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Why Nevada Can Go Red: My Speech At Fervent Church in Las Vegas

Why Nevada Can Go Red: My Speech At Fervent Church in Las Vegas

Released Sunday, 21st April 2024
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Why Nevada Can Go Red: My Speech At Fervent Church in Las Vegas

Why Nevada Can Go Red: My Speech At Fervent Church in Las Vegas

Why Nevada Can Go Red: My Speech At Fervent Church in Las Vegas

Why Nevada Can Go Red: My Speech At Fervent Church in Las Vegas

Sunday, 21st April 2024
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0:00

Hey everybody, happy Sunday. It

0:03

is my conversation at Fervent Church

0:05

from Las Vegas. Pastor

0:07

Jimmy Morales, and we

0:09

talk about a lot of different stuff and

0:11

take questions to the audience and why I

0:13

think Nevada can go red this November. Email

0:16

us as always, freedom at charlincirk.com. Subscribe

0:18

to our podcast, open up your

0:20

podcast application, and type in Charlie

0:22

Kirk Show, and get involved with Turning

0:25

Point USA at tpusa.com. That

0:27

is tpusa.com. Buckle

0:30

up everybody. Here we go. Charlie, what you've done

0:32

is incredible here. Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the

0:34

college campus. I want you to know we are

0:36

lucky to have Charlie Kirk. Charlie

0:39

Kirk's running the White House, folks. I

0:42

want to thank Charlie. He's an incredible

0:44

guy. His spirit, his love of this

0:47

country. He's done an amazing job building

0:49

one of the most powerful youth organizations

0:51

ever created, Turning Point USA. We will

0:53

not embrace the ideas that have destroyed

0:55

countries, destroyed lives, and we are going

0:58

to fight for freedom on

1:00

campuses across the country. That's why we are here. Noble

1:05

Gold Investments is the official gold

1:07

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1:09

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1:11

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1:13

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1:16

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1:18

Noble Gold Investments at noblegoldinvestments.com.

1:21

That is noblegoldinvestments.com. It's where

1:23

I buy all of my

1:25

gold. Go to noblegoldinvestments.com. Well,

1:30

I'm excited to have Charlie here and

1:32

I want to get right into it

1:34

with Charlie. First of all, Charlie, it's

1:38

been three years since you were here last. And

1:40

it was really exciting last time. But

1:43

let's see, last time you were

1:45

getting ready to start Turning Point Faith. You

1:47

were engaged to be married to the

1:49

love of your life. And

1:52

now you have taken it

1:54

next level. So tell us what's going

1:56

on in your life. Boy, three years it's been. First of

1:58

all, you're in a great. job, Pastor Jimmy, and thank

2:01

you for having us here. It's just

2:03

terrific. And so, yeah, we now have

2:05

a baby girl, praise God, and the

2:07

most important thing that

2:10

anyone can do, which is besides giving

2:13

your life to Jesus, is

2:15

having children and getting married, and it's just

2:17

been amazing. And so now at PPSA faith,

2:19

we have thousands of pastors as part of

2:21

our pastor coalition across the country. We're

2:24

dealing with churches all across

2:26

the country. And our mission statement,

2:28

as we were just talking with some of our pastor

2:30

friends earlier, is to try to kick

2:32

Wokism out of the American church as quickly as possible.

2:39

And there's a serious problem in American Christianity

2:41

right now. There are three types of churches.

2:43

There are the cowardly, the complacent, and the

2:46

courageous. You're in a courageous church here tonight.

2:50

And we have many courageous pastors from all over

2:52

the valley here, but far too

2:55

many are complacent. They say, I

2:57

don't do that political thing. I don't

2:59

get involved in it. Well, the way all of you

3:01

should respond is, well, do you do the biblical thing?

3:04

Do you do what the Bible says? What

3:06

do you make of Esther, Mordecai, Nehemiah, Jeremiah,

3:08

Daniel, Elijah, who were counselors to the king,

3:11

who cared about their nation, who cared about

3:13

the welfare of the nation that they were

3:15

in? Jeremiah 29.7 says, demand the

3:18

welfare of the nation that you are in,

3:20

because your welfare is tied to your nation's

3:22

welfare. We as believers are called to care

3:24

about our city, care about our state, care

3:26

about our nation. And it just so happens

3:28

that we live in the greatest nation ever

3:31

to exist in the history of the world,

3:33

that we've been so blessed to be in

3:35

this nation. And it

3:38

was largely founded and grew

3:40

to what it is now today. And it's now

3:42

falling apart. Thanks to Christians, thanks

3:44

to churches. And now the

3:46

vast majority of American churches and pastors are

3:49

remaining silent at this time for choosing. With

3:51

USA Faith, we aim to change that and

3:53

honored to have so many members all across

3:55

the country. And we're going all in on

3:57

Nevada. We believe in this state. I

4:04

believe Nevada is the number one swing

4:06

state in this election. We are going

4:08

to make or break this election.

4:10

So as long as we're talking about it,

4:13

let's talk about the TPUSA faith strategy

4:15

for taking Nevada. Yeah, and this is

4:17

also part of our organization, Turning Point

4:19

Action. Those of you that watch the

4:21

Charlie Kirk show and we have our

4:23

Turning Point Action. Is that Brett back

4:25

there? Brett is from Wisconsin. I'll talk

4:27

about that in a second. We

4:29

need to win Wisconsin to everybody. Wisconsin is

4:32

a critically important state, and I'll

4:34

walk through that. But this state gives me

4:36

so much hope because this state

4:38

used to be Ruby Red and

4:40

then Harry Reid temporarily painted

4:42

it blue. And now we're

4:44

going to bring it back to its Ruby Red roots here in

4:46

the state of Nevada. That's what we're going to do. And

4:51

what Harry Reid was a pioneer in the

4:53

worst possible way. I think he's a very

4:55

sinister human being, and he should

4:57

not be remembered well, is that

5:00

he wasn't so concerned about

5:02

persuading people or about

5:04

winning the argument. He was really,

5:06

he was so obsessed about

5:08

machinery, about voting

5:10

laws, about culinary union

5:13

relationships, on precinct organizing.

5:15

And that is why Nevada went

5:17

blue for so long. And

5:19

we know what it was. He built

5:22

a machine of fraud and corruption. He

5:24

built a whole machine of graft and

5:26

intimidation. I'm sure many

5:28

of you have stories of outright

5:31

mob-like intimidation of people that work

5:33

on the strip. You better bring your ballot to work.

5:35

You better submit it the way we tell you to.

5:38

And he built a whole machine around that. And

5:41

now that there are so many, a

5:43

couple things are changing. Number one, Hispanics

5:45

here in the state of Nevada are

5:47

turning red in record numbers, and they

5:49

are embracing Republicans. Which

5:52

I think is so promising and so exciting.

