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March 8, 2024 - Fresh & Fit
01:10:09
Candace Owens Meets FreshandFit!
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Thank you.
And we are live.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Freshman Podcast.
We're here with the legendary Candace Owens.
Let's get into it!
Let's go.
Welcome to the Freshwood Podcast, man.
It is Friday and we got a very special guest in the house.
Probably one of the most requested guests we've had in a very long time.
We got Candace Owens in the house.
Yes.
Candace, welcome to the Freshwood Podcast.
We're happy to have you.
Thank you, guys.
I'm excited to be here.
Well, we know who you are.
We support your work.
But for those that live under a rack that might not know who you are, can you please introduce yourself to the people?
Candice Owens.
I'm a podcaster, a public speaker.
I'm repping CT hard, right?
We're repping CT hard tonight, nobody ever says that.
Mother first, also a wife, and yeah, I just tell people what I think.
For whatever reason, we live in a society where people are not allowed to just say what they think, and everyone's trying to, you know, castigate thought.
So, people are probably seeing me on the internet.
I think I'm trending on Twitter right now.
You always are.
Always trending.
Or something.
So, can you tell us a little bit about, you mentioned Connecticut earlier, but, you know, people might not know your past.
Can you tell us a little bit about your upbringing, what family life was like and how you became the woman that you are today?
Yeah, so I was born in New York, but then was raised in Connecticut.
Been in Connecticut pretty much my whole life, like from kindergarten all the way up to graduating in Stanford.
And I mean, life was pretty normal.
My family didn't have a ton of money.
So my grandfather, when I was eight years old, like came to the crappy little apartment that we were living in and was like, I don't want my grandbabies to grow up like this.
And so I moved in.
At eight with my granddad and my grandma, the whole family moved in.
My mom and dad were in there too.
And yeah, I think that was probably what shaped me a lot.
I always say those were the formative years because, you know, eight years old and then through to high school with my grandparents.
And my granddad was like super conservative, not politically inclined.
My family was not politically inclined, but just like read the Bible every morning when he was like making breakfast sort of a thing.
And I obviously hated that when I was in public school and I went the exact opposite way because, you know, public school, atheism, it all is in lockstep.
So I became a liberal, not politically inclined, just believed everything that was coming out of the school system.
So, you know, the racism, the sexism, all of the isms that is pounded into your head every single day.
And then, yeah, I mean, that's kind of my story.
I have two sisters, one brother, so I come from a pretty, what would be considered a big family now.
Very close with my sisters and my brother.
Yeah, I mean, it's nothing too interesting in my childhood.
I don't think so.
And I went to high school right around the same time that you did, and I can definitely attest to the public school system in Connecticut was super woke, very liberal, very, you're a victim, the man is evil, and all this other stuff.
And it wasn't also, because I grew up fairly liberal myself, it wasn't until I graduated from college that I started to see, what the hell, this is BS. Being conservative is not as bad as they try to paint it as.
For me, it was after I graduated from college that I noticed this, but for you, when was it?
Exactly.
I think once you're in the real world, you realize that a loser mentality will yield loser results.
And if you're a person that's hungry and you want to be successful, it's not going to serve you to go around thinking that the world is out to get you.
You want to be a part of the world.
You want to be the purveyor of your own destiny.
And so it just didn't work for me.
I wanted to be successful.
Didn't consider myself to be a victim.
But my big aha moment was definitely, because I wasn't paying attention to politics, but was when Trump came down the escalator.
I hadn't even voted.
I mean, I was that much abstained from politics.
But then, because I grew up listening to hip-hop, Watching them go from, like, everybody loves Trump, hip-hop world, everybody, he's this icon of status, and Jay-Z and Beyonce are sipping poolside at Mar-a-Lago.
I mean, if you're listening to music, it's like, Trump's fine.
And then just like that, a drop of a hat, they were like, no, no, no, actually, he's racist.
He wants to own slaves.
I was like, what?
He definitely hates all black people.
He wants you back in chains.
I was like, the narrative flip was too aggressive for me not to kind of pop up and be like, what's actually behind this?
And then I made a couple of YouTube videos talking about that, and they went viral, and people were essentially calling me a coon, Uncle Tom, just for daring to think outside of the Matrix.
And I'm very stubborn, so if you're going to tell me that I can't be myself, that's my number one thing.
I listened to way too much Kanye music growing up.
So as soon as you're going to tell me that I can't be myself, I'm going to be the biggest myself that you've ever seen.
I'm going to make you hate how much of myself I am.
And I think...
I've done a very good job of doing just that.
There are a lot of people that hate me for daring to be myself.
You've definitely done some things that take a lot of courage.
I'm going to talk about that here in a second.
But you started also something called Blexit.
Can you talk about that a little bit?
Because, again, coming from Connecticut, it's a blue state, right?
And everyone that's colored there, minority, they vote Democrat.
They say fuck the rich people, you know, because people think that, oh, all of Connecticut is rich.
No, that's concentrated in just a few towns on the shore, guys.
Connecticut, actually, if you look at most people, their blue collar workers are not as rich as you think they are.
You know, you're thinking of Greenwich, planting these towns right on the, you know, on the water.
What kind of stimulated you to create Blexit and what was the ideology behind it?
So I think what happened was I started falling down the rabbit hole.
And what I mean is, at first, I would have never gone to FoxNews.com.
That was the worst possible thing you could do as a black person.
And then when I saw them lying about something, I watched a Trump speech live.
It was in Dimmondale, Michigan, where he made his pitch to black America.
And he just started listing statistics and was like...
You know, you've given your vote for 60-ish Democrats.
Why not just do something else?
And I was like, that's not a bad pitch.
Like, I'm not for this dude, but, like, fair.
And then I watched the media that I trusted interpret what he was saying, and they were like, he looked Black Americans in the face, you know, Don Lemon, close to tears, you know, the whole bit, and told them they have nothing and they're poor, and we haven't heard this sort of racist rhetoric since...
And I was like, whoa.
It really made me go, okay, what's actually up?
And so...
I have to be honest because I make it sound like it's so easy, but when you wake up one day and you realize that everything that you thought, that you had been propagandized in the school system, you've been told that this is true forever, that you're justified in every feeling that you ever had, and one day you realize that the exact opposite is true.
That's pretty much how it happened.
I basically just went flip.
You do go through a period of cognitive dissonance.
You actually start to wonder if you're crazy.
How could this possibly...
What do you mean the Democrats aren't here to rescue you?
What do you mean those racist Republicans could actually be trying to help?
That's a lot to go through emotionally.
And it impacts...
It's going to immediately impact your relationships, right?
Because you're coming from...
All your friendships have this viewpoint.
Your family members have this viewpoint.
So to then...
To go through this period of cognitive dissonance, you have to first think you're crazy.
Then I just wanted to read.
And I picked up...
The Coons.
I was like, well, you know, those people that I thought were Coons, what were they saying, right?
And I started reading Thomas Sowell.
And he was a good first step.
Great work.
Yeah.
He was a good first step in terms of educating myself because he's not overtly political.
And he just made the economic arguments.
And I read this book and I was like, wait, I think I... I've been a conservative my whole life.
I just didn't know it.
Actually, I agree with everything that he's saying.
This is what makes sense.
I just want opportunity.
I want to be able to climb a ladder.
And so I went through a year, year and a half of just reading to make sure that I understood what I felt was true.
I was angry, right?
Because then I realized how sinister, how evil, how manipulative, how Machiavellian.
I mean, really, the public school system for black Americans is just a pipeline to the prison system.
And I was like, I am going to now be the loudest voice against this.
And I understood, obviously, the bullets and the arrows that I was going to have to take, but it motivated me to action.
And I just was like, I'm going to start my own YouTube channel and I'm going to start saying stuff that people need to hear for the first time.
I can see that you take things into a different perspective.
You just answer the question, why?
Why is this happening?
What's going on in the background?
Let me ask you this, though.
What about free speech?
Is it really free speech nowadays?
What do you think?
No.
