April 28, 2025 - Liberty Hangout - Kaitlin Bennett
15:17
College Liberal Has INSANE Opinions
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Whatever the mother wants to do with her body, she should be able to do.
Should she be able to take do cocaine and fentanyl?
Should she be able to do that?
While she's pregnant?
It is her body, it's her choice.
She should be able to do cocaine and fentanyl while she's pregnant at nine months.
If it's her choice, then yes.
Hi!
How are you guys?
She's here!
I love talking to college students.
I think they're very bright and smart, and so that's what I came here to find.
Are you a bright and smart college student?
I try to be, but I don't know.
You don't know?
All right.
You say you're paying.
What's your major?
I'm an art major.
An art major.
Yeah.
What do you hope to do with that one day?
I am going to work in entertainment.
Entertainment is huge, makes a lot of money.
I love doing art.
Absolutely.
Do you like drawing, acting, painting?
What's your thing?
Visual art, yeah.
Visual art.
Yeah.
So painting and drawing.
We're asking students specifically, and I was trying to ask the woman with the beautiful scarf that she had on about the Palestinian students who are being deported off of campuses and getting their visas revoked.
Have you heard about that?
I have not heard about that.
Never heard about that.
It must not be a hot button issue like I thought it was, right?
Yeah, but I'm not personally.
Yeah, I personally don't know anything about that, but that doesn't make it less important.
Of course, no, of course, of course.
There's a lot of important things that I don't know about, but that doesn't mean they're not important.
What's the political topic that you feel most strong about?
I don't know.
Are we going to have, what is this conversation right now?
I'm asking you about your opinions as a college student.
What's most important to you?
Do you guys have an opinion that or a political movement that's really important to you as Gen Z?
Just, you know, basic rights for all human beings.
Just like, you know, good people stuff.
Good people stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
Good people would support basic human rights for all human beings, right?
Do you see any basic human rights being infringed upon for a certain group of people?
What do you mean, like a specific?
Yeah, do you see anybody, like a group of people who are getting their rights infringed upon?
Do you mean on campus specifically or just overall?
Anywhere.
I'm trying to think of a good example, but I just I believe that immigrants need to be treated more fairly than they are right now.
What is happening to immigrants or illegal aliens?
Which one?
I don't know if I want to talk to you if I'm being honest.
Well, are they immigrants or are they illegal aliens?
Which ones?
I mean, that's...
Like, I don't...
Because honestly, I'm not great at speaking.
Because if immigrants...
I agree with you.
Yeah, yeah.
They definitely should be treated with kindness and love.
But if you're talking about the illegal immigrants who come over and those people are being deported right now for committing heinous crimes against women in our country, yeah, that's why I'm asking you to clarify.
Are you talking about legal immigrants who come over, get vetted, pass the naturalization test, do all the good stuff background check?
Are they being treated poorly?
Or are you talking about the illegal immigrants who come over and break our laws?
Well, I'm not talking about the people who break laws because I believe anyone who breaks the law.
Sorry.
I believe anyone who breaks the law should, you know, like murder.
Whether you're born in the U.S. or you come from somewhere else.
You know, you gotta pay for that.
You gotta pay for that.
So you're okay with them being deported.
Like, get the hell out of here.
I don't know.
I feel like you're trying to catch me in my words.
I just feel like...
I'm aware that all you've done is ask me questions.
It's very manipulative, though.
Yeah.
Okay, let me ask you a straight up yes or no question.
If someone crosses our border illegally, they were not vetted, they came over with bad intentions, they have murdered women, they have raped women.
Do you think they should be aborted?
Do you think they should be deported?
I think totally.
Yeah, right?
Well, some people do like to abort children after they were born, and that's called an afterbirth abortion.
Or we could do a partial birth abortion.
I think you're talking about, Yeah, you're talking about human rights, too, right?
Yeah, well, you're talking about that.
Rights shouldn't deserve humans.
What don't happen?
Like, afterbirth abortions don't actually happen that often.
Wait, wait, they don't happen that often.
How often are they happening?
Not enough for people to be freaking out about it.
They are happening.
I don't know that.
I'm not a fing doctor.
What are you talking about, right?
You just said afterbirth abortions are not happening very often, so they are happening.
I think women are from pregnancy.
I mean, babies die.