5:55

Number two is that

5:57

traditional Democrats that work with their

6:00

hands, the muscular class, if you will,

6:02

people that shower before work and after

6:04

work, they're leaving the Democrat Party. And

6:06

by the way, we need them in

6:08

our country. God bless

6:11

the muscular class. Police

6:13

officers, firefighters, electricians, welders,

6:16

the people that do the tough work for all

6:18

the conventions here. And let's be honest, Vegas

6:21

is home to a lot of people that

6:23

don't have college degrees that work their tail

6:25

off in very difficult jobs, that

6:27

work in labor intensive jobs. Vegas

6:29

is a mini center of the

6:32

muscular class in this country. And

6:35

they're leaving the Democrat Party. They see

6:37

the Democrat Party as an out of

6:39

touch, elitist oligarchy party that talks more

6:41

about our democracy when they can't afford

6:43

groceries, that talk more about

6:45

systemic racism when they see what's happening at

6:47

their local kids' school. So

6:50

they're gravitating away from the Democrat Party, which

6:52

I think is so exciting. And I'm talking

6:54

about people that work in the casinos, not

6:56

just work in the casinos, but work in

6:58

all of your amazing industries here. They used

7:00

to be reliable Democrats, and now they're a

7:03

swing demographic. And then finally, there's a good

7:05

amount of net inward migration. Some

7:07

of it is bad, but it actually is

7:09

generally good in this state, especially

7:11

up in Wash Out County. There's a lot of

7:13

Republicans that are fleeing California and coming

7:16

into Nevada and registering as

7:18

Republicans. And so those factors

7:20

all coming together. This

7:22

is a legit battleground state. Every

7:25

new voter we register matters. Every

7:27

ballot that we chase matters. Every ballot

7:29

that we harvest matters. Every conversation that

7:31

we have matters. Earlier

7:34

today, I was on campus at UNLV,

7:36

University of Nevada, Las Vegas. And

7:39

it's liberal, as you would imagine. We

7:41

had well over 1,000 students show up

7:44

at the height of the day in

7:46

the blitzing sun to want to have conversations

7:48

in support. I think some of you might

7:50

have been there and saw what we were

7:52

doing there. It was really exciting, and that

7:54

is not a normal response at a kind

7:56

of center-left, somewhat liberal university. And so there's

7:58

something happening here in the... the state, the

8:00

Democrats have taken the state for granted, they

8:03

have not invested the resources that they have

8:05

in other states, they're starting to see it

8:07

all of a sudden fall apart, and it's

8:09

time for us to go all in and

8:11

accelerate and take the state back. Amen,

8:16

amen. Charlie,

8:21

everybody knows Charlie Kirk, the

8:23

political activist. Obviously you're

8:25

pretty popular in Nevada. They

8:28

know you from your campus visits and you

8:30

know, you're make me change my

8:32

mind to booths and,

8:35

but you know, a few

8:37

years ago you started Turning Point Faith

8:39

and people in Nevada really

8:41

don't understand kind of where

8:43

does Turning Point Faith come from. Would

8:45

you tell us a little about Charlie, the

8:48

man of God? Well thank you. I

8:50

pray that I am a man of God. I am

8:52

born new thanks to Jesus Christ, born again and most

8:54

of them. I'm a believer in a very,

8:57

very outspoken Christian, but thank you

9:00

for those kind words. How did you come to

9:02

Christ? I gave my life to

9:04

the Lord in fifth grade in the suburbs of Chicago,

9:07

most important decision I ever made in my life, and

9:09

you know, every year as you grow older, decisions

9:12

like that start to mean more and start to

9:14

all of a sudden set in and

9:16

you know, I went to high school in the

9:18

suburbs of Chicago, public high school, government high school.

9:20

I was always known as the Christian kid. Many

9:23

of you could probably relate to that and then

9:26

started Turning Point USA when I was 18 years old, obviously

9:28

very political in my

9:31

beliefs and you know, my disposition has

9:33

always been, have been a Christian all

9:35

throughout that journey. Never thought I'd

9:37

be doing anything in churches up until 2019, late 2019. I'd

9:41

never spoken at the church and

9:44

it's now been, it'll be what, five years

9:46

in fall and I've now spoken over a

9:48

hundred churches across the country. I've learned a

9:50

lot. I have spoken every type of church

9:52

you can imagine from five point Calvinist churches

9:55

to swinging from the chandelier Pentecostals. I've

9:57

seen it all. We

10:00

launched TPUSA faith as

10:03

a direct response to a crisis. Again,

10:06

I needed another project like a hole in the head. To

10:08

give you an idea, we have 500 full-time

10:11

employees at Turning Point. We

10:13

have Turning Point Academy, our high school division. We

10:15

have our college division. We have our campus victory

10:17

project. We have Turning Point Action. We have an

10:19

office in Wisconsin. We have our media department. We

10:22

have Blacksit. We have productions. I do three hours

10:24

of radio a day. I do podcasts when I'm,

10:26

you know, my free time. I do 300 public

10:28

speeches a year and try to still, you know,

10:31

be home for dinner and try

10:33

to raise, you know, $80 million a year. 300,000

10:36

donors run a development department. I just say, we

10:38

have a lot going on. And

10:40

the last thing we needed was another project

10:42

on top of it. But honestly, it became the

10:44

most important thing we were doing. And

10:47

it became the most important thing we were doing

10:49

because I understood what would happen. It was a crisis.

10:51

I'll tell you the story. If the church all

10:53

of a sudden became complacent and fell apart and was

10:55

not strong and courageous, the country will immediately disintegrate. And

10:58

it was during COVID whereas, and

11:01

you're gonna have to forgive me. Some of you

11:03

heard the story earlier. I'll repeat it. I do

11:05

a three hour radio program every day. Praise God.

11:07

It's been very popular. It's on hundreds of radio

11:09

stations across the country, also on Real America's Voice.

11:12

I'm sure some of you guys listened to it. And

11:14

thank you guys for supporting that. And

11:16

I looked directly into the camera and I

11:18

made a prediction. I said, let me make

11:20

a prediction. These lockdowns are not gonna last

11:22

very long and that the American church will

11:24

not tolerate them. And they're gonna resist these

11:27

lockdowns because the American church loves liberty. And

11:30

that was a very foolish thing to say. Because

11:32

the American church, except for churches like

11:35

this and some present, generally do not

11:37

love liberty. And liberty is God's idea,

11:39

not man's idea. And I was looking

11:41

around shocked and saddened

11:44

when churches stayed closed for

11:46

Easter. They stay closed for Pentecost.

11:48

We had one of the greatest crises in

11:50

American history where people were killing themselves at

11:53

record rates. We've never seen before because of

11:55

isolation and despair. And the church was like,

11:57

sorry, I'm afraid you might have the flu.

12:04

We turned away a youth that wanted camaraderie

12:06

and community and said, why don't you just

12:08

watch on the live stream? It's the same

12:10

thing anyway. Eliminating

12:12

the verse where it says where two or more

12:15

are gathered, do not forsake thee. And

12:19

by the way, watching church on

12:21

YouTube live stream is like watching a fireplace

12:23

on YouTube live stream. You get all the

12:25

effects, but none of the warmth. And

12:34

just one other thing. So then the

12:36

race riots happened, all the wokeism occurred,

12:38

and the church embraced that

12:41

too. And I said, we have to do

12:43

something. We launched TPUSA faith. It took us

12:45

some months to get the funding and stuff

12:47

together. It's now one of our most successful

12:49

divisions and departments. We are doing pastors trainings

12:51

across the country. Our recent pastor training in

12:54

Phoenix, which many of you attended with our

12:56

great friends at dream city church was our

12:58

largest ever. I think we had over 2000

13:01

people attend from all sorts of different churches

13:03

across the country. And we're just

13:05

getting started. And again, we are so

13:07

focused on trying to strengthen the American

13:10

church. If the American church is not

13:12

strong, the country will be weak. It

13:14

is that simple. And that's why TPUSA

13:17

faith exists. Amen. Amen.

13:24

I like watching YouTube fireplaces. You

13:27

just ruined it for me. Thanks.

13:30

But Jimmy, you would agree

13:32

a real fireplace is better.

13:34

It is better. Amen. Amen.

13:37

So, you know, but this

13:40

touches on the other issue I wanted to talk

13:42

about tonight. And that is, you

13:44

know, with

13:47

TPUSA faith, you've

13:49

seen great success because

13:52

it's nationwide. And because of

13:54

the reputation of turning point, pastors

13:57

already knew about you, trusted you, were drawn

13:59

to you. and they're

14:01

coming to hear the message that

14:03

is being shared at these conferences.

