The Charlie Kirk Show - The True Meaning of Wealth — My Interview on the Iced Coffee Hour Podcast
Episode Date: August 3, 2025Graham Stephan and Jack Selby's Iced Coffee Hour podcast has become one of the most popular podcasts discussing business, entrepreneurship, politics, health and more, and they recently had Charlie on ...as a guest. They discuss how Charlie built TPUSA from scratch, the top three things he would change in America, what society gets wrong about wealth, the Gen Z religious revival, and more. 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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Hey everybody, my conversation with the iced coffee hour.
They interview me about dating, about marriage, about investing and more.
Happy Sunday.
Everybody email us is always freedom at charliekirk.com.
Get involved at turning point USA at TP USA.com.
That is TP USA.com.
Thanks to Alan Jackson ministries for your continued support.
Buckle up everybody here we go.
Charlie, what you've done is incredible here.
Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus.
I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk.
Charlie Kirk's running the White House, folks.
I want to thank Charlie.
He's an incredible guy, his spirit, his love of this country.
He's done an amazing job building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created,
Turning Point USA.
We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries,
destroyed lives, and we are gonna fight for freedom on campuses across the
country. That's why we are here. Noble Gold Investments is the official gold
sponsor of the Charlie Kirk Show, a company that specializes in gold IRAs
and physical delivery of precious metals. Learn how you could protect your wealth with
Noble Gold Investments at noblegoldinvestments.com. That is noblegoldinvestments.com. It's where
I buy all of my gold. Go to noblegoldinvestments.com. Charlie Kirk, thank you so much for coming
on the Ice Coffee Hour. Thank you guys. I'm a big fan. I've seen a lot of your clips and
so it's great to be sitting down.
That means a lot.
In 2012, when you were just 18 years old at the Republican National Convention, you approached
billionaire Foster Fried.
Yes, I did.
And you asked him to help you out with your idea, Turning Point USA.
What was the conclusion of that conversation and what did that teach you about life and
risk?
Wow, that's a great question.
So I was just recently graduated from high school.
I wanted to go to West Point before that.
Didn't get in.
And it ended up being one of the greatest things that
never happened to me.
And so I went to the Republican National Convention.
I studied all the major donors.
I had to kind of sneak my way into the RNC grounds,
if you will.
And at the fourth day, I was so demoralized.
I was like, oh, this is not working.
I have this idea for 20 Point USA,
which basically the idea was to try to win over young people
around conservative ideas.
And I was in a stairwell, literally a stairwell.
And then I saw Foster Friese doing like a podcast interview
with this major cowboy hat on.
And I gave him the stairwell pitch.
You know, people talk about the elevator pitch. I gave him a stairwell pitch. You know, people talk about the elevator pitch.
I gave him a stairwell pitch and he told a couple of jokes.
He was the sweetest, most godly, incredible person ever.
He was actually took me seriously because here I was 18 years old, no money,
no connections, no idea what I was doing and no reason that he should be listening to me.
And this guy for people that know Foster Freeze started from nothing in rural.
I think it was like Rice Lake, Wisconsin
became like the top mutual fund manager for like 30 years, the brand to wind fund out of Delaware, like legendary stuff.
Right.
So he's someone that gets pitched all the time.
His life is to listen to pitches 10 times a day, top companies would come
in and try to pitch foster freeze.
Can you have your couple billion dollars assets under management to buy Coca-Cola
or to buy United Airlines?
He's constantly getting pitches.
So here I am pitching a guy, a legend about, you know, this organization that I wanted to start, Turning Point USA.
And he took me so seriously and he wrote me a $10,000 check.
And that was like the seed funding.
It wasn't shares. It wasn't like equity.
It was just a donation because we were 501C3.
And it might as well have been $100 million, right?
It finally was enough for me to be able to start a website,
to have gas in the car.
And yeah, then from there, the journey just started
and he became a bigger and bigger donor.
What do you think he saw in you?
Well, he probably saw someone
that was passionate enough and crazy enough.
And honestly, he probably saw someone
that was really like naive to a great
extent that I still wanted to get into this like broken political space, but
I didn't know any better.
Um, and in Foster's own words, he said, he saw someone with focus and determination
and a Midwestern work ethic.
So he was from Wisconsin and I was from Northern Illinois.
So we kind of had that in common.
And look, I live in Arizona now, and I love Arizona,
but I have like a huge Midwestern bias.
I think Midwestern work ethic is like the best on the planet
and nothing against other people in the country,
but there's something very special about
how we're raised in the Midwest and kind of that idea
that we're gonna outwork everybody.
And that's always been who I am.
I'm gonna do more events and more speaking,
and more podcasting, more radio interviews,
and more donor meetings.
And that's kind of been the ethos.
So yeah, I mean, I don't want to put words in his mouth.
He passed away unfortunately a couple of years ago.
And so, but no, he was a great friend.
And you asked the question,
what did it teach me about risk?
Is that right?
Risk in life, yeah.
Why, honestly, I had nothing to really risk
because I had nothing to lose.
And so that's like-
I mean, that's a nerve wracking thing.
A lot of people are presented with opportunities
to talk with someone,
get their foot in the door
for some opportunity.
Sure, so what are you losing though?
Like your own, like-
Getting over the embarrassment of rejection.
I know, but like it's not losing anything, right?
I mean, that's in life, if you think about it,
like, okay, if you're second mortgaging your house,
like some entrepreneurs are,
I don't have like one of those stories, right?
I'm sure you guys talked to some of these people.
I was on the second mortgage of my house
and I couldn't feed my kids.
That's actually not my story.
That is something to lose.
This is like the only thing you have to lose
is your own sense of comfort.
That's kind of weird when you think about it, right?
I mean, oh, I'm not going to ask that girl out. Why?
Well, because I'm comfortable in my own corner.
Comfort will not bring you success, actually.
It won't bring you excellence.
Like, only in that place of uncomfort and discomfort
do you actually get to the next level.
You guys know this.
So why does so many people believe
the exact opposite of that?
That they feel like that's a big risk
for them to go and do that.
Like, why don't more people think like you?
Because I agree with you, I think.
Well, first of all, like, I mean, it is risk
in the sense that we as human beings do desire comfort
and we want to kind of be in a place
where we can have certainty above uncertainty.
And going and asking a question or going and asking a top billionaire for money,
you have the probability of failure and we are very failure-averse as a species.
And honestly, we should be like you think about 5,000 years ago, you have,
you know, two kids and you're living in like Mesopotamia. And you're like, well, I hope there's food over that hill.
And if you're wrong, your whole family could die.
So like that's embedded into our, our species, right?
God designed us in a way where there was not a lot of food all the, all the place.
So now you kind of extrapolate that kind of genetic wiring where we used to be in
the wilderness to foster freeze and you think you're like, wow, foster tells me no, my whole life's going to actually know
you're going to be fine.
Like you could go and still eat food and you're not going to die.
And so I think we have to overcome our genetic hard wiring where so many people think that
it's like a life or death situation.
I can't ask this girl out.
I can't go ask for a raise.
I can't go to my boss.
I can't assert myself.
And you have to overcome that because it's actually not that much risk. I can't ask this girl out. I can't go ask for a raise. I can't go to my boss. I can't assert myself.
And you have to overcome that because it's actually not that much risk. Now, what is risk is like, if there's a material or a reputational
thing you're putting on the line.
Like, for example, if like you're working for a company and they're like, you
know, you're not allowed to express your conservative views and you're like,
all of a sudden wearing a MAGA hat.
That's a risk.
Like I totally get that.
But if you're 18 years old and you have no money,
no connections, no idea what you're doing,
I had nothing to lose.
And that's actually one of my main arguments
for like why we have so few entrepreneurs nowadays,
we have less and less,
entrepreneurship rates are going down.
Is we're sending all these kids to college
and they're telling you to be risk averse.
Like the whole incentive structure in college
is to not pursue big broad ideas actually
to stay rather closer
in place.
Speaking of that, that's where I first found your content was you on the college campuses
debating.
When did that start and what was the most surprising aspect of that?
Yeah, so I've been doing that for 13 years.
I haven't been doing that on camera for 13 years.
And so look, the Lord has been so amazing to us and has blessed us in amazing ways.
And so I never would have imagined, like honestly,
ever since I met Foster Friese,
that we'd be somewhat of kind of like a household name.
I don't want to overextend it, but I mean,
there's some serious virality and some real punch
behind what we're doing.
So I started doing that without even filming it.
And it's like, that's what people are like, you have,
and that was before like mass social media is 13 years ago.
It was still there.
Honestly, I should have filmed it, it would have went,
like their trajectory probably would have been even faster.
But 2012, right?
Yes, I mean, like, cause that was like a raw internet
and like it would have been really interesting.
But that's how you know, I actually believe this stuff
is I used to go into bait kids
when there was no incentive structure for virality.
I just did it cause I loved it
and I love the battle of ideas.
And I did it to try to start like a turning point group
on campus. And so I've been doing it for of ideas. And I did it to try to start like a turning point group on campus.
And so I've been doing it for 13 years.
We started filming it around 2017.
We started perfecting the model really around 2021.
And then 2023 is when all of a sudden it kind of became
a somewhat a cultural phenomenon.
And then of course the last year seems like I can't get
out of people's algorithm.
So you mentioned that you like the battle of ideas,
but one thing that I tend to notice
is that whoever has stronger rhetoric, persuasion skills, quick on their feet, quick on their
toes, that's going to be the person to win the argument, the debate.
Do you feel like these debates have turned into a battle of ideas or just who has stronger
rhetoric?
That's a good point.
I actually have to think, I think about that a lot.
So I try to do a couple of things and I fail.
But if you notice I've in the viral videos, I try to put my microphone down
literally physically on the table when the person is asking their question.
Because I want to try to give them uninterrupted time to be able to make
their argument number two, there is an advantage that the person coming up with
the mic has that they're allowed to ask any topic,
and I don't know what that topic is going to be,
and they could prepare profusely on it.
But you're right, of course it's advantage
to the guy that does it for a living, right?
But understand, like, I have to go to a college campus
and defend ideas that are in the minority
of a lot of these kids' worldview.
I have to go to college campus and argue against abortion.
Most kids are not against abortion, right? Have you ever had your mind changed from one go to college campus and argue against abortion. Most kids are not against abortion.
Right? Have you ever had your mind changed from one of these college campus debates? Oh yeah. I mean, so my mind changed over a period of time, probably. Yes, I would say that
I definitely have grown respect for the thoughtfulness of a lot of international
students when it has come to the Russian-Ukraine War.
Definitely, I'm very against US involvement.
But talking to, and they're all public, you can watch them.
Very thoughtful German students
and very thoughtful students from Eastern Europe.
For them, it's a very existential crisis,
what's happening.
And so to hear that was something that was very,
let's just say, different than what you would hear
just on the usual American political landscape.
But yeah, look, I'd say over, I would say that I learned a lot too.
And that's what's important.
I do a hundred hours of this a semester, a hundred hours in addition to two hours of
podcasting radio, right?
250 speeches a year.
I got to raise $130 million a year and I got a thousand employees.
I got a lot going on, right?
I still do a hundred hours of content a year.
So 200 hours of campus content.
And I'm not just like, I try and I fail,
everyone would fail at this, but I try not to just be ready
to say what I want to say next.
I try to really learn and listen.
And then I try to listen back to the footage.
And so this is one of the reasons why
it's a little bit unfair when I go to these campuses
because I've been doing it for literally a thousand hours and these kids are like a college, you know, freshman.
So I try to have at least somewhat of a teacher role to them and try to be a little bit softer
unless if they're coming after me and they're like insulting me and you've seen it, right?
They're just being like totally like blitzkrieg.
