From the Kitchen Table: The Duffys - Can Sydney Sweeney Save America From Going Woke?
Episode Date: March 23, 2024Could Sydney Sweeney's body wipe out wokeness in America? In today's Q&A, the Duffy's discuss how Sweeney's appearance is making many Americans remember how different men and women are in a society fu...ll of 'gender fluidity' and why going out to find a girl to marry may not be so bad (so get a move on, Gen Z!).  They also discuss what parenting styles they resonate with, their thoughts on whether the plug should be pulled on TikTok (and why they believe Google is just as bad), and more! Follow Sean & Rachel on Twitter: @SeanDuffyWI & @RCamposDuffy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. Hey everyone, welcome to From the Kitchen Table.
I'm Sean Duffy, along with my co-host for the podcast, my partner in life, and my wife,
Rachel Campos Duffy.
Hi, Rachel.
Hey, Sean.
Q&A.
Q&A.
It's Friday.
It is Friday. It's my favorite time of the week.. Hi, Rachel. Hey, Sean. Q&A. Q&A. It's Friday. It is Friday. It's my favorite time
of the week. It is actually. Okay, so let's just go. Let's go right into it here. Okay.
So first questions of the asses. How would you describe your parenting style? Let's start with
you, Sean. And there's lots of you. Are you a free spirit? Are you a helicopter parent?
Are you a gentle parent?
Are you a disciplinarian?
Are you authoritarian?
What is it?
I think I'm a lot of things.
I think you are too.
Thanks for springing that question on me.
Sorry.
I told you, let's just get right into it.
So I think sometimes I'm nurturing.
Sometimes I draw lines and don't accept kids' BS.
Give us an example of how you are nurturing.
Listen, when kids are, whether they're having trouble with their friends,
whether they're having trouble in school, I think I'm very helpful. When they're injured,
I'm nurturing. But also they'll, they come home with, my teacher did that or my friends are doing this.
Where I think a lot of parents today will come in a helicopter.
We kind of go, you know, man up.
I'm sorry.
Or you can figure it out.
Well, we'll help you figure out some of these answers.
But we're not, you got to deal with this yourself.
I'm not going to, we're not going to get involved.
Swoop in and get involved in this.
That's right.
Yeah. And I think some of that in this. That's right. Yeah.
And I think some of that, too, is just having a lot of kids.
And over time, it's like...
Is it that we don't have time?
We don't have time.
We don't have time for the relationship.
I can't deal with that.
And sometimes...
But what it is, it's like...
You know what that is?
That's actually really important because then the most important things that you actually have to spend your time on get taken care of.
Are the most important things.
But you don't have time for the BS of the little things.
And frankly, that's kind of probably the way we were raised back in the day.
But it's not just a factor of the fact that we have a lot of kids.
I still remember when Evita was really little and her cousin was really little and they would get in fights.
And my sister is very protective. And so she would want to get involved and they would get in fights and my sister was very
protective and so she would want to get involved and like she would get upset about and i'd be
like i'll work it out like i'm a little bit more of that kind of let them work it out i'm also was
not um you know and it's gotten worse because the internet but you know i never was one of these like
what what do the experts think i mean i, I think parenting is so innate. If you have common sense, I think I'm a woman with common sense.
Um, if you have common sense, you just know how to do it. And if you have the wisdom
to look back at what was done before and decipher what was good, and maybe there were things in the
past that, you know, parents did that were things in the past that, you know,
parents did that maybe weren't great things like, you know,
putting cigarette ashtrays inside their cars.
You know, I'm kind of glad we're not doing that anymore.
But there's a lot of wisdom in the past. And I've always been, I think the only person I ever sought wisdom on parenting from
was from my own mom.
And sometimes the kids
would come to me with questions and I'd be like, ask grandma, ask Yaya. So I think I've always been
a common sense, gut intuition way of parenting. When it seems like not a good idea, it's probably
not a good idea. So can I give you a little reality check on that? Or my memory serves a
little bit different. So again, you mentioned don't go to the experts.
And I don't, I mean, if you want to, whatever.
But I think the best advice to give young parents is ask someone else,
a friend of yours who actually has kids or someone who's older that's an acquaintance,
ask them.
