The Charlie Kirk Show - Bondi Down + The Suicidal Death of the West ft. Dr. Gad Saad
Episode Date: April 2, 2026The show opens with a reaction to President Trump's Iran speech, and then a bonus response to the breaking news of AG Pam Bondi's departure. Former U.S. Attorney Jay Town gives his expert breakdown of... what defense filings in the Tyler Robinson case really reveal. Then, one of Charlie's favorite thinkers, Dr. Gad Saad, joins for a full hour on birthright citizenship, mass Islamization, and the other disturbing signs of how "suicidal empathy" is leading the West off of a cliff. Watch every episode ad-free on members.charliekirk.com! Get new merch at charliekirkstore.com!Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/supportSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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noble gold investments.com. That is noble gold investments.com. All right, welcome to the Charlie
Kirk Show. It's April 2nd. We got through April 1st. I was not unscathed, I have to say.
I got duped a couple of times. I was really enjoying some local sheriff's agency put up
AI generated stuff of their new don't safety initiative.
So they were putting up special don't signs that represented like don't get distracted and various things.
And they were putting it, you know, above stop signs.
Don't stop.
Don't yield.
I like that one.
That sounds potentially, you know, problematic for public safety.
But that's all right.
It was good fun.
April 1st is done.
We're April 2nd here at the YREFI Studios.
It's our new partner in the studio.
YREFI studios.
Check them out.
So we've got lots of news to get to, and we've got a jam-pack first hour.
We've got two guests in the second half of the hour.
So I want to get to the news right now.
So there's multiple things swirling that I think all could be the lead if we wanted to.
First of which is Trump gave a speech last night giving an update on the Iran war.
Now, a lot of people said, well, he didn't really make any news.
I actually disagree.
I think what was most interesting about the speech was what wasn't said.
Let's play some of his clips and kind of get the tone, set the stage, and I'll explain what I mean.
SOT 6.
Thanks to the progress we've made, I can say tonight that we are on track to complete all of America's military objectives shortly, very shortly.
We're going to hit them extremely hard over the next two to three weeks.
We're going to bring them back to the Stone Ages where they belong.
In the meantime discussions are ongoing.
All right.
So he gives the timeline two to three weeks.
We've heard that before.
Sometimes it goes back and forth.
President Trump is definitely reserving the right here to define what he sees as victory.
The question, though, has remained what to do with the Strait of Hormuz.
And I think that's where we're starting to get the most clarity here, SOT 7.
To those countries that can't get fuel, many of which refuse to get involved in the decapitation of Iran, we had to do it ourselves.
I have a suggestion, number one, buy oil from the United States of America.
We have plenty.
We have so much.
And number two, build up some delayed courage.
Should have done it before.
Should have done it with us, as we asked.
Go to the straight and just take it, protect it.
Use it for yourselves.
Iran has been essentially decimated.
The hard part is done.
So President Trump is sending a very clear signal to, I would say France,
England, Italy, that's what that was directed to, because in another clip, he sort of gives a shout
out to some of the Middle Eastern allies here that I think have met the moment in his eyes more,
Sop three.
So I want to thank our allies in the Middle East, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, Kuwait, and Bahrain.
They've been great, and we will not let them get hurt or fail in any way, shape,
for him. All right. So I'm going to translate this because Blake's, Blake's team, he didn't say much.
Here's what I'm going to say. Message is clear. The U.S. is winning. It's shy of we've officially
won, though. All right? And I think that's consistent with some of the messaging we've heard.
He's got strong words for NATO, the NATO countries that are dependent on energy flowing through
the Strait of Hormuz. He's now telling them that it's your responsibility in the long run to
keep the straight open. Not his job. We have enough oil. Okay. We could tell you.
talk about the implications of what that means. He did not, and this is a key, he did not mention ground
troops as some media outlets had been reporting he would do in this speech. So the fact that there
was not a ground invasion announced last night was a big, big deal. Trump did not mention Kurdish
forces as other media outlets had predicted. The war's not over, but that was about as close
as you could get to President Trump spiking the football as you could get without doing it. So we're
32 days in and a little bit of TBD on how many more weeks we have ahead of us.
So what this was was President Trump defining his right to define what victory looks like
and define when he is going to determine that the missional objectives have been achieved.
So that's what that speech was.
He was defining the straight of Hormuz.
What's the future there?
He was defining who he thinks have been good allies and who have been bad allies.
We've heard reports that President Trump in Marco Ruby are going to be reassessing our relationship to NATO after Epic Fury concludes.
And it's almost done.
That's what was really, I think front and center here, he wants to be able to say this is what victory looks like.
Our mission is achieved.
We're out.
Straight of her moves or not.
I think that if he wants to get a win for ending the war, the way to do that is to end the war.
Yep.
That's, I think, what he's saying.
but I guess what I was telling you is
it was essentially what we've already heard on
truth social in fact they made the point
the White House made the point that he's been repeating the same thing
the goals are sink their fleet destroy their missile capability
keep them from having a nuclear weapon
and he emphasized that in the speech last night
but it's the same message
and the reason it mattered that the president was giving a speech
as people were wondering if it was going to mark a big announcement
and in fact it didn't either way
So if he says the war is nearly done, that is great if the war is in fact nearly done.
But we've been saying the war is nearly done since the Ayatollah was blown up.
Yeah.
Well, listen, I agree.
But again, he said four to six weeks, we're four weeks in.
He did not mention ground troops.
I think that's a huge, huge thing to take note of.
He basically said, listen, we're basically wrapping up the job.
And if you want the straight cleared Europe who relies on this energy,
we don't rely on it. It's up to you to make it clear. Okay. And that's a big deal because he's wiping his hands of the
responsibility. I think the larger implications of this are going to be our relationship to NATO moving forward.
Our relationship to countries like Italy, Spain that weren't letting us use their bases to launch strikes.
And you saw it in that clip from President Trump where he said, maybe you could get some delayed courage, do the right thing now, go support your own
country's economy by clearing the straight. I mean, I get the whole dynamic. And the NATO question is
going to be looming large in the years and months and years to come. So I think we have to be
clear-eyed about what that means. I think there is, NATO can be absolutely a force for good,
but they really, there is an antagonism that has developed between the United States and our
European allies that we can't, we just have to be clear-eyed about it and open about it because it's
out in the open now. Well, the funny, the funniest thing about it. The funny, the funniest thing about
it is it does actually take you back to when President Trump wanted to buy Greenland.
The fact that all of these NATO allies are now denying the U.S. access to their airspace and airbases does drive home the point as why it matters sometimes to have your own airspace and your own air bases on your own land.
Yeah, that's a good point.
So it is very interesting. It's one thing for them to not join. The fact that they've even denied the air bases after we've spent billions of dollars, I can understand why President Trump is.
very angry with them yeah i i can too and you got to at some point you got to say what are we getting
out of this relationship i don't think that even if we pull out of nato which i don't think is going to
happen but even if we did that there's it's it doesn't instantly mean that we're at each other's
throats with europe it doesn't it could mean something else and maybe this would force
europe to stop being fake and phony countries that think they have strong militaries when really
they're just relying on the u.s military might i'm open-minded i'm going to be
really honest. I don't fear the world order sort of shifting and evolving over time.