Someone could kill their child.
That's not an after-like birth abortion.
That's just a murder.
That's a murder, yeah.
Abortion is not murder.
What is it?
It is.
It's terminal.
What is an abortion?
It's not a medical term for abortion.
I'm asking for a definition.
So, like, the medical term, the definition?
What is the definition of an abortion?
Girl, I don't have a medical definition.
I'm not a doctor either.
Okay, what do you think?
What do you, if you support it and you said it's not murder, then what is it?
Like, terminating a pregnancy before it becomes a viable person.
Before it becomes a viable person.
So it is a person, but it's not viable?
Girl, I'm not a med student.
You don't have to be a med student to have a clump of cells.
Before a certain point.
Yeah.
Like, obviously, at like nine months, unless there's like something extreme, like a complication for the mother or the baby.
Like extreme scenarios.
At nine months, if the mother is at risk.
I don't know.
You don't have to be a doctor.
Hold on.
Every time.
Okay, so to save.
To save the mother every time.
Is she pregnant with a dead child?
You said the mother who is already a term.
Like dead, they have to take it out.
That's not an abortion.
Okay, but I'm saying that's still like something that they're not like going for.
They don't want to do that.
Sometimes it's literally going to kill the woman and they still will not let her get the abortion.
What are you talking about?
What cases are you talking about?
Just in general, like that happens.
No, it doesn't.
It doesn't happen where a woman is pregnant and it's going against her health.
It's literally killing her and they won't abort it.
You're telling me that's not happening.
What case are you talking about?
What condition?
No, it doesn't happen.
Can you tell me when?
Can you tell me when it doesn't?
So if you're going to engage in a discussion here and you make a claim that something is happening, you need to back that up.
It's not, I don't have the burden of proof right now.
You do.
So I want you to tell me an example of where that has happened.
I don't have an example because it doesn't happen.
If a woman is experiencing something like an ectopic pregnancy, that is not banned in any 50 states.
That's not banned anywhere.
So that is an example, but that's also not an abortion.
That's why we need to define what an abortion is, but you guys won't define it.
We first have to define what an abortion is.
Can someone tell me what an abortion is?
I said, like, again, I'm not a med student, so I don't know.
You don't need to be a med student to know what an abortion is.
Do you know what a cat is?
Girl, don't talk to me like I'm stupid.
But you're not a vet.
Okay, yeah.
So what is an abortion?
If you support it every time for the life of the mother, what are you supporting?
Whatever the mother wants to do with her body, she should be able to do.
Should she be able to take do cocaine and fentanyl while she's pregnant?
She should be able to eat.
Should she be able to do that?
While she's pregnant?
It is her body, it's her choice.
She should be able to do cocaine and fentanyl while she's pregnant at nine months.
If it's her choice, then yes.
So does that affect, does that affect you?
You support that?
I'm laughing.
I'm laughing.
I don't support that.
We don't know how she got pregnant.
We don't know what situations she's in that she's taking these hard drugs that you're talking about.
Maybe she's dealing with some shit and she has to take these drugs.
Maybe she's on the street.
Like, you don't know what's going on with somebody.
And if we're saying, oh, we're going to start criminalizing people that are doing hard drugs like that, which is already happening while pregnant.
Putting the while pregnant is like you're not addressing the real issue.
The real issue is why is this mother on these drugs?
Why is she doing these things that she feels like she has to do these to relieve stress or something?
It's not a problem.
I don't think people do cocaine because they want to relieve stress.
I think that they are addicted to cocaine and They have no, they have no ability to control themselves.
But when a woman is pregnant and doing cocaine, is she just affecting her body?
If the baby is in her body, yeah.
So it's only her body being affected.
The baby is in her body, so the baby and her are being affected, but the baby is part of her at that point.
Does that baby deserve any justice for being abused in that way?
I think if we're going to talk about babies being abused, we need to address how the orphan orphans.
Let's talk about that after you answer my question.
Does that baby deserve justice for their mom abusing them while they were in the womb and making them addicted to cocaine and fentanyl out of the womb?
And now they have so many conditions messed up.
Does that baby deserve justice, or is that baby deserve to be given whatever that mom deserves, the mom decides to do to her body?
Is it truly just her body if that baby is going to be born addicted to cocaine?
Can you give me an example of when this has happened?