14:05

And they're amazing pastors conferences. I

14:07

mean the stuff that they're hearing

14:09

at these conferences is opening eyes

14:11

and changing churches. But there's still

14:13

a huge

14:16

percentage of churches out

14:18

there that are sold

14:20

on the idea that

14:22

somehow it's immoral or

14:24

ungodly for churches to be

14:26

involved in politics. Yeah

14:29

and I it's funny there's an open invitation. It's

14:32

really interesting. I can get a

14:35

tranny, a Marxist, or always to

14:37

debate me. I can't get a

14:39

woke pastor ever to debate me.

14:42

I'm gonna keep trying. It's

14:44

the strangest thing. You know I'll

14:46

set up a shop at UNLV and you know

14:49

you got the Black Lives Matter people they'll come

14:51

scream. It's fine we have a conversation. But

14:53

I've had an open invite for three years for

14:55

any one of these woke pastors to come on

14:57

my program which by the way is a bigger

15:00

audience than they'll ever have to

15:02

come on and to talk about why they

15:04

think where it says in the Bible they

15:06

only can use the Bible okay. You can't

15:08

use new-age philosophy. You can't use feelings and

15:10

emotions. You can't use words like nice that

15:12

are not in the scripture. Only in the

15:14

66 books of the Word of God does

15:16

it say should we not get involved in

15:18

politics. Where does it say that? And

15:20

they'll never do that because first of all many

15:22

of them are afraid of anything that is like

15:24

not in Matthew okay. But I can

15:30

show you in Matthew where it says we are

15:32

supposed to be political. Of course but I mean

15:34

and then they'll say well you know it's context

15:36

specific. But

15:39

there's some truth to this though which

15:41

is Andy Stanley who's a motivational speaker

15:43

who calls himself a pastor in

15:45

Georgia and he comes out and

15:48

he says we I'll never forget it was a

15:50

tweet. You guys during question and answer someone find

15:52

the tweet for me who's tech savvy because I

15:54

don't want to ever I never want to be

15:56

inaccurate. He said something of the of

15:58

the I that the

16:01

Jesus Christ is more than the 66 books

16:04

of the Bible and that the Old

16:06

Testament is not that important to understanding

16:08

Jesus. This is such rubbish, which is

16:10

what prophecy do you think he was

16:12

fulfilling? Why do you

16:14

think all of a sudden the followers said, you

16:17

might be the one? You might be, what does

16:19

Messiah mean? Where does that idea come from?

16:22

Did it just come ex nihilo out of nowhere? By

16:25

the way, did Jesus was an observant

16:27

Jew? So shouldn't we know

16:29

what observant Jews believed? Understand what our

16:31

Lord and Savior also believed? And

16:34

the line of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,

16:36

Joseph, David, that led to our Lord

16:38

and Savior, but the reason they don't

16:40

like the Old Testament, number one, it's

16:42

too many words for a lot of

16:44

them. They just, you know, they too

16:46

much. Number two, no, it

16:49

really is. Number two, though, is that they

16:51

think it's too judgy. And

16:54

they said, well, it's kind of mean. I

16:58

don't like it in Leviticus where it says two

17:00

men shall not lay together like they will lay

17:02

with a woman because, you know,

17:04

I run a motivational seminar that

17:06

is called the church with really good coffee

17:09

and organized parking. And, you

17:12

know, I want to make sure I don't offend anybody.

17:15

If you are afraid of offending people,

17:17

you should not be a pastor. The

17:24

problem is, is that

17:27

pastors think that people

17:29

come to church for affirmation. They

17:32

come to church for

17:34

redemption. They come to

17:36

church for hope. They don't

17:38

come to church to hear that all the

17:40

decisions they made in the last week were

17:42

terrific. Like, whoo, thanks.

17:45

I'm really glad, you know, that

17:47

all the decisions I made about the money

17:50

I stole from my company, just

17:53

perfectly fine. You cannot get

17:55

revival without repentance. You can't get

17:57

repentance without talking about sin. And

18:01

so they they also they

18:03

ignore that the Old Testament in

18:05

particular is some of the most

18:07

political ancient documents ever composed The

18:10

most and I'll throw back to you in a

18:12

second Jimmy on this But because I think it's

18:15

super important the founding fathers and they founded America

18:17

the book that they cited more than any other

18:19

book Secular religious was the book of Deuteronomy Moses

18:22

is farewell addressed to God's chosen people

18:24

and there is a lot in Deuteronomy

18:26

that talks about the structure of government

18:29

Separation of powers consent to the government

18:31

the founding fathers built the American Constitution

18:34

Primarily on the structure of the book

18:36

of Deuteronomy and yet pastors say that

18:38

we shouldn't get political You should

18:40

challenge them the same way Jesus challenged

18:42

the Pharisees and say what does politics

18:45

even mean? Give me a definition. They

18:47

can't you know what politics means in

18:49

Greek business of the city. That's

18:52

it Should the church be involved in

18:54

business of the city? You should ask that your next

18:56

Sunday Hey pastor, should we be

18:58

involved in the business of the city? Of course, we

19:00

should be okay So you think we should be political?

19:02

No, that's too divisive Could

19:05

Christ come to unite he came

19:07

to divide? Divide

19:10

truth from error people have

19:12

this idea Well, you know, we must have this like 1960s

19:14

John Lennon version of Jesus where everyone can do

19:17

whatever they want to do It's like Buddhist Jesus.

19:19

It's like who am I to judge and you

19:21

know, all this sort of stuff Jesus sits on

19:23

the throne of judgment in the book of Revelation

19:28

And yet here we are today with

19:30

with churches that are indecipherable from TED

19:32

talks with a rock concert Here

19:39

it is, thank you so much he

19:43

He says that Old Testament should not

19:45

be seen as quote the go-to source

19:47

regarding any behavior in the church in

19:49

His view the first century leadership of

19:51

the church quote on hitch the church

19:53

from the worldview valid system and Regulation

19:56

of the Jewish scriptures according to Andy

19:58

Stanley. Thank you. So That's

20:01

quite remarkable. Unhitched from creation,

20:03

right? In the beginning, God created the

20:05

heavens and the earth. Andy Stanley rejects

20:08

such truth. It's amazing how far he

20:10

fell from his dad's tree. Yeah,

20:13

and by the way, let's just talk... How much trouble

20:15

am I allowed to get in? All the way, man. All the

20:17

way. Go for it. And

20:23

I don't... Again, I'm a political guy,

20:25

so I don't play by all these fake Christian nice

20:27

rules, right? Where, again, it's like... It

20:29

just drives me nuts. Like, oh, I can't say that

20:31

because... Okay, whatever. We

20:33

need to speak truthfully. It's like someone who I loved

20:36

growing up was Rick Warren. Like, what happened to him?

20:38

Rick Warren marched in a BLM parade. Rick

20:41

Warren eulogized Timothy Keller, who didn't finish well

20:44

either, by the way. Timothy Keller, you should

20:46

never listen to. Timothy Keller,

20:48

by the way, said the Bible does not speak

20:50

clearly about abortion. Did you know that? Timothy Keller.

20:52

Yeah. He eulogized Timothy Keller saying that, oh, my

20:54

goodness, Timothy Keller didn't...

20:58

Never weighed into right-wing politics. That's

21:00

why he was so great. That's what

21:02

Rick Warren said about Timothy Keller. But

21:05

there's this whole new genre of

21:07

these cool kid pastors that they

21:09

want to get invited to Lakers games,

21:11

and they want to be around celebrities.