All right. So the other big news here is that rumors are circulating around D.C. at the moment
that Pam Bondi and Tulsi Gabbard could be on their way out. It's being reported by
semaphore. It is, which is Shelby Talcott, she's a serious reporter. So I would say don't take it too
lightly. She says news. The president has informed Pam Bondi that her time as AG is nearing an end
multiple sources. Tell me, formal announcement hasn't yet come, aka all the normal caveats that he
could change his mind. He's been speaking with advisors on a possible replacement in recent days,
as others have reported this week. And Bondi is aware of that as well. Blake, the timing has
been brought into question, right? Because the big
controversy with Pan Bondi was over the
Epstein binders. We had, yeah, the Epstein
binders, the Epstein files.
She's become the punching bag for
everyone who's dissatisfied with how the administration
handled that, a bit along with
Cash Patel, but mostly Bondi. When we
did, at Amfest,
we did a survey of the
approval of all of Trump's cabinet members
and basically all of them were really high
except Bondi. I think Bondi had
25% disapproval.
even higher. I think she was the only one in double digits even of disapproval. And I think that's a
real cohort of mag. In fact, I'd appreciate emails how you guys feel about this.
Freedom at charliegirt.com. I think people have also projected onto her frustration that there's a lot of
people who just, they want they want Fauci indicted, they want members of the deep state indicted,
they want various Democrats indicted. And there's been a few attempts at that. They haven't fared great
in court. Some of them have also failed at the grand jury level. But the point is, is she's not
delivering scalps that a lot of MAGA supporters wanted. And she's a very easy person to blame for
all of that. Yeah. There is a lot of activity in South Florida. You know, we saw the one subpoena of
James Comey. I'm told there's a lot more coming there. So perhaps, you know, they're, you know,
waiting is really hard when it comes to this stuff. I think there's a huge chunk of MAGA that just is not
going to be satisfied until Anthony Fauci is, you know, arrested and shackled and that sort of thing.
I think it's a very, very hard job. I just want to be very clear. The job that Pam Bondi has is
very difficult. So I want to give some, at least a dose of grace, right? If we had Mike Davis on,
he'd probably be very supportive of her efforts thus far. But nonetheless, wanted you guys to be
aware Pam Bondi is, it's rumored that she is possibly or even probably on her way out.
Want to know your thoughts. Freedom at Charliekirk.com. Send us your thoughts on Pam Bondi.
The other rumor mill is over Tulsi Gabbard. This goes back to her congressional testimony.
There was some feelings that she did not defend the president, I guess, vocally enough when it came to the Iran strikes.
I thought she threaded the needle.
Obviously, we're very aware that Tulsi Gabbard is a non-interventionist.
That's kind of been her brand for a long time when she called Hillary Clinton, the queen of warmongers.
And I think it's fun.
It would have just she could say something else.
And then people would say she's just lying through her teeth.
There's just no way to win.
They trot her out here in order to create this drama.
Yeah.
I'm less certain about this one.
I think Tulsi Gabbard, from everything I've heard,
has been doing a great job.
That being said, you know, it's the president's decision to make.
So those are the two rumor mill pieces going around.
A lot of people saying they've been hearing similar things.
Again, I would put Tulsi in a less confident position about what's her future.
But Pam Bondi, these are real news reports.
Semaphore.
Shelby Talcott is a serious reporter.
She's got multiple sources that have confirmed that.
So Pan Bondi very well could be nearing the end of her tenure in the Trump administration.
So let us know what you do.
think of that? Yeah. The other big news, because there's a lot to get to, was that they have reached
a deal. The Senate and the House have come to terms on funding DHS. And so the plan ahead,
Mike Johnson did a whole comment on it in X, saying that at first he said that it was a joke.
The proposal was a joke. They were, the deal was reached that they were going to fund DHS with the
exception of ICE and Customs and Border Patrol.
but they weren't the Democrats weren't getting any of the concessions speaker or uh speaker johnson
did not like this at first said it was a joke he's now changed his position they're going to pass
full dhs funding minus the border patrol and ice they're going to include that in a july
reconciliation bill fund them additionally there what is important to understand is that ice and cbp
are already funded mostly through the one big beautiful bill so they have there
their paychecks have continued. Their work is continued. And the upshot, so if you're saying,
what do we get out of this? Is it a complete fold or not? I happen to not like it. But the upshot here is
that they will not get any of the concessions that the Democrats wanted. The Democrats wanted no masks.
They wanted some other areas of enforcement to be off limits. They basically wanted to hamstring ICE and
Customs and Border Patrol. So the silver lining here is that they get none of those concessions.
Mass deportations will continue on. The enforcement will continue, which is very popular with the base.
They'll just have to fund them in the reconciliation bill, which will be another fight, which will be another fight.
I don't think that we should ever get into this process of saying, hey, we're going to fund this agency, but not this, this and this.
Because then it just becomes a race to the bottom of using leverage points against Republicans.
Again, it's just truly despicable.
It's this plan to try to...
The ultimate goal here is to prevent the enforcement of American law
to enable the unlimited invasion of America by foreigners,
including foreign criminals, including foreign gangsters,
including foreign spies.
There is no limiting principle for the left.
And to do this, they are just going to randomly hurt Americans.
It's the...
Honestly, it's the government equivalent of like a school shooting.
Just hurt random people in order to get what we want.
which is also an evil thing.
Despicable people.
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I'm excited about our next guest, and that is a gentleman named Jay Town.
Let me tell you about him.
He's a former Marine Corps officer and judge advocate for 13 years,
former violent crimes prosecutor for the state of Alabama for 13 years.
Trump appointed United States Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama and Trump's first term.
He's a Newsmax legal analyst, and now he's the chief compliance officer at Radiance Technologies.
Jay, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show.
It's an honor to be with you.
And before we get into our chat, let me just say that like the tens of millions of households that grieved when Charlie was shot,
It's really an honor to be here.
My house was no difference and honored me with you today.
Thank you for saying that.
And yeah, it means a lot.
It still does.
So thank you for saying that.
Does.
I wanted to have you on, Jay, because I was told you are one of the leading experts in the country
when it comes to litigating in the court of law, violent crime,
understanding the way motions work from the defense and the prosecution and all this.
Obviously, a lot of news and noise was made when the Daily Mail dropped that headline,
and it was reporting on the brief from the prosecutor,
or the defense attorney for Tyler Robinson,
where it said the bullets did not match.
And you have some insight here to help us understand how to make more sense of this.
I think we did a great job the day after this story launched,
but I'm not done with it because I'm still upset about it.
We need to hit this.
This was such a dishonest headline by the Daily Mail,
and it was run with by other dishonest people.
Yeah, you have a lot of experience in this.
We don't have a lot of time with you.
What did you make of the headline and the underlying evidence?
Yeah, nowhere in any report, in any reporting,
either from the government, the ATF, or any of the filings from the state of Utah,
does it say anything does not match?
And I spent most of my adult life prosecuting violent crimes.
That includes homicides.
Most of those homicides involve firearms.
So ATF Ballistics Reports, what we call firearms and tool marking reports, I've seen hundreds of them.
And I can tell you that when it says unable to identify, which is all the report says, that does not equal, nor is that term the equivalent of, does not match.
Unable to identify is describing the rifling characteristics on the fragmented round that was found in Charlie Kirk's body.
And what that means, so inside of every long gun in the barrel, you see those little stripes that's rifling.
Those impressions are made upon the round when it is fired.
And because of the way it tumbles sometimes when it hits a person or a wall or whatever it might be,
they're unable, ATF, the forensic experts, and they are the absolute best in the world at this,
through their Nibin system and through their correlation system of finding out, even if there's
just a little bit, whether or not the rifling matches the actual rifle.
