The Charlie Kirk Show - The Mideast Gas Fire + The NYC Dumpster Fire

Episode Date: March 19, 2026

Israeli strikes on Iranian gas led to an Iranian strike on Qatar, and even President Trump is signaling it wasn't supposed to happen. Eric Bolling breaks down the impact on the global economy. Lydia M...oynihan talks about the many small scandals consuming Zohran Mamdani's terrorist-supporting wife. Alex Marlow digests Joe Kent's claims about Israel and Charlie on Tucker Carlson.   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.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:03 My name is Charlie Kirk. I run the largest pro-American student organization in the country fighting for the future of our republic. My call is to fight evil and to proclaim truth. If the most important thing for you is just feeling good, you're going to end up miserable. But if the most important thing is doing good, you will end up purposeful. College is a scam, everybody. You've got to stop sending your kids to college. You should get married as young as possible and have as many kids as possible. Go start a turning point USA College Chapter. Go start a turning point you would say high school chapter.
Starting point is 00:00:35 Go find out how your church can get involved. Sign up and become an activist. I gave my life to the Lord in fifth grade. Most important decision I ever made in my life. And I encourage you to do the same. Here I am. Lord, use me. Buckle up, everybody.
Starting point is 00:00:49 Here we go. The Charlie Kirk Show is proudly sponsored by Preserve Gold, the leading gold and silver experts, and the only precious metals company I recommend to my family, friends, and viewers. All right, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show. It's March 19th, 2026. We've got to get right into this
Starting point is 00:01:15 because the breaking news story over the evening was about a place I'd never heard of called South Pars Gas Field in Iran. And here to help make some sense of it right at the top is going to be Eric Bowling, who is an expert when it comes to these types of things. Welcome to the show, Eric. Hey, thanks, Andrew. Hey, Blake. What's going on, guys?
Starting point is 00:01:34 So let me just read. read part of Trump's truth, and we're going to get your analysis on this. So he says, Israel out of anger for what has taken place in the Middle East, has violently lashed out at a major facility known as South Pars gas field in Iran. A relatively small section of the hole has been hit. The United States knew nothing about this particular attack, and the country of Qatar, Qatar, was in no way, shape, or form involved with it, nor did it have any idea that it was going to happen. All right. So this has now been. I would say contradicted by Israeli officials that says actually the U.S. did know about it.
Starting point is 00:02:13 And there's a little bit of back and forth on that. We're not sure what to make of this at this point. I'm loath to call President Trump a liar. So something's going on here, Eric. Do you have any insight as to what the true story here is? Well, Andrew, I've been doing this for nearly 40 years. The oil, I've been through Gulf Wars. I've been through massive geopolitical stresses in the Middle East.
Starting point is 00:02:34 and it involves in producing country or countries in the Middle East, oil is always going to be at the center of it. I'm positive. I know Pete Hex said very well. I'm positive. Trump knew that any sort of attack on sort of Iranian oil infrastructure would cause prices here in the United States to spike even further. Any attack in the Middle East is going to do it. But when you hit the oil in infrastructure, it's a big mistake. I doubt Trump would have sanctioned hitting an oil infrastructure. Iran. In fact, Besson today came out and said, look, we may even allow Iranian ships to navigate the Strait of Hormuz. Now, look, this is, you know, a couple of days after the fact. However, the price shock that's happening is because you're talking about Iranian oil. Iranian has produced three million barrels of oil, and that what they did in response to the Iran to the Israeli taxes, they started hitting other Gulf State oil platforms, refineries, et cetera, and they, and they
Starting point is 00:03:34 This is all leading to the nervousness, the jitteriness of the energy markets. Driving prices up, we're going to hit $4 a gallon probably over the weekend. We may go to $5. If this continues, we could actually go to $5 a gallon. Trump, he's a good businessman, but also he's a good economist in his mind. I think he probably saw the effect of hitting those oil infrastructures in Iran was a bad idea. And I tell you what happened just hours ago, Iran turned around and either targeted, certainly hit the Israeli. Reilly Refinery, the biggest refinery in Israel as a retaliatory measure. Now, they're saying it may be shrapnel, but who knows, if they may have missed, then shrapnel hit the refiner.
Starting point is 00:04:15 But the refinery shut in right now. So once you start playing around infrastructure, all bets are off on how oil prices could go. Yeah. Well, so let's get Pete Heggseth. He was asked about it this morning, SOT 17. So with the strike yesterday on South Pars, Gasfield, you know, if the U.S. didn't know about it or didn't approve of it, It kind of seems like a trend of Israel apparently pursuing their own objectives over U.S. objectives. Why are we helping Israel prosecute this war if they're going to pursue their own objectives?
Starting point is 00:04:46 We hold the cards. We have objectives. Those objectives are clear. We have allies pursuing objectives as well. And the truth speaks for itself. I mean, President Trump was very clear about that. Iran has weaponized energy for decades. Israel clearly sent a warning. And POTUS has made it. made it clear, very clear. Iran knows when you hit Carg Island and you hit military capabilities on Carg Island, which is the only thing we hit, we can hold anything at issue, anything. The United States military controls the fate of that country. So what he's saying is we clearly have Israeli objectives. Our allies have objectives. The U.S. has other objectives. But the bottom line here is, Eric, it's causing this really, I think,
Starting point is 00:05:34 strange oil market. And this is really where you bring a lot of expertise here. Go up, go ahead and throw up. It looks like we're having the emergence of essentially three different, three distinct oil markets, Asia through Oman and Dubai, Europe, Brent, and U.S., West Texas, right? WTI. Correct. What the heck is happening and why this huge price gap between the different oil? That's simply a fine. So look at oil, kind of look at the world global oil. reserves, we use about 100 million barrels a day globally, all countries included. The difference in the price between those three, and by the way, there's probably 50 grades of crude oil, but the three main benchmark, they call them the benchmarks as all prices are determined based on
Starting point is 00:06:23 those, well, I would say to Brent and WTI. West Texas Intermediate, that's the oil we produce. We produce 13 million the day. We use 20 million. We have a gap. We have to, port oil from Canada, China, not China, Canada, Mexico, and others. The Brent is higher, and Andrew, I've done this a long time. For the past 15 years, the difference between Brent oil, it's always higher because of location and transportation, because it's produced way up north and the North Sea in order to bring it down. There's transportation costs.
Starting point is 00:06:55 But the difference has always been $5 at the maximum, one or $2 at the minimum. They run very close in price. now it's 16, 17, and could be pushing $18 a barrel difference, and that's because getting that oil from the North Sea through certain areas of Europe is having a very hard time getting enough oil. China is as well, but they have deals with Russia and whatnot,
Starting point is 00:07:19 but Europe is going to be very, very sensitive to price shock, gasoline price shocks for sure. They're equivalent of a gallon. They use leaders, but over there are equivalent. They're probably going to hit $10 a gallon of gasoline before probably within the next couple of weeks. So, Eric, I think a lot of people have noted, okay, the prices are surging more in other places compared to the U.S.,
Starting point is 00:07:42 and I've seen some people present this as that means it's no big deal for us, but maybe give us a sense. My feeling is that if we have a giant energy spike everywhere outside the U.S., even if we're self-sufficient in our own energy, that's going to have pretty severe ramifications for our own country and our own economy, correct? 100%. We are absolutely sensitive to the price of Brent oil going up, even though it's going up a little bit more. It is up.
