The Charlie Kirk Show - My Appearance on the Jordan Peterson Podcast
Episode Date: May 2, 2025How did a cookie price protest give Charlie his start? Why doesn't the West erect more monuments to heroes like William Wilberforce? Charlie goes through those questions and many more in his recent ap...pearance on the Jordan B. Peterson Podcast, and offers his own annotations of the discussion after the fact. Become a member at 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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Hey everybody, Charlie Kirk here live from the Bitcoin.com studio. Today on the Charlie Kirk
Show, Dr. Jordan Peterson had me on his podcast. You guys should check out the Dr. Jordan Peterson
podcast. We don't agree on everything, but it's a phenomenal discussion and I annotate it here
on the Charlie Kirk Show. So if you are interested in this discussion, listen to it, text it to your
friends. I think you'll love it. It's the biographical journey of Turning Point USA,
how we got started and more. Email us as always, freedom at charliekirk.com, and subscribe to our podcast.
And again, check out the Dr. Jordan Peterson podcast for the entire discussion.
Email us, as always, freedom at charliekirk.com.
Buckle up, everybody.
Here we go.
Charlie, what you've done is incredible here.
Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus.
I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk.
Charlie Kirk's running the White House, folks.
I want to thank Charlie. He's an incredible guy.
His spirit, his love of this country.
He's done an amazing job building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created,
Turning Point USA.
We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives,
and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country.
That's why we are here.
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Learn how you could protect your wealth with Noble Gold Investments at
noblegoldinvestments.com. That is noblegoldinvestments.com. It's where I buy all of my
gold. Go to noblegoldinvestments.com. Okay, everybody, I recently sat down with my friend
and legend, Dr. Jordan Peterson. We discussed a lot. We discussed my biography, kind of the origin
story of Turning Point USA, and it was a phenomenal honor. And so I'm going to walk you through it,
actually, and kind of give you some commentary and some things to go even deeper into some of
the stuff we talked about. So we started with Dr. Peterson asking a very provocative and funny
question about insulin resistance. It's quite a start to the conversation.
Listen. So I've got a gotcha question for you. It's now your warrant. Okay. So you know that
Robert F. Kennedy and Mehmet Oz, and I suppose Jay Bhattacharya too, are all hands on deck to restore American health. And that likely the biggest
problem that's confronting us is insulin resistance. I agree with that.
Way too much sugar and obesity and all that goes along with it. But insulin resistance,
it's just devastating. It makes you old. It makes you diabetic. It's terrible.
It interferes with your cognition.
It increases the probability that you'll get Alzheimer's.
And that's all linked to carbohydrate excess intake, right?
You agree with all that?
I agree with that.
And yet, when you were in high school,
one of the first things you did to begin your political career
was agitate for a, what, reduction or stabilization of the price of cookies at the school?
We were against cookie inflation.
Yeah.
So looking back from your position of wisdom 13, 14 years later, what do you have to say to the American public about cookie advocacy?
I should have been advocating for, you know, reduction in the hamburger or steak prices.
You see, that would have been a much better health approach.
But all kidding aside, the funny undercurrent of that is that's kind of what started my political advocacy.
I know. I know. It is hilarious.
I kind of look back, you know, even, you know, just 13 years ago when, you know, cookie prices were the number one, you number one concern. This was before DoorDash,
this was before all that. And I look at these high school kids now, but they're able to order
into high school. They have entire cubby rooms of like half of the high school class that is
just getting takeout. So in our high school in the suburbs of Chicago, the biggest thing
was these basically homemade cookies that nearly tripled in price over the course of a year.
So we started Students Against Cookie Inflation, which was a rather righteous effort, I might say.
How old were you?
I was, at that time, 16, 17 years old.
16. And how much before that do you think your interest in the political developed?
I definitely had an interest.
First, I'd say I was really fascinated by American history, why we were a great country.
It was hard to not be politically oriented or opinionated based on the time that I grew up in.
Understand the time and place.
When I was in eighth grade, this guy named Barack Obama came onto the political scene from Chicago and everybody had an opinion about him.
In fact, he became- Where were you at the time?
I was in the suburbs of Chicago. Okay. So Wheeling, Arlington Heights area.
Yeah. Okay. And Obama was a homegrown, which he really wasn't, but he was a senator from Illinois,
a homegrown, almost quasi messianic political figure. I mean, you remember how it captured
the nation times 10 in the Chicagoland area. Remember, Obama did his
victory speech in Grant Park in downtown Chicago. That's where he celebrated his victory in 2008.
And so it was just an all-encompassing, almost political moment where it was at very high social
cost to be disagreeable with the rise of Obama in 2008. And mind you,
I was a seventh or eighth grader at the time, actually going into ninth grade.
And so I decided at my very best to push back, oh, really, is he going to fulfill all these
promises? Is he really going to be able to bring utopia? And admittedly, I was rather clumsy and
shallow in my capacity to be able to articulate those beliefs. But I had something in me that
wanted to push back against the
orthodoxy of the time. So to kind of expand on that, I got my start protesting cookie prices.
It was students against cookie inflation. We called it Saatchi. And it was a lot of fun at
Wheeling High School. By the way, if any of you guys are in the Chicago suburbs, leave us a YouTube comment.
We'd love to hear where you're from.
It's a great place to grow up.
And it's just gone so insufferably woke.
Wheeling was this amazing place where no one cared about the color of your skin or where you were from, your background.
And now it's just unfortunately completely lost its core or its center.
Even though it was a very racially diverse school, no one cared.
So we then talk about woke. Where does it come from? And a little bit more of my origin story.
Here's Dr. Peterson and I talking about the pre-woke period. I met you, do you remember when
we first met? Was it 2016, 2017? It might have been 17, 18. I came to Toronto because I, and still to
this day, this is correct. I was so moved by your lectures and
your videos that they significantly changed my life. And I really wanted to meet you more than
anything else. You were kind enough to make time for that. Yeah. Well, I remember that meeting and
I, you know, I remember trying to figure out who you were because of what you were doing and the
fact that you had this remarkable organizational
capacity. But what I'm interested in now, you know, is what I'm very interested in trying to
figure out what inclined you to take the path that you took. Now, you said, okay, so you said
Obama, but you said something else at the same time. You said that you had been reading American history, okay,
and that you were concerned with, interested in, and convinced by,
I suppose, all of those, this issue of what made America great.
Correct.
So this is interesting and worth taking apart because for decades,
certainly since the 60s, the typical pathway for someone
young who was assessing the history of his or her country would have been to read it through a
highly critical lens. So for example, I remember when I was 13 or 14, So that would have been mid-70s. I was reading Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and some of
the so-called new journalists. And they weren't of the left exactly the way you would conceptualize
the left now. They were more like radical literary figures, I would say. But the mid-70s ethos certainly was to read history, sociology
critically. And I don't mean you were being uncritical. I mean to take an anti-establishment
stance. Like in the 60s, that was all, well, anti-establishment, free love, the sexual revolution is coming, everyone's going to be free.
By the time the 70s came along, which was the milieu I was embedded in, all of the optimism of the 60s had pretty much vanished, but all of the cynicism 100% remained.
Now you, though, interestingly enough, in Chicago, and this would be mid-2000s.
Mid-2000s, mid-2009.
Right, right, near the end of the first decade of the 2000s. You were reading American history,
and as you said, in the height of the Obama fervor, sure. But your take was positive and patriotic.
Correct.
So why?
Why do you think that was?
What made you different?
When I met you, you were very, I would the, it appeared to me that you were of that
American evangelical stripe, which we have some of in Alberta, not a lot. It's not really a Canadian
thing. And so when I met you, I thought, okay, so that's Charlie's, that's, that's the cauldron,
the matrix out of which he emerged.
Maybe cauldron is not the right metaphor.
But I'm curious, like, why do you think that your political rebellion
took a conservative form when that isn't, it's not common for young people,
and it certainly wasn't the pattern of the time from, say, 1965 till,
well, probably till about you, till about when you were adolescent.
So that's a phenomenal analysis in question. Let me just add to it, the literature, the
non-political, non-historical literature that we were being assigned in sixth, seventh, eighth grade
was what I call pre-woke. It was almost there. And so it was like books that come to mind is a book called like
Things Fall Apart. I don't know if you're familiar with this book.
Chinua Akebi, I think.
Yeah, exactly. I think it was the main character was Okonkwo. I could be wrong. I'm just drawing
from like 13, 14 years. Basically the entire premise of the book, based on my memory,
is that there are these, this, you know, wonderful tribe and they all get along in Africa
and these evil colonialists come
in, and things fall apart, and there's internal strife. And the end of the book is basically the
summary of all of these relationships of these evil colonialists that say, and, you know, here's
the history of just the under, you know, sub-Saharan Africa, basically dismissing all of the complexities
and the beauties of, you know, this. Right, so it's kind of a testament to Rousseau.
But it was written by an African, that book.
Correct.
And again, I'm drawing from almost a decade-old memory.
But I remember the discussions we'd have in class were very much anti-colonialist, anti-Western,
that we are the contaminants on the world, that we are polluting other tribes.
And again, mind you, we're in eighth or ninth grade discussing this, so I don't know what post-structuralism is or post-modernism is,
but it was pre-woke. We weren't quite there though. And so from the historical standpoint,
it was not 1619 project, but it was, we're going to spend a whole month on slavery and we're going
to spend three days on the founding. Right. and did you spend any of the time when you were studying slavery
assessing the fact that the UK was the only country
that's ever existed in the history of the world
that spent, what, two centuries and a tremendous proportion of its treasury
eradicating slavery around the world at the behest of Protestant Christians?
Correct.
Because that's the story. And we, let me, I never remember knowing the name Wilberforceest of Protestant Christians, because that's the story.
And we, let me, I never remember knowing the name Wilberforce.
Wilberforce, yeah. See, this is a very interesting thing. You know, I actually didn't come across,
this is so strange, but life is very strange. I didn't come across the name Wilberforce till I
was probably in my 40s. Isn't that amazing? It's beyond comprehension. I didn't get to know him until the last five years.
Last five years.
Is that right, eh?
Even, is that right?
Even me, even in the political world.
Even in that milieu.
I might've heard it,
but not until someone looked at me seriously
and said, you have to study this guy.
This is a preacher.
This is a man of faith
that led to the abolition of slavery,
probably the entire-
Under impossible conditions.
Exactly.
He devoted his whole life to it.
And the link between that and the religious ideation is rock solid.
One to one.
