The Charlie Kirk Show - Spencer Pratt, Savior of Los Angeles?
Episode Date: May 20, 2026Los Angeles is one of the bluest, most corrupt, most decrepit cities in America, but now political upstart Spencer Pratt has sent local politics into turmoil as his bid to become mayor gains steam eve...ry day. Can Pratt pull off the impossible and save LA? Peachy Keenan joins to discuss how his campaign has been so successful. Plus, Thomas Massie went down in defeat Tuesday night, once again demonstrating President Trump's dominance over the Republican Party. Scott Jennings dissects that primary and others. Hutz Hertzberg talks about Turning Point Academy's Prep Year program and other opportunities for educational choice created thanks to Republican policies. Watch every episode ad-free on members.charliekirk.com! Get new merch at charliekirkstore.com!Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/supportSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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My name is Charlie Kirk. I run the largest pro-American student organization in the country fighting for the future of our republic.
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noble gold investments.com. That is noble gold investments.com. All right, welcome to the Charlie
Kirk Show. It is May 20th, 2026. We're here at the Y-ReFi Studios in Phoenix, Arizona. How are we doing,
Blake? We're doing great. Yeah, what a night. What a night. It wasn't much of a night. It was over
right away. Well, exactly. We, you know, often on election nights of primaries, we debate whether we should
go live. I'm actually really glad we didn't last night because to Blake's point, it was over so quickly.
And there was a lot of news made. And now the top line is that President Trump on his endorsements went
37 and oh. So he won 37 races that he endorsed in those candidates won versus zero losses.
Okay. So the breakdown is he went 10 and 0 in Pennsylvania, 6 in O in Alabama, 6 and O in Kentucky,
in Georgia, 5 and O in Idaho, 1 and O in Oregon.
I don't even know the race he endorsed in Oregon, but nevertheless, 37 to zero.
Okay, so the top line is that President Trump's endorsement reigns supreme.
And that's certainly, I think, true on the top line, but when you dive deeper into it, I think it's more complex than that.
I think that what really happened last night was that Canada,
that are with the base that are with the grassroots went 37 and 0, right?
And there was, by the way, there was more election results from last night than just the races that Trump endorsed in.
Yeah, there's the graphic.
But if you look at what really happened, okay, so we got Bert Jones, who was actually the first Trump endorsed, our candidate to endorse Trump in 2015 out of Georgia.
Now he's a lieutenant governor.
And he's now, he now won.
He's going to be going to a runoff for the next Georgia governor.
We have endorsed Bert Jones.
He's a great candidate.
So get behind Bert Jones.
We're going to get him on the show soon.
So that was one example.
You obviously saw with Mike Collins, who's about as MAG as it gets, America First as it gets,
he won the U.S. Senate primary last night, but he's going to be going to a runoff.
By the way, he was spent, outspent 15 to 1.
But Mike Collins is a guy who's actually got legislation passed as a congressman out of Georgia.
he is unabashedly pro-Trump he's pro the the grassroots he works his butt off we're really really proud of his
accomplishment last night he really he got close to not needing a runoff so that was impressive for him
but he'll go he'll go to the runoff there uh i would expect him to win that and the other thing that
happened in georgia last night and i i'm hesitant to read too much into it i think that's fair
but there was actually state Supreme Court races in Georgia.
Three of the six seats were decided last night, all for Republicans,
which means Republicans will control the state Supreme Court in Purple Georgia at least through 2030.
This is really interesting.
So I think a lot of people just had no idea this was going on,
which is not surprising because they'll have appointed judges,
but then they can go up to the vote for another term.
No one has lost reelection to this.
in over a century, but Democrats, because Georgia is a swing state that has a pretty strict
abortion law, this was a big part of their motivation. They decided to put up challengers this
time. And put money behind them. And they put a lot of money behind it. They brought in President
Obama to campaign on it. They ran ads. They tried to really pump it up and thankfully they failed.
One of their efforts was pretty close. A funny thing you'll notice, by the way, you'll see
there's two people they were making a big challenge against,
and there's actually a pretty big gap in how they fared.
And some analysts are, it's a nonpartisan election technically.
So some analysts are saying one of the reasons the Democrat who did better was named Miracle Rankin
versus the other was, I think, is it Joe, Jen Jordan?
So Miracle Rankin versus Jen Jordan.
And they said Miracle Rankin sounded more like a name that a Democrat would have.
So they think a lot of voters were in the booth trying to think,
Okay, who's more likely to be the Democrat here?
And they were a little bit better at guessing with Miracle Rank and than the other.
And so that's why she did way better than the other Democrat.
Interesting.
Well, whatever the result is or whatever the reason behind that is,
we now have seen statewide races that won by Republicans or conservatives at least in Georgia,
which is a good sign for the general because I want you to remember,
even CNN is calling the Ossov race.
He's the incumbent Democrat senator from the state of Georgia, the most vulnerable Senate race for Democrats going into this midterm cycle.
So if Mike Collins, our endorsed candidate who came out way on top last night, ends up winning the runoff, which we expect him to do, then that gives us a really good shot looking at Georgia.
Now, Georgia is one of those states that I kind of fear the most, right?
It's been a state that we, you know, we had Purdue as a senator, ended up losing that.
and Herschel Walker ended up losing that.
So we've got Warnoff and Assoff as our senators there.
We've got Kemp as governor.
He's sort of been a thorn in Trump's side.
It's a weird state.
I talked to some of the Trump 1.0, Trump, you know, 20-20 guys about Georgia.
They said it's the hardest state for the president to actually crowd-build-in.
So I don't know what's going on in Georgia, but it's a historically red state.
Republicans have the registration advantage, but it's plagued.
dust at the federal level, I think this is a real opportunity to take back some ground in Georgia.
So we're watching that very closely. And then again, Bert Jones for governor, that would be a
massive, massive race there. We've endorsed Bert Jones. So turning our attention also to Kentucky.
That's the other big race that everybody was looking at. Kentucky's fourth, which is, of course,
Thomas Massey, we talked about it on the show some. We're going to actually bring Scott Jennings,
who's a Kentucky native, onto the show in the second half of the.
this hour to get his take. But he lost. He lost by about nine points, which was significant.
Now, a lot of people were calling this race 50-50. We had Rich Barris on the show. He was even,
I think, basically leaning that Massey was retaking the edge. But what ended up happening is the
older voters here way out indexed. They punched way above their weight. They turned out way more
than Gen Z and millennials. And they voted in mass for Thomas, or for Ed Gail Rain, not for Thomas
Massey. So it ended up being a huge, huge victory. Obviously, President Trump took a special
interest in this race. So did Stephen Miller. So did Pete Heggseth. So Secretary of War even campaigned,
which is a very unusual move. But this was a massive, massive victory for the president because he took
special, I guess, special interest in it. And that's not a surprise. Now, the, I would call it the sort
dissident wing of the conservative coalition is very upset about this. And I think that's to be
expected. Gen Z was very much in Massey's corner. And I want to show this graphic here.
So if you look at this is coming from Chris Brunette, Massey versus Guyron, support by age
demographic. You can see that 18 to 29 year old supported Massey.
78.5% to 21.5%.