Starting point is 00:08:10 So before the conflict, I would say a week before we hit Iran, oil was $65 a barrel. The day before we hit Iran, it was $67 a barrel the day afterwards. The week after one Friday after, we hit them on Saturday by Friday was $76 a barrel. It's going to hit $100 a barrel before the end of this. week. So we are very, very sensitive. Even though we're not as sensitive to the bread price, we're still, it brings all, here's why only very quickly, I know you've got to go, but because if you, at some point, if you're running Brent oil and it's too expensive, you can retool your refinery to use WTI if it makes sense to transport it at a cheaper rate. So we've got, you know,
Starting point is 00:08:56 a news that was breaking this morning that it looks like Japan, who, by the way, the Prime Minister of Japan is meeting with President Trump, the White House. Currently, Japan, the Netherlands, Germany, France, Italy, Great Britain. They're all going to start working with us. It looks like a bit of about-face to help clear the Strait of Hormuz. Is that going to fix the problem, or are we still looking at inflationary upward pressure from this oil spike? Yeah, so $4 is baked in the cake. 4.50s probably baked in the cake, already maybe five.
Starting point is 00:09:28 And by the way, we haven't entered the Strait of Hormuz, our Navy, hasn't yet because it's not safe. Iranians have a lot of tools. They can lob missiles from the shore. Look at that shoreline, top of that map right there. That is all Iranian shoreline. They can shoot missiles from anywhere. They've also said that they can mine the Gulf. Trump says there's no mines in the Gulf, but I've seen a confirmed video of Iranian submersible drones that are mines,
Starting point is 00:09:54 and that they can remotely control from, from, from, you know, land and there's hundreds of them that they haven't put in the water yet, which they could still do. Iran's in an existential threat right now. They're literally looking at the possibly end of Iran as anyone's known it, and they probably feel that way in the inside right now. They're liable to do anything. And what they're doing right now is attacking other Gulf countries petrochemical production. They hit Saudi Aramco's refinery. That Saudi Ramcoe, one of the biggest refineries in the Middle East is shut in. Kuwaitis, in a refinery. They've hit Bahrain production. You just mentioned a gas field in Iran being
Starting point is 00:10:34 hit by the Israelis. This is massive, massive oil disruption. I had a captain on my show yesterday, and not even a captain. He owned the shipping company. Has 15 ships going through the Strait of Hormuz. And I said, Captain, have you put one through? He said, no. I said, why not? He said, too dangerous. I said, okay, Trump administration has come up with a $20 billion lawyers of London insurance policies. Does that change the thing? I knew what his answer was going to be. Does that change the thing? I knew what his answer was going to be. Does that change anything? He said, no. I said, why?
Starting point is 00:11:00 And he said, because I'm, no one I know, nor would I ever send a crew through the Strait of Hormuz just because there's insurance in case they get blown to Smithoranes. It's not safe. And if the Iranians, all they have to do is threaten or show one or two minds, you don't know where they're going to be. There's not going to be a lot of confidence in navigating that goal. I personally think we should put our boot on Iranians' neck, go into every industry. they have. It's going to be collateral damage. It's going to be really bad for the Iranian people.
Starting point is 00:11:31 Take out their media. Take out all their infrastructure. Take out their highways. Get them to the point where they submit and they say, we'll cut a deal with you for oil. And what I would say was I would send our oil companies in, our major oil companies in and bring their production up. They're doing less than half of what they could possibly do, potentially do. We bring that oil price, their oil volume up and we take that oil at the market price. Iran stays whole. We get oil independence in perpetuity. But wouldn't that just strengthen the regime, sorry to cut you off there, Eric. Wouldn't that just strengthen the regime's hand if there's hope that they're going to topple?
Starting point is 00:12:09 There's a press conference going on right now in the White House. And, you know, Scott Besson is saying that the regime is already wiring money all over the world. Treasury's on top of it. They're going to seize the money. They're still, the Trump administration is still signaling that this regime's about to collapse, Eric. They may be on their heels, Andrew.
Starting point is 00:12:29 I find it hard to believe that they're about to collapse. I mean, they still have a lot of fight left in them, even if it's fight to the death, which they will do at this point because this is their existential threat. They're not going to just decide we're going to roll over. I believe you kind of deal with them, an international legal deal with them where they can't ever back out of it, and we are energy independent forever. I mean, are we really in the business of me? making sure countries aren't nuclear weaponized.
Starting point is 00:12:59 I mean, North Korea has become under Clinton. How about Pakistan? Are we going to go take out Pakistan because they have nukes? I mean, it's a fool's game. This is over oil. This isn't over regimes or nukes. This is about oil. Eric, just the natural question that follows up then is maybe how much time?
Starting point is 00:13:20 Like you've mentioned, obviously, there's a lot of economic pressure coming from this. What sort of timeline are we looking at for economic issues escalating where we need to start taking, you know, how long do we have before we really need to get this wrapped up, do you think? It's acute right now. Like right now we're on a path to higher prices, oil prices, gasoline prices. It didn't matter if it's all clear decided today, we're still going to see substantially higher prices going forward. All these Gulf countries that are major producers of energy have shut their production and some of them are damaged, some of them have, have shown. shutdown systems that could take 30, 45 days to get retooled, get running again to full capacity, that energy, those hydrocarbons off the oil market will keep prices higher.
Starting point is 00:14:07 Will they stay at $100 a barrel? Maybe not, but they could stay at $90, $85. $85 a barrel turns into about like $350 a gallon gasoline. That is just way, way too high when it should be in the 50s. Trump had it almost near 50. Think about this for one second. I'm skeptical enough to believe that all Saudis, Baranis, Omani's, all the Iraqis, they're all kind of saying, hey, Trump, go ahead, we got you, we support you.
Starting point is 00:14:38 But the reality is they like a $100 print on the oil market. They love that. They actually need that. So they're going to be no rush to ramp up production because the minute they start ramping up, prices come down. So they will slow walk that on the way down. So I think we're in, I think we're in dire straits already, Blake, and just how, how bad it gets is, is kind of up to the policymakers in D.C. Eric, what are we looking at in terms of inflation? You know, the, they held the rate again, steady. What are, what, what are you seeing coming down the pike?
Starting point is 00:15:13 Yeah, we're at 3%, which is a little bit elevated right now, and higher than we had been for the second half of 2025, I think four or four or four and five percent, given this, if it lasts another month, six percent, oil is tied to every single product that we use. Andrew, you just sipped a cup. There's oil, there's a petroleum input somehow in there as well. It's in almost every single toilet paper. There's petroleum in toilet paper. Don't forget, anything you produce and one part of the country, bring it to the other part, you got to transport it and you do it with rail or truck. That's diesel fuel right there. Eric Bowling, time is of the essence.
Starting point is 00:15:54 You made the case for urgency. Thanks, Eric. We'll talk to you soon. Thank you, guys. Thank you guys. Appreciate it. You know, we spend a lot of time on this show talking about culture, about why strong families matter, why values matter, why faith matters. But here's something practical. If you actually want to build a strong family someday, you have to start by meeting someone who shares those same values and convictions.
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Starting point is 00:17:40 and I'll play a clip here. Well, let's not actually skip it. Basically, he's under investigation for leaking classified documents. The investigation is being led by the FBI, and apparently the investigation started before his resignation. What do you know, John Solomon? Yeah, that is an accurate description of what we know. Several months ago, the FBI began examining a potential leak of information and technology that they believe is connected to Joe Kent or his office.