It's nice because I feel like you do tend to do that where they might have a hard time
articulating a certain philosophical argument, but then you take it for that strongest derivative
or representation of that strongest philosophical argument.
And I try to do a better job of that.
So look, everyone fails, right?
I mean, look, sometimes it's like 98 degrees outside and I didn't sleep well because my
kids were up all night.
And it's like the ninth time they're asking me about Israel.
And I love Israel, but I'm tired of answering questions on Israel, okay?
Like I love it, it's fine.
Like, it's just, but this is not a debate,
Charlie Kirk on Israel hour.
And I'm like, can we have another topic here?
And I might get a little bit miffed.
Who wouldn't, right?
I mean, that's just human.
But I will say, like, I try to meet you
at the frequency you're at.
So if they're coming after me
and they're like insulting my appearance or whatever,
like, I'm not gonna let myself get run over.
But if a liberal student comes and they're like,
hey, I really seek to understand this or help me know,
or I try to, I try not to like pummel them,
if that makes sense, because I,
at least I think that's effective, right?
Now, if they come with like a uniquely grotesque idea,
then I'm gonna try to expose it to the audience
and to the online community.
But no, look, I learn a lot and I hope the audience does too.
And I mean, the physical crowds are now three, 4,000 people
almost every time we do this.
Now in those cases, when have you found
that college is really worth it for someone?
Yeah, it's a great question.
So I'm a big proponent of Hillsdale College.
So Hillsdale, I think it's America's greatest college
because it's what college should be, which is it's the development of the soul and character. So character is one of the most important things that you can invest in when you're 18, 19, 20, 20 years old. And I guarantee you to go to most colleges, they're about preparing you for your career, but they're not about preparing your character. And character is really, really important, right? Character literally comes from the Greek word tattoo or to etch into you. Character will define every decision, right?
From what you eat to what you drink,
how you communicate to people, to the decisions you make,
way more important than whether you have a skill.
Having a skill is important, I'm not diminishing that,
but wouldn't, I mean, if you guys are building a business,
wouldn't you rather have people of high character,
high skill?
Of course you want people of high character.
Skills can come, character's the hard thing.
And so I think that we as the college world
has done a really bad job of developing character.
They don't even prioritize it instead.
Why?
Why do you think it's failed so many people?
Well, those are two separate questions.
So why do they not teach character?
Well, first of all, they don't think
that's their reason for existing.
Most of them, it depends, like the super left wing colleges,
which is most of them, they're all like,
we're here to create global citizens
for an ever changing world, like some sort of pablum,
or they're like, we wanna have you very specific skill,
like we want you to be able to turn a widget.
Which by the way, if AI replaces that job, what do you have?
That's a cool thing about developing character,
like if AI replaces jobs,
you still have the most important of all things,
which is you know the difference between good and evil,
right and wrong, beauty and ugly, right? You know the difference between the most, the high
things and the low things. Like that's what we should strive for in higher education.
That's why I think Hillsdale does a great job. But yeah, most, I mean, if you want to
become a doctor or a lawyer, of course you have to go to college, right? You still have
to go through this ridiculous environment of left-wing social indoctrination. But I will say though that the, I've debated all around the world,
they'll have debated at Cambridge and Oxford all across the country.
The other problem is that they're not in the pursuit of wisdom.
And this is one of the more important things.
Like if you ask a regular college kid, what is the difference between
knowledge and wisdom, they like, they'll just trip over themselves.
And it's not a semantic thing, but semantic means meaning, but it's not a semantic thing. It's actually important. Knowledge is
just facts like okay, I know the capital of, you know,
California, Sacramento, whatever. Wisdom is the knowledge
of things that never change. It's the understanding of
things that never change. It's like what is human nature? What
does it mean to be a good person? What is beauty? What is
goodness? What is the best way of living? What is a society in
its fullest form? Is it good to have children? Wisdom is understanding that, is even playing with the
idea like, is there a God? Like, who are we? How did we get here? I think that's what college should
be all about is the cultivation of wisdom. As a Christian, we believe wisdom starts with the fear
of the Lord. But yeah, I mean, I don't mean to talk uninterrupted for 10 minutes straight, but yeah,
I think that college has completely derailed its purpose.
In terms of college as an application for the average person, I think it's really interesting.
Ben Shapiro claims to be wealthy in America, you need to do three things.
Graduate high school, get a full-time job, and get married before you have children.
Yeah, and he's right.
That's the Brookings Institution.
He's right on all three of those.
Do you think he's missing anything?
First of all, I like Ben a lot. We disagree on some big things, but Ben's great, and he's been a And that's the Brookings Institution. He's right on all three of those. And do you think he's missing anything? First of all, I like Ben a lot.
We disagree on some big things, but Ben's great.
And he's been a good friend for a while.
Yeah, I would say like become a person of high character.
Again, I'm gonna kind of go back to a main theme.
Do you think that that is essential
to be wealthy in America?
That's a good question.
I don't think being wealthy is that important.
Like, do you wanna be wealthy of the soul
or just have like a bunch of money?
Well, that would be a different question, but I agree with you.
I guess what I mean, but like the question is fine.
If you wanna be rich, I can tell you how to get rich.
Like, that's actually not that hard.
I mean, you have to just- How would you get rich?
Like, work relentlessly and solve a problem for people
and like dedicate your entire life to it
and like become an insane person, basically.
Do you think it's possible to still do
all of those things though and then not become rich?
Of course, but like if your whole reason for living is to become rich, you will become rich.
Most people that I think like, most people I meet that want to be rich, they actually don't want to be rich.
They want to have the lifestyle of being rich. They don't actually want to be rich.
They're like, you have to sacrifice everything to want to become actually rich, unless you're born into it.
Like no nights, few weekends. I traveled 3000 days over a decade.
I'm a million mile or American Delta United.
I'm in all 50 States multiple times.
Like it's thankless, gritty work.
Like Shapiro hosted two radio shows
plus like brightbart.com and truth revolve.
Like not easy.
So if you actually wanna be rich,
then there is a path for you.
You have to like sacrifice in like immensely.
I don't drink alcohol.
Like Tucker Carlson doesn't drink alcohol.
Donald Trump doesn't drink alcohol. Now doesn't mean that
like, you can't be rich if you don't drink alcohol, but you
must sacrifice stuff. Now, it might be that you create a good
widget or like you might a good social media app or you might
be get good venture funding. But even those guys will tell you,
you have to fail a lot, you have to sacrifice a lot, you have to
be really gritty. I just challenge the premise of like,
what is the most important? Like, I think if getting material wealth
is the most important thing,
I think there actually is a playbook for that.
That absent of like committing crimes,
like being a really crappy person, being sociopathic,
it depends also what you define as rich.
Like, there is a way forward for,
if it's your number one reason for living,
to, you know, earn $500,000 a year.
Like that's very conceivable in America. But if you're like, hey, actually, the most important
thing is to have kids, which I think actually think having children is more important than having
material success. And I have both. And I can tell you kids are way better than having money. Like,
honestly, not being poor is awesome. That's like the best thing I could tell you. Like being super
rich, and I'm not super rich, but I would consider to be successful under
American terms, is great.
But up to a place, it's kind of like, you're blessed, you're wealthy, it's fine.
Not being poor is the true blessing.
Not worrying about medical bills or being in debt is really bad.
But yeah, it depends on what you want.
If you want to be rich, actually have your bank account big, then America, of course,
you would do
that.
How much of people being poor is their fault versus just the circumstances of their life?
It's both.
It's very case dependent.
A lot of it is agency.
We as conservatives tend to blame free will, agency, and the person a lot more than circumstance.
But of course, circumstance play a role. Of course it does. We're honored to be partnering with Alan Jackson
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Why do you think conservatives generally stay silent on wealth inequality?
Well, I don't know if we're silent on it.
I mean, I think that we're finally starting to talk about it.
I'd say that we would say that don't throw rocks
at the top of the building, fix the elevator.
So the question shouldn't be like,
how many rich people are.
The question is, how easy is it to move up
the socioeconomic ladder?
That's the more important metric.
And that's actually becoming harder.
So that's a really important conversation.
But I could probably agree with a liberal.
That it's not good to have like an entrenched permanent oligarchy that's
running the country and that people have to go into debt and go into credits, pay
for their groceries, like I actually don't want to live in that country.
So I can agree that we should talk about it more.
Um, but is there anything like inherently wrong with a billionaire?
No, like most billionaires actually have solved big problems for us.
Like, you know, people love hating on Elon Musk. I like Elon a lot. He's become a friend.
I know there's been like a lot of social media talk about it, but I refuse to say anything negative about Elon. Like, okay, you tell me the next time you're able to launch a rocket and land
it. Like, actually, that's pretty cool. Like, okay, you're able to revolutionize the electric
car industry. Like, you deserve a lot of money if you do that. One of the things that I've been
confused about is why financial literacy is never taught in schools. Like, you deserve a lot of money if you do that. One of the things that I've been confused about is why financial literacy is never taught
in schools.
Like, you think that this would be something taught throughout middle school, high school,
college.
Why is that?
I mean, if you want, like, an actual conspiracy theory, that's the best evidence of a conspiracy.
If you want to, like, have people remain super poor and dependent on the government, don't
teach them financial literacy.
It's inexcusable.
And who do you think is in charge of that?
No, I'm not.
Like, I'm just saying, like, I don't know who's, like, the charge of that? No, I'm not. I'm just saying, I don't know who's the designer of that conspiracy.
The incentives are aligned.
They are.
I'm saying if you want a generation to have to go to the payday lending people, and if
you want to have them filling out credit cards at 25% interest, don't teach financial literacy.
I don't know who...
It's convenient.
I'm a big school choice advocate.
I think that we need school choice.
I think the public sector teacher unions
and public sector cartel have done a huge damage
to this country.
But yeah, I mean, look, there's how many young kids
right now that are 17 can tell you the difference
between credit and debit.
They can't.
So one of the things I like about Trump's upcoming
big, beautiful bill is that every new baby born in America
will get a thousand dollar loan from the federal government
in, I don't know if you guys know about this, but in a investment account that they can't touch their
18 invested in the Dow Jones Industrial Average that they'll be able to monitor throughout
their 18 years.
It can be grown by philanthropists, family members, grandparents.
So they'll be actually be able to see their wealth increase.
They're stakeholders.
So if we have two kids, if we have another kid, that kid will immediately have an investment account
that's only a one-way drop box.
You can't access this money until you're 18.
So it actually creates ownership units
for the next generation.
I think it's a phenomenal idea.
I wish they did that with Social Security.
Oh, of course they should.
You just invest that.
We were told it was a lock box and it wasn't.
Of course, but no, I mean, look, so if you want
like the secret to get rich,
there's, it's actually not super hard.
It's like live below your means, save your money, invest in good companies, and then
find good ideas and read a lot, like read a lot.
If you just read a lot and you understand, like all of a sudden you'll see trends.
And you'll be well informed.
Again, I don't want to make it seem like it's super easy, but it's, it depends
what you define by rich, but I'll say one final thing.
People are so bad with money.
Like again, if you, if your top priority is getting drunk, okay, then go do that.
Like I know a lot of people, they're like, I want to be rich.
I spent $700 going out this weekend.
Like, I guess you don't want to be rich.
Okay.
You want to feel good and you want to have a bunch of, you know,
toxins go through your liver, but
you actually don't want to live a life of happiness and contentment.
I'm not a moralist.
If you want to drink, go ahead.
It's a free society.
Go do that.
But then don't all of a sudden complain to me that you're not materially wealthy.
It just seems like it's such low lift to make a huge change in terms of wealth inequality
if there was just one course taught in high school
about financial literacy.
And so, like, let's just say hypothetically,
I'm just a casual viewer of, I mean,
I've been watching for a very long time.