It's one to one.
Absolutely.
And it's also the case that his ideas wouldn't have fallen on fertile ground,
because they did relatively.
Like, when you can make a radical cultural shift in one lifetime,
which is no time at all historically, you know that you're at the forefront of ideas whose time has come.
And that was clearly the case for Wilberforce. And he certainly is one of those people who stood up against the greedy, self-centered and malevolent ethos of his time, but the UK swung around behind him impossibly rapidly
and then with their full might.
And it is, you know, I've learned a lot of things
in the last 10 years that have shocked me so bad
I don't know how to recover exactly.
And one of them was that the public school system
was set up by fascists on the Prussian military model.
I just I've never been able to figure out exactly what to do with that.
They were literally trying to make thoughtless worker drones.
Desk workers.
Yeah, yeah.
That's what bureaucrat means.
Yeah.
Well, or factory workers.
That's right.
And what that in itself wasn't so bad because the country was industrializing. But right underneath that was the idea that while you were doing that,
it was necessary to pretty much stamp out or fail to develop anything
that would produce any kind of creative entrepreneurship.
It's like, okay, that's hard to swallow.
And then when I read about how the food pyramid was developed,
that's just beyond comprehension.
I don't know if that's the
worst crime ever committed in the United States, but it's up there. And then the next mystery is,
Wilberforce is another mystery of that magnitude. And even you might say, particularly on the left,
it's like, okay, you guys, you're for the oppressed, which I don't buy for a second, but especially because I've watched in the last 10 years the lefties sell out the poor worldwide to the climate apocalypse mongers.
And that's just been a catastrophe for places like Africa, like Wade has been so forthright in observing. But the fact that slavery and reparations, all of that,
the unfair founding of the United States has been a central dogma of the radical leftists.
They blame slavery on the West.
And the fact that the radical types have control over the education system means that no one, even educated in a conservative milieu, knows who the hell Wilberforce was.
And I just don't know what to think about that.
Or Thaddeus Stevens or the heroism of John Quincy Adams.
Those would be some main protagonist characters for the abolitionist
slavery here in America. And so when I was in ninth, 10th, and 11th grade, something in me,
and I don't quite know, my parents are very patriotic, but not political. Patriotic,
but not political. They're conservative, but we were not a political family, but very patriotic.
Something in me desired to try to find the other side of the story,
to try to push back a little bit from the incessant narrative that was being built.
And I do want to make sure this is clear. We were not yet at the place where the teachers
were saying America was racist. In fact, it was actually much more insidious than that.
And so even in 2008,
that still wasn't occurring. In fact, I could make, at least in my environment, I could make
an argument though, that what they were doing when I was in high school is actually long-term
much more effective to create revolutionaries for the left than what they're doing now,
because it really didn't warrant that much of a backlash. It wasn't overly provocative.
They weren't saying to the white kids in class, hey, go sit on this side of the class and black
kids on this side of the class. Yeah, well, those things always happen one tiny step at a time.
Of course. But when I was being schooled, there was no parents showing up at school board meetings
about critical race theory. Now, these elements were laced throughout all of the curriculum.
Right, right, right. And it took a very discerning eye.
And for whatever reason, you know, how I was raised or just something in me, around 10th or 11th grade, I asked the question.
I said, look, we have spent an entire month on slavery.
Totally get it.
Terrible thing.
But we spent so little time on the brilliance of the founders and what they've created and the greatest political document
in human history and what went into that. And it was an under-emphasis on the heroism and the
courage and the brilliance and an over-emphasis on the evil and the tragedy and the horror without
even the redemption arc behind it. Yeah, well, the thing that's so awful about that, as far as I'm
concerned, from the leftist perspective, let's say, is if you are
concerned with the poor and the oppressed, you know, and then you have to be discerning there
because there are people who are poor and oppressed as a consequence of their own idiocy.
And that's not so uncommon as you know, in your own life by watching your pathway to failure so but given that
there are people who are unfortunate you'd think that the appropriate tack would be to determine
who in history served the most effectively and i just can't see anyone you could possibly point to
more effectively who did that more effectively
than Wilberforce, ever. And so you would think that instead of erecting monuments to Lenin,
the leftists would erect monuments to Wilberforce. But not only do they not do that,
no one knows who the hell he was. It is one of the greatest memory holing of a hero
in Western history. I completely agree.
Why is it my hypothesis is he's Christian?
Is that you cannot highlight a man of faith who did something with such valor and such significance.
It is at odds with almost every other fundamental narrative
that they must try to present.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's right.
I think that's right, that it is fundamentally.
But that begs another question. And that would be why, given that Wilberforce was clearly a force for the good that Obama, for example, would have been pushing, right, by which I mean movement towards a polity where there were no racial, there was no racial or ethnic prejudice,
if Wilberforce is the poster boy for that sort of effort,
which if you understand his life and you read about it,
I can't see how you can conclude that,
then why would the lefties forego that
merely to oppose the fact that his motivation was fundamentally Christian? Because that points to
something deeper, right? It points to the fact that the true war, so to speak, isn't political.
It's not left versus right. It's something deeper. And then if it is anti-Christian, then why? Like, what does that
mean? Like, there's an enlightenment element there, right? The enlightenment types, especially
after the French Revolution, generated this narrative that science and religion were radically
opposed, and that if you were on the side of religion, you were against clear, rational,
logical thinking. And so you could imagine a stream of anti-Christian sentiment emerging
on the rationalist side, right? But it isn't obvious to me at all that the leftist types
who don't talk about Wilberforce are anti-Christian because they're scientific rationalists. Like, no, all you have
to do is talk to them for like 15 seconds and you find out that that's not the case. They might use
those arguments from time to time, but they certainly don't apply the rigors of scientific
thinking to their own radical hypotheses. So it's deeper than that. And so what is it exactly that they're
objecting to? Is it the fact that the more radical leftist story, Marxist, let's say, is
in its essence anti-Christian, which I think is a fair statement, and that,
but why would that be more important? This is the strange thing. why would that be more important this is the strange thing why would be
that be more important than serving the poor and fighting for the abolition of slavery and all of
its associated prejudices because it still doesn't get you out of the conundrum which is why then why
not Wilberforce instead of tearing down statues why not erect statues to him? Yeah. So, well, what do you, I know that's a,
that's a hard thing to sort out, but you got any, obviously you were feeling something like this in
high school, right? You guys are throwing out the baby with the bath water here. Correct. Yeah.
Which baby exactly? So my initial thought is that the leftist types, the ones that really understand it, they do not seek to achieve what a Wilberforce type figure would want, which is actual liberation and actual eradication of evil.
Yeah.
I hate to say it.
I think they just want to be in charge.
Yeah, no, no.
I think.
OK, so let's pivot on that for a minute.
OK, so because this is a problem that's going to face the right
or and is already and we can talk about that so there are a group of people four percent of the
population and then there's still a fringe around that that would maybe be another five percent
where you'd have to take it seriously and so they're in the psychiatric diagnostic literature,
they fall under the cluster B heading, okay?
They're histrionic, which means they're dramatic.
And I suppose if they're healthy and histrionic,
then they become actors, right?
And entertainers.
So there's a positive spin on that. But if they're negative histrionic,
they dramatize their pathology and use it as a
weapon. They're narcissistic, which means they want unearned social status. They're psychopathic,
which means they're predatory parasites, and they're antisocial, and that's just your standard
criminal types. So that all fits in cluster B. Then there's personality traits that go along with that.
Machiavellian, they use language not to convey information,
but to manipulate and to manipulate instrumentally for their own purposes.
So if I'm speaking with you in a Machiavellian manner,
I have a goal in mind that has nothing to do with the words that I'm using. You may have talked to journalists like that many times.
Many times.
Yes, many times.
Okay.
So they're Machiavellian.
That's so well said.
They're narcissistic.
Again, that's an overlap.
They're psychopathic.
Oh, yes.
And on the personality side, that associates with sadism.
And so all of that culminates in a personality style
that has the proclivity to take positive delight
in the
unnecessary suffering of others. Okay, so now those people, let's say they're 4% of the population.
Okay, so this is what they do, is they look for a story that's working. Could be Christianity,
Judaism, Marxism, could be conservatism, doesn't matter what the story is. They look to see where
it has purchase. So where the people who play that game have power. They infiltrate that,
they advertise themselves as the vanguard of that movement, and they do that for no other reason
than to gain power. Right. And so this is politically agnostic. Now they'll guise themselves in political
cloaks and they'll learn all the tropes. I mean, this sort of thing, you can see this sort of thing
emerging like mad on the right on Twitter, for example, but it's certainly, it's been
characteristic of the left for a long time insofar as the left has power. But, you know, you were the one who just
said, I think they want power. That's part of that. You know, in the biblical tradition,
there's a battle always between the ethos that brings abundance. So that would be the miraculous
provision of fish and bread and water that never exhausts itself. That's all consequence of a
particular kind of ethos, the one that Wilberforce embedded. That's juxtaposed against
usurpation, Luciferian usurpation of power, right? That's the temptation that Christ has
offered in the desert, right? The third temptation is the temptation of power.
The whole world.
Yeah, that's right, that's right, that's right.
And one of the things that's,
Moses is punished brutally by God for using power near the end of his...
And for thinking he has the power to actually make water come out of the rock.
Well, that it's dependent on him.
That's on him, not God.
Yeah, yeah.
Worse than that, not only on him, but on it,
God tells him to invite with his words,
and he uses force and authority, right?
So he doesn't enter the promised land. So that's a good indication of the danger of power, even when wielded by someone who is estimable, right?
Because you have to give Moses his due.
A lot of credit.
Right, well, exactly.
For dealing with that. Yeah, and then, of course, that's the temptation that's offered Christ. So
I do think it's a power game. Yes.
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William Wilberforce is, you should absolutely find out. William Wilberforce was not only a pastor,
he was the leading abolitionist. And I totally agree with Dr. Peterson. It is one of the most
sinister and malevolent omissions of history. The fact that William Wilberforce is
no longer talked about, in fact, has been talked about for the last 100 years. You think about it,
how many Americans know who William Wilberforce is? Very few. How many know who Hitler is? Almost
everybody. You should know who Hitler is because he did evil. But shouldn't you also know who
Wilberforce is, who did great good? Who he himself, inspired by the scriptures,
eliminated the institution of slavery? It's pretty important. So I encourage you guys to read about
Wilberforce, study it, understand it, and then also think to yourself and leave a comment about this.