You would ask your mom, that's true.
But also when we were in Ashland, you would ask Debbie Lulich,
random questions here
and there about um what she's done and how she does things or other parents more observing that
i think your sister your sister peggy is somebody that i you know you know like to hear how she did
things but in the end i always use my own gut instinct to decipher But for moms in general, I've always thought it was good to be observant.
You get questions though now even as a mom with a son.
Of course. What I'm saying is...
You're the Fox expert on parenting.
A lot of the young pregnant women come to me with questions because I've done it so many times.
And I do have some solid advice on labor and delivery in particular.
But I do think that it's good to look at people who are older than you,
who've had kids who you think the product, the end result with their kids is pretty good.
And you don't even have to interview them.
Just be around them and watch them and see how they interact and see how they do things.
Take the good things, leave the bad things.
Leave the bad things. Because no one's perfect.
Yeah, no one's perfect.
But I do think that it's so hard because with Google, people are constantly Googling everything on like, you know, how to get my kid to sleep.
I mean, yeah, I mean, it's nice to get some advice.
But in the end, I mean, you're a parent.
You know that balance between overindulging a kid and leaving them to cry for five hours, you know, like, because they don't want to
go to sleep. There is this balance. And I just think in general, in our culture, we've lost that
balance. And I can, I think there's a lot of things that suck kids in that need balance, whether it's
sneezing or watching TV, playing video games, being on phones.
And these are, they're meant to be addictive for kids, but also trying to feed them balance.
And we work on that too with, you know, we don't have, the young ones don't have phones
and we don't have video games in the house, but sometimes the TV can be a draw and a little
seven-year-old oftentimes will go turn the TV on by himself and he'll be like, hey, turn
that off.
You're not allowed to do that.
Get up here.
I have to hide the remote so he won't do it.
But, yeah, I do think we've lost some of that trusting your own instinct.
Your elders, too.
And your elders and the wisdom of the ages.
Like these people that think they can reinvent childhood um or reinvent i should say
reinvent parenting and that somehow you know i have to do it exactly the opposite of everything
i've ever seen i mean obviously if you grew up in an abusive home that's probably a good idea but
if you grew up in a pretty decent home um chances are your parents who raised you in the 70s and 80s
got some things right because they're probably following a pattern that's been time tested and
i think that's been a mentality we want to think that's been a mentality. We want to change
all the things of the past.
We want to do it differently. And the question is,
how's that working out for you as a culture,
as a society? I would argue not so well.
So let's go back to the wisdom of the past. Okay.
What else do we have? I like that. I like that.
How's TikTok built?
How do you feel about it, Sean?
Well, I had a fight with Evita about it on a podcast.
We had a great podcast, a father-daughter debate on it.
Has your mind changed?
So I think she made some very good specific points on the bill and the power that it gives the president.
And I think I ceded that during the podcast with her.
But I think she also went too far in saying TikTok is a free speech platform and we want to protect
the First Amendment and therefore protect TikTok.
When you, and again, I still stand by this.
If everyone's banned off a platform versus certain individuals on a platform, that doesn't
affect free speech.
And again, this is a national security risk.
So again, I think this is what's important.
The Senate's taking their time with it.
And some of the problems that have been identified in the House bill can actually be fixed in the Senate to make sure we don't give too much power to a Joe Biden, a Barack Obama or a future Gavin Newsom.
That's important.
I'm a lot more China friendly.
No, I'm a China hawk.
And you know that I'm sure I'm on every list they have.