I mean, obviously not.
It's even speech.
The consequence is that people suffer.
So they've kind of gotten around speech.
And if they don't like what you're saying, if they want to control or manipulate what you're saying, they will smear you and libel you.
And so people then will not say something even if they know it's true or even if it's how they actually feel because there is this consequence of, you know, organizations like the ADL that exists literally.
They're not anti-defamation.
They are doing the defamation, right?
Right.
But we're gonna call ourselves anti-defamation, but we're actually the ones that are defaming.
And by the way, everybody, if you want to get educated on the history of the ADL, they literally existed as an arm of a gang, right?
To start calling people anti-Semites when they started looking into gang activities in New York.
So they can miss me.
I assaulted a child.
That's why it was originally created.
Absolutely.
And you can miss me entirely.
And they're still trying to blame it on a black man.
Still trying to blame it on a black man.
Unbelievably wealthy man who raped, sexually assaulted and killed a 13-year-old.
And they're still trying to blame it on a black man, as if Atlanta, Georgia would have not gladly hung a black man for the crime if he had done it.
So now you have these sorts of organizations that are doing this kind of bullying tactic, which is why I was...
Dragging someone on Twitter for the last 24 hours who's been trying to thug life, like, threaten me into speech to compel me to say things I don't believe or to shut up if I do believe them.
And so, no, we don't.
We know he has fucked that guy.
Yeah, he's a horrible human being, horrible backwards human being, definitively racist, there's no question about it.
But yeah, so it's speech with consequences.
And they go, you still have free speech, but we're going to run this whole arm of people that are going to assassinate your character if you don't say the right things.
And I'm not with that at all.
Well said.
You mentioned something, and I didn't want to stop you in your speaking.
You said that the public school system pipelines black children to prison.
What component of the public school system do you think is the most damaging that leads to that?
So this is really important, and I'm glad you asked me this question.
So currently right now in America, 40% of students can't pass a basic literacy exam.
Within inner city communities, that's 70%.
That's true, because the CAPT exam, I don't know if you were, did you take that when you were in Connecticut?
Oh yes, I did.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Half my class failed it.
Okay.
So they can't pass a basic literacy exam.
Yeah.
So they created the public education system for that very reason, to slowly and slowly dumb people down, right?
And the reason why you want to dumb people down, the reason why you want to reverse education, it's actually the Department of Non-Education, is because educated minds can be enslaved.
It's the reason why we had slave codes.
It's the reason why they were not allowed legally to teach black people how to read when they were slaves, right?
And that was such a severe law that if you were a white person in America and you were caught teaching a slave how to read, they punished you too, right?
And so the design of how to enslave people, how it works, how you can do that, has already existed.
Now they're just modernizing it, right?
And so they're giving you a fake education.
Actually, what they're doing is they're emotionally engineering you, which is why we talk about like, oh, believing in you're a victim, all this stuff, because then whenever they want to press a button and get you to go after somebody...
White man, rich man, you'll do it because you're not educated about why you're in that circumstance.
You don't understand how economics works, right?
It's divisive.
Yeah, you don't understand how economics works.
All you understand is you have no money and he has money, right?
And so when they say, oh, go out and do our bidding and scream, you don't even know who is controlling your plantation.
You don't even understand who the plantation supervisor is.
You're just warring.
You're a bunch of slaves that are warring.
And the other reason is to slowly erase history.
It is stunning to me how little we know about history, how little Americans know, how little Christians know about their history.
I mean, once you become awake to everything, you realize that actually what's happening is just holy wars.
Holy wars.
Everything actually really does trace right back to religion and the battle for Earth.
But that is another reason.
It's because then they can edit history or no history.
You live in an ever-present.
You have no idea what's happened and how you got here.
Black Americans thinking LBJ is a hero.
Vowedly racist man.
Well, they own the textbooks.
He who can print the textbooks is king.
This is what happened to you.
This is what happened during World War I. This is what happened during World War II. This is the bad guy.
This is the good guy.
This is all you need to remember.
LBJ signed the Civil Rights Act.
That is true.
Linda B. Johnson, right?
Yeah, but also completely out of context.
The decades in the Senate voted against every single measure that would have given blacks any freedom.
He was an avowed racist.
He said, I will have those N words, hard R, voting Democrat for the next 200 years.
He signed the Great Society Act along with it to enslave black Americans to the Democrat plantation.
And he was forced to sign the Civil Rights Act because of the America was just on fire.
JFK had just died.
There was riots.
There was protesting.
Too much was happening.
And they were like, this you have to get done.
He did it begrudgingly.
But they don't tell you any of that.
They just say, he signed it.
Right?
Not to mention he forced a bunch of military people in the U.S.'s liberty to sign a nondisclosure and not talk about them being attacked by a certain place.
He also, I just learned this actually over the PPD podcast, intentionally drafted black men to Vietnam.
He just was so racist and yet black Americans think.
Yay, that's when we got our freedom.
Nope, that's actually when we were enslaved.
Re-enslaved.
He wanted Kennedy dead.
They never got along either.
Yeah.
He didn't like Robert F. Kennedy either.
Wow.
See, and this is the thing, no one talks about this stuff in history books whatsoever.
No one knows this stuff.
Not in school, at least.
Hell no.
They would never tell you this about Lyndon B. Johnson, but they am.
We just don't know who shot JFK. Oh, okay.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
I'm gonna shatter the CIA and throw him into the wind and then he ends up dead and you're like, I don't know, but CIA just doesn't know who did it.
Damn, they fucking know.
You know, Alan Dulles, the original CIA director, didn't like Kennedy.
Kennedy had a lot of enemies.
We need a Rumble-only episode with Kennedy.
I say it on my show, and I'm on YouTube.
I mean, I just don't care.
I mean, these people are criminals.
It's a criminal enterprise that's running the country, and they're using tactics of blackmail.
Everyone can see it now.
I mean, the Diddy lawsuit, the Jeffrey Epstein stuff, it's all the same.
This is how they've been able to control people.
Did you guys read through that Diddy lawsuit?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I want to get your thoughts.
We've been looking at it.
I know you've been doing a deep dive.
Everyone's talking Diddy from all fronts, literally.
Yeah, that's crazy.
What are your thoughts?
If the person...
Listen, anybody can file a lawsuit, and it can be frivolous.
With the pictures, the photos, the thing that he showed saying I was next door in the bathroom, and he's allegedly, allegedly, allegedly, protect me, YouTube, that he, Diddy, and his son shot someone, and then this is the guy that you called to clean it up, and then he had the photos of...
Obviously, the shooting took place inside and he says this guy comes, he gets the LAPD to come and write a fake report and the LAPD said that the person was shot outside in a drive-by and then he showed how the news reported on it and said, oh, drive-by shooting at a recording studio.
That's crazy.
Like, absolutely crazy.
And, I mean, then you realize that that person that you're supposed to call was the same person that was there, one of the only people there when Michael Jackson died.
Like, Scary stuff.
Oh, yeah.
Scary stuff, you know?
And it rings exactly like the Jeffrey Epstein stuff, where you understand that they're getting...
This person is alleging that you drug people, you know, you get invited to these parties, and you invite underage girls that you know are underage, you invite guys, you groom them for homosexuality.
Freak-offs.
Yeah, freak-offs, as he called them, and then get them on camera doing the stuff, and then you own the person.
And I'm like, that makes sense to me.
It really does make sense to me because...
Compromising control.
Yes, yes.
Because I'm like, what on earth is even being sold to black America right now?
This isn't even our music.
And like, who's controlling that?
Like, who's making them produce this kind of filth and putting it out there?
So it's interesting.
It's definitely something worth following.
I always wondered, though, what would be, I guess maybe to control them from a musical standpoint, hey, I own the masters, I own whatever it may be, because we know why Epstein did it, right?
Epstein did it.
We know he was Mossad.
It is what it is.
He was Intel for a certain nation.
But with Diddy, it's like, all right, you already got Bad Boy.
You're already making a bunch of money.
