All Episodes Plain Text
March 11, 2022 - The Charlie Kirk Show
37:35
Race, Feminism, and Christianity in the Conservative Movement—LIVE from the National Religious Broadcasting Conference

On this special episode of The Charlie Kirk Show, two conversations LIVE from Radio Row at NRB in Nashville, Tennessee. First, Charlie has a sometimes confusing, sometimes contentious, but nevertheless interesting conversation with Dr. Paula Price—a black evangelist, teacher, and the founder of Price University in Oklahoma. They talk about the roots of racism in America, she shares her thoughts on how the GOP could improve their standing among black people, and finally they find agreement on the Transgender craze and how the devaluation of Sex in America led to a crippling lack of moral order that is hurting everyone.   Next, Charlie is joined by Cynthia Garrett a member of the Salem Radio family, evangelist, host on TBN, and a former Hollywood insider for a thoughtful, fascinating discussion on the media, feminism, race, representation, empowerment and so much more. Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/supportSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcriber: nvidia/parakeet-tdt-0.6b-v2, sat-12l-sm, and large-v3-turbo
|

Time Text
Table Talk and Conservative Structure 00:10:06
Hey everybody, today on the Charlie Kirk Show starts a very interesting conversation with my friend Dr. Price.
Took me a little by surprise, but I think you'll enjoy the dialogue.
Then we have Cynthia Garrett, where we talk about the state of young women in America.
And I think you're really going to enjoy this conversation.
It's very special.
Get involved with Turning Point USA today at tpusa.com.
You can email me your thoughts as always, freedom at charliekirk.com and subscribe to the Charlie Kirk Show podcast.
If you want to support the Charlie Kirk show, it's charliekirk.com/slash support.
That's charliekirk.com/slash support.
Buckle up, everybody.
Here we go.
Charlie, what you've done is incredible here.
Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campuses.
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.
Brought to you by Andrew and Todd at Sierra Pacific Mortgage.
For personalized loan services, you can count on.
Go to andrewandodd.com, the wonderfulandrewandodd.com.
Hey, everybody, Charlie Kirk here.
We're at the National Radio Broadcast Association here in Nashville, Tennessee.
And you meet all sorts of wonderful people at these types of conventions, and they come on your show and you learn from them.
So, with us right now is a new friend, Dr. Paula Price, founder of Price University.
Uh-huh.
Welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Thank you for having me.
I'm looking forward to it.
Great.
You know, I've heard nothing but sparkling things about you, so we're going to have a blast.
You've been talking to my relatives.
Well, not actually, that's not true.
Not all my relatives would say that about me.
So, Dr. Price, introduce yourself to our audience.
Well, I am Dr. Paula Price.
I have a church and ministry called, well, actually called the Embassy.
I'm the pastor and founder of Congregation of the Mighty, where God stands.
And I am the founder of Price University, author of the Prophet's Dictionary, The Prophets Handbook.
I have a talk show called Taking It On with Paula Price.
I train leaders and ministers around the world.
So you're an underachiever, basically.
You have a school, you have a church, you have the whole thing.
So you're an outspoken Christian.
You believe in the natural law.
I'm also the state committee woman for the Republican Party, District 1 in Oklahoma.
In Oklahoma.
Oklahoma.
Well, that's awesome.
So let me just kind of ask you: we can kind of go from there, kind of go from this sort of topic, which is traditionally in the last couple decades, the black community is not conservative, not Republican.
What is your theory as to why that is the case?
Well, I actually have a historical fact on it that the black Americans were Republican until Nixon.
Nixon refused an audience with Martin Luther King, and because he did, Martin Luther King went to Kennedy.
And Kennedy gave them the platform.
So he took and brought black America under the mask.
So you mean when Nixon was vice president?
Yeah, well, when part of that Nixon was president after Kennedy was I know, but when he wanted to have a meeting for him to back them, according to a book I read, I could be wrong.
Maybe they didn't.
No, no, it would make sense because it would be in the 50s when Nixon was Eisenhower's vice president.
Right.
And the reason that I say that is because everybody talks about how we only voted Republican.
Yes, that's right.
Because of Martin Luther King, he shifted us to vote Democratic.
Got it.
So would you think that mainly in the black community their values are conservative in nature?
Yeah, we are very conservative.
