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Oct. 11, 2022 - Dennis Prager Show
01:27:49
Ideological Subversion
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Time Text
Hi everybody!
Welcome to Dennis and Julie.
Dennis Prager and Julie Hartman.
And this is a precedent-breaking moment.
It's never been Dennis and Julie and...
There's one person to do an and with.
It's the girl right here.
That is very fair to say.
Thank you.
Amal Epunobi, who is one of the most successful podcasters in America.
She has a phenomenal...
Podcast at PragerU and periodically sits in for me on my national radio show.
And when the issue arose that Amala was already in my regular radio studio, would we have her on?
My instinct, I'll be very honest, is, well, it's Dennis and Julie, and that's what people know.
On the other hand, it is Amala.
I know.
You're right.
Exactly.
I mean, if we're going to break precedent, this is the person to do it with.
I am with two of the most remarkable women in the country, young or old.
And so it leads me to a very interesting question, because this is not politically driven, as you know.
It's very human, the show.
So you're both...
Immensely successful, inordinately successful at a very young age.
I have watched people ruined by fame and success at an early age.
I don't think this will happen to either of you.
So the question is, why not?
That's a big question.
I know.
This is the big question show.
Wow.
I guess I'll start.
I think I... I've always approached the subject matter of being famous with the attitude that I would never want to be famous, because I think it comes with a lot of different issues that people don't necessarily think about.
They always think about the perks.
But outside of that, I think I view fame different to most people in that all it means is that...
People know your name and they know your likeness and they can recognize you on the street.
It doesn't really mean that they know you as a person or you know them.
So when people approach me or they talk to me, to me it's just, oh, here's another person who happens to know my name.
How can I get to know them and take in what they say with really a grain of salt?
It's people that you don't know.
But when I first started working here, you told me...
You know, don't let the hate go to your heart and don't let the love go to your head.
And that is something that I've carried with me throughout this whole process.
Oh, I'm very touched because it is powerful.
Yep.
That's a great Dennis Pragerism.
Sean calls them truth bombs.
I have a new name for it.
A guy gave me a liberal that I had dinner with in Washington.
Yes.
And he said, you should call them Prager's Proverbs.
I love that.
That is good.
Yeah, you can put that in a book.
You know, I have to say, so...
As you may know, Amala, I know that the viewers know.
Last summer I worked for Dennis and I was a guest once a week on his radio show.
And part of my job was that after the radio show, we'd go back to your house and I would read his email and respond to listeners and just try to organize things for you.
And one of your listeners, I can't remember his name, but you should try to dig it up in your email, sent a list of about 50 pragerisms.
You know, everything the left touches, it ruins.
Even stuff like, you know...
You refer to Alan as the living martyr and Sean as Triple G. You have got to pull that up and we should read it aloud.
There are easily 50 of them.
I printed it out.
I think I gave it to Sue, but we've got to dig it up.
We will dig it up and read it on the next show.
My answer to your question is two things.
Number one, I hate arrogant people.
That is the quality that I despise most in others.
I've always, since I was little, if I sense a hint of arrogance in someone, I automatically don't like them.
I think also, though, and this substantiates a point that you make a lot, Dennis, I think that people have natures.
When I first met Amala, I immediately sensed that you were a humble person.
Thank you.
Yes, both of us, you know, are somewhat in the public eye and we have the privilege of being able to do things that a lot of people our age, you know, don't have the opportunity to do.
But I think, you know, not to compliment, I feel like I'm kind of breaking my ruler because I'm complimenting myself and complimenting Amala.
No, complimenting yourself doesn't mean you're not humble.
Right, right.
Right.
I think, you know, there's the phrase that fame and money make you a horrible, greedy person, but I think it's really not that at all.
I think that fame and money exacerbate what you already are.
That's a brilliant point.
And that's what happens.
That's exactly.
Really well said.
Also, I'm not famous.
I just get cursed out in restaurants when someone overhears me.
That's a certain type of fame.
Yeah, that's a certain sort of fame.
We're going to go with that.
Well, let's be honest.
I learned.
Right before we went on now, that you're very seriously involved with a man.
Yes.
And indeed, it was your fame that brought you together.
It's interesting because, yes, I'll tell the story really quickly.
I was at a bar in LA with my roommate, and this gorgeous man sat next to me, and we sparked up a conversation.
Gorgeous man.
I love that.
Gorgeous man.
What happened to handsome?
No, no, no.
I'm just curious.
I don't know.
Is that the way girls your age would say it?
Gorgeous guy?
I think...
I don't know.
I've heard that before.
I don't have a position on it.
I'm just curious.
I've heard so many different acronyms.
Is handsome still used?
Seldom I would say, but yes.
It's sort of an antiquated term.
Do you feel this too, that it sort of sounds like an antiquated term?
I think it does.
That's why I raised the issue.
Okay, go ahead.
You saw a gorgeous guy.
Gorgeous guy that's next to me.
And I sort of looked over and just caught the glimpse and went, oh, I'm not going to do anything there.
I'm not going to start anything because I'm not an extremely extroverted person.
Even though I might come off as being that on my podcast, but I just turned around, kept talking to my roommate, and all of a sudden he sparked up a conversation with us, and it wasn't until about 10 or 15 minutes into the conversation that he realized I look familiar.
And he said, you look super familiar, and I told him, trust me, I would know if I met you, and you do not know me.
And he pulled out his phone and started scrolling through messages he had with his best friend.
Your immediate reaction was not he knew you from your public persona?
It was not, because...
That fascinating.
It's weird.
I wasn't really getting recognized all that often.
And even when I do, I don't sort of lead with, oh, well, I do a podcast.
That's what you must know me from.
I just sort of go, I don't know.
Here's my point.
She's humble.
I admit I do lead with that.
When people come over to me at the airport, I have to say, they go, are you?
And I go, yes.
Yep.
Okay, go ahead.
It might be just easier that way at some point.
But he pulls out his phone and starts scrolling through messages with his best friend.
And two days prior to us meeting in this little bar in L.A., he had sent one of my videos to his best friend talking about how the points that I was making were very on point and that it was stuff that he wasn't comfortable expressing.
So what are the odds?
So gorgeous and in sync philosophically.
Yes, absolutely.
Holy crow.
Yes, it's amazing.
That's my wish for you.
And extremely humble.
So when I met him, I obviously thought, oh, this is a beautiful, handsome man.
He doesn't like to admit it, but in the past he was a model and he doesn't talk about it really ever because he's humble and he has that nature to him.
And we started talking in that bar and we got into feminism and voting and all these different political issues.
And I think we talked for four hours and just kudos to my...
All right, so wait, kudos to...
My roommate for sticking it out.
Oh, that was my question.
How does a guy...
I never, ever figured this out.
A guy sees two women together, which is very common, right?
Sure.
Most women go to a bar, let's say, or with somebody.
So how does he zero in on the one he's interested in?
I think he sort of looked into who was giving him the most interest and who sort of came and who he vibed with the most, as we young people say.
But we were sitting, and my roommate, I will say, is gorgeous.
Julia has met her as well.
She is stunning.
So he's talking to these two girls, and we start getting into politics, and that's really where the riff starts, because we start talking about feminism.
My roommate is right-leaning, free-thinking, but is...
Feminist and self-identifies as a feminist.
So we started talking about that and our chemistry, me and John, that's his name, just went through the roof and we were going off on this and then she started to disagree a little bit and I think he realized, oh, this girl.
Didn't this happen?
Dennis, correct me if I'm wrong with you and Sue.
The first time you met her, she was with a friend.
Oh, that's right.
So how did you decide?
Yeah, so how did you?
That's such an interesting question.
I never thought of that.
It seems like the friend was Sue's cheerleader, though.
Oh, big time.
That's how you recount the story to me.
To her great credit, yes.
Right.
But it was after a speech, and it took me two minutes to figure out this was the woman that I should be with.
Back quick.
I'm happy to talk about it, but I find the question I asked you is an important one.