You've been doing this for a very long time.
Is there really a need to be doing this?
But I guess at that point, it's like, oh, I get all the girls I want.
I have all the money that I want.
Let me just explore new things.
Well, don't forget the documents also said, like heavily implied, that he was having a relationship with the CEO of Universal, Grange, Lucien Grange.
Okay.
Yeah, and that's pretty scary stuff.
That's all I'm saying.
They weren't saying that Diddy was at the top.
He was saying that all of the execs were in on it and were sanctioning Diddy to do this.
Diddy's kind of...
Middleman?
Yeah, he's the middleman, so to speak.
If those documents are true.
Clive Davis was involved as well.
And now we're unearthing everything now.
It's like, okay, let's revisit what Michael Jackson was saying.
Let's revisit what a bunch of people in the industry have been coming out saying that there's some sort of a ring that's happening.
But every time those people speak out, you're wacko jacko.
You're crazy Kanye.
You're this.
It gets the full effort smear thing.
Kanye talked about this a while ago.
He mentioned it.
Yeah, he did.
And the thing that was crazy at that time was that Kanye showed a text that he had received from that Harley Pasternak, right?
Mm-hmm.
Mia didn't even report on this.
Harley Pashnik wrote to him, if you don't do this, I'll put you back into a psych ward, drug you up, and take your kids.
Mia didn't even care about that.
Now everybody's revisiting the things that have been said by a lot of artists and wondering what's really happening in Hollywood.
It's very scary.
I believe McMillan, man.
I think he's innocent Speaking of Kanye you and Kanye are good friends and You guys went viral with the White Lives Matter shirts.
Which, you know, it amazes me how that caused so much controversy.
Because it's like, wait, is there an issue with saying White Lives Matter too?
That was the point.
Like, what the hell?
And the fact that you guys went viral for that is crazy to me.
But again, we live in a wild world where no one's life matters unless you're black, apparently.
Can you tell me about how you guys became friends and then how they came about with the t-shirts?
So I honestly, I'm a person, I believe in frequencies.
I think that things happen in your life and it's like whatever you're channeling.
So just a funny backstory, I grew up listening to Kanye's music and leading up to Kanye tweeting me, I was listening every day to, why can I never remember the name of a freaking song?
You know the one...
Huh?
Which album?
Which album?
I can never remember the name of the song.
It's a freaking one that he...
FSNL and the whole cast.
Tell him, Yeezy said, you can kiss my hole.
More specifically, my asshole.
I'm an asshole.
You know what I'm talking about.
It was after he did the Taylor thing and they were like, you're canceled.
And he just came back with the Fire song.
My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy is the...
But what's the song called?
It's going to drive you crazy.
Power.
Power.
Okay.
Hey!
That song, forget it.
That's my anthem, honestly.
Anyway, so I was every day just listening to this song, running on a treadmill, running five miles a day, just getting on my F what the world thinks, because that's what that song does to you.
It's like, forget what everybody is saying, you be you, and don't apologize for being you.
And I was explaining this at the time I was working with Charlie Kirk, and he didn't even know who Kanye was.
It was crazy, crazy.
I can't believe he even asked me that question.
And I'm playing this music for him.
So Charlie starts listening to Kanye's song.
And I started talking about Kanye when I met Nigel Farage and somebody that worked with him named Dan.
And I just remember sitting there at my house after all of this, the months leading up to this, and Dan...
Sends me a screenshot, and it's like Kanye's account, and it's like, I love the way Candace Jones thinks.
And I thought, is this like British humor?
Are you being funny?
Because I just said to you like how much I love Kanye, and like how I listen to a song every day, and da-da-da, and I was like, I don't, this can't be real.
And then I like go and check, and he just tweeted, I love the way Candace Jones thinks.
Wild.
It was just crazy.
It was just, the energy of that was insane leading up to the moment.
And yeah, I was so excited because his music got me through a lot in life, you know, and his music inspired me.
To take a chance on myself, you know?
The song power directly inspired me to take a chance on myself.
And, yeah, so we met up in LA. I then tweeted back, like, let's meet up, you know, super like, ah!
Actually, I think I actually literally cried.
Wow.
Because it was just, think about that.
Every morning you're listening to this song, you have no idea.
He's not involved in politics at all.
It inspires you to get in politics, and then this person just tweets.
He was more low-key with it back then.
It was wild, yeah.
And then, yeah, so we met up and we became friends and that's that.
And then the White Lives Matter stuff, it totally was his idea.
You never know what Kanye's cooking up.
You know, you really, I call it a Kanye carpet ride.
You just, when you're with him, you don't know what he's thinking.
It's like mad scientist.
Genius.
Yeah.
I've heard from multiple people that he'll be doing four things at once.
He'll have his music people there, his sneaker people there, his clothing people here, and they'll all be in the same place.
And he'll work in one station for like 10-20 minutes, then he'll go and do something else.
He just does that the whole time when he goes around.
He's just like, you know, coming up with ideas.
Was he doing that even back then?
Yeah, it's just, you're just like, I don't know what's happening or what's with this person.
He'll be like, you should stand here.
Or like, let me photograph your outfit.
I like it.
It's inspiring.
You know, just...
You know, you can't even explain it.
And then he was just like, I really need you to come to Paris.
Doesn't tell me why.
Like, I think, you know, he's doing his clothing line, doesn't tell me why at all.
And then when I walked in and we jumped on a plane and went over there, he just had the shirt and was just like...
And I instantly understood it, obviously, because this is the whole point.
You keep saying, you keep patronizing, black lives matter.
And then when people say, like, what about other people?
You're like, it's implied that white lives matter.
So then this shirt is not going to bother you at all, right?
At all.
If we rock the shirt.
Because you're going to be like, yeah, of course.
Of course white lives matter.
Yeah.
People were bothered by that shirt.
Of course.
They were very bothered by that shirt, right?
So it proved a point in a very artistic Kanye, brilliant way.
Isn't it funny though?
Whenever someone's like a creator or has like a change of like, I want to say the game itself, they call them crazy, a maniac, something's wrong with you, you're insane.
But these people are setting trends where like, ask the question, why is this happening?
Why not this way?
And they always ask the question, why?
But they call them crazy.
Yeah, that's true.
And a lot of the times it's sad because it takes somebody dying for you to realize how brilliant they are and what they actually brought to you.
And it shouldn't happen like that.
You know, we should be able to respect these people when they're alive and not like in the legacy where it's like, oh, it was so great.
I know we all like jumped on the person and called them this and canceled them and did all that.
But now in the retrospect, we really loved that person, you know?
And he predicted a lot of things that he was right about.
A whole lot.
People talk shit, and he was right about a lot of things.
Because they'll say, oh, that's...
They might say, oh, that's Antoinette's medical.
We don't like this.
Read the race or some other bullshit.
But it's like, was he wrong?
I'll say this, man.
I'll wait.
Well, hold on.
Number one, what?
Vultures.
Yeah.
Hey, man.
I will say this.
So, you did a documentary.
Fantastic piece of work.
I really heavily advise everyone watching this to go watch this documentary.
The Greatest Live Ever Sold.
Covering the George Floyd incident, Black Lives Matter.
Can you tell us a little bit about that documentary?
I know that documentary probably got a bunch of hate for doing it, but I think it was powerful and needed to be done because it's a topic that people are scared to talk about, people are scared to discuss, but people know privately this is what really went down.
Can you tell us about that documentary a little bit?
Yeah, and I mean, you could say this, it goes back to what we were talking about with people using smears to prevent you from talking about anything, any subject they don't want you to touch, any powerful institution they don't want you to get close to.
And, you know, Black Lives Matter as an organization, it was just so obviously fraudulent.
It was so obviously racist.
It was so obviously going to lead to black Americans setting themselves back, looting and rioting their own communities.
I kept saying it, and I was just being called a coon, and like, this is the thing we're doing, we're finally getting power.
Okay, you're finally getting power by taking a flat-screen TV, because they're gonna allow you to do this for a couple of months, and then the businesses are all, they're playing chess, right?
