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Oct. 4, 2023 - Candace Owens
33:23
Candace Owens REACTS to Woke College Students
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Happy Wednesday, everybody. Is it me or are a lot of men acting and looking like sissies these days?
I'm being serious. I don't know if it's just because I'm pregnant with a boy and I do tend to be a little more aggressive, but I feel like I could beat up a lot of men today when I look around.
Plus, later on in the show, it has been exactly one year since I put on the White Lives Matter shirt with Kanye West at Paris Fashion Show.
So we are going to put that on, rewind, and reflect.
What did I learn from all of that?
All that and more today coming up on Candace Owens.
All right, let's start with the facts.
There have been significant reductions in testosterone levels observed over time.
In one study conducted in 2007, they observed that testosterone decreased by about 22% when comparing 1985 levels to those from 2002.
That is significant, 22%.
In another study that was conducted in 2021, researchers found a roughly 25 decrease in testosterone levels Between 1999 and 2016, that is a tremendous decrease in testosterone levels.
There can be no doubt that your grandfather and his father had higher testosterone levels than you
Assuming that you are a male living in today's society So why is that I don't know why I won't be able to answer
that a lot of people have their own theories and people Think it's the food some people think
It's the things that are being sprayed on the crops other people have other theories what I will say is that that
never Became more clear to me than when I was watching a
documentary which I really recommend every person watches It was on Netflix, but it was amazing
It was called World War two in color and they essentially went back and they had all the footage from World War two
and just Colorized it as they told the story and they did a very
good job. It was a political story So apolitical, in fact, that as I was watching this documentary, and I never cry, but I was really boo-hoo crying watching this, because suddenly you could really see the faces of those individuals, those soldiers, and you cried for the German soldiers, you cried for the American soldiers,
you cried for the Japanese soldiers, because it became apparent how young they were.
You know, you're talking about men that were 18 years old knowing that they were going to die for their country.
When I say no, and you're talking about the Japanese young men that were going on suicide missions.
Do you imagine that? You are going out and you know that today is going to be the day that you die.
It's incomprehensible.
And then they told the story of the Battle of Midway and they honed in on these pilots who were going out and they were flying, knowing that they did not have enough fuel to get them back.
So you imagine these young American pilots, 18, 19, 20, knowing that they did not have enough fuel to get back.
Again, incomprehensible to imagine the bravery that these young men had.
And then you think about the women who were sending their sons.
I can't imagine sending my son at the age of 18 knowing for certain that he's going to die, right?
Women were stronger back then.
Men were stronger back then.
And they looked at it. Go look at the photos of those 18-year-olds who served in World War II. They look like men, right?
You can see their boyish features and their boyish eyes, but they look bigger than the 18-year-olds that we are producing today.
Which brings me to something that I do every year, multiple times a year.
I visit college campuses, and I just want to give myself a pat on the back for being able to stand there and to do it right now, especially.
I am... Eight months pregnant, having to sit into this room and to deal with people, not people who are going out knowing if they don't have enough fuel to get home, going out knowing if they're going to die for their country, but people that think it's an act of bravery to have to listen to a conservative speak.
Oh my God, I feel so sad for these people.
How am I going to be able to sit here and listen to a conservative speak?
It always makes me angry, actually, when I see the individuals, the adults, the young adults that we are producing today, because I think about that.
I think about the past, which is so recent, really, in our American history, our very short American history.
And then I compare them to these individuals who I speak in front of, and then they get the courage to ask me a question.
They stand up, and they try to have what they believe is their Martin Luther King moment.
They're going to say something strong and assertive to Candace Owens.
It's going to be, I have a dream speech.
It happens over and over again.
Well, yesterday I visited a campus up in Albany, New York, and as was to be expected, I had a very short fuse with these children because I'm not here to raise you.
I don't know why you turned out this way.
I don't know why you think that it's an act of bravery to ask a conservative a question or to insult a conservative.
But I was required to answer these individuals for about 30 minutes, and it was just incredible how many people from the queer community had something to say to me.
Take this young woman as an example.