How difficult would it be for you to just, you know,
reach out to Trump or reach out to someone and be like,
what do we got to do to put some incentives
into the school system to teach financial literacy?
But you know what? It might hurt a lot of businesses if people were smart with
their money oh it would totally the credit card companies would freak out
they would freak out could you imagine like visa and master card Apple like
poor people are asking questions about 25% interest I mean so it's all like
how difficult would that be I mean is there just way too much interest that no no
no it would just be different it's very hard for the federal government
to control curriculum.
But to apply incentives.
Yeah, the states should do it.
There have been some ideas to do this.
I know that there's big companies
that have tried to do this,
because they're like, oh yeah, we're giving money
towards financial literacy.
I'm sorry, it's not working.
Whatever you guys are doing, it's not working, okay?
Whatever program you think
that's going on in financial literacy,
you guys are all a failure, you should all be shut down, because it's just not working. Because you guys are doing, it's not working, okay? Whatever program you think that's going on in financial literacy, you guys are all a failure.
You should all be shut down because it's just not working.
Because I deal with the next generation.
They know kaput about financial literacy,
like very little to nothing.
And this is one of the things
that I just wanna caution everybody about,
which is like, I'm very, very pro crypto,
but I know a lot of people that have lost money on crypto.
I'm sure you guys, I'm very, very pro crypto.
I think there's a huge opportunity.
I think it's incredible technology more than anything else, but like the best way
to build wealth is over long periods of time, saving money and doing boring stuff.
It's not get rich quick.
It's not big meme coins, right?
It's not big spikes.
It's just going to work, saving money and living below your means.
I know that's not the sexy answer everyone wants, but that's what Warren Buffett did.
Warren Buffett is one of the world's wealthiest men.
He started with like very little money 70 years ago and the eighth wonder of the world.
You know, the eighth wonder of the world is compound interest.
And no one wants to hear that, right?
They want to hear about like, what's the next Nvidia?
Okay.
And no one wants to hear that, right? They want to hear about like, what's the next Nvidia?
Okay, I don't know, but I can tell you that in 40 years,
if you put a hundred bucks a week
into a moderately managed, you know, wealth account,
you're going to be great.
A hundred bucks a week, man.
I can't afford that.
Okay, well let's talk about it.
How much money do you make?
Oh, I make $91,000.
You can afford a hundred bucks a week.
Stop getting your Frappuccino.
Stop going out to drink with your friends, right?
I've been saying this since I've been on the case.
You sound exactly like that.
I mean, the reason why we're called the iced coffee hour
is because he had a joke on his channel
called the 20 cent iced coffee,
and you could save $3 a day,
which is $100 a month.
And if you just invest that in a Roth IRA,
yeah, a Roth IRA, assuming know, assuming 10% interest,
you have some inflation, but when you're, you know,
60 or whatever, you'll be a millionaire.
That all came from a guy who was spending $500 a month
at Starbucks.
No, probably that guy.
You're that guy?
Well, now I am, but like, no, I know it's terrible.
It's not good, but-
You have amazing coffee makers upstairs.
Aren't they incredible? Yeah.
Yeah, I know.
I also drink a lot of tea and Starbucks,
like someone who travel a lot,
the one thing about Starbucks is consistency, right?
So it's just like, I don't know what mom and pop,
you know, place there is in Laramie, Wyoming.
I don't know if it's gonna be-
It's a coin flip if it's good or not.
Exactly, the only argument for like mass proliferation
of Starbucks when you travel is-
You do the rewards though, right?
Yeah, Mikey does.
It's funny, I actually have coffee socks on,
believe it or not.
I like coffee, it's really good for you.
I'm very pro coffee, so.
I think coffee gets a bad rap,
it's very, very good for you actually.
Let's talk about the average American.
Do you think it's possible to build wealth
when you're making $40,000 a year?
That's a great question, boy.
First of all, if you're earning $40,000 a year,
you're in a tough spot, and I don't envy that,
and you might be there because your own choices,
your own agency, that's a really hard question.
Depends where you live, depends your age.
And also depends your circumstances.
And so if you have kids at $40,000 a year,
it's very hard to build wealth.
And that's a real problem that we have to tackle.
But if you're 18 years old earning $40,000 a year
and you have four roommates, yeah, you can build wealth,
for sure, actually.
Like, if you have four roommates
and you're living in downtown Phoenix and your rent's 1,000 bucks a month because you're splitting it four roommates, yeah, you can build wealth for sure, actually. Like if you have four roommates and you're living in downtown
Phoenix and your rent's a thousand bucks a month because you're splitting it four ways,
you absolutely can build wealth. I mean, so it's a very case dependent answer.
But if you have $40,000, you have two kids, I don't know how you'd support two kids of
four thousand. You have to go to government assistance, right? Which by the way, we as
conservatives, we bash government assistance a lot. So I'm a huge organ ducks fan, like massive
organ ducks fan. My dad went to university of Oregon, my uncle did, my as conservatives, we bash government assistance a lot. So I'm a huge Oregon Ducks fan, like massive Oregon Ducks fan.
My dad went to the University of Oregon, my uncle did, my aunt did, like I know every
player.
So Dan Lanning, the coach, I don't know if you care about college football or not, but
the coach of University of Oregon, like there was a moment in his life where he was like
a, what they call like an, not an assistant coach, what do they say?
Like you're kind of like a coach's assistant basically.
He was on food stamps as a coach.
He's like, and it was like, I was ashamed by it.
I felt guilty, but he's like, we needed it.
And now he's earning like 11 million bucks a year
being the University of Oregon football coach.
And so I think that's like a great case story of like,
okay, we want this to be a safety net, not a hammock.
And like, here's a guy who really needed it.
He had two kids.
And so if you're earning 40,000 bucks a year, you know, that's
a tough spot.
So I always think about this study, this data where the US military during World War II
and Vietnam War conducted aptitude and psychological evaluations showing that 10 to 20% of new
recruits were only ever positively counterproductive in any sort of
work.
And then this is also backed by corporate research as well, showing that 10 to 20% of
individuals will only ever be toxic and contribute to less efficiency in the work environment
than them just being gone in the first place.
As someone that runs a massive company, how do you find these people and then seed them
out?
That's a great question.
They kind of reveal themselves.
So it's a really important question.
So we have highly intensive events, the best in the movement, I would say.
They are objectively the biggest, 15,000 people, 20,000 people.
Last year we hosted the Bobby Kennedy Donald Trump event where Bobby Kennedy endorsed Donald
Trump. We hosted Kennedy endorsed Donald Trump.
We hosted President Trump six times last year.
We had our Student Action Summit, our Young Women's Leadership Summit, AmFest, tons of
campus stuff.
So pressure is a beautiful thing.
Pressure will reveal those 20% very quickly.
They cannot hide in a high pressure situation.
What do you look for specifically?
You're like, what do you-
Complaining, asymmetrical behavior, suppressive personality,
anti-social personality behavior for sure.
Gossiping, leaking, being late, trying to divide,
things of that nature, disobeying orders,
cutting corners. When do you know
how to cut and maybe give them a chance?
Maybe they just had a bad day,
they didn't sleep, their kids are...
So if there's a pattern, for sure.
I mean, it goes to like levels of defiance, right?
If somebody is directly defying orders
or if somebody has a really bad attitude.
And again, events are a great way to flush this out.
I always say when I have our all staff meeting,
I said, some of you guys are gonna move up in the company
in the next four days,
and some of you guys might not be here in four days.
And like, there's a lot of silence in the room.
But you know, when you have 700 people in a room,
it's just the odds, right?
And so, you know, we have very strict policies
at Turning Point USA of certain things that we expect
and certain things that drive success.
And it's a great way to kind of see what people are made of.
Now, when you say disobeying orders,
how can you tell if they're truly just being defiant
for the sake of being defiant,
or if they're an entrepreneur at heart
and doing what they feel is the best move for the company,
even though it's not popular.
So let me give you an example.
If there is a rule which is like,
during these three days you are not to drink alcohol,
because you have to be on call
and that we're hosting high school,
it's totally appropriate.
And we find out that you're at a bar drinking alcohol.
That's disobedience, right?
Defiance.
Whereas if they're trying to find a more creative solution, yeah, I mean, I'll be honest, like we kind of run our stuff like
the military in the sense of like the four days, we appreciate your creativity. We want
you to kind of within bounds. But for example, if I'm hosting President Trump and I need
like bike racks up, and all of a sudden, you know, you show up with cones.
Like I didn't need your creativity there, okay?
I need you to follow the orders, okay?
Right?
Like, so, you know, if I'm hosting the biggest speakers in the movement and I need an intro
video done, and all of a sudden I see Dolly Parton, like no, no, no, I need an intro video.
I don't need Jolene, okay?
So like I appreciate the creativity, but you got to be creative within, you know...
By the way, we also have... There's times to be maximally creative, right? But understand our
events. Our events team is the greatest in the country, in the movement. They deserve so much
credit. You guys should come by. You'll love it. It's unbelievable. It's life-changing. And just
from the audiovisual to the music to the attendees to to the experience, to the exhibitors, to the sponsors.
It's unbelievable.
What we put on is second to none.
It's just one of the many things we do.
And like, there's a long lead up,
but it's like, it's literally a military operation.
It's a 24 hour operation, right?
From the security to the students.
We have 5,000 students that we have to look after, right?
High school kids from across, come across the country, so.
Yeah, I will say I'm extremely impressed.
We've filmed with a lot of different businesses, corporations, et cetera.
You do run a tight ship.
We do run a tight ship.
That is a good way to put it.
But for those people that aren't able to be a deckhand of a tight ship, those people that
10% to 20% of people that will only ever be positively counterproductive, what do we do
with them as a society?
You can't just let them job hop for their entire life, right?
If they're never going to make it out of poverty, poverty is just not good for anybody.
Some of them end up in prison.
I mean, that's an honest answer, unfortunately.
I mean, there is a anti-social component to going to prison.
I don't know the answer to that.
Honestly, some of them end up getting married and they don't reenter the workforce. So that's an answer. But look, this is not a problem
unique to America. It seems as if it's built into the species, right? I don't know.
Now, you've started making quite a lot of money going from the beginning to where you
are now.
Very blessed.
How have you handled your own personal finances? Very carefully. I mean, I'm a big investor.
I have a great team that does it.
So, I mean, for just to be clear,
I didn't take a salary from Turning Point,
you say, the first five years.
So, and I didn't want it.
I mean, all the money went back into the company.
And so, my test of a founder is always like,
what do you pay yourself the first couple of years?
And unless you have kids at home,
or else you have like a family to support,
like, you know, mom that's sick, you should not be taking money out of the company. Like it all should be going
back in. Because it's just, it's so precious at that point in that period of time. And so
I would say that probably over 75, 75 to 80% of all the money I make is invested.
But what do you invest in? I mean, it's very diversified from private equity, which is great.
So once you're able to make enough money, you're able to kind of get access to private equity deals,
which is great. I'm super boring with some stuff too. I'm just like, Hey, you know, buy this mutual
fund by, you know, buy the Dow, buy this index and just kind of put it aside. I went all in and bought
the dip during the, the tariff stuff and COVID. During COVID I bought triple leverage triple Q.
No way.
Of course I did.
What do you mean of course?
Of course you did.
I mean like what are you doing?
You should become a financial advisor man.
You got to start having fun.
Okay why was that so obvious to you to go triple leverage?
It was the easiest bet I've ever made in my life.
Why?
You're in a bet against America.
I think the argument was that it could get a lot worse
before it gets better.
And we didn't know that there was gonna be
two trillion dollars printed into your economy.
First of all, that's true.
And I was against that.
But I mean, my whole premise at the time was,
this is so self-inflicted.
We decided to shut down the country.
A meteor didn't strike.
It's not an alien invasion.
We could reverse this immediately.