The businesses are all gonna leave the black neighborhoods, because why would they stay, right?
They're making no money, you're allowing people to steal.
We've already done this in the 60s, by the way, they called it the white flight, leaving Everyone's leaving because you keep rioting and looting.
And so I just saw it happening in slow motion and knew that a lot of times what happens with emotion is you're all in and then you're finally ready after some time to look back on things with clarity.
And it was something that I received a lot of heat from, not obviously bowing down to the George Floyd narrative and also knowing how much they lied about it.
I mean, they didn't even show the full arrest.
It was crazy.
It's crazy.
This is a great example of how biased the media is.
Who was the guy, Brad Parscale, worked for Trump, and he got arrested.
When I tell you they had his arrest tape, full arrest tape, on the internet within, like, hours, it was amazing.
With George Floyd, it was just that one angle of the girl's phone.
That was all you were allowed to see.
You couldn't see that.
They tried to get him in that car peacefully.
I mean, from the jump, he...
They're acting weird, not answering.
They're asking him questions.
Are you okay?
Why are you acting weird?
They put him in the car.
It could have been a totally peaceful arrest.
He asks to get out.
He asks to be put on the ground.
It's just wild.
It is wild.
They put him on the ground.
They wouldn't let him breathe.
He had enough fentanyl in him to kill a horse.
Yeah.
Okay?
That is a fact.
There's just no way to look at that.
You can be upset about that fact all you want, but at the end of the day, this is a man, and his story should have been a conversation about what led to his addictions.
Maybe we would have looked back on Big Pharma.
Who knows?
Maybe it started with him taking pills for pain, and it ended up the story of a man who then became heavily addicted to fentanyl, whatever it is.
And talking about addiction is always going to be a compassionate story, I think.
And that's why I had to actually check myself after doing the documentary.
I actually am glad I sat down with his roommates because I felt bad for him in that way because he didn't ask to be turned into a martyr.
He never said, I'm a good man living my life well and let my death mean something.
The media did that.
So, he was a man from addiction.
He died in his addiction.
His whole life was a story of addiction.
He was not a good person.
He committed crimes probably just to get money.
Career criminal.
Resident all over Texas, Minnesota.
You know, traumatizing black and Hispanic people that you claim to care about.
These were his victims.
Put a gun to a pregnant woman's stomach.
Literally put a gun.
Passed a counterfeit bill before he was apprehended by the police in the first place.
Like, no one ever talked about all the things that led up to what happened.
Right.
And they're just pretending like, and then not showing the other angle, which you can see Derek Chauvin actually from the front, it looks like he's on his neck, but actually, and police are taught that, to put their knee there once he was on the ground.
And so yeah, you could say that, oh well, once he said I can't breathe, why didn't you move your knee?
He was saying I can't breathe from the second they pulled him over.
And they were just like, dude, I'm claustrophobic.
I can't be in the car.
I can't breathe.
And so it wasn't like they just thought he was BSing, likely, is what happened.
That he was just BSing.
Not only that, but if you're able to scream, that means you're able to breathe.
Right.
And so here's the thing.
Quite literally, when you take fentanyl, do you know what it does?
It stops you from breathing.
The drugs he took worked.
And it's a tough conversation to have.
I get it.
But I will not accept turning somebody into a martyr...
Who led a life of criminality and then also at the same, I mean, you had little black girls, little black boys wearing his face, a criminal.
They were baptizing people in the square.
What?
Yes.
You don't remember how crazy it was.
They literally tried to make his name synonymous with Jesus Christ.
When you go to that square and that went down, there's like a billboard and they've basically put angel wings on him.
I mean, it's nuts what they did to a career criminal, but that's what they want.
They want black Americans to believe and to defend the people in our community that are doing the worst.
That's why it's a racist system in that regard, right?
When you are saying to black Americans, aspire to be filth, right?
Aspire to be the next sexy red, you know, the next this person, and simultaneously saying these are your new idols.
These are your new Jesus Christ.
This is the new Jesus Christ.
It sickened me and it still makes me so angry to look back on it and the people that fed black Americans that garbage.
You know, I've always said, people, they give me the same term, say the same thing to me, because I've always said, you know, Black Lives Matter is a terrorist organization.
It is.
I used to work in law enforcement, and one of the things we investigated was terrorism.
And by definition, you know, using violence or, you know, trying to coerce people from a violent perspective for a political ideology is terrorism.
And BLM is a domestic terrorist organization every way you slice it.
If you want to go in and call the KKK and use white supremacy groups, you know, Domestic terrorist groups, and you've got to call BLM too, but the FBI is so scared to label them as a domestic terrorist organization, it's crazy because they don't want to deal with the backlash.
No, I don't believe that.
I think actually the FBI uses it as an operation.
Probably.
They support it because it's their op.
You know what I mean?
You think it's just like overnight every single news channel was suddenly interested in this arrest?
Come on.
It was a total up.
It was so obviously an up.
They were suppressing, trying to find out any real information on the case, not releasing the body cam footage.
I mean, everything that happened shows you that the government was complicit.
Different coroners doing the autopsy.
That was weird.
The government was complicit in the narrative, and they wanted that disruption because it helped to foster an environment in which they thought, well, now no black person is going to support Trump.
I mean, there was so much going on.
You know, we were in the election season, and so I- Lockdowns?
Yeah.
Lockdowns were right- It was funny because they're like, all right, guys, sit in your house, masks on, six feet apart, et cetera.
George Floyd dies.
This is in May.
Everyone's riding in the streets.
Yeah.
They literally were creating laws that were like...
It's allowed.
Yeah, they were carving out exceptions.
If you're black and you want to riot and loot your own community down and burn it down, it's allowed.
We must have this exception.
And so, yeah, it was an insane time.
And where did all that money go?
I kept asking, where do you guys think this money's going?
You think it's going to go into black communities?
Don't be so stupid.
BLM. They went to trans organizations.
Yeah, so in the documentary, and I don't want to give it away, you guys need to really go watch it, but you go over where that money was spent.
Can you talk a little bit about that?
Guys, guys, LGBTQ trans neighborhood, first ever trans neighborhood that we're building in San Francisco.
You know, these trans center for art.
Poll black Americans.
You want to talk about the community that would not be supporting all of this, the number one community that would be against all this LGBTQIA plus nonsense?
It's going to be black Americans.
We're very conservative on this issue, right?
And yet, for the cost of you rioting and looting your own communities, not only do you now have to live in these criminally rotten communities, but also we funneled your money to LGBTQIA. IA Plus organizations that all spawned overnight, so you know it's just a money laundering operation, obviously.
Not only that, they bought themselves, I always make the joke, bought lavish mansions.
They bought mansions, because the heads of the BLM are, if I'm not mistaken, two or three lesbian women?
I think one turned to a man, I don't know.
But they bought some mansions.
My lavish mansions.
One in Canada.
I mean, it's just unbelievable.
And if you want a reason that black people should be rioting, it's because of that.
And it's crazy because I actually knew someone that lives in Minnesota at that time and they were, I think they ate something and they were allergic and they called 911.
The police couldn't even come.
Couldn't come.
Like, they literally, they almost died.
Because they're like, sorry, I can't come out there.
Like, because they said defund the police.
So they have to cut 911 staff.
They had to cut police officers.
And they almost died.
I'll tell you what.
Definition of, you should never give niggas money.
Literally.
Just saying.
No, but it wasn't even, they never got the money.
It was like, never give Patrice Cullors money.
You know, that's the crazy thing.
And yeah, it's just, it's unbelievable.
And yes, it was 100% the Democrats that were supporting that.
And they, I think there was a deep-seated hatred of That they have for black Americans.
That's the one I can't figure out.
It's always black Americans.
They're always experimenting on black Americans, you know, whether it's our bodies, Tuskegee experiment that happened, or whether it's our minds, it's black Americans that suffer first, that they're trying to encourage to be illiterate by putting up these people as idols who definitely should not be idols in the black community, like sexy, right?