But there's two things in every firearm and tool mark report.
The rifling, which they were unable to identify it because it was so degraded, the round that
was found, but also the caliber class of that round, which is almost always determinable.
Now, what that is is the projectile, it's round at the base, and the diameter of that is the class of the caliber.
Now, the rifle that we found was a 30-od-6, which fires a 30 caliber class round.
And what was missing from the defense counsel's motion in his mouth, or her mouth, rather, is what caliber class that round was.
I will bet all the money in my pocket, against all the money in yours, Am,
Andrew, that the ATF report describes this round as a 30 caliber class round.
There's only a couple of rifles that fire that type of round.
If it was a 22, let's say, caliber class, which would be a 556 or 223 round, so like an M16,
that would have been what they led with because it couldn't have been the 30-od six.
It doesn't fire a 223 or a 556 round.
So, Jay, yeah, go ahead.
Yeah, let's pick up that.
So you're saying really what we need to look at is not so much what the defense says.
It's what they're not saying.
It's the dog that didn't bark here.
That's exactly right.
And the defense lawyer knows that.
The defense lawyer with this motion, they're buying time.
Someone who's tried capital murders, I can tell you that, you know, time is your friend.
The longer these things drag out for the family, for the state, for the witnesses, the better your case as a defendant gets.
Now, I will say there is a mountain.
Before coming on the show today, I reread the indictment against Tyler Robinson.
Just in that, and I would suggest to everyone that there is another mountain of evidence that has not been disclosed and is not public yet.
Like, for instance, that this is a 30 caliber class round that was found in Charlie Kirk.
But there is a mountain of evidence admissions from Tyler Robinson to his roommate, to his mother, to his father.
There's a piece of paper with an admission on it where he texted his roommate to look under the keyboard, his DNA,
is on the spent cartridge. Remember, there was one shot fired, and there was no shell casing found
at the scene. That suggests a bolt action rifle. You know what was found also at the scene? A 30-od-6,
Mouser-98, bolt-action rifle. His DNA's on that rifle, all the spent rounds, or the one-spent
round, two of the three shell cartridges. There's CCTV footage showing his ingress and egress
to his firing spot on the roof, and guess who recognized him? His mother and his father. And
other. There's not another shooter. There's not another gun. There's not another person culpable or
guilty of the murder of Charlie Kirk. It's Tyler Robinson. He's sitting in a Utah jail waiting
trial right now. Yeah. I mean, I just I what your insight here is I think really important, Jay,
that it's what the defense did not say in that motion. They did not contend the caliber of the round,
which is something.
That's a huge, huge.
And I didn't even have eyes to see that that I needed to look for that.
You saw that because you've read so many of these motions over the years
and read so many of these ATF reports that you instantly knew that if they had,
if the defense knew that it was a different round based on the ATF report,
which we haven't read, that they would have led with that.
That would have been their first point that they made in that motion.
They didn't, which means they sort of, by omission,
admitting that it's a 30 caliber?
Absolutely by admission.
It is, well, as you said, it's by what they did not say.
And the reason they didn't say it is because they know that that is in the report.
It would be otherwise very, very useful sculptory evidence.
But since it is in the report, it directly matches to use the media's term anyway,
by the way, unable to identify and does not match.
Once again, do not mean the same thing.
But it wouldn't match if it was a 22 caliber.
But you know what? It does because it's a 30 caliber. And I'll tell you this too. I can't tell you how many murders I've prosecuted or assaults involving a firearm where we couldn't identify the rifling because the round was so degraded that we were able to examine. It's very common. Like I said, the ATF is the absolute best in the world at identifying rifling characteristics and also examining for the caliber class. And they always get it right.
So the defense lawyer mentioned that they might use the ATF report as exculpatory.
Go ahead.
Knock yourself out because we'll throw an expert on the sand, we being the good guys, that says,
no, this is the exact type of round that is used in that Mouser 98, bolt action 30-0.6 rifle.
It's the same kind.
And how many rounds were fired?
One.
How many spent shell casings were found?
One.
Was his DNA on that spent shell casing?
Yes.
I mean, it is overwhelming evidence, and his intent is overwhelming, too, that he intended to kill Charlie Kirk that fateful day.
Why would the defense want to drag this out?
Dive into that more. You said that's their goal, is really to, like, delay. Are they trying to spread conspiracy?
Are they, they must be aware of the conspiracy culture that's emerged? Are they trying to play into that to potentially taint the jury?
Is that, would that be a motive that you could divine from this?
Sure.
I mean, so part of it is the delay, you know, because, okay, we need our expert now,
and that's going to take six months to a year, and this is all to drag it out.
That's part of it.
I don't, I mean, the trial date could get moved, obviously, and onward and so forth.
But they're aware of the conspiracy theorists, the whack jobs that are on the Internet,
and even in, you know, print media with a headline that says does not match.
that was all over. It was USA Today. It was others. They were just wrong. As dishonest it is,
it's just factually and forensically incorrect to make that statement that it does not match.
It shows how little the left nose or the people twisting their mustache know about firearms, right?
Especially about firearms and tool marking tests that the ATF provides.
So I'm sure they're willing to, you know, my experience is they're absolutely willing to taint the jury pool with this sort of
cast of little bits of doubt here and there.
So that, you know, that when 12 people are sitting in the box, it actually might go
their way with one of those people.
But as soon as it comes out, hopefully the state will file something soon that will mention
the 30 caliber class of this particular fragmented round so that we can, you can have me
back on and you'll owe me all the money in your pocket, Andrew, because I will have been right.
I'm not betting against you, Jay.
The ATF will have been proven correct and also the professionals that they are.
Yeah, Jay, thank you so much for, I think that was such an important insight.
And again, we're not rushing a judgment here.
We want the legal process to play out.
This is the system we have.
And I fully expect Tyler Robinson's defense to mount a rigorous defense.
That's what they're supposed to do.
So, J-Town, thank you so much.
This was great, really, really important insight.
And we will have you back on.
You have quite the resume.
Thank you, sir.
Thank you.
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We have some breaking news here really quick.
Fox is reporting that Pam Bondi has already been fired as Attorney General.
Cabinet official teed up as replacement according to sources.
EPA director Lee Zeldon is reportedly being considered as Bondi's replacement after a White House meeting Tuesday.
So that's...
That's break up.
We got about 40 emails in five minutes.
minutes, I think, just after we asked what people thought. Yeah, a dozen, dozens, just filled up the
entire Gmail screen. So clearly inspired a lot of passion. We know a lot of people. And I couldn't
read all of them, but it looks like a lot of people did want Bondi to go. Yeah. All right,
our next guest is ready. I want to get to it. Scott Kupor, he's the Office of Personnel Management
Director. And they have a big new initiative. It feels very central to the mission of this show and to the
mission of turning points. I wanted to make some time. Scott, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Hey, thanks for having me. Really great to be here. Yeah. So you guys have this huge new initiative
at the Office of Personnel Management hiring Gen Z. And I think it's absolutely the right message
to send. So tell us about this, please. Yeah, no, and we're thankful to have the opportunity
to talk to you about it because obviously you all are the leaders here in terms of this audience.