I'm constantly condemning them and
doing stories about them however i'm i'm probably more worried about google you know i've recently
had to do a google search on something and i'm like the amount of crap that they algorithmically
put forward for me to look at so for example liberal website you mean yeah or like
if you were to google george soros you would see probably five pages of positive george soros pieces
until you figure out he's actually satan um you know like it's weird it's like they they so what
happens is kids kids no longer go to the library um they no longer, you know, go and look for books. Everything is
Googleable. So if they have a paper to write, if they're trying to learn about a topic, let's say
they're trying to learn about abortion. It's really hard to find two sides of that argument
if you Google that. And this is one of the ways that they're indoctrinating and altering history
and rewriting history. And that's what you hear a lot of people
saying. I got to hold on to these old books because if I let Google be my source of information,
that's going to be a problem. So I'm just, again, just because Google is bad,
doesn't mean that TikTok is good. I agree. Google is Google, our left wing. I'm not saying
TikTok is good either. I think, though, I think it's a threat to my freedom. I actually feel the
most existential, imminent, current threat is Google. And in fact, because Google is going to
affect the outcome of the next election in some way or another. So first of all, Google is a real
threat to democracy, a real threat to democracy,
a real threat to free speech, 100%. But Google doesn't have an army. Google isn't building
warships. Google doesn't have nuclear weapons. Google doesn't have a plan to take over the
Western Hemisphere, a plan to take over the world. Google, you know, is a company that are communists. That's different than a country of communists that are very powerful and can use this information for warfare.
So they're very different threats, I think.
And I think Google, as bad as they are, is a different threat that is possibly manageable uh as a as an american
company as opposed it's not an american company it's a globalist but it's but it's it's a
multinational company isn't it it's housed in the u.s it's an american-based company
so all right so here's another you know somebody um recently so you know that
sydney sweeney was on
Saturday Night Live, she hosted a couple weeks ago
And when she was hosting it
She wore
Some very
Let's just say
Chest enhancing
Outfits that really
Displayed her assets
I didn't notice that
I'm sure you didn't
And so somebody posted
a picture of her from or a video clip of her at the end of the show where she's wearing this very
asset enhancing um chest enhancing outfit and all he wrote with this little tiny video clip
of her saying goodbye for the night on saturday Live was, Woke is Dead.
So I guess the question, and this tweet got 16 million likes, 16, over 16 million likes.
And so I guess 16 million, that's a lot of people, Sean, who think that Sidney Sweeney's breasts might have just ended the whole, you know, there's no difference in the sexes, the whole operation.
And it was a billion dollar operation, billions of dollars that were put into motion to try and convince us that sex and gender and and men and women aren't different and in the end um for what
it just took sydney's breaths to like end this whole debate okay so men and women are different
so let's just be really clear these are shark infested waters of this topic that we're going
to talk about right now for me anyway in this in this environment um and let me tell you you know
let's just i'm going to come back and give you my take
on Sidney Sweeney's breasts right after this break. The world of business moves fast. Stay on
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All right, welcome back to From the Kitchen Table.
Rachel decided to bring up a question about...
Sidney Sweeney's boobs.
Yes.
And the end of wokeness.
If we're honest, we go, men appreciate women.
And men that appreciate women are not toxic.
God made us a certain way to appreciate and want to meet with a woman.
And women are made the same way to want to be with a man.
And I think Sidney Sweeney is just a reminder that men are still men.
I'm sorry, we are.
And women are still women. And women are still women.
And that's okay.
And all the things that the woke left tries to tell us, that if you are attracted to a woman or think she's attractive, that you are toxic.
And that genders are fluid.
I think there's probably a lot of little fluid boys or thought they were fluid out there that saw Sydney Sweden and go like, actually, no, I'm not fluid.
I know what I am.
I like what I saw online online or you know on uh
on saturday night live or on any of her yeah any of her shows and movies uh here's what richard
richard hanania is the one who um i hope i said his name right he's the one who wrote the the
the tweet um wokeness is dead with a picture of her and her assets. This is what he says.
He says, the more attractive women around us are, whether in real life or fiction,
the less one is able to maintain two important leftist delusions,
that the sexes are or can be made interchangeable,
and that the sexual selection either, or that sexual selection either is or
can be made to be an unimportant part of human affairs he goes on to say sean if sydney sweeney's
boobs walk into a room even chris hayes is going to experience a physiological transformation
um he's saying even chris hayes who's gay and, you know, likes to see himself as, you know,
not a toxic male, will have to contend with what just walked in the room.
So I think it's an interesting discussion because the left has tried, again, to make
it seem like gender is a construct.
Gender is fluid.
All this kind of stuff.
But in the end, we're created for a purpose.
We are wired a certain way.
We are wired for procreation.
And part of that reproduction process involves us being wired to be attracted to one another
and that there were certain signals.
This is sort of evolutionary biology stuff.