It's always black Americans.
The worst role models.
Meg Thee Stallion.
There's a hatred for black America.
The people that are running America, the criminal organization, they hate black people first, and there's no doubt about that.
With the documentary, how long did it take you to film it, and what was some of the backlash that you dealt with that?
Because I could only imagine.
We filmed it.
It took about, you know, I moved quick, so we were like just maybe like four to five months to film it.
You guys did in a winter, too.
Yeah, and I was freaking pregnant, which is why that Patrice thing was so funny when she pretended like I was attacking her outside.
I was eight months pregnant.
It's like, you're not getting attacked by anyone.
And the reception was great.
You know, I do think, like I said, with time, the scale kind of falls from people's eyes.
BLM, the organization, blocked me, of course, because we're just looking into where the money is.
But black people were receptive to it once they saw it and it was being shared on A lot of the, like, highly traversed black blogs that are on Instagram, and they were pretty outraged.
Now you can see people are saying, yeah, Candace was right.
She told us about this.
She told us about this.
You can see that the black community has moved a lot from when I first appeared on the scene to now, and I'm really grateful for that, you know?
Slowly people are waking up.
And I think that's America as a whole.
They're starting to see fake news, mainstream media, lies about a bunch of stuff.
A bunch of things that we were told are not true, as they try to say they are.
History has been rewritten by the winners a bunch of times.
People are kind of getting an alternative look.
And thanks to platforms like Rumble, etc., people are able to do that.
And X, with Elon getting rid of all the censorship.
You were going to say something?
How do you handle hate?
I think a lot of people, like for example, we had some girls come on the show, like later on today, and I asked them, Candace is coming, what are your thoughts?
I've said, she's talking the truth, I like her a lot.
I said, we hate Candace.
How do you deal with hate?
I just don't deal with it.
I think people have me mixed up.
I literally, I just told you, I listened to power on repeat for like way too long, right?
So if you want to get into my head, you should listen to power, right?
If you think I'm spending time reading comments about how much you hate me, my life is great.
Thank you.
Amazing.
I am saying what I actually believe to be true.
People are responding to that.
I have a husband who loves me, children who love me.
They're really cute.
Not that it'd be different if they weren't cute, but my kids are really, really cute.
And that's it.
When your family life is intact, do you think I go to the internet for my sense of security?
Like, oh my God, let me see what Rabbi Schmolle thinks of me, you know?
Said nobody ever, right?
Said nobody literally ever.
So I just do not care what the haters think.
I wish them well, and I think a lot of times, gratefully, the haters do eventually become lovers because when you're on the side of truth, eventually people get there, right?
And so it feels good to be like, yeah, I was right about that, I was right about that, I was right about that, but I'm happy because I want people's lives to change and for them not to accept this cancerous victim narrative that's being fed to my people who hate them.
Speaking about the whole George Floyd situation, if I'm not mistaken, there was a civil lawsuit that was kind of independent of the case, but something else was going on.
And one of the prosecutors, I think, had to testify, and she said something on the stand about that George Floyd died from fentanyl overdose.
Even she said it.
Yeah.
No, people didn't even get to see the court case.
That was it.
The media was quite literally just showing you him one angle, dying over and over again, because they wanted to propagandize that, and you actually got no facts about that case.
And the doctors that testified of what would happen, how much fentanyl it takes to kill a human, and how much he had.
It was just insane.
That wasn't covered.
Yeah.
They didn't cover that angle.
And then the fact that, like, this was literally a couple months ago.
I think it was when we were in Vegas.
Well, like, literally, the prosecutor testified in this civil case, and it came out that, like, no, he died of fentanyl overdose.
Or even one of the prosecutors admitted this.
I was like, what the hell's going on?
Like...
I don't know.
Chauvin has a pretty good shot at trying to maybe get this thing thrown out.
People should be rioting outside for what happens.
It's a very scary thing when the Justice Department can do something like that.
And it could be any of us.
This is why I fight this sort of stuff because it can happen to you.
It can happen to me.
You just decide a narrative and get everyone against you.
And it's not based on fact at all.
That is why I was the loudest voice consistently against the Me Too movement.
Before it was popular, I got hit by conservatives and liberals when it first started trending because they were like, oh, it's rape, so we can't possibly...
I was like...
These bitches are lying.
Thank you.
I know what you did.
You slept with him because you wanted a job, right?
You slept with him.
This is like the oldest.
This is prostitution.
The prostitutes get a refund now?
They get it.
That's what Me Too was.
It was prostitution refund.
Yeah.
I'm like, what?
No, no, no, no, no.
And I'm telling you, you go back and read the articles.
I showed it on my show.
I'm like, because I got hit by the left and the right.
Even the right gets in line and then waits a little bit until it's comfortable to start saying something's wrong.
It's like, no, it's always wrong to say that I'm going to believe your allegations because I'm with her.
Hashtag believe women.
It's insane.
Just believe women.
Women have never lied ever.
Yeah, just believe women.
Blank it.
No women has ever lied in the history of the world.
I'm like, what?
Are you guys crazy?
Like, What you said is so true.
Nobody's safe.
All it takes is one allegation to say, oh, he did this to me.
From a woman, your career, your brand image is screwed.
Because you know what happens?
Even if you're vindicated, they won't say, oh, we were wrong.
Too bad, buddy.
It's already out there.
And they called me, what did they call me?
Self-hating.
You're self-hating women, but it's like...
Internalized misogynist, is what they called me.
Like, I hate women, and I'm like, no, they're always accusing you, it's because I refuse to hate men.
You wanna know why?
Because I'm married to one, I have two sons, and so whatever world I fight for is gonna be the world that they have to grow up in.
And if you think that my son is gonna live in a world where a woman can ruin his whole life by just saying, like, this happened, and you're not, that's it, it's just one allegation, and your life is over, Absolutely not.
So that is why it's like they somehow make women think you're different from men.
No, these are our brothers.
These are our husbands.
These are our friends.
These are our eventual sons.
And so I was not with Me Too from day one.
Preach.
Which case would you say kind of made you say, you know what?
I'm second guessing this one.
The first one.
Actually, I was pre-Me Too.
I was dogging Kesha.
I was against Me Too before they even knew what to call it.
Do you remember Kesha?
Yeah.
I was way back.
Let's take it way back, though.
This situation was wild.
I don't like to call things white girl feminism, but I know why people do say that, because it's a special brand.
It's a different brand, is what I would say.
It's a Taylor Swift brand, where it's like, just believe what I say and don't question anything.
Kesha, this girl.
Tonight we're going hard.
First off, first off.
No, no, no, no.
She said...
She said...
She woke up in the morning feeling like P. Diddy.
Suspect, suspect already, right?
She said, she said, she said, she brushed her teeth with a bottle of Jack, okay?
This might be a girl that sleeps with some men, right?
It might be, she literally was just saying some things in her quotations that were coming to her, like, brush my teeth with a bottle of Jack.
Okay, so I'm not going to just blanket believe you.
I didn't know if you were sober, what was happening.
She gets in the back of a courtroom and she cries because she wants out of her Sony contract, okay?
Yeah.
And my goodness, every single Lena Dunham, Taylor Swift of the world was like, oh my God, women are suffering.
I'm like, what?
She signed a contract and she has to finish out the contract.
That's like how business works, right?
But she wants out, so then she said that Dr.
Luke raped her, right?
She just went with her, like, oh, he raped me or whatever.
And I was like, this is a lie.
You just know, I am certain in my heart, I'm alleging this, that you slept with him because you can't sing and you somehow got a contract at Sony, right?
So I can believe that you slept with him, but I'm not going to buy that you were raped, right?
Yeah.
So she lies, and then they made her a hero.
She was on red carpets.
They were like, this is her coming out album since the Sony thing.
Lady Gaga was crying with her.
And then what happened that nobody likes to talk about?
Oh, Dr.
Luke fought for his reputation.
We'll never get a refund, so to speak, on how the media covered him.