But the issue is we don't, and I talk to us because I've been Republican since I was 18.
I've never been anything else.
I mean, I did not like the way the Democrats were running in my neighborhood, in my community, so I didn't.
But I do know that we feel like we're ignored or we're misunderstood or we are pretty much not invited.
I was on a recent show and I said many times when they bring it, when we're brought in, we're kind of like, see, we're not racist because we have three.
Like my least favorite comment is, I have a friend who is black.
I don't want to hear that.
I'm sorry.
You got my hot button.
Forgive me.
No, you're fine.
I mean, I just.
So what do Republicans have to do better to win over black voters?
I think a lot of this is conditioning.
So, and I have a teaching called Table Talk.
Pretty much everything we learned, we learned at the table.
Okay.
Whether it's the table in a restaurant, the table at a friend's house, it doesn't.
Radio table.
Radio table.
Look at this one.
And so the biggest issue is that there are ideas that have been inseminated in us that melded, I think, with our formative years.
I think that America right now is more race conditioned than racist.
So tell me what that means.
Well, racist means you want us out of your world.
You don't want us to ever have success.
You really wish we would be destroyed.
And if there was ever any way to purge the land of minorities, you would take it.
That's racism.
Race conditioning is, I grew up with comments and commentary that I didn't know were wrong, but they are part of my psyche and they are forming and shaping my reactions and my behaviors.
If someone makes me learn better, then I will make a decision of my own accord to no longer do that.
So give me some example of race conditioning.
Well, race conditioning is how we hear comments like, you're a credit to your race.
Yeah.
That's a conditionment.
That is not, you don't, I mean, because you don't even know my whole race.
You know what I mean?
So you know what we, what's accredited or not.
Race conditioning is, I want you to succeed.
I just don't want you in my neighborhood because I've heard you tear up neighborhoods.
Those are conditionings that don't wish us ill will, but they don't want to bring us into the fullness of the American dream in their neighborhood.
Big one is, if your daughter had a black child, how would you feel about it?
Well, I don't want my seed sully.
It's not that I don't believe in people being happy.
I don't want my seed sully.
I want my seed to stay pure white.
Those are conditionings.
Those are not, we wish you evil.
We want you to cease to exist.
Right.
So what do Republicans need to do better or conservatives to win over black voters?
They need to, right now, we don't really believe they want us to do better.
They want us that close in their world.
And I'm speaking as the collective, not me personally.
Blacks?
Yeah, blacks.
We don't really believe that.
Like, for example, we go to Republican meetings and they can have six, 700 people.
They have three black people who reached out to the black folks.
Nobody even knew the meeting existed.
So, or either we'll get, we'll have all of these talks.
You can, you know, sit at the table.
But when you're talking about being at the think table, being part of our thought, your thought structure, we're not invited.
Yeah.
You really think that's true?
Well, I'm in it now.
I recently said to someone, I got elected thinking that all of these great things were going to happen and that things had changed.
And I was told, nothing's changing.
We're going to stay the same.
We're glad you made it, but we already have something in play and we are not willing to have it stopped.
So in other words, don't bring your ideas.
Okay.
So what so what ideas do you think in particular would be able to win over the black community?
I think, first of all, learning us beyond black.
Like, I'll be glad when we stop being the black community and we start being part of the conservative structure or the thought like I need that.
I always ask a question, Charlie.
And you know what my favorite question is?
How do you find America without color?
How do I define it?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, I don't really care much about race, to be honest.
You may not, but America is defined by ethnicity and race.
According to who?
According to all of our literature.
Look at your commercials and look at all of the when we see if I look online when you look at the commercials online and they have a lot of them.
Very few of them are other.
And I'm not just fighting for blacks.
I'm just saying, can we have a one-minded America?
That's my passion.
Yes.
That's all I want is a one-minded America.
I'm not defining you.
You and I walk in a room and we say, I've invited the head of so-and-so.
They're going to call.
They're going to come to you.
Even if I am the person that happens to me all the time.
I'm not really tracking what you're saying.
In other words, if I'm brought in, if they say, I want to bring in Price University.
Okay.
Okay.
And I come and you come.
The person in the lobby is going to come to you.
You don't know that.
That's a stereotype.
You can't.
That's a prejudice.
No, no.