30 to 44 year olds, that millennial demo,
64.9 to 35.1.
And then Gen X is about 50, 50.
But look at that 65 plus, Blake.
35 for Galrain and 65% or 35 for Massey,
65% for Galran.
That turns into a landslide because they turn out
in a lot of greater numbers.
And also they're more likely to be Republican generally.
but it does show what we discussed.
There is a generational divide there.
And so for now, it was a big beat down for the president and against Massey.
But we can see there's potential shifts on the horizon.
There could be potential shifts on the horizon.
Nevertheless, President Trump had a big night.
And he endorsed Ken Paxton.
Thank goodness.
And so Paxton's got a huge boost in that senatorial GOP primary.
All right. So there is a tweet that went pretty vibrant by one of our very common guests here.
A great friend of the show, and that is Sean Davis. And he had a very interesting tweet about why he believed Massey lost.
Now, a lot of noise has been made about the Massey race because they think that the Israel lobby wanted for him.
And it turned out to be the most expensive congressional race in the history of congressional race.
in the history of congressional races,
which is saying something,
because typically those,
that's like a million,
two million.
And this is a primary.
Yeah,
so this ended up being,
I think,
roughly around $40 million on a GOP primary
for a congressional seat,
which is unheard of.
More than $40 per person in that district.
Yeah.
And a lot of finger pointing has been made at APEC and stuff like,
and they were,
they did play a role in this.
There's no doubt.
but it's also worth saying that only about 5% of Massey's money came in state, all right?
So the rest of it came from probably mostly libertarian causes in, you know,
backers in California, Texas, Florida, etc.
Okay, so this is what he said.
Why did Massey lose?
Massey went from principled libertarian during COVID to GOP leadership lapdog under McCarthy
to anti-Trump Epstein obsessive in 2025 after tweeting about that issue a whopping three times
in the decade prior. So that point
Sean had made on our show as well.
Zepstein point. That
Massey had only mentioned that three
times in a decade, immediately
2025 comes around and it's basically
the only thing he's talking about. The nail in the coppum
for him was voting against the
one big beautiful bill in 2025
because according to Massey, it did too much
to secure the border.
Sean ended up getting challenged on that
and he was proven correct. Massey
did make a comment like that.
Here's what's interesting about this.
I thought Sean did a great job in this tweet.
He said Trump mercilessly trashed Massey in 2020, calling him a disaster for America and Kentucky,
saying he should be thrown out of the GOP entirely.
But Massey easily swatted that away and won 8119.
So Trump didn't like Massey in 2020, and yet he won 80 to 20.
So in his primary.
It's exactly what he says, which is Massey has annoyed Trump for a long time.
Trump has wanted him gone a lot longer than he's wanted other Republicans gone.
He's one of the few guys who Trump went after in his first term and has stuck around all the way until now.
He served, I think he served, what, seven terms?
Yeah, and he was around even before Trump was in.
And he annoyed him in a bunch of ways.
But what was actually fatal to him is when he decides to, first of all, become this character whose persona is being annoying to Trump.
and then getting, got a lot of love from Rokana, from Mother Jones, from left-wing outlets, because he's doing this.
And on top of that, that he decided to become the face of, I'll be frank, an issue that I don't think is core to the MAGA priorities in terms of saving the country.
And instead just kind of involves smearing the president and his allies where he's saying they're, he just says they're all protecting pedophiles.
That is an insane thing to say.
Yeah, it was an insane thing to say, especially since the Democrats were sitting on the Epstein files for four years and didn't even mention them.
Nobody even brought it up.
It would have been one thing if there was any leadership during those four years to unseal the Epstein files.
There wasn't.
The only people that have actually unsealed anything, and you could disagree with the way they did it, is the Trump administration, okay?
He said weirder things.
I think he shouldn't get away with what he does.
He suggested that Jeffrey Epstein is actually alive, and they're covering.
not that his death was fake. He's done that. He's done that. Yes. He said, he said, like,
we don't know where he is. And then on top of that, he's also called for criminal charges to be
brought against people who we, like, actually categorically know. There's, like, no credible
allegations against where, in fact, allegations have already been investigated and found to be
groundless. And he just says we should, we should prosecute and indict them anyway. Well, he's been
hugely reckless with this. And he deserved to get owned. But I think it's something, I think it's
something even deeper, actually, sort of fundamental. And this is actually, and this is actually,
actually the main paragraph I wanted to get through from Sean. He said Massey lost because he went from being
perceived as a quirky but lovable nerd who seemed to genuinely believe everything he said, which is
definitely the way that I perceived Massey. I believe that, like, listen, I disagreed with him on stuff.
I really agreed with him on some stuff, but I believed that he believed it, you know, and he was
sticking to his principles. So he went from that to looking like a clout chasing influencer who
cared more about getting TV time with Democrats on an issue.
he clearly never cared about until five minutes ago than he did about representing his voters.
And that, I think, is a really interesting stuff. And he, you know, he says, I don't know if it was
losing his wife, the tragic death of his spouse. I don't know if, you know, if it was a desire for
notoriety or media claim or lucrative podcasting career. And by the way, that's what everybody's predicting
is that Massey is going to now become a podcaster. We'll see him on the podcast circuit with, you know,
Dave Smith and, you know, probably Candice, like, whoever else, right?
So I don't know what's going to happen in the future, but that's what everybody's predicted.
And it does feel like that was ultimately what happened.
If you do like a before and after of Thomas Massey when he was married to his wife and he had like no facial hair and glasses.
He literally went from looking like a dork to looking like Robert, like a Civil War General.
He got a glow up.
And that was interesting.
And by the way, that happens sometimes when people lose their spouse later in life, they kind of go back to the gym.
Jim and they kind of, I'm not even mad about any of that stuff.
I'm just saying, I actually think that was more fundamental because he really had chops and
credibility.
And then it just felt like he went, he went in a different direction.
And I think the voters perceived that.
And he says, Massey's voters didn't change all that much, but he did.
Massey did.
And they noticed.
Audience captures a real thing.
Yeah.
And I think Massey, he got, he got caught up.
He got caught up in becoming.
a celebrity, for lack of a better term.
Well, they're already chanting his name for
2028 during his concession speech.
So, I put it this way.
We have not seen the last of Thomas Massey.
It'll just be a question of what he chooses to do,
certainly.
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I want to bring in the great Scott Jennings, Mr. Kentucky.
We got lots to talk about Scott.
Welcome back to the show, my friend.
Good to see you.
Hey, Andrew, good to see you, brother.
Thanks for the invite.
Yeah, man.
I'm so glad.
I know you got your show on next.
Everybody check that out, and you made time for us, so I appreciate it.
All right.
So I saw you on CNN last night.
I saw the clip.
You went off on Mr. Thomas.
Massey. I'm going to play the clip and I'll get your reaction to it here. SOT 19.
I would have come out sooner, but I had to call my opponent and concede and it took a while to find Ed Galrine in Tel Aviv.
I didn't expect that. I didn't expect that from him.
I, uh, look, I live in this district. I vote in this district. I have voted for Thomas Massey many times.
that was terrible.
And I thought, you know, he is, in my opinion, he has changed somewhat over the years.
And this, dipping into this anti-Semitism and sort of making everything about Israel.
