06] So, how are they going to make up for that deficit? [00:19:10] Well, by raising local and property taxes. [00:19:14] So, a lot of people are thinking they're feeling the only parts of inflation by going to the grocery store or buying meat or gas or whatever, things that are up double digits. [00:19:25] But the other part of this is that city and local governments are now going to have to have a correlating amount of new revenues to keep up with these mandated inflation-adjusted salary increases. [00:19:38] Inflation is bad for everyone. [00:19:40] The only people that benefit from inflation are like the 3,000 wealthiest people at the top of the income ladder. [00:19:47] That's it. [00:19:47] Or if you happen to be, if you happen to own apartment buildings or places where you can adjust your rates based on inflation, you're going to do just fine. [00:19:57] But inflation is a strategy. [00:20:00] It is a technical assault to try and debase and deteriorate the dollar bill in your pocket. [00:20:07] Now, one of the arguments they use for mild inflation is that it creates something, as Milton Friedman described it, called money velocity. [00:20:15] If you think that your dollar is going to be worth less a week from now, you're going to be very quick to spend it. [00:20:21] Therefore, it's going to increase the velocity of the dollar bills flying through the economy. [00:20:26] What's wrong with this argument? [00:20:27] It means people are going to spend money on really stupid stuff. [00:20:31] They're not going to go invest money. [00:20:33] They're going to spend money. [00:20:35] Investment is what drives a sustainable economy. [00:20:38] Spending does not. [00:20:40] You always hear like, well, consumer spending is up. [00:20:44] That's nothing more than whether or not people think that dollar bill is going to be worth something. [00:20:49] So you kind of have this analogy of who's the winner in this equation? [00:20:54] Person A, who saves their money, which we're told you're supposed to do, or person B, who spends all their money. [00:21:03] But by the time they spend all their money, the dollar is worth nothing anyway. [00:21:07] Is the person who spent the money the winner? [00:21:08] Actually, probably yes. [00:21:10] Savers get screwed in inflation. [00:21:15] And so this is the moral argument against inflation: is that we were told from a young age that you must have a preference on saving. [00:21:23] So if you have a monetary policy or if you have an entire configuration of instruments that are used when it comes to how our currency is calibrated, that actually morally makes recklessly spending and immediate gratification the more prudent thing to do than delayed gratification. [00:21:42] That's a really bad thing for your civilization. [00:21:44] Printing money does not lead to wealth. [00:21:47] You must earn wealth. [00:21:49] Dennis Prager's favorite word in the English language, and I tend to agree with him, is earn. [00:21:55] If you do not earn something in life, then you're just trading fiat currency or promises. [00:22:02] Inflation is a promise that we cannot keep. [00:22:06] The only time that inflation was actually necessary, that I would defend, that was a promise we could keep, was in the 1940s. [00:22:14] But do you know what's so interesting that in the 1940s, when we went to war in two continents and one successfully, how did the federal government primarily finance that war? [00:22:24] Well, this was before the Federal Reserve had the levers or had the ability to massively infuse cheap money into the economy. [00:22:31] So what did they do? [00:22:32] Well, if you have a relative that worked or that lived in that era, they might still have postage stamps or posters from war bond campaigns. [00:22:45] The government used to have to actually go and persuade the population for big government programs. [00:22:51] They were not able to go to the Federal Reserve and say, hey, this coin right here is a trillion dollar coin. [00:22:56] This is literally what they've done. [00:22:58] Like, hey, this coin's not worth a trillion dollars. [00:23:00] We're not going to be able to do whatever we want. [00:23:03] And so this was an example in the 1940s where we decided to significantly borrow against ourselves. [00:23:09] We decided to temporarily debase our currency. [00:23:12] Why? [00:23:12] Well, we were at war and the entire civilization was at stake. [00:23:16] But we made good on that promise in the years after in the 1950s by massive pent-up demand, reinvestment domestically, and being able to stabilize our currency. [00:23:26] What was so interesting about the war bond campaigns is the war bonds fluctuated based on how well America was actually doing in the war. [00:23:35] The most successful war bond campaign, I believe, was the seventh war bond campaign after the Battle of Iwo Jima, in that famous picture on Mount Suribachi, where those five Marines were at the top of the mountain. [00:23:46] That actually wasn't even the end of that battle on that island, by the way. [00:23:49] It was like day four. [00:23:50] They were at the top of the mountain. [00:23:51] They were putting the flag up. [00:23:52] A picture was taken, and the war bond campaign surged domestically. [00:23:56] It was a massive stimulus to American