21:13

You know, like that male model

21:15

that was the church in New

21:17

York, who cheated on his wife, Carl

21:20

Lentz. Yeah. Who was

21:22

like, again, he was a serial adulterer, and I knew it

21:24

as soon as I met him. I turned to my then

21:26

girlfriend. I said, that guy is cheating on his wife. I

21:29

said, just wait. You know, just wait a year and

21:31

a half. He said, he's a liar. He's a thief.

21:33

He's a bad, bad dude. And next thing you know,

21:35

he's like, oh, my goodness, big crisis. I said, yeah,

21:37

I mean, he's walking around shirtless

21:39

with Justin Bieber with tattoos all over himself,

21:41

sharing the doctrine of Jesus. And at his

21:44

church, he's like, who am I to judge?

21:46

You know, homosexuality is fine in the eyes

21:48

of God. It's like, you're not a pastor,

21:50

okay? And by the way, it goes on

21:52

for all these people that run these massive,

21:54

massive enterprises that they never talk about the

21:56

actual roots of the scripture. Why? They've

21:59

turned Christianity. into a business model

22:01

and the business model is about affirmation

22:03

and inspiration not about the truth of

22:05

Jesus Christ and it's done huge damage

22:07

to the kingdom in this country. Amen.

22:10

Amen. Okay, so let's quit beating up the church.

22:14

It needs a good spanking, no doubt about it. That's

22:17

not the church, Jimmy. No, it's

22:19

an imposter. It's exactly. That's

22:21

what's so important. And

22:25

this always shocks people when I say

22:27

this, but that's why I believe that

22:29

COVID was the best thing that ever happened to the

22:32

church because it showed

22:34

where people stood and we

22:37

started to see during COVID

22:40

who was asleep, who was awake,

22:43

who was real and who was a fake.

22:46

Amen. Yeah, it became obvious

22:48

and I think, I

22:50

don't know the numbers of how many churches

22:52

failed during COVID. It was staggering, but

22:55

I think it was the best thing that ever happened to the church

22:57

because most of them needed to close their doors. Amen.

23:00

Yeah. So let's talk about something else.

23:03

Here kind of going back to the election and

23:06

this one is something

23:09

that I want you to speak to because I

23:12

think it speaks to many

23:14

of the Christians, the people that

23:16

didn't vote and they don't come

23:18

out and tell you they didn't vote. You hear it

23:20

in offhand discussions,

23:23

but the ones that didn't

23:25

vote, here's the things that they

23:27

were saying. Why bother? And

23:30

here's what they said, election fraud, a

23:32

corrupt justice system, a pathetic

23:34

Congress, an illegal alien

23:36

invasion, social media election

23:39

interference, a 2022 red wave

23:41

that never happened, a left

23:43

biased news media. They're

23:45

frustrated. I understand they're frustrated. But

23:48

how do we as pastors stir

23:51

these people to

23:53

try again, to stay in the fight?

23:57

Thank you. I get that a lot too. I

24:00

have very little patience for that because I hate

24:02

cynicism. I hate negativity. If you want to be

24:04

cynical and negative, just get out of the way.

24:07

We have way too much on the front of ourself to

24:09

go build, to go create. I could add more

24:11

to the list, by the way. They're transing our

24:14

kids. There's a million abortions a year. The border's

24:16

wide open. Politicians have never

24:18

had accountable. Fauci just got a new bonus. Peter Struchstroke

24:20

Smirk didn't go to jail. Lois Lernin didn't go to

24:22

jail. Can I

24:24

continue? We have

24:26

1,200 people in gulags called January

24:28

6th, the defendants without

24:31

getting proper hearings. I

24:33

could go on. And so

24:36

does that demoralize you? Then

24:39

are you Christian? Why

24:42

would that demoralize you? Okay, the best thing about being surrounded is

24:44

you can shoot in any direction. Yeah,

24:46

there's one. But I also have this idea.

24:49

I just want to make sure I understand. I'm not

24:51

going to vote because things are bad or because it's

24:53

broken. Okay, voting takes like five minutes. So

24:56

it's very simple. It's called Pascal's Wager. Do you guys

24:58

know this? Which is that he

25:00

postulated that the downside

25:02

of not believing in God means eternal damnation. And

25:04

the upside of believing in God is potentially you

25:07

can go to heaven. So the downside is so

25:09

great and the upside is so

25:12

great and it takes almost no effort. So he postulated

25:14

like it makes more sense to then believe in God.

25:16

Just that one. It's the same thing

25:18

with voting, which is not voting guarantees their takeover

25:20

of the entire country. Yeah. Where

25:23

does this spirit of negativity

25:25

and victimhood come from? Yeah. Where

25:28

is the American gusto that, hey guys, guess what? We might lose

25:30

in November. Are you going to give up? No,

25:33

we might lose. I just hope we understand. And

25:35

if your answer is yes, you are what the founding

25:37

fathers made fun of as a summer

25:40

patriot, a sunshine patriot, as someone that would

25:42

never have the grit to go through the

25:44

tough times, never have the grit to go

25:46

through the smallpox of the winter to actually

25:48

go fight the British work. Guess what? If

25:50

we lose in November and I'm dedicating my

25:52

life to make sure that we win, okay,

25:54

literally everything in my fiber of my being,

25:56

make sure we win. If we lose, I

25:58

go to work the next day. And

26:00

you should too and it's whole

26:02

ideas like wow the odds are so stacked against

26:04

us and it's so rigged How

26:06

about all the things that are working in our favor?

26:08

you might say well, what's working in our favor they

26:10

try to take out Donald Trump by throwing him in

26:13

prison and Hijacking the Republican

26:15

primary and he won it speedily

26:17

and easier and more triumphantly than

26:19

anyone could have imagined number one

26:21

number two We

26:24

are seeing massive Demographic realignment young

26:26

people to our turning right wing.

26:28

We were seeing Hispanics come our

26:30

direction working class blacks We

26:33

are seeing this illegitimate regime finally be

26:35

exposed for who they truly are So

26:37

I could go through the line of all the

26:39

positive things that are happening. I just this idea

26:42

like oh my goodness It's so demoralizing. I'm not

26:44

gonna sugarcoat it. They might feel it again And

26:47

if that deters you from voting Then

26:50

I I got nothing for you. Shame on you

26:52

to do like the five minutes to go do

26:54

a very basic thing Yes, they might tear up

26:56

your ballot at the counting center still do it

26:59

still try to chase ballots You know why

27:01

you don't do the right thing for the

27:03

outcome you do it out of obedience to

27:05

God because you love God And he commands

27:07

you to fight You

27:10

must have your why right It's

27:13

like saying, you know in military terms and God

27:15

bless all of our veterans because not a single

27:17

person the military would think this Way by the

27:19

way, man, they would never think this way They

27:21

wouldn't say I'm not gonna follow orders and potentially

27:23

lay down my life from my country because it

27:25

might not work well for me You know what?

27:27

It didn't work out well for hundreds of thousands

27:29

of people that were killed in the line of

27:31

fire But they did it anyway. I'm not asking

27:33

you to storm Normandy Beach I'm asking to fill

27:35

out a piece of paper and drop it off

27:37

at the county elections office It's

27:41

a what are we talking about? Well,

27:47

there's your pep talk to get busy no, but

27:49

I do that intentionally because I could do this

27:51

I could be like well guys this time it's

27:53

gonna be different and all that I

27:55

don't know if it will be I said some promising

27:57

things. Yeah, but if I have a moral obligation not

27:59

to And also make sure

28:01

that we have our why right why we're

28:04

involved in this fight But why we're engaged in

28:06

the trenches because if I just try to say

28:08

hey one more and everything's gonna be right This

28:10

will be a fight for Liberty in the country

28:12

as long as every single one of us is

28:15

alive They will never go away They will never

28:17

give up these are nasty parasitic creatures that want

28:19

to destroy everything beautiful in the world if that

28:21

intimidates you Go home watch March

28:23

Madness and just stay in oblivion

28:26

away from those of us that are gonna save the country

28:28

Just get out of our way. Don't come because it's that

28:30

we have a country to save and

28:32

we're gonna get it done Man,

28:35

hey man, that's exactly it

28:38

so You've been fighting

28:40

this are not to intend. I know dude.