Take a listen. What do you have to say to the trans students on this campus who actively feel victimized by your presence here today?
Additionally, you just pointed out that this man detransitioned, but earlier in your speech...
Guys, I want to hear her. Go ahead.
What do I have to say?
Just the question, please.
No speech. What is the question?
What do you have to say to the trans students on this campus who feel actively victimized by your presence here?
Life's tough. Get a helmet, man.
I'm too pregnant for this.
Next question. My goodness.
Seriously, somebody just give out free hugs or something.
Somebody give out free hugs.
I can't be your mommy, okay?
I'm too pregnant. I can't be your mommy.
Over and over again, I was being asked to be their mommies.
They wanted to talk about their feelings.
They don't have any facts.
They just want to talk about how they feel.
And they're coming to these college campuses to be coddled.
That's what's going on. People are spending upwards to $60,000 per year to be coddled.
In their various identities and the things that they want to say.
Here's another example.
So that girl was just victimized by my presence.
What do I have to say? I'm victimized by you just being here holding a mic and speaking.
Well, this woman was much bolder in her assertion that she knew exactly who she was.
Take a listen. As a non-binary person, what do you have to tell me about my identity?
Because I know for a fact I'm not confused.
Okay. Next question.
Great statement. That's a statement.
That's a statement. Okay.
You know your identity.
You're not confused. Congratulations, sweetheart.
Thank you very much for your statement.
What was she looking for there?
What did she expect me to say?
Why would I care?
If she's so confident in exactly who she is, why is she snarling at me to stand up and
tell me that?
Go live your best life.
Truly, from the bottom of my heart, I mean that.
Then, of course, came a guy who asked a very long question because, like I said, they all
think that they're having a brave moment that's going to circulate on the internet and they're
going to be seen as a hero to the queer community.
And he even prepared a special shirt for me to wear.
Yes, you're not going to see it in this clip, but underneath his sweatshirt, he did some art.
He wore a shirt that said F you and he had one of his friends recording it because so brave to do artwork.
And Candace Owens comes to speak and to hide an F you shirt underneath your sweatshirt.
Take a listen to what he had to say.
My question isn't specifically about anything you really said tonight, although I don't really agree with anything you said.
I'm proudly part of the LGBTQ community.
I've always stood up for my community whenever I needed to.
I want to focus specifically on, I've been listening to you for a little bit just to understand some things, a livestream you did about Pride Month in June on Facebook because you were no longer allowed on YouTube.
The event that you were talking about, I actually had the honor of attending that event with a lot of my really close friends, and I found it very perplexing to me how you choose to only focus on the things that are negative when it comes to the queer community.
Sorry, when it comes to what community?
The queer community. Okay.
Like, do you not realize that People like you and people like the people you're around and that, you know, continue to have this idea of us are the reason we feel that we have to be so openly proud of who we are.
Your demented homophobic and transphobic rhetoric and rants just further prove our point that we have to fight loudly to be respected.
The reason that LGBTQIA plus suicide rates are so high in this country isn't just because we're part of the community.
It's because there are people like you who make us feel like we don't belong.
The only LGBTQ agenda we have is...
Okay, is there a question in there or a speech?
You've got to ask a question, buddy.
I know you wrote this out in your notes, but ask a question.
Let's go. How do you and how do you think other people with your beliefs respond to the fact that your hateful and harmful rhetoric costs the lives of queer children every single day, on average, every 45 seconds?
Okay, so this is just going to be a pure boogeyman You're pretending that someone committed suicide because of Candace Owens.
You've got no facts here. You're just going, it's your rhetoric that's causing all of this.
When in reality, you want to talk about the tea?
I sat down with a man named Walt Heyer who was convinced to chop his penis off after your community told him that there was something wrong with him because he had confusion.
Why was he trans? Because he was molested when he was four years old by his uncle.
Rather than being sat down and spoken to by a psychologist, he was handed hormone pills and he eventually chopped off his penis.
Walt Heyer is now 80 years old.