There's a reason why men are attracted.
It implies fertility.
I mean, you can go back and look at all kinds of stuff of how we select in order to reproduce
and know that our genes are going to carry on into the future.
Okay, so I'm just going to give you this.
Sidney Sweeney's boobs.
Are you going to tie up the boobs right here?
I'm going to tie up the boobs.
I'm going to actually go a little bit off on the boobs, and then I'm going to give you this. Sydney Sweeney's boobs. Are you going to tie up the boobs right here? I'm going to tie up the boobs. I'm going to actually go a little bit off on the boobs, and then I'm going to tell you why.
Sydney Sweeney's boobs are a direct front, a challenge to climate change.
She is going to destroy the climate change movement in and of itself.
And here's why.
So the left will talk about carbon emissions in cars and electric and windmills and cow farts, all these different things they talk about.
Climate change really comes down to you.
They don't want you on Earth.
They want less humans here.
It's not about less cars and carbons.
It's more about less of you.
Less people, right?
And so the whole movement here has been to say,
you know what, we want to have gender be a construct. And gender is a construct,
we'll have more or less people getting married, less people having families, and then less
procreation. I think the left loves porn, and they love, a lot of people love porn, but the left
likes to push porn, and they love to have prostitutes and they want to destigmatize prostitution.
Well, if someone is hanging out by themselves, you know, with their with their computer and looking at porn, they're not out at the bar meeting a girl and having the real thing.
I'm sorry, they're not. And if you're with a prostitute, the prostitute is probably on birth control.
And if she does get pregnant, she's probably going to have an abortion.
So if you're using porn and prostitution, you're not procreating.
And that is good for the left because they think that procreation gives more climate change.
And so when you have Sidney Sweeney's boobs that remind men that they want to be with women,
and maybe if they are with women, they might get married and they might have a family and they might procreate.
The left hates that because then they think, oh think oh my god you're going to destroy the world
and uh climate change um is going to be completely diminished devolved because this theory of yours
sean is actually i just mean i was i know listen i was gonna no, no, no, I'm not laughing at all. I think it's actually really profound that ultimately the whole climate change agenda is about depopulation.
Yes. It's a it's an anti-natalist, anti-family, anti-baby movement.
That's why the people who are for all of this, you know, climate, climate change, global warming.
They also happen to also be, you know, about pro abortion.
It's an anti reproduction thing.
And Sydney Sweeney's boobs make us want to reproduce.
Right.
Sydney Sweeney's boobs are going to save America.
And I was just gonna say
maybe that's the title of this episode sydney sweeney's boobs save the planet
save america i'll just go to america you're just gonna say you're you're even gonna say
just save america i think might even save the planet i'm gonna leave it there because i'm
i'm not gonna get in any more trouble than i've already gone in that's my philosophy
um and i'll just note and i'm gonna i provide too much information rachel and evita were talking not going to get in any more trouble than I've already gone in. That's my philosophy. Um, and
I'll just note, and I'm going to, I provide too much information. Rachel and Evita were talking
about Sydney Sweeney and I'm like, I know who she is. Yeah. That's so funny. I have to say this
because usually we'll bring up like literally this has happened. We were talking about Selena Gomez
once. This was years ago. And he was like, who? And all the kids are like what but this happens over and over again we'll
talk about some celebrity some cop culture figure that everyone else is talking about
and that's why these in the boys too i'm like i have no idea and he doesn't know who we're talking
about and we always laugh about it it's sort of like a dad joke in our in our family and then
evita and i were talking about Sydney.
She was on speakerphone with me in the kitchen, and Sean was there.
We were talking about Sydney Sweeney.
And lo and behold, guess who knew who Sydney Sweeney was?
Because I know, I care about saving America, and I know that she's going to do it.
And so I know who she is.
All right.
I love it.
That's awesome.
Let's get out of this topic.
Okay.