And I just, I don't know.
I think, you know where I stand on it.
I don't think this is good for our party.
I don't think it's good for the conservative movement.
And for him to go up on stage and do that last night was pretty bad.
in my opinion. So yeah, I said on CNN, I thought it was worth noting and worth calling out and
worth condemning. And so I did it. Yeah, you did it. And I thought you did a great job. Honestly,
I kind of with you, listen, I like Thomas Massey. I have had affection for him. Charlie had
affection for him. You know, there was more than a few comments in my mentions yesterday saying,
you've betrayed Charlie and all of this. Here's the thing. Thomas Massey used to have a tremendous
voting record actually. And then two years ago, something changed. And then it wasn't so good. And he got
fixated on all the Epstein stuff. He got fixated on the, you know, the GOP is protecting pedophile stuff.
And I think we need to have a real conversation about Epstein because nobody wants to do it because, I mean, there's like Michael Tracy, you know, and he gets widely excoriated for it.
But first fact here is that, you know, the Democrats didn't release the files.
The Republicans have been releasing the files.
You may not like the way they did it.
Okay, fine.
I have some critiques too.
I do.
I didn't like the binder thing.
I didn't like, I didn't like Trump's reaction to it.
Charlie didn't like Trump's reaction to it.
But the truth is, and Blake has been out.
I give Blake a ton of credit here.
He's, there hasn't been the smoking gun that we wanted or expected or thought was
going to materialize. There's been a lot of bad behavior. There's been a lot of gross stuff,
but this, you know, and that's part of it. It's like they say, we're always apparently one
email release away, one file, you know, we'll finally get the smoking gun that's just, oh,
here's the list in every single crime this person committed and also here's this video attached.
Instead, we have millions of these things. And some of them have been humiliating for incredibly
rich and influential people. If Bill Gates is getting humiliated, if Elon Musk is getting
humiliated. If Leon Black is getting embarrassed by what comes out of these, if Lawrence Summers is getting
embarrassed by what's coming out of these, where's the cover up here? Because really important and
notable people are actually getting dumped on from this stuff. Yeah, but the idea that there's,
like, you know, there's going to be this email that gets released and then, you know, 67 pedophiles
that are all billionaires are going to be thrown in in the gulag or something. Like, that's just,
we just haven't seen. I would love to see that. I would love to see a bunch of pedophiles be.
you know frog march yeah exactly if it's not there it's not there we have to have rules and we have
have to have laws and we have to deal with this thing the way a civilized advanced nation would
instead one of my critiques of massie is that yeah you you you let on this you were you out
with rocana but you didn't even mention it for a decade and all of a sudden it became your cause
de jour and listen i'm with them candidly on the iran war scott you and you and i might be a little bit
of difference of opinion on that.
But like, you can't be a thorn in your side of your party for years now and not build up
some enemies and some ire.
So I'm, you know, I have no ill will towards him.
I'm just, I'm also like not that upset today, okay?
And I didn't like the Tel Aviv joke, okay?
Or whatever you want to call that.
Yeah, on the Epstein stuff, you know, Massey spent a lot of time with Roe Kana.
And Ro Kana was using the issue to hurt Donald Trump.
and Thomas Massey started to try to use the issue to hurt Donald Trump.
Democrats wanted everybody to believe that Donald Trump had some problem in the Epstein files.
They still go out and say that on television almost every day. I hear it every day.
There's not a shred of evidence Donald Trump ever did anything wrong.
But Thomas Massey was teaming up with people who wanted everybody to believe that.
That was really unforgivable, in my opinion.
Regarding the issues, Thomas Massey started voting with Democrats on things like
tax cuts. He opposed the president's big beautiful bill last summer. He voted with them against
Donald Trump's border security initiatives like the wall. I mean, look, I don't know much,
but I know one thing. There's a couple of issues on which you cannot become an apostate
in a Republican primary, and that is taxes and immigration. If you are opposing Donald Trump
on cutting taxes and stopping the flow of illegal aliens across the border, you are going to
have a problem. As someone who lives here, I watched all the ad traffic.
Almost all the advertising was about those issues.
And it's like Trump wants to do this.
Massey doesn't.
You make the choice.
And the people in Kentucky have agency.
They made the choice.
They want a Republican congressman to support the president.
I think one of Massey's problems is that he began to think,
because I guess of all of his online activity,
that he was somehow bigger in the party or more.
He was supposed to be setting the agenda for the party.
No, the Republican voters here want Donald Trump to set the agenda.
And he had set that agenda.
Massey opposed the agenda, and he paid the price in our primary.
It's easy to overanalyze these things, but it's really no more complicated than that, in my opinion.
So one thing that I am aware of, though, Scott, and I'm curious your perspective on it, is the generational breakdown.
The older voters, the older you are, the more likely you were to vote for Gowryne.
The younger you were, the more likely you were to vote for Massey.
What do you make of the generational divide?
And is it problematic or are those they're going to grow up and change their voting habits?
I mean, what do you see here?
Some of it, I think, has to do with communications.
I think Massey tends to communicate more on platforms that are used by younger voters.
And Galrine, the communications around his campaign were on platforms that were geared towards older voters.
I also think Galrine, you know, look, he supported the president on Iran.
He's a veteran. He's a Navy SEAL.
You know, I think that message vector, frankly, was more, you know, kind of right.
wrapping the flag, rap in patriotism, support the commander in chief.
That meant more, I think, to the older voters in the fourth congressional district,
who I think are more traditional conservatives when it comes to national security stuff.
If Donald Trump says we need to go attack somebody, they're going to get in line and they want to do it.
And Gal Ryan was certainly right there on that.
I worry a little bit about some of the conspiracies and the sort of what I don't consider to be conservative messaging vectors
that Massey was pursuing to try to attract some of the younger voters.
But that's the kind of campaign he chose to run.
The district has some younger voters in it,
but it's a Republican primary in a rural area in Middle America.
There's a lot of older traditional conservatives in there
who just decided I would rather have a more loyal Republican in the job
to help my president succeed.
And maybe some of the younger voters didn't feel that way as much about Gowry.
You know, Gowryne himself, he wasn't really that much of a part of the campaign.
He was endorsed by Trump.
The whole thing was a referendum on, is Massey supporting Trump enough?
I mean, that was the whole question.
And whether you voted him up or down, I don't think it had as much to do with Gowryne's credentials or his views as it did with just, you know, I thought Massey was going to help Trump.
And it turns out he's hurting him.
And people got time.
Yeah, and I want to get to the Andy Barr race, but I just have to show up this before an hour.
after this before and after that like Thomas Massey the Thomas Massey that I really was like a huge
fan of versus you know what he sort of is lately I mean barely recognizable between between the
I mean Thomas Massey is an MIT grad he's a you know what is he built his own house
built his own house he's he like he like you know on on on raw milk on all this stuff and then and then
and then he's like he looks like you said like like
a civil war general or something. He looks like he's suddenly from a civil war general and just
totally different behavior too. It's just, you think of this nerd who went to MIT and now he's
a guy who I'll be frank, he's chasing conspiracy theories. You do you sort of expect he's going to
have his podcast next. Go ahead. He went from like lovable, quirky policy nerd that, you know,
was always willing to carry the torch on, you know, controlling spending and so and so forth to
to some bizarre peddler of conspiracy theories. And I think he, look, a lot of people make this
mistake in their lives, politics or otherwise.