He de-transitioned and he does a lot of work talking about why it is that he runs a charity, okay, an actual charity that is dedicated to sex change regret of people who have changed their parts and can't go back.
And you know what happens? Suicide rates go up after they transition.
After they transition. And Candace Owens wasn't the one that chopped their off.
All of this to say it thoroughly depresses me when I visit college campuses today, when I see the state of manhood and the state of womanhood.
And I hope that you understand why.
When you look at these individuals and you see what they deem to be acts of bravery and acts of glory, and you weigh it against the heroes of the past, it's depressing.
I don't know That everything that they do is special.
That everything that they say is rational.
Rather, we need parents to return to actual parenting.
And that's what it feels like when I go on college campus.
I feel like I am being asked to be everybody's mommies and daddies.
And I'm happy to do it. I have a few more stops coming up, one in Buffalo, one in Georgia.
There will always be protesters.
They exist there.
In conclusion, I will restate that I don't know what is contributing to the drop in testosterone rates, but I'm observing it absolutely everywhere.
And there's no doubt that in the Western world, we are facing a crisis of a shortage of masculinity.
We don't need less masculinity, far be it from what the feminists have told us about toxic masculinity.
We need more of it.
And that's all I have to say about that.
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Okay, now it's time for some topics du jour So it's the one-year anniversary since I put on the white
lives matter shirt in Paris during Paris Fashion Week next to Kanye West
And when I saw these memories popping up on my phone and on my Facebook, I was like, oh, we got to talk about that because it is without question easily the most iconic thing that I've ever done in my career, the most viral thing I've ever done in my career, and that obviously is due to the fame level.
Of Kanye. Well, now he goes by just Ye.
And reflecting on that time, it was just so crazy because I could have never imagined the response that we got to putting on these shirts of saying something that was so obvious and reflecting upon just that period, first and foremost, me being postpartum.
Literally the entire time that I was on this trip, I was still breast pumping and still dealing with all the emotions of that.
And then you get a phone call from someone like Ye and he asks you, Whether or not you will get on a plane overnight to come to Paris.
And I kid you not, when I tell you this was a last-minute trip, I mean to say that we decided to book the tickets at 9 p.m.
the night before. My assistant woke up to a text from me, which I think I sent her at 11 p.m., which said, you need to be on the 11 a.m.
You could imagine the scramble that she had to do packing to get to Paris and I had to do packing to get to Paris
And to make it in time for his show which was happening the next day had no idea what he had in mind
He had asked me to just be there and then when I walked in he held up the shirt and
Said will you wear this and there was no conversation about it
There was absolutely no conversation about it because I think we both understood that it had to be done
you know often on this show I talk about the natural equilibrium of the world and
How I believe that when the pendulum swings one way it will necessarily have to swing the other way
And when he held up his shirt, I understood it was one of those moments.
It was one of these moments where we had to commit ourselves to swinging the pendulum.
I mean, the madness that had ensued because of Black Lives Matter, the lies that were being told, people saying that this is really just about equality, and we're saying Black Lives Matter because it should, and the phrase doesn't mean anything.
It doesn't imply that Black Lives Matter more.
And so I knew the artistic and the creative direction behind what Kanye wanted to do.
He wanted to test a theory.
You know, if people genuinely aren't bothered, and this isn't about a movement of people
that are trying to make white people beneath, somehow beneath black people, which we saw examples of them
in the streets, bowing down, shining their shoes.
I mean, what took place in this country after George Floyd was sickening.
It was reverse racism, or as I like to call it, racism.
It's just racism.
There's no such thing as reverse racism.
And as people were told that they were made to feel guilty, they had to be guilty for being born whites,
that they had to account for the sins of their great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, great,
great, great ancestors.
People that had never owned slaves were now somehow being made to feel guilty about slavery
by people who were never slaves.
This wasn't some great reckoning that we saw with Black Lives Matter movement.
Highly what was being done was the highest levels of fraud that was being committed.
And my documentary that we had created was meant to expose all of that.
And so by putting on a simple shirt that said White Lives Matter, we were testing the theory because truly if you believe that that's implied, this shirt wouldn't upset you.