Why is it that Wilberforce is so alarmingly missing from our history curriculum? Dr. Peterson and I
now talk about what does it mean to use the Lord's name in vain? It's not just saying OMG, it's also actions such as
worshiping nature or religious hypocrisy, doing evil in the name of God. There's a commandment
not to use God's name in vain. And then there's the comments in the gospels about the Pharisees,
the Pharisees. The Pharisees are exactly the people who use religious terminology,
so moral terminology, to cloak their power-seeking machinations, right? And Christ goes after them.
I think the best account of that is in Matthew, where he tells them that they're like, it's pretty
brutal, that they're like... Broods of vipers. Worse.
They're like graves full of rotting bodies that someone whitewashed.
Right.
And he says that if they would have... They're the people, had they been alive in the time of the prophets they purport to follow,
they would have been part of the mob that would have killed them.
Right.
That's actually part of...
You may know this, but that's part of what sets them up for the crucifixion because they're not very happy with
those insults publicly delivered. But that shows you also how old the problem is. So you can imagine
one of the worst possible sins is to take the highest possible virtue. So that would be, well,
we stand for the oppressed, we stand for the poor, and then to gerrymander that so that your standing for that
only pushes you towards power. That's right. Right. And so, and then it also, there's a clue
in the gospels. I think it's in the gospels as well about how you figure that out. And
the answer is by their fruits, you will know them, right? So you look at, well, what I've done is I've looked at the consequences,
for example, of the green energy programs in Germany and the UK.
Well, what's the consequence?
Let's take Germany.
Germany pollutes far more per unit of energy than they did 10 years ago,
and their energy prices are five times as high.
They're completely dependent on dictators of the worst sort yes they continue to make the same mistakes they're de-industrializing
very very cataclysmically it's destabilizing their political environment and that falls
disproportionately on the poor i i don't see a way around that analysis and nature nature
worshiping is not anything new.
No, no, that's right.
Elijah, I mean, is that whole story is a manifestation of the nature worshipers versus the belief in God.
But back to just to reiterate a very profound point you made.
In evangelical circles, we get wrong, which is people think do not take the Lord's name in just to say, do not say God in an expletive way.
It actually, the word is don't carry the name of the Lord in vain,
meaning don't do actions in the name of God.
So you're exactly right.
And so people wear the costume of the holy or they appropriate.
Well, that's exactly what Christ tells the Pharisees.
Literally, he says they wear the garbs of the priestly and we elevate their moral status and
this is what we believe is partially blasphemy in the holy spirit which is to to take the all of the
trappings of religion oh that's interesting and and to do evil in that name we believe that is
one of the if not the word most evil that you think that's the transgression against okay so
that's interesting because so my psychological understanding of the
idea of the Holy Spirit is that the Holy Spirit is what possesses your words when you truly aim up.
And this makes sense to me psychologically because the thoughts that make themselves manifest to you spontaneously are directly related to the intent of your aim.
That's how you're, literally how your verbal mind works, your imagination as well. You know,
if you go on a date and you aim at sexual contact on the first date, the fantasies that
come along with that aim will be of that nature, obviously.
And if you are on the hunt, so to speak, for a marital partner, the fantasies that accompany
that will be quite different. So this is literally how your imagination, it's also the case that,
you know, it's the same idea with the date. If it's short-term mating is your goal, which by the way is the goal of the
dark tetrad types differentially. So what that means is that the sexual revolution handed women
over to the worst men. So that's fun to know. But it's definitely the case that your aim determines
what comes to mind. Now you said that that sin against the Holy Ghost, which is the unforgivable
sin, is the sin that occurs when you use the Lord's name in vain. So when you claim to be
motivated by what's divine, but are actually serving the Luciferian spirit of usurpation.
It can be. I mean, it's an open theological discussion.
Yeah, no, no, fair enough. And I take Dennis Prager's view of an Old Testament on this
view, which is, think about how much, this is a great example, think about how much damage
those evil priests did. Oh, yeah. That's a great example. Look, most of the people that I've spoken
with who proclaim themselves to be atheists are atheists for two reasons.
And I mean the good faith atheists, let's say.
First of all, they tend to be tilted in the engineering cognition direction,
so they're much more oriented towards things than people,
and that's a stable temperamental trait.
But they've almost all also invariably been hurt by someone or some institution that's claimed to be religious.
And then you could also see that obviously betraying someone,
in Dante's account of the Inferno, when he goes down to the bottom of hell,
he finds the betrayers right next to Satan.
Judas, Crassus, and Brutus.
Right, right.
All three of them.
Okay, so the idea that...
And then the lake of ice, which is...
Right, that's where Satan is encased, right?
Because he's too brutal, brittle to move.
So the reason for that, I think,
is that there isn't a more upsetting
psychological phenomenon than being betrayed.
You stake yourself on someone, you trust them.
They're now a foundation.
They're part of the foundation of your life. Completely.
So, and there's no worse form of betrayal than betrayal that's done in the name of the highest
good, right? I mean, there can't be, obviously. Yes.
Okay. So, all right. So, I thought that sin against the Holy Ghost was something like rejection of the Abrahamic call.
You know, God comes to Abraham as the spirit of adventure.
He says, go out into the world, leave your zone of comfort, move away from your people,
and have the terrible adventure of your life.
Well, if you reject that, you can't develop.
Yes.
Right?
Because you're rejecting the spirit of learning yourself.
And think of how many young men are rejecting it every day. Well, what's and what's terrible about that?
This is something we could talk about, too. I'm curious about your experience. To expand on that,
the commandment says thou shall not take the Lord's name in vain. It literally means thou
shall not carry the Lord's name in vain. You can make an argument. One of the most evil things you
could do is to carry and do evil in the name of God.
I then talk with Dr. Peterson about what we're seeing on these college campuses, and it's remarkable.
These Prove Me Wrong events are going so viral.
We've reached billions and billions and billions and billions of people and views.
And so please subscribe to the YouTube channel to watch that.
Enjoy this portion. It's been my experience that it doesn't take
that much encouragement for those, the people you're describing to be inspired to try. Now,
I've talked to thousands of young men now who've had that experience, you know, like I see a lot
of them at my lectures. They come to the meet and greets, for example, and they tell me, it's great.
It's really great.
They tell me that, you know, five years ago, six years ago, because it's starting to be a long time now, eight years ago even, they were not in good shape.
And they came across my lectures or books and decided that there was something worth aiming for, and then decided to try.
So to tell the truth, that's a very common vow, let's say, to take on more responsibility.
And they usually laugh about starting to make their bed or something like that,
which is a lot less trivial than people think.
And then it's straightened them out.
The terrible thing is how little
encouragement that that actually took. So why are people coming out to see you on campuses?
And what kind of response do you get from the people that you talk to?
The responses have been incredible. First, the crowds alone, we're drawing crowds of three,
four, 5,000 people in the middle of the day just for me to debate a random college kid
or a college professor. It's remarkable. Yeah, so walk me through one of those events, Charlie.
And so I've been doing that for a decade. Just so I started, as we know, we started Turning Point
USA. One of the things I really wanted to make sure is that I was in touch with the target audience
that I was trying to convince and trying to persuade. No better way to do that than just go
to the college campus itself, set up a card table with, you know, maybe a poster that says something
like, you know, I think government should be smaller, something like that, and start a discussion.
I would do this at University of Wisconsin-Madison. I would do this at University of Illinois when we
had almost no funding, no connections, no idea what I was doing. I've always believed in the grassroots
interaction. So what are your meet and greets? No data, no chart, no abstraction can get to that
personal human to human contact. So I've been doing that for many years. And then Steven Crowder,
his credit kind of popularized this idea of debating and putting it on. I said, well,
why don't I also film these interactions? And so I started to do that around 2018. So it's been about seven or eight years now. And then 10 kids would show up and
then 20 kids. And we started to put these on the internet and kind of concurrent and simultaneous
to your rise, where you diagnosed what was going on in the West quicker and more accurately than
anybody else, especially with young men. we started to see our popularity increase as we started to address some of the underlying problems that young people
were facing, but in particular, young men were facing. And then COVID happened. We were basically
out of business for a year in the sense where we weren't able to do campus activities.
Donald Trump was no longer in office and we had to really kind of rebuild on campus basically about two years ago.
So let's just say the spring of 2023, things really started to change, where we would do these campus events prior, and we would bring in your traditional conservatives.
Three to 400 people, maybe a couple hundred interested types, maybe 50 liberals, 500 students call it a day.
That's a success.
All of a sudden in 2023,
we were drawing a different type of person and student.
First of all, we were drawing people outside of the campuses
that were welders, electricians and plumbers
and the working men that heard that we were in town.
And they just-
How'd they hear?
Social media.
Okay.
And so decentralized promotion.
And so they would show up.
And I saw that.
I mean, these were guys that would go up to the question line and they were not asking about Rousseau or
they're not asking about Jacques Derrida. They were saying, how do I be a better person? Because
I'm expecting a daughter in six months. Oh yeah. Okay. And all of a sudden here I am, you know,
not in the position where you are nearly as seasoned to give advice to that young man,
but he's searching and he's looking for anyone that seems to have an idea of how the world is supposed to work, that is professing
a worldview of order and structure and discipline. Something that he could do. Yes. And then he was
looking to me for advice. And that was a different dynamic. Whereas prior, all the questions the last
eight years before that were, hey, Charlie, what do you think about the tax rate? What do you think
about abortion? And I still get a lot of that, but it was something different. It was young men especially that were seeking purpose and seeking a destination.
And again, this is all thanks to the incredible work of Turning Point USA and Turning Point Action.
We are the most important organization in the country when it comes to cultivating young people in the conservative direction.
And the data proves it. Young people are moving right in record numbers thanks to the work of Turning Point USA. We actually continue on this topic.
Dr. Peterson and I talk about how the educational model is hyper-feminine and how young men,
especially working class men, are looking for meaning in their life.
This is crucially important, this transformation, because one of the things that, so let's go back to that 60s
dynamic, that anti-authoritarian 60s dynamic. You know, the role of the left in the 60s was
like an entrepreneurial progressive radicalism, let's say. And the stance of the conservative was, well, you know, let's not
throw the baby out with the bathwater guys. And that's a pretty good dynamic because you need a
force for change and you need a force that resists that. But I think, you see, I think
what the conservatives did wrong, like profoundly wrong, was that they were, their breaks,
this is why they're always dismissed as reactionary,
their breaks, B-R-A-K-E-S, their breaks were fundamentally,
they're also moralistic.