So let me just give you the background real fast. So about 7% of the federal workforce is
under the age of 30. And if you look at the workforce more generally, that's about 22, 23%. So by a
factor about three to one, you know, the very simple way to say it is the federal government has done a
very poor job of attracting kind of young people to decide to spend some time and, you know,
commit some public service and do some good for the country. So what we've done is launched a new
program where we're coordinating with all the agencies across government. And we've put out a
call, a centralized call for anybody who is interested in. We're starting with five career areas. So
technology roles, human resources, financial services, program management, and then contracting
and procurement. These are jobs that are kind of well distributed across all the agencies and
government. And we're about to kick off a very broad recruiting effort. And, you know, your
leadership here is fantastic. In fact, you may know this, but we're going to actually have a
presence tonight at the event that you're hosting at George Washington University at 630 tonight.
So for anybody who's in the D.C. area and is interested in being patriotic and helping support the government
and all the wonderful work that we're doing, please come see us.
Well, this is amazing.
So I think, you know, I don't know what the rules are,
so I'm not trying to break any rules,
but I would love to get you a bunch of graduating seniors,
their CVs over to the Office of Personnel Management.
I think this is amazing, and I'm sure.
Yeah, you send them to us and we'll take care of them.
Hey, listen, they got to meet the mark just like everybody else.
Of course.
They've got to have excellence and merit.
and all that's I'm not asking for special favors,
but I know a bunch of graduating seniors
that I'm sure would be looking for some jobs
and could be a great fit for this administration.
So that's amazing.
Go over, drill down just a little bit further
in the areas that you're looking for
to fill these positions.
And any idea of how many positions we're looking to?
Because obviously, I'll be honest,
I'm a little bit biased.
I want to see the federal workforce numbers decrease.
As do I, by the way.
Okay.
So let me give you perspective, though, on that one.
Yeah, yeah.
All right, let me frame it here to make sure you don't think we're going crazy.
So I mentioned that only 7% of the workforce today is under the age of 30, and that's, you know, well under indexed.
On the other side of the federal workforce, close to half of our population is over the age of 50,
and so we'll likely retire over the next 5, 10, 15 years.
So while I agree with you, I'm a small government, but I think I'm probably not a no-government person.
So we actually will need some people to do the jobs of the American people.
So part of this is we've got to solve this demographic imbalance problem, right?
We just have a pending problem that we've got to solve.
The second thing we're trying to solve here is, look, we just need people who've got skills
that are representative in kind of this generation of talent.
So I'll give an example on the technology side.
There's a tremendous amount of modernization efforts that we're doing in the government.
So we launched something called Tech Force fairly recently.
And Tech Force is part of the,
this early career program, but it's specific to, obviously, technology jobs. And we need people who
understand modern software development, who understand AI technologies, who understand data science.
So those are specific areas where, quite frankly, that skill gap is preventing the government from
being able to do the things that we need to do to modernize. And look, as you well know,
modernization is the key towards efficiency. So if we actually modernize and use technology where
appropriate, then we will have a much more efficient government that will able to actually
do the work of the American people without, quite frankly, bankrupt.
my kids or grandkids and certainly, you know, the generation that I know you talk to quite a bit.
So that's one big area is technology. The other area is there's a bunch of jobs that just lend
themselves well to people who need to be trained. So there are a ton of HR-related jobs in
governments, so human resources. There's a ton of financial analyst jobs. And these are all roles
where, you know, we can take people who are smart people. Many of them are coming out of college.
And by the way, you mentioned college. I just want to make sure you understand. It's okay if people
don't go to college. So one of the things that this administration is, you know,
doing is we're eliminating college degree requirements for almost every job classification. Because in our
mind, look, we want to hire people for the skills and the merit they have. And, you know, it's great if they
went to college. But by the way, if they're incredibly skillful and they know what they're doing and they can
perform the jobs we need, we shouldn't discriminate against them because maybe they don't have the financial
means to go to college or they just didn't factor into their life plans. So that's a, these are all kind
of priorities we're working on. Yeah, or like Senator Mark Wayne Mullen, his father dies and he takes over
the plumbing business, blows it into a multi-million dollar business, and he's an entrepreneur.
We need more of that as well. So we'll add graduating high school seniors to the list of CVs
if they're not planning on going. It's just, it's, I want to really, I guess to any young people
out there, you should strongly look into applying for this, because what do we all complain about
as conservatives? We complain about the fact the deep state, the government, it's full of
left-wing career bureaucrats who are extremely difficult to dig out.
And the way that you fix that is actually we get young people who have pro-American values,
who are not left-wing barnacles.
Like, you get them into government.
And then that is how you allow this country to perpetuate into the decades in the future.
Because as we know, once you get into government, it's hard to get you out.
And so you want job security.
Here you go.
We're working on that one too, by the way.
We'll work on that one.
Fair enough.
So I would just say, you know, what, D.C. votes about 955 Democrat.
We'll let's get some turning point grads in there and make it like 90-10, you know, 85-15.
I'm going to end it here, Scott, with your guys' beautiful ad that you made for this.
SOT 8.
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Scott, beautiful peace.
Thank you for coming on.
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We have Dr. Gad Sad for the entire hour.
And he is one of my favorite public intellectuals.
He was one of Charlie's favorite public intellectuals.
He has so much insight to bring to bear that we needed a whole hour.
So without further ado, welcome back to the show, Dr. Sad.
What a lovely introduction.
Thank you.
And I just posted on X, but it's worth maybe repeating here live, that today is the first day of Passover.
and I thought it was particularly apropos to take this high Jewish holiday and come on the show to honor Charlie.
Charlie, you live on in our hearts and minds.
Amen. Yeah. We actually played a clip and it'll air tomorrow actually.
But Charlie reflecting on how Easter and Passover always overlap and what an important season this is for Christians and Jews.
So it's great to have you, sir.
There's so much suicidal empathy going on.
Let me give you your proper dues here.
Dr. Gadsad, you are the scholar at the Declaration of Independence Center for the Study of American Freedom.
For a Lebanese-born man, that is quite the jump.
But you do love this country.
You love American freedom.
You love the West.
And that's at the University of Mississippi.
You have a forthcoming book, The Suicidal Empathy,
eat. And I just love the cover if you guys could throw this up. Yeah. You got the sheep on there,
free the wolves. Dying to be kind. It's kind of the, it's kind of a take on the, you know, I guess the chick filet, you know, where they're always trying to say, you know, the cow, the cow take, you know, eat the cows.
Anyway, so this is actually, it's a cow saying eat more chicken. So anyways, but it's a great, great cover there. And I, we've been hearing about you,
writing this book for some time. So when does it come out so people can pre-order? Let's just
start there, Dr. Said. Thank you so much. May 12, 2026, so in about six weeks, but if I can just
engage in some shameless plugging, it's really important if you can actually pre-order the book,
because what happens is that all the amassed pre-orders, then when the book is released, they
all count as sales on that first day. So if the book can immediately hit the bestseller list,
then that becomes an avalanche.
So please, if you're interested in this topic, go out and pre-order ASAP.
So there are, yeah, go by the book.
It's really important.
I think it is the key to understanding the future of the West.
Are we going to survive as we currently are constructed as we currently understand ourselves
or are we going to commit cultural suicide?
I think the first topic, there's so many to get to.
There's Islamification, there's energy policy, there's cultural,
issues, spiritual issues. I think Islamification's got to be the first. Well, hold on.