Starting point is 00:18:11 That has been ongoing. It is nearing a resolution. And it's in that period of time when it's nearing a resolution. Often when you get to this point, you get a notification that you're either a subject or a target of the investigation. Target means you're about to be indicted. Subject means your behavior is being examined. It's usually around the time of resolution that you get those notifications.
Starting point is 00:18:31 We don't know if that happened, but we are told that the decision on whether charges are to be brought is going to happen soon. This does go back until last year, late in 2025, is when the investigation allegedly began. And then all of a sudden on Monday, he dropped that bombshell of a letter. And, you know, again, when you look at the whole of Joe Kent, no matter what happens in this outcome, he's a man who was deployed 11 times to combat zone in Iraq and Afghanistan. He's an American hero for doing that. He lost his wife to a combat attack. She also was an American patriot and lost. That part of his career stays intact. But if you go into the civilian side and you're trusted with
Starting point is 00:19:12 intelligence and you don't handle it properly, there are going to be consequences, particularly in this administration, which is very serious about prosecuting links. And so we'll have to wait and see what the evidence is. But there was an investigation ongoing before he ever released his letter expressing his dissent for the Iran operation. Yeah, Tulsi was asked about this. D&I, Tulsi Gabbard, SOT 27. Do you agree or disagree with what this letter was put out by former director Kent. He said a lot of things in that letter. Ultimately, we have provided the president with the intelligence assessments, and the president is elected by the American people and makes
Starting point is 00:19:54 his own decisions based on the information that's available to him. But do you agree with, does that statement he made blaming Israel concern you? Yes. So that was a pretty significant moment there, John Solomon. Because a lot of people link DNI TOLSI Gabbard with Joe Kent, thinking that they are ideologically in lockstep. That was a break right there. Yeah, that was a very significant moment. Now, I would have preferred if they followed up saying you're concerned
Starting point is 00:20:21 because you agree with his assessment on Israel, you're concerned that he made it. There's some ambiguity about what yes meant. But I think we generally have a sense of where Tulsi Gabbard stands based on the last 48 hours of testimony. She has not endorsed the president's decision. She puts it at his doorstep. And yesterday, when given the opportunity to, I think, coherently and cohesively describe the
Starting point is 00:20:44 intelligence of what led the president, I don't think she did a very good job. I think Pete Hagseth and General Kane this morning in their briefing did a much better job describing the threat and what would lead a president to believe that there was an imminent threat from Iran. These are the things that we wrote about this morning, all of it an open source intelligence, but they're pretty serious things. In January, the United States government discovered three Revolutionary Guard members on Arsula. And I will tell you that Revolutionary Guard members from Iran don't come here for winter vacation.
Starting point is 00:21:16 They were sent here for a mission. They were forcibly deported very quickly. Then we learned that Iran had secured a half billion dollars of Stinger missiles from Russia. These are shoulder-fired missiles capable of taking down a civilian or military aircraft, a capability that Iran traditionally has not had. Then we learned that they were trying to get, and we're at the final stages of negotiation, and acquiring a hypersonic missile from China that would be able to reach much further American assets outside the immediate Middle East theater, the immediate Persian Gulf.
Starting point is 00:21:51 And by the way, hypersonics, we don't have a great defense system against us. Those components, along with the fact that Iran admits itself, it tried to reconstitute its nuclear program as soon as the Midnight Hammer was launched last summer, were the components that drove the president to decide that American assets were increasing risk and to do that. It isn't some magical spell that B.B. Netanyahu has over the president. Anyone who knows the president knows he makes his mind up on his own, often to the shock of some people, not ready for what he's about to do. Well, John, I mean, you know, to be fair to Tulsi, you could look at the same intel here and come up with different conclusions.
Starting point is 00:22:31 I don't think it's any shocker that maybe Tulsi is, less interventionist than some within the admin. Yeah, no, I agree. Yeah. So, so, so, her job wasn't to, what I would say is when you serve a president, your job isn't to express your own political opinion or try to give yourself. Your job is to tell the committee what data points did the president have to make decision. Listen, I think it's perfectly great in America to disagree with the decision your president makes. That's our lawful right to do it. It wasn't easy to do under the Biden years. They tried to suppress us lots of times. But in the Trump era, no one's going to stop you from expressing your opinion.
Starting point is 00:23:06 But her job as the intelligence chief was to give the data points, and there are data points. You can disagree whether that constitutes an imminent threat. But the opportunity yesterday was to give those data points. We were able to give those data points. I don't think she did as good a job as she could. And I think there was a little bit of virtue signaling going on. I've covered scores of these hearings over my career. I have never seen an intelligence chief that couldn't put the intelligence in front of the Congress.
Starting point is 00:23:32 She could even say she disagreed with it, but she should have at least told us what the intelligence was. We now have those data points, but I think it would have been helpful for people to know what the data was. Yeah, fair enough. Let's change our focus here. There is, so one of these storylines is this China interfering in our elections. Tell us what you've uncovered in your reporting, John. First, we need to remind people because they probably didn't get a lot of coverage here. But two years ago, Great Britain was thrust into national crisis when it was learned that China had. hacked into parts of their election voter registration database, just people how they register their data because it does have your driver's license, your social security number or other personal
Starting point is 00:24:12 identifying. Great Britain was enormously alarmed. People were fired. There were big hearings and blue ribbon commissions. New election security provisions were done. And by the way, the Biden administration expressed enormous alarm that this happened to Great Britain. And they even indicted some of the hackers from China that did this to China, or did this. to Great Britain. Here's the dirty secret that the Biden administration and the U.S. Intelligence Committee knew when they were expressing outrage of what happened in Great Britain. It happened here all the way back to 2020. But it was kept a secret from the American public, from the Congress, and it appears from the statements of an intelligence community, Ombudsman, a civilian that's
Starting point is 00:24:51 supposed to protect our interests in the intelligence community. Because the ombudsman said that the intelligence community, the CIA and others, decided to keep this information from the president, the public, and the Congress because they didn't like President Trump and his policies. They actually used pejorative turns to describe the commander-in-chief in their own private emails. And they made a decision to put their personal politics ahead of their country and their commander-in-chiefs need to know, and they just didn't let the country know. So America and Great Britain suffered the same crisis. Americans were kept in the dark.
Starting point is 00:25:25 Great Britain reacted with great alarm. I think that's a very... We have to get to the bottom of this politicization of these intelligence agencies. We talk about in the context of Russia collusion and the fake scandal there, but when you start depriving a president or the intelligence committees of actionable intelligence, you're moving to a point of harming national interest. And that is what the Ombudsman in the Biden era decided to allege in a document that we made public this week. So it then kind of goes to Fulton County, right?
Starting point is 00:25:57 So again, D&I, Tulsi Gabbard's testifying before the Senate and then say the House. And she obviously was photographed at that Fulton County raid. What do we know about her presence there specifically? I don't think the criminal case here ties to this China stuff. I think the criminal case here ties to the fact that if you're an election administrator in Georgia or Maricopa County in Arizona, where we also have some investigation grant, and you don't follow your state laws, you don't create equal protection. for your voters, it becomes a federal crime. And so the FBI's interest in Georgia and in Arizona was simply to signal that they may prosecute local election administrators because they didn't follow their law.