But of course it did upset people because how dare you say that?
How dare you say that White Lives Matter?
I remember the next morning waking up in Paris and just the phone going off like crazy, all of these headlines.
And I remember Ye called me.
He was staying in a different hotel than me that was just one block up.
And he said, so, how are you feeling?
And I said, I don't really know what to feel processing, just the world processing this.
He said, you know, originally I wasn't going to say anything because I wanted the shirt and the art to speak for itself.
And I didn't want to answer the question, what did you mean by White Lives Matter?
Why would you wear this shirt?
What's being implied here when you say White Lives Matter?
But then he said, now I think it's important to answer the question.
Why did you wear a shirt that said White Lives Matter?
The answer is simple, he said, because they do.
It's just such a Kanye way of processing everything.
Yeah, because they do. White lives matter as well.
And that should have been abundantly clear.
And it was so simple and in front of us.
Anyways, it's one of the greatest memories that I have throughout my entire career.
I'm grateful that Kanye included me in that show.
I'm grateful for the madness that followed it.
I'm grateful that we created such an iconic moment and such an iconic shirt.
And I kid you not when I say that I have that exact shirt hanging up in my gym today because it's something that obviously for the rest of my life I will never forget.
And in conclusion, in case people forgot in all of the Black Lives Matter rhetoric, that also, yes, white lives matter because they do.
Alright guys, moving on.
An activist poet has been randomly stabbed to death in front of his girlfriend after they attended a wedding together.
His name was Ryan Carson and he died at the age of 32 years old.
It's tremendously sad. I want to say that off the bat.
But I will tell you why this particular stabbing has political significance and why people are discussing Ryan Carson's death so much today.
Ryan Carson allegedly, according to Andy Ngo, was an Antifa member.
What we can tell you for sure is that Ryan Carson, just like the young man that we showed you yesterday in Philadelphia, was without question a leftist activist.
And bizarrely, just like the young man from Philadelphia that we discussed on yesterday's show, he also was an activist in terms of trying to establish safe havens for drug addicts and for homeless people.
Ryan specifically wanted throughout New York City to establish safe injection sites for drug addicts.
Take a listen to Ryan in his own words.
Hello, my name is Ryan Thorson Carson, and I'm a political organizer and policy analyst from Brooklyn, New York.
Like many people, my life has been shaped by the opioid epidemic that has ravaged our country.
I've lost family and friends to the epidemic, including my best friend to a lethal heroin overdose in 2016.
My story is unfortunately common.
For many, the opioid crisis hits close to home.
It's time to focus on new strategies to fight back.
One strategy is safe injection facilities.
The facilities are a part of a harm reduction approach toward drug use.
They provide sterile injection equipment, information about drugs and basic health care, treatment and rehabilitation referrals, access to medical staff, and, crucially, counseling.
So this is weird. It's a weird thing to take up as a platform, in my opinion.
We now have two young men, this young Ryan Carson and this Philadelphia man, Josh Kruger, who are really focused on making sure that drug addicts feel more at home, right?
That the system is not coming after drug addicts.
Well, as a quick update to Josh Kruger, we remember he was fatally shot in his own home.
Police are also investigating whether or not that was drug-related.
So he himself may have somehow been involved in drug crimes, allegedly.
We'll have to do an update on that story when the police have their conclusions.
But with this guy, Ryan Carson, it is strange to me, as it always is strange to me, that there are people that are trying to convince you that homeless people and drug addicts are really good people, right?
Despite the fact that they're on the streets, and I have spoken out against this tons of times, I have been open about the fact that I have drug addicts in my own family that live on the streets.
The idea that these people are just on some bad times is completely ludicrous.
It is dishonest, and it is a narrative that is going to get people killed.
It's going to get people killed.
These people are desperate.
They will do anything for drugs.
If you gave them $2,000 a month to spend on rent, they would choose to live on the streets and spend every single penny on the next high.
That is the reality.
The majority of people that you see that are homeless on the streets and are screaming at themselves are either high themselves, mentally unstable, or both.