And then they did a deposition of Katy Perry because she texted, he got her text messages, and she texted Lady Gaga like, yeah, he raped Katy Perry too.
And this is why I like Katy Perry.
Because they brought her in for a deposition and she was like, nope.
We weren't raped.
Nope.
Just like told 100% the truth.
And then suddenly she pulls her lawsuit away.
And obviously it's like absolute garbage human being for what she did.
But that's the thing.
Once a man's reputation is ruined in that capacity, now he's quietly winning in the court.
But nobody's covering it.
Nobody is covering it with the same...
Can I bring up somebody else that we all know very well?
Andrew Tate.
Dude, I just want to say again, she said she brushed her teeth with a bottle of Jack.
Yeah.
Yeah, you already know she on some host shit for that one.
Also under Diddy, by the way, as well.
Yeah, wake up in the morning feeling like P. Diddy.
Proincidence?
Proincidence?
Why were you feeling like P. Diddy?
Me as a lawyer.
Why were you feeling like P. Diddy?
That sucks about partying hard.
That sucks about partying hard.
Tonight we're going hard.
Hard, hard, hard.
I have questions.
What's going on, man?
Sorry, I didn't mean to cut you off.
No, it's fine.
I just think as men, especially with influence in a platform, we could at any moment be under this same issue.
And Andrew Tate, a good friend of ours, awesome guy, went to his house.
Yeah, we were there a couple weeks ago.
You guys got to Bluegrass?
Yeah.
Super cool family, cool people there.
But to see what happened to him close to home was terrible.
He has cameras in every place in the house.
You can see what's happening in real time.
If he was a trafficker by chance, you would have seen everything there, plain sight.
But you know what it ain't show in court or anything like that?
Footage.
It's all there.
Evidence.
To me, it's like, this is unfair as men.
Yeah.
What we can go through for that.
I look into that specific case and it is wild.
Yeah.
It is absolutely wild.
And everyone's sitting here trying to litigate, well, this is what he said 10 years ago, so he should go to prison in Bucharest.
It's like, no, this is absolute madness.
I don't care what he said on a podcast 10 years ago, right?
First, just the fact that he had to sit in a prison cell with no charges for as long as he did.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Wild.
Yeah.
Absolutely wild.
Like, we're just going to look for something and try to find something.
The fact that the girls that were listed in those complaints came out and made articles and said, this never happened.
The fact that they're trying to hunt and sit these women down and say, you know...
We just want you to factually say that something happened and all these women are coming out and, like, I don't know why I'm listed in this suit at all because it's not true.
And then the girl that they used to start the whole thing, people that don't know the story I covered on my podcast, the fact that she has an entire history.
Yes.
I mean, how many times are you going to believe that this keeps happening to one woman, you know?
Emma Gabby.
It's crazy.
You have the worst luck ever.
This just keeps happening to you your whole life, right?
And that's why you just ask questions, like basic questions.
If you're a girl and you say, I was date-raped once.
Okay, like, let's look at the, I was date-raped twice.
Oh, wait, wouldn't you cover your drinks like that?
Five times, ten times.
It's like, okay, well, you know, I have questions.
And this is a circumstance where this woman, it's just been a lot of men that she has accused, and for the...
Short amount of time that she was there, desperate to go over there.
If you looked into the text messages, I mean, allegedly, allegedly, allegedly, let us rinse ourselves into the lawsuit.
Allegedly.
Wild.
Yeah.
Wild.
Yeah.
No, it's crazy.
Even one of the men that she accused ended up offing himself because he couldn't take it anymore.
And then another guy's in jail, and it's just like...
Like, and she's like a known sugar baby and it's like all this evidence is there and they're like, oh yeah, blah, blah, blah.
Not to mention that they're not going to come back and testify in Romania.
They're fucking long gone.
Oh, is that what they're saying now?
They're not coming back to testify?
No, not at all.
Definitely not.
Like those chicks are, like that one chick is here in, I think in Orlando somewhere and the other one, I don't know where the fuck she's at, somewhere in London.
Yeah, they went partying.
Can I also mention one more person?
Yeah.
Free Tory Lanez, man.
That's my guy, bro.
I don't know about that.
You don't know about that one?
I don't know about that, because I looked into that case, and that was crazy.
That was crazy.
And I'm not a Megan Thee Stallion fan, but everything leading up to that, from trying to pay people off, unless there's something that I missed, and if I did miss it, I will correct the record, but...
You can't just be shooting people in the feet.
And so what is the conspiracy?
They're like, no, her friend shot her in the foot.
But the messages that she showed from that night or the night after.
And first off, initially they were saying she stepped on glass, which I thought was wild.
He was at first saying that she stepped on glass.
The doctor, I mean, you can't just make up a surgery.
A doctor's not going to say I pulled out a bullet.
So the fact that his story changed, like, oh, she's lying, she's up on ground, doing all that stuff, it's like, okay, you wouldn't need to say that if you were telling the truth from the beginning.
Unless there's something I'm missing here, but when I looked into it, it looked like Tory Lanez shot her in the foot.
There is some evidence that the friend could potentially did it, because they were fist fighting.
You know, argument and all that other stuff and they were fist fighting.
They were drunk.
Everybody was drunk as hell.
Yeah.
What was her name?
Kelsey?
Kelsey.
Yeah.
Because they were fist fighting on the street, her and Megan Stein, because I looked into that case as well.
And then the doctor even said before that when she first went to the emergency room that it did look like she stepped on some glass originally when you look at the first police report.
Yes.
Police report, but not the doctor.
The doctor...
It says in a police report that the doctor said that there were shards of glass, unless they were, like, he maybe reported wrong, but in that first police report, they did say it.
Oh, yeah, like...
Surprisingly.
Okay, but I'm not saying, like, the doctor, the doctor say, because, like, he said he pulled bullet fragments out of her foot.
Yeah, the person at the emergency room.
I think she went to go see another doctor after the fact.
But the first person, their first doctor, when they first originally went to, because remember, she told them, I stepped on glass, because she was covering for Tori at first.
She was covering for Tori, yeah.
So the doctor was like, oh, okay, well, it looks like you stepped on glass too, right?
It's a emergency doctor.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, gotcha.
So yeah, she did tell them, that's right.
She lied at first, and then she said, I stepped on glass, et cetera.
I think she got reassessed again.
But we don't know, but like, I think there's strong evidence that Kelsey and the Senate fought, and then Kelsey shot her, because when she took the Fifth Amendment on the stand, I was like, what the hell?
So, there's a story.
But then why wouldn't Meghan say that?
Why?
Because they're obviously not friends anymore, right?
You know what I'm saying?
Like, she has no love for her.
I mean, Kelsey got on the stand and basically pleaded the fifth the entire time.
Yeah.
So, why wouldn't you, why would you want it to be Tory that was locked up and not the woman?
That's a good question.
Right?
Because you would just be like, I hate her and she shot me.
And also, Kelsey's text, I mean, she could have been lying.
Yeah.
She's not a good person, full stop.
Kelsey is the biggest loser in all this.
But she texted somebody right after and said, oh crap, Tori shot her or something like that.
So that shows that something happened, but if you're saying that maybe it could have been her.
Yeah, I think there's evidence that it could have been her for sure.
And I think maybe it's a situation, because that's a good question.
Hey, well, why didn't she just say that?
Kelsey shot her.
Well, I think she dislikes Tori more.
Listen, there's two scenarios here.
Allegedly, by the way.
Either Kelsey shot Megan in the foot, Or, there was a scuffle, somebody had a gun, and it went off, and she got shot.
Either way, what happened is, free Tory.
No, because she said he said, dance, bitch.
Then she was, come on.
The way she was saying it, because he's a short guy, she was like, he stood over the car and he said dance, but it was a really cumbersome thing.
I don't know.
I think that there's strong evidence that Kelsey could have shot her, but we don't know.
The only people that know really are the people that did it that night.
We're speculating.
There's a story...
Out there and it is the real story, so we'll see what happens.
He's Canadian, right?
Yeah.