Starting point is 00:26:41 They created exemptions or didn't do things the way the law in their state required, and that becomes a federal offense if it's intentional. I think that's all. I don't know why she showed up. I know of no reason she needed to be there other than maybe the president asked her to show up is what I've been told. That's fine. What we do know is that Tulsi Gabbard has known about this Chinese election intelligence for about eight months and only recently began moving in a direction of declassifying it under pressure from just the news. We've been asking daily for about seven weeks now for Tulsi Gabbard to make this available.
Starting point is 00:27:14 The first documents we got were not declassified by Tulsi Gabbard. They were declassified by Avril Haynes, her predecessor in the Biden administration. The Biden administration and former Biden administration officials were much more willing to talk about. about how shocked they were that Trump knew or Trump people knew about this Chinese infiltration and didn't act on it back then. They were glad to throw some shade on that. But this is a serious matter because the second you know that China got voter registration data, what we learned a few months ago from our reporting about what the FBI learned becomes more important.
Starting point is 00:27:47 All right, voter data is accessed by Chinese intelligence. Then China sends driver's licenses to Chicago O'Hare report, and the FBI's Chinese intelligence sources tell them it was an effort to send those licenses here so someone could file fake ballot requests and vote and stuff the ballot box for Joe Biden. That's what the FBI documents. So we're starting to see a continuum. That doesn't mean that anything ultimately happened, but it was a more organized effort than we were led to believe. And the reason we were not given this information was a political decision by some biased intelligence analysts. That should concern us all. Yeah, that is concerning. I mean, I think Tulsi Gabbard is a star.
Starting point is 00:28:29 Yeah. I trust her motivations here or, you know, her political calculations, but I think you're absolutely right. The American people have an interest in knowing as much as we possibly can about election integrity. John Solomon, just the news. I think she could be a star next week if she declassifies them. Yeah. Well, amen. All right, thanks, John. The online world moves fast and it's moving even faster these days. That's why TikTok approaches teen safety with families in mind from the start. Because discovery and creativity are both wonderful things, but it's important to make sure that safety comes first as well.
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Starting point is 00:30:09 Today we are launching and opening a new office, a new field office in Nevada. Right. So turning point action. You see the beautiful logo there. Our field office is now. open in the state of Nevada. Why is this important? Because we are building what we call the red wall. Everybody knows about the blue wall. It's Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin. It's those three pesky states that Democrats have held for election cycle after election cycle until 2016 and 2024 when we took it back. But we can take those states off the electoral map in a sense if we win Arizona, which we are massively active in. If we win New Hampshire, which we're massively active in,
Starting point is 00:30:54 which a lot of people don't realize has more registered Republicans than Democrats. You've got to win the Indies in that state. That's the key. But still, there's more Republicans than Democrats in New Hampshire. And then, of course, Nevada, which we took back. And notably, there's more Republicans registered now in Nevada for the first time in many decades, actually. probably about 20 years. Democrats have had the registration advantage in Nevada.
Starting point is 00:31:19 That has now flipped. Republicans now have a small, small advantage. So this is key. So we're hiring now hundreds of staffers in these three states, hundreds and hundreds in each state, and we're combining those with a bunch of thousands of volunteers. So in 2024, we had thousands of volunteers that would come in, link hands with the paid staff,
Starting point is 00:31:42 the ballot chasers on the ground, and we created a machine. We know the machine works. Why? Because we borrowed a lot of the best practices from the left that had a two-decade head start on us in this arena. And so now we're taking ground, we're catching up, we're building the army that will deliver these three states for 2026 and hopefully 2028 and build that red wall. Blake, you are a master of history. For those who don't understand the significance of the blue wall, and maybe they're not aware of the population shifts to the sunbelt. Explain why this is important.
Starting point is 00:32:18 Yeah, I mean, so basically, a lot of blue states have been run badly for a long time. And so that's the first thing you want to start with is we've got these people have been fleeing from, and also just deindustrialization. So deindustrialization, a lot of other factors. They've driven people out of Illinois. They've driven people out of New York. But they've also driven people out of Minnesota, Wisconsin. Pennsylvania, Michigan. All of these states have either lost people or they've slowed to a
Starting point is 00:32:47 relative crawl. They're not where immigrants move as much. They're not where Americans move to seek opportunity. They've moved, frankly, heavily to mostly Republican-controlled states, Florida, Arizona, historically, Texas, and every 10 years, we have that census. It redraws the lines. It reallocates electoral votes. And, you know, back in 1960, when Kennedy won, the biggest state was New York, it had almost 50 electoral votes. It's now only in the 20s, I believe, for how many electoral votes it has. And so the Democrats used to be able to rely on, oh, if we can just win Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan, Pennsylvania, it's very, very hard for us to lose an election. But we're getting to the point where even if they win all those states, and as we've seen
Starting point is 00:33:30 with President Trump, they don't always win them, even if they win all of those states, they're still not going to be able to win unless they can snag these Sunbelt states. Now, as we all know, kind of californication is a problem that those states used to be rock, solid red. They are a lot of them now more purple. Nevada used to vote very consistently Republican. Arizona voted Republican for basically a half century straight. They've gotten more purple. The Democrat plan is flip them.
Starting point is 00:33:59 And our job is step in there, stop any of that sliding, make them rock solid red, you know, make them kind of like Florida, where Florida was trending blue, and we flipped it back. the other way. Just Jack Posobic sending us a note right now. He says, I'm in New Hampshire. Trump signs all over. So that's telling. And people don't realize New Hampshire is kind of like this beacon, this red dot in the New England area, where they tend to have a lot of conservatives at the state level. For whatever reason, they're sending Democrats at the federal level. So we want to stop that. And the ROI in New Hampshire is just the potential ROI is really, really favorable for us. If we spend a relatively small amount, we can get a relatively large impact there. But this is a massive, massive day on the calendar for us, having a field office in Nevada.
Starting point is 00:34:50 And to Blake's point, how do we do this? We target low propensity conservative leaning voters, right? These are people that maybe don't show up all the time, but we need them to show up. And it's going to be an even greater challenge without President Trump on the ballot. So President Trump is one of those polarizing. political figures who just happens to draw out the Democrats. They come out to the polls to resist him, and he draws out a lot of low propensity conservative voters as well. Our challenge in 2026 is how do we get these people to the ballot box to keep these seats red, to keep the Republicans in office? And that's going to be our challenge. And that's why putting a field office in a place like Nevada is such a big, big milestone. So while all this noise and all this distractions going on,
Starting point is 00:35:36 and you got feuding people and podcast wars, whatever. We are doing the quiet work building to make sure that those low prop, conservative, right-leaning voters, get out to the polls. How do we do that? It's a fusion of relational organizing, data-driven, live data updates every day when we touch pace with somebody. We put a note. We learn more about them.
Starting point is 00:35:59 And then we build a relationship. And we follow up with them. We tell them when the deadlines are. We tell them how to get their ballot in. And every state has different rules, and we follow the rules of each different state. But this is the way that you actually win elections. This is the hard on-the-ground work that we're actually doing. So if you want to get involved, go to tpaction.com.
Starting point is 00:36:21 T.paction.com. Tyler and the team are doing an amazing job. There's going to be a whole opening ceremony there in Las Vegas, Nevada today. So please get involved. Check it out if you want to volunteer. If you want to apply for a job, we are hiring like crazy. So a big hat tip to the team there. Show the picture one more time, guys.