It's possible to be too online.
You know, you get very, very online, you get wrapped up in what's going on online.
And I think maybe he fell victim to that a little bit.
But I guess we'll see what he does in his next career.
But, you know, a lot of people liked him.
And I think still want to like him.
I still want to like him.
I'm trying to.
This wasn't good enough for the Republicans who, you know,
Yeah, no, listen, I think that I think we could make the mistake of making too much out of this race.
and taking too much away from it.
Let's open to the aperture up a little bit.
So you've got Andy Barr.
I know you got, you know these guys well.
Were you surprised by the result in that Senate race, GOP primary?
No, not at all.
Late in the campaign, President Trump came in and endorsed Andy Barr.
And not only that, he made a deal to get Nate Morris,
who was another candidate out of the race.
That just left Daniel Cameron.
But look, in Kentucky, like in most places,
if Donald Trump makes the choice in a primary, it typically makes the difference.
This would have been a pretty close race, I think, between Barr and Cameron.
And when Trump came in and made the choice, everybody flowed to Andy Barr.
He's been a good congressman from central Kentucky in the Lexington area.
And the Democrats here nominated a very, very progressive radical named Charles Booker.
So I don't think Andy Barr will have any trouble holding the seat in November.
Got it.
Well, if you could help talk to him, back channel with him, that I have some notes on immigration.
I'd like to talk to him about.
If you could set that up, I'd be very grateful.
We were big supporters of Nate Morris,
so I was a little disappointed to see the way that played out.
Nate's been a good sport about it.
I think we haven't seen the last in Nate Morris.
And anyways, that's that's that.
So Andy Barr is going to probably run away with this
and be the next senator from state of Kentucky.
Georgia, you got Mike Collins.
We endorsed him at Turning Point Action.
He had a big night.
It's going to go to the runoff.
I would expect him he's probably going to mop up there.
I'm also looking at Michigan. Mike Rogers. That's a race to watch. So let's let's talk. You've got the gutting of the VRA section two by the Supreme Court. You've got fewer and fewer toss-up seats. It does feel like there's a bit of a momentum shift, right? You saw that with the Indiana. We had five guys that voted in the U.S. State Senate there against redistricting. President Trump, turning point action. We had a big night there. You're seeing that there's less.
meet on the bone if we're going to see a wave election, which you often do in the midterms.
There's less meat on the bone here. I'm feeling a momentum shift. I'm subtile. I'm cautiously optimistic.
What are you seeing holding the Senate, holding the House? I think on redistricting, there's been a
clear momentum shift. The Supreme Court in Virginia throwing out there, you know, that crazy map that they
passed, that changed a lot to go back to six to five in Virginia. And then you look at some of the
changes that have been made in the southern state. So that alone gives Republicans, you know, a fighting
chance. Whereas, you know, a few weeks ago, I think a lot of us were sitting around in the doldrums
thinking, well, there's no way if Democrats do all these things on redistricting and we don't,
you know, they're going to, they're going to blow us out. So that's changed. The other thing going
on, I think, is financially, you know, Trump has raised a ton of money. The party's doing well
financially. And I think on candidate recruitment, we're doing well. We're nominating people who are
basically mainstream conservatives who have broad common sense appeal. On the Democratic side,
you brought up Michigan, they tend to be looking at people who are so far out of the mainstream
that you take a purple state. I mean, all those candidates on the Democratic side running for
Senate and Michigan are lunatics. Okay, they're radical, progressive lunatics. Dangerous people.
Look what's going on in Maine. You've got this Platner character. I mean, every single day
something comes out about Platner and you think, where do they find these kinds of people?
I think that's also happening in House primaries around the country where the more radical Democrats,
are winning primaries, but they may not be a match for, you know, more purple constituency.
Texas, they've nominated a guy for Senate down there who thinks there's six genders and should
be no meat. I mean, good luck selling this in Texas. Like, I, how do you, I've never met anybody
from Texas who believes that. Except this guy. I'll call my shot. Yeah, Scott, I'm going to call my
shot. I think Paxton's going to win the primary. I think he's going to end up winning the general
by six to ten points. That's my prediction. I think Paxton will win the race in
the fall. I think Democrats, as they have in the past, are going to spend a boatload of money in Texas.
They spent a bunch of money on Beto. They, you know, they spent a bunch of money, you know,
on a couple of Senate races down there, and it never pans out for them. Texas is basically a conservative
state. And by the way, Kim Paxton has won election statewide before. And Tala Rico, they are going
to try to portray him as a middle of the road, normal person. There's nothing normal about this.
On issue and her issue, there's nothing normal or relatable about any of this.
But to the Democrat, they always try to come up with the caricature of what they think, you know, a normal middle America male is like.
Like, this is the caricature of what they think it's supposed to be like.
It's like early AI.
It's got like six fingers, you know.
And they always end up self-destructing a little bit because Democrats nationwide are obsessed with Texas.
they love the idea of flipping it.
And so what they do is they end up spending a ton of money.
It's always a ton of out of state money.
So these guys come out.
Texas,
even compared to other states,
I think,
is a little,
they're a little regional.
They don't like it when they sense other people are coming in and changing Texas.
They like the idea that they're a very distinct state.
And so then,
oh,
here's someone coming in to transform and flip Texas blue.
And Texas Democrats are really live in comparison to some states.
They really are.
They're much more left wing than some other red state
Democrats are. They hype it up and they blow it all of smithereens. They make it worse for themselves.
They might have been better off with Jasmine Crockett down there. I'm just, I mean, she, I mean, look,
she is a more normal conservative person than James Talley. I'm just telling you right now.
Her voting record was relatively, you know, more mainstream than any of thing I've ever heard
Tala RICO say. And the fact that Democrats continue to try to, with a straight face, go on television
and say, oh, no, no, no, this is just like your, you know, mild-mannered, ordinary, you know, Christian guy from
it. It is the farthest thing from the truth, and they think people are buying it. Nobody's buying it. Nobody's
buying the, the schick in Maine. This guy's not an oyster farmer. He's like the, he's like a trust fund
kid. They have constructed to run for the U.S. Senate, and they're overlooking the fact that he had
a Nazi tattoo that he says he wants to masturbate in public toilets. I mean, it's crazy what they
are trying to present to the American people as normal.
and it's not going to work.
I'm going to play this Hakeem Jeffries clip
because I do think one of the best arguments,
and I don't think it's cope,
I don't think it's opium,
is that Dems do overshoot.
They scare the hell out of a lot of people.
I know myself included.
Sot 10.
I guess part of how we as House Democrats view this moment,
either MAGA extremists are going to break the country
or we're going to break them.
And our goal is to break them.
We will defeat them.
We have to beat them,
electorally, and then we have to break their spirit because of the extremism that's being unleashed
on the American people that's completely and totally unacceptable. That was the No Bad Ideas
Conference, I think, that Kamala Harris put together. Final words to you, Scott. So when you hear
Hakeem Jeffries or any other Democrats say maga extremist, they just mean anybody who has ever
voted Republican in their life. That's the thing. They're not talking about five or ten people
that they don't like. They're talking about 80 million Americans who voted for Donald Trump,
who vote Republican, who just want to go out and support, you know, a common sense conservative.