Let's come back on the other
side with one last question all right we'll be right back all right welcome back to the kitchen
table so in the the vein of popping stories on each other on each other which rachel just did
to me i'm going to pop a story on rachel um so we keep hearing these stories in the news about
all of these squatters um people buy a house and they might have weeks or
months before they move in, or a bank forecloses on a house and it's empty, and squatters are
moving in. And a foundation of America, and you've mentioned this, we talked about this last night,
a foundation in our country is property rights. And people love to invest in America because we have rock solid property rights. You buy the property, it's yours. And our laws protect
your rights to own that property. And if anyone tries to infringe or encroach on that right,
our laws are very stringent. They're going to step in and go, no, it's very clear you own this property. Well, in certain states, they've allowed a, the laws have digressed and they're now giving
squatters rights. So you have people just moving into vacant homes and saying, I live here,
they'll draft up fake leases and the laws are written in such a way that it'll take months, potentially years, to get these squatters out of your house.
And think about this.
Think you bought a house.
You're paying a mortgage.
You did all of the research and you took all the loans and you saved your money and you have this house.
And before you move in, someone else moves in.
And they're living in your house, sleeping in your bedroom, using your bathroom and you're paying for it and you can't get them out.
This, we talked about this before, you've talked a lot about this happening in Europe
and what it means for the Europeans and where the movement comes from, where they allow
squatters to take priority over homeowners.
Yeah, you know, first of all, there's a TikTok, I guess, star.
He's Hispanic.
He's Venezuelan.
He does his TikTok videos in Spanish.
And he will basically, you know, give advice to other people who are coming here illegally
on how to milk the system.
And now one of his latest TikTok videos is, hey, these are the laws here now. You can
actually move into someone's home, not pay rent, squat there, and it's going to take them a long
time to get you out. And in the meantime, you get some free months, maybe a year of living for free.
So people are catching on to it. You know, when I, I would say about eight, nine years ago,
I have friends and family who live in Spain.
And one of my friends in Spain, her name is Diana, and she has, her family has property in different parts of Spain.
And she said, you know, we're talking about, you know, how she does that.
She's, you know, traveling at different times to manage the different properties.
And she said one of the concerns they have is that squatting is a big problem in Spain
and that the laws were terrible and they could, yeah, I think it was about eight or nine years ago.
And that one of the things she had to do is keep going to check on these properties
in different parts of Spain to make sure that there weren't squatters or
anything happened, especially when she was, you know, making these rentals and whatnot.
And I remember thinking, Sean, and I literally said to her, I'm like, wow,
that crap can never happen here in America. It's bizarre.
I'm like, that is so bizarre. I can't believe it. I've heard of squatters like in Latin America,
you know, like you sometimes hear about that. You hear about land being repatriated because, you know,
some dictator took over some Latin American country. And now this, you know, beach home
you had, you no longer own. Heard of those things. I was shocked that it was happening in Spain.
And I was certain that was something we would never have to worry about here.
So this has been a huge eye-opener for me.
And now there's this new business coming up of, because the cops won't do anything, the
law won't do anything, now there's these, like, people are hiring these task forces
to go, okay, I can't get these guys out.
Maybe you can scare the heck out of them and run them out of the place.
Yeah.
So just in law school, there's a
philosophy. Yeah. There's something called adverse possession. And it's one of the most
horrible things in property law that you'll have to study for the bar exam and you'll take in class.
And basically you have to have an adverse possession, I believe for 21 years in most
places before you can make a legitimate claim on someone's property. This is, I've been here for a
month and I'm going to make a claim on your property.
And this is so insidious for a couple reasons.
When you have a breakdown in the rule of law,
when you have a breakdown in property rights,
you have a breakdown in society.
So if I can't buy a home and it can't be mine,
people aren't going to make investments in properties.
Correct.
If I can't walk down the street and feel safe, I aren't going to make investments in properties. Correct. Right.
If I can't walk down the street and feel safe, I'm not going to walk down the street. What you see
is this slide into what people have lived in third world countries for decades. They've lived
in this kind of squalor and these internal fights because the laws aren't clear and crisp. And what's interesting is the left is actively working to make America more like a third world country.
Whether it's the crime, whether it's the selective prosecution, and now it's on property rights.
And what fascinates me is that even liberals own homes.
Even liberals are having issues with squatter
rights, even liberals are getting beat up on the streets, even liberals aren't being treated fairly
under the law. And still, they keep voting for politicians that advocate for these crazy laws.