I mean, we'll get there because we have to get there because just because of his own biography,
Dr. Sad's biography out of Lebanon and what's happened in that country. But I have to start with
my personal pet favorite, which is birthright citizenship, which I believe is a suicide
pact that a country would make, especially in this day and age of air travel that the founders
and the drafters of the 14th Amendment would have never conceived.
They couldn't have conceived of jets that can fly from South Africa direct to Los Angeles.
They wouldn't have.
But here's the thing.
It is a suicide pack, a Trojan horse, where we now have to, our own laws bind us to,
our own constitution binds us to letting in CCP spies that can then determine an election.
If they get millions of voters that live in China but can vote in America, why strike us militarily if we just are letting them in the front door?
What is your take on birthright?
I mean, I couldn't agree with you more. Of course, the old maxim demography is destiny is exactly what you're alluding to. And to your earlier point when you kindly introduce me as a scholar at Ole Miss and you said, you know, here's the Lebanese guy who's defending American freedoms. The American spirit is enshrined within the DNA of our value systems, right? It's not the fact that you're born in the United States through, you know, the birthright nonsense that makes you America.
It's whether you've internalized a set of values and of codes that uniquely defines American exceptionalism.
And so even though I'm not born in the United States, even though I'm officially now Canadian,
I venture to say that I'm a lot more of an American than people who just come to the U.S., plop down a kid, and then voila, he becomes American.
So I couldn't be more in agreement with you.
and the quicker that they, they, meaning the United States, changes that law, the better it will be for everyone.
Yeah, and I, I try not to do this, but I did just tweet out something that I think is central.
I didn't come up with this idea, but I was, we had Molly Hemingway and Sean Davis from the Federalists,
and we're talking with them, and I just said, no great nation would allow a loophole that allows
communist birth tourists to vote in its election and bestow citizenship on the children of those who broke the nation's law to
enter the country in the first place. No great nation would allow themselves to get played like that.
And I just, the fact that the legal scholars are telling me it's probably going to go seven to
against getting rid of this ridiculous policy that the entire rest of the world seemed to have
gotten rid of by about 2005, it breaks my heart because I feel grieved internally that we would be
so dumb, that we would be so hamstrung by idiocy. You know, at least the Greeks when they were letting
in the Trojan horse, they didn't know what was inside of it. We know what's inside of this Trojan horse.
And I had my own take, which is really the bleak thing. If the Supreme Court rules that way,
we don't know the full law. Maybe there's some dumb reason they can justify it. But, okay,
it should be pretty simple to change the law, to have a Congress that says, oh, Chinese oligarchs
don't get to just buy kids from America and their citizens. Tourists can't just sail a boat
10 miles offshore, drop a kid on that boat, and they're a citizen for life. Like, that's an
absurd thing. Our Congress should be ready to ban it. And I think this gets back to your big point.
It's suicidal empathy that makes us refuse to do this obvious thing. Yeah, indeed. I'm sorry.
Go ahead. No, go ahead. Dr. Susser. I was going to say, and I know maybe you're not ready to segue into
the Islam issue, but it really is relevant to what we're talking about here, where you sort of become
impotent to implement, you know, autocorrective mechanisms that are complete common sense, right?
So I often hear from esteemed American lawyers, hey, Professor Sad, Dr. Sad, I completely get your story with Islam.
But, you know, unfortunately, we have freedom of religion here.
And I say, really?
So you actually think that there is no mechanism that you could come up with that would then auto-correct the fact that not all religions are equally congruent with the foundational ethos of the United States.
right. And I often do this satirical, you know, dialogue where I say, you know, some guy, some immigrant from that region says, I want to kill you, I want to rape you, I want to destroy your heritage, I want to destroy your religion, I want to destroy your culture. And then some American lawyer says, hey, you're not allowed to say that. That's incitement to violence. And then the noble immigrant responds, no, but that's in my religion. I have freedom of religion. Oh, okay, sorry, carry on. So it really is in its astounding form of,
impotent suicidal empathy to say that we are somehow hamstrung, as you said, by these codes that
can never be there inerrant and they can never be changed. And if it has to be that we commit
civilizational sepuchu, so be it. Oh, the way you said it. Yeah, it feels like we get stuck in
these ideological cul-de-sacs because of the myths that we've told ourselves. One of the myths,
I believe, is that we are a nation of immigrants. And I want to get into that history because we're
actually a nation of settlers, in my opinion. You could disagree with me, Dr. Sadd, that includes
immigrants waves when it makes sense for us. And then we're able to stop it when it stops making
sense for us. Dr. Said, for those who don't know your bio, just really quickly give us your bio
in about two minutes. So I was born in the 1960s in Lebanon. We were part of the last very small
dwindling group of Lebanese Jews that had steadfastly refused to leave Lebanon, perhaps wrong.
strongly so. When the Civil War broke out in 1975, it became impossible to be Jewish. So we ended up
leaving Lebanon miraculously. We made it out of there. On one of their return trips to Lebanon
to deal with some of their business interests, my parents were kidnapped by Abu Nidal's group
Fatah. And so all of the things that you've seen since October 7th is stuff that is called
my childhood. And eventually we made it to Canada. And then, of course, I went to study in the
United States and never thought that I would be facing the Jew hatred that I now see on a daily
basis all over the place. So that's sort of my personal history. My academic history, I've been
a professor for 32 years. My main area is to apply evolutionary psychology to study human
behavior in general and consumer behavior in particular. I realized very quickly that academia
was laden with insane parasitic ideas. That's what led me to write the parasitic mind. But that
book explain what happens to your mind when it is parasitized by ideological capture. Suicidal
empathy completes the story by explaining what happens to your emotional system when it is hijacked.
If I can hijack your thinking and feeling system, I own you.
And, you know, I think that I did not know that about your parents, by the way, Dr. said.
Oh, you didn't know that?
No, I didn't. I didn't realize that. I knew that you had fled Lebanon. For some reason,
you end up in Canada, which was, you know, which is unfortunate.
I'm sorry.
But if anybody's going to understand the parasitic mind, it would be somebody who's lived in Canada
and suicidal empathy.
We played the clip yesterday on the show and just had so much fun with it of that.
What's the name of the party?
It's this far left party.
The new Democratic Party.
Yeah.
And they were talking about their equity cards and their point of personal privilege.
I just, I couldn't, man.
But Blake made a great point.
It's laughable. It's cartoonish. It's fun to make fun of. But boy, oh, boy, is that serious stuff.
It's serious stuff because it's one step away from, you know, Gen Z adopting a lot of that stuff and being mainstreamed in America, too.
All right, Dr. Sat, I'm going to tell you what I believe. I think Blake agrees with me, but it's okay if you don't completely.
If you go back through America's history, we had this huge immigration wave between the 1880s and about 1920.
and they set the in the 1920s it had an immigration act with a quota system that was overturned by Hartzeller in the 1960.
The people that fought in the 1920s for that immigration quota system did not consider America to be a nation of immigrants.
It was a myth that was created after World War II to bring everybody together in this wave of Polish and Irish and Italian immigrants.
But before that, they did not want this new wave of Eastern and Southern and Southern.
Southern Europeans because they were too Catholic or the cultures, they weren't Anglo enough or whatever.
We were a nation of settlers and the people that warned then about this new wave of immigrants
had a point because it then embedded this idea that we're a nation of immigrants and that we
sort of have what's the word, the expression, the blank slate, right?
This blank slate of humanity.
It doesn't matter if you're Muslim.
It doesn't matter if you come from the third world.
You'll be an American, just a piece of paper.