Because I look at...
Was it Britney Spears?
She's not that famous?
I mean, she's extremely famous.
I'm impressed that you didn't even know the name Britney Spears.
Oh, that's why you're shocked.
I thought you looked like you never heard of her.
No, she's an A-lister.
She's an A-lister.
So even I know...
No, I actually do keep up on Daily Mail.
There's a section on U.S. showbiz.
I have to know something.
Even forgetting my radio show, I just feel like I have to be somewhat aware of this stuff.
It just seems to me that it's a wrecking ball in her life.
It's not a happy life.
I'm sorry, what is a wrecking ball?
Her fame and her fortune at an early age.
I wish, it's not, of course, it's not possible.
I don't even think God could do it.
But I wish that there were a way, maybe posthumously, that after you die, you could have a video Of had I made this choice, or had this happened, what would have happened?
That's a movie.
There's a movie based on that subject.
I believe it's called Sliding Doors.
Oh, with the subway train.
Yes.
I've never seen it.
Oh my gosh, it's a great movie.
I think at the beginning of the movie, in one scenario, she makes the subway.
In another scenario, she misses it.
And you see how her life pans out with those two scenarios.
Wow.
I don't want to give away the ending, but I actually think the ending has a very good message about it.
There would be a million ways to break that down.
So many choices we make.
Oh, of course.
That's why Yogi Berra is famous.
Did either of you ever hear of Yogi Berra?
Yes.
You did?
Yes.
The guy naturally came out with hilarious lines.
Naturally.
He didn't even, I don't think, always think that they were funny.
But he said, for example, you know, when you come to a fork...
In the road, take it.
That's a perfect example of a Yogi Bear.
What do you mean?
Yogi Bear.
Yeah, it's true.
Yogi Bear.
He was a great baseball player and manager.
So, anyway, I could vouch for the fact that you guys are real.
That this stuff...
I wouldn't have asked it, obviously.
Otherwise, may I offer another thought?
And you absolutely don't have to agree, needless to say.
But I have a thought.
When I thought about asking you two this question, and I don't want to put any words in your mouth or anything, but you're both women of very deep convictions.
And I think the convictions are more important to you than the fame.
Oh, yes.
Yep, definitely.
So I think that's a big factor.
When an actress or actor becomes very famous and successful, I'm not knocking acting profession.
I think it's a wonderful profession.
But they're not there because of their convictions.
That's an excellent point because, you know, most people are in the line of work that we're in to promote themselves.
And every project they do is about elevating their stature or their fame.
Certainly, you know...
Maybe professionally we make the right choices to put ourselves in good positions professionally.
But I know that when I'm sitting in front of a microphone, especially when I'm guest hosting for you, I feel a deep sense of responsibility to talk about these things in the right way because I know how important it is.
I was telling you on the phone the other day, I really believe that right now in this country...
I mean, things have been bad for, I would say, about five, ten years.
I believe that today we are at a worse point than we have ever been in our history.
I believe that too.
I really do.
And so, again, when I'm speaking, it goes beyond me.
I have to, I know that I have to be good, not just to elevate myself, but I have to be good to be effective and convince people that our values are worth following.
And that's a great point.
That's why you kind of take yourself out of it.
Yeah, and I guess it begs the question, what is left when the fame is over?
Because it doesn't last your entire lifetime.
So what do you have to lean back on when that's gone?
And is it a reputation of just saying things in order to garner more fame and surrounding yourself with people who are willing to take advantage of you in the name of getting more fame?
Or is it you spent your whole life speaking about your values and encouraging people to not even be on your side of things, but just to question their own realities and their own worldviews?
And when the fame is gone and nobody recognizes me...
I'll have that to lean back on.
But let me get to the point, Hamala, that Julie raised.
Do you feel that this is the darkest time since the Civil War?
And you don't have to.
I'm just curious.
I'm not making any point.
You know, I think there's a lot of problems with the time that we're living in right now, but with how many people who I meet who are just as reasonable as we are and just as rational but choose to stay quiet, I like to think it's just a problem of apathy and that we're not necessarily in dark times.
I couldn't tell you really.
I don't know.
I like to remain on the optimistic side of things that we are just in what is the time for now and it could be a dark one but I don't know that it's the darkest time.
How do you explain the phenomenon of all these girls who say they're boys as an example?
This is clearly societally induced.
It's inconceivable there's another explanation.
You're absolutely right.
So, funny story.
Yesterday, I filmed a video for a YouTube account called Jubilee, and they do this series called Middle Ground, where they invite people from two opposing sides to come together and debate.
And my episode was conservative women versus trans women.
So, I was one of three conservative women who came and spoke to these trans women.
And the question came up, are kids being indoctrinated with gender theory and made to be gender confused?
And you know what?
Only one of the trans women denied that it was happening.
And the other two said, yes, we are teaching kids about this because we're trying to make a society that's more aware.
But it doesn't account for the rates of what I call social contagion gender dysphoria, where kids are exponentially identifying as gender confused and transgender and non-binary simply because of what they're exposed to.
That is it.
That is the core of the issue.
It's unbelievable, actually.
It is.
I will...
All right, so now, since the two of you are humble, I'll compensate for it with a non-humble statement.
But I'm not saying it to brag.
I'm saying it because I think it's important.
I wrote in 1980-something, pre-internet, when I was sending out a newsletter.
I wrote a big piece called The War on Differences, The War on Distinctions.
And I said the male-female is one of the distinctions that's being made a war against, and this is going to lead to terrible things.
And I asked myself, how did I know this?
And the truth is, to me, it was clear.
When I was your age, At graduate school, I was taught there's no difference between men and women.
Why wasn't that the beginning of this whole thing?
By the way, I just want to get both your answers to this because I can't figure this out.
If the left says there's no difference between men and women, what does being trans mean?
I completely agree.
It's a great question.
I'm just becoming me.
You were on The Young Turks recently, and why do I feel the urge to call her Anna Karenina?
What is that host's name?
Kasparian.
Anna Kasparian.
She's not Anna Karenina.
She played a Dennis and Julie clip where I was talking about.
At Harvard, I would see all of my classmates, all of my female classmates, that's an important distinction, putting computer stickers on their laptops with, I heart women, I'm a woman, hear me war, women run the world.
Why would you even elevate women in that way if gender is just a construct and gender doesn't matter?
Their whole way of thinking is so upside down.
Before we move on from this point, I just want to give you...
Quickly, my theory on why I think this is the worst moment in our history since the Civil War.
And I'm, obviously, I want to hear your guys' responses.
I really, the thing that concerns me now, you know, in the time of the Civil War, there was a very clear side that was totally morally wrong and evil.
And there was a side that was totally morally right.
And thank God, the morally right side trumped over the morally wrong side.
Now, the thing that concerns me...
It's all the people in between.
And I had such a window into this in college where, to Amala's point, I think there is sort of a silent majority.
But with all due respect to that silent majority, and we talk about this a lot on this show, Dennis, we get paid to espouse our values.
We are in a very privileged position.
A lot of people don't have that privilege.
They would lose their jobs if they spoke up about their values.
I recognize that.
But there are so many morally confused people who don't take a stand on anything.
Nowadays, when I talk to my college peers and I say, do you think that this, you know, mutilation, the gender genital, excuse me, mutilation of young children is wrong?
They have this very lukewarm, well, you know, it's maybe it's not the best thing, but some people, you know, choose to identify in another way.
Or when I talk to them about defunding the police and I say, do you think that's morally wrong?
Well, again, maybe it's not the best thing, but, you know, the police have been oppressive.
That's what concerns me.
The amount of people that won't take a stand on things that are truly evil.
There is no moral clarity anymore.
So, yes, in the Civil War, there was evil as there is today.
But unlike the Civil War, we have swaths of people who are essentially just in the middle, and I think those are the people that are going to tank us.
That's an argument.
What do you think?