Yes.
And that's another thing, too, that kind of sucks for him.
Just being in Canada.
He's going to get deported after this.
100%.
That's why a lot of people say, why didn't he just take the plea?
He would have got deported if he did that.
They would have given him a felony.
Maybe he wouldn't have gotten in jail time.
Damn.
But ICE would have been there and be like, all right, you got to go, buddy.
Foreign national.
He got kids, family stuff.
Oh, we actually deport people now?
Yes.
Color me shock.
I didn't know that we had the potential to do that.
Just come right back in over the border, buddy.
Right now, maybe not.
Just come right back in over the border.
We'd buy the office, maybe not.
But if it was for a felony like that and a high-profile person, they're going to remove them.
Because everyone would be like, why is he still here?
That's why.
We've got 30K watching, by the way.
Guys, this is amazing.
Follow Candace on her channel as well.
Yes.
Hop over right now.
No, not right now because you're here.
But when you're done, you better go on my...
Yeah, go support Candace, because a lot of people are coming and hating on her right now.
Because you guys can see, she speaks facts.
The truth, by the way.
No lies told.
Have we got some chats that you want to do?
Yeah, I can read some chats real quick.
Guys, we're reading only 50 and up, obviously, because we're short on time.
We want to make sure that we can get you on after-hours shows.
W, Candace Owens.
We got here, JTK goes, Big W having Candace Owens on.
Candace, loved your Tucker Carlson episode.
So happy to see you on here.
Shout out to my fellow Connecticut tier.
Shout out to Westport, Connecticut.
What about Fresh, Chris, Mo, Bills, and Angie?
Thank you so much for the shout out to Westport, Connecticut.
Run on Interstate 95, bro.
We know where you're at.
Nasty Stew goes, Candice, you are beautiful, intelligent, everything I want in a black woman.
Do you have a sister on 40 Minutes from Nashville?
Dude, I have two sisters, but they still live in Connecticut, and they're both married.
I'm sorry.
Joe, hey, Myron, I booked a consult with you for 30 minutes.
Pay $500, but never got to call them out here.
Okay, I'll hit you back.
Don't worry, I'll check my email.
We got you, Joe.
Red Pill saying goes, WFNF, shout out to Candice for coming on the biggest podcast in Miami.
No, no, no.
Not?
Okay.
Huge obstacle.
Okay, this is from Young Jeezy.
Huge obstacle to Candace Owens.
I appreciate what you're doing.
There are a lot of young women that look up to you.
Even friends of mine, it's an automatic green flag.
When I see a young lady, I might be interested in it as a fan of yours.
Thank you.
That is a good test.
That's a good indicator.
We'd much rather see that than see women worshiping cliche online liberal influence.
Please keep being an example of someone young women can look up to.
Thank you, Young Cheesy.
If I had a daughter, you know what to tell her to watch?
Okay.
Candace Owens!
Yes!
Let's go!
Guestly says, Hey there, it's great to have you on the podcast, Candace Owens.
I'm really looking forward to seeing you find some common ground.
Maybe we can even develop a method that consumers of this RP content can adapt and apply.
What do you think?
I mean, I would say Candace is pretty base, guys.
You guys just heard.
These tips must have came in from earlier.
Yeah, from way earlier.
And then FNFW Candace Owens is from Rumble.
And then WFNF Candace Owens.
How do we get rid of the Pookies and Thugs?
How can we get rid of the Pookies and Thugs and the black community?
Their population keeps growing.
Is there a hope, honestly, to push folks like you forward versus sexy red types?
I think the first thing we should do is abolish the welfare system.
If you want to talk about what black America was doing way better, obviously, outpacing white Americans before the establishment of the welfare system, which actually wasn't a war on poverty.
It was a war for poverty, and the government won.
So black Americans are poor today after trillions of dollars poured into the welfare system.
They actually did better in the 1960s when racism was at its strongest.
They were more educated.
They made more money.
The communities were stronger.
They had more black businesses.
There was more black support.
It's crazy how, with the Jim Crow laws and everything, they actually united them and they were doing better than they are now.
And it's interesting to me how, like, you know, because again, people always, we're not even black and can't talk about these topics when they think it's a ridiculous concept.
You don't have to be a certain race to speak on a problem.
But regardless, I think there's just too much victim mindset.
It's too much.
It's the white man's fault.
It's the Asian's fault.
It's the Jewish fault.
It's the Caribbean's fault.
It's the African's fault.
Like, they never take accountability for their fuck-ups in life.
They always blame other people.
That's exactly right.
And it's just this victim mindset, this perpetual victim mindset that it's always someone else's fault versus their own.
But it's like you look back in the 1960s and black people did better back in the 1960s at the worst times.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
Darnell Elliott goes, have you ever had a knee pressed on your neck in awe?
You don't do this unless you plan on killing someone.
If someone exerts downward pressure using their body weight while you are lying on concrete, the pressure has nowhere to go but your neck.
No, I have not and neither did George Floyd.
We got that in common.
Joaquin Clay.
Shout out to Ivan F Team and CEO Network.
Question for Candice.
We got banned again on YouTube.
Do you think YouTube will survive long term with its current censorship compared to platforms like Rumble?
What?
You got banned, bro?
You got banned?
Oh, this person got banned.
Yeah, this person did.
What's your thoughts on that?
I mean, listen, it doesn't make economic sense to ban people for wrong think, right?
So that can't survive long term.
It just can't survive long term, right?
Which is why I think they're trying to pull away from it.
They hit me the whole time when I talk about trans people, because that's their new narrative.
That men can be women and women can be men.
And it's just something I'll never stop talking about.
So they hit me with strikes.
It is what it is.
It's crazy.
I will say that they did loosen up the standards a bit, which I think from platforms like Kick and Rumble, obviously competition is good.
But yeah, I mean, with certain topics, man, you just got to go on Rumble.
It is what it is, unfortunately.
Rumble's the way.
Yeah, Rumble's the way, man.
Your best one is Candace.
Was the 2020 election stolen from Donald Trump?
Yes.
Easy yes.
Okay.
What else do we got?
Last one.
Everblazer goes, shout out to Candice.
Shout out to the greatest lie ever told.
Truly a revealing masterpiece.
Watching it gave me RP. Yeah, man.
Really good documentary.
You guys need to go watch it, man.
I'm telling y'all.
If you think you know whatever it is about the George Floyd story, I promise you, you don't know more than I do.
So, I wouldn't be saying this stuff for clicks.
I wouldn't be saying this stuff because it's cool to be different or contrarian.
They lied to you about literally everything.
Even things that you didn't even realize you were being lied to about.
So, check out the documentary.
It's available on Daily Wire Plus.
It's the only reason they made a subscription on it.
That's exactly right.
Speaking of Daily Wire, how's it over there?
I know obviously there's a little bit of rift between you and Ben.
What's going on there?
Let the people know.
I mean, what I said on Tucker following that is the truth.
The thing that I regretted about that situation is that people then assumed that there was all of this tension and horrible things that were happening at Daily Wire.
Ben lives in Florida.
He lives down here.
The rest of us live in Nashville on a day-to-day basis.
I don't see Ben.
There's no toxicity in the office or anything like that.
We all get along really well.
Michael Knowles is actually the godfather to my daughter.
I mean, we get along really well.
So yeah, I obviously don't agree with Ben on a lot.
He also doesn't agree with me on a lot.
We take different stances on things.
I would be hopeful that that's exactly the reason that the Daily Wire was built, is because people don't want to be propagandized and hear one perspective.
But yeah, obviously it wasn't a fun situation to go through last year when I was freaking 40 weeks pregnant.
And that starts trending.
I'm like, dude, I'm about to have a baby.
I don't want to deal with all this stress.
And I've got every media person in the world calling me, asking me to comment on this situation.
But, you know, people are emotional.
He is very passionate about Israel.
He's married to an Israeli.
I mean, that makes sense.
I guess, you know?
Yeah, no, of course.
And you don't have to agree on everything.