28:42

I love that that is perfect right

28:52

So, let's let's let's look at the the

28:54

college campuses You're fighting

28:56

this fight and everywhere you guy just saw

28:59

that When

29:01

you had Renton house, you

29:03

guys got chased out by the mobs

29:05

and and the cops had to like

29:07

corral you guys out And they

29:09

were like attacking. That's right. So You

29:13

got a few Evil

29:15

liberals that are

29:17

destroying freedom on our

29:20

campuses What's the vibe on our

29:22

campuses are we seeing a Conservative

29:24

revival are we seeing are we losing

29:26

the fight? I mean our professors are

29:29

all woke. Yeah, they are I

29:31

mean look, it's still a majority left-wing I have

29:33

to be honest But it is far more promising

29:35

and far more conservative than any time I've been

29:37

doing this in the last 12 years I

29:40

have visited and spoke at and organized more

29:42

campuses than any person I think alive at

29:44

least in the last couple of decades God

29:47

bless you Yes, and the credit is to our

29:49

students the credit is to our staff that do

29:51

that difficult work every day and they deserve credit

29:54

and Praise because they have gone through so much

29:56

You know, let's talk about the Kyle Rittenhouse

29:59

event last evening Our Turning Point USA

30:01

chapter leader who hosted that event had his

30:03

private address put on the internet basically

30:06

so that BLM gangsters and thugs could

30:08

go try to hunt him down, harass

30:10

him, and potentially harm him.

30:12

His private information put up on a

30:14

public dashboard of all these gangsters that

30:17

could then come after him. They show

30:19

up in huge numbers. They show up

30:21

beating, banging windows,

30:23

chasing down people, blocking roads, banging

30:25

on cars. Thankfully nobody got hurt,

30:27

praise God that the police

30:30

were there to intervene. Again, this

30:32

is in the city of Memphis that is one of

30:34

the most, if not the most, murderous per capita cities

30:36

in the country. And they're super worried that Kyle

30:39

Rittenhouse is going to go share about

30:41

how the American justice system is flawed

30:43

in some ways but good in other ways,

30:45

and thankfully he's not in jail. Like actually

30:47

a pretty interesting story, right? One of the

30:49

more important cultural figures of our time, especially

30:51

for young people, this idea of guilt, innocent,

30:54

like the trial by a mob in a media,

30:56

he's good at delivering it, it's fine.

30:58

Meanwhile they're there screaming at him and

31:00

shouting him down. That's not a majority,

31:02

it's a fringe minority. The administration catered

31:04

to them, by the way, and gave

31:06

them effectively inside access to the student

31:08

database, gave the activists the ability to

31:11

disrupt the event, which is a violation

31:13

that we might sue the University of

31:15

Memphis for what they did here. Because you're not

31:17

allowed to do that. But

31:21

let's talk about it. Young men on campus,

31:23

and the numbers show this, young men are

31:25

the most conservative they've been in 50 years.

31:28

They're the most conservative we've been in 50 years.

31:32

Young ladies present a great opportunity.

31:35

They are not conservative.

31:39

What do you think that is? Well,

31:42

there's a couple reasons for this. Abortion is obviously

31:44

part of it, but they've

31:46

been sold a lie through culture,

31:48

through media, through even some of

31:50

their parents that you basically have

31:52

to go pursue this corporate trajectory,

31:54

and that men are always the

31:56

problem, and suppress your biological impact.

31:59

pulses. Let me say that, you

32:01

know, the church is here to

32:04

help people put it back together when they have blown it.

32:07

And so when you have those hurting people,

32:09

hey, minister to them, bring them to church.

32:11

They need Jesus. And

32:14

guess what? We're a house full

32:16

of broken people. You know, we've all

32:18

been down the wrong roads and look

32:20

at what God's doing in our lives. So this

32:23

is the place to bring them and reach

32:25

out to them, love on them. Don't tell them

32:27

too bad, so sad. You should have listened to

32:30

Charlie. You know, he's got a podcast, you know,

32:32

three hours a day on the radio, you know,

32:34

just bring them to church and let us love

32:36

them. Let us minister to them and help them

32:38

put it back together and we'll win them to

32:40

Christ. And then maybe they'll actually vote conservative. So

32:42

we're going to

32:44

open it up to some Q and a time.

32:46

And I'm not real clear how we're

32:48

doing it. We've got a couple of guys, people with mics, and

32:50

where are you guys going to stand right

32:52

there and stand right here? So if you

32:54

have questions, just kind of line up down

32:57

those aisles there and we'll take questions

32:59

as long as we can before it's time to close up.

33:01

Just try to make them questions, not

33:03

statements with a question mark at the

33:05

end. We'll start here. If

33:07

that's okay, young man here. And if you guys want

33:09

to start queuing up or lining up, we'll

33:12

try to get to as many questions as we can. Yes, sir. So

33:15

my question is, what are we doing to

33:18

encourage our youth to start dating again?

33:20

Like real dating, like

33:22

not just going on Tinder. So I've been

33:24

married for a while now and I work

33:27

with a lot of my Gen Z coworkers

33:29

and they are terrified of in-person

33:32

dating. They literally can't have a

33:34

conversation outside of, let me just swipe right

33:36

and see if she likes me. So I

33:38

guess my question is, how can we help

33:40

youth learn how

33:42

to have in-person dates again? Because I

33:44

think that's going to help the whole

33:47

idea with having the young ladies become

33:49

more conservative. And you've got

33:51

to flirt to convert, right? So let's get them on the right side.

33:56

No one should be on these dating apps. It's

33:58

amazing to me. The apps

34:01

are basically just gateways for you know, free

34:03

sex is basically what they've become. They're not

34:05

dating apps. They're hookup apps That's a big

34:07

difference But yeah, I this is

34:09

where the church should be actively involved in trying

34:12

to get people married younger and younger I mean

34:14

you guys are the wedding capital of the world, right? So you

34:16

guys can lead the way here divorce capital

34:18

Yeah, I'm sure I'm sure you are Yeah,

34:22

I don't know exactly how we can lead on

34:25

that except by example But

34:27

yeah, look it's a crisis. We we are not having

34:29

enough babies in our country right now We

34:31

are on the verge of a population collapse And

34:35

you know, there's this whole trend on social

34:37

media called dinks dual income No kids of

34:39

people that are married and they're deciding not

34:41

to have children and I just

34:43

think that's a tragedy I think that it's

34:45

incredibly selfish. I think it's it's bad for

34:47

society And we as churches

34:49

should be, you know the beacon for try to have very

34:51

very big families Amen. Amen. Yes,

34:53

sir Hi

34:56

Charlie Why should Republicans be entrusted

34:58

with maintaining control of the house the

35:01

Senate and the White House when

35:03

the Republicans lack unity? We

35:05

look at the Democrats your progressive

35:07

Democrats your moderate Democrats and your blue

35:09

dog Democrats are all united Why

35:12

can't the libertarian Republicans your

35:14

Thomas Massey Republicans and your

35:16

McConnell Republicans unite? Yeah,

35:19

I wish they could So the

35:22

again, I'm very honest the best reason to control

35:24

the house in the Senate is

35:26

to prevent their bad stuff from happening To

35:28

be honest, which is to add DC and

35:30

Puerto Rico estates and to eliminate

35:33

the electoral college And

35:35

stack the Supreme Court. Yeah Yeah,

35:38

and then hopefully if we have president Trump we can actually

35:40

get an actual border bill passed We

35:42

need to balance the budget. We are I I

35:45

am so disappointed at what DC is diamond.