You know, I... A person that I found when I was going through this transition of becoming a freethinker and opening up my mind was Yuri Bezmenov, who was a KGB defector.
And he made this video warning Americans about ideological subversion.
And he said the real pitfall of this is that people aren't going to wake up from their apathy or their cowardice until the military boot kicks them in the butt.
And I think that's the problem.
We can talk to people about these issues as much as we possibly can until our faces turn blue.
But until they feel it, they will.
Do nothing.
And they have to feel it directly in front of them.
It has to be something that affects them, their family, their community.
And that's what happened to me.
I was a leftist until I completely surrounded myself with the ideology and felt it on a personal level through issues that I could not run away from because they were happening right in front of my face.
Reading an article or listening to a podcast doesn't quite do that for people.
If I asked your mother, may I bring your mother into this?
Sure.
So for those who don't know, Amala's mom is an activist on the left.
So if I were to ask her, or maybe, I don't know if you did, but if I, a stranger, she would know who I am, presumably.
But a stranger.
So what do you think of girls having their breasts removed because they say they're boys?
What would her response be to that?
Great question.
You know, I think she would be sympathetic to the blind affirmation medical care that's going on right now in this country.
And she would make the statement that most progressives make and that it's, you know, the reason we haven't seen rates of transgenderism like this is because we haven't been talking about it.
We haven't been educating about it.
And of course, children know their gender.
And to deny them of that affirmation would be harmful to them.
I think that would be.
Her answer, even though the research is completely antithetical to that.
Right.
Of course, my follow-up question, and I'm not picking on your mother, with anyone on the left would be, but since you say men and women are not different, what does it mean to identify with the other sex since the other sex is the same as me?
You know, I... I don't think my mother would be on the side of saying that men and women are not different.
I see.
Because she subscribes herself to the idea of patriarchy, of male aggression, of male assertion of themselves.
Toxic masculinity.
Toxic masculinity.
So yeah, I think you're going to find two classes of people there.
So, alright, let me ask one more here.
This has been a joy.
Amala, I've got to tell you.
Thank you, Dennis.
It's an Amala sandwich.
Yeah, it's very, very hearty.
So, you two, and I'm asking only because we really touch on the personal, on the Dennis and Julie podcast.
So, her mom is very proud of her.
And your mom is ambivalent.
Recently becoming proud, I will actually tell you.
Oh, this is new.
Let me hear about it.
Yeah, so she's sort of turned...
She called me the other day just for a little bit of background.
My brother is a jazz musician and he just recently booked a very big festival and I sent my mom to the festival to see him perform live because she's never really gotten that experience.
And she called me from the festival and she was so emotional seeing her son up on a stage performing for all these people and she said, you know what, Amala?
As much as, you know, we have our differences in politics, I want to express to you how proud I am of you for what you've done.
Well, I could cry.
Yeah.
And she said...
Did you cry?
I did not cry, luckily.
But it was just a shocking experience.
So, all right, aside from shocking...
I'm so glad she said that.
Yeah, but I, of course, we are.
I want to know how you reacted.
You know, I thought...
I think this is a long time coming and I feel as though she's been maybe fighting the idea of it a little bit in her mind just because the ideologies are so polar to each other.
But it was groundbreaking for me because I had grown up with a mom who...
Had made it very clear, and I should add, my mother is fantastic.
I never wanted for anything as a child, and she made sure we were very happy outside of our political discussions.
But she was constantly making it clear, I don't want to be friends with conservatives.
My grandparents were conservatives and continue to be conservatives, so there was lots of turmoil.
By the way, for the record, your mom's white.
Yes.
So people will know.
Okay, go on.
Yes, so she would get into arguments with other family members.
They wouldn't talk for months.
There was moments where she would tell me, I can't be friends with people who are Republican.
They're conservative.
They have no place in my life.
They're toxic.
And my grandmother called me the other day and she said, I think your mom has turned a new leaf.
She just told me the other day that you have opened her up to being friends with people who disagree with her.
And then I got the call of her telling me how proud she was of me.
So I feel like we're really taking a turn on this story.
So how do you react emotionally to this?
You know...
I mean, let me explain why I'm asking.
Sure.
A young person could say, you know, look, there's so much water under the bridge that, look, I'm glad this is happening, but look, the damage is done, and I'm happy that it'll be more peaceful going forward.
That's a possible reaction.
Yeah, you know, I don't...
I don't think, I don't view my relationship with my mother as something that has instilled damage in me whatsoever because I am who I am today, and that is very much due to her.
The reason I'm so strong-willed is because of her attitude growing up, even though it might have been for the wrong side.
So she did so many great things for me.
So as far as her being proud of me and getting that call...
I was so happy, not even for myself, but for her, because, I won't get into this, but she's...
Oh, that's a very sweet, that's a very healthy reaction.
Yeah, yeah, she's struggled.
So it's even better for her than for you.
Yeah, she's struggled with her mental health and things.
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Your parents, like... - The...
Since they are essentially in agreement with you, philosophically.
My mom more so than my dad.
My dad and I get into it sometimes.
He doesn't like Trump.
He does not like Trump at all.
Right.
But you know what?
It's great to have that in my home because he makes me better.
He challenges me on everything.
He agrees with me on most things, but he does challenge me on the Trump issue.
So here is one more thought from You're the Kids, I'm the Parent.
So I tell parents they cannot allow their children to hold their happiness hostage.
A lot of kids have turned out crappy.
It's just a fact.
And treat their parents despicably.
Which you don't, by the way.
No.
No, I know.
Not anymore at least, yeah.
Not what?
I said not anymore at least.
We've certainly gone through contentious periods.
Yeah, but that's not the same as treating...
Contentious is not the same as...
Well, I mean, my best example is kids who won't talk to a parent who voted for Trump.
They won't let them see their grandchildren.
This does not enter, I assume, your mind.
No.
And would not.
No matter how much you differ with your mom.
But I do tell parents, you cannot have all your joy from your children and you cannot have all your pain from your children.
You have to live a life.
Does that resonate with you from the children's standpoint?
Oh, hugely.
I love to say the most powerful and lasting thing that you can give to a person...
You know, people nowadays say it's money or it's opportunities.
I think it's the power of your example.
If you set a really good example, that will stick with people longer than any material thing that you give them.
And Amala has set such a great example for her family of being brave and going out and espousing good values.
And of course it leaves a good impression on your mom.
And of course, you know, it's not surprising to me that she ultimately has expressed that she's proud of you.
How do your siblings react to you?
You know, my siblings are sort of...
They're not political.
No, not really.
They're left-leaning, certainly, but not super engaged.
Well, that's the default position.
Right.
Yeah.
Right.
So when I think of you, Amala, I see you as an ode to...
And this is not a political fact or not a political opinion.
It's just the way life works.
You're...
Your nature is, it's not unique, but it's rare.
And it is a nature to inquire.
If it doesn't, and by the way, I think the three of us have that.
From a very early age, my feeling was, if it doesn't make sense, I won't accept it.
Yep.
And I think that's true for the three.
By the way, I think that that is true for most people who are not on the left.
They accept things that don't make sense.
Wear masks when you're a two-year-old makes no sense.
Forget politics.
It doesn't make sense.
It doesn't make sense that a biological man can compete in female sports.
So I got a great story, and then react if you think I'm right, that it's essentially when all is said and done.
A certain nature will respond to what we say, and certain natures just won't.
So I met a guy, and I've told this story on the air, and I may have said it on our show, the Norwegian guy I met at Philadelphia Airport.
Who was cute.
Yeah.
So it's rare.
I'm a guy.
I'm a sexual guy.
But I thought this guy was stunning looking.
Just, I mean, masculine, gorgeous.
Gorgeous man.
As tall as me, but considerably thinner.
And about 35 years old.
Comes over to me and he goes, oh, I love your work.
It's a joy to meet you.
Very kind and so on.
And I detected a tiny, truly tiny accent.
And I said, may I ask, where are you from?
He goes, Norway.