Ryan, who wanted to be a hero to drug addicts and to people that we find that are wandering
the streets, who wanted to create a safe haven for those that are suffering from drug addicts
so that they could shoot up, met an unfortunate fate. He was killed, he was stabbed to death by
a man that I am going to assume, we won't know because he has not yet been caught,
was on drugs given the fact that it was 4 a.m. and he was acting erratically on the streets of New
York. You can take a look at this video to see what happened. I'll talk you through it in case
you're listening to the podcast, but viewer discretion advised. What we have here is Ryan
and his girlfriend sitting on a bench and they begin to walk. They were coming back from a
wedding at 4 a.m. in the morning and what takes place and what you can see is that this man seems
to be kicking something, you can hear it, and Ryan approaches him. His girlfriend stops in her
tracks, Ryan approaches him. Now according to his friends, this is just the kind of guy that Ryan was.
He thought that he could always talk to somebody.
One friend shared a story about how he stopped himself from being mugged by just giving the homeless person his money.
Well, this is not what happens here.
You see, the guy approaches Ryan.
He threatens him. He tells him that he will kill him.
Ryan then begins to defend himself and realizes, obviously, that this is serious.
And then Ryan gets stabbed by this man.
He is on the street, bleeding out.
His girlfriend is above him.
It looks like she's scared to approach him.
She tells another young woman, who appears to maybe know the person that just stabbed him, to just keep the guy back.
Unfortunately, she was not able to save Ryan Carson.
Ryan Carson later died.
Okay, so he spent his last moments on this earth on that sidewalk.
He spent his last moments approaching that individual, likely convinced that he could
somehow do something, that he could somehow stop him.
That it's just the media depiction of homelessness and crime statistics that's wrong, and that
you have no right to be fearful of crazy people.
When you see a crazy person, you cross the street.
You don't approach them.
It is a known thing.
Take it from me. I was born in New York.
I spent seven years in New York City.
But at 4 a.m. in the morning, nothing good can happen in the city.
You get inside. You take an Uber.
You don't take the subway. You don't approach a homeless man.
There is nothing good that happens, no matter how good and fluffy you feel on the inside, no matter how hard you want to virtue signal as a white person that you're not scared of black people, even when they're behaving erratically and acting like they're on drugs, and telling you that they're going to kill you.
By the way, it should be obvious by now that this is why the Marine who took out that homeless person on the subway is a hero because this could have been the conclusion.
He said he was going to harm people on the subway and he likely was going to harm people on that subway.
Except fortunately, there was a Marine there to take care of the circumstance.
You don't wait to find out.
You don't feel goodness in your heart and sadness for this individual.
You protect yourself.
That is what should be abundantly obvious.
Protect yourself. Now, regarding his girlfriend, Claudia Morales is her name that you saw in that video, who was the last person that he saw while he was on this earth.
Claudia is also an activist.
She was a BLM anti-police activist, which is ironic given the fact that they are now asking the police to help them find out who killed Ryan on the streets.
Claudia once posted this long message onto Facebook, which was pro-BLM. And it ended with this.
The police do not protect you.
BLM, hope you're on the right side of history.
Thank you, Claudia, who was referring to protests, participating in BLM protests.
She was pro-defund the police.
And now, of course, she and Ryan's friends are all looking to the police to try to figure out who committed this heinous act.
And it was no doubt a heinous act.
It's not something to applaud. It's sad.
It is sad to me that people continue to delude themselves about the reality of what is happening in Democrat cities.
It is sad to me that these people create videos trying to help drug addicts, trying to help homeless people and trying to further delude others into believing that the problem is simply racism.
The problem is simply that we do not have enough compassion.
You should not be an idiot.
You should not be an idiot. Do not have so much compassion that you would put yourself into harm's way at 4 a.m.
in the morning with a knife-wielding maniac.
That is not compassion.
That is stupidity. So, if I sound harsh, oh well.
Okay? That is a circumstance.
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That's balanceofnature.com, promo code KANDICE. Alright guys, now let's get into some of your comments on episodes past.