You cannot call a prejudice my experience.
You can, of course, but I live.
You can't talk to about my testimony.
Do you know what it's like to be a white man?
I don't know what it's like.
Oh, there you go.
So you don't know my experience.
I know what they've done.
But I know what it's like to work for one.
I know what it's like to have to stand in a room with one.
I know what's happening.
And I've had one experience.
What are you talking about?
I'll be very honest with you.
You think that white people have mistreated you?
Well, how would you know if you've never been mistreated?
You couldn't call, well, we live mistreatment.
I'm not really tracking your whole shit here.
I'll be very honest.
And I'm not tracking yours, but it's really.
I'm just listening to you.
No shit.
But you know, the thing that I want you to know, if you hear anything, the one thing that we have always been accused of is stereotyping, having an issue that doesn't exist, because that's what people who deflect.
I'm not accusing you of any of that.
But you just told me my experience wasn't real.
No, I said you can't formulate public policy on your experience.
But you don't know how big my experience is.
Well, like, let me give you an example.
A friend of mine's dad died because he was suffocated by a seatbelt.
You can't design policy based on that.
But we're not talking about seatbelts.
We're talking about it.
Your experience could be an exception.
It could be one-off.
It could be a misinterpretation.
It could be a feeling.
You're right.
My experience is still my life.
It's still an imprint in my soul.
It's still in my memory.
And you can't read my memory.
You can't wake my memory.
You can't gauge my memory.
You can't evaluate.
You're getting worked up here.
I'm having fun.
Did you tell me I was supposed to have fun?
Well, no, I said to let loose and make sense, which I'm not really understanding.
What's the point of your saying?
I asked how Republicans can win over black voters.
Good Ranchers Fixing the Problem 00:02:43
Let's back up.
Can we back up?
Sure.
I'm just listening.
You asked me for my experience, what I experienced, where I live.
You did ask me that.
Uh-huh.
Okay.
And I told you my experience, and you disagreed with it because you felt it was stereotypical.
Now, you disagreed with it without knowing the scope of where it came from or how it happened.
I pushed back on the generalization that if we both walked into the room, they would immediately assume the white man's in charge.
Well, I tell you what.
I disagree with you.
That's okay.
I'll tell you what we can do.
You want to know what we can do?
Ask 25 black people and ask 25 honest white people.
Because ask them if we were both in a room and somebody came in and went to the bathroom.
That's a ridiculous thing.
Okay.
Look, inflation is out of control.
One area we see it more than ever is the grocery store.
Even though grocery prices feel like they've doubled, Good Ranchers' prices have stayed low and affordable.
Once you subscribe, it's locked in.
The price never goes up.
Your best price is locked in for life.
They sell 100% American meat and deliver it to your door for a great price.
Good Ranchers help solve your meat problem.
And the problem is 85% of the grass-fed beef in stores and online is imported.
Shop Good Ranchers for all your beef, chicken, and seafood needs.
Their pre-trimmed and pre-marinated chicken breasts are absolutely delicious.
I love Good Ranchers, and you guys should too.
Their animals are ethically raised and they're beautifully sourced.
They do the things the right way and it shows in every box.
Good Ranchers takes the guest work out of the meat aisle and grocery shopping.
Get a steakhouse quality at home with Good Ranchers.
Right now, go to goodranchers.com slash Charlie and do it right now.
It's Good Ranchers, American Meat Delivered.
I love Good Ranchers.
When Good Ranchers get delivered to our home or to our office, it's something incredible.
If you don't buy the meat in your house, tell the person who does to check out Good Ranchers, support the Charlie Kirk Show, support America, goodranchers.com slash Charlie.
You wanted to know about the Republican landscape?
Yeah, I was just kind of curious about it.
Or Tulsa or just generally, like, what are conservatives doing wrong or what they could do better?
First of all, I don't think, I think wrong is probably a little strong only because we do what we know.
And we do what we know because it's what we've been trained to do.
The only thing that I would look forward to is a rich, open dialogue.
For example, I have some powerful friends in Oklahoma, and they are part of how I got elected.
These people want to know how to fix the problem.
This is the counsel I give to everyone in this position.
My counsel is if you have a situation, you have a problem, if you acknowledge it and then take the lead in fixing it, you own the fix.