And I said, wow.
I didn't think that there were many conservatives in Norway.
He said, I don't know if I'm conservative.
I just know what makes sense.
And that opened my mind.
I don't see any difference between conservatism or at least non-leftism and making sense.
Yep.
I agree with you.
This was something that I went through.
Left, the left, as they say, I had this immediate instinct to go really far right and be like, well, if the left is wrong, the right must be right, and this is my new label, and here I am.
And then through that, I decided, okay, I don't want to be somebody who falls in blind faith.
I don't want to be somebody who's wholly cynical.
I want to sit in the middle and be a skeptic.
So what does that mean to people?
It just means being rational and reasonable and being able to decipher things through the lens of your own values.
And I don't think that's a trait that's particular.
It can be these random people from Norway who just recognize what sense sounds like and follows it.
So it's just a statement.
By the way, I'm not even happy about this realization, how powerful one's nature is.
You overcame...
You departed from the whole world in which you lived.
You have a BLM tattoo.
It's so interesting.
And yet you sat down.
I wasn't there, but it's sort of like you sat down one day and said, wait a minute.
It just doesn't make sense.
That's your nature.
That's what I'm saying.
I hope so.
I hope I carry whatever happened in that moment with me throughout life because I think it's very easy to abandon those things and just stick to one side ideologically and just go for it down the line.
So I hope I continue to carry that nature with me.
I like to keep it in check.
I asked Amala once, I think it was about a year ago, I said, would you ever consider removing your BLM tattoo?
I think it's a black power fist.
Black power fist, yeah.
And I really appreciated your answer.
You said, no, it's a part of me.
I really liked that because if I were you, I would sort of wear it as a badge of honor.
You know, this is what I believed.
And look at the way that I transformed.
I want to say one point before we move on from this common sense point that you raised.
I remember in college when I would talk to people about my conservatism, that was sort of my like...
I'd go out and talk to all these left-wing college students about conservatism and see their reactions.
It was hugely enlightening to me.
And I remember people would call me far-right.
They would say that I had far...
And they do this to you on the internet.
I'm sure they do this to you, too.
You know, far-right conservative host Dennis Prager.
And my response is...
If advocating for the presence of police and, you know, opposing the genital mutilation of children is far right, I mean, again, that's just common sense.
That's what I did one day.
I still think I'm a liberal.
And I have a proof.
A relative of mine, and it was actually, it was sad to me that this happened during the Trump era, who has known me much of my life.
All of my life, basically.
And he wrote to me out of nowhere.
We're not in contact much, but I've always had affection for him.
And he wrote to me, I just don't understand.
You've devoted your life to moral values, to teaching morality, and you support Trump?
What happened to you?
That's the gist.
So I just look at these things as...
The price you pay, but I wrote back.
I didn't write back.
I take it back.
This just brings me to the point of what I wanted to say about my being a liberal.
Had I written back, I would have said, you know me since I was a liberal Democrat.
Tell me one value I have abandoned.
That sparks an idea for me, and I'm curious to get your thoughts on this.
It's something I've been mulling over for quite some time.
I think I'm going to move forth in my career just not labeling myself as anything anymore, not coming forward and saying I'm a conservative woman.
And it's not to say that I want to abandon the label or the group of people that it represents, but I feel as though when we're having conversations with people, the second you say conservative, they've already come up with an idea of what that means for you, and they've already put up a mental block for what's going on.
going to happen moving forward.
So now I say, well, I'm a free thinking person, or I'm a person who is skeptical of certain things.
And on my show, I just talk about the issues from my perspective, and I do not label it.
I'm curious to hear your thoughts on that.
So I have thought about that.
I am proud of the term conservative.
It's ironic because my column this week is, what is conservatism?
I have embraced it.
And the If I only say I'm free-thinking, I'm not giving credit to the people I largely agree with.
So I totally get your desire to do that, and I wrestled with it for years.
Look, I didn't become a Republican for that reason until Reagan.
And I thought, look, I don't agree with the Democratic Party, but I still want to say I'm a Democrat because maybe I can have an impact that way.
Look at Alan Dershowitz.
He's still a Democrat.
He's still a liberal.
He literally, he said this to me and he wrote a book on it.
He has lost every single friend he had.
It's unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
You know, I have thought about doing the same thing.
It's so, you can see my reaction.
It's so interesting that you just said that.
Literally last night I was having a conversation with a friend about this very thing because she said to me, why do you label yourself as conservative?
And I was thinking about it too.
You know, should I just...
Position myself as Julie, you know, a free thinker.
But the reason, ultimately, at the end of the conversation, why I came to Dennis's conclusion, why I'm proud of the term conservative, is because, look, I may not fall directly always into a conservative line of thinking.
You know, for instance, I've expressed many times that I'm very conflicted about the issue of abortion.
You know, part of me is pro-life, part of me is pro-choice, and I'm wrestling with that.
So maybe I don't exactly fall into the conservative camp.
However, I like using the term...
Term conservative.
Because what animates me is conserving the principles of the American founding.
And that term captures that.
I don't want to progress away from it.
I want to conserve something.
And when I say that label, you're right that it comes with a whole host of assumptions or ideas.
Right.
First of all, I like the baggage that it comes with because I don't think it's baggage, but also it captures what animates me.
And every position that I take, I'm trying to look back and preserve what I believe is unique and exceptional about this country.
Yeah, I guess my view on it is I always view it from the lens of my previous self, right?
And when I was going on the internet to find people who resonated with me or whose ideas I can get behind, the second I heard conservative, I went, oh, shut.
Correct.
No, no, that's fair.
So you're saying tactically?
Yes, yes, tactically.
So give me an example, because I resonate to your desire, but I ultimately sided with being called conservative.
Give me an example of someone who embodies what you want to do.
Free thinking.
Has conservative views, but isn't labeled conservative?
You know, somebody who's recently been on my radar over the past few months is Russell Brand.
And I don't know if you've watched any of his content or heard what he has to say.
Now, of course, he talks about socialism in some of his videos, but he's very much anti-big corporation, anti-government overreach.
He's having talks to people about what that means for society, about free speech, about upholding what are traditional American values.
Right, but there's nobody on the left who has those values.
Yeah.
Right, right.
So he is functionally conservative.
Exactly.
But he never expresses the word conservative.
Right, so is he winning over people on the left?
It's interesting.
So he's actually one of the fastest growing YouTube channels on the platform.
And in a matter of, I would say, a matter of months, he's hand over fist getting millions and millions of subscribers.
And I go through and I keep a radar on people who are growing in this industry and in this business.
And you read the comments and it's...
I'm a liberal, but what you're saying is really resonating with me, and the hardline conservatives don't resonate with me.
I'm a Democrat, and I've been a registered Democrat my whole life, but what you're saying is pointing out something to me interesting.
And he just sort of poses the question and goes, don't you think this is a little bit weird that they're doing this?
And he points out all the players in the situation, and he espouses conservative beliefs, but never says he's conservative and says he's just a free-thinking person who wants other people to stay free.
And his message has broken the bounds.
bounds of ideological groups that's all right look i'm not familiar with that example i will look into it so so sean just put in my earphones that he thinks jordan peterson is such an example jordan peterson is but he he is labeled conservative correct so it almost doesn't matter what you say you are
if this russell brand starts winning people over to conservative ideas while calling himself a free thinker i have a feeling that the young turks were going to catch on He has been attacked, certainly.
He has been attacked and labeled far right by some.
So it's another interesting question.
Tactics versus pure honesty.
So I came to realize, because I went through...
That period when I... My original title, somebody just raised this with me.
He said, I know you so long, Dennis.
I remember...
You don't know this even, and Julie knows me very well.
And I... He said, I am with you since you used to say you're a passionate centrist.
You used to say that?
That was my self-description.
And gradually I realized...
Yeah, but there's actually a group that has all my passionate centrist views.
They're called conservatives.
But I'm curious, how does the label serve you?