And so I said, and by the way,
I'm investing for the next 30 years.
You're trying to tell me the Dow's gonna remain
about 17,000 points in the next 30 years. So basically I was like, I'm investing for the next 30 years. You're trying to tell me the Dow is going to remain about 17,000 points for the next 30 years.
So basically, I was like, I'm buying triple Q, triple lever.
I mean, it was like kind of ballsy when you think about it.
Yeah. I guess what you don't know is that how far can it go before businesses start flat out?
Sure. So to be clear, I started to buy when I started to see a little bit of signs of hope, right?
Like, I try to see the bottom.
If I remember correctly, it went down to like 17, 18,000,
like, and then yeah,
just kind of plowed a bunch of money into it.
By the way, I was like, fine.
I wasn't even married at the time.
I had no kids.
Do you manage your own money or do you have people?
No, I have a great guy that does,
but I call a lot of shots.
Like I make macro decisions, not micro decisions.
That's the way I say it.
I'm not a good micro investor.
Buy this company, buy that company.
The only thing I'll say is like when Elon's company
went on Tesla, I wanted to buy Tesla
just as kind of a symbolic philosophical thing
because I thought he was being treated so terribly.
But like macro stuff, I'll get involved in.
So for example, if there's like,
hey, I want to invest in more artificial intelligence,
or I think that oil is undervalued,
we'll have a conversation.
The guy that does it is a guy named Doug DeGroote.
He's phenomenal.
And so he's just a great family office, really sweet guy.
And what about Bitcoin?
Oh yeah, no, so I don't buy individual Bitcoin,
but I'm an investor in a thing called Anagram,
which is the fundamental technology below crypto.
So it's kind of like buying the plumbing
of the crypto industry, if you will.
And so like Solana and all these companies, anytime they wanted an ICO, you have to basically
have the fundamental technology beneath it. I don't even understand it that well, other than
you're kind of buying a philosophy, if you will. And then look, I'm in a very unique blessed place
where there is a lot of deal flow that comes my way, where a lot of people want to, you know,
have me invest in stuff. And I say no more than I say yes.
And then I'll do a little bit of real estate here or there.
But no, I mean look-
In terms of rental properties or what?
No, like flipping homes and stuff like that.
Do you have guys that you partner with to flip homes or?
Yeah, I mean I do.
I have a couple guys and they've actually been very successful.
Did a couple in Chicago, trying to do a couple here in Arizona.
Where do you have the time for that?
Look, I mean, that's the thing is like-
It seems like it just takes away from everything else.
It does, but like, I mean, if you, time is a very interesting thing.
And if you meticulously plan out your day, there's so much waste in people's schedule,
right?
How much time do things actually take?
Do you really need two hours for a meeting?
Do you really need an hour and a half for that?
And so I'm like a time efficiency maximalist.
And I still get nine to 10 hours of sleep a night, amazingly.
Yeah.
I mean, we were talking with your team and they were saying you work crazy hours.
Correct.
And I was like, why does he work so hard?
And their answer was he's just extremely mission focused.
Yes, correct.
I'm very driven.
Does it exhaust you ever to the point of regretting it?
Oh, no, no.
I mean, so I'm actually finishing a book.
Sorry, I actually don't work one day out of the week.
So I take a Sabbath every Saturday.
Turn my phone off, no work, just kids, just family.
It's an amazing blessing.
So every Saturday, totally off.
It's amazing how much work you can get done in six days though. And so I wake up early, you know, wake up around
6, 630. You know, again, I usually feel really good in the morning. I don't have
any hangover or any of that stuff, right? And I just get straight to work. And I do
my show from 9 to 11 local time in Arizona. Once I'm done, I try to just kind of, you know,
just eat a little bit, maybe take a 10 minute,
15 minute nap, maybe.
I try not to do more than that.
It's amazing, like the power of like a 12 to 15 minute nap.
And then I'll just work all day.
And then I'll try to train a little bit, go for a walk.
But again, I'm in a very blessed position
where things really come to me,
where I used to have to go to things.
Have you always been this way? Like you've had laser, laser sharp focus. You've never
felt like you dealt with poor motivation. You've always just been that way. You don't
do anything to try to cultivate this motivation and laser focus.
No, that's a really good question. No, I've always been very driven, like very, very driven.
So that's a really interesting point.
I thought when I first started this,
everyone wanted to be equally successful.
Like everyone had equal drive.
So I thought that was like an equal,
equally distributed ingredient amongst the population.
And that was my nape of the tang.
I didn't realize that like motivation and like drive
and grit and hustle was actually like an exceptional quality.
And so then quickly I realized like, whoa,
I'm just gonna outwork everybody.
Like I'm not the most charismatic person.
You know, I can speak.
I got a good thing going, but I'm not the most.
I'm not the smartest person to go to Harvard Law, right?
I don't have the highest IQ,
but I can compete with the best of them.
But I am gonna outwork you.
Like I'll put in more hours, I'll read more books,
I'll listen to more podcasts.
Like I will do more meetings, I'll travel to more cities.
Like that I can do.
Have you done an IQ test?
I did when I was young, yeah.
And what did it come back at?
It was well above average.
I don't wanna misspeak on the spec, but I think
it was like, I don't want to say a number because it's going to get cut off on all that,
but it was. 300.
No, that was not. No, it was not. No, but it was not quite meant so, but it was high.
I mean, I have a good memory, but I'm not like an international chess champion, right?
I'm not like a perfect SAT guy. I had good ACT scores, right? We took
the ACT where I was from, you know, 31, 32, was it respectable? It was like a 36. But,
so I'm not dumb. I mean, that's not, but I, I, I, I'm a unique combination now that I'm,
I can see it, which is, you know, I'm like a heat seeking missile towards what I want
to achieve. And that, and that alone can be an incredible differentiator in this space.
So what are some of the sacrifices or compromises that you make because of that heat seeking missile
nature that people may not recognize? My life's configured now in a way where
the biggest sacrifice I have to make is not being home with my kids. And that sucks. I don't have
to do that as much. I get to say no to a lot of stuff. By the way, thank you guys for coming to
Phoenix. It's one of the main reasons why the way, thank you guys for coming to Phoenix.
It's one of the main reasons why this was like-
Thank you for doing this.
Yeah, absolutely.
By the way, I'm gonna do this more with more shows.
I'm like, you wanna interview me?
Come to Phoenix, yeah? Yeah.
Because my kids are my most important thing in my world.
My wife, my kids, my relationship with God,
top three things, right?
God, wife, kids in that order.
And so that's a sacrifice that I just am not willing to make.
So I'm just saying no to a lot more stuff.
And so, but in the early days, it's so interesting.
Like people think like, oh, you know,
you had a bunch of donors that wanted to give you money.
Like, yeah, that's not the story actually.
The story was I was going to find a lot of donors
and tried to have to scrap and hustle
and get like elementary funding
because we could barely make payroll
for the first five to six years, right?
We could barely pay the bills.
This building that we're sitting in right now was not even open until our sixth year.
Okay?
We barely had an office the first couple of years.
And so, yeah, I mean, like you want to be successful, you think it's easy.
Okay, I'll show you my flight logs.
200 red-eye flights.
You want to go do that?
200 red-eye flights, where you have to go sit and perform and give a speech and be on
and go all day and be interesting.
1200 cable news interviews, Fox news at three o'clock in the morning, Fox
news at three 30 in the morning, get up, get on a flight conference calls.
Remember the donor's name, write a thank you note, show up, report for the donor.
They have questions.
They're critical.
They're skeptical.
Like fine.
Okay.
It sounds easy, right?
And I'm not here to like brag on it,
but like, there's a lot you have to sacrifice for all this.
And it's really easy to look at Turning Point USA
because people think they can like recreate it.
Like, oh yeah, I can recreate.
Like, it's fine, I mean, look,
it's the Lord's blessing and providence of all this.
Like, I'm telling you, man, like,
there's a hustle behind the scenes.
And not just me, it's our team too.
Our team works their tail off.
Because now what's so cool is like,
my like maniacally driven purpose
is now shedding off on people.
And like not everyone can sustain it.
They're like, this is too much for me.
I'm gonna go work for an insurance company.
Like that's fine.
Like, cause the pace here is first class.
That's why we get more done.
That's why we have more chapters.
We have more donors.
That's why our budget is bigger.
It's cause we're just gonna keep on growing.
We're gonna keep on expanding
because we do not settle for mediocrity here.
Excellence is the only thing that will settle.
What do you do now to save as much time as possible?
So I'm a huge scheduler, big time.
And so I schedule out days in advance.
And so I will block out, like,
this is when I'm going to have conference call time.
This is when I'm going to have,
this is when I'm going to train.
This is where I'm going to eat lunch.
Like I go down to like the 15 interval, 15 minute interval.
And this is the time that I'm gonna go try
and go see this friend.
This is the time where I'm gonna go just turn my phone off
and go for a walk.
So I'm very, very precise with time.
And then the biggest hack,
and you guys know this, nothing new,
it's called layering, you know this.
So anything you're doing,
try to fit two or three things on top of it. So if I'm traveling to go speak,
listen to an audiobook, right?
I mean, obviously.
So then all of a sudden, I'm getting two things done at once.
If I'm training or working out, OK, I'm also
going to be trying to listen to a podcast
that I need in preparation.
I take all my calls in the treadmill.
100%!
It's amazing, right?
Or like, so I try to do a lot.
I'm a big walker.
I think there's a couple health hacks out here
that are right in front of us that nobody ever wants to talk about, right? I'm a huge lot. I'm a big walker. I think there's a couple of health hacks out here that are right in front of us
that nobody ever wants to talk about.
Right.
I'm a huge big, I'm a huge believer in sleep, like massive believer.
I think it's totally undervalued.
I'm a major believer in walking.
I think we don't talk about walking enough.
Just walk, not running, not deadlifting, not cold plunging, just walking.
Okay.
I'm a big believer in fasting.
I think fasting is like untapped power.
And then I just think like not eating terribly this you know not those four things
You're actually gonna be pretty relatively healthy. Yeah, we used to come up with their best ideas taking walks
Oh walking is one to mile walk there are studies
I think that show if you have forward movement like if you're walking your brain actually
Functions at a higher capacity than if you're sitting sedentary.
My best ideas are when I'm walking.
My best ideas are when I'm moving.
And I go for walks with my kids.
So that's another layering, right?
So, I mean, you wanna talk about like a triple layering.
When my daughter was six months old,
she can't yet communicate,
but she'd wanna go for a walk and she'd fall asleep.
So I'd listen to a podcast while getting a walk,
while spending time with my
kid. Like that's the trifecta, right? And so I'm really big on that. And so as far as
time, you just also have to be able to say no. There's so much wasted time. And look,
I'm also in a very blessed position. I'm incredibly blessed. Most people don't have this. A lot of
entrepreneurs do. I don't have to sit around at a desk and do just like wait for stuff to come to me.
I constantly can set the terms of my own schedule.
Now it comes at great cost and great consequence, right?
Because with great freedom comes phenomenal responsibility
and enormous responsibility.
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In terms of your own material success, where is the money coming from in terms of like
percentages?
Because I know you have like a store, you have a for-profit merchandise company, you
have your nonprofit, you have, you know have your YouTube channel, all of these things.
Where is the money coming from?
Very small percentage is my salary at Turning Point USA.
So Turning Point USA is 120, Turning Point USA, Turning Point Action, 120, $130 million
budget.
My salary there is about $300,000 a year, and I donate $350,000 back to Turning Point
USA.
So it's basically a wash, right?
So it literally is a wash.
And you might say, well, why do you donate it back?
Well, my wife and I, we try to be charitable.
We try to give 10% of our income a year.
What better place than to give it back
to Turning Point USA, right?
Why do you even take a salary?