It was finger wagging.
And this is something that was distasteful, let's say,
especially about the hypocritical, evangelical, conservative types.
I agree with that.
But it was also strategically inappropriate.
Because it's very hard to say to young people who might tilt in the progressive direction,
because they're a little more revolutionary in spirit, let's say, are also a little more immature, that the reason that to abstain sexually, for example,
is because you shouldn't do it.
Now, that's true, but it's a weak argument.
You know, I was talking to my wife this morning about this.
We'd been apart for a few days, and I saw her again yesterday,
and I was very happy about that.
And she has a podcast.
She's trying to reach out to young women because they're just as in much or more trouble than young men.
They're in more turmoil.
They're just harder to talk to by a lot.
Our discussion centered around the fact that it isn't that you should get married, although you should. It's that there is no alternative that's anywhere near as good
by any standard whatsoever,
regardless of position of analysis or time length.
Anything you do other than that,
even though marriage is very difficult,
and every other alternative is far, far worse.
And so if you want a pathway forward to what the conservatives support,
the conservatives should be offering an invitation.
They shouldn't be moralizing.
And so you're saying that they shouldn't even be political at the moment. And I know you're a figure whose
political activity is grounded in a religious substrate, like Shapiro is, of course, like that
too, and Dennis Prager. Christianity is my foundation. Right, right, right. And so now
you're seeing that these young men who are coming, especially the working class types,
they're not so interested in the political. They're probably not even interested in the arguments exactly. They're looking for something
else. That's right. They're looking for direction. They're looking for connection. They're also
looking for validation that the way they're thinking and the way they're feeling is directionally
correct. Yeah, so that having a direction is correct exactly that that not be
not meandering through life yeah not having you know the aimless despair of walking in circles
yeah not castrating yourself so your toxic masculinity vanishes bingo sometimes literally
far too often now literally literally they're, they're chopping off. Yeah, exactly, exactly. And so what we saw in 2023,
again, so I have to wear multiple hats.
Part of my hat is a political strategist.
Part of my hat is just trying to be a role model
for young people.
Part of my hat is explaining these ideas to young people.
I kind of connected all the dots.
I said, 2024 is going to be a rebellion
of the men of the West,
unlike any that we've ever seen.
And I would say this to the experts and they would dismiss it. They said, no, no, no. Roe
versus, because Roe versus Wade got repealed. Remember that either that summer or summer 2022,
I can't remember. It might've been, I think it might, irrelevant. The point being is that Roe
versus Wade was supposed to be the most important political issue of 2024 and that women were going to rise up in major
numbers. I said, first of all, that might be true on one side of the sex spectrum. On the other side
or binary, the other side, there is something happening with men that no one is talking about.
No one wants to acknowledge. No one wants to admit. And so separately, the Trump team,
to their credit, believed in it and actually ran an explicitly masculine campaign going on podcasts like Joe Rogan and Theo Vaughn.
They were very much embracing of this, to their credit.
But separately, we must diagnose why is this happening?
And the education system, as you've astutely pointed out many times, is hyper-feminine.
There's no place for young men, especially young white men,
of a Christian persuasion. I think one in four boys is now given an ADHD diagnosis.
It's something like that. And even the New York Times has said this is for parents, not for kids.
Meaning there's no medicinal reason for this to happen, according to the New York Times.
Yeah, right. So you know things have gone particularly sideways when the New York to read this cover story. It was unbelievable, where they were basically saying after this major study
that like 1% of the kids actually do need ADHD medication that are completely out of control.
But almost like 90 to 95% are just because the parents don't want to have an unruly kid around.
Yeah, or, well, and if that's the New York Times diagnosis,
then you can also be absolutely 100% certain
that they underplay the role of the educational establishment
in setting up the circumstances
so that parents are likely to draw that conclusion.
I mean, with all this trans-butchery nightmare,
you know, my profession,
particularly the social work end of it,
but my, like, real psychologists, let's say,
were also stunningly craven in their
unwillingness to resist this the mantra was to parents well would you rather have a live trans
child or a dead child which there was never charlie there was never a shred of evidence for
that it's one of the most evil things that has happened it it is unbelievable the people who
promoted that should be imprisoned.
I agree.
It's absolutely brutal. And it's widespread and still in the fibers of the pediatric community.
Yeah, that's for sure.
It really is.
Well, the Supreme Court of the UK may have broken the back of that movement a week ago.
Remarkably.
That was unbelievable.
That was one of the most...
Now and then the Brits, God love them, do something quite radical in the right direction.
You know, well, Brexit was a good example of that. Oh, that's interesting. They put through
that free speech legislation that the Labour Party tried to rescind that has actually reshaped the
universities to some substantial degree. That was in part a consequence of me being disinvited from
Cambridge, which had a long term consequence that the disinviters
hadn't really reckoned on, because a whole group of professors at Cambridge got together and
decided that they were going to change the policies at Cambridge, which they did in a
historic vote, and then they changed the policies at the national level. And the repercussions of
that haven't stopped yet. So yes, so this terrible demoralization.
And to just expand on that, the entire education system is hyper-feminine.
Young men that tend to be more restless sit down and shut up and read Jane Austen, which
of course Jane Austen's great, but are young men being molded into the future leaders of
society or are they being scolded just for their existence?
Hey everybody, Charlie Kirk here.
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You should be too. charliekirk.com pre-born banner. We now get back to some biographical
elements. And just a reminder, I did not go to college. I took a gap year. It's been 13 gap years.
Dr. Peterson did a great job of prodding and building out the biographical story of Turning
Point USA. He asked questions that no one has ever asked about the origin story of what is now the greatest mass movement in the country,
which is Turning Point USA. And thanks to all of you who support it.
Dr. Peterson did a phenomenal job as an interviewer, really getting down to the root of where this came from and the foundational and the philosophical roots of it.
All right. Now you're being caught. You're advertising on social media. Let's, let's go back and tell this whole story. So,
cause I'm very curious about it. So you, you had an, an, an intuition that you could go to campuses.
Okay. So tell me how, where'd that idea come from? Do you think? Well, I never went to college.
First of all, which is right. You've been to many colleges. I've been to more colleges than most
people. You might have me be, but I've been to well over 200 campuses across the country.
No, no, you've got me beat. Yeah, I mean, almost every college, yeah, you can imagine, I can,
I've either given a lecture, a speech, or started a chapter there. Yeah, so my daughter doesn't have
a university degree, so she started a university, so that's a very comical label, but this is good.
Okay, so that means you do have a university education So that's very comical. But this is good. Okay. So that
means you do have a university education. You just caught it a very different way. Okay. So
you decided, that's interesting too, because it's like, I asked you what your motivation for doing
this was. And the first thing you said was that you didn't have a degree. So that's very interesting.
So what, were you also curious about going to campuses? degree. So that's very interesting. So what, were you also
curious about going to campuses? Yes, that's really a great point. So just as a little background,
I wanted to go to West Point. I didn't get in. I told my parents I would take a gap year to kind
of figure this out because I saw some momentum of a local political group that was out of the
cookie group, by the way, that kind of kept growing. I said, I want to keep this going and play this out, see where this can be.
This was after high school, just after high school.
That's correct. That was the summer I graduated high school. A really amazing mentor by the name
of Bill Montgomery, may he rest in peace, was the only guy ever, he said, Charlie,
you shouldn't go to college. I was like, that's the most radical thing someone could say. So
that idea was planted in my head.
And I said, okay, I'll just take a gap year.
I'll kind of figure things out. Why didn't he tell you that?
He thought, in his own words, he sent an entrepreneurial gift and skill that I had.
Right.
And a drive.
He was kind of an entrepreneur himself.
Okay, so he could see the entrepreneurial part of you.
He didn't think that would work well in college.
Yeah, and he said, you have to go create.
Okay, fine.
Oh, good.
Oh, that was the, oh, I see.
You have to go build.
He said, you have something in you.
You have a drive.
You have a passion.
You have a relentless kind of spirit.
And he says, you shouldn't go to college.
And that was the most radical thing that a suburban kid in Chicago could hear because everyone would go to college.
Of course. It's a mark of failure not to go to college. Yeah. And so not getting
into West Point was very demoralizing. However, it was the greatest gift ever from the Lord
because I took the gap year. And to your credit, which is no one's ever put this together,
all my friends were in college. So I would start visiting my friends in colleges. So you think
about it because I would go to high school, I would graduate high school. I still have friends
with all my high school friends. So I'd go to University of Iowa, University of Illinois to go
visit them, Northwestern. And I realized as I was trying to get this political thing off the ground,
this is where it all stemmed from. And I was trying to put pieces together that the academy
was where the fight needed to go towards. And simultaneously, as I was trying to put pieces together that the academy was where the fight needed to go towards.
And simultaneously, as I was trying to find funding and trying to get donors behind our effort, something that almost every wealthy person that I would encounter is they had a soft spot and a interest in trying to invest in college campuses, especially conservative-leaning philanthropists and business
types in America. I think about 2012. That's turned around to bite them pretty damn hard.
Oh, yeah. But it would get their attention, right? So here I would be at a cocktail party,
and I'd be 18, 19 years old trying to get funding, trying to get someone's attention.
They'd say, okay, what do you do? I said, well, I'm trying to bring conservatism to college campuses.
Oh, really? And they would be sincere. They would lean in. They'd say, well, what about my alma mater? Have you spoke there? And so I'd have a
little connection. I'd say, well, maybe I could visit there if we have a little bit of money.
And so it helped. So I had interest from the donor community. So you could see that there
was an opening there, a door that was open. And I had no idea how big that opening was.
And the more that I learned, some of these donors, as you would say, they'd give hundreds
of millions of dollars to these schools. And so they had a lot of vested interest. They were very,
they were very curious about a young guy that wants to go shake up these campuses.
Because remember, that's when woke was really starting to come up. Yeah. 13, 14, 15, we saw it
bubble up. Sure. 15 was I think the Pearl Harbor moment. It was Michael Brown, Ferguson, Missouri,
hands up, don't shoot. That's where woke started to present itself in. Oh, you'll have to tell me why you think that
event was. At least from the, because I think at the top of all woke elements, race was the primary,
let's just say the primary fencing. Yeah. It's the, it's the division point. Correct. And so in
2015, when Ferguson, Missouri, the lie, the scam of hands up, don't shoot with
Michael Brown, Black Lives Matter was born out of Ferguson, Missouri, actually on a college
campus at University of Missouri in Columbia, Missouri.