Because somebody can watch my show for an hour and get it.
It doesn't serve me.
Okay.
I serve it.
Okay, interesting.
Okay, so you feel the need that because I have these views, I take on the label as a representation.
Dennis isn't the issue.
The value system is.
Okay.
See, I'm of the belief that, you know, my views speak for themselves, and that is me being honest and telling you how I feel about a given situation.
The label, to me, is becoming more and more unnecessary because I'm sure the label services some people that I maybe am not on the same side as.
And it might hurt to label everybody and bunch us into one group.
I hear that hesitation.
Forgive me.
So my instinctive reaction is conservatism needs you.
That would be my answer.
And like her...
Conservatives don't care if you differ with them on X, Y, or Z. Look at what I just said.
Yes, that's the most sensitive issue among conservatives.
And she says she's ambivalent.
I was with a guy, I don't remember, but who said on Salem Radio, point blank.
I'm for same-sex marriage.
I've said that.
Salem, you said it.
I am too.
You are too?
Fine.
Salem didn't send you or you.
Well, you're not with Salem.
Sure.
Well, you are in a sense.
You sit in for me periodically.
But obviously you don't work for Salem.
You work for PragerU.
PragerU didn't send you a note.
No.
It's a non-issue.
We accept diversity of thought.
Forget diversity of race.
It's a non-issue.
But diversity of thought is acceptable.
It is not on the left.
You deviate on one matter.
You just say, teenage girls should not have their breasts removed.
You're out.
Of the movement.
Yep.
Yeah, I'm going to speak at a university on Friday in Minnesota, Winona State.
And this is my second time going there.
I went there last year.
And this year, the faculty association at the university put out a letter in the school newspaper saying, if you are a faculty member or a student who doesn't want to come to class or work that day, you don't have to work because she's such a threat and such a provocateur.
That's their view of things.
It's unbelievable.
They just want a free day off.
I really think that's what it is.
Yeah.
They just want a free day off?
Well, you know what?
I wish it were that.
Right.
That is sick.
It's unbelievable.
From faculty at a higher education institution.
Wait, wait, wait.
So you're free to take the day off in protest of Amalek Genobi's coming?
Yeah, if you don't feel comfortable being on the campus when she is present.
Oh, comfort.
Well, this is the new sickness if you're not comfortable.
Yep.
The purpose of life is not to be comfortable.
No.
The purpose of life is to be uncomfortable.
I completely agree.
See, I have a theory about this, and I started asking this question of people.
I was having a discussion.
Again, I love finding liberals and leftists wherever I can and talking with them because I learned so much.
I was talking with someone the other day at Starbucks, of all places, about my views.
And I said something about fatherlessness among the African-American community.
And that person responded that they were offended by what I was saying.
And I asked them, I said, I really want to say this with total respect to you.
It's not a leading question.
It's a genuine one.
Are you truly offended by what I just said?
Or do you feel that you're obligated to say that you're offended?
I.e., is that just your Pavlovian response?
I am, even though I said it wasn't a leading question, I did have my own suspicion.
I think, of course, it is a Pavlovian response.
I don't think that these people genuinely feel unsafe or uncomfortable by Amala's presence.
I think that they feel...
Obligated, because this is a precedent in the past, and this is what liberals and leftists are supposed to do when a big, bad conservative comes on campus.
I just, again, think that it's contrived.
It's the response that they think that they should have to please other people.
It's not the response I think that they genuinely had if you gave them 100% effective truth serum.
Who invited you to Winona State?
They're college Republicans there.
Their little group invited me.
To come out for the second time.
How many people do you think will come?
You know, the first time I went there, which was when I was very fresh to this, a few hundred people came.
That's amazing.
That's great.
Amazing.
So you'll have double that this time.
I'm sure.
Now we've been blasting the letter to the editor that they put out.
So here's my theory.
And it's something, if you want to say it, say it.
I'm just throwing it at you.
The reason they're so uncomfortable when we come to their campus is...
I am certain that they suspect that in an hour and a half, you can undo four years of their indoctrination.
I agree with you.
In five minutes.
Yeah.
Well, that's right.
Five minutes.
We have five minute videos.
That's right.
It's interesting because the last time I went on the campus, the campus response was, we are going to protest and we are going to be there when she's there.
And I went and confronted them.
And this is a video that people can check out online.
And I said, let's just have a discussion about why you disagree with me.
And it's a 20 minute video of them just completely embarrassing themselves, having nothing to say to me while holding these signs that say such strong things about my values and who I am.
That video got filmed.
It got put on the internet.
Clips went out.
TikToks went out.
Tweets went out about it.
And it amassed probably over 20 million views collectively.
And now it's interesting.
Now that I'm coming back, they're saying we must abstain from being at the campus and we need to not be around her.
Oh, to not give you publicity.
I think they're afraid of being embarrassed to the scale that they were embarrassed last year.
And now their tactic is to stay away from the space that I'm at rather than confront me.
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Talking about the issue that we raised earlier about your feelings about America, your emotional reactions to the current state.
So here's a reason, and my listeners know, I never...
I don't patronize them.
I don't say, oh, here's a reason to be optimistic, but I don't really believe it.
They know I'm neither optimistic nor pessimistic.
I just believe we have to fight.
But here is a reason for optimism.
The crowds we draw on campuses, we meaning all of us, if I may still say, conservatives.
Free thinkers.
Well, the free thinkers are conservatives.
I agree.
I know you do.
I'm just saying it's...
So I'm sort of challenging you on that, because a free-thinking leftist is no longer a leftist.
Sure.
So, again, the cause needs you.
Fair enough, fair enough.
But anyway, it is fascinating.
When I spoke to the University of Wyoming, and it's on YouTube.
Not only, I think there were 700 in the main room, and then they had an overflow, hundreds more in another.
Maybe there were 1,000 students.
University of Wyoming, and Ben Shapiro goes to a college campus.
You can see on YouTube, these gigantic auditoriums are full.
How do you explain that?
And you'll get it Winona State.
How do you explain that?
I guess it comes back to that.
Question you raised earlier is, is this the worst time that we're truly in?
And the reason I don't believe it is because people keep showing up in masks like that.
And I think people truly are on our side of things by and large.
The people that you're going to run into the street will think you're a truly reasonable person and will respect you and show love to you regardless of what camp you're in.
I really think there's just a thirst for ideas and a thirst for brave and courageous people who are willing to say them out loud.
The issue is people aren't willing to say them out loud.
But I think most people feel the way that we feel.
You think so?
I really do.
You do too?
Yes, I do.
Yeah, you know, I always hearken back to Yuri Bezmenov, but he says, like, the final stage of ideological subversion is normalization, where they just show you everything and go, hey, this is your new normal.
And I think what happened is the progressive end of our spectrum did that way too soon.
Came out way too hard and were way too brash with espousing their most radical views.
And people went, whoa, wait a second.
I'm normal.
This is not normal.
My suspicion is the vast majority of Americans, not vast, the majority of Americans, and certainly of non-conservatives, there I would say vast majority don't know nearly as much as any one of us sitting at this table.
Yes.
That's the problem.
I agree with Amla that most people are rational people.
They don't think that we should be...
You know, mutilating young children.
They don't think that we should defund the police.
But again, first of all, the reason why I'm concerned is that the left has all the power in this country.
They control every single institution, I think, besides the police.
And I think that's one of the reasons why they hate the police so much because they haven't gotten their claws on that yet.
But they control so many of our institutions.
And also...
You're so right, Dennis, that a lot of people don't know just how bad things are.
It is our job to research this all of the time so we know, but people out there don't, and you know the example.
Go on, I'm sorry.
No, no, that's okay.
I just want to say this because it is so important.
I have a friend who was considering getting her fourth or fifth COVID vaccine a week ago, and I said to her, please do not get it.
We already had to get three in order to go back to school for our final semester.
But I said, if I send you some things, will you just read them?