If someone has to fix it for you, then you've lost your grip.
Biblical Responsible Investing Industry 00:06:26
So tell us more about Price University and the work that you're doing.
Well, Price University was born out of the idea that we could not accredit apostles and prophets and the five-fold and the threefold.
You can get a degree as an evangelist, pastor, or teacher.
You cannot get a degree in the traditional setting as a prophet or an apostle.
Yet we're supposed to be first and second.
Well, if we can't be accredited, if we can't be credentialed so that we sit at those tables and contribute to the decisions and the actions, then we're just figureheads.
And so I founded Price University curriculum.
I designed it for, it's taken me 25 years.
I designed it over 25 years.
I wrote most of the textbooks, and we're now en route to accreditation.
So, and this is in Oklahoma, is that?
Oklahoma.
But it's also online.
So talk to us just kind of in general about some of this kind of social decline we're seeing, the transgender movement, all of this.
Do you have comments on this?
Do you talk about this openly?
Yeah.
Now, come on, Charlie.
You know what I'm saying?
Tell me.
Literally.
Literally, I talk about it, and I just got through discussing it.
People ask, how did we get here?
We got here by first diminishing sex.
We took sex out of the sanctity.
I completely agree with that.
Then we went from there to we went from taking it out of marriage to making it, making it an obsession.
You have a pimple because you haven't had sex.
You know, you're cranky because you haven't had sex.
See, I'm old enough to remember those arguments.
No, that's exactly right.
So we went from there.
Then we moved forward to everybody needs sex just to feel good about themselves.
Now, all of that was opening the door.
But what really knocked down the gate was Woodstock.
Interesting.
Woodstock.
Okay.
Because it's known as the free love, free sex.
Yeah, for sure.
We've talked about Woodstock a lot on this program.
And so it knocked it down.
And what it did was it also ushered in a whole lot of unclean forces that made it, that's inseminated our entire environment, our psychic, if you will.
From there, we came up with the idea of what?
Merchandising it.
And you and I both know when you take an ideology and you merchandise it, it becomes an industry.
And so what do we have?
Sex on Wall Street.
Did we ever think we'd see that?
In my time, I never imagined we'd see that.
It is now an industry.
They call it the sex trade industry.
So once you add the financial or the money factor, it's not going to reverse.
Too many people are invested in it.
So now we've gotten sex out there.
So then, oh man, we're bored with just straight sex.
Let's go and bring up, as they say, let's let the homosexuals out of the closet because this is an industry.
And so can an industry define how we're going to do this?
So now we have them out of the closet.
Well, we've done that.
They're out of the closet.
We're giving them, you know, rights.
They have bought into everything because when you track their movement, they bought the right to say.
And they paid for their place.
So now we go there, and now we have the other last major milestone is what?
Transgenderism.
Let's just change our sex.
I remember when I grew up, an applications had gender on it, not sex.
Now, but they had to save that word for today.
So we have transgender, cosmetic transformation of your gender or your sexual orientation.
Because the transgender is a cosmetic version of God's creation.
So basically, your argument is that there's been this moral decline of the last couple decades, and Woodstock was really this kind of center point of a lot.
Is that right?
Yeah, I think it was, to me, it was the institutional trigger.
Its job was to tear down the institution of monogamy.
So Dr. Price, how could people follow you and your website or get behind you?
You can go to meetpaulaprice.com and you can find everything you need to know about me there.
Dr. Price, this was fun and lively.
And can get to another guest here, but I want to thank you for being honest and candid and God bless you.
Seriously, and thank you for your great work.
With all the noise surrounding the topics of money and the economy, today more than ever before, you need a financial guide that you can trust.
That's why I trust PAX Financial Group.
Not only do they share my conservative values, they are committed to putting your interests ahead of their own.
Big Wall Street firms are forcing their political agendas into your investments.
And it's time to stop giving your money to companies that don't share your values or use their profits, my profits, as a way to silence Christians.
PAX is proud to offer an alternative called BRIs, Biblical Responsible Investing.
Look, I got to know the people behind PAX Financial at a pro-life dinner in San Antonio.
I got to know them and they told me about biblical responsible investing.
And at first, I wasn't really sure what to make of it.
But as I got to know the team behind PAX Financial, we agreed to partner with them here on the Charlie Kirk Show.