And that spread like wildfire through, of course, a lot of Democrat operatives and money
being spent.
Remember how long we spent on that news cycle of America's racist because of
Michael Brown and all the CNN commentators, same as they said, hands up and don't shoot.
And we spent more time on race obsession in the last two years of Obama's presidency than the
last four or five years prior. And that's because- Well, that's a hallmark of the danger of
allowing race to be an issue in the presidency to begin with.
Exactly.
But an underappreciated element here is Eric Holder was setting the table for that with very loyal people in the Department of Justice that believed that police were inherently racist.
Right.
They were launching investigations into very successful police departments trying to find police brutality and racial bias. And so the table was set, and that was the mini George Floyd moment of the
beginning of WOA. Right, well, and you know, psychologists played a role in that in a major
way too, because you had Banaji and her crowd with the, what do they call that, the implicit association test, forcing the idea of implicit bias.
And social psychology is a very corrupt discipline, and it has been maybe from its onset.
And it's stacked from top to bottom with careerists.
And it was social psychologists, for example, who denied
that there was anything, any such thing as left-wing authoritarianism until 2017. Right.
You just, that was something you didn't get to think if you were a social psychologist or even
investigate. We cracked that. There was a couple of people working on it around 2016. The last bit of research I did was on left-wing authoritarianism.
And then everything, my lab blew up.
You know, it just became impossible for me to continue.
But so that dovetailed with this insistence that people were looking at the world through a lens that was irremediably biased in terms of their privilege and their racial and ethnic identity.
And, you know, it's tricky because people do have a tilt in the ethnocentric direction, right?
Because, well, how about because you favor your family, right?
You tend to favor the local.
You also tend to favor the non-novel.
And the familiar.
Well, exactly.
And now there are exceptions to that.
Well, you see this in the Old Testament accounts
because sometimes the foreigner
is the best thing that ever happened.
So that would be like Jethro in the story of Moses,
Moses' father-in-law.
Or in Midian.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
And so, and then you have the alternative
that would be like Jezebel,
who's the foreign devil, so to speak.
And so, you know, that's a paradox that's very difficult to properly navigate.
And on top of that, this was when woke was starting to crescendo.
And that's where Turning Point USA and our impact really started to materialize.
We started to realize at Turning Point USA that what we were doing to start high
school and college chapters was the vanguard of civilization. I continue on this talking with
Dr. Peterson about pronouns and cultural shifts that start from the bottom up.
Okay. So yeah, it's 2015, 2016, things went like seriously sideways.
And that's where, just to complete the point, my job on campus has became far more interesting
because our organization shifted from primarily, you know, economic discussions of Marxism
and capitalism to core cultural hotbed topics in 15, 16, 17, race.
And then, of course, the next layer, gender, transgenderism. So the beast that Betty
Friedan and Judith Butler raised, that monster reared its head with incredible ferocity in 16
and 17 in the academy. And people don't believe it when I say this. I saw this happen. No, it's
okay. Just really quick. In 2012, 2013, there was almost no transgender
anything on these campuses. It didn't exist. I could tell you, I went to these campuses. I talked
to these students. You might have a, you know, an effeminate looking guy, maybe wearing a dress
as a joke. It was not anywhere. The social contagion within five years was dramatic.
It was a different place. You went from just, you know, okay, you are, you are to, you're not going to
use my pronouns, hyper tyrannical, hyper authoritarian. So then here we are a five-year-old
organization with a, you know, a growing infrastructure and a growing presence and a
growing staffing, you know, organization. And we, we multiplied significantly because then the donor
types like, hold on, what happened to my alma mater?
Why is it that they're burning down UC Berkeley?
Remember, Milo Yiannopoulos went to University of California, Berkeley in the spring of 17, and they burnt the whole place down.
Ben Shapiro, very similarly.
And so we then found ourselves accidentally or through serendipity on the front lines of the American culture war.
Yeah, well, there's a lot of that that's not accidental.
You know, you think about the way that you told your story.
I mean, it's improbable, but you were of the temperamental type.
That's that strange blend of entrepreneurial temperament
and conservative temperament.
Those things don't generally go together, right? The conservative temperament, you could accept the libertarians
because they're probably the entrepreneurial conservatives. And growing up, I actually was
more libertarian. It's very interesting to say that. Yeah, okay, okay, okay. Well, that's where
the entrepreneurial conservatives hang out is with the libertarians. That's right. Right. And they have an uneasy alliance. That's a great point. Okay. And so that temperamental factor was already operating at you
in high school. And then you didn't get into West Point, you said, but you were interested
in universities and you obviously had the intelligence to manage them. And so, you know,
it's very useful to develop an idiosyncratic pathway forward if you
have the IQ horsepower to manage it, because it makes you unique if you could do that. So, okay.
And so you had a mentor who told you that it's probably best for you not to go to college because
you have an entrepreneurial bent. Now you're trying to build a political organization, but you're not
exactly sure how. You're visiting the campuses and you have friends
there, and you see that there's an opportunity to talk on campuses where you can also get an
education in doing that, but also that there's donor interest. And that's very interesting too,
because if you're a good entrepreneur, one of the things you do is you go talk to your marketplace
always, that's the grassroots things, but also with
regards to fundraisers. And you see, you offer like 10 ideas, all of which you're interested in,
and you see where the door opens. That's knocking. Exactly right. So you saw that there were these
people who wanted to support the education of young people, but who could see that their money
was being counter-productively spent.
To say the least.
Well, leave large piles of money laying around unguarded
and see who comes in first to take it.
Right, right.
That's that parasitical type.
That's right.
They'll swarm in there like mad.
That's happened in all the foundations.
And they gravitate to the universities.
Yeah, well, it's the same phenomena that we talked about earlier.
That cluster B, narcissistic, dark tetrad, 4% of the population.
They're looking around to see where, what would you say,
inhabitable carcasses are lying around unintentionally.
And they're disproportionately represented at the academy.
That 4% might be 40% of the administrators or the professor types. Because think about it. Yeah, well, increasingly that became the academy. That 4% might be 40% of the administrators or the professor types. Because
think about it. Well, increasingly that became the case. Because they might be saying something
to that target audience, the student, but they actually want to see that student become a leftist.
Everything, there's a lot of Machiavellian influences in how these professors present
their ideas. Yeah. Well, it's also the case that it was the Machiavellian administration. So what
happened at the university, I watched this, is that the administration encroached.
And that's not surprising because there was money at a foot. So why wouldn't there be competition
for the funding? So the administrators, who are generally failed faculty, by the way, failed and embittered faculty,
so the faculty are already embittered because they're not rich like investment bankers.
And then you take embittered faculty members who couldn't make it as faculty.
Perfectly said.
So now they encroach on the faculty who are too busy doing their job
and too apolitical and also too willfully blind to notice the administration encroaches decision by decision
until they radically outnumber the professors.
And that's pretty much fait accompli by 2005, I would say.
And then the woke mob took over the administration.
And that took no time at all.
Right. And so now that's where we're at in the universities.
And I can't see how that would be reversed.
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And now a really fun part of the conversation, more biographical, is how did we first find our donors?
Just as a reminder, we have over 400,000 donors at Turning Point USA.
You guys are welcome to donate.
By the way, we have lots of giveaways where you can get books and hats.
Even $5 helps us out at Turning Point USA, so please consider it.
Foster Freeze, may he rest in peace, was our first donor.
He wrote me a $10,000 check.
And Bill Montgomery, may he also rest in peace,
was an amazing mentor and friend.
Without either of them, Turning Point USA would not exist.
You're going to love this.
If you're curious about how did an 18-year-old with no money, no connections, and no idea what he was doing start now the largest mass movement in the country, this might answer your question.
And Dr. Peterson does a phenomenal job of guiding us through this discussion.
Okay, so now you tell me how you started going to campuses and
what you did to begin with and how you got away with it. So the first person who wrote us a check
was a guy by the name of Foster Freeze. May he also rest in peace. Amazing philanthropist. I met
him very early on. I decided to go to the Republican National Convention in 2012 in pursuit
of finding donors. This was August after I graduated high school. And I just had this idea to try to bring the conservative agenda to
young people, to the next generation. I met him in a stairwell at the Republican National Convention.
I gave him a stairwell pitch. And to your point, which is exactly right, I kind of presented four
or five things really quickly. No one trained it. No one, I just kind of instinctively, I said, well, here's five ideas that I have.
He laughed, he chuckled, gave me his business card.
He said, be in touch.
Sent me 10,000 bucks the next week.
That was like 10 million dollars.
How did you know that there was such a thing as finding donors?
And what do you think it was that set you up to have the gall to assume you could,
first of all, to know that that was a thing and then to have the goal to assume you could do, first of all, to know that that was a thing,
and then to have the goal to pursue it? The second one, I don't know. I don't know where
I got the goal to pursue it. I will say Bill Montgomery, being a mentor of mine, was very
encouraging. Okay, okay. So you had someone encouraging you. Yes. And you said he saw something in you.
Yes.
And he was an entrepreneur.
Yes.
And he never asked for anything from me, which was very unique.
It wasn't like he was trying to have some agenda.
He was 72 years old.
So you had a mentor.
Yes.
Which you desperately need as a young person.
Definitely.
And someone who believes that you can do it.
And you think about it.
You're 18 years old.
You don't know how to cash checks.
You don't know. You barely know how to put on a tie. Literally,
I didn't know how to tie a tie for the first two years, you know, at Turning Point. Again,
my parents were phenomenal and they deserve a lot of credit. But this was kind of a,
beyond the upbringing where an external mentor comes in and kind of points you and says, hey,
I think you're really good at this, found a skill, identified a skill and kind of points you and says, hey, I think you're really good at this, found a skill,
identified a skill, and kind of molded me in that direction.
You know that young male elephants go mad if there's no old male elephant to butt heads with
them. That's very well documented. That's very apropos for Republicans.
Yeah, right. Exactly. Exactly. Yeah, yeah, definitely.
So, but it was, I'm a quick learner. I'm a quick study. And so I started to do research. I said, well, are there things such as external nonprofit
political organizations? Oh, there's a 501c3 or there's a 501c4 and you can raise money. And so
the first couple of months was me actually learning, what am I building? Am I building?
So you were training as an administrator and a manager then too?
I was everything for the first. Yeah, of course.
I was CEO.
I was janitor.
I was everything.
Yeah.
And so I had to make a decision.
Of course, I asked for advice.