To them, you are a MAGA extremist who needs to be punished, who needs to get something.
They need to get revenge on you. They need to break your spirit. Winning at the ballot box
will not be enough for these people. They're already promising retribution and revenge on anybody
who's ever been within 200 feet of Donald Trump. And now they're extending that.
to anybody who ever cast a ballot for a Republican candidate in any office.
That's what I hear in Hakeem Jeffrey's words.
Well, I mean, I feel for you, Scott, because every night on CNN,
I'm pretty sure you're sitting around a table of people who think you're a MAGA extremist.
And you're a pretty like mainstream guy, you know?
All right, Scott Jennings, have a good show.
We'll see you next time, my friend.
Thank you for joining us.
Thank you, Andrew.
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decades of savings noble gold investments.com slash kirk a lot of exciting things are going on in
california in the city of l a we're always getting contacted by people who say can you guys get more
involved in california can you help us save california and usually our answer is there's not we'll do
our best. We should work hard, but we're still having, you know, you want to be, you want to be
pragmatic about these things. But big things are happening in Los Angeles where former reality
TV star Spencer Pratt has launched an upstart bid for mayor and he's gaining ground by the day. He
has great media savvy. And Peachy Keenan is one of our California fans, California experts. And she's
joining our show now to talk about his run. Peachy, are you there? I'm here. How are you guys?
Welcome, welcome. So let's just start with, let's, how is Spencer shaking things up? What's it like in Los Angeles now that there's hope in this city for the first time in a while, it seems.
Yeah, I just want to let you know that right now, as we speak, my house is filled yet again with the smell of burning forest fires. I live near Altadena and there's like another fire going on up in the mountains today. So having a little PTSD from last January.
Yeah, Spencer. Spencer is so great. I have never actually personally met him, but I feel like I know him because he went to Crossroads, which is like a super kind of fancy private, very progressive high school in Santa Monica, where all of my in-laws went. I know a ton of people who went to Crossroads who are actually in his class in Crossroads. And a lot of my family have been going to his father, who's a dentist for years. So I feel like I know Spencer very well. And I'm super excited about his impending victory.
Oh, wow.
That's confidence.
By the way, Pitchie, we had a technical difficulty.
I heard the second half of what you said.
We've got so many clips.
And really, so Pichi, people don't know this, but you have a very, well, some people
know this, but your background in the entertainment industry, you did work with, like,
Star Wars and the, you know, I've, I know been to pieces of your, of your, of your CV here.
I mean, I have to say, and I said this on X and it seemed to go around, I think this, I think he
is the best campaigner of his generation. Like, bar none, without a doubt. The question is,
will it matter? But let's go in to some of his clips here and his campaign ads because they're
really striking a note. They're really resonating with people across the political spectrum,
which is very interesting, which you need to do in L.A. I literally, I could grab, it's a grab bag.
How about the Lego takeoff of everything is awful, although it says three.
And there's two, three.
So we'll play slot three and see what we get here.
Everything is awful.
Everything is hell when you're part of the scene.
Karen back and burning down our street.
Like, we've never seen this before.
Yeah, and I, you know, a lot of the AI ads that are being made are actually being done by kind of fans.
I don't really believe his main campaign video team is doing those.
They're doing all the shots with Spencer and all the drone stuff.
But these are just being developed sort of by grassroots creators on social media.
And there's just there's more than one.
There's a lot of them and they're doing so many.
And they're really groundbreaking.
Yeah.
Well, and I would just make the argument that even if he's not creating them, it's even more a testament to just how effective his campaign is being.
Because when you inspire a legion of like, you know, diehard fans out there that spend their time creating videos on your behalf, it underscores the enthusiasm for your campaign.
Yeah, and a lot of the creators are locals. They live here. And so they are, they have so much stake in this. And anyone who lives in L.A. or around the cities, you know, around L.A. City, like Santa Monica, West Hollywood, where I am in Pasadena, we're all affected by what happens in L.A. City. And so they just opened their eyes. And for years now, people have been complaining that there's, you know, a tent on fire outside their $3 million Venice home. Or they took their kids to the beach.
and there was needles in the sand.
I mean, I've seen all of these things.
They've been chased in parking lots.
I have had to step over bodies.
You know, you drive by scenes that look like Gaza.
It's for years, years and years and years, since I was a little kid.
And so these are creators and filmmakers who are just finally,
they finally have someone that is giving them hope and giving them a motivation to, like,
unleash their creativity.
So there's this whole controversy about the fact that he's not actually staying in the
airstream, okay, on his burned down land. So again, backstory of Spencer Pratt. His house gets burned down
in the palisades fire. I remember Pichi having you on with Charlie when the fires were raging in
in East Los Angeles area near your house. And you were like on the block giving us a play by play,
which buildings had just burned down. I mean, it was wild stuff. So this inspires him to get in this race.
He says he's living in the airstream, but this is a new home. But turns out he's at the Bel Air Hotel.
and people are making a big stink about this,
but what I love is that he instead...
He took advantage of it.
And he came out with this banger.
I love it.
Stop 15.
Now this is a story all about how my life got foot turned upside down,
and I had to take a minute to run for mayor.
I'll tell you how I became the prince of a town called Bel Air.
In West Los Angeles, palisades.
My backyard is where I spent most of my days beating hummingbirds.
My kingdom, I was finally there to sit on my throne as the prince of...
It's just so good. I mean, it's leaning into it. And, you know, he's got the truth on his side. I think that is the big thing here. It's like whether he lives in an airstream because his house got burned down or it gets doxed and then he gets death threats, which we can relate to here. And so he has to go live in a hotel. What does it matter? The fact is his house burned down. I mean, it's an unassailable sort of origin story. What are you going to do with it?
Right. I mean, they want him to be in a tent with his children like in the ash. And the Pacific Palisades is still ash. It's still there's such a travesty. So yeah, that is his house. And to penalize him for not like living in the dirt with no running water like this kid. Like to penalize him for that is just, I mean, it's just, you know, what they have nothing. By the way. Pitchie, he said he said as much. He said I couldn't even get the sewer line hooked up to my airstream. I couldn't get power to the airstream. I couldn't get power to the air.
stream and not only that, all the trees burned down. And he was like, he told TMZ, he's like,
I could get sniped. I'm getting death threats. Like, there's nothing obscuring the view to my
airstream. People, if they wanted to hurt me, they could. So yeah, like, I have to go live at a hotel
right now because I have no home. And I was just like, you know, and you could see, you could see
TMZ, like the body language going like, oh, that's a pretty good point. And I feel bad for the question
about it. They've got nothing else. These are just like, Nithia or Karen's talking point.
Yeah, looking at this footage.
I mean, I grew up on Villadalapause in, you know, when I was little in the Palisades,
and it, that house burned down, obviously.
And it's just, it's so sad.
I have family who were also burned out, and they live, they moved to Manhattan Beach.