I hate this myth. I want to destroy this myth. And I'm saying it to a Lebanese man who I believe is like fully American at this point. So help me make sense of this. What are your thoughts on the history that we just went through? Well, I completely agree with you actually. Look, in suicidal empathy, I talk about this classic categorization error that frankly, if you're if you have greater cognitive acuity than a three-day old pigeon, you should be able to not be committing this error. And let me
explain what it is. Your cat, Fido, is a feline. So is the wild lion in the jungle who would
happily eat you. They're both called feline. The fact that they're both feline doesn't mean that
when I'm on a safari in Botswana and I see a feline, I say, oh, let me get out of my Jeep
so I can cuddle with the wild lion because he's a feline just like the cat I have at home.
But when you say all immigrants are equal in the way that the progressively, suicidally empathetic people do,
they're saying that there is no inherent differences between the values that might come with one set of immigrants versus another.
And I will receive tons of hate mail, gentlemen, where people say, well, you are such a degenerate hypocrite.
You are an immigrant.
So is your buddy, Elon Musk.
So you are immigrants who can come here, but Muhammad and Ahmed who went to a summer camp in Afghanistan
can't also be perfectly nice Arkansas immigrants.
But that's what the categorization error is, right?
When you say all immigrants are equal, you're simply saying that once they become members of the host society,
they're treated equally under the law.
But the idea that we all come with the exact same baggage, to your point about the Latin term,
by the way, for empty slate is tabula raza.
We're not tabula raza, right?
So it's not surprising, for example,
if you let in millions of people that come from societies
where they've been surveyed and shown to have 95, 96% of those survey have endemic Jew hatred.
So when these people come to the host societies,
what do you think is going to happen?
Is Jew hatred going to go up or it's going to go down?
And so all the politicians are scratching their head and saying,
what's causing all this Jew hatred?
Well, maybe because you've imported millions of people that have a genocidal hatred toward the Jews.
Novel thought.
Novel thought.
It's also, you know what bothers me about this whole thing?
Is I am sort of like a product of this tabula rasa ideology.
Because I remember growing up being very much brainwashed into thinking that all, everybody's the same and there is no differences.
You know, we all, you hear these things like 99.8, 5% of your DNA is the same as somebody.
Nobody's arguing any of that.
Everybody isn't made in the image and likeness of God.
Everybody has dignity before the eyes of the creator and equality in our laws.
But it's also common sense.
Like once you break the parasite in the brain, like once you break through and you get red-pilled or whatever you want to call it, it's so frustrating how stupidly common-sense this is.
And this is one of the reasons why, you know, there's a, you know, people are talking about MAGA and the coalition fracturing.
I will always have respect for President Trump because of one thing.
I have a lot of respect for President Trump.
But one thing, he came down that golden escalator and he just started throwing bombs about stuff that was these pieties you were not allowed to address.
He called dumb wars, dumb wars.
God bless him for that.
Before that, we weren't allowed to talk about it.
He called free trade.
He said it was ripping off America.
and it was, you know, it was hollowing out our manufacturing base. He was right about that. These were
pieties you were not allowed to address. And then he said, you know, he said, they're sending rapists and
murders over here. And I suppose some are nice people. You were not allowed to say that stuff.
And I remember jumping for joy, because at that point, I'd become completely convinced our immigration
policies were just insanity. Jumping for joy that he had the guts to say it. And that was the first
step. One minute. So let me just. Oh, yeah, let me just mention very quickly about the sort of the
Tabla Raza premise, the reason why that parasitic idea is so ubiquitous everywhere, so pervasive,
is because it is rooted in a form of unicornia hope, right?
It is really nice for me as a prospective parent to think that when my child is born,
he or she could be the next Leonel Messi, Michael Jordan, or Albert Einstein.
It's nice to know that there are no, quote, innate individual differences in biological
potentiality, right? We could all be the next Michael Jordan if only we're hugged enough or not
hugged enough. So the reason why these parasitic ideas work so well is because they cater to this
fundamental unicornia optimism that most of us carry. Especially in America, I will say.
And this is why I think our foundational myths, it's the software that's running in the
background of our brains that we think are these eternal truths, but actually they're myths
like America is a nation of immigrants.
Well, we have immigrants,
but we're actually a nation
that was founded by settlers, okay?
That's a core myth
that we have to deconstruct.
And Tablo Rosa is another one.
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All right.
Dr. Sadd, this is the,
Charlie Kirk's show, so we're going to play a clip from you and Charlie. Sot 9.
Islam is all about power and leftism is all about power. Maybe that's also what they have in common.
Exactly. They both despise the West. So because we both despise the West, we will join in unison
and trying to get rid of the West. But of course, the leftists don't recognize that once Islam
becomes ascendant, they will be decapitated just like the rest of us.
That is a decapitated.
That's why Charlie liked you.
You had that frank way of talking.
He likes to quote, I think, you, the West.
The West, Islamis West as a woman to be.
We have that clip.
Yes.
We have that clip.
We should play it.
Let's play that one.
All right.
Sat Ted.
What would you said, the West is a woman to be mounted?
That is the Islamic Creed.
Remind us of it.
Yes.
I would repeatedly hear from Arabic speaking, Muslim speaking, immigrants,
in this case, it was in Canada, always say that the West is a woman to be mounted.
And what the reflex that that captures is that all of the virtues that we think as laudable in the West,
compassion, magnanimity, generosity, empathy are heard as weakness, weakness, and weakness
by cultures that don't necessarily share our infinite large.
And so it's exactly what they're saying.
West is weak.
It's a woman.
Therefore, you know.
So I'm going to share as relating to that clip,
something that just happened in Quebec, my home province.
So there was a gentleman, you ready?
Drumroll.
His first name is Muhammad.
Yes.
He was caught in many, many different clips,
but the one that made it viral,
he was caught on a clip where he had been stopped by a female police officer, Montreal police officer, interacting with her.
And the things that he was saying are exactly, like to the word when I said, you know,
the West is a woman to be mounted.
So I won't repeat it here, not to soil the ears of your listeners, but it's all about I'm going to F this to you,
I'm going to do F this to your mother and so on and so forth.
So that's the mindset, right?
Might is right.
Therefore, men in those cultures, you know, are the rulers of women.
And therefore, you can imagine what that implies.
So they see the West as this feminized, weak, you know, suicidally empathetic woman that deserves to be mounted as per this Muhammad guy being stopped by the female cop.
So let's just import a few million more.
That'd be great.
Yeah, I think this all makes
And by the way, the way that you're able to justify that
If you're a suicidally empathetic person
And maybe we'll get into this more in later segments
Is that as long as those progressive folks
Can identify their neighbor Ahmad
Who's a very sweet guy, who's gay,
Who's married to a Jewish man
And who eats prosciutto and drinks vodka
That is the true representation of Islam.
So I only have to come up
with one person who seems to fit in within Western liberties and voila that becomes Islam and
all of those other things that also seem to be linked to Islam are false Islam.
Ahmed, my neighbor is the real Islam.
Yeah, and Charlie tried to navigate that dynamic by separating micro from macro, right?