Starting point is 00:36:39 Yeah, I mean, it's just I really want to drive that home. It's always what set Charlie apart. There's a lot of people offering takes about politics. There's a lot of people trying to provide ideological vision. Charlie did all of that, but he also always stepped up for the hard work, kind of the thankless work, the tough work of get out offices open, build the relationships with ordinary people, actually get votes out. And he was always great about that.
Starting point is 00:37:03 And our goal is to always remain great about that. Yeah, congratulations to the turning point action team. Phenomenal work here, huge milestone. We're going to keep Nevada red. Hi, folks, Andrew Colvett here. I'd like to tell you about my friends over at Y-ReFi. You've probably been hearing me talk about Y-Refi for some time now. We are all in with these guys.
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Starting point is 00:38:13 I want to welcome to the show Lydia Moynihan. She's a New York Post columnist and you might have seen her in the many viral clips from CNN, Abby Phillips show. I believe it's news night. News night. All right. Welcome to the show Lydia. It's great to have you. It's your first time joining us. I'm so happy to be here. I'm so I'm glad you're thrilled to be here. What's thrilled to have you. So let's just start right there. You are a New York Post columnist. You live in the city. And here you are. You're doing Abby Phillip, the Abby Phillips News Night show, a clip, a show that gets clipped, I think, more than potentially any other show. How did this start? And what's it like being on set there? So I've been doing the show now for about six months, I would say. And it's interesting, I think, in this world where everyone lives in their own, chamber with their own algorithm. I think it's actually great television and great to see people on both sides engaging and talking to each other. And it's interesting. I mean, there's times I feel
Starting point is 00:39:16 like we're all shared something that it's a basic fact to me. And a lot of folks there have never even heard of it. And I think, you know, the five on Fox does really well. And people want to see these completely separate echo chambers interact because we live in a country now where you can go about your daily life and be in a complete bubble on social media with the people you interact with in your city and just never be confronted with anything that might challenge your beliefs or your ideas about something. All right. So you and I actually first exchanged text right after this. We covered it here on the show. Blake had some some hot takes on it as well. And that was, of course, when Abby Phillip repeatedly and mistakenly said that the IEDB.
Starting point is 00:40:01 bombing or attempted bombing was targeting the mayor's house. We have to play. We have to put some quotes around mistakenly there, Andrew. It wasn't an IED. It was a loose grouping of nails. And yeah, they didn't call it an ID. I don't know why we're simping for terrorists, but that's where we find ourselves.
Starting point is 00:40:21 Cut 16. Two Republicans say Muslims don't belong here after an attempted terror attack against New York's mayor, Zoranam Dhani, and the House Speaker, Mike Johnson says nothing really to condemn those comments. Well, there you have it. To be fair, she corrected the record. So we got to be fair to Abby Phillip.
Starting point is 00:40:45 She's a colleague of yours, so I want to be respectful. SOT 24. This morning I issued a correction first thing in the morning on X for a mistake that I made in last night's show. But I also wanted to do so on air as well. I incorrectly said that the bombs that were thrown by ISIS-inspired suspects in New York over the weekend were directed at Mayor Mammondani. They were not. I failed to catch and correct that mistake in real time, and I take full responsibility for that. And while we do make mistakes, it is important to acknowledge and correct those errors when they happen.
Starting point is 00:41:17 All right, classy move. You were on the set, though, when that happened. I mean, it's not like it wasn't corrected in real time. I think the other sort of right of center panelists corrected her, and she still missed it. What, like, what were you thinking as this moment was playing out on TV? Well, look, again, I think everyone's just in their silo where maybe they don't even know that what they're saying is incorrect. And I think it was great that she went out there and did correct it. But I think this is just a bigger problem where there isn't really any reality check of what's going on. And I think it's interesting seeing the way.
Starting point is 00:41:55 that the mainstream media has and has not covered what in my mind is frankly one of the most important and most significant stories is the fact that there were four terrorist attacks. I believe all of them by naturalized citizens. So people who were not born here or in the case of the terrorist attack here in New York, both of those men, their parents were born in Afghanistan. So there's a lot to discuss there. And of course, attacks against Jewish people in a synagogue. There are a lot of things. to suss out. And it's interesting, in that case, the approach the mainstream media takes is let's talk about Islamophobia. And that's, of course, not the story. The story is that there's actually terrorist attacks and people are shouting al-Hu Akbar, right? They're doing this in the name of religion
Starting point is 00:42:41 and then the angle that is covered. And we saw this, of course, with Zvara and Mammani. I'm sorry to keep harping on him. I know every time we talk, I bring him up, Andrew, but this is just the quintessential way of sort of spinning something and making an accusation that somebody is Islamophobic. So he talked about when he was confronted by the fact that he is very close with Hassan Piker, who believes in America deserved 9-11, he said, didn't address it, basically just said, oh, well, my aunt, who may or may not be a real person, she got mean looks on the subway after 9-11. And it's completely failing to address a very important and real and legitimate issue and then just attacking somebody and saying that they're bigoted because they're
Starting point is 00:43:24 noticing this pattern. And that's kind of the approach that we saw, obviously, with Mamdani. And it's the approach that we're saying the media takes as well. They're not addressing this issue of, wow, there's a terrorist problem. Americans are in danger right now. They're just saying, oh, anyone who's trying to address that problem is bigoted for noticing it. Blake, what's with the selection bias? You've been in media and journalism. What is the undercurrent? What is the driving motivation for this? I think it's pretty straightforward. There used to be more balanced to a lot of institutions in American life. Like, the press always leaned liberal, but leaning liberal in even the 60s, where we think of as a left-wing time,
Starting point is 00:44:05 leaning liberal meant, oh, maybe 70% of them voted for Kennedy and 30% voted for Nixon. But in a lot of these newsrooms at major outlets, we're talking 95-5, 99-1, and it breaks down your ability to think reasonably about things. You don't get questioned. You have a lot of assumptions that don't make sense, but no one's calling you out on them. And there's a lot of group think that takes over. I've heard accounts from the New York Times where here's a classic one from a few years ago. It was pretty obvious right away, for example, when the written house shooting happened, that written house was engaged in self-defense. He didn't do anything wrong. And I've heard stories. There were New York Times reporters terrified to even take that assignment because if they
Starting point is 00:44:53 had to report that fact, it could destroy their career in the newsroom because people there were that unhinged. And if you repeat that over and over and over again, and then if you're in a kind of lower IQ area like CNN, they're not quite firing on as many cylinders as the New York Times, you just get these absolutely embarrassing stories where they actually have to come out and admit it because it all seems reasonable to them until they get called out on X or on some other public platform. Yeah. And Lydia, that was my read on that instance. the way. It was because all the early reporting was that, you know, it was a bombing outside or attempted bombing outside of the mayor's mansion. So I actually think Abby Philip just didn't know that she was
Starting point is 00:45:34 wrong. Well, and Andrew, I just kind of want to go back to something that Blake was saying about the sort of selection bias. And I think when you think about historically how we get these people in media kind of telling us what the story is and breaking things down for us, they're in, they go through the university system, which my colleague, Isabel Vincent here the Post, had a great story yesterday just highlighting people who are literally children of IRCG members are teaching in universities like University of Illinois and Emory. And so you think about you're going through this university system where literal terrorist children are professors and teaching. And then you go into this other ecosystem typically in a big city like New York or L.A. where it's quite
Starting point is 00:46:18 liberal. And then all of your colleagues are also thinking the same way as you. So it's just literally from the time you leave your house, no matter who you are, if you're going to an elite university and then continuing on to get a top job, especially in media in a liberal place like New York or L.A., you're just not challenged with any of your viewpoints. You're inculcated in something that's extremely left wing, and then that just carries on with no one challenging those presuppositions. I couldn't help but find this clip, and you're sitting right next to the person involved in this. This is Lee McGowan. And this clip is just, it's a peach. Cut 26. So your answer is to continue to let Iran back has ball. No, that is not my answer.