They're rebuilding, and obviously it's going to take, God knows how long, you know,
with Karen Bass in charge of giving out permits.
And they, I read that people who did move out of Pacific Palisades are not getting their
ballots. Like, they're not considering you a Palisades resident because you had to lead to another.
And that is L.A. proper. That is L.A. City, yes? Manhattan Beach is. Well, no. Yeah. Palisades.
is. The Palisades is. It's not part of San Amok. Okay. Yeah, that's right.
When you talk to Jake Tapper in 2023, you said that your goal was to end street homelessness in L.A. by
26. It's now 2026. And we haven't ended it. We have. We haven't.
not ended it and we're not close to ending it. How are you so off?
Well, basically, when I said that, it was at the beginning of my term, I am very committed
to achieving that goal. I didn't anticipate some of the bureaucratic barriers that I would
experience, but I am prepared to take those on now.
But you promised that it would go away 100%, and it's only gone down about 17.6%.
Right.
So why should people trust you that you're going to be able to get to the 100%.
Because let me just tell you, for the first time, we've had a decrease at all.
So Pichi Keenan, L.A. resident, L.A. area resident and childhood home in the Pacific Palisades,
where Spencer Pratt's home burned down now famously.
Homelessness is taken on a huge issue here.
And I want to get back to that voter piece that you just mentioned because I think it's key.
But homelessness, talk about it.
If you're just a normal Angeloino, like, are you?
Are you really worked up about homelessness?
Yeah, it's the number one issue.
And not just in L.A. City, but even here in Pasadena, it's kind of become a mini skid row.
You see people outside any, like, metro station.
They're just loaded up on every bus bench, passed out unconscious on the street.
Sometimes they'll even see them, like, bent over in that like fentanyl, frozen pose.
It's absolutely everywhere.
It's even creeping into places like Beverly Hills, which never used to have it.
The Palisades was one of these places that didn't have any homeless.
It was like this pristine, like, utopia,
because we're kind of out of the way.
It's a little bit hard to get to.
And so, of course, now it's going, you know,
now that they burn it down for, I wonder why.
It's something that affects every single person,
no matter where you are, basically in L.A. County.
And as that report just came out from Chris Rufo and Kenneth Schiff,
that 70%, 80% are out of state homeless people.
And I've known this for years.
I've seen videos of people going around Skid Row.
interviewing homeless people. Where are you from? Where are you from? They're all from nowhere. No one grew up
here. They come here because you can be homeless here very easily. You can get access to drugs,
free needles, handouts, food, money, checks. And the weather. And the weather. Yeah, you can't be
homeless as easily in, you know, Montana or Wyoming or even Texas. And it's pleasant here all
the time. You can live outdoors year-round. And that's why Santa Monica at the beach now is
basically an open air drug camp. Ocean Avenue, these beautiful hotels are now overrun.
You can't even walk down by the pier really anymore. Yeah, and that's all overflowing.
It's apocalyptic. So Spencer Pratt has another campaign ad on the homelessness crisis.
Let's play it. Sat 18.
Los Angeles losing tens of thousands of residents, one of the biggest population drops in the nation.
Man killed near the L.A. Convention Center. Billions and homeless funds will poorly track.
far more sexy to talk about all these billions of dollars that are missing and blah, blah, blah.
The system in Los Angeles isn't struggling. It's fundamentally broken.
The city failed everyone. The insurance companies failed everyone.
Mothers that want to go to the park that don't want to inhale fentanyl smoke from the 70,000 drug addicts that the mayor currently lets live on our streets.
If you're not shocked by what you see, then I don't know what you would be shocked by.
Just giving you needles and pipes on the street and dropping off a sandwich is not helping these people.
So I think he's getting right to the crux of the issue and he's just nailing it every which way you can think of.
But then the question then becomes peachy. Can he win? Can he actually win? President Trump was asked about this and we'll play that clip.
But your take, can he actually win Los Angeles?
I mean, when he first announced, you know, everyone was like, well, that'd be great.
but obviously L.A. City went, I think, 80% to Kamala, 20% to Trump. So there are a lot of Trump supporters here, but we're so outnumbered. So it's like, how can you win? But Spencer's been doing something really smart. He's playing it totally nonpartisan. And he's making this a local issue. L.A. issues transcend politics. Like left and right don't matter, like at all. It's about quality of life, safety, your family, you know, your ability to just like walk down the street. And so that's very, very,
smart what he's doing. And so yes, I think he can win. Nithia Rahman fell apart in the debate.
We all kind of saw right through her. She's actually, I can't believe I'm saying this, too
progressive for Los Angeles. And then you have this quiet Pratt vote, which you have like, you know,
the sort of like, you know, L.A. wealthy people, the trophy wives of Brentwood, you know,
these are people who love Kamala Harris. They probably voted for Hillary Clinton. They hate Trump.
but they more than that they hate that they have to see a guy with his pants down like taking a crap outside their children's elementary school so it's possible that these women are like and that ad that he did or his friends did the AI like the yoga mom ad of like we're voting for Pratt yeah i think that's absolutely real and now the question is are there enough of them to defeat karen bass's like s i you thug army of ballot harvasters which is why she comes
kind of stole it from Rick Caruso.
Yeah, she did.
Do you think there's, you say L.A. has particular aspects, but do you think there's any lessons
we could draw from Spencer's success beyond just the, you know, doesn't, you know, plays it
nonpartisan for other cities in the U.S. because there are a lot of blue cities that are very
badly run, that people are fleeing, but they're a Democrat.
And we've kind of given up on a lot of them.
And it would be good for conservatives if we can have better governance in our big cities,
because they're America's big cities.
Yeah, it's so sad.
It would be so easy to turn these places around.
I mean, you could clean up the homeless here in like a few weeks.
You just have to have, you just have to literally enforce the law,
just the way Trump suddenly stopped all border crossings.
You just have to enforce the law.
I think it's about candidates.
And Spencer says, like, the perfect kind of candidate that can kind of transcend, you know,
party lines and be really engaging, great on TV, funny, charisma, personality.
it really comes down to finding those kinds of people who don't come across as these like stiff,
you know, politician type people who are just, people just don't want those right now.
They want real people with real lived experience and who aren't these.
And also don't have a background of corruption and failure and high-speed trains to nowhere
who are like fresh and who have like been been actually victimized by these,
by these crazy urban city policies.
And so there are a lot of lessons.
It would be so great because we've seen Mamdami and like Mom Dami,
Little Mum Dommies popping up, like Nithia popping up.
It would be so great to see an army of Spencer Pratt types.
I went to Chicago in New York and all these other cities.
Peachy, so this morning Trump was asked about Spencer Pratt's campaign, Sotate.
Do you see yourself in him at all, a former reality TV star?
No, I'd like to see him do well.
He's a character.
He's doing well.
I don't know.
You have a rigged vote out there.
That's the problem.
The votes are rigged.
Well, and he says in between we cut it, but he says,
I heard he's MAGA. I heard he's really MAGA. He heard he's big support Trump supporter.
Can he win if that becomes the messaging from the left?
It already is. Like Nithy is already calling him you MAGA extremist and he did this like,
ooh, like, you know, scary. Yeah, the meme. Yeah. From the, yeah, from the debate.