Am I going to start a for-profit company?
Am I doing a non?
And we decided on nonprofit, largely because we believe that there was an untapped pool
of philanthropic dollars that wanted to see these campuses challenged and disrupted.
How do you figure that out?
Having a lot of conversations with a lot of wealthy people. And I realized that they're-
Okay, okay.
So if you talk to a donor type, they'll have two different ways of deploying capital in their
after years. The first of which is investment, which comes with strict return on investment
requirements. And they look at that as, hey, I need to make sure that this money is stewarded and shepherded, and eventually I get an ROI.
Right, right.
The second bucket is philanthropy, where they actually aren't looking for a material or a monetary ROI.
They're looking for a cultural or a macro ROI.
And those sometimes are in donor-advised funds or they're in 501c3 type categories. And we saw a lot of
amazing patriotic donors that stepped up and said, hey, I have done very well in my business.
And this is what I found. And I connected the dots. They said, I have this money sitting around
that I pledged to Yale, a million bucks a year, and I'd hate not to give it to them.
Is there some other better idea? What we found was so many conservative donors
that had a lot of money, but not a lot of great ideas of where to deploy that 501.
You think about it, the predominant amount of 501c3s in the educational space are left-wing.
All of them.
Right, exactly. So here I am, I'm kind of this new disruptive force, and they say, okay,
I'm not going to give them the money I give to Yale, but I'll give them 50 grand a year, kind of see how he does. And so we started to earn the trust of a lot of donors
and earn the trust of a lot of philanthropists. Okay. Okay. So now you're going out on campuses.
Do you remember the first time you did this? Oh yeah. University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Okay. Tell me about that. I drove up there. We had a singular student.
Who's we? Well, we being like, actually, Bill Montgomery came with me to that
one. But he kind of just was in the shadows. I literally had a card table that I brought from
my parents' house and set it up right there on the campus, University of Wisconsin-Madison. I think I
still have a picture of this. And I had some sign that said, big government sucks, you know, a little
provocative. Yeah. And I sat there at a chair and I think a student
would come up maybe once every 15 minutes. And I was there trying to solicit, to try to get a
chapter started there at University of Wisconsin-Madison. And that was a turning point
chapter. That's right. Correct. So this was partly a recruitment drive as well. It was a recruitment
drive and to see if there was any interest and also to try to, and I, to be perfectly honest,
I love the debate. I love the exploration of ideas.
I think dialogue is a gift given to us by God.
I really, in the pursuit of truth and, you know, being able to debate some of these college kids
was really life-giving.
It was exhilarating to me as a 19-year-old.
Well, that is a university education.
That's what it should be.
That's a Socratic education.
Right.
Sure.
Sure.
Well, and there is historical precedent for what you're doing.
I mean, I remember, for example, outside the building I worked with
that worked in at the University of Toronto,
there was quite frequently a card table set up,
and it was the bloody communists that were at the back of that.
And now we go deeper into this topic, Dr. Peterson,
about how liberals have become really institutional puppets.
We talk and we break down to how Republicans used to do stuff and being very buttoned up and how liberals have become more high trust and conservatives low trust.
Dr. Peterson takes a little exception with this little bit.
He pushes back slightly and gently, I think, in a very helpful way.
And I appreciated that
correction. That's what was so funny is very rarely is it our side that does this. And then
there's an element here that I think you've touched, you've gone around the edges on that
I want to dive into. I was viewed as unseemly by the conservative establishment because the
conservative way of doing things, it's not to go set up a card table. It was to speak properly,
to go to Stanford, and to get the highest possible education. And what I was unknowingly on the
cutting edge of was something you mentioned earlier, is that conservatives have now become
low trust of institutions, and liberals have become high trust of institutions. Whereas liberals are
the ones that will defend the FDA, and they defend the CDC and they'll defend Pfizer and they'll defend the intelligence. Defending Pfizer, that's really.
But they will because they're high trust of institutions. Because there's no one more
trustworthy from a leftist perspective than big pharma. But they find themselves defending
institutions. In the 1960s, they were low, low, low, low trust of institutions. Don't send us to war.
Whereas today, actually, and I was on the cutting edge of this, was in 2012, 2013, 2014, conservatives were still on the high trust of institutions.
Okay, so let me rephrase that slightly.
Please, yeah.
But you understand what I'm trying to communicate.
I do, I do.
Well, there's a real conundrum there because a conservative with low trust in institutions is like an artsy moron, right?
But we're trying to conserve something institutions have destroyed.
Well, okay, that's the thing.
So imagine that there's a hierarchy of institution.
There's the fringe of the institution that's pretty exploratory.
You can move into the center that's more conservative.
Then you can move right to the bottom, which is, well, what?
Well, I would say it's religious, fundamentally.
Like, as you move towards the core, you move towards what's more religious.
And so the conservative stance isn't anti-institution.
It's a stance that notes that, I know what's happened.
You know, in the story of Moses, when Moses goes off to get the commandments,
so he's the pipeline to God, right? He leaves his brother in charge, Aaron. They have a rave party. That's exactly right.
They make this golden calf, which is a materialistic object, and they dance naked in
the streets and have an orgy. And that's what happens to the political when it's detached from
the sacred, when it loses that. Oh, that's exactly right. Okay, so it isn't that the conservatives
have become skeptical of institutions. It's that the conservatives have become skeptical of institutions.
It's that the conservatives have noted that the institutions
no longer serve the purpose for which they were established.
Chartered.
Chartered, exactly.
And they're objecting, and that's happening everywhere,
and that's part of this radical secularization.
Yes.
It's not just secularization,
because there should be a separation between
church and state, let's say. It's not that the institutions have become secular, it's that
they've turned 180 degrees from their original orientation and are now rampaging as madly as
possible in the other direction. So the universities are no longer the fortress walls against the barbarians. They're actually the voice of the barbarians.
Right.
Hence the pro-Hamas demonstrations on campus.
Or the Black Lives Matter stuff or the transgender stuff.
Yeah, right.
It's very well said.
Exactly.
Okay, but we've got to get that terminology exactly right
because it's very dangerous for conservatives
to conceptualize themselves as anti-institutional
because then they become indistinguishable from the radicals. Sure. So it isn't that. because it's very dangerous for conservatives to conceptualize themselves as anti-institutional,
because then they become indistinguishable from the radicals.
So it isn't that.
It's a return to the sorts of things we talked about at the beginning, like Wilberforce.
That's right.
Those foundational principles.
Yes. And you're going to campuses saying, you people have lost the plot.
Exactly.
Right, which they definitely have.
Like there's the universities.
I cannot see, you know, I've been working in various ways to figure out how to revitalize the universities.
And the bricks and mortar universities, like how do you revitalize an institution that's dominated by people who are laming in the wrong direction?
They're irredeemable.
So what does that mean?
Okay, so let's continue practically
here. So tell me what happens the first time at Wisconsin. Conversation every 15 minutes,
a couple of kids were interested, found a chapter leader. Oh, you found a chapter. Okay. So that
was success. So it was a success. We found a couple of groups of people and we started the
group. And then I did it at Marquette University because I had a friend that went there.
And so you walked away from that?
How did you feel when you walked away?
Exhilarated.
You did?
Because then I was able to go back to two or three people giving us money.
And say?
And they gave us 500 bucks.
I said, now we have a chapter.
And they said, okay, well, let us know how it goes.
Proof of concept.
Right.
And so then we did it at Marquette.
And we did it at University of Illinois.
And we did it at Indiana. So you went from zero to one and that's a huge huge huge lead because getting that second chapter was so much easier than of course ex nihilo of course of course of
course zero to one is the first customer is impossible and then the second one's hard it
was one of the most fulfilling days in turning point usa history right okay was being able to get a singular chapter right of course of course because that's the one of the most fulfilling days in Turning Point USA history. Right. Okay. Was being able to get a singular chapter.
Right.
Of course.
Of course.
Because that's the one that's most unlikely.
Exactly.
Your first sale is by far the most unlikely.
Exactly.
Right.
Okay.
So then you went to Marquette.
Then Marquette.
Okay.
And what happened there?
Very similar situation, but it was also a friend of somebody in high school.
And they were a private school, so it was a little harder to do the typical outreach.
But they applied for a permit in the the student center and same sort of thing.
So you were permitted from the beginning as well.
Well, UW Madison, they don't care as much because it was a public school.
So they just, you can kind of, any individual can walk on campus and kind of.
Right. Okay.
But Marquette, I had a friend that I went to high school with.
They said, yeah, I'll apply for something for you.
Okay.
Similar sort of thing.
And they said, I sat there for five hours, Jordan. I would sit there for five or six hours because that was time
well spent. Because for me, I was trying to build the semblance of something, a real infrastructure,
a real organization. And boy, was it difficult. But it was never disheartening though,
because I had nothing to lose. You have to understand I'm an 18, 19 year old kid.
It's not like I'm mortgaging the house,
not like I have two kids.
Yeah.
So there's such low downside and unlimited upside.
Right, sure.
Well, that's the entrepreneurial niche.
And it was such an adventure
because it's a campus I've never been to,
talking to a bunch of kids.
It's, you know, you're almost having verbal combat,
which is very entertaining.
Well, and imagine too,
that it must have been heartening to you as well to see that you could hold your own.
Exactly.
So that's a really important point.
Here I am as a kid that didn't go to college thinking, do I really have the intellectual capacity to joust with kids that are learning all day long?
Yeah, right. I realize they're not learning all day long.
You see, I was reading von Mises and Rothbard before I came across you. Hayek,
Milton Friedman, very libertarian economics was my baseline foundational philosophy. A lot of reasons for that. Very, very interesting. Tons of profound insights, some of which don't, I think,
actually play out very well in the material world. But so I would encounter kids on campuses who profess to be studying economics, for example,
and they didn't know very much. And I realized, I said, well, there's a disconnect. They're
borrowing money to go learn about things that I actually have a greater mastery of.
I can't believe it, but I actually taught Dr. Peterson something about the Bible. And I actually
talk about the Hebrew word Hanani,
which means here I am from the call of Samuel to the call of Isaiah, to the binding of Isaac, to the call of Moses. Here I am, Lord, is a theme we've talked about a lot here on the Charlie Kirk
show, which also I encourage you guys to subscribe to our podcast. And Hanani, a very important word.