And just, again, obviously I'll respect whatever decision you make, but can you just read what I send to you before you do it?
And to her credit, she said yes.
So I called Dennis and Sue, who are professional researchers, and I said, please send me the best studies, etc.
I sent my friend the article about Denmark not offering vaccines to people under 50. I sent her this...
Article that proves that the COVID boosters were not even tested on human beings.
They were tested on mice only.
I sent her statistics from Britain that in April and May, out of all the people who died of COVID, 94% of them were vaccinated.
In other words, many, many, you know, just facts.
And she, I could just tell that she thought that so much of this was a conspiracy theory.
And I'm like, I'm literally showing you the evidence here.
But people, it's so alien to her because all that she has heard is that the vaccine is effective and safe.
That when I send her things that are contrary to that, she literally views it as a conspiracy theory.
And that shows your point.
That people are not exposed to the daily information that we're exposed to.
So then when they hear us, there's an immediate hesitation and block.
Just because, again, it seems so foreign.
Are you vaccinated?
No.
And they're letting you on Winona State campus?
Yes.
Yes, they are.
But students have to be vaccinated, I'll bet.
I'm not sure.
They've never broached the subject with me.
No, not with you, but I always wonder how they allow unvaccinated speakers on campuses.
I mean, at Harvard, wasn't it a requirement?
Could you even attend classes if you weren't vaccinated?
You couldn't enroll.
You couldn't enroll.
And boosted.
You had to be double vaccinated and boosted.
Did they apply that to speakers?
I don't know.
It's an interesting question.
I don't know.
I'm sure any speaker that would come to Harvard would automatically be vaccinated and boosted, but they did for students and faculty.
It's a very good example of my sad realization that brains and being a fool are never mutually exclusive.
A lot of bright people at Harvard, and nearly all of them are fools.
Gigantic fools.
Well, there's a lot of knowledge, but not a lot of wisdom.
Yeah, that's it.
That's exactly right.
Did you go to college?
Very briefly.
You're a living example.
I dropped out.
Where did you go?
I went to a community college.
I went directly to the left-leaning organization.
From that, I started working at an allergy clinic, and the doctor was like, you would be a great nurse slash midwife.
So I said, okay, I'll become a midwife.
Signed up for the nursing program.
Your life took a detour.
Oh, a big detour.
I'm just at the right time.
She really is the Yogi Berra.
When you come to a fork, take it.
That's exactly what happened.
And right in the nick of time, because all the COVID stuff started happening and they said nurses had to be vaccinated to be in the program and all this stuff.
Did your mother want you to be vaccinated?
Oh, she was not happy with the whole COVID narrative and the things that I was saying surrounding that.
Certainly not.
Yeah.
Not happy at all.
She probably thought that a lot of it were conspiracy theories.
Oh, 100%.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Well, this has been a total joy.
I thought it would be 10 minutes, 15 minutes.
But I'm going to have Amala for only 10 minutes.
I know.
It's absurd.
And this is the nature of this podcast.
We get on one thing and then it's just...
Right.
When Sean tells us we're done, I'm like, what?
Well, that's true for yours, too.
I mean, when I was on your podcast just a few weeks ago, I mean, you just went to the next subject, the next subject.
I loved it.
We go all over the place.
By the way, Taylor is very good.
Oh, he is.
I'd like you to communicate to him how impressed I was with him.
Of course, yeah.
He started out on camera being so nervous, and just through this past year that we've been doing this, he's just blown through all of that.
He's fantastic.
How'd you find him?
He was working at PragerU when I got there and he's one of the people who found me.
So we started working together and he was working with me on, you know, what type of show do you want to do?
What do you want to talk about?
And we just realized we had this really great synergy with the two of us and have worked together ever since.
So people...
Most people know about you, but not everybody, so tell them how to reach you.
Oh yeah, sure.
I do a podcast called Unapologetic Live that everybody can check out on any podcast platform.
I'm also on all social media platforms at Amala Epunobi.
And there's a K in there.
Yeah, right.
I think it'll be easier for Unapologetic than Epunobi.
Yes, I think so.
Start there.
You used to say Epunobi.
No kidding.
Everybody does.
Well, who wouldn't?
Let's be honest.
Let's be honest.
It's like I tell, I love doing this with, if I, I book most of my reservations online, but if I do it on the phone, they go, could you spell your name please?
I go, sure, P. P is in pneumonia, R-A-G-E-R. Oh, God.
So here is, by the way, this is my little test.
Am I talking to a robot in human form or a human?
If she laughs, it's usually a woman, then I know, oh, it's a real person.
Right.
If there's nothing, let me go.
You didn't find that funny?
I mean, give me a break.
Some people may not get it.
That is true.
Some people may literally think it is spelled starting with an N. Wait, my name is Prager.
P is in pneumonia.
They don't know me, okay?
P is in pneumonia.
No, people may be confused.
Well, then she would say, I'm confused.
Right, true.
Yeah.
Well, she may be laughing awkwardly because she doesn't know what you're talking about.
Right, there's that too.
I used to do that.
I still do that.
Well, you're terrific.
Thanks for...
So fun having you.
Yeah, it was great.
Thank you for having me.
You're the first guest we've ever had.
Oh, my gosh.
We should get our badge.
This is an honor.
We're honored.
All right, we love you, Amala.
Thank you so much.
Right, okay.
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It really was fun.
So, I was thinking while the two of you were here, obviously, I'm hesitating because I don't want to overstate the case.
And it's more wondering than even stating a case.
But the equivalent males of your age seem to be a little harder to find.
Yes.
We were blessed with Will Witt as an example.
And there were terrific guys who were older.
But your age, it does seem...
There might be more remarkable females than males from our perspective.
Yes.
And I'm saying it so hesitatingly because I may be completely wrong, but do you have any thought?
I do.
Look, Amla and I are both 22 years old.
We have a long life ahead of us and certainly more time to see how this plays out, meaning to see if there are the same amount of men as women who are outliers, as you like to say.
In my experience so far, I have found, even though I agree with your stipulation that you wrote about a few weeks ago, that women are disproportionately ruining American society.
I also think, despite that, women are also, that I've met at my age, disproportionately outliers.
Amla is an example.
Who are doing good for society.
Who are doing good for society, yes. - Candace Owens is an example.
I mean, she's 10 years older than we are.
All right.
So if the women are disproportionately leading in the bad stuff and disproportionately leading in the good stuff of your age.
Of my age, yes.
So what does it say about the men?
What are they doing?
What is a bright man your age doing?
Just worried about making a good living?
I think so.
I've also noticed that bright men my age don't take a stand anymore.
They're very open-minded.
They don't want to offend anyone.
Yes, we were talking about this the other night at Shabbat dinner.
By the way, before I say this, I just want to, before I forget, say that we know that women's brains develop faster than men's brains.
So this could just be a 22-year-old thing.
And in a few years, perhaps, I'll be seeing just as many men that are good outliers, if not more.
Oh gosh, what was the point I was going to say?
I was going to talk about Shabbat dinner.
What was it?
Oh, yes.
So, Sean, you can edit that out now that I've remembered.
Don't edit it out, Sean.
We're real here.
The other night at Shabbat dinner, we were talking about, as we often do, dating.
And Sue, your wife, raised this point.
I thought it was really interesting that women...
Care more about dating a man.
I should say conservative women care more about dating a man who shares their values than a conservative man cares about dating a woman who shares his values.
And I think that that may have something to do with the fact that I see more female people my age who are good outliers than males.
Men my age right now are very concerned with hooking up with people in a way that I don't think women are.
They're just, I'm sorry to say, they're just hornier than women.
So, again, maybe they don't want to take a stand because they think it will deter them from hooking up with a liberal woman.
Oh my god.
I'm not kidding, that's my theory.
That's a great theory.
I'm not kidding, that is my theory.
I know it sounds ridiculous, but it's true.
Oh my god.
Because women...
Okay, so I... Revelation for you.
Yes.
So I was as interested in women when I would...