35:47

We don't talk about it We're borrowing a

35:49

hundred trillion dollars. I'm sorry. We're borrowing a

35:51

trillion dollars every a hundred days That's

35:54

what I meant to say a trillion dollars

35:56

every 100 days. It's outrageous.

35:58

So Why? Why should they

36:00

be entrusted with support? Because they're not Democrats.

36:04

Other than that, they haven't earned our support.

36:07

I mean, they haven't. I like Speaker Johnson.

36:09

I've been very critical of him on certain things.

36:11

He's just going to keep on letting us down

36:14

on a lot of other stuff. That's just the way DC works though. But

36:18

you're up against a force where they have a

36:20

whole saying, vote blue no matter who. The

36:22

problem with conservatives is we're way

36:25

too individualistic and

36:27

we're very critical. The Democrats

36:30

never challenge their own. They're

36:32

very communistic, very Stalinistic,

36:34

like the Borg. They always get in

36:37

line. We're here, we're like, you're not

36:39

conservative enough. Where is this? You're

36:41

a rhino. By the way, I sympathize with all that just to be

36:43

clear. I'm kind of one of those people. At

36:46

the same time, handing over the gal

36:48

of the Hakeem Jeffries or letting Chuck Schumer

36:50

remain as Senate Majority Leader would be awful.

36:52

It'd be terrible. And you

36:54

guys can flip the Senate seat here in Nevada. This

36:57

is very, very flippable here. Jackie

36:59

Rosen, right? She's up there. She's

37:01

very, very beatable. Thank you.

37:04

Hi, Charlie. I was there on UNLV

37:06

campus today. Did you enjoy it? I enjoyed

37:08

it. I heard everything. I was a big

37:11

supporter of you. Listen, I wanted

37:13

to see what you can do to tell

37:16

President Trump to get himself over

37:18

there to Chicago, to get himself

37:20

over there to Queens, Brooklyn, the

37:22

Bronx, to have a rally over

37:24

there because I believe that the

37:26

Democrats there, the black folks over

37:28

there are ripe and ready to

37:30

vote Republican, but we need him to show

37:33

up and to really represent

37:35

and let them know that he's there

37:37

for them. Can you do that for us? Oh,

37:39

thank you. My answer to anything when

37:41

it comes to Trump is I'm not even going to

37:43

try. But

37:45

he is a friend. He's

37:49

terrific. And I'm very biased

37:51

because I've got to know him very well over the

37:53

years. I will say this. I love the

37:55

idea, but I'm going to push for him to do those

37:57

rallies in swing states. So how about this? In inner city

37:59

black rallies. in Atlanta and Milwaukee and Philadelphia

38:01

and Detroit. Now we got agreement. Amen.

38:06

I totally agree with

38:08

you. Working-class blacks, working-class Hispanics

38:10

are primed to come our direction.

38:12

In fact, Donald Trump is

38:15

one of the few candidates that can really

38:17

penetrate the Democrat monopoly

38:19

that they've enjoyed for years

38:22

with black Americans and Hispanic Americans. Hispanic Americans

38:24

are already happening. Black Americans, I think, you

38:26

can make historic gains there. I really do.

38:28

God bless you. Thank you. Thank you. Yes,

38:31

sir. Well,

38:35

I have a bit more of a, like

38:37

a personal question for you

38:39

guys. What's your favorite, if

38:41

you want to share, your favorite scripture, I was wondering? So

38:44

a couple. I love John 10-10, where it

38:46

says, the enemy has come to lie, steal,

38:48

cheat, and destroy, but I, Christ Jesus, have

38:50

come to give life and life more abundantly.

38:52

I think that beautifully frames the whole gospel

38:54

and the whole spiritual work. As

38:57

far as why I do what I do, Psalm 97-10,

39:00

those who love God must hate evil, which

39:03

is a great, great verse of why I'm

39:05

in the fight. As far as politics, Jeremiah

39:07

29-7, demand the welfare of the nation that

39:09

you are in, because your welfare is tied

39:11

to your nation's welfare. As far as the

39:13

story, I always love rebelling against

39:15

the tyrant. So I love Exodus 1, where

39:17

the midwives to the Hebrews rebelled against Pharaoh,

39:20

who's considered a God at the time and

39:22

refused to throw the babies in the Nile

39:24

River. And God dealt well with

39:26

them and dealt with favor with them. So I could

39:28

keep on going from there, but I love the Bible.

39:31

I love the word. I study it closely. I'm not

39:33

a theologian, I'm not a pastor. I'm just a layman.

39:36

But the Bible is the most important thing that

39:38

God has given us to show us how to live

39:40

and to show us that his promises are true.

39:44

Thank you. Thanks. Hi.

39:50

You made a statement earlier that the Republicans

39:52

are gaining ground in Nevada, and I just

39:54

looked up the statistics. And according to the

39:56

Secretary of State, we've lost 465 people. from

40:00

January to February. With

40:02

that being said, my question being, do you believe

40:04

that the 2020 election was stolen and

40:07

do you believe the machines were manipulated? I

40:10

do believe it was stolen. The machines might have. I

40:12

don't love the question because what it

40:14

does is that a lot of people in my audience

40:17

are now saying they won't vote. I'm

40:19

not telling people not to vote. I know, but

40:21

I think we need to be realistic and we

40:23

need to watch those voter statistics because they're going

40:25

down and they're probably manipulating them. So the machines

40:27

will be there in November. Should we still vote? Yes,

40:29

we should. Okay, but I thought it's rigged. I

40:32

believe it is. I just wanted to know what your

40:34

question is. But the problem is... What you thought. I

40:36

think that's a fair question. Yeah, it's fair. The machines might

40:39

be doing stuff. I don't know. I'm agnostic

40:41

on it. I do think it was rigged. I think it was

40:43

rigged provably in other ways. Most

40:46

provably first with the Twitter

40:48

FBI collusion on the Hunter Biden

40:50

laptop story. Secondly, the mass mail-in

40:52

balloting stuff. But I don't

40:55

love the question as we're nine months away

40:57

from an election because every day I have

40:59

to debate people in my email inbox that

41:01

say, I will not vote this November. Oh,

41:04

I will vote, but I'm going to vote day of and

41:06

I'm going to vote. I'm going to stand in line if

41:08

it takes me 10 hours. Good for you. I

41:10

will do that. Great. Not

41:13

everyone's like you. They should be because you know

41:15

what? George Washington laid in a bunker and snow

41:17

for us. Live in

41:19

reality, not in Narnia. Not everyone is a patriot.

41:22

There's some people that have four kids

41:24

and they have to get them from

41:26

daycare. They have to go pick

41:28

up the dry cleaning and get dinner. And so when

41:30

they show up on day of in Scottsdale to go

41:32

vote for Carrie Lake and the machines are broken and

41:35

it's a three and a half hour wait, they say,

41:37

forget it. She's up five points in the polls. I

41:39

don't need to vote. Wouldn't have

41:41

been better for that soccer mom to vote early. Thank

41:47

you very much. Hey, Charlie. I

41:49

know you've been to Mar-a-Lago. It's kind of a dump.