morale. [00:24:01] What I'm getting at is that the way we used to have to inflate our currency was through voluntary exchange. [00:24:08] You used to have to get the buy-in of the people. [00:24:11] Our monetary policy actually used to be based on a constitutional moral principle of consent of the governed. [00:24:17] Now it's submit. [00:24:20] We're going to do whatever we want. [00:24:23] And we know inflation is bad for consumers. [00:24:27] We know it's bad for everyday people. [00:24:29] But also, inflation allows the continuation of an unsustainable fiscal model of debts and deficits. [00:24:37] You know, in this program, we've spoken openly about both political parties, how they have metaphorically kicked the can down the road. [00:24:44] I am reminded of some political movements that I started here in the suburbs of Chicago with some of my friends all about fiscal spending and being prudent when it came to balanced budgets. [00:24:54] What you are seeing now is a 10-year, let's say, buildup of the same sort of fiscal policies. [00:25:00] Because when you borrow a trillion dollars a year, it used to be $500 billion a year, or now $2 trillion or $3 trillion, eventually you're left with very few options. [00:25:08] Eventually, the people in charge are like, well, we can make the dollar worth nothing, so then $28 trillion really isn't worth $28 trillion. [00:25:15] It's all just kind of funny money. [00:25:18] And that's the other part of the population that is significantly aided by inflation: people that have debt. [00:25:26] So, the question that we should ask is: why is it that Argentina has such a weak currency? [00:25:30] It's because first they borrowed money. [00:25:32] No one actually goes into inflation voluntarily. [00:25:34] It's not like, oh, yeah, we're going to go in, like, I guess. [00:25:37] So now it's not as a first option. [00:25:38] It's not necessarily immediately enjoyable, but inflation is a last-ditch effort to justify fiscal policies that were morally and, let's say, categorically out of control. [00:25:58] And so, what you're seeing now is a solution that is actually a, let's say, an attack because of prior mistakes before. [00:26:10] What am I getting at? [00:26:11] I'm getting at a multi-decade buildup of bad behaviors that is now at its near climax, but it's not. [00:26:19] Because once you have inflation, then you're going to need solutions to that inflation. [00:26:23] What are solutions to inflation? [00:26:24] You can raise taxes to confiscate the money supply. [00:26:29] You can cut government spending. [00:26:32] You can become more efficient, such as don't pay people to sit at home and not work, which by definition is an inefficient practice that leads to inflation. [00:26:42] Or you can reset the currency, which is exactly what the great reset wants to achieve. [00:26:50] That's it. [00:26:50] These are the options in front of you. [00:26:52] Do you think our leaders are going to substantively raise taxes or do we want them to? [00:26:55] No. [00:26:56] That would be the worst thing you could do. [00:26:57] So we're going to have, that's what Jimmy Carter tried to do, by the way. [00:26:59] No economic growth, lots of inflation. [00:27:01] He called it the Great Malaise. [00:27:03] Well, he didn't call it that. [00:27:04] It was branded the Great Malaise. [00:27:05] Okay, or we can cut spending. [00:27:07] DC's not going to do that anytime soon. [00:27:09] Well, the other thing they're going to try to do is, well, let's just reset the currency. [00:27:13] It's the least we could do. [00:27:14] I mean, come on, it was COVID. [00:27:15] Lot of people. [00:27:15] It was a once-in-a-generation pandemic. [00:27:17] Let's just push a button and we reset the currency. [00:27:21] What would that mean for the average everyday person? [00:27:23] You would lose 99% of your purchasing power and it would give an infinite amount of power to the people that have made the proper investments over the last year. [00:27:33] Why do you think Bill Gates is buying farmland? [00:27:36] He's not buying farmland because he has some sort of love of nature. [00:27:40] I don't even think he knows what a tractor is. [00:27:42] I don't think he knows how to start it. [00:27:45] No, he bought farmland because he knows, and not just a little farmland, we're talking about millions of acres of farmland. [00:27:52] He knows that in times of inflation, those things will be objectively valuable to remain wealthy and powerful. [00:28:00] Look, I love supplements. [00:28:02] If you go look at Mikey's desk, it's pretty amazing. [00:28:05] If you could see my supply of various supplements, you would think I was training for the Olympics. [00:28:09] But if I had to pick the one supplement that transcends all the others, it would be Balance of Nature. [00:28:13] I struggle sometimes to get my fruits and vegetables, hectic schedule, crazy travel, boarding planes, taxis, etc. [00:28:19] It's really hard to go to the farmer's market to get greens, beets, pineapples, oranges, and kiwis. [00:28:24] So every day, I'm popping my balance of nature. [00:28:27] That's right. [00:28:28] It's just four easy supplements right there. [00:28:30] You just put them in, have them with breakfast or lunch, and you get your fruits and vegetables for the day. [00:28:35] Get