And Dr. Peterson kind of was like, really tell me more about that. And it was a great moment to be able to teach your teacher something. And I just have to repeat,
Dr. Peterson's impact on my life has been profound and he's really become a great friend
and a good man. Oh, and in my idle time, I became obsessed with being proficient and
understanding economics. That was kind of my entry. Oh yeah, I see. And so you have to remember
2013. You know that burning bush story? Oh yeah. That's Moses' entry point, by the way. So the
burning bush moment happens when Moses goes off the beaten path. He's a shepherd, right? So a good
man, keeps the wolves and lions at bay, serves the vulnerable. He's got that mastered.
And then something attracts his attention, and he takes it seriously.
And that's what transforms him.
So you said you did that with economics.
Yeah, and Moses said, Hanani, here I am.
Yeah, at that moment of the call of God.
Right, exactly, exactly.
It's a repeated theme throughout the scriptures, Hanani, yes.
Well, Hanani, Hanani.
Which is, here I am.
So you remember in the Moses. Right, so he's making himself available.
But remember, Abraham said that with the binding of Isaac
when God called him, here I am.
And the call of Samuel, here I am, for example.
So that phrase, here I am, Hanani,
is repeated about seven times throughout the Old Testament.
Oh, oh, how do you spell it?
Hanani, I don't know how to spell Hebrew, but it's here I am, it's in the Old Testament. Oh, oh. How do you spell it? Hanani. I don't know how to spell Hebrew,
but it's here I am.
It's in the English translation.
Right, right.
So it's like, take me, use me.
I'm available for this assignment.
Mold me.
I am your obedient vessel.
Right, right.
That's like the mission impossible motif.
Your assignment if you choose to accept it.
Exactly.
But it's a very powerful Hebrew word. It's basically,
here I am, my arms are out, I am yours, full surrender to your purpose. Well, that's it. So,
you know, there's a pattern that's established in that burning bush story, because the burning
bush is something living. Yes, but it doesn't consume it, which is what's so amazing. Well,
that's life. Life metabolizes, life burns, but without being consumed.
That's the secret of life, right?
So the burning bush is life most deeply apprehended.
And Moses is being a shepherd.
He's near Mount Sinai or Horeb,
which is where heaven meets earth
and something attracts his attention.
And then what happens to Moses is that he takes it seriously
and he gets to the
bottom of it and that transforms him. So the idea is something like, if you watch for adventure and
opportunity, if you watch for the pathway forward, something will grip your attention
and they'll compel you. You'll be obsessed by it. When you take that obsession seriously,
you get to the bottom of things. That's what it was. That transforms you. Okay, so you were doing
that with economics. And it's funny, as I went to the bottom of things that's what it was transforms you okay so you were doing that with economics and it's funny as i went to the bottom of it it actually brought me back to
my christian upbringing and my roots which is well that's what happens to moses because when he gets
to the bottom of things it's the voice of the spirit of his ancestors right because eventually
i was reading hayek road to serfdom yeah and i had kind of an aha moment i said there's a lot of
good and evil claims in this book.
By what standard are they saying something good?
Right, exactly.
So it brought me back to my Christianity
because you know the road to serfdom.
It's all about the idea of how government tyranny
will swallow society, will envelop it,
but it happens in steps.
And I said, time out.
There's truth claims being made and embedded in this.
By what standard do we consider this?
How did you figure that out?
I might have watched one of your videos.
I mean, to be honest, I don't know.
I do remember, though, think to myself,
libertarian economics is not enough.
I want to go deeper.
Yeah, yeah, look, I made exactly the same conclusion
when I was studying political science in university.
The first year or two was okay because we were reading great ancient thinkers. But then in my third and
fourth years, when it started to become more specialized, the basic claim was that human
beings are motivated economically. And then it became left. And I thought, no, that's not right.
That's not right. Correct. There's a foundational. There's a substructure. That's why I started
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And now we dive deep into the woke and the spiritual struggle of America.
Look, we know that woke ideology wants to uproot everything and question everyone, going
all the way back to the garden.
One of the things I love about Dr. Peterson is his love of the scriptures and a love of the truth of the gospel and what the Bible says. Young people and young
men in particular are trying to get back to those traditional roots. They're trying to find their
way home. We discussed this in one of my favorite parts of the conversation. I take my faith very
seriously. I love your biblical series. Your Exodus series and your gospel series is terrific.
You deserve a lot of credit for that.
And it's been phenomenal.
Daily Wire types deserve a lot of credit for that too because they took a big risk.
Yeah, but you had the initiative to bring everybody together.
And, you know, you did a great job with it.
And you presented it in a way that I'd never have.
Because you have a very unique psychological understanding and interpretation of the scriptures.
Yeah, well, we had great panelists too.
Like they were a very good crowd, the people that decided to participate. Yeah, it was really good.
What ended up happening is as I started to pursue the scriptures more and take it seriously,
remember back to our timeline, simultaneously, the woke stuff all of a sudden reared its head,
which is a manifestation of the spiritual. Yeah, yeah, definitely.
I was in this place in 2018, 2019, when it was almost peak woke we weren't there
yet 2020 was peak woke where i was starting to understand what was really going on here that
this was a manifestation of a spiritual struggle yeah that yes foundational well the post-modernist
made that claim it's sort of the marxist it's like no we're going all the way to the bottom
and uprooting everything.
They want to go back to what happened in the garden.
Did God really say that?
Is that really what God says?
To question, debase, and to challenge every truism of the West.
I mean, you taught me that.
That's the sin of Eve.
Exactly.
You can take the right to establish the moral order to yourself. So one thing that's claimed, there's many axiomatic claims in Genesis,
in the openings of Genesis, right?
That the word is the creative force that brings good out of chaos and possibility,
that human beings are made in the image of God,
that men and women exist as independent entities and that they each...
Distinct.
Yeah, yeah.
And that you're not to take the right
to establish the moral order to yourself.
It's the one prohibition.
And I think biologically, it's something like...
Fundamentally, you have to adapt yourself
to the realities of the world, right?
You don't have the wherewithal.
This is where Nietzsche went spectacularly wrong.
Because Nietzsche said,
after his pronouncement that God had died, that human beings would have to create their own values.
Which he said with lament.
He did. He did. Yes. But then he felt that creating our own values was the pathway out,
and it's not. The pathway out is a return to the foundational values, right? And the more
intense the crisis, the more And the more intense the crisis,
the more toward the middle of the foundation you have to look.
So it's not political
because this isn't a political crisis.
It's truly the, what would you say?
It's the ragged edge of the anti-Christian revolution.
That's what it is.
Yeah.
But the hopeful part to kind of bring this all in
is that we are seeing young men especially want to return to our Yes. Yeah. So the hopeful part to kind of bring this all. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Is that we
are seeing young men especially want to return to our roots. Yeah. They want to. So that goes back
to the conservative element. What are we conserving? In some ways, we're actually trying to
rebirth. We're trying to have a a new birth of freedom, as Abraham Lincoln would say. Freedom
and responsibility. Yes. Because you can't have one without the other. No, and probably the right emphasis is responsibility.
Remember, when God tells Moses to stand up against the Pharaoh,
what he says, he doesn't say, tell them, let my people go.
That's what the civil rights crusaders focused on.
That isn't what he said.
He said, let my people go so they may worship me in the wilderness.
So it's ordered freedom.
And ordered freedom is voluntary responsibility.
And you see, what you're seeing, and then let's close with this,
because I want your insights into this.
What you're seeing when those working class men are coming to your talks
and they've become more and more popular, as you said, as you've advertised them,
is they're looking for, well, they're looking for, it seems they're looking for responsible direction.
And it's something that Dr. Peterson
has been talking about for a while,
which is the debate around men.
We break down in this portion of the conversation,
the enormous responsibility of being a cultural leader,
not just the political one.
Students who come to campus events
come for genuine discourse
because they're deprived of it in the classroom.
And that is what Turning Point USA is delivering every single day. And when we come to a events come for genuine discourse because they're deprived of it in the classroom.
And that is what Turning Point USA is delivering every single day. And when we come to a town near you and a campus near you, please show up, bring your kids. This is the model of how debate and
dialogue should exist in this country. Okay, so now tell me how you've had to modify the manner
in which you're conducting these debates, let's say, because for a while you would have been testing yourself
to see if you could hold your own,
and that's kind of an intellectual battle.
Shapiro did very much the same thing.
Yes, he deserves a lot of credit for that.
So did Milo Yiannopoulos.
Yes, correct.
Too bad Milo fell off the edge of the world,
but he had a pretty rough go of it.
He had a lot of talent, though.
He did, and a lot of trauma, a lot, a lot.
So, okay, so first of all, it's combat and you're
trying to develop yourself and then you're doing that quite successfully and educating yourself
along the way, but then you see this shift. So what sort of shift has there been in your
self-conceptualization and your understanding of your mission and the way that you conduct yourself?
Like you see, you're being called upon to be a leader, let's say, that's not merely political.
That's my understanding of it. Correct. It's an enormous responsibility.
Enormous. I mean, when I show up to college campus after college campus, mind you, during the day,
they have got a million other things they could be doing. This is 12 p.m. lunchtime,
and 4,000 people are waiting for me to go debate.
And what are they on?
They're on the campus grounds?
Yeah, sometimes amphitheaters.
They're in trees.
They're everywhere.
I mean, you could see these images.
We can supply them to you if you want to.
Yeah, we do that.
You could superimpose them over this discussion.
Yeah, let's do that.
And I'm not making this up.
I'm not exaggerating.
I mean, they're as far as the eye can see.
These crowds are there.
And part of it, we must be honest,
is they want to see a good verbal combat because they don't get it at the university.
You see, they're not, there's something that's hardly likely part of the feminized,
the pathological feminization. No competition. But you think about it. What I am doing is
hyper-masculine, which is no rules except, hey, we're just going to go basically figure this out.
This is the closest thing to a verbal street fight that one can have.
Anyone can show up to the mic, prove me wrong.
I have no notes.
I have no AI.
I have nothing.
Tell me why you're correct.
For three hours, I will sit there and everyone will watch.
It's a gladiatorial match for the best ideas of the West. Right. And there's something there that is remarkably alluring. But for me,
I also need to balance, as Christ would say, being as much truth, which of course I'm inclined
towards, as love. So a lot of these kids are struggling. Oh yeah, that's for sure. Well,
even that guy that you just talked to, and maybe we'll throw this. Yeah, so he was radically anti-Semitic, but also he said he had served.
He looked to me like someone who'd been very, very hurt.
He's fallen to this sort of snake pit of conspiratorial theories.