41:52

It's only worth 18 million. By

41:55

the way, if Mar-a-Lago is only worth 18 million, I'm going to go

41:57

put in a bid. buying

42:00

it. So, in President

42:02

Trump's first term, some of the political

42:04

appointees were not the greatest as we

42:06

saw, stabbed in the back a

42:08

lot. So hopefully he gets

42:10

reelected. What can we do to change

42:12

that for the future? And can you influence that in any way? Can

42:14

you talk to Don Jr. maybe? Yeah,

42:16

it's, you know, this is the, so if I were to

42:18

say of all the things

42:20

I hear from the grassroots, and

42:23

Trump is beloved, of things that Trump could

42:25

have done better, it'd be Fauci, response

42:27

to COVID with the vaccine, and

42:29

then finally personnel. Even

42:32

Rush Limbaugh, who never criticized Donald Trump,

42:34

he said, Donald Trump's selection

42:37

of people is puzzling

42:39

at times. You

42:43

got to love Rush, right? I

42:45

miss him so much, and what a gift humanity

42:47

Rush Limbaugh was. Is

42:50

there any influence we can have so

42:52

that, I don't know, maybe you can

42:54

discuss it with him and his inner circle? I'm not sure who

42:56

his inner circle is. Yeah, I think it's going to be a

42:58

lot better, and it's never going to be perfect. And

43:01

I don't want to make over promises, but

43:03

look, you have to understand, Donald Trump came

43:06

from a world where the incentive structure was

43:08

largely financial driven, okay? So

43:10

therefore, it was a very one-to-one type deal. You say

43:12

you're going to do A, and if you don't do

43:14

A, then I'll know why, because you don't want to

43:16

get rich. In politics, there's

43:18

50 different incentives, right? They might have loyalty

43:21

to some ideological agenda. They might be blackmailed.

43:23

They might be there to try to leak

43:25

on you. They might be afraid for some

43:27

future job they want. And

43:29

Donald Trump got an education in the

43:33

swamp, if you will. But not everyone

43:35

he chose was awful, right? He had

43:37

Ben Carson in his cabinet, right? He

43:39

had some terrific people that we

43:42

like, and there were some people that, quite honestly, I think

43:44

that we would have not have liked to see them around.

43:46

Dr. Deborah Birx, Anthony Fauci, to be kind of two

43:48

of them at the top of our list. I

43:51

can't speak to that privately, but I do

43:54

know that there's a robust

43:56

project called Project 2025 by

43:59

the Heritage Foundation. that is trying to

44:01

solve this problem specifically to try to make sure

44:03

that the next administration is staffed. America

44:05

first policy is to do the same thing. And

44:08

remember seven years ago, Donald

44:11

Trump understood the game, but he

44:13

didn't know the players. Now he

44:15

understands the game and he knows the players.

44:17

He's still going to pick some wrong ones

44:19

guaranteed. Can't no choice, but I guarantee

44:21

you he's going to do a lot better this time.

44:23

And I hope it starts with a really solid vice

44:25

president pick. And so

44:28

Charlie Kirk. So

44:30

I'm 30 years old. I

44:35

constitutionally can't be vice president of the

44:37

United States. J.D.

44:40

Vance is my current front runner. I like J.D. a

44:42

lot. J.D. And I

44:44

could give you an argument why if you guys are

44:46

interested later. Yes, ma'am. Hello Charlie. So I

44:48

actually attend UNLV and I stand in class

44:50

with the Wilk professor. We're currently

44:53

learning about decolonization. And because of that, I've

44:55

been told that as a Hispanic woman, I

44:58

hold my conservative Christian values

45:00

due to decolonization. So

45:02

as the Hispanic community is growing and learning

45:04

and going back to the conservative roots, what

45:06

do you have to say to the Hispanic

45:08

community being told that they are a product

45:11

of colonization? Yeah,

45:13

I mean, they're not. And just so

45:15

everyone understands, what decolonization means is decivilization,

45:17

just so we're clear. Decolonization

45:20

is Haiti. Okay. And

45:23

Haiti literally decolonized. If you guys know

45:25

anything about the Haitian slave revolt during

45:27

the French Revolution, it was actually a

45:29

moral thing they did because the slave

45:31

trade of sugarcane slave in

45:34

capturing was some of the most immoral slave

45:36

practices. Not that any slavery is moral, but

45:39

the average lifespan of a sugarcane

45:41

worker in Haiti during the 1770s, 1780s was four

45:43

years. The

45:46

French were just so brutal that are so awful.

45:48

And so Haiti went above and beyond. They didn't

45:50

just rebel. They killed the French, killed the

45:52

family and families. They said, we never

45:55

want any colonized forces in Haiti ever

45:57

again. Well, they kept the language.

46:00

That's about all they kept. And look at

46:02

what's happened to Haiti now. Haiti

46:04

is a perfect project of what happens

46:06

when you decivilize or decolonize. What's my

46:08

message to Hispanics? The

46:11

question is, do you believe

46:13

in the project of Western civilization in almost

46:15

every Hispanic? Yes. You know why? They obviously

46:18

believe in Western civilization because they left their

46:20

home country to come to a Western country

46:22

here because they believed in the

46:25

promise. So what is Western civilization? Western

46:27

civilization has a couple core promises and

46:29

core premises, I should say, that are

46:32

biblical in nature, that we take

46:34

for granted, that third world, more

46:36

primitive societies do not have as

46:38

part of their culture, one of

46:40

which is delayed gratification. Delayed

46:43

gratification, that I'm going to do something

46:45

today that might not feel good that

46:47

will bear fruit a year or five

46:49

years or 10 years from now, is

46:52

a Western value. That is not

46:54

a tribal or primitive value of every culture around

46:56

the world. Because they don't

46:58

have refrigeration in a lot of these cultures, they

47:01

say, if you have it, eat it. If it's

47:03

in front of you, take it. There's

47:05

no reason to have for tomorrow. They don't

47:07

have reason for currency. They don't

47:10

even have ways to make food last very long.

47:12

It's not just about food. So the idea of

47:14

delayed gratification has been built into the Western code of

47:17

conduct. So there was a really interesting point

47:19

that was made during Fluidipalooza, when we destroyed our

47:21

country under a lie from the pit of hell

47:24

that we're systemically racist. When

47:26

the African-American History Museum, the

47:28

Smithsonian, came out with this pamphlet.

47:30

It's one of the most telling

47:32

things ever, where they said, these

47:34

are attributes of whiteness or Western

47:36

culture that we should try to

47:39

decolonize from. Following, speaking

47:41

grammatically correct, that

47:43

math has only one answer,

47:45

showing up on time, treating

47:47

people politely, saving

47:49

money and investing for the future, believing

47:52

that a child needs a mother and

47:54

a father. These they consider to be

47:56

Western values. And instead of

47:58

fighting it, we should say. they are western

48:01

values. Thank you. They are. In

48:03

fact, the West is the best. The

48:07

West is the greatest project in self-government

48:09

in human history. We have protected more

48:11

people and their rights than any other

48:13

civilization ever. More people have been

48:15

able to achieve a middle class and upper

48:17

middle class lifestyle than any other civilization ever.

48:20

We have been able to be more benevolent,

48:22

more charitable than anyone else in the history

48:24

of the planet. And so, what

48:26

are you trying to decolonize from? The fact that

48:28

people show up on time, that they are speaking

48:30

correctly, that we have to follow the law.

48:33

So, the whole idea of decolonization is flawed

48:35

from the beginning. I think that most Hispanics

48:38

actually believe in the promise and the premise

48:40

of western civilization. Thank

48:42

you. Good answers. I

48:45

think western civilization also believes in

48:47

ending on time. So, we are going to do

48:49

two more questions. That is true. Howdy,

48:51

sir. Kind of an

48:53

interesting question. And so, I got to

48:56

work here with Stan Hite actually for

48:58

his election here. And I wanted to

49:00

get more involved into politics.

49:03

Just making a difference here. As a young man, I am

49:05

22. I work a very physical job.

49:08

I am born and raised here in Nevada. Like you

49:10

said, it is a small demographic. Muscular

49:12

class. Yes, exactly. Unlike

49:14

me. But... You

49:17

will get there, you know. Eventually.