Biblical Responsible Investing supports and promotes our values of being pro-family and pro-life and screens out companies that support pornography or anti-Christian or anti-conservative.
If you have $150,000 or more in investments, text them, Charlie, at number 74868.
Text them, just Charlie, right now to number 74868.
They'll be able to schedule a 15-minute free no-obligation consultation.
I'm moving some of my money over to PAX Financial.
And honestly, I hope they do well with it with some of the returns.
But I'm happy that part of my portfolio will be able to go towards biblical responsible investing.
I think they're going to crush it for me in the market, but I'll be able to know that my hard-earned dollars are not going towards pornography, anti-Christian, pro-BLM nonsense.
You'll be connected with a financial advisor who will walk this through with you.
Text Charlie at number 74868 today.
Invest in companies that don't hate you.
Invest in companies that I believe are actually consistent with biblical truths.
Go to biblical responsible investing.
If that interests you, text right now to 74868.
Just Charlie in the body there.
Check it out right now.
Brought to you by PAX Financial Group PAX.
With us right now is Cynthia Garrett, who is a TV host at TBN and also part of the Salem family and an evangelist.
Welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Living Life as a Victim 00:10:22
Thanks.
It's good to be here.
How are you?
Thank you.
Good.
So just introduce yourself a little bit further to our audience.
Oh, gosh.
Let's see.
Well, it's great to be here.
I'm a fan of yours.
I love what you young Turks are doing, to be honest with you.
I've been a television host for a long time.
Yeah, you young Turks.
I don't know about you.
I'm not sure.
Oh, okay.
That's an insult, but okay.
All right.
It's not.
Oh, yeah, it is.
It's a compliment.
No, no, no.
The young Turks were like the Hitler youth, but that's okay.
We'll talk about that later.
Seriously.
Yes.
Okay, well, in Hollywood, where I grew up, young Turks were the guys that actually ran the industry.
Oh, really?
Yes.
Okay.
Got it.
Yeah, my son.
Because there's a left-wing organization called the Young Turks.
See, but Charlie, I'm not that hit.
That's okay.
You're good.
I'm not that cool.
I'm younger than you.
No, you're very cool.
I'm older than you by far.
That's okay.
No, I've been in television my entire life, to be honest with you.
I started out, I became the first woman of color to ever be given a network late night show.
I started out on VH1, went to NBC Network, and then have been under network contract for years.
My faith started me producing faith-based TV shows and content for TBN and other Christian platforms like Salem.
And, you know, I do publish my books through Salem.
I did my first book with them, well, my second book with them, actually.
My second book is called I Choose Victory: Moving from Victim to Victor, which was released at the height of the pandemic.
And not a lot of people wanted to talk about not being a victim through the last year.
But why do you think that is?
Why do people enjoy being victims?
Because I think there's something called poverty of the mind that has afflicted America.
What is that?
That's interesting.
What is it?
It's interesting.
It means I'm a victim.
I go to victims' groups because in the beginning, it makes me feel like I'm not a freak and I'm okay.
But then somewhere along the way, you get entrenched in being a victim and holding on to victimhood because it sort of releases you from taking responsibility for your own move from victimhood to victory.
And the choice is really ours individually to make.
A lot of bad crap has happened to me in my life, and I could certainly stop and be angry.
Or I could move forward and take the hand that life gave me and move into my own success.
And that's always been my choice.
So, what compelled you in your own personal journey to then become a victor?
I mean, because that's not a step a lot of people make people make.
No, my faith and my father.
My dad, Bernard Garrett Sr., became the first black man to ever own banks, white banks.
He owned and controlled seven white banks in America throughout the South and the state of Texas in the early 60s.
So imagine the frame of reference, right?
My dad had to disguise himself as a chauffeur or a janitor to get into his own board meetings.
There's a movie on Apple called The Banker.
Hollywood changed my mother to a black woman in the banker to keep the race narrative alive.
My mother's as white as you.
So they changed it to try to make it, what was the scheme there?
I think the steam there was they made an unauthorized film about a national treasure, my father.
And in order to deal with keeping the race divide alive in this nation, you couldn't be able to do that.
If there was a white mother, it becomes less of a thinking.
I agree.
That's fascinating.
I interrupted you, though.
So your father impacted you.