These comments were pertaining to disciplining children.
The age-old question, should we be spanking children?
The answer, definitively, is that when kids were spanked, they became better adults, as I said to you.
Everyone in the studio, I went around and asked, everyone was spanked.
Except for this guy right here, the one controlling this camera.
He was the only one who didn't get any spankings, and he's bad.
First comment from Tammy says, Love this episode, Candice.
I have been saying children need more discipline for years.
I was born in South Africa but raised in England with extremely conservative parents.
Yes, they did spank on occasion.
I wasn't allowed to be roaming the streets or going to parties.
School and work was always a priority.
Although I hated it at the time, I am 26 now and look back and I am so grateful to them.
All my friends were having sex at 13, doing drugs and drinking.
I hope to raise my children the same way, although I worry with how the world is going up, this will be difficult.
It is not the norm to have traditional values and boundaries anymore.
As a teacher now, I see how a lack of parenting is affecting the future generations.
Yes, I can only imagine what teachers have to go through or professors have to go through when you see these bubbling babies.
I encountered on that college campus, you know, everybody has a feeling, and I don't know why they think that it's the job of their administrators and their teachers and their professors and the people that come to their college campuses to speak, to deal with their feelings.
They act very much like toddlers, except actually, no, my toddler son acts way more masculine than the little boys that I see on campuses.
The Riza writes, the lack of discipline in many homes is astounding.
I had a job a few months where I was helping a family with their two- and elementary-level age children.
To discipline their children, they used a motivation approach where every single day, both children would receive a gift from Amazon that they used to get them to do their homework or to eat dinner.
Yep.
Yep. You are correct.
The idea of giving your child a gift every day to do their homework or to eat their dinner?
Talk about the inmates running the asylum.
What? That is absolutely insane.
Yep, they will go on to become little narcissists that I will have to then encounter on college campuses.
I am convinced of that.
I will see those kids in a few years.
Wife Life writes, I agree with most of what you say, but I would like to share this.
I once told my son that he can't hit his brother just because he did something that he did not want him to.
And he said, that's what you do.
He was four years old.
I quit spanking them as an experiment, and that was eight years ago.
They have not had any more negative behaviors than they did while spanking.
You don't have to spank them.
You can punish them in other ways that don't physically hurt them.
I'm not, you're not disagreeing with me.
I told you, I don't spank my kids.
I put them in timeout, my son at least, and it has been tremendously effective.
So I have not seen a reason to spank him when timeout, he acts like he's had acid poured on him when I put him in timeout.
You would literally think we were physically beating him That's how much you hate to time out.
So there are effective measures.
I think what I have learned from other parents is that every child is different.
So what works with one child doesn't work on another.
For me, I would say spankings weren't that effective.
I probably think the person that I respected the most, obviously, was my grandfather, and he never laid a hand on me.
But for other kids, people feel that they need that discipline, that they need that structure.
I'm not here to judge how people are raising their kids, but I will judge you if you're not raising your kids.
And I, again...
Have to encounter them on college campuses crying.
Last comment. This person writes, We're keeping attitudes in check and builds muscle and discipline at the same time.
You can't beat it. I have heard about this strategy.
I like it, the military strategy, making them drop down and give you 20.
That feels good to me. I feel like I would be a good sergeant, and when my kids get older, I'm going to make them drop down and give me 20, even if they don't do anything bad, just because it's good.
It's good for people to do push-ups.
It builds character. All right, ladies and gentlemen, that, unfortunately, is all the time that we have for today.
As a reminder, my new 10-part series, Convicting a Murderer, you know, it's available now.
First episode, free on X, also free on YouTube.
Second episode, still free, but it's over on the Daily Wire Plus, and a new episode that drops every Thursday.
That is tomorrow. So you're going to see the whole Brendan Dassey thing that is going to start.
If you're following the Stephen Avery story, you're finally going to See his full confession.
I promise you, even if you're not into true crime, I'm going to bring you in.
You're going to enjoy the cult of true crime.
You're going to love the series. Be sure to check it out.
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