49:20

But my question to you is, so,

49:22

I want to get more involved in politics. I want to

49:24

make an actual difference. I don't just want to be on

49:26

the sidelines anymore. As

49:32

a young man, here in Nevada, what can I

49:34

do to get more involved? First

49:36

of all, give it up for him. I love that he wants to get involved.

49:43

Number one, we would love to have you come

49:46

to our turning point action table out there. That

49:48

is our political arm. Number two, the first thing

49:50

I would do, run for office, yes. But get

49:52

involved as a precinct committeeman in the Nevada GOP.

49:55

These meetings go on for a long time. But

49:58

they need young energy. They need... spunk

50:00

and I'm sure someone here tonight can help

50:02

him get involved as a precinct committee member

50:04

on the state central committee they need your

50:06

presence there and then from there you'll see

50:09

so many opportunities and then you

50:11

know run for dog catcher or whatever

50:13

you know mosquito abatement district something you

50:15

know run for school board no joke

50:18

go run for the school board where

50:20

you went to high school and

50:24

I don't know if you're in a trade or

50:26

you received trade training but if you did then

50:28

run for the technical school or technical college board

50:30

that trained you that all these things are

50:32

great starting points and then finally you know

50:35

try to consume information every day you know

50:37

podcast news radio all these things

50:39

are important but the best thing I could tell you is

50:41

it's a marathon not a sprint be involved

50:43

it for the rest of your life there

50:45

will be successes and there will be valleys

50:47

there'll be moments that are so delicious that

50:49

you think that it's like Jesus coming again

50:52

when Hillary Clinton is crying on

50:54

screen and Donald Trump is elected

50:56

as right and then there are

50:58

moments that are so maddening where Donald you go

51:00

to sleep at 2 a.m. and

51:02

Donald Trump is up a hundred thousand votes and

51:04

you wake up at 7 a.m. and Donald Trump

51:07

is down 30,000 votes you got

51:09

to weather those storms right you got

51:11

to stay involved regardless of all that so it's a marathon

51:13

not a sprint God bless you man thank you so much

51:16

final question hey one more one more thing before

51:18

you before you walk away what

51:21

what he was saying about visiting the turning

51:23

point faith action table learn

51:27

the game before you run for office

51:29

learn how it works and come

51:32

here American Christian caucus meetings

51:34

here you'll learn the system

51:36

learn how to play the game and

51:39

then you'll be a winning politician amen

51:42

all right and most important thing give

51:44

your life to Jesus and attend a church

51:46

and be involved in church preferably this

51:48

church yeah yeah amen but that is the

51:51

most important thing final question

51:53

sir hey Charlie um yeah just wanted

51:55

to say I think it's really important how well

51:57

you've been how well you guys have been mobilized

52:00

churches across this country to help save this

52:02

country. I'm Catholic

52:04

and with the structure of the church

52:07

it's really hard to mobilize the churches

52:09

to get involved. With your

52:11

experience what's been the best practices in

52:13

mobilizing the churches in

52:16

the right wing? Yeah, I'm your

52:18

Catholic I wish your Pope was

52:20

Catholic, truly. And that's not an

52:22

insult to you, that's an insult

52:24

to him. I am, I get

52:27

hate for this, I am one of the

52:29

pro-catholic evangelicals in the country. I have

52:31

a soft spot for Catholics, I always

52:33

have my grandma's Catholic, my wife is

52:35

baptized Catholic, I also think that we

52:38

as evangelicals must be very fair and

52:40

say Catholics have been more

52:42

vocal on the life issue than

52:44

most evangelicals have been and Catholics

52:46

deserve credit for that, okay? We

52:48

have big differences as well, I'm not gonna dwell

52:50

on that. But I will

52:52

say though that what I found to be

52:54

successful and Catholic churches can get involved, you

52:57

have to find a specific priest or father

52:59

that's willing to stand up, ideally in a

53:01

diocese that is not going to stifle them

53:03

and not is going to you know prevent.

53:05

I spoke for the first time ever in

53:07

January at a Catholic church, we had 2,000

53:10

people show up, it

53:12

was unbelievable. You know we talked

53:14

about where we agreed, we talked about where we disagreed obviously,

53:16

you know a lot of stuff there, but

53:18

it was so amazing and we talked about

53:20

the fight for life and against this trans

53:23

stuff, how beautiful marriage is, you know and

53:25

I found it to be this awesome experiment

53:27

about how we can combine forces, you know

53:29

for why God put us here and so

53:31

I'm so glad you're here and I think

53:34

you should, I think you should

53:36

challenge your local father, you know find

53:38

a diocese, find a church that is

53:40

speaking out about this stuff because the

53:43

Pope is flirting with like upending, long-standing

53:45

Catholic church dogma at this point. He

53:48

is blessing same-sex partnerships, he came out and

53:50

was against anyone that didn't get the COVID

53:53

vaccine and he said it was basically butchery,

53:55

you saw that thing the other day and

53:57

so I miss the unity.

54:00

that we used to have when John

54:02

Paul II, for example, was an anti-communist,

54:04

pro-freedom pope, and I hope we can

54:07

get that sometime

54:09

soon. It's gonna start with

54:11

faithful Catholics like you though, making noise,

54:13

staying involved, and so God bless you,

54:15

man, thank you so much. Thank you.

54:17

Absolutely, absolutely. All

54:20

right, well we are at our closing time, and

54:22

we wanna do something before we close though. We

54:25

wanna pray over Charlie. Charlie is

54:27

in the battle, and what

54:29

I'd like to do is, Charlie, I'm gonna have you

54:31

stand over here, and then I'm gonna lay hands on

54:34

him, and if you would just direct your hands up

54:36

here, and let's pray over

54:38

Charlie together. Father,

54:40

I thank you so much for Charlie, and

54:43

for the fight you've called him to, Lord,

54:45

and though he takes

54:47

hits well, Lord, we

54:49

know that those hits can

54:52

hurt, and Lord, we pray that you would

54:54

protect him, that you would strengthen

54:56

his resolve every time he does get hit,

54:59

and Lord, that you would make him stronger, and

55:01

Father, that you would give him wisdom beyond his

55:03

years, Lord. Help him to speak

55:05

as one that is speaking as

55:07

your ambassador, Lord. Make him wise

55:10

as a serpent, but gentle as

55:12

a dove, and Father, I pray

55:14

that you would continue to give

55:16

him that audience that you're giving

55:18

him, open those doors for him

55:20

for effectual ministry, and Lord, I

55:23

pray that you would protect his

55:25

family in all this, Lord. We know

55:27

that there are people who hate him so much,

55:29

Lord, and we know the devil hates

55:31

him, Lord. We're so glad the devil knows

55:33

his name, and yet,

55:36

Lord, we know that short

55:38

of your angels protecting him, he'd

55:41

be in a world of hurt. So, Lord, we

55:43

pray. Keep your hand of protection about him, and

55:46

Lord, continue to use him in a

55:48

mighty way, and Lord, I pray that

55:50

you would continue to bless this relationship

55:52

with our churches, and

55:54

with Charlie, Lord, and that you continue to

55:57

strengthen these friendships, and Lord, that you would

55:59

be glorified. in these relationships

56:01

as we take back this nation

56:03

for Jesus Christ. Lord we love

56:05

you and we pray these things

56:07

in Jesus name amen amen Charlie

56:11

thank you so much. Thanks

56:13

so much for listening everybody email us as

56:15

always freedom at charliekirk.com thanks so much for

56:17

listening and God bless. for

56:21

more on many of these stories and news you

56:23

can trust go to charliekirk.com

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