My father, yeah, my father said to me on his deathbed, you know, honey, life is going to deal you wrongs.
It's going to do you harm.
But you have a choice to make.
So you can take the first 20 minutes and grieve and get something bad out of your system.
But after 20 years, you're a fool because you are the only one that can make the choice to take the hand that you have and choose victory with it.
And so I was raised by parents.
I mean, my parents marched on Washington with Martin Luther King.
I was raised by parents who sacrificed to make sure that we could have advantages.
And even with disadvantages, I was raised by people who always said it's still my choice.
You know, it's my choice.
I mean, anger and unforgiveness will kill you.
And that's the problem we have in America today, unfortunately, is a lot of people don't want to forgive what's gone on in their past.
Yeah.
And you think that there's more comfort in being a victim?
You know, I do.
I think that there's more comfort in choosing to be a victim because then you don't have any responsibility.
You just, unfortunately, you just sort of drown, though, In anger and bitterness and entitlement, you know, and it's, yeah, I do think there's more comfort in it.
Charlie, I also think that a lot of people just don't know how to make the choice.
I don't think that people, you know, if you really explain to someone what living their life as a victim in their mind really does to them and what it does to their children and what it does to their communities and generation upon generation, I think that there could begin to be an understanding of the fact that you got to just at some point say, I got to get over this.
I got to get past this.
I have to take responsibility for myself.
And unfortunately, our country, especially our current administration, likes to basically keep victims victim because you can control people when they choose to identify with all these different victim groups.
That's exactly right.
So your faith helped you a lot as well.
My faith is everything.
Sure.
With God, all things are possible.
I mean, I don't take, I don't listen, I don't read the Bible and pick and choose what I believe.
I'm a literalist in terms of the word of God.
It is true.
If it is in the word of God, it is true.
And so I've lived my life taking him at face value.
And when I take him at face value, he never proves me wrong.
So I believe that I can do all things.
And you spread this message across the country.
Every chance I get.
I really, I left a very successful Hollywood career to make faith-based programming where there is no money.
You know, ministry is, will you do it for free?
Right.
But for me, I didn't need the money.
I needed people to understand the gospel that really has saved my life and has set me free in so many ways.
You know, and so that's, I love to share that with other people.
And I think it's what's missing even in the political landscape.
I often say we don't necessarily have a Democrat problem or a Republican problem.
We have a Jesus problem.
We had a real big Jesus problem in America.
And to think that this country wasn't founded on Jesus is to lie to yourself.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
So talk about the state of women in America right now.
We have a lot of female listeners.
We do believe in the differences between men and women.
So what's the state of women in America?
Are they in a healthy state or an unhealthy state?
Generally, of course.
Generally, I think women are in an unhealthy state again, but I think it's gone beyond unhealthy.
I think we're in a dangerous state.
Dangerous because when you start to embrace and support a culture that says to you, and to your little girl, she's cute, but now a guy can also be her.
That's a problem because now you're basically abusing her.
And I think what we're doing in terms of a lot of the issues to try to love and help the marginalized, you know, this whole transgender movement, I have compassion for anyone struggling with identity in any way.
Now, I happen to believe that all identities should be rooted in Christ.
Amen.
That said, I also have great compassion for little girls who are now being told you have to compete against men and they can be you because they identify with you.
And we're discounting science and biology.
I'm obsessed with what's going on with Leah Thomas, the transgender swimmer.
Sure, she's sweeping NCAA events.
Yeah, right.
She's sweeping these events.
He, right.
And he's beating these girls.
Of course, he is.
And these times and records that are being set, no woman can come along and break these times because they weren't set by a woman.
So why do you think there's large science, a lot of silence from most of the feminist groups on this?
Oh, feminists should be up in arms.
I think because feminists have backed themselves in a corner.
If they get up in arms and speak out against it, they're kind of going against a group, the LGBTQ, who's sort of lumped into their we're all marginalized, we all want to fight together group.
In reality, feminists really, feminists really have a big problem because if feminism is meant to protect women, just like Title IX, Title IX is really implemented to protect young girls in sports, right?
So, I mean, based on sex, we're not protecting them based on sex, not when we're letting men who identify as women compete against them.
So, I think, I think, look, I think feminism caused a lot of problems in our country.
I mean, I don't even know where to start.