And again, I don't have an answer for it. It doesn't make any sense to me. At what point
do they go enough is enough. I want to actually have laws in New York City that support the person who
saved their money and bought the property and is paying the mortgage. They should sleep in that
house, not the squatter. And especially the squatter that just came to this country and now
has more rights than I do. The guy who saved and bought the property, the guy who just came across
the border, that broke down our fence and came into this country illegally, they have more rights than me.
When do they throw those politicians out?
It's a liberal mindset that I haven't figured out yet.
I can't understand it, but you're right.
It will take us down into a third world track.
The main reason why people have faith in America is property rights.
Honestly, it's property rights.
It is one of the most important things.
It's one of the things, you know, when I talk to people who come from Latin America who came here legally, one of the reasons they wanted to come was property rights because it's something you could not depend on there.
And it's just mind boggling to me that we're living in a time when you could not depend on there. And it's just mind-boggling to me that we're living in a time
when you can't depend on that in America.
I have wanted to invest in places like Mexico or Costa Rica.
I pick all these crazy ideas.
Throughout our marriage, Sean's been like,
hey, I've got some friends that have a beach house.
We should go here.
We should maybe think about maybe saving money and investing in Costa Rica.
And Rachel would always say what?
Nope.
I don't trust property rights in Latin America.
If you invest money there, they can take it away from you.
That's right.
I'm not going to put our hard-earned money into those countries.
I mean, we've been married almost 25 years.
That has been a conversation we have had since the beginning.
Because Sean has always been like
wouldn't it be great to have a place somewhere warm you know and it's cheaper there than florida
and i'd be like sorry nope don't trust and and the reason people should know is isn't just because
i'm hispanic i studied latin america i have a master's degree international affairs um with
an emphasis on latin america studies um i speak often to people who are familiar with the area.
My sister has lived in Latin America for, you know, 10 years of her life.
I've lived in Latin America for, you know, a year in Peru, you know, three or four months in Venezuela.
So I've been there.
I know it.
And I can't believe we're turning into it.
But every day we are more more like a Latin American country in terms of the lack of predictability in our laws, the lack of security on our streets.
It just feels like even the roads that we drive on. I'm like, you know what? We pay so much in taxes.
The airports now, how many countries'm like, you know what? We pay so much in taxes. Or the airports.
How many countries are better, more clean?
Beautiful airports.
Beautiful subways.
The subways aren't safe.
The airports aren't safe.
The roads are full of potholes.
And I'm like, what do you do with the money?
Well, you know what?
This is all about cronyism, right? They pay off the unions and they've got all these people that get paid.
But we really pay taxes to
make our government work and that means build roads build bridges invest in airports didn't we
didn't we pass like a year or two ago a big over a trillion dollars in infrastructure which they
always use infrastructure it's never going to go to infrastructure you're not going to see
the only person john that should have been trusted with infrastructure was Donald Trump. Donald J. Trump.
And when Donald Trump was elected in 2016, his instincts were so good.
He said, I'm going to do something bipartisan.
Everyone likes infrastructure, as you just said.
And I love to build things.
And I know how to build things.
And I know how to get a good deal on them.
And we're going to do infrastructure. And a bunch of people in Congress convinced him that, no, he should put all that political capital into health care, which was not bipartisan and which in the end the Republicans lost because John McCain got out of his basically his deathbed to fly to Washington, D.C., to make sure that Donald Trump and the Republicans didn't get a win,
and he voted no and killed two years of efforts. And boy, if Donald Trump had done
infrastructure instead of Pete Buttigieg, America would be better off.
By the way, we did do tax reform, which was really good, but it would have been nice if
we had gotten infrastructure done where we actually built infrastructure. We built roads, bridges, airports, train stations that were safe with, anyway,
if our kids listen to this, they're going to call me a boomer, though I'm not a boomer.
No, you're a Gen Xer.
I'm a Gen Xer. Listen, any more topics? I think that's it.
No, I think we've covered the spectrum from boobs to infrastructure. I don't know,
TikTok and parenting. I don't know, a tick tock and parenting.
I don't know what more gamuts you want to cross.
Let's end this before we get in any more trouble.
Listen, let it, let us end it.
Listen, thanks for joining us at the kitchen table.
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