Honestly, that's a really good question.
Number one, it's very important from just an IRS standpoint.
If the CEO is unpaid,
it just kind of looks very weird on the form.
But also, I do believe in different buckets
for different things.
I still think I should earn a salary for my work here.
And then if I want to give it back, then so be it.
It's a psychological thing more than anything else.
Like it comes in, and then if I want to give it back,
I can give it back.
I know that might sound like strange to people,
but in the non-pro...
I'm thinking just wasted payroll taxes.
No, it's fine, it's true.
I mean, all the FICA tax money going out the window, right?
It's better to go back into the company than not.
No, the revenue streams is the show.
The show is a for-profit entity, Charlie Kirk Show podcast.
As of the recording right now,
we're either number two or number three
in all of Apple News, incredibly blessed.
We stream on Rumble every day, on X every day.
We're on 250 radio stations, on over 400 affiliates.
We are on Real America's Voice every single day, which is a great fast channel, which is also on Pluto and Roku.
It easily estimates 2 to 3 million people a day tune into some part of the Charlie Kirk show.
We cut it up, we socialize it, and then of course we have a beast of a YouTube channel.
We do very, very well on TikTok.
And so you kind of compile that all together.
And then of course I do speaking.
I try to write a book a year, which I'm able to make personal money on.
Has life gotten a lot better since becoming wealthy?
Yes.
I mean, look, my life has gotten a lot better since I got married and I had kids.
I will tell you, the best thing about being wealthy is not being poor and not having to worry about money.
Like, just like not get to a place where you don't have to worry about money.
It's funny, when you get to a place where you have like billions of dollars,
you're actually worrying about money all the time because then you have like lawsuits and it's like your identity.
I'm not joking. Like that, it's kind of like a weird like horseshoe,
which is like you have no money, you worry about money all the time.hoe Which is like you have no money you worry about money all the time and you have a ton of money
You worry about money all the time
It's best to be like somewhere in the middle where you have like a lot of cash flow
The best thing is this I've purpose what I'm doing and the money is a nice reward
Like it's not money is not the number one driver for me
It's not like I mean that like I have the skill set where if I quit all of this right now
I could probably go start a company right now and after 10 years, I could probably sell it for like a couple
hundred million bucks.
That's not, I mean, that's not like a crazy thing for me to say.
The fact that we've started Turning Point USA in action, we have $130 million in revenue,
right?
I have the Charlie Kirk Show.
If it was all about getting rich, I could go start some app and probably go be successful.
What makes me so happy is I get to impact people's lives.
I get to speak truth.
I have purpose.
I get to help save the civilization.
And then I also get to make some money while doing it.
And that quite honestly is the most enormous blessing.
I have the greatest job in the world.
I'm the happiest person in the world.
I mean that.
Now in terms of disclosures like this and being so open about your finances, AOC recently
disclosed that she has no individual stock holdings.
Tim Walz famously said he doesn't have any investments.
Do you think this is just financial irresponsibility or do you think it's a good thing that they
don't have a financial interest in maybe some of the measures that they're putting forward?
So I mean, I'll tell them about the Tim Walz and AOC thing.
I don't know enough about it.
She's young and but like Timalsh, it's very interesting.
It's like, so on one hand, you're like, wow, he can't be bought.
Another hand is like, wow, you're like really bad with money.
Like, like you're kind of old and like you don't have any stocks.
Well, he has a pension.
Okay, fine.
But I mean, like, okay, I get it that he was a football coach or whatever,
but I mean, is, okay, I get it that he was a football coach or whatever. But I mean,
is that a good example? I guess. I mean, I just kind of the idea, which is you're of that age, you haven't played into compound interest. You haven't like really tried to, I mean, by the way,
you could have you could have blinded trusts and, you know, different ways of building wealth.
I don't think you should go as far as Nancy Pelosi and basically like trade stocks after committee hearings.
I think that's probably a little ambitious, right?
But I actually prefer my politicians to be successful.
I know that's a weird statement,
but people that own nothing, like own nothing,
it might be like really appealing on the surface,
but then I wonder, do they know how wealth is created?
It's indicative of something deeper that could be an issue.
I think so.
Again, there's plenty of good Republicans, I'm sure,
that own nothing and they run for office, and that's great.
But generally, I do want someone that knows.
Here's the key.
Poverty is human norm.
Go to any country around the world.
Most people are in poverty.
Wealth is the exception.
How do you get wealthy is the most important, like economic issue in front of us. It's actually a
really hard issue to solve. We know how to solve it. Markets is
how you get wealthy. That's it. Okay. Private property, trade,
rule of law, can't steal people's stuff. We're going to
enforce those laws. It works. Decent virtuous society. Okay,
so we know how to go be poor, not hard. I actually want people in so we know how to be poor. Not hard.
I actually want people in office that know how to create wealth.
I think that's a really important question.
And then the opposite of that, though, with, you know,
tickers like NANC that track the trade of...
You should totally follow Nancy Pelosi's trade.
That is grotesque. That's a totally different thing.
So how do we crack down on that?
To what degree is it a problem?
We should make it illegal. Josh Hawley's act is very good.
I think it's called the Stock Act or something.
See, here's what I think.
I made this in a video years ago when the whole Nancy Pelosi tracker came up.
I thought it would be a great idea for just anyone in Congress to signal their trades
publicly in real time at 24 hours before they plan to make them.
And that's it.
And they could trade whatever they want to, but they just have to signal 24 hours in advance.
That's it.
I have no issue with that.
I think it's great.
I would go a step further.
I don't think any member of Congress should be trading stock period whatsoever.
Individual stocks, but they could buy ETFs.
Sure.
I think, yes, fine.
I think it should be complete moratorium on individual stocks.
They know way more than they're telling.
I think that would be impossible to enforce
because they would claim that, well, I don't trade.
I have a financial advisor who's trading on my behalf
in an irrevocable trust that I don't own.
And they just happened to buy all these defense stocks
before Iran started bombing Israel.
Yeah, I know.
That's not, that was coincidence.
I bought all the pharmaceutical stocks
before COVID, right? Exactly. I don't know the enforcement. I just, I spend a Yeah, I just happened to it. That's not, that was coincidence. I bought all the pharmaceutical stocks before COVID, right? Exactly.
I don't know the enforcement.
I just, I spend a lot of time in DC.
It's a disgusting city.
It's repulsive.
There's a lot more information that these people know
than they're ever letting on.
And they're getting wealthier while most Americans
don't have access to that information.
I think your idea is great.
The kind of public, you know, beacon, if you will.
We have insider trading laws for a reason. And what these congressmen do is like the definition of public, you know, beacon, if you will. We have insider trading laws for a reason.
And what these congressmen do is like the definition of insider trading.
But the penalty is so small.
Like if they don't report their trades, they have 30 days to report them.
And if they don't do that, the fee, I think, is either 200 bucks or it's a thousand.
Like it's not, it's pennies, basically.
It needs to be severe criminal penalties my opinion
I'm very populist on this question because look most people in this audience
They would love to know what's going on in a skiff
They would love me which is a secure compartmentalized information facility where there's no phones
It is a bunch of generals giving you classified information about I don't know a new Wuhan leak or a new war
Or they would love to know whether or not an electric vehicle mandate is going to be attached to the reconciliation bill or not.
And then they're able to make trades in that information.
So I don't know, I'm very populous on this thing.
I think we should just put an end to all of it.
What do you think about things like Trump's meme coin?
Do you think something like that was an overall smart or not very smart?
I don't know.
I know Eric really well.
He's the one that's pushing it.
I mean, look, I know the Trump family, so I'm not going to speak against them.
They're all friends of mine. I don one that's pushing it. I mean, look, I know the Trump family, so I'm not going to speak against them. They're all friends of mine.
I don't know enough about it.
I get a lot of questions about it on college campuses.
I know people that have made money on it.
Like, I don't know, like I'll say this when it comes to like crypto in general,
I'm very supportive of it.
I know it's largely like a Trump family endeavor.
Technically he did promote it before he came president.
I know a lot of people kind of rolled their eyes at it.
Here's my statement and people can laugh at it. He got shot so he's allowed to launch a meme coin. That's my statement.
So anybody you get shot.
No, I'm half, it's sarcasm. Look, I'm not going to get into the details of defending
it. That's a question for Eric or Don.
What are your thoughts on Bitcoin?
I'm a big fan of Bitcoin.
Should the US do a Bitcoin reserve?
Absolutely, yes.
Yes, the United States should have a strategic Bitcoin reserve.
And who should pay for the Bitcoin reserve?
That's a good question.
Hopefully, some of the tariff money could potentially do that.
The reason why I think we should have a strategic Bitcoin reserve,
I know you guys had Michael Saylor on your show,
and I think he's onto something.
There is something called the mass adoption theory,
which is over a period of time, like the English language, US dollar,
things just catch on and they're just kind of volitional
and there's no stopping it.
I think Bitcoin is that.
You gotta watch out though,
quantum computing could potentially crack cryptography.
But if they do that,
then they're also cracking bank accounts.
Right.
And stock trading accounts.
Yeah, so quantum is the only asterisk on all this,
but I think sailors onto something very profound, which is that because Bitcoin is a legitimately scarce resource, that it's
probably going to go nowhere but up.
So Sailor makes a very provocative argument that Bitcoin could go up 10X over the next
10 years or something like that, which therefore if we start a Bitcoin strategic reserve, it
could pay for the national debt and like basically cover our losses on
the deficit.
But I think that we should add, I think the United States government should be invested
in crypto without a doubt.
I tend to agree with Michael Saylor that it's more likely to go to a million than zero.
Yes, I think that's right.
And by the way, so you have a problem with the world's richest people.
They don't know where to put their money.
So there's only so many penthouses in London and Paris that they could buy.
There's only so many ranches in Wyoming that they could buy.
And so we've had this problem.
So you create all this money, the money goes upwards to wealth inequality point to your
earlier point.
The question is then, well, what do rich people do with money?
There's only so many equities they can buy.
There's only so many shares in Nvidia and Apple and Microsoft they could justify.
Well, money needs to find a home and it's found a home in Bitcoin.
And so once it has mass adoption and literally the wealthiest families on the planet are
starting to park serious monies in Bitcoin.
And because it's scarce, it's easy to transfer and it's just a winner.
Sometimes there's a mass adoption and it just rises to the surface.
I think Bitcoin is that.
Speaking of the national debt, at what point do you think it's going to become a major
problem?
I think it already is. I think it already is.
Do you see any solvable way that we could address this? Because it seems as though if Trump's big, beautiful bill passes, it's just going to get two trillion higher.
Yeah, so that's over 10 years. So I do find issue with some of those estimates. I don't want to get too deep into that. That's kind of a wonky, we'll lose the audience on CBO estimates, Congressional Budget Office estimates. I don't want to get too deep into that. That's kind of a wonky, we'll lose the audience on CBO estimates, congressional budget office estimates. I think we need to cut a lot more
spending. I wish more Republicans wanted to agree. I know Donald Trump agrees. He's just very
frustrated with some of the Republicans on Capitol Hill that don't want to cut it. So here's the worst
thing we could do though. The worst thing we could do out of all the options is not grow.
So the worst of all the options is not grow. So when you have a big debt,
that's bad. Not growing the big debt is catastrophic. Growing with a big debt is
somewhat manageable. Growing with cutting your debt is awesome. That would be the best possible
scenario. So the calculus is okay, we have a big debt. Let's at least try to have the debt outpace two things,
the rate of the increase of the debt to GDP ratio
and the rate of inflation.
If GDP can grow faster than inflation
and grow faster than the rate of the debt to GDP ratio,
then we're in a manageable place.
So that's what the premise of a lot of these tax cuts
of the bill is, right?
No tax on tips, no tax on overtime, right?