Starting point is 00:47:03 Explore error all over there. Okay, so someone has to take them. No, it's not a false choice. We did not need to be in this war. We did not need to be in this war. We started a war for no reason. We are the bad guys here. We are the bad guys here.
Starting point is 00:47:15 That's a strong. You can be against this war in the first place, just to be clear. But that's quite a thing to say from Lee. Who is she? That's the issue is, again, totally valid to challenge what the strategy is and ask questions. But we're seeing on the left, it's like people are rooting for us to fail. It's like people want this to be a disaster. So Donald Trump has egg on his face.
Starting point is 00:47:43 That's what it feels like is going on. And I genuinely think, and I know we're going to talk about Mamdani and his wife Rama, there seem to be people. And obviously the fact that there are. protests and people honoring holding services to honor the Ayatollah. There are clearly people here who actually do think that America is the bad guy in this war. And of course, no universe could that be possible. You're looking at a regime that murders people for sport. They just today executed a young man who walked the streets trying to protest back in January. They hang gay people from cranes.
Starting point is 00:48:16 They rape women as punishment. They're the largest exporter of terror. Let's be very clear. In no universe, are we the bad guys through and through. And again, you can debate the war, but there's no way that you could characterize Iran as anything less than the most evil regime on the face of the earth. Yeah, I mean, I think a lot of this is we've let a ton of people, millions of people in our country that hate us. And it's the third worlding of the United States. And we're living the consequences right now, but probably nowhere as, I guess, poignant, can you feel that,
Starting point is 00:48:52 as New York City, your home where you live. And there's a bunch of reporting now out from the New York Post of Rama Duwaji. I think I got her name right finally. That is the wife of Mayor Mamdani. And you could go up and throw this image up. It says, in a series of unearthed social media posts, Rama Duwaji reportedly celebrated Palestinian plane hijacker Lila Khalid. Like, this is shocking stuff.
Starting point is 00:49:20 Yeah, there you go. The New York Post is reporting it. This is, you know, anti-Israel activists who called, she's associating with some anti-Israel activists who called Jews cockroaches, has multiple links to Mamdani's family. This is the, you know, it was interesting because we had Coach Tuberville on the show, and he said the enemy is inside the gates now, and it became this huge back and forth with Chuck Schumer. What is going on in New York City?
Starting point is 00:49:49 And how bad really is this mayor's office? Well, it's really concerning, and this is on the heels. I mean, there's been a few pretty alarming headlines coming out against about Rama. The most recent one, just in the last 12 hours or so, is that, of course, she had liked all of these posts and reposted them on Tumblr, which not a lot of people are on Tumblr anymore. But one, for instance, says American soldiers fighting an imperialist war is not brave, nor are they fighting for anyone's freedom. They're mercilessly slaughtering third world civilians and fighting to maintain American. hegemony. That's just kind of a flavor of the things. And she's also used the N-Rour, a lot of offensive things out there. And it comes on the heels of another report that she was illustrating a children's book, or not a children's book, sorry, illustrating a book written by a woman who said things like Jews are cockroaches, their rabid demons, their sons of Satan. So this is, this is a ongoing issue. And we see, obviously, goes back to when she was a, you know, young woman in her teens, but it's continuing. This isn't like one little thing that she said
Starting point is 00:50:56 10 years ago. This is a long-seated issue that's extended for decades. And so, of course, she was lauded and celebrated when Mom Donnie was first elected. She had this fabulous photo shoot in New York Magazine, and she was heralded as this artist and Gracie Mansion, and she was just so wonderful. And it's interesting to see there hadn't been a lot of sort of Appo Research or reporting on her specifically. But now that we're seeing all these things, I'm waiting for New York Magazine and some of these other publications that just lionized and celebrated her to come out and say, oh, we apologize for featuring and lauding a woman who likes and reposts things that are extremely, not even
Starting point is 00:51:41 just offensive, but things that are advocating for terrorism. Yeah, welcome to New York. Yeah, I mean, I feel like. And we're paying for her to be in green. Macy Mansion. Yeah, and I just want to flag, like, when they say, like, post, you know, liked this person who was in the PSLF, that they're basically the ones who pioneered aircraft hijackings. Like a big reason I think Al Qaeda might have thought, let's hijack planes and fly them into buildings is because this Palestinian group kind of
Starting point is 00:52:08 popularized aircraft hijackings as this dramatic political terrorist stunt in the 60s and 70s. They were doing one every few weeks, basically, for a long time. Yeah. Yeah. And then I would also note, too, So it's sort of been a one, two, three punch. There was also a story last week that came out that she had liked a bunch of pro-terrorist pro-Hamas posts in the wake of October 7th. Obviously, a horrible day. And to have somebody, again, who, Mamdani cosplays is somebody who cares about everyone in the community, to have someone in Gracie Mansion who's celebrating the murder and the rape of Jews is just, it's beyond.
Starting point is 00:52:47 And I would know, you said New York has obviously changed a lot in the wake of his election. Everyone kept saying, like, oh, how could a city that was, you know, sustained a terrorist attack just two decades earlier vote for this? And it's interesting, among the people who actually have lived here for more than five years, more than 10 years, Mammani did not win. It was really new people who've been coming here who elected him. Are those newcomers from the U.S.? or are we talking immigrants? Oh, no, no, no, no, no. Yeah, no, people who have moved here from outside the U.S.
Starting point is 00:53:22 We got to get a handle on our legal immigration system. It's a big theme on this show. Lydia Moynihan, thank you so much. Great to have you. Your first time on this show. We'll have you on again soon, I'm sure. Be well. Andrew, such a pleasure.
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Starting point is 00:56:10 All right. Without further ado, honored to have our next guest, Alex Marlowe, editor-in-chief of Breitbart News, as well as host of the Alex Marlowe show. Welcome, my friends. Good to see you.
Starting point is 00:56:21 Well, it was great to see you, Andrew. Thank you for having me on The Kirk Show. Listen, man, there's a lot of stuff. We've been going through story after story, but I want to zoom out on the state of the movement, right? Yeah. There was this poll yesterday that was circulating.
Starting point is 00:56:35 CNN had it up. I believe they conducted the poll that said 100% of MAGA, supports the president. I just don't believe that that's statistically possible or true. I don't know where they got that from or how they posed the question. But there's no doubt that this Iranian conflict, war excursion, whatever you want to call it, is, you know, it's a challenge to the movement. You see Megan Kelly sounding off. You see Tucker Carlson. You have the Joe Kent resignation. There is a lot of noise out there right now. Alex, how do you process this? How are you thinking about it? Yeah, thank you. Yeah, it's a great question to ask because this is the question for the year because we all want MAGA to endure.