I'm still interested in women, but I'm monogamous.
But in my 20...
I didn't marry until 32. I remember being on an Air Canada flight.
There was a beautiful stewardess.
And it was a time where it was pretty much...
A given, you know, if they were called stewardesses, if she liked a guy who started flirting with her in some sophisticated way, hopefully, which I thought I was, you would get her number and you would meet somewhere.
Well, it turned out that the woman was a communist.
I mean, a bona fide communist.
Oh, no.
Yes.
From Portuguese extraction, that's how well I remember this.
And I remember debating in my mind, well, she's gorgeous.
On the other hand, she's a communist.
She's gorgeous.
Typical male brain.
Right?
So I'm lending credibility to your theory.
And I hated communism.
And I hated communists.
Right.
On the other hand, she's gorgeous.
Oh my god.
I know!
It's worthy of an oh my god.
I have seen, I know some conservative men at Harvard and when they are hooking up with a girl who is a left winger, I'll say to them, hey, I know that you don't agree with her.
Why are you hooking up with her?
She's hot.
Exactly.
I know that I, because this makes sense, because women...
Care more about the emotional connection when they are physically intimate with someone.
So I, as a conservative woman, would not feel that emotional connection if I were...
To a communist.
Yes, to a communist.
No matter how gorgeous...
No matter how gorgeous, as Amala would say, of a man.
This is so real, this discussion.
It is.
It is so real.
I just love it.
You know, I want to say one thing, just commenting.
I was thinking about this as Amala was leaving.
It's so fun that we were able to do this.
And one of the things that I love, I think I've said it on this program before, but it's worth saying again.
One of the things that I love about conservatism, by the way, we should talk about the labels thing too, just because I use that term conservatism.
we should talk about the labels thing too, just because I use that term conservatism.
Everyone is so supportive of one another, everyone who I have met.
Everyone is so supportive of one another.
Everyone who I have met.
I remember last summer when I was working, or the summer before that, when I was working for you, you were collaborating with the Daily Wire and you were giving them suggestions for videos that they should do.
And they were giving you suggestions, videos that you should do.
And I said to you, aren't you guys competitors?
It's remarkable that you collaborate the way you do.
And you said, we are all rowing in the same boat.
We are all part of the same team.
And we so badly want the other to do well, because again, we're animated by things that are higher than ourselves.
That's what I was saying earlier in this conversation with Amala, when we were talking about fame, I said, I know when I'm behind the microphone, that it's not just about elevating myself.
It's a, it's, it's There's a greater thing that I am striving for here, and that is to save this country.
And you guys all share that.
And that is why we all have such great relationships with one another.
It's not like, I'll scratch your back and you'll scratch mine and you'll come on my show and I'll go on your show.
It's genuinely just, how can we get the word out there?
It's really, really refreshing.
So that's why I hope she continues to use the label conservative.
I do too.
I was glad I reacted because obviously I adore her and PragerU adores her.
But there's no such thing.
There's no group.
There has to be a movement larger than yourself.
And there's no group called free thinkers.
Right.
There's conservative, there's liberal, there's leftist.
That's what exists.
It's like the libertarians.
Who are conservative, who vote for the Libertarian Party and throw the elections to the left.
It's extremely naive at best and utterly destructive and narcissistic at worst.
You've got to join with others whether you agree with everything they stand for or not.
It's irrelevant.
And we are in the group called conservative.
If we were called watermelons or cantaloupes, I would be a cantaloupe.
That's just the way it is.
Well, as I expressed when Amla brought it up, I have thought about that too, really from a tactical perspective, as she said.
Because, again, I am concerned with bringing the most people in so I can convince them of our values.
A, as I mentioned, I like the term conservative because I think the name itself captures what animates me to conserve the principles of the founding.
But also, I like using it because...
Nowadays, people are so afraid to take a stand, at least the people that I have grown up with and gone to school with.
They are so afraid to say what they really believe in.
I was just discussing the lukewarm moral reactions that people have to the evil that is going on in this country.
I love calling myself a conservative because I want to be an example of someone who is young and female and I am proudly saying that I'm conservative.
I'm not trying to qualify it.
I'm not trying to hide it.
I am very proud and I think that does.
I think that leaves more of an impression on people than not labeling yourself.
I get her hesitation.
By leaving the label, you're giving them a victory.
Exactly.
I get her hesitation because nowadays we do reduce people so much to labels.
No, no, I get it too.
I flirted with it.
But we reduce people, I find, mostly to demographic labels.
You know, I'm a black woman.
I'm a queer man, etc.
And, you know, the thing I like to say about conservatism when...
When people ask me, why do you identify as a conservative?
I say, look, conservatism is my compass.
One of the things that I love about it as a worldview is that it forces you to define your values and your principles.
I know that when I am approaching a life question or a political question, my conservative worldview is what guides me.
But if my compass leads me into a muddy field, You know, if it leads me somewhere that I don't like, I'll abandon it and use my own judgment.
But overall, I think it's a good thing that I have a set of principles and values that guide me.
And that's what I want to impart to the audience.
Because nowadays, people don't have principles that they put higher than themselves.
They just choose to follow their conscience.
And that, to me, is our biggest problem.
Really well said, which brings me to our final subject today.
For the first time, I guess, in three years, the next volume of my Bible commentary is out today, this very day.
Let me show it here for those watching.
I'm so excited.
Deuteronomy.
Deuteronomy.
The fifth of the first five books, the third of my volumes.
I'll eventually do all five, God willing.
Who designs your covers?
So it's a process.
We choose the painting.
Regnery did a phenomenal job.
The whole book is, by the way, I have to approve the paper or it doesn't get published.
Authors should all do that.
This is gorgeous paper, gorgeous type.
Regnery did a great, great job, I have to tell them.
Normally I say to people, I don't care if you get the Audible, I don't care if you get the Kindle, but in this case, I think people should get the actual book because it's so beautiful.
I want you to know, when I see your copies of Genesis and Exodus, and how much you have marked them up, people say, so you...
Yes, that's right.
Those of you watching, I'm showing.
I don't even think I told you that I brought this today, but every page is...
I didn't know, yeah.
Every page is highlighted.
I want you to know, so people say, so it just happened, in fact, at a recent dinner.
People say, so aren't you excited?
Your book's coming out on, you know, they say the date.
I said, I'm not at all jaded.
It's a wonderful thing.
But I said, I'll tell you what excites me.
I thought about it because I always analyze myself.
I'm excited by the reviews on Amazon.
There are 4,000 of them.
This changed my life.
That excites me more than the actual date of publication.
Seeing someone of your depth underline on every page some point I make, that excites me.
So it's not that I don't get excited from this.
It's that the publication isn't what does it.
It's the reaction to it.
Right.
Well, you said this to me once because I was telling you how much this work has influenced me.
And you said, I've become numb sometimes to the power of my words.
And I have noticed that that happens to me when I'm talking on this podcast.
Someone will say, you made such an interesting point to me.
It really resonated.
I never thought of it that way before.
And to us, it seems obvious because this is what we're doing all day.
It's our job to come up with these interesting points and to learn.
But it really, this, your Bible commentary is, I know I've said this so many times in this program.
I am going to tell people to the best of my ability how much it has influenced me, but sometimes I feel like I am sucking up or people are going to think of it.
Nobody thinks that.
I really think it is the most extraordinary book I've ever read.
This book has done more to shape my thinking than anything else I've consumed.
It is...
You really have accomplished something remarkable.
I was thinking about this on the drive over today because I thought, how am I going to talk about this book in a way that does it justice?
You write with such clarity and such simplicity that you make very hard things understandable and palatable to people, and yet you do not sacrifice the profundity of your point.
You have this incredible ability to say things concisely and simply, but also still pack a punch.
Another thing I love about this book is that it's all in bullet points, or many of the points that you have about a particular passage are, it's designed in a way to not be just straight through prose, and I think that that's very good mentally for the reader.