You've never seen a baby go through withdrawal?
No.
No.
I've never even heard about that on the news.
It doesn't have to be on the news.
You don't think women are taking drugs and then their babies are born addicted to these drugs?
I don't know about that happening.
All right, let's live in my personal label.
Let's live in fantasy land.
Getting pregnant.
Yeah, well, there are billions of people on this earth, and so no, it doesn't have to be anyone in your personal life.
I'm just asking you, let's do a hypothetical.
Let's pretend it's never happened.
Let's live in fantasy land, okay?
What if a woman knew she was pregnant and she continued to do cocaine and fentanyl and her baby was born addicted to those drugs, going through severe withdrawals, and her house brain damage from it?
Was that still a choice you think she should be able to make while she's pregnant?
I think a woman should be able to make whatever choice she wants with her body.
Okay.
No.
There are other prerequisites to this conversation of, oh, if she's doing cocaine, doing cocaine is legal.
So then there's legal precusions for her doing cocaine.
But then that doesn't have to do with her being pregnant.
That just has to do with her making bad decisions about herself.
No, it has everything to do because I asked you.
This is the best way to do it.
I asked you if that baby deserves justice.
Does that baby deserve justice?
Do they matter that their mom abused them?
justice.
Children in the system deserve more justice than Now that baby will be in the system.
Now that baby will be in the system.
We don't care about the moms.
We're not helping the moms.
We're not protecting the moment.
No, no, no, because you've told her that she can make any choices she wants with her body, and now she's gone and affected someone else that is in her body.
That baby's not her body.
Does that woman have two heads?
What are you talking about?
Does a pregnant woman have two heads?
So silly.
I can't believe you're on us.
I'm not the one.
I'm not the one advocating that it's not a problem for pregnant women to choose what to do with their body if that means doing cocaine and their baby being abused in that way.
That is one of the most wildest.
That is a very, very wild claim I've heard from someone on the pro-abortion side.
But I have to give her some respect here.
She's being consistent.
If it's not a child, if pregnant women are not pregnant with a child in their stomach, then yeah, I guess they're not affecting the baby, right?
There's not another person being abused there.
That's just her body.
All of it's just her body.
Until that baby is born with awful detrimental disabilities now and addicted to cocaine, just like I mentioned in the story.
And where's the justice for those children?
And because it's not happened in her personal life, well, then it hasn't happened at all.
That happens all the time.
And I agree with her that women need more help, pregnant women need more help.
And especially, I think women, if you're pregnant and you're going to do drugs, you should be charged.
That baby should not be with you when they're born.
And they're going to have a long stay in the NICU and they deserve all the help that they need.
And yeah, you should go to jail for doing drugs while pregnant.
Absolutely.
We're asking students today, number one, what's the biggest political issue that they care about is Gen Z?
What do you care about?
Biggest one?
Yeah.
I'm going to let her go first.
Okay.
I guess like abortion, right, and stuff like that.
Okay.
Yeah, it's an abortion.
Okay.
Why is that so important to you?
Because I personally believe in Christ, right?
In Jesus Christ.
And for me, it's like I know that God has made every single person with a purpose, right?
He has ordained everyone to go forth and to ultimately find their way back to him in this world.
And I really think that not giving a child the opportunity to go forth and find that life in Christ is doing them a disservice and a disjustice.
Okay, so you're pro-life.
Yes.
When you said abortion rights.
Abortion rights.
I was like, oh, you're a total pro-abortion supporter.
Nope.
No.
Oh, okay.
Abortion rights.
Okay, do you agree with her?
Yeah, I'd say Jesus knows all the hairs on our heads.
He loves us all individually.
He has a purpose for each and every one of us.
And like, he just knows us in the womb.
And I think that's the biggest, that's the biggest part.
Absolutely.
And with that being said, we were at UCF.
A few years ago, I came to this campus and I was mobbed and nearly attacked and had to be ran into an Einstein bagel for the police to get me out the back.
As you can see, the tides have changed on this campus.
I am glad to say so.
And what a breath of fresh air.
My goodness, that was beautiful.
Thank you for saying all of that.
While today's visit was super quiet and my security was not needed, I always go everywhere with them.
You can go to patreon.com slash Caitlin Bennett to support my work and make sure they go everywhere with me so I can film with safety.