Starting point is 00:57:21 We all want to make sure that Americans are safe and prosperous and thriving. And then the question is, is this war that's going on right now? Is this getting us closer to that? And I think there's going to be a lot of people who think that the president has earned a lot of credibility. And I'm in that group where he gets a little leeway here. If he feels like he's the imperative and the intelligence to wage a successful war, that he should have a little time to do it. If he's doing his strategic bombings, he's trying to take out high-profile targets. And if you look at sort of a reasonable standard is, are we devastating Iran's ballistic missile capabilities? Are we developing, are we devastating their ability to create nuclear weaponry?
Starting point is 00:57:59 Are we perhaps making it so that it's less likely they support terror proxies that kill ourselves and our allies in the region? then it's been pretty successful so far. But if you look at it, the way Joe Kemp framed it up on Tucker's show yesterday, which is that Iran was never really going to develop a nuclear weapon and that they were only enriching as a bargaining tactic, and we should have stuck around longer to bargain with Iran, and you take that side, then obviously you're going to be very discouraged about what's happening right now.
Starting point is 00:58:27 And you see a $119 barrels of oil and no real incentive for Iran to open up the Strait of Ormuse. And you could see this thing spiraling really. quick. So I feel like whichever side you're on right now, I do recommend operating with a cautious lens because if you're someone who's already thrown President Trump under the bus, then it's probably because you are, you're taking cues from a really extreme, but often credible and very persuasive faction of the online right. And if you are, think that Trump is infallible here, then unfortunately Middle East wars are a place where a lot of president's falter. So I see a lot of wisdom on both sides. And that makes it a very tough one
Starting point is 00:59:09 because it's very hard to come in, Andrew, and declaratively say this is going one way or the other. Yeah. And so there's two, you know, I watch clips. I did not watch the whole thing, but there's two clips floating around from Joe Kent's interview with Tucker Carlson. Yeah. One is basically kind of outlining the divergence. Let's say that, and Pete Heggseth alluded to this, that Israel and the United States have. oftentimes overlapping ambitions with the Iranian strikes. Sometimes their objectives diverge. So let's start there.
Starting point is 00:59:43 What do we make of this divergence? I personally, you know, understand that Israel has its own objectives. Sure. That does not surprise me. However, to suggest that President Trump is lacking any agency to make his own decisions, especially on something where he's been so consistent when it comes to Iran for at least a decade about nuclear capabilities. I find it is a bridge that's a little far for me to wrap my head around.
Starting point is 01:00:11 Totally with you on this. So there's a couple of things that Kent throughout there that I think are very serious and I think it would be wise for the White House to address them over time. The first one is a suggestion that Trump had sort of moved the goalpost and Iran is not on the brink of getting a nuclear weapon and that their enrichment was only designed as a negotiating tactic. It was not designed to get nukes. This is something I have heard, but is directly contradicted by the administration's line via CIA director, John Ratliffe, who said flat out that Iran was enriching to create a nuke to destroy America and our allies.
Starting point is 01:00:45 And, of course, I'm lightly inclined to side with the administration because they've built up a lot of credibility with me, but Kent's not a joker. So that's worth taking seriously. It's worth taking that on on a serious level. I think that's real to understand that that is a, I think that's a legitimate concern that people have got. where I start losing them is the suggestion that Trump is only doing the bidding of Israel because throughout the course of the two hours and I watched the whole thing, both men really praise President Trump a lot. But the whole implication of the whole text here is that Trump is also getting played
Starting point is 01:01:19 and rolled by Israel and doing Israel's bidding, whether or not because he feels like he's under threat, whether or not he's doing this because he's easily manipulated. That's sort of incoherent to me, that Trump is the greatest leader. or imaginable and the perfect guy for the moment, but also is getting suckered by Israel, a country of nine million people. That strikes me as a little incongruous. And I think that's one that does make me question some of what's going on and make me feel like there's more than meets the eye to some of this conversation.
Starting point is 01:01:46 But I clear that Israel definitely wants regime change. I think that some of our allies in the region, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, who are sort of newer to the America First Tent, largely since the Abraham Accords, which have largely been a triumph. I think they would like to see more widespread devastation to Iran than perhaps as in our immediate interest in America. So I don't think it's just Israel in the region. But I think it would be nice to get some clarity on some of those legitimate issues Kent and Tucker raise in the conversation. Yeah. So then it goes into obviously this point that, and I played this in our one, I think it's worth playing again because, you know, Joe Kent
Starting point is 01:02:25 is now officially, we're told under investigation by the end. FBI for leaking classified documents. And I want to be very clear, Joe Kent deployed 11 times for the U.S. military. He's, that's unassailable. All right. Gold Star husband? Yeah, Gold Star husband, lost his wife, you know, absolutely unassailable. And a lot of my friends really love Joe Kent a lot. I don't know him that well personally. Yeah. This was an interesting moment when Tulsi Gabbard was asked about it, and I want to get your take on it. SOT 27. Do you agree or disagree with what this letter was put out by former director Kent. He said a lot of things in that letter. Ultimately, we have provided the president with the
Starting point is 01:03:08 intelligence assessments, and the president is elected by the American people and makes his own decisions based on the information that's available to him. But do you agree with, does that statement he made blaming Israel concern you? Yes. That was a moment right there. Having, she said yes, it was a little ambitableness. of what she was actually saying she was troubled by. What did you think was communicated in that moment, Alex? Yeah, I think that's really, I think he goes way too far in this regard, especially noting that there are other allies we have in the region who would like to see
Starting point is 01:03:43 regime change in Iran as well. And just the thought that Trump is just some sort of a patsy for Israel, it just doesn't make sense for anything else in Trump's character. And they cite one piece of evidence, which is the clip from Marco Rubio saying they got intel that Israel was going to go. go in and it was sort of a do or die moment, I guess, for us to go in or not. I had a feeling that just one day to point out of millions that were probably part of the president's calculation. The president loves being a peacetime president. He loves starting no new wars. So you know he's
Starting point is 01:04:12 only doing this. He knows a lot of his base is not going to support it. He's not a dumb person. He's a very bright person who is very conscientious of his own people, his own supporters. And they knew not all of them were going to get on board. And that's why some of this stuff just goes way too far with the just blanket, this is Israel's fault. And Trump. as a sucker for Israel. That does not compute to me. And I did find, I got to say this, we're on the Charlie Kirk Show. I thought him speaking for Charlie was very crass to me. And it's the, we're all those of us who knew Charlie well. Andrew, you knew him the best of all of us. I knew Charlie very well. That's a really delicate thing. And he was out there the biggest
Starting point is 01:04:46 podcast in the world speaking on behalf of Charlie and speaking on behalf of in the context of in perhaps Israel murdered Charlie. And then using that in the exact context to suggest that Israel is compelling America to bomb girl schools on Iranian base. I mean, it's starting to get a little bit. I'm seeing the orange yarn, always Saudi in Philadelphia meme, starts popping into my head here. Now we're just connecting all sorts of different dots
Starting point is 01:05:14 without any hard evidence. Yeah, and I want to get into that a little bit more in the next segment, Alex, because, you know, obviously I logged that, I clocked that. Blake clocked it. We instantly shared that clip and discussed it, and I think it deserves a whole segment.