I mean, let's face it, you know, I love being a woman, you know, and I've never felt marginalized or I've never felt less intellectual, less capable.
I've never felt unintelligent.
My husband supports me.
I'm a very strong, powerful, independent female.
However, I love my role as a wife and a mother.
I love them.
I embrace my God-given role.
And unfortunately, people don't understand what it means to sit under a proper male covering.
I do because I understand biblically that Jesus Christ is my proper covering.
And when I submit to a man who loves the Lord, guess what?
I'm okay.
A lot of female listeners we have struggle with that.
They say, I will never submit to a man.
Yeah, I hear you, sisters.
You know what?
I said the same thing.
I remember when my husband asked me to get married, and I looked at him and I said, Are you?
Listen, I got to tell you something.
I love you, but I will never submit.
I'm not down with that.
And he said to me, He goes, you know what?
You don't know the whole chapter.
You're stopping at part of the scripture.
Husbands love your wives like Christ loved the church.
Husbands, be willing to die for your wives the way Christ died for the church.
Now, listen, the problem for all you female listeners, the reason why you don't want to submit is you're probably dating a guy who not only wouldn't die for you, he doesn't know anything about.
He doesn't have any testosterone or anything else.
That's probably part of the problem.
I'm very honest.
The state of young men is a joke.
The state of young men is a joke.
Cynthia Garrett on Young Women 00:07:56
Yeah, no, it's true.
Yeah, but, well, because if, listen, the agenda is clear.
If we can make all young men pansies, and we can release all young men from responsibility for men.
Women become men.
That's right.
So women become men.
And ultimately, it's an attack on marriage.
And if marriage is attacked, now this is going to maybe go a little bit further than a lot of your listeners can follow me, but try to hear me on this.
Marriage is the paradigm of what we as faith believers believe, that we're the bride.
Yeah, that's right.
The church.
That's what our listeners are tracking.
Okay, we're the bride, right?
We're the bride of Christ.
He's the bridegroom.
We're waiting for what?
The great wedding feast of the lamb.
If we destroy the concept of marriage here on earth, there's no understanding of any of that in the Bible.
It now sounds like malarkey.
That's so interesting.
So as marriage is destroyed, the theological significance of that illustration just goes away.
Absolutely.
And if the theological illustration and the significance of it goes away, what happens now to all the lost souls down here on this earth trying to find happiness outside of their actual identity as created by God?
They perish.
They do, and they are, unfortunately.
How could people follow you or support you?
www.cynthiagarrett.org.
Cynthia Garrett Garrett Ministries.
You have some very important things to say.
Thank you.
Yeah, it's very, especially in these confusing and turbulent times.
Hey, everybody, Charlie Kirk here.
As you know, Mike Lindell has a passion to help everyone get the best sleep of your life.
He created the Giza dream bedsheets.
They look and feel great, which means an even better night's sleep for me.
Mike found the world's best cotton called Giza.
Mike's latest incredible deal is the sale of the year.
For a limited time, you'll receive 60% off the Giza Dream Sheets that come with a 60-day money-back guarantee and a 10-year warranty.
You receive a set for as low as $39.99 for a limited time with a purchase.
You will receive Mike's soft cover book free when you use promo code Kirk.
Go to mypillow.com and click on the Radio Listener Square and use promo code Kirk.
Along with this offer, you'll also get deep discounts on all my pillow products and my pillow talent sets and so much more.
Call 1-800-875-use promo code Kirk on mypillow.com.
That's promo code Kirk.
I just bought a dog bed.
It's amazing.
Check it out right now: mypillow.com, promo code Kirk.
Mike Lindell is a great American.
He sits on the Turning Point USA Advisory Board.
Go to mypillow.com, promo code Kirk, mypillow.com, promo code Kirk.
We were just talking about the Apple TV film about your father and how they butchered the story.
I just find that so interesting because the narrative is a true one that your father had to go through incredible racial hurdles to accomplish success.
However, there is a factual component that they just revised that he was married to a white woman.
And I could just imagine the Apple TV screenwriters being like, yeah, that's an inconvenient fact.
It doesn't really fit the narrative.
Well, you know, it's interesting because the filmmaker is a guy named George Nolfi, who did the adjustment bureau, who was sued before for things like this, but whatever.