your immune system up and running by taking Balance of Nature's 10 servings of fruits and vegetables. [00:28:39] In fact, it might actually boost your mood as well, all in six tiny capsules. [00:28:42] For a limited time, all new preferred customers will receive an additional 35% discount and free shipping on your first Balance of Nature order. [00:28:49] Use discount code Charlie. [00:28:50] Call 800-2468-751 or go to balanceofnature.com. [00:28:54] That's balanceofnature.com and use promo code Charlie. [00:29:00] They need to control your money. [00:29:02] This is one of the reasons why they're so threatened by Bitcoin. [00:29:04] By no means am I saying go buy Bitcoin or crypto assets or anything like that, but it definitely is a threat. [00:29:10] It's really hard to regulate. [00:29:11] It's hard to pinpoint. [00:29:12] It's by definition decentralized. [00:29:14] And as we just kind of just talked about inflation, it's a good way to tie the topic off with something very timely, which is what's happening in Canada. [00:29:24] Postmillennial.com, freedom protesters warn they may be separated from their children as police action looms. [00:29:33] The government of Canada is starting to dox and publicize people who have donated to the Freedom Convoy. [00:29:42] One person in particular is Ottawa's Stella Luna Gelato Cafe, who was forced to close on Tuesday after receiving threats when owner Tammy Giuliani's name was appeared on a hacked list of give, send, go donors to the Ottawa Freedom Convoy. [00:29:59] Now, it's not the government per se that could be involved. [00:30:02] We know the government has said that the people who give to these sort of campaigns are the version of narco-crypto-terrorists. [00:30:11] Giuliani says she now regrets making a $250 donation on February 5th, and that staff in the shop has begun receiving threats Monday morning after a donation was posted on Twitter. [00:30:24] Thomas Siebel, American billionaire, I doubt any relation to the Siebel in Siebel family in California. [00:30:33] Maybe it is. [00:30:34] That would be hilarious because Gavin Newsom married into that family. [00:30:38] But gave $90,000 to the Convoy. [00:30:41] They are starting to dox the names of everyone that has donated this convoy. [00:30:48] They need to restrict the money flow of freedom. [00:30:51] And the person who's the architect behind most of this is, of course, Klaus Schwab. [00:30:56] We are going to keep on talking about Klaus Schwab, who runs the World Economic Forum. [00:31:00] We are now in bond villain territory. [00:31:03] We are now in like specter super government stuff. [00:31:07] Cut 75, Klaus Schwab brags that he has infiltrated cabinets across the world, including Canada, who are making these decisions around give, send, go and where you can spend your money. [00:31:18] Play Cut 75. [00:31:20] And I have to say, when I mention our names like Mr. Smirkel, even Vladimir Putin, and so on, they all have been young global leaders of the World Economic Forum. [00:31:34] But what we are very proud of now is the young generation like Prime Minister Trudeau, President of Argentina, and so on, that we penetrate the cabinets. [00:31:50] So yesterday I was at a reception for Prime Minister Trudeau, and I would know that half of this cabinet, or even more, half of this cabinet are for our actually young global leaders of the World Economic Forum. === Global Leaders Penetrate Cabinets (01:48) === [00:32:10] And that's true in Argentina, too. [00:32:12] Well, yeah, sorry. [00:32:14] That's true in Argentina as well. [00:32:15] It's true in Argentina and it's true in France now. [00:32:19] I mean, with the president, with the young global leader, but what is important for me. [00:32:25] What is he saying? [00:32:26] That's Klaus Schwab from the World Economic Forum. [00:32:28] And we're not saying that Klaus Schwab was behind the hack or behind the Canadian vice president, vice minister of finance. [00:32:37] What we're saying, though, is Klaus Schwab has a farm team where he penetrates the cabinets. [00:32:42] That's his word, not our word, where he puts people into the cabinets of world governments to then help this globalist chapter be ushered in. [00:32:52] And that's precisely and exactly what we are seeing in Canada: the person who is actually running a lot of this clampdown on the flow of money in Canada literally worked with George Soros. [00:33:05] And Klaus Schwab said that he has half the cabinet of Canada that has gone through his system, the Young Leaders Forum. [00:33:15] There's so much here to dive into at the World Economic Forum and how their tentacles reach to every major government across the planet. [00:33:23] It's going to be hard to kind of dive into all of that in the time we have remaining. [00:33:28] But the point is this: there is a centralized orchestration behind this. [00:33:36] And all roads lead to Davos, the World Economic Forum. [00:33:42] Thank you so much for listening, everybody. [00:33:44] Email us your thoughts as always. [00:33:45] Freedom at charliekirk.com. [00:33:46] Want to support our show? [00:33:47] Go to charliekirk.com/slash support. [00:33:50] Thank you so much for listening. [00:33:51] God bless. [00:33:54] For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to CharlieKirk dot com.