The depreciation, the extension of the Trump tax cuts, all of which I support,
because you need a pro-growth agenda, because when you're a debtor nation and you have no growth,
then you're going to be in a really bad spot.
What happened to Doge? It just seemed like it's...
Oh, I don't think it's done. I think, but first of all, I think Elon did a lot of good work.
I really did. First of all, I think Elon's greatest contribution was a philosophical one.
I think Elon made us all realize how much waste there is and how much we really need
to kind of get into the details of how much the government is inefficient from a technological
standpoint, from a efficiency standpoint.
So I don't think it's over by any means.
I think Doge is a cultural mindset that is going to be in hopefully around the Republican Party for years to
come. It just seemed like Congress didn't really have that big of an incentive to
do anything about it. What was most surprising, Elon said that he just
wanted people to code and write in a description of where the money went
because right now you could basically just leave it blank, send money and not
write what the purpose of the money is for.
And he just put something in there and he said he was up against just a wall that they
didn't even mandate that.
It's a very complicated, so yeah, that's right.
And so there is common sense to type what it's for.
There's so much waste in the federal government and my hope is that we can start to rein it in
in the next couple of months and couple of years.
It's a beast though, guys.
I mean, this is a, it is a wild monster
that is hard to rein in.
And I know that sounds like cope and an excuse,
but you have an entrenched permanent bureaucracy
of millions of people.
And then you have judges that are preventing
literally the Trump administration
from doing some of this stuff.
You have federal judges that are coming in and preventing, you know, President Donald Trump from being like,
no, I want to lay off these workers.
Nope. I want to cut this aid.
Nope. I want to cut this, which of course is unconstitutional.
So, yes, I mean, like it would be nice.
Here's the goal.
The goal would be we need to block chain the entire federal government, put the entire federal government on block chain.
The number two, every dime of federal spending online in real time.
We should know what everybody is spending in real time.
No different than a transparent federal database.
Did that be a national security risk in any way?
There are certain things you could block box for sure.
But like, I think that people deserve to know on a day by day,
month by month basis, like what is the department interior spending?
Like, are they going, what is the department, what are the veterans
affairs spending money on? We should know. Like, are they going, what is the department, what are the veterans affairs spending money on?
We should know.
Like, are they buying $50 hammers?
Like, are they buying $200 bandages?
Like, I think it's our money.
We, this is the whole problem I have with this whole thing.
This is our money.
It is you watching money.
We are the ones that earn the money.
It is not the government's money.
They, we are the sovereign.
We create the government. We create the government.
We earn the money.
And then the government extracts it from us with our consent, right?
Because we vote, we have elections, whatever.
So we have a right to know where that money goes.
It doesn't magically become the government's money.
I guess part of the problem is that there's no penalty for overspending.
It's like a credit card.
The limit just keeps getting higher and higher and higher.
So why is there?
No, it's actually even worse than that.
There's an incentive to keep spending more.
In fact, the incentive in Washington, DC
is that you have one wing that wants to spend money
on more war, which is the Republican Party
War Mongering Caucus, which I'm at war with.
And then you have a whole other thing,
which is the Welfare Caucus.
So you have the Warfare Welfare Caucuses.
So the warfare guys want to go invade the world.
The Welfare Caucus wants to go put the entire world on welfare.
What can they both agree on?
We'll authorize your warfare if you authorize our welfare.
We all spend more money and we get our pet projects done.
And then we're going to go invade the world.
And they're like, oh, so the warfare people say don't invade the world.
But if you invade the world, can we invite the world?
They say it's okay if you go invade the country, but then we can have a couple million more people into the country.
And then the warfare people are like, ah, we don't like that. We'll if you go invade the country, but then we can have a couple million more people into the country. And then the warfare people are like,
ah, we don't like that.
We'll do that for the welfare people,
but then we gotta put them on welfare.
And literally this is the uniparty bipartisan agreement
last 30 years.
Every major public policy budgetary debate
comes down to an agreement between the warfare
and the welfare wing of the two parties.
It's warfare.
No, there's no way to solve that, right?
First of all, I would not know.
No, actually, I-
That's impossible.
Yes, that's very simple.
The way you described it, I agree with you completely, but that-
The reason I say no, no, no is that I am not a cynic.
I'm like a super optimist.
I've never been more optimistic on the country.
Let me tell you why.
I saw insane doomerism like a year ago.
They're never going to let Trump win.
They're going to try to take him out. And like, I saw dumerism die.
And so I think what Trump's,
one of his greatest contributions
is he's really pushed the art of the possible.
Like actually, no, you can do dramatic things.
You can change stuff.
But yes, to your answer, it's gonna be very big.
It is climbing a major mountain, massive.
Do you worry about the US dollar?
Of course, absolutely.
And what do you think is the most likely outcome?
Because I would like to think positively,
but at the same time, I think realistically,
it's just gonna be pregnant.
As one of my friends in Heroes, Tony Robbins would say,
I don't tell you to go to your garden and say,
there's no weeds, there's no weeds, there's no weeds.
I tell you to spot the weeds and pull them out.
So I'm not like delusional.
I'm an optimist.
I try to find the best case story
of how things can be told.
Then have us have human agency and action to actually do it.
So with the US dollar, look, the US dollar
as the world reserve currency has gone down dramatically
in the last 20 years.
President Donald Trump is focused on breaking up BRICS.
So BRICS is Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.
South Africa is the DEI pick.
Why South Africa is considered to be some sort of world.
That's a, that's a joke for the record.
Some sort of like world currency power.
It's like a freaking joke.
Okay.
All right.
India, easy to peel away.
We already have great relations with India.
JD Vance did a state visit to India that was very, not very reported.
Donald Trump, by the way, he stopped the India Pakistan war.
He deserves huge credit for that.
That thing was like simmering up and was going to be incredible and big. And so then Brazil, Brazil is a disaster.
Lula is a complete Marxist and communist Bolsonaro should still be prime minister.
So then you have Russia and China. That's a personal Brazil, Russia, China. The best case
telling is we can end this Russian Ukrainian war, and hopefully try to create a little bit
of separation and daylight between the ever growing marriage of Russia and China,
which is bad for America.
It's bad for the West.
It's bad for the world.
And so we should want the U S dollar to remain the world reserves,
currency status.
It is imperative or I think reckless involvement in the United States with
the Russian-Ukrainian war has only led to de-dollarization.
We took Russia out of the swift banking system.
Basically we took their dollars out of their bank accounts.
We confiscated their dollars.
What does that do to every other nation that uses dollars as the
world world reserve currency status?
We're no longer a safe haven.
We never should have done that guys.
Regardless of how bad Putin is for invading Ukraine and all that stuff.
Basically we de incentivincentivize
people to trust the dollar as a safe haven. Basically we said, oh, if you misbehave, we might take away
your dollars, which then has led to an incentive structure away from the US dollar, which is very
destructive. It seems like we're always facing several cataclysmic level issues at the exact
same time. Welcome to modernity. And so I'm just curious, what would you say are the top three issues that if they could
be immediately addressed and fixed, we would be leagues better off?
I'm going to give you probably some unexpected answers.
I have some answers here.
Let's see if you can answer what I have here.
Okay.
So the question is cataclysmic actual like-
Like what you would say are the biggest issues facing America right now.
And if you could provide three answers.
Yeah.
So number one is the fertility crisis.
Interesting.
Yeah.
We're having less children ever before.
We're mating less.
It's a major problem.
We're on the verge of a population collapse.
It's a huge issue.
No one wants to talk about it.
Everyone's like, oh, I'm single and 32 without kids.
No, you have a moral obligation to get married and have kids actually.
And if you don't, that's fine. If you don't want to, you have to make the case
that what you're doing is more important. And there is a case for that. Like if you're
a Catholic father, like a priest, I'm not Catholic. Okay. You're actually helping society.
You're doing something. But I come from a worldview that you have a moral obligation
to help society and to help people through something that you do. It's not just all about
yourself and pursuing your own self-interest. And that's the death, the death of modernity. I think part of it is getting married and
having children. I'm a very traditionalist in that way. So that's number one. Other cataclysmic
things. We are incredibly sick in this country. And this is why I love Bobby Kennedy. Like I'm a
huge Bobby Kennedy fan. We're a fat country. We're a sick country. We're a beast country.
We're a depressed country. We're a poisoned country. We're a depressed country. We're a poisoned country.
We are not physically fit to fight a war, let alone be able to stand up and even go for a walk for two, two miles.
We are a fat country and it's a major problem.
And so I actually think that physiology is directly related with how you act and how
you feel.
I got that again from Tony Robbins. And so if all of
a sudden you're kind of this like obey obese, sad country, of course, you're going to kind of just
fall apart and you're going to collapse. The last one is the most provocative of the three,
is that we have a major issue of this country that we become a nation of foreigners, and we're
strangers in our own country.
We have not assimilated the third world well into our country.
We have 20 million illegals that I believe invaded the country under Joe Biden.
And so you kind of come, I could go to 456 if you want me to, but we are increasingly not a nation or a country.
We look more like a colony where no one talks to their neighbor and we have to lock our doors at night.
We're like a high, our cities are all super high crime.
So people say, Charlie, what does success look like?
I get asked all the time.
Very easy.
I want fertility rates to go up.
I want church attendance to go up.
I want people to be less fat.
And I want to be able to not have to lock my doors at night.
I want to be able to talk to my neighbors and really have a
connective bond with them.
My final one, I want to feel safe that talk to my neighbors and really have a connective bond with them. And my final one, I want to feel safe
that my daughter can walk the streets of L.A.
unaccompanied at night.
That's it. Can you walk L.A. at night?
She can walk Tokyo at night.
Why can't you walk New York at night?
Or L.A. or San Francisco or Denver?
We are a failed country.
What did Newsom say to that?
I loved your debate with him.
Thank you. Yeah, it was something.
Why did he agree to do that? It seems so debate with him. Thank you. Yeah, it was something.
Why did he agree to do that?
It seems so weird.
So weird.
It was maximally entertaining.
Yeah.
It did very, very well.
It got millions and millions of views.
And so I don't really know what his incentive was, to be honest.
I think he wants to be president, obviously.
But he just, so to the left, he looked weak, and to the right, he looked fraudulent.
And so who did he win over? Exactly. And to the right, he looked fraudulent. And so who did he
win over? Exactly. Because the right's not going to believe I mean, we can't stand him for obvious
reasons. And to the left, they're like, look at this weak guy who's trying to find common ground
with you know, Charlie Kirk, who I think I'm terrible. So but his credit, I mean, there were
no gotchas. But I mean, look, I'll kind of go back to the point I say, like, it's a failure of
governance. If you cannot walk your greatest cities at night
That's my politics. I know that sounds like I don't care if it's Republican or Democrat
I want to be able to walk America's greatest cities at night the five greatest cities in America or New York
Chicago San Francisco LA and what's you maybe Miami? Okay, it's fine. Whatever
And people in Dallas are gonna like email us. Sorry Dallas is not what America's great
Dallas is fine, but it's not one of America's greatest cities.
And no, Seattle is not.
But Seattle used to be one of America's
like most interesting cities,
but you should be able to walk your major cities at night.
This is insane.
You go to Seoul, South Korea, amazing.
You can eat off the streets.
You go to Tokyo, go to Singapore.
This is a choice.
We are deciding to have our cities dangerous
and we shouldn't put up with it. I think it's really just being tough on crime. But that's a choice. And people deciding to have our cities dangerous. And we shouldn't put up with it.
I think it's really just being tough on crime.
And people know they could get away with it.
We're choosing to be soft on crime.
We're choosing that. It's a choice.
What was the biggest takeaway from Newsom?
His backpedaling on the trans sports issue
was fascinating to me. I did not expect that.