We all know Muslims that are nice people that are probably bad Muslims though. That's the
point. Like the Muslims that you like are probably bad Muslims and the Muslims that we all don't
like are probably the ones that are reading this. It's something I like to point out to Charlie and
he listened to me on it. It's that sometimes people would say, Islam needs a reformation like the
Protestant Reformation. And you have to tell them, Islam did have a reformation. It's the
Salafism that you see. It's that in the 1800s, they looked around and said, we're losing all
these fights to the West. It must be because we got away from true Islam. Let's be super
fundamentalist about it. And that's what gave us Islamic fundamentalism. It's not even stuff that's
been around forever. It's they got really intense about it in the last 100, 150 years. And this is what we
see. Slightly more optimistic than the history that I know you're making them seem as though they've been
rough only for 100 years. A few people would like to remind you that this has been going on for
14,100 years. But I understand the spirit of what you're saying. All right. Dr. Sad, there are so many
in which suicidal empathy comes into play.
Islamification is a huge one,
and Blake has been doing, he's got two stories.
We've got this Michigan guy and Birmingham story.
There's a couple very symbolic ones in the last few days,
and I think they're both worthy of note.
First is they have local elections are coming up in Britain.
Charlie visited Britain last spring.
He saw Arabic language, Arabic script on all the stores.
It just felt very foreign.
He felt it when he was in Oxford and Cambridge.
And now Birmingham, not even a city he went to, but it's one of the most Islamified cities.
And just for context, Birmingham is where the Industrial Revolution was born.
It was the Silicon Valley of the 1800s.
It's where so much innovation happened.
Now Islamified, polling for the city council election in Birmingham, the number one party is going to be, it's not going to be a party.
It's going to be an independent Islamist alliance slate.
They are favored to come in first place.
With 31 seats out of about a hundred, about 100, it looks like.
And so they'll be Islamist party running the largest city in Britain.
It's something we haven't seen in Britain since Muhammad came out of the desert.
And the other story that's really compelling, there's a Democrat Senate contender in Michigan.
He's running in the primary.
And he said, they got recording for him in the, a recording of him in the Washington Free Beacon.
He was telling voters he had to stay silent about the.
killing of the Ayatollah Khomeini because he says many of the Muslim voters he is interacting
with in Dearborn in that area around Detroit are very sad about the Ayatollah's demise. So he's going
to remain silent on that issue, but they got that recording. So two very profoundly
symbolic stories, I think, of what we've allowed to happen to this country, Dr. Seth.
And can I, those are great examples, of course, and they are part of something that I, if memory
serves me right, I had mentioned the last.
last time that Charlie and I spoke, which is there's been a blueprint that the Muslim Brotherhood,
among other Islamic groups, have been screaming for everybody to listen to from the top of the
mountain. They said, we're going to conquer the West by three means. And the third means is
related to the two examples that you gave. So first, we're going to conquer the West through
the womb of our women, right? Two, we're going to conquer the West through Hizhouen.
Hizra is the Arabic word for migration.
Even Muhammad did Hizra from Mecca to Medina.
And so, of course, what does the West do?
Say, hey, come on in, my brothers, in the millions.
And then the third way, to your point, we're going to conquer the West by using your miserable
freedoms against you.
And so this is exactly what they're doing.
And to your earlier point, Blake, when you said it's not always violent, right?
In the 1400 years of history of Islam, not every way.
that they went to, they just decapitated everybody, right? Sometimes it's that. Sometimes it's by imposing
very, very stringent rules on the non-Muslims, forcing them to convert without putting the sword to
their neck. Sometimes it's just by letting demography takes its natural toll. So there are many ways
by which you can close your eyes and open your eyes and suddenly you went from zero Islam to 99.9%
Islam. The problem comes from the fact that most people don't have the imagination to be able to extrapolate, right?
So short of you being in Dearborn or in, you know, some areas in Minnesota, you think, well, come on, I live in Arkansas.
I live in Washington State. I don't see a problem with Islam. Well, that's because the United States is a
very, very large country. So it's going to take many hundreds of years before you see Dearborn
repeated everywhere. But if you allow it to happen, I will guarantee you, inshallah, that it will
happen. The Birmingham folks are now finding out. I mean, people are, as you say, really,
they're not good at visualizing the numbers. I think often on an exchange I had when I was
way up the daily caller, one of the first jobs I had, we had an employee who was from Britain,
and this is 2014, 2015, and I'm already then raving about Islamization of the West, about Britain.
and one time he just got exasperated at me.
He said, Blake, why do you care about this so much when they're 1% of Britain?
And I said, that's where you're wrong.
It was probably 1% when you were a kid.
And we looked it up.
And at that point, it was already 5% or 6% of Britain.
And it was 10, 15% of London.
And how much has it moved then in the decade since when they've kept moving in?
They've had high birth rates.
Britons haven't had high birth rates.
If they're having four kids each and you're having one kid, that moves very fast in a single generation.
Yeah.
And if I could go ahead.
Sorry, go ahead.
I was going to say, and I made this analogy with Pierce Morgan, but apparently, you know, my logic was impenetrable to his mind.
So take, for example, diabetes.
If I say, if I am your endocrinologist and I say, hey, sir, you have diabetes.
and then imagine if the next day you wake up and say, look, it's been a day since I've had diabetes
and nothing's happened to me. Nobody's amputated my extremities. That physician must be an idiot because
nothing's happened to me. Look at me. Well, what he's saying, he or she is saying,
is that there is a very known trajectory of what will happen to you in X number of time period
if you don't manage your blood sugar level. It doesn't happen overnight. So that's exactly the
issue with demography is destiny. Peter Hammond, by the way, I highly recommend that people check
him out. He's a preacher, I think, out of South Africa. He wrote a book many years ago where he
broke down what happens to a society. This was a historical analysis as a function of the
percentage of Muslims that are in that society. Zero to two percent, oh, they're just the
lovely, peaceful, exotic community. You know, three to five percent, we start being more aggressive
in our political engagement, but, you know, we're still kind of peaceful.
And you could perfectly trace what will exactly happen.
So I can show you different countries, you know, France versus Australia versus Canada,
and we can put it into the Pete Hammond box to tell you exactly what's happening.
But again, that goes to the point of people are unable to extrapolate from time T to time T plus N.
If we don't solve this problem, we will wake up one day.
all being called Abdul. Dr. Sadd, what's the, what would,
is Pete, Pete Hammond, is that what you said his name was?
Pete Hammond. Yes, sir.
What was the tipping point where they get really aggressive, 12%, 10%, 15?
So the aggressive in that you better start putting on running shoes and really run fast,
it doesn't take much. By about 20%, you're already getting into physical violence.
Right? So again, that speaks to the fact that, you know, it didn't take 190,
million terrorists to alter the New York City skyline, right? It didn't take 190,000. It took just
19. So the idea that you need, you know, all two billion Muslims to sign up for violent jihad for
you before you wake up from your stupor is really lacking in extrapolation imagination.
We're going to end the Islam talk here with a cut from Charlie. Stop 15.
Islamism has a tendency to take over and metastasize like a cancer.
Immigration without assimilation is invasion, and Islam does not assimilate.
Islam conquers. Islam takes over.
Islam devours.
Islam is an imperialistic, parasitic ideology.
Islam views itself as a conquering faith.
You have to pray five times a day pointing towards a separate nation, pledging feet.
guilty to another nation. Islam's own self story is that we will take you over. It's totalitarianism
masked as a religion. Well said. It's one of my favorite CK rants about this topic.
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yrefi dot com and tell them your friend andrew sent you all right i want to i want to break some
some news here so it is official pan bondi is out uh and it kind of will transition into the other
way that suicidal empathy manifests which is in our criminal justice system so uh let's just go
ahead and get Peter Ducey's reporting from Fox News, SOT 16.