I think also from this book, you will be getting a sense of history as well as religion.
What's so remarkable is that you point out, you make the hardest passages understandable, for instance, and not just understandable, but interesting.
I think in chapter 5 or 6 of Genesis, it's one of those lineage chapters where they just go, blank was the son of blank and lived till 100 years.
And most people just flip through that and go, okay, I don't know why the Bible...
But what you say about that particular part of the book is you go, this is actually not something that you should pass over.
This is significant because previous societies valued or just would talk about lineage with regard to kings.
This is such a great example of how you take something that seems insignificant and you turn it into something meaningful.
And that makes you understand and respect the Bible even more if you understand those seemingly insignificant things.
And I think also the way that you explain the stories It has such an impact because you pull out the hidden message that God is trying to say, or perhaps I shouldn't say the hidden message, the more...
Yeah, it's sometimes hidden.
Yeah, not obvious message.
I love to point to the Cain and Abel story.
If you read that story, you just know, okay, Cain made a sacrifice to God, Abel made a sacrifice to God, Abel had the better sacrifice, and Cain was jealous.
Most people would just go, okay, moving on.
But you say, hey, there's something important to this.
Seek to envy or emulate the people that do better than you.
With every single story, you point out the moral significance.
And I originally bought this book because I wanted to get a sense of history.
I thought just to be a learned person, it was important to read the Bible.
But you actually made me religious.
Because you convinced me of just how wise it is.
Well, it was worth it just to get that reaction from you.
You know, I feel like it was sort of a laundry list that I just spat out, but there are so many things about it that make it so exceptional.
So forgive me if it seemed disorganized.
More than excited about its publication today, there's a sadness in me.
I know this will sound.
Whatever it'll sound, I don't care.
This is what I feel.
I just wish everybody read it.
Right.
It has nothing to do with money.
Nobody writes Bible commentaries for money.
It has to do with this will answer most people's issues in life.
The purpose of life, good and evil, meaning, men and women, God, everything.
Because everything is in these five books.
You talked about the lesson I offered on Cain and Abel.
So Cain could have said, which he did, oh, I... I resent his better sacrifice.
I'll beat him or kill him.
We don't know if he intended to kill him, but he killed him.
There's another phenomenal story where I think it's with Isaac.
So Isaac had, I think it was Abraham, Isaac, or Jacob.
I think it was Isaac.
It might have been Jacob.
It might have been Abraham.
It doesn't matter.
The lesson matters.
So the Philistines, the surrounding people, who had a failing economy, saw that he had wells that really worked.
So the story is so perfect for our time.
So what did these Philistines do?
You would think they'd go, gee, he got rich with his wells.
Let's figure out well technology.
No.
They filled his wells with dirt.
That is a perfect metaphor for the life in which we live.
Let's destroy those who are successful, not emulate them.
By the way, that's the root of anti-Semitism.
Yes, we talked about this.
And it's the root of anti-Americanism.
Yes.
People hate America because it's been successful.
So let's tear it down, not let's emulate.
Well, that's your stipulation that most people who have hated the Jews, it's because they actually do perhaps subconsciously believe that they're the chosen people.
Right.
Because if they didn't think the Jews were the chosen people, then they go, oh, they say they're the chosen people.
So what?
- I thought they were a bunch of kooks. - No, but another example that I love, because I don't just try to convince people on this podcast to buy this book, I try to convince my friends in my life to buy it.
You know I actually send them signed copies.
And one of the examples that I love to bring up is your essay on why it's important that God is a he.
Again-- - Depicted as a he. - Depicted as a he.
Thank you.
Again, you just feel like a broken record.
I worked very hard on that essay.
There are a lot of essays in the book just for people who don't have one.
You make everything understandable.
Everything.
Things that I wouldn't even think of, you make understandable.
And look, it's a daunting thing to read the Bible.
It is.
It is.
Because it seems like it's going to, you know, the diction is going to be difficult.
The concepts are going to be difficult, and you make it really, really digestible.
So, folks.
You've got to buy it.
Seriously.
I hope you do.
Here it is.
Beautifully printed.
Today.
It's a 10-year project.
This is the third of the five volumes I've done.
The book that the founders of America quoted more than any other book, secular or religious, Deuteronomy.
It's incredible.
Well, it's been great being with you.
Oh, yes.
We have to talk about last week.
So last week I told you this story of the transgender barista at the coffee store that I go to and how she said to me, you know, Julie, you are so sweet.
You are one of the nicest people that comes in here.
We have so many people that are rude and, you know, don't have any time, but you are not like that.
And remember I said to you, I had the urge in that moment to tell her that I... I'm conservative.
Because that happens to me so much in life.
People think I'm a nice person and I know that they're left wing.
And they like me.
And then if I tell them that I'm conservative, it seems to kind of burst their bubble.
So I didn't...
I actually got a lot of people writing in who said, you know, for some reason people had an aversion to me telling her that I was conservative.
And I should...
Maybe next time I'll read one of the emails.
That's fascinating.
Yeah.
Why would they have an aversion?
I think what they said was, is it really necessary?
Can't you just have a relationship with her without bringing politics into it?
Okay, I have an answer to that.
Right.
It has nothing to do with politics.
It's morality.
I don't give a damn about it.
Right.
I don't either.
I only care about right and wrong, good and evil, meaningful and meaningless, helpful and hurtful.
So the dismissal of this notion, I'm not a conservative because I care about politicians.
I care about politicians because I care about who's in power.
Because if we have a bigger and bigger government, we have less and less freedom, and I cherish freedom.
Is my cherishing of freedom political, or is it moral?
I'm posing this question to that person.
So you're saying that you're a conservative after this person who probably thinks conservatives are all hate-filled people.
How could that not be a good thing that you have added to the sum total of kindness on Earth?
And I want to open their minds to the fact that conservatives are not these evil villains that you think they are.
But I decided, and it wasn't because obviously I'm not ashamed to say I'm conservative.
Look at what I do as my job.
But I decided to tell this barista, or at least indicate it to this barista in a different way.
I said to her...
Yesterday or two days ago when I was there, I said, you know, I come here a lot and we kind of have this rapport, but I don't think I've ever told you about my job.
I actually do a semi-public job.
I do a podcast with a talk show host named Dennis Prager.
She didn't know of you.
And I said, I just gave her, I wrote down my website and I said, look up Dennis and Julie on YouTube.
And I just passed it to her.
And she said, oh, I will.
I'm sorry to add to the suspense more.
Oh, I am aching to know.
That is what I did.
Oh, that's great.
I don't know if when I come back into the coffee store, I don't know if I'm going to get hot coffee in my face.
I don't know if I'm going to get a hug.
I have no idea what I'm going to get.
But I thought, you know, just let her see for herself what I think.
You know, I don't...
I want her to see the entirety of my value.
Obviously, she's not going to binge watch Dennis and Julie.
I mean, maybe she will.
I don't know.
Meaning, obviously, she's not going to watch everything that I've done.
But I want her to listen to an episode because not only do I want her to know that I'm conservative, but I want her to see how real this is.
And I want...
In many ways to debunk the stereotypes that she may have of conservatives.
I couldn't agree more.
By the way, maybe she's listening.
Hi!
Oh, that's right.
I know.
Sometimes we forget when we talk about people.
That's a great point.
They could be listening.
All right, folks.
Bye, Deuteronomy.
And contact me at julie-hartman.com.
That's the website name that I gave to the barista.
You can email me at julie at julie-hartman.com.
And follow us on social media on Instagram and Twitter at DennisJuliePod.
And on Facebook, it's called the Dennis and Julie Podcast.
And look out for my show, which is going to be called Timeless with Julie Hartman.
It's going to be launching in the next two weeks.
So I'll give you another update on that the next time we're on Dennis and Julie.
But it is coming soon, and I'm very excited about it.
My set is actually right here, Dennis.
So he can't get rid of me, even if he wants to.
I don't want to.
Thanks, everyone.
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