But in doing the film with my older half-brother, the big turning point in the whole thing, which is why Apple originally shelved the film, was because he sexually molested my sister and I.
So imagine you have this woman whose face is as white as yours.
Your father did?
Or the brother.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Okay, got it.
My mom took my father's son from his first marriage into our home for a few years when my sister and I were little girls at that point to help because he was having problems with his mom.
Imagine my mother's feelings.
Fast forward 30 years.
My father's not here.
My mother is the only person alive who can tell the story of what really happened because Melvin Belli, who defended my dad, is dead.
Joe Tunnehill, who also defended Jack Ruby, is now dead.
He defended my father.
I have letters from these men.
I have tons of it's it's a it's a crazy story Charlie because it I think about my mom looking at Nia Long, I think it is playing her and my mom's going, she's black.
Am I the inconvenient truth when I help you?
Well, the point is that they wouldn't want in a Hollywood film to show the protagonist that actually was treated well by white people and poorly.
Right.
Because that's life.
That was actually life in the 1950s and 60s.
And life is a big spag.
Complicated.
Yeah, that's right.
It's complicated.
It's true.
Race is not.
It wouldn't have made for the slam dunk story.
Exactly.
But actually, it would have been really interesting for the viewer, right?
It was so much more interesting, you would think, because especially today, what viewers need today is to see how complicated life actually is.
And how your mother fought for him, too.
My mother.
Against other white people.
My mother marched with King.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, totally.
Like, she's an amazing woman.
It's sick that they have to do that.
It really is.
That's such an important thing.
Anyway, I didn't mean to get sidetracked by that.
That's right.
A lot of young women are listening to this.
They say, I'll get married later in my life.
I'm going to put my career first.
You know, is there anything wrong with that?
What's your opinion on kind of that overdrive of career that seems the least married generation in history?
Yeah.
I mean, look, I understand it in a lot of ways.
I put my career first for many, many years.
I actually ended up, I mean, my first marriage was a disaster.
And so I use that to continue to put my career first.
And I'm married to an amazing man now.
I found him late in life at like 40.
Wow.
But, you know, I got to tell you, I understand what young women go through today, but it's really rooted in identity crisis.
You know, I think if I could say anything, and it's the thing I say to all young women, is that you're precious.
You're daughters of a king.
God loves you.
And your identity as written by him is that you're meant to be honored and loved.
And there's nothing wrong with needing or desiring to have a mate, a spouse, because when we're covered properly with love, it's a beautiful thing.
I don't understand why your generation is the least married generation.
I know why.
I mean, but I have my theories.
Well, when you decouple sex and marriage, then people think you can get pleasure without commitment, which is the hookup culture.
That's part of it.
But it's more than hookup.
It's people that are just dating for eight years because they feel as if I could do whatever I want to do without the commitment as well.
Right, right.
Which is a sister of the hookup culture.
Don't you think that has something to do with driving faith out of the dialogue?
Yeah, it's the least religious generation in history.
It's just scary.
Yeah.
It is.
It's terrifying.
And childless and all the others.
So we have to have you come speak at our Young Women's Leadership Summit.
I'd be on you.
In Dallas.
We have 3,000 young women that come every June.
Oh, conservative Christian women.
It's really special.
I do.
I speak at a lot of conferences, and I got to tell you, in South Africa, I'll go 40,000, 50,000 young women.
It's really powerful what you see sisterhood can do to really break down a lot of these.
Well, I'm a big believer in this.
I mean, we actually believe in the difference between men and women.
Yeah, there is a difference.
That's a thought crime to say in America.
You mean you don't want to arm wrestle me right now?
No, and I don't believe men can become pregnant.
I know that's a very difficult thing for people to hear.
Well, you ask people the apple.
They think they can.
They have the pregnant man emoji.
It's ridiculous.
Website again that people can follow you.
CynthiaGarrett.org.
CynthiaGarrett.org.
Thank you for joining.
This was a lot of fun.
Thanks.
I'd love to see you again.
I'd love it.
Everybody, thank you for listening today and subscribe to the Charlie Kirk Show podcast.
Email me your thoughts as always, freedom at charliekirk.com.
We deeply appreciate your support.
Thanks so much for listening.
God bless.
For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to CharlieKirk.com.
Export Selection