I mean, obviously, foreign policy is its own thing, so it is what it is.
And I am very much on foreign policy.
I am consistent.
I don't care what the country is.
There's no country that's special to me.
Stop sending our money overseas while our country looks like this.
I agree.
While we have a porous border, you know?
You're not even going to get me to your side even 1% on this when America is in this situation.
Yeah, yeah.
We got people coming in illegally like literally every day.
And this always happens when a Democrat is in, by the way, FYI. When I was working, you know, when Obama was in, same thing happened in 2014.
Mass migration, borders were open, people were going crazy.
This always happens.
I wonder why.
When you have a Democratic president in.
Cool.
I think...
That's it for...
Yeah, we'll switch on over to the...
You got some girls coming?
Yeah, I think so.
I don't know if Chris is here.
Chris, we good to go on?
There's some hoes in this house.
By the way, guys, I've just been doing music the whole time.
Every time there's an appropriate song, I've just been singing it.
Okay, cool.
But the big thing is, she brushed her teeth with a bottle of Jack.
That shit is crazy, man.
You brought back some college memories there with that one.
We're just gonna accept everything she says.
I have some good questions, but I'm just gonna leave it till later.
Dating today?
Fair enough, fair enough.
Are you dating anyone?
Anyone?
Oh, here's a playoff.
We do it.
Big kids.
Answer the question first.
I'm a man of many flavors, you know?
But let's just say I love China.
Alright, let's move on.
Do you know my first boyfriends were Asian?
Really?
Oh my god, it cracked me up.
Everyone was like, because when I first got into this, like...
I was like, actually, I was on a very strong Asian kick in life.
Like, I was convinced I was going to marry a Japanese man.
My first boyfriend was Japanese.
Second boyfriend was Korean.
But, you know, people don't do their research, I guess.
Do you like anime?
No.
No?
No, I don't.
Yeah.
My brother used to draw Dragon Ball Z, though.
Oh!
Rest in peace to the creator of Dragon Ball Z. No!
I gotta text my brother.
Dang, I gotta text my brother.
Akira Toriyama.
He died March 1st.
It was announced yesterday he died March 1st.
Oh, so he passed away March 1st?
Yes.
But they just announced it now?
It was announced yesterday.
Oh, okay.
Wow.
Wow, look at all the Rip Akira's.
Wow, see?
Guys really loved Dragon Ball Z. Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, my brother always was just like drawing it the whole time.
I was like, what is this?
Yeah, it's my favorite anime, too.
Our audience is a little bit older.
They're like, they're old in their 30s and stuff like that.
I like One Piece.
It's over 9,000!
Okay, last two here.
Yves Simonis goes, Candace, what is your brutal, honest opinion of people you do...
You once highly respected.
You once highly respected.
That decided to receive the job.
Listen, I actually very much, like, I don't have an issue If you want to poison yourself, it's no problem to me.
I have no problem with that whatsoever.
My issue is when you start condemning people that don't want to poison themselves, right?
And so for the people that did that song and dance, if you did it because you really thought it was going to save the world and you believed the media hype and we were all going to die, then you should say sorry.
Mm-hmm.
We don't always get it right.
You know, all of us, we're not perfect.
But if you're not going to say sorry about it and you think we're just going to, like, forget, it doesn't work that way.
I don't like that kind of arrogance.
And me, just to be clear, because I don't care that I'm called this, I am anti-vax all of them.
I produce an entire Syrian vaccines.
Exactly what you saw happening with COVID is exactly how every vaccine on the schedule has been produced.
They've lied to you about the history.
They changed the diagnostic definition.
Polio was never eradicated.
I did...
Years of research on vaccines.
Create an entire show.
Also, women, please stop poisoning yourself with birth control.
Learn the dark history there and how they experimented on Africans in Zimbabwe to make sure the purpose was to sterilize them.
So all these women, I can't have one kid.
I don't know what's going on.
IVF. What's going on is what they intended, right?
You are dosing yourself with synthetic hormones every single day.
If you let somebody convince you that that's not going to have an impact when you want to have a child, I mean, let's use our common animalistic sense, you know?
Like, when you poison yourself, the result is that your body...
Not only that, they had it out in a year.
I mean, like, come on, guys, like, a year?
That's all the vaccines.
They create the fear, and then they're like, we have a solution.
Yep.
Here you go.
To illnesses that were not problematic.
I mean, the story on all of these vaccines is stunning, and I deep-dived on all of them.
Now they're saying to treat it like the flu, which is what people were saying in the beginning.
And they definitely created COVID. They created COVID. All of these new things that are happening, these are not normal.
Don't forget.
We have a new virus and you can't smell or taste.
You created this in a lab.
That's never happened.
You normally get a cold.
You might sit into your chest.
Nobody was like, oh, I couldn't taste for two months for anything that we ever had growing up.
Very clearly created in a bio lab.
And they are engaging in that sort of a thing.
And that's why on my show, I did a long interview with Dave Smith.
Do you guys know who he is?
Yes.
He's phenomenal.
If you're going to watch anything on my show, go watch that two and a half hour sit down.
But we were talking about how Gaddafi got up in front of the UN and was calling America out on the assassination of JFK. They killed him immediately.
Yep, on the assassination of MLK. He was saying, you guys are making people sick and then selling them the cures, like calling them out on the entire BS, the pharmaceutical industry.
He wanted to get a currency for Africa based on their resources.
He wanted to get rid of the dollar.
And they killed him for a reason.
And they killed him immediately.
Immediately.
So, yeah, go back and read that speech given in front of the UN by Gaddafi.
And it's like, if you knew how intentionally sick they were making us all, once you're awake to it, you're good.
No vaccine has ever touched any of my children.
It's like people are like, they're going to die of darkness!
I'm like, you're so ignorant.
You're so ignorant.
Libya had zero debt as well.
But they don't talk about that.
They never mention that.
Man.
Everyone becomes a terrorist when they stand up to the criminal enterprise that's running our country.
Oh, never mind, that guy's a terrorist.
We said we loved him and we were taking pictures and everything with him five minutes ago, but now he's a terrorist.
Same thing with Osama bin Laden.
First he's an asset, then he's a terrorist, right?
Saddam Hussein, asset.
He fought the Russians for us in the 80s.
It's like whenever they decide someone's a terrorist, then you better respond.
Okay, guys.
She is Candace.
Oh, we got...
Oh, okay.
Hello, welcome, sisters.
Candace Owens.
Shout out to my brothers making it possible.
Don't be afraid to talk about them boys.
Wife is with the kiddos.
She's going to miss out on the pod.
Officer Tatum?
Oh, yeah.
Hold on.
Let me say something.
Sure.
Brandon Tatum is...
I love Brandon Tatum.
He's a brother to me.
Let me say something about his character, first and foremost.
Like, there are very few people, when you get into politics, that you can attest to their character.
Give it one year, this person will be shaking their butt for this cause because they think that it's better to say things they don't believe.
There has never been a person that has been more authentic, like, from the time I started and people were attacking me, to, like, reaching his hand over the aisle, than Brandon Tatum.
I know you guys...
For whatever reason, don't like him, but I just have to tell you, he's my brother.
He is my brother.
I don't hate the guy.
I go traveling with him and his wife.
He's like my brother-brother in this.
I call him, tell him everything that's going on, so just out of respect for my relationship with Brandon Tatum, I can't have anything negative said about him because I'm super loyal, and he's my homie.
No problem.
We disagree on some points, but we don't hate the guy.
Yeah, you guys should sit down.
He's just dope.
I'm telling you, he's really dope.
Who is that?
Brandon Tatum.
Austin Tatum.
I don't know who it is.
Okay, don't worry.
We both used to work in law enforcement, so we pride some common ground there.
I'd be happy to sit down and talk with him.
All right, we'll end it there, guys.
We've got some lovely ladies in the house.
We'll be back in a little bit with Candace and some girls.
We'll catch you guys back.
Give us about 30, 40 minutes.
I'll have like 10 more songs.
All right?
Peace, guys.
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