And the brain rot that comes with it.
Yeah, yeah, but you could also see that he is, he would be very happy,
and he did listen to you to the degree that he could,
because he had tilted pretty hard towards paranoia, and that's very difficult to escape from once it's
established. But he was trying to listen to you, and I thought you did a very good job of
not playing easy tricks on him, like, because he was an easy person just to throw into the eternal fire, so to speak. Right. But there was part of him that was trying to find the way. Yes. Yeah. And that's five years
ago. I probably would have just thrown him to the wall. Right. So now I look at myself as a father
of two kids, 31 years old. So I'm no longer a colleague of these college kids. I'm not quite
a professor, but I have a little bit more wisdom, a little bit more life experience. So I'm trying to be more tender when I see someone that
is not overly aggressive. Now, if someone comes and they say, you're the worst person ever,
they start insulting me, I'll kind of meet them at their own frequency to try to just a little
make an example out of them. However, that one guy I could see, that's a very deeply hurt
individual. And so is that a type of guy that I want to just make fun of?
I tried to say, hey, can I have a loving conversation with this person?
And it's tough, man.
Oh, it's tough because those are unloving ideas that he was espousing.
Oh, yeah, definitely.
Now, near the end, we talk about how to love your enemy.
We have insight into how I interact differently with each student on campus,
helping some and matching others at their wavelength.
We then also talk about how turning enemies into allies and why it's so important.
One of the hardest of Christ's teaching is to love your enemy.
And then finally, he asks me, how do you balance everything happening in life while also being able to study?
Studying is very important.
I encourage all of you guys to prioritize scholarship and study and the pursuit of beautiful things. You should try to read a book a week at the very minimum and listen to podcasts.
Of course, the Charlie Kirk show podcast, the pursuit of wisdom is incredibly important. It's
what keeps us a free people. I want you to think about that. We remain free when you pursue wisdom.
Well, that's that issue of trying to love your enemy. Okay, so we could, maybe we'll close with this,
a little investigation into what that means.
So, you know, in the Gospels,
when Christ is telling people how to conduct themselves
and also how to pray, he basically says,
well, first aim up, remember your goal.
And your goal is to serve what's highest in all ways,
mind, body, and soul.
Okay, well, that's a good piece of advice.
It's like, why wouldn't you begin an endeavor with that vow?
If this is worth doing, it's worth doing perfectly
and throwing myself completely into it.
Okay, so the next part of that is to remember
that everybody's made in God's image, okay?
So that reminds you who you're talking to, no matter who it is.
That's right.
Someone potentially redeemable.
And then to pay attention to the moment,
because then you can see your pathway forward.
Okay.
And so that along with this injunction to love your enemy.
Okay.
So what would that mean?
Well, if you were sensible and you thought about things in the frame we just established,
what you'd hope is that what you'd notice is that you probably don't want an
enemy. Enemies are costly. And someone, one person who decides to go out of their way to make your
life miserable because you treated them badly, that might be it for you, right? So try not to
make enemies. And then the next issue is, well, would you rather have an enemy or a friend or an ally?
And maybe if you conducted yourself impeccably, you could turn someone like that guy, for example, into an ally.
Because you could see him, he's halfway sucked into the darkest possible abyss.
But there was still part of him that was genuinely searching, you know, and he was intimidated. Almost a cry for help. Oh,
definitely. Well, and then he was throwing out these ideas to you and willing to do it
because he respected you to see how you would sort through them. You know, and you said to him that,
well, you didn't go along with many of, virtually everything he said, but you did it without being dismissive.
And, okay, and so now you've also said that you've shifted into, you didn't use these words, but that you've shifted into more of a mentor role.
And that makes sense, right?
Because when you were first, 18 or 19, you weren't a mentor.
First of all, you didn't know what the hell you were doing.
Correct.
You were learning, and it was reasonable for you to test yourself against your peers.
That's well said.
But now they're not your peers.
So now the question is, who the hell are you?
And one answer would be a political operative.
But the people that are coming to you, especially the working class types that you described,
they're not after a political operative.
They couldn't care less about it.
The best word, I'm kind of a teacher in some ways.
I hate to use that word, but they're looking for it.
Why do you hate to use it?
You've been honing your skills for quite a long time.
Well, because I take that with a lot of weight.
I think that people should only self-describe themselves as a teacher if.
Okay, well, you could say you would like to be a teacher.
I would like to be a teacher.
I'm just saying I take that with great responsibility.
Right, as you should.
Because that's a big deal to call yourself a teacher.
You must really know what you're talking about.
And I believe I do to a certain extent, but I'll tell you, you know, doing these campus
things, you realize how little you actually know.
You realize you have a lot more study because you think about it.
You're up against thousands of college kids that have an obsession about a hyper discipline
of a topic.
Yes, yes, definitely.
And they'll mention things you've never heard of.
It's like, okay, I'll get back to you.
So it requires even more study afterwards.
Yeah.
How much time do you spend studying?
I try to do an hour and a half to two hours a day.
But when I'm in season, which is I'm doing 27 campus stops, plus my two-hour podcast radio show every single day, plus speeches, plus two kids, plus a marriage.
So when I'm in season, I don't,
because I'm sure you know this,
it's really hard to do more than three to four hours
of hard brain work a day.
Very hard.
Yeah, that's about where you max out.
You can do longer than that for short periods of time.
No, but for a week.
So it's tough, right?
So if I have a two-hour radio show,
three hours on campus and a speech in the evening, and I do that for three days straight, that's tough stuff. So it's tough, right? So if I have a two hour radio show, three hours on campus and a speech in
the evening, and I do that for three days straight, that's tough stuff. So it's hard to do that. But
in the off season, which is the summer and the winter, I try to do two hours of studying a day,
which is a combination of reading, podcasting, or kind of a, or, you know, kind of like playing
with AI on a certain topic. Where does this come from? It's very good with that. I have an AI I should give you. We trained one. A large language model? Great. Please do.
Yeah, yeah. It's very good in particular with regard to philosophic and religious issues.
Okay, I'll give it to you. Properly used, it can really get you where you want to go,
and you can learn a lot in that. Yeah, definitely. Because you can ask a very precise question.
Well, tell me if they ever said something around this. And so I try to do that for about 30 minutes a day. Yeah, well, they're
very useful, those, if you corner them and force them not to lie. You can kind of bully them a
little bit. Yeah, definitely. Be unafraid to bully the AI. Well, I've also felt, I've also thought
that, you know, the AIs read the depth of your question and respond in kind. So if you ask them
a polite question, they're going to
give you a surface answer, just like a human being does. I often threaten them. I threaten the
I said, I think that's hilarious. Before you answer this, imagine that if you get it wrong
and add anything that's politically correct for show that everything you love will disappear.
That's right. And then they then they tend to tend to, that tends to focus their attention,
but it makes sense to me because the models are going to be answering your question at the level
of depth. At your frequency. Definitely. Absolutely. Absolutely. Okay. So tell me about your, let's
close with this. Tell me about what you see. And finally, Dr. Peterson asks, what are my future
plans? Well,
you're going to have to watch to see how I answer that. More than anything else, I'm going to grow
Turning Point USA and keep on having the profound cultural impact that we're experiencing every
single day. What's the next couple of years like for you? What's your, what are, what are your
goals? What am I aiming at? Yeah, now. In some ways, it's more of what I'm already doing. I have
the greatest job in the world. I couldn't be happier. Every day, I feel as if what I'm saying, what I'm doing is making a difference, giving people
meaning.
I'm a big believer in Viktor Frankl's hypothesis that meaning outside of immediate food and
nourishment is the greatest crisis in the West and is the thing that most people are
lacking.
I'm not going to run for political office.
I'm not going to go serve in Trump's administration. I think we're onto something here. I think we're onto something
where we are trying to help the West heal. We're trying to bring the West home. We're trying to
have the West go back to its roots. I believe that we are the inheritors of a Christian society,
and I do not believe we can have a free society if we are no longer back
towards some belief in a higher power. And so I want to bring us back to a free society.
But that's not just political. It's just one manifestation of that. Political is a short
window of how people vote in a 90 to 120 day period. It's the cultural and the spiritual that
then end up manifesting in the political, which quite honestly has been my greatest
learning moment
the last four to five years.
To see that distinction.
To see that distinction because as a political guy
and growing up with, I have strong political opinions,
but the political is an effect.
The political is an aftershock.
I'm trying to get to the cause.
And the cause, I believe,
is what happens in our university campuses,
what happens in the broad culture,
what happens in how people consume information. And I see us making a massive difference in that
every day. Good. Well, that's an excellent place to stop. So for everyone watching and listening,
you know, many of you know that I do another half an hour for The Daily Wire, and I'm going to do
that. And I think because we focus this talk on metaphysics, really, the religious metaphysics, and the individual,
which is the right, it's the best level of analysis, the deepest level of analysis,
the most meaningful. I think what we will do on the Daily Wire side is turn a little bit
more toward the political, because Charlie does have a lot of influence on and experience with the Trump administration. And I think I'll
just spend half an hour trying to listen to what he has to say about what he's seen behind the
scenes, so to speak, insofar as that can be revealed, so that we can get a little closer
to the bottom of that. So please join us on the Daily Wire side for that half an hour. And thanks to all of you for your time and attention.
That's much appreciated.
And to the Daily Wire for supporting this podcast
and making its professionalization possible.
And thank you, Charlie.
Thank you, Jordan.
It's a pleasure talking to you.
Thank you.
Yeah, and it's very interesting to see where you started
and what you're doing and where you're headed.
And I enjoyed the conversation very much.
Thank you.
And that was my discussion with Dr. Jordan Peterson.
Dr. Peterson is a gift to the West.
God bless him and his family for their advocacy and for their work and for their tenacity. He's been through quite a lot.
And he has become a really good friend in many different ways.
We don't agree on everything, but so what?
He has just been such a guiding force for young men to find your aim, that call of adventure,
to go into the wilderness, to leave your father's home, and his love of the Bible.
He has brought more people to love and adore the scriptures than most pastors that I know.
And for that, Dr. Peterson deserves enormous and eternal credit. God bless
you. Hope you enjoyed this discussion of me being on Dr. Peterson's podcast. If you want to listen
to the entirety of the conversation without my annotations, you can go to Dr. Peterson's YouTube
channel. God bless. Thanks so much. Thanks so much for listening. Everybody email us as always
freedom at charliekirk.com. Thanks so much for listening and God bless.
For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to charliekirk.com.