Starting point is 01:05:28 Let's just wrap this segment up really quickly with, you know, Megan Kelly tweeted out something like if you really want to destroy MAGA, you know, have the CIA surveil Tucker and the FBI indict or the DOJ indict Joe Kent. Do you read it that way or do you think we're more stable than that? Yeah, I think we're more stable than that, but I do take that in a deep consideration. I'm a person who's a very online conservative person. I'm aware of where the pulse of a lot of the highest energy people online are. And they really like Joe Kent, and they're very skeptical of us doing Israel's bidding at all.
Starting point is 01:06:10 And that's a real factor here. But the FBI investigation started earlier, and we know there are these strange leaks that are certainly designed to put some sort of a wedge between America and Israel. And some people in this audience probably think that's deserved it. But it's certainly a thing that's happening. but it's worth considering. Let's talk about what's really happening right now. New data shows financial stress is at an all-time high.
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Starting point is 01:07:52 closest advisors. And he also advocated heavily against a war with Iran. He was in the Oval Office in the lead-up to the 12-day war. I wasn't particularly close with Charlie. He was very gracious to me when I was running for Congress, very, very supportive. So we knew each other. And the last time I saw Charlie Kirk on this earth was in June in the West Wing. And he said, Joe, stop us from getting into a war with Iran. So when one of President Trump's closest advisors who is vocally advocating for us to not go to war with Iran and for us to rethink, at least our relationship with the Israelis. And then he's suddenly publicly assassinated, and we're not allowed to ask any questions about
Starting point is 01:08:37 that. So he says we're not allowed to ask any questions about that. I can personally attest that I don't believe that that is the truth. I believe there's been a billion questions asked, both publicly and privately behind the scenes. So many leads have been pursued. Alex, get your reaction, and then I'm going to throw to Blake. Yeah, first of all, I think that Charlie did not want regime change war in Iran, but he did support the president. I think he would have given the president a wide berth and a certain level of trust.
Starting point is 01:09:09 I don't think it would have gone on indefinitely. But I think that two and a half weeks in that Joe Ken is speaking on behalf of Charlie, I find that to be grotesque. I just do. And I'm a Joe Kent fan. So this is disappointing to me that he's going out there at this level because I think I respect so much of what he's done, both in political life and, of course, his service is just. It's just fantastic. And the fact that he's speculating at this level, I think that is connecting Charlie, who appears to have been murdered by a trans furry freak to what's going on in terms of Trump's Iran policy right now.
Starting point is 01:09:42 It doesn't add up to me. And the thought that Joe is saying this right after he left the government, we know while he's under investigation by the FBI, the timing of it, so he leaves the government. And because he couldn't ask questions when he was in a position of immense power, now he's going in the private sector and getting a lot of attention, it just reeks to me, that there's something off. There's a variable we're not seeing here, but it doesn't make any sense that I couldn't ask questions. So now I'm quitting. That doesn't add up as well. So there's something way off about this. I mean, I'll be honest. I'm quite angry about what he did. I think his agenda was very clear.
Starting point is 01:10:16 He's saying, oh, we're not allowed to ask questions. No, I believe we were allowed to ask questions. That's why the FBI investigated the crime. That's why they collaborated with Utah authorities to find and charge the suspect, which they did. and we have ample evidence that there is a ton of evidence in this case. Maybe the reason he wasn't involved is it's actually not his department's job to investigate crimes once they're committed. Maybe the reason he wasn't looped in as much is because they already suspected him of leaking and he appears to have continued to be leaking things. And I'm just, I'm so angry about Charlie, a person we care about being used in just as a political football in this blatant way where he's using bits of conversations he supposedly had, bits of evidence to really paint a picture that he can't actually demonstrate evidence for. It just, it made me very upset. And it demonstrated, frankly,
Starting point is 01:11:10 why I suspect it's a good reason he's not in government anymore. I know a lot of people have fondness for him. But I think, I think this was incredibly, I think this was odious behavior by him. And, you know, he dismisses some clear evidence on Trump's behalf. It doesn't come up in the conversation. And all I mentioned those other allies that were definitely would like to see even more done to Iran. But also think about how Trump basically laid out a red line a year ago in a letter saying no more ballistic missile development, no more nuclear development to the point of beyond civilian means and no more funding tear proxies. Iran literally did all three of those things. Joe Kent's aware of this. He's spoken about it.
Starting point is 01:11:47 He's tweeted about it. He's even gone pretty far to say that he's called on Trump to basically knock out Iran's ballistic missile capabilities, which is pretty far out there. And then now he's here and he just got there, seemed like, within a matter of two weeks, it just is inconguous to me. I don't even want to fixate on that because we know there are people who will say things publicly because they're on side or they're part of the movement. They might have private misgivings.
Starting point is 01:12:12 But it's just incredibly aggravating what he's done where he himself, he has no evidence of the thing he's implying. All he can say is I was cut out of the investigation when it seems there's ample reason to cut him. out of the investigation because he's a guy who runs off and does stuff like this. And I, like, we'll be that we've been the first to say, Charlie didn't want war with Iran. He argued against it. He argued against it to the president. We've tried very carefully to present what we knew Charlie believed, how we think he might react to this while acknowledging we aren't sure because he's no longer with us. We're not, we're trying to not use him as this
Starting point is 01:12:53 blatant, you know, veto power over everything. And I'm just so upset that Joe Kent runs off. And this is like the first thing he does because he knows it will go viral. He knows it will get a ton of attention. When as he admits, he actually doesn't have anything. He has no evidence. He just does that classic, we're not allowed to ask questions. A ton of people have asked questions. They've never, if they're given answers, they don't like the answers. And they pretend they were never given them. Yeah, the lack of hard evidence definitely strikes me. It's so speculative. The argument that's being advanced. And just to repeat, just the invoking Charlie is just when he admits multiple times that you didn't know him very well, it was just really off-putting to me. Yeah. And I just want to underscore a fact here because I'm privy to certain details that I'm not allowed to speak about publicly. And I want the audience to know every single question that has been floated in any way, shape, or form we have chased down and we have done our best. So my point is he's saying we're not allowed to ask questions. Well, just because you're not presented with the evidence doesn't mean, or given access to that part of the investigation, doesn't mean that the questions haven't been asked and that the lines of inquiry haven't been followed. You know, that does not mean things have not been investigated because I know a tremendous amount of things have been investigated.
Starting point is 01:14:12 And by people that love Charlie, people that cared about Charlie. So here's the last thing, you know, and I constantly go back to this. Turley quote in my head where he says if 90% of the evidence against Tyler Robinson was thrown out, this guy would still get the death penalty. If the defense somehow succeeded in throwing 90% of this evidence out, he'd still be found guilty in a court of law. The mountain of evidence that is accumulated against this guy is incredible. And just believe me on that, they have this guy completely. Did people seem to know about it beforehand? Yes. Was he radicalized by other people? Yes, I am desperate to get to the bottom of those questions.
Starting point is 01:14:55 I'm open to all kinds of different things. But to suggest that somehow Tyler Robinson was not the guy that pulled the trigger, I think, is a line where I just have to put my foot down and say, no, this guy did the deed and he deserves to be punished by the court of law. Final thoughts to you, Alex. Yeah, it's a great, it's a great summary. and all this is designed, timed to do maximum damage to Trump at his war effort, which, like it or not, were in it for at least a little bit longer, and divide the MAGA movement. That's very sad to me as a OG member of the MAGA movement. Alex Marlowe, thank you so much. For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to charliekirk.com.

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