Kaylee, I just got off the phone with President Trump. We have a big scoop. Pam Bondi will soon
leave her job as the Attorney General. She is going to get a different job within the administration.
It doesn't sound like there is any bad blood between her and President Trump, but it does
seem like they want her to go and do something else. And in an interim role, she will be replaced
by Todd Blanche, who is currently her deputy at the Justice Department.
So President Trump has given a truth social here, Dr. Sad.
He says Pam Bondi's great American patriot and a loyal friend who faithfully served as my
attorney general over the past year.
Pam did a tremendous job overseeing a massive crackdown in crime across our country,
with murders plummeting to their lowest level since 1900.
I'm sure that just happened.
It was just a trend.
We love Pam, and she will be transitioning to a much needed and important new job in the private sector.
to be announced at a date in the near future.
And our deputy attorney general,
the very talented and respected legal mind,
Todd Blanche, will step in to serve as acting attorney general.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Blake, we reported it, and it has come true.
Once again, we did this with Christy Nome, by the way.
Same deal.
Well, I think we had an inside scoop on this one.
This time our scoop was seven before, but.
Yeah, well, fair enough.
The other one was a better call.
Todd Blanche is tweeted as well.
he says, Pam Bondi led the department with strength and conviction, and I'm grateful for her leadership and friendship.
Thank you to President Trump for the trust and opportunity to serve as acting attorney general.
We will continue backing the blue and forcing the law and doing everything in our power to keep America safe, which ties in to this other.
I saw this story, Dr. Sadden, I got enraged because I've seen people do this to Charlie as well, where people put up murals and then people take them down or they vandalize them.
And it's so infuriating to watch.
This is out of Providence, Rhode Island.
A private business erected a mural to Arena Zarutka to memorialize her and her brutal murder on that train in North Carolina by a repeat criminal who should have never been on the streets.
And this mayor is trying to take it down in Providence, Sop 14.
You said the intent behind these murals is divisive and does not represent Providence.
The murals artist sort of feels like he was stifled.
Do you have any regrets about what you said and how you handled this?
I regret the state of where we are in politics today where absolutely everything is political and controversial and hard.
There's nothing we should be doing to take away from the tragedy of the loss of life that was represented here.
But then it was distorted by an erroneous tweet by our president.
And then a movement was funded by some right-wing billionaires.
And it found its way to our community.
A private owner of a building decided to put a mural up that I don't think.
he understood the full context of and I was asked whether I thought it should come down and I
thought it should certainly wasn't bringing us together as a community I don't think we're a stronger
more united community because of this mural and I thought the best thing to do was to just take it down
dear god that is like the perfect encapsulation of how the left behaves they they love to weaponize
that utterly BS unify our community we need to heal they they never believe in that if you wanted to
believe in healing there's a simple way to do it you allow people to put up monument
for people they like.
And arrest criminals that are killing people.
Arrest criminals.
And if the left, you know, if they want to put up a statue of Caesar Chavez, you know, go for it.
They love Caesar Chavez.
And then allow us to memorialize the people that are murdered by left wingers, other national
heroes.
But they always love to say, we need to heal while they're ripping down a statue of a founding
father, while they're blotting out a mural of an innocent woman who was butchered.
These are not statements of healing.
These are not statements of unity.
These are statements of domination.
He can only visualize a word.
For him, unity is just, I decide what you value, what you believe, what you see.
And if you don't like it, shut up and get out of the way.
He's disgusting.
That is a perfect embodiment of suicidal empathy.
It's a weaponization of empathy.
The floor is yours, doctor said.
Yeah.
So I would say, though, I will address suicidal empathy as relating to soft on crime policies.
But I'm sure that this mayor would have been first in line to hail a mural of George Floyd.
that would unify the community, but not this poor, beautiful Ukrainian immigrant.
Okay, so let's link it to suicidal empathy.
Suhsada empathy really has several manifestations, one of which is the hyperactivation
of empathy, right?
But the other part of suicidal empathy is when, you know, we all have a fixed tank
of empathy that we could met out.
Now, evolution has endowed us with the capacity,
to strategically met out our empathy in biologically relevant ways.
So if a bus is hurling down at my children or at some random strangers,
notwithstanding that I would love to save everybody,
I am much more likely to jump in front of the bus to protect my children, right?
Even though in a dream world, everybody should be saved.
What suicidal empathy does is it completely removes the correct targeting
of who should be privy to your empathy.
So a felon, I called them, by the way, blank slate felons to our earlier point talking about blank slate, felons are born perfectly lovely and it's only society that has made them bad, especially if they are felons of color.
So they've already been victimized by the white supremacy of the United States to now punish them when they've only been arrested 174 times.
shouldn't you be giving them as 175th second chance?
And so it removes the personal agency of these felons so that all of our empathy is targeting
the criminals and not the victims.
But I'll add another twist to the criminality dimension of suicidal empathy.
Suicidal empathy is so parasitic that even the victims of the crimes feel greater
empathy to their felon who victimized them, then to themselves. And I'll give you two quick examples.
Example one, Norwegian man is sodomized by a Somali immigrant. When the Somali immigrant is about to
be deported back to Somalia, the guy who had been raped by the Somali guy had a existential breakdown
because he felt so guilty that the Somali sodomizer was not going to get a chance to live a
lourished life in Mogadishu. That's example one. Example two, a white American woman went to Haiti
to break down the stereotype that black men could be violent. She was held on top of a rooftop
by a Haitian man who viciously raped her and she walked away from that lesson or from that experience
with two lessons. It's white supremacy that made him do this because he was so enraged by how he was
victimized and she ended up learning from this experience. So when you have a guy who is
sodomized and a woman who's viciously raped themselves feeling empathy for their rapists,
you couldn't have a better poster child of suicidal empathy. Jeez. And you know, I'm reminded of
Sarah Rogers who has those examples out of the Europe. Europe has lost its damn mind. Yeah,
you'll get a worse punishment for, you know, calling a group of gang rapists.
savages or whatever it was, then the rapists themselves will get or pigs, something like that.
And it's just, it's so destructive.
I mean, we were also bashing Canada the other day, along with everything else that they do.
Feel free.
Yeah, I mean, Canada has, they just explicitly have racial discrimination in their laws.
They say, if you're from a racialized group, because races aren't real.
It's just some groups are racialized.
That's the Canada concede.
Then you get punished list for crimes.
Forgive me for interrupting because I'm seeing the countdown.
I want to get in as many cool facts for your audience.
In Canada, the University of Waterloo, which is sort of the equivalent of Caltech or MIT,
a largely engineering computer science school, was hiring Canada research chairs.
This is the highest endowed professorship that Canada has.
They wanted to hire AI professors to be competitive in AI.
And the job description said that you had to be non-binary, two-spirit,
or transgender to hold that position.
So the Canadian government that endows this chair does not pick the best AI people.
They have to be non-binary or two-spirit.
Canada has stage five suicidal empathy.
Dr. Gad's sad.
This was amazing.
He's suicidal empathy.
Please pick it up.
It's been so much fun.
Yes, I genuinely believe that this is the vaccine to save the West.
and I really mean that.
And Elon Musk agrees, others agree.
But thank you, Dr. Sad.
It's been a pleasure.
Thank you so much, guys.
You're a pleasure.
Thank you.
Cheers.
We'll talk to you soon.
For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to charliekirk.com.