Where all of a sudden he kind of
agreed with me. And then you know went
super viral where he was saying that,
of course it's deeply unfair for men to compete
in female sports, that would kind of insane stuff
is this, right?
Yeah, I would say that was probably
one of the biggest takeaways.
Have you kept in touch with him since then?
I've texted him a couple of times.
Does he get back to you?
He does, yeah.
My biggest text with him was being like,
hey, you said that it was no big,
you were unfair for trans athletes
to win state championships.
Why are you not doing anything about it?
Because a man just won the girls' championship
with the state of California.
So you were still poking the bear.
Poking the bear, but I was just calling him out.
And by the way, I wasn't even publicizing it.
Now I'm finally having to publicize it.
I was like, why are you not doing it?
And by the way, during this whole Trump Newsome feud,
I was like, fine, this is the guy's total,
he's a catastrophic failure.
Does he ever reach out to you for help?
No, and I wouldn't, I wouldn't give him help.
You wouldn't?
No.
Why?
He's a Democrat.
But what if he wanted your insights in terms of policy
and you could somehow eek him a little bit more towards-
Policy, yes.
No, no, for sure.
Yes, that's right.
If he's asking like how to better govern
and help people, without a doubt, yes.
If he's asking me like how to get political power,
I will not help. What's your advice to him in terms of turning around
the state of California?
He would argue the state's doing fantastic,
they're doing great revenue.
So great.
We left California in 2020.
Good for you guys, very smart.
Unfortunately, the issues just got so bad
with homeless, crime, the taxes.
Worse.
Out of this world, they just raised the sales tax
in the city of Santa Monica.
Worse, which is a tax on guys like you.
It was really bad.
It got to a point where Vegas was so welcoming.
I made a video announcing that I was moving to Las Vegas, and someone from the Business
Administration within the city of Vegas found my email and sent me like, hey, we're really
happy to have you.
If there's anything we could do, they were happy to get the business.
We love it there. So since Gavin Newsom has like no core beliefs, he's just like a slippery politician that wants
to be in power. He's literally somebody that could pass a lie detector test easily. Like he, this guy
has no guiding principles at all. Just leave the Democrat party. That's my advice to him. If you
really want to like be in elected office that bad, just leave the Democrat party and just go run as
like a moderate Republican and just have some sort of conversion story.
Like, oh yeah, I'm some sort of progressive.
You just want political power.
You have no guiding beliefs at all whatsoever.
You'll say whatever it takes, whenever you want.
You're captured by your left flank, but you won't do that.
And finally, I don't know, I would say that more practically. Don't be afraid Gavin, to like,
go lock up a bunch of criminals and make your state better. I just, the whole premise of
California is so sad. Every time, I love California. I love California. Every time I land in California,
I say the same thing to my team. It is a shame that they messed up heaven on earth. It is without
the most, it's the most beautiful place in the world, right?
I mean, Orange County,
can you think of a better microclimate than that?
The mornings are just like gifts from God.
You do have pockets.
Orange County has gotten gorgeous.
It's like 61 degrees.
Santa Barbara too.
You have certain cities.
61 degrees in the morning.
It's just like, you just can like,
anything is possible.
It's kind of got this miss.
But I think they're sending all the people to LA.
It seems like LA is kind of like the stomping grounds
for a lot of the issues.
And then other cities are actually getting better.
Yeah, I hope so.
I think Orange County has some real, some bright spots.
But generally, look, LA is the beast of California, right?
And LA is just a dump.
It is just disgusting.
And it's too bad I say that never used to be that way.
LA used to be a really interesting city 30 to 40 years ago.
Yes, it had crime, but a better example of a city that has fallen apart is the
city that he was the mayor of San Francisco.
When I was a kid, I could walk the streets of San Francisco.
It was gorgeous.
It was fun.
It was unique.
It was interesting.
It was artistic.
It was boundary pushing, but it was gorgeous. It was fun. It was unique. It was interesting. It was artistic. It was boundary pushing, but it was safe.
You would again, Gavin Newsom, if you're listening to this, would you let your son
walk the streets of San Francisco unaccompanied at 1 a.m.?
No, you wouldn't.
Of course not.
You're a failure.
If you, if your own kids can't walk your city at night, then what have you done?
I don't want to hear about like how you oversaw gay weddings
or whatever stupid thing that you're talking about.
Or, oh yeah, we're taking you to record revenues.
I'm sorry, your son can't walk the streets of the city
that you were in charge of.
You're a disgrace.
Like don't lecture me about like how you're some sort
of progressive beacon.
How much of that do you think is Gavin Newsom's fault
versus other people's fault?
He was the mayor of the city. I put a lot of fault on mayors.
I think mayors have a lot of power.
And I know this because of New York.
Look at Bloomberg and Giuliani and how well they did in New York versus de Blasio.
New York crime went up.
It got dirtier.
Homelessness went up.
Mayors are actually some of the most powerful people in the country that we don't spend
enough time or attention on.
The police are responsive to the mayor.
The building codes is responsible mayor. mayors are very, very powerful.
So he was mayor of San Francisco.
Then he ran for lieutenant governor and then he ran for governor and he was mayor of San
Francisco.
Like during the collapse of San Francisco, while it started to go down, when all this
progressive woke stuff started to pop up.
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You get a lot of people just on the street,
and you have a good pulse of what's really going on
with younger people.
What's something that you've noticed
that mainstream media either gets wrong
or is just out of touch on?
I would say that something that mainstream media
really misses with young men especially
is they desire to be more religious
than I think they give them credit for.
There is a return to religion.
You're seeing a little bit of these news reports,
but there's definitely a curiosity for God
and for going back to the church in a very serious and significant way.
What's causing that?
Well, modernity is a failure. I mean, modernity has given us a lot of great stuff, right? I mean,
praise God that we have modern medicine and surgery and that we have antibiotics. Like,
these are all amazing things, right? No one debates that. But modernity has the core of modernity is what you are in charge of your own life.
And you could do whatever you want to do.
And you're the center of the universe.
Sounds good.
Leads to highest depression ever, highest rates, highest anxiety and hopelessness.
And Victor Frankl's amazing book, Man's Search for Meaning, he said that
outside of food and water, the greatest need for man is meaning.
And so we see modernity constantly changing around us at all times.
Things are changing, people are changing their genders.
There's constant change.
And I think young people want to go to a church environment that isn't changing.
They want to go to a place that is stable, that is consistent, that is beautiful,
that is ancient, that is everlasting,
and that is eternal.
What would you say is the biggest non-issue
that people make out to be a massive issue?
You already spoke about the issue
that you think is extremely important
that people don't really talk about,
which is the birth rates.
What about the birth rates?
By the way, the birth rates are so big.
I mean, the fact that no one wants to talk about it.
It's just not really discussed. Yeah, so, okay, great. birth rates. What about the... By the way, the birth rate's so big. I mean, the fact that no one wants to talk about it.
It's just not really discussed.
Yeah. So, okay, great. So I would say, it's not a surprise what I'd say, racism. It's
like the most ridiculous. I mean, we are the least racist country ever to exist in the
history of the world. I don't like racists. You don't like racists. I don't like running
into them. I have no tolerance for it. I would put it as like issue number 22,800
on issues of like what's pressing facing America.
How about the fact that our public schools
can't educate our kids and we can't find a single kid
that can read at grade level in Maryland or Chicago?
Probably a bigger deal than racism.
How about the fact that in this country
that we have an average family
cannot afford to go buy groceries in major cities.
They have to go into, like these are much major problems.
Young people can't buy homes.
Like the dollar is being deteriorated.
We have 110,000 drug overdoses every year.
That's a much bigger problem than racism.
Like, woo.
And like we have like entire social and cultural
institutions that are trying to propagandize us.
That racism is like the biggest problem.
I'm sorry, it's not.
In fact, I would argue that not only is it not a problem,
it's a massive psychological operation against us
that I actually talk about the major economic,
cultural and political forces
that should be addressed in this country.
And what do you think makes someone conservative
or liberal in the first place?
Do you think it's nature and nurture?
It's both, obviously.
Again, actually, the older I get,
I do give a little bit more weight to community
than I did probably 10 years ago,
just because I see how much my daughter and my son
absorb around me and my wife.
So I get kind of how you're a product of your environment.
But you're not solely a product of your environment, but it's not, you're
not solely a product of your environment.
You're not, you have agency, you have decision, you have free will.
You could break, break free of your environment.
You're not only your environment.
That's very important.
You're not only your upbringing.
So concert, it's just a worldview difference.
So left wingers generally look at things through a prism of what they look at a prism of oppressor
oppressed whereas we look at prisms of things versus just and unjust right and
wrong and good and evil and moral and immoral where they look at things as
more as like who's in power and who is not in power, which group wants sympathy,
deserves sympathy and what other group deserves sympathy. But look, we know that people that tend
to be liberal tend to have temperament that is far more on kind of the openness and acceptance of,
you know, how people are and how they act. We're conservatives, we tend to be much more order and discipline and, um, let's just say,
um, structure driven.
A great example of this is crime.
So when we as conservatives see someone that commits a crime and we don't think they're
necessarily a product of their environment, we say, you shouldn't have committed that
crime.
You're being an idiot.
You're going to jail.
Whereas liberals like, well, we must have sympathy for them because the schools are
broken.
And of course there is some truth that you still decided to commit the crime.
It's an insult to every other person that's not committing a crime that comes out of that
environment to act as if that that person should be given an exception.
HOFFMAN As someone who works very closely with young
voters, do you think that we should change the rights for who can vote?
Should we increase the age?
Should we apply a civics test to it?
I mean, probably not.
I'll say this, we won the youth vote this last cycle.
And it's funny, in certain states, not across the country.
And it's just an amazing thing that you can actually win the youth vote and you could
do it with mass virality and mass popularity
and reaching out in ways that people would never have imagined.
And so, no, I probably wouldn't put any more restrictions on it.
You mentioned earlier in this podcast that one of the biggest sacrifices that you have
to make is running this massive business at the same time as trying to be the leader in
a family.
Yes.
I'm curious, what do you think is the biggest issue
with modern dating?
As a single guy, I would love some advice.
You know, Graham, he got married a year or so ago.
Congratulations.
So he's looking to start a family.
Have as many kids as you can afford.
Now have more than- Probably two.
Have more than you can afford.
That's what I should say.
I'll stick with two.
What is wrong with modern dating?
Yeah.
The biggest problem with modern dating is very interesting.
We had a women's summit.
The young ladies all raised their hands.
They're like, how many of you are unhappy with the dating pool?
Every woman raises their hand.
I'm like, funny.
All the young men I talked to aren't happy with you too.
So who's wrong?
Those seem like kind of select groups of people though.
If you're asking women that are attending a women's summit, they might be in a very
specific situation.
Yeah, I mean, like I would say generally,
I hear more complaints about the dating pool than, you know,
like, wow, there's so many options.
Maybe you're right. I don't know. Maybe...
I think it's more of an options issue,
is that you could go online and just,
if you don't like someone, instead of working through it,
it's just, you go back and you start swiping again.
So there's, so let me, what's the problem with women
and then I'll go to the problem with men.
The problem with women is that many of them,
A, have unrealistic expectations of the man
that they want, a lot of them.
And I deal with this all the time.
I'm like, I want a guy that's earning a million dollars
a year and he's six foot four and I want him to have a,
you know, a perfect jaw.
And I'm like, yeah, that's never gonna happen.
How about, by the way, you know where we're on your list is like, I want someone
who will be a good father or someone with good character.
So I guess like really disgusting actually, that you just want someone
that's like super rich and looks good.
Like, why don't you want someone that's going to be loyal to you, not cheat on you.
Like, oh yeah, I want that too.
Oh, okay.
Got it.
So basically you want like Ken Barbie doll, and then you'll have like all the good virtues.