And so I think, you know, it depends. You're never going to get the like ideological, the crazy ones,
the blue hairs. You're never going to get them. You could have a homeless person burned there,
like live in their house and burn it down. But I think he,
He absolutely is likely to win.
Whoa, that would be huge.
That would be tectonic.
Peachy Kaden, follow her.
She's amazing.
Thank you, Pici, for making the time.
God bless you.
We'll see you soon.
Thanks, guys.
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All right, we have a special treat for you today.
Dr. Hutz-Hertsburg runs Turning Point Education.
And you are somebody that goes way back with Charlie.
And when we were starting our education initiative,
you were the first guy he thought of,
and you have been leading this charge from the very beginning with us,
turning point education.
And there's so much news that you guys are making.
and I wanted our audience to hear about it because we, and I'll be honest, sometimes I take my after ball on the education front, and we had a couple guests that just really freaked me out about what's going on with these teachers unions, what's going on with the way they spend, and it relit a fire inside of me to refocus on that, and that's why you're here.
So just give us the broad strokes. Why does turning point education exist in the first place?
Well, thank you so much, Andrew. Great to be with you. And Blake,
Yeah, I will tell you because Charlie, as both you guys and the audience knows, was able to see beyond the horizon.
And he was able to see that, you know, as we all know, Charlie started on college campuses.
His last day on this planet was on a college campus.
But Charlie began to see what some of the others of us were beginning to see, and that is the indoctrination of woke ideologies was happening long before students were coming on college campuses.
I remember talking with a professional acquaintance, Dr. George.
Robert George at Princeton University a couple years ago.
And I was actually, I did some work at Princeton.
And I said, Dr. George, what have you noticed different in your then?
It was 39 years.
It's probably more like 41, 42, 43 years now.
So four years ago.
And he said, the thing that I noticed that is different with students today than when
I first came here is that they're already coming indoctrinated.
It used to be they came to Princeton again, indoctrinated.
now they're already getting indoctrinated in high school and junior high.
We would say the indoctrination starts in grade school and even preschool.
So Charlie was seeing that, was seeing that if we're going to get this next generation,
we have to go younger.
And I was beginning to see the same thing in my own life.
I was in Christian higher education, never anything lower than working with a freshman in high school,
or freshman in college.
But I realized the same thing that I needed to go younger.
So I made the intentional decision to go younger,
and I ended up being president of a K-12 school, the northern suburbs of Chicago,
and lo and behold, that was the school that Charlie attended third, fourth, and fifth grade.
And he was gone by the time I got there, but that's how we connected.
And that's how he knew that I existed.
That's how I knew that Charlie existed.
That's, and I love that story.
Charlie would often tell it, you know, when he was introduced.
you on stage and things like that.
So you've got so many initiatives here, though.
You've got the Educators Summit.
We've got Turning Point Education Prep Year.
I know we've got to talk about this education freedom tax credit.
So take it as you will because they're all super important.
And by the way, your speaker list on this, where did I see this?
Right here.
Yeah, this, you've got, I don't even know.
You got George Barna, Al Moeller, John Stone Street, Megan Basham, Riley Gaines,
Congresswoman Mary Miller, Ben Shetler, Ryan Walters, you've got yourself, Belferr, John Amund Chuquo.
I mean, you've just got an all-star cast.
You've got so many confirmed speakers to this Educator Summit.
When is it?
And who in the audience should think about attending?
Yeah, great question.
So this is our fifth annual educator summit already.
We're just a little over four years old and we're already out our fifth Educator Summit, which is great.
This year, suburban Chicago, Lincolnshire, Illinois.
Interesting point of trivia here, Blake, that Lincolnshire was the second turning point headquarters.
Started in Lamont.
Yeah.
And then Lincolnshire was the second before Charlie moved down to Arizona, interestingly.
But we're at the Marriott Lincolnshire Resort and June 16 to 19.
And this is...
June 16 to 19 in Lincolnshire, Illinois.
Correct.
Absolutely.
So who should consider going?
You know, in the years that we've been doing this, which again,
as I said, this is our fifth year.
We have had a great mix of public school teachers and administrators, maybe about a third,
a third Christian school, private school teachers and administrators,
about a third or so, maybe 40% homeschooling parents.
And then we have some other folks.
We have some pastors.
We have some school board members.
We have people that are interested in being education advocates.
So I would say an answer to your question is anybody who's interested in making a difference
in the field of education.
and even more specifically making a difference for the lives of these children that, you know, are currently being indoctrinated if they're in the public government school sector and want to be a voice and help make a difference in the world of education.
So I have spoken with a number of these kind of startup schools.
It's a big community of startup schools in the Arizona and state of Arizona because of the child tax credit that was passed.
So we have full school choice in Arizona.
It's amazing.
If you want to break the back of the teachers union, you break their monopoly on education.
By the way, they're fighting that like crazy, and we're going to get it.
We're going to do some highlight that.
So Arizona has this great school choice, pass it under Governor Ducey, and now they're trying,
they got all these ballot referendums and things like this to claw back power over students' education.
And it's a total disaster.
It's perfect the way it is right now.
And they need to get their hands out of the cookie.
jar. They want their money back because there's money per pupil in most states. All right. So that's one
thing. Okay. Now you've got this prep year, turning point education prep year. Who should be
who needs to hear about this and what is it? Well, prep year is one of our major initiatives.
And it's our newest initiative. We have five major things that we're doing, Andrew. One is we're
starting schools across the country. The second is the educator summit that we've just talked about.
And by the way, any of your listeners, viewers today, if they're interested, they can go to our website, turningpointED.com. It's all one word turning point ed.com. And if they enter the code CK Show, they get a 30% discount off of the price of. No kidding. I didn't even know they were doing that.
Okay. TurningpointED.com. Yep. And then what's the code again? It's CK Show. And they get 30% off a prep year. Wow.
30% off of the Educator Summit. Oh, Educator Summit. Okay, I'm so sorry. Okay, great.
Yeah, the prep year, that's a deal in itself. But I just wanted to mention that because
No, I'm glad you did. The price is already unbelievably cheap. It's $50, so it's 30% off of $50.
Okay, perfect. And so that would be a great opportunity to take advantage of all these wonderful
speakers that you mentioned. And that includes meals, programming costs. And the hotel rooms are already
greatly reduced.
We've got them in a block, yeah.
Yep. So prep year, though, that is one of our major initiatives. We're excited about it. We launched this past year down in Fort Worth, Texas.
Interestingly, from here, I'm literally leaving here and I'm flying down to Fort Worth, Texas for graduation.
We've had these students for nine months. It's been a wonderful nine months in this kind of pilot launch.
And basically what it is, is post-high school prior to going on to the next stage of life.
So many students today, unlike when I graduated from high school, everybody wants to be.
went to college. But today kids are actually asking the question, why should I go to college?
You have my own daughter, who's 16, saying, you know, I'm not sure I'm going to go to college.
Why should I go to college? I think it's healthy that students are actually asking that question.
And of course, Charlie was leading the charge about, you know, college being a rip-off in the scam.
College scam, they've got the book back here somewhere.
Right, right. And so I know that his influence was huge and, you know, with these students.
But we thought, and I went to Charlie, I said, Charlie, you're always talking about kids not going to college.
I understand we're an agreement on that.
But let's design a program that will prepare them for life irrespective of whether they go on to college
or go into the military, the trades, the arts, entrepreneurship, become a homemaker.
So we designed a nine-month intensive leadership development program where we studied the great book,
which of course is the Bible, the great books of Western civilization.
Blake, you would appreciate that.
The great documents of our country with great speakers and mentors and experiences that we give these kids.
It's an incredible experience.
And you also say immersive skill-based experiences, too.
Yes, because we want to give them practical skills that are going to serve in the rest of life.
So we teach them personal finance.
We teach them firearms training.
We teach them how to cook.
But those are things in the afternoon.
Make no mistake, it is a hardcore academic program, but it's also very practically oriented.
Blake, you had a question.
Well, I was thinking you mentioned great books.
Do you have some good examples?
What are some of the highlights of that?
Well, you know, the great Western classics that you would study, you know, the philosophers, you know, Aristotle, Plato's Republic, you know, Descartes, some of those, those works. And then other great works of literature, some of Shakespeare and others that are regarded as really core Western literature. And of course, we can't do it all. But, you know, so many of the kids coming out to, they have no training in biblical worldview. They have no understanding of classical Western classical literature at all. They don't get that. They get social studies.
I just as an anecdote.
So I have a friend who is still in Hanover where I went to school at Dartmouth.
This is an Ivy League school.
And he says kids, they come in.
They're really fried.
AI, he says, has made things really bad.
So, for example, you at least used to have to think up questions to ask, even if you hadn't read the book.
Now they ask AI to generate the questions for them because they can't even handle that level of thought.
Just tell me what to ask about this in class.
If you want to be humbled, and I'd actually be curious how you'd do, Blake, because you're
probably one of the few I know that would do fairly well.
But like if you want to be humbled, go check out like Oxford.
Their freshman initiation like essays questions from like 1900.
Yeah.
And the level of understanding of our classical literature, the classical canon of the Western civilization was just tremendous.
I mean, it blew me away.
It would blow me away every time.
But we've really lost.
We've really lost something.
All right.
So you got this big print out here, Dr.
Herdsberg here, Dr. Hutz-Hertsburg, TPPUS, turning point education about the education
freedom tax credit. Why are you, why did you print this out? What do you want to tell people about it?
Well, let me just say, first of all, there is so much happening in the world of education.
I mean, we could talk, we had time about the education department being closed.
That's big news. That's major, major department of education that is going away.
We could talk about the terrible test scores that we see almost every week with the research
is coming out. But maybe the most exciting thing is something that was a part of President Trump's
big, beautiful bill that's called the Education Freedom Tax Credit. You alluded to what's happening
in Arizona. Arizona has been a model to other states across the country in terms of education
tax freedom, education credit freedom, vouchers, ESAs. It's amazing. It is amazing.
It's somebody who just moved here, and I'm telling you, you get 7,000, 7,800, 7,500,
dollars per pupil. So your student, and so what a lot of the schools do is they'll say,
well, it's one to one to send your student to this school. It's $7,500 a year or $8,500. So they
supplement massively the cost. And you get all these classical schools popping up, these
Christian schools popping up. And these are business people that decide to start a school,
and then they bring in all these educators. And it's, I'm telling you, it's a really amazing
culture that's being cultivated here. You know, and so many states across the country, you know,
look at that and just drool. I mean, people in the states, not necessarily, the state governors,
our state where we're located, which is in Illinois. I mean, we don't even have a crumb that is
anything close to this at all in our state. But I say all that just to say that in some ways,
because of the education freedom tax credit, it's going to be somewhat moot, but not completely,
because this is a great start. It's not the whole enchilada, but we're so thankful that in the
big, beautiful bill, President Trump included a provision.
It's called the Education Freedom Tax Credit, and it's a dollar-to-dollar tax credit.
So you can give up to $1,700, designate that to a designated scholarship granting organization.
They're called SGOs, and we've already identified one with turning point that we're going to be working with with our schools and parents.
And these parents can make a gift through the SGO to directly benefit their child, their school, and it's not just for tuition.
It can be for technology, it can be for books, it can be for support.
So if I have a student and I want to send my child to a private school, I can go on to Turning Point education website, turning point ed.com.
And maybe not now, but you'll have an SGO there that you can work with.
They'll send the money to your kid's school.
So that could help with tuition.
100%.
Okay.
100%.
And actually, and just to give the name of the SGO, is A-S scholarship out of Denver, Colorado.
We're very excited to be working with them.
They share.
They're amazing.
We share their values.
Yeah.
And they totally get what we're doing.
We get what they're doing.
But here's the tragic part.
Again, half the states, you know, have not opted.
I think there's actually 31 that have opted into this.
And then there's a few that are waffling.
But states like Illinois, and you alluded to this earlier, Andrew, the teacher unions hold such sway over these states.
I loathe the teacher's unions.
And so the best sign, by the way, that that education tax credit is, you know,
it is amazing is it just drives the teachers unions berserk they constantly are trying to get rid of
this i know i know there's trying to get something on the ballot right now to in arizona in arizona
they have two different two different they're both they're both and they're both terrible ones less
terrible but they're both terrible yeah yeah so again this this is now at the national level
like arizona had been the bellwether the lead on this but other in other states now have had
their own version about 25 26 states have some kind of form of tax credit vouchers now 31 states
as of just a couple days ago, I've opted into President Trump's education tax freedom credit.
The state has to opt in.
But here's the part that people don't understand.
Even though we live in Illinois and our governor has not opted in, and he says still considering it,
the only reason he'll opt in is because he just will get too much pressure.
But we can still take advantage of the tax credit, but that money is going to leave the state of Illinois.
So you've got hundreds, thousands of families that want to.
to take advantage to this dollar to dollar tax credit. They go through the SGO, but their own school
in our state can't benefit from it. In other words, their child's school, our child's school
will not be able to benefit, but I can benefit a school in Arizona and, you know, whatever
other state is participating in the program. So if you have like grandparents watching this right
now, they could take advantage of this to help us one of their grandkids in another state.
That's exactly. Do we have a list of the states that have opted in?
in our website. Can we get something like that?
I'm sure we can get it. It's known. It's 31 states.
Which states have. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Do you have a Republican governor or not?
Yeah, that's exactly right. Now, there is a couple Democratic ones. One that was a little
bit surprising is the governor of Colorado has opted in.
Paulus. Yeah. And there's reasons why he's doing that. But we hope eventually that the
pressure will be so great that all the states will opt in. Because, again, the governor,
the schools are losing money.
Yeah, well, it's insane.
I mean, can you imagine turning down money just because you're so beholden to the teachers unions?
I'm telling you, the teachers union, we've got to break the back of the teachers' unions.
They're ruining so much.
It's like teachers union, feminism, mass migration.
It's like there's like a top five things that are ruining the country, and it's one of them.
Dr. Hutz, thank you so much for coming on.
Great work that you're doing at Turning Point Education.
Let's keep going.
Thank you so much.
Appreciate it.
Thank you.
For more on many of these stories.
and news you can trust. Go to charliekirk.com.