Notice they don't lead with the virtue,
and a lot of things lead to that.
But number two is women need to be very clear that,
we need to tell women more clearly that
if you do not have children before the age of 30,
there's only a 50% chance that you will have children.
That's a fact?
It's a fact, you can fact check me on that.
Isn't that though that women are becoming very intentional
about whether or not they wanna have kids
and just it's more socially acceptable,
we should say that. Yeah, but they're miserable
because of it though.
I mean, it's not just mine.
You can fact check me, put the numbers up.
The most depressed people in America
are women without children.
They're the most likely to be on antidepressants.
They're the most likely to be anxious.
Again, people that experience severe depression
are people, people that say
they are very unhappy are people, young, single women in their early thirties
without children who are the happiest women in America, married women with
children.
I think there is a, and by the way, of course they have the agency to do that.
I'm not trying to like make a law.
Like you must get married and have kids.
But I think that we've gone wrong here, that women should prioritize family and children
way above career, that they should try to find
their husband before they're 25,
that they should try to get married way younger.
This is probably a fertility trap.
But then that also goes back to just finances.
No, that's a huge problem.
You can't quite have a husband going out,
making a salary to have a stay at home.
I completely agree with that.
That's the best argument.
It's not a winner argument, but it's the best argument.
Because at some point, you go to like Sub-Saharan Africa,
they have like eight kids and they live in like a dirt hut.
You can figure it out.
Having children, I believe is a blessing of the Lord.
It's the most amazing thing.
You should try to have as many children as you can.
Much more important than traveling to Thailand
or having a big apartment or a bunch of cats, okay?
Having children are a gift from the Lord.
So, but as far as like the dating pool problem, so young ladies, they need to be very clear about
what they're expecting in a man and date with the intent to marry and not just date to have
a good time.
And quite honestly, both need to do this, but young women need to do a much better job
of saving themselves from marriage.
They need to prioritize purity again.
Young men need to too, but if young women do it, then young men will.
So if that's what the women need to do in order to make themselves worthy of dating,
what do you think is the main thing men need to do to make themselves worthy?
The most attractive quality in a young man that young women can't ever articulate is
self-control.
So how does this look in application?
A woman needs to be able to know that you can control your impulses when things get
really crazy.
They can't articulate it, but that's what they want.
So for example, they want to be able when you go on a date, can you control your mouth,
can control your tongue, can control your eye?
Are you going to cheat on her?
Are you going to have a wandering eye?
Are you going to get drunk every night?
Are you going to kind of go into like a drug, you know, abyss?
Women can't always put that into words, but that differentiates a boy from a man.
A boy is someone that has no self-control.
I would argue it's confidence and ambition.
And if you have those qualities,
I think everything else falls into place,
because you have to have self-control
if you're gonna be ambitious.
Sure, I think that I totally agree.
Confidence is true.
Look, again, it's just, if you look at it though,
you can be very confident, ambitious, but you could also then cheat on your wife like 10 years later,
right? So you have to be able to control your flesh. We as men have very different problems
than women, right? Different temptations. As men, we have problems controlling our flesh.
That's why adultery is literally in the Ten Commandments. You had to command an entire
people not to cheat on their wives. It was easy. God would not have to command us not to do it.
And so when men are dating, if you want to make yourself more attractive to a woman,
first of all, demonstrate self-control.
And also, women want to be able, they want to be taken care of.
I know this is super provocative, but deep down they want a man to be able to provide
for them financially.
Should a man pay on the first date?
100%. What kind of a worst beta male is splitting the check?
Like who are you?
Do you agree with me?
With Macy, I pay for the check.
On the first?
Yeah, the first.
It's like, I'm just sorry.
It's so fun.
I would go into debt and scrub dishes before a woman paid for it.
Let's see what this is.
Yeah.
Let's see.
What is this Jack?
So didn't you go on a date like years ago,
like a decade ago with this woman
whose mom gave you $20 to take her to the movie theater?
Yes, yeah, I made money on that date actually.
Well, so there's a good financial deal for you.
No, no, no, explain how you made money on a date.
That sounds different though,
that's not what we're talking about though.
Yeah, yeah, her mom gave her, and by the way, this was in high school. Okay though. That's not what we're talking about though. Yeah, yeah, her mom gave her,
and by the way, this was in high school.
Okay, so this is, this is,
that's not what we're talking about here.
We're talking about like 24 years old,
like serious dating, right?
That's, I split the check quite a lot.
So I'm sorry, I don't mean to offend you.
You guys are great.
That's incomprehensible to me.
I think that's-
To me, I thought it was a great financial decision.
I've just-
Okay, so from your prism, I totally get that.
And you have really good financial discipline.
I'm sorry, I would be so humiliated.
If I- I'm more-
I did not care.
I find that to be the greatest beta male humiliation.
To save money?
No, no, the idea that a woman,
that you're trying to court.
Now, if it's a friend thing- As a first date, you don court, now if it's like a friend thing or-
As a first date, you don't even know
if she's like the quality's worth-
It doesn't matter.
It does not matter.
I'm sorry.
By the way, that money you save
is not worth the honor that you compromised.
See, it is such a big deal.
It's a massive deal.
I'm not trying to give you a whole company.
I don't know, I'm sorry.
But here's the thing.
No, in fairness, for your point with Macy,
I paid for the whole first date.
And we're married now.
Well, why'd you do that one though?
I think I was, at that point, I was at a level
where that felt like the right choice to make,
but throughout my early 20s.
Was it because you felt more serious with her?
I was also in a point where I was ready to be able to lie.
Financially?
Yes. Legit, I get that.
Early 20s, saving five bucks here and there, I would do it.
I would go to bed. Okay, so you're manic with saving and there, I would do it. I would go to a point.
So you're manic with saving money.
I am.
We have Blake on my team is like you.
Yeah, no, he goes and he'll eat like the snacks for lunch
to save money here at-
You know what's funny, I brought food from home.
No, no, that's-
Today.
By the way-
And coffee from home.
Frugality is a virtue.
So we, as Christians, believe that there is an order of virtues and above frugality is a virtue. Yeah. I, but, so we, as Christians believe that there is an order of virtues
and above frugality is honor.
And so we as men must lead, we must provide.
Under no circumstance ever should a man ever
let a woman pay for a date or you can split.
Ever?
Ever, no circumstance.
Even on the third, fourth, fifth.
What if it's first date and you're just not into it?
What if it's first date and you're just not into it?
Okay, well let me, period.
Well, let me, okay, so I.
What kind of world are we living in?
Well, hold on a second.
I agree with you.
If I'm dating a girl, I would pay for everything.
Everything.
Yeah, everything.
However, I could see for other people
that might be in a different financial position,
you know, you pay for 10 dates and then she's like,
you know what, I wanna treat you.
Well, that's totally different.
No, no, what we're talking about is like, oh, we're going to alternate.
Like once you're serious and she wants to take you out to something for a nice dinner
and you might, by the way, if you have the intent to marry, you're already like kind
of blending finances.
Like I get that psychologically, but like if you're like, oh, we'll take turns.
Like, oh, well, you know, you pay this time, I pay this time.
What's your advice to a girl who the guy she's currently seeing, he says that. Oh, do not marry that man.
But here's the thing, I feel like they should always
break the offer.
But they should offer,
they should pull out the credit card.
The woman? Of course not.
Just to offer.
No.
It's a nice gesture.
No, by the way, no, no, no, this is feminism.
Feminism is that you have to be this like self independent,
this is not a nice gesture.
It's you trying to be like egalitarian.
No, you as woman should want to be provided for.
In fact, you should have an expectation
that you as a woman are so important
and so critical and so necessary and beautiful
that it shouldn't even be a question
that if you're in a date now,
if it's a business lunch or like friend zone stuff,
50 50, we're not talking about that, right?
Like it's all of a sudden, you're like,
hey, I wanna buy insurance or like, you know,
you're gonna, you know, I wanna go do business.
I totally do.
I still think the man should pay, but that's-
But see, to me, when I was dating,
it would be a huge turnoff if the check comes
and she just looks at it and then looks at me
and looks at the check.
I totally disagree.
I at least wanna see like I'm reaching for something
and I'm like, no.
I want a woman that wants to be led
By a man. I don't want a woman that's all the sudden gonna be competing financially in a marriage
I don't want a woman that's gonna be like, oh, you know questioning financial decisions or a woman
That's gonna be like all of a sudden Jeff
No, the man is the leader of the household
The man is the leader of all the financial decisions. The man is the, is the primary, should be the primary provider.
Again, there's exception to this, that's all.
Oh, Charlie, you're so sexist.
Sorry, it worked for 2000 years, for 5,000 years,
and it should work again.
And by the way, what we're doing right now is not working.
Let me just repeat again, this is not working.
And I'm not trying to like bash you, like this is fun.
It's in really good spirit, right?
No, I love the banter.
No, it's great.
But like this idea, if a woman on a date
were to pull out a credit card to go pay for something
like, I would be so it'd be like, oh, so you're like one of those boss babes.
No, that's that's not what that's saying.
That is no that is completely
catastrophic.
I think no, I think if I'm on a date and she reaches for it, like I just think, oh, that's
really nice.
You're trying to be kind here.
You're trying to alleviate what you perceive to be a financial burden on me.
That's a generous interpretation.
And so, but obviously-
We're bringing something to the table.
Women are not bringing money to the table.
They're bringing something else.
It's a nice gesture.
I agree with Graham.
I think it's a nice gesture.
However, I agree with you.
I think the guy should pay.
I agree.
I think the woman going into that should have an expectation that the man takes care of her.
But should she be grateful if the guy takes care of her?
100%.
Oh, OK.
Because if you're expecting it.
Oh, no.
It should be immense gratitude.
No, no, no, no.
The woman should be like, you know what she should say?
She should say, thank you so much for doing that
and not having to put this unnecessary pressure on me.
Because you've just freed me.
That's what women want, by the way.
You freed me?
100%. I would say run. No, no the way. You freed me? A hundred percent.
I was going to run.
No, no, no.
Or like what?
A number two at Red Robin?
By the way, do you know how many women are secretly miserable that they have to be as
financially successful as men?
A lot.
Like a lot.
It drives them insane.
Deep down, a lot of women want to be mothers.
They want to be wives.
I tend to agree with that.
Not every woman.
By the way, if you want to go be a bossmate, go do that.
It's a free society. There's a lot of great people to do that. But generally woman, by the way, if you want to go be a bossmate, go do that, like it's a free society,
there's a lot of great people to do that.
But generally we have over-corrected, okay?
We have a lot of women that deep down want to go be moms
and they would love to have their man come in
and just grab the check and be like, no, I got it.
And by the way, you know what they see that as a signal?
It's going to be okay.
When the bullets start firing and there's chaos
and things start falling apart,
this man is going to protect the family.
Boom.
Throw it on the table.
Wallet on the table. No, even better.
Paying 26% interest on that.
It's got to be even more alpha.
You go to the waiter before the meal
and you just give them the credit card.
It's not even a conversation.
It's paid for. It's done.
Like you don't even allow it to be a thing
that is introduced there. I would agree
with that. I actually agree with that.
Alpha is like you go straight up where you're like smooth move
and the girl is so stunned and she'll be like, Oh, don't we
have to be like, No, I got it. It's done. Boom. Are you kidding?
From a woman's perspective, they'll be like, that's the most
attractive thing ever. I would love to hear some woman's
perspective in the comments. I think they're going to be agreeing with you
for the most part.
If it is fine, but like you'll end up
with, by the way, some women want to marry
weak men because they are the boss.
What other tips do you have like that?
Like that was a good suggestion.
Oh, I have a lot of tips.
So for marriage or for dating?
I have both.
Let's start with dating and then move
our way to marriage.
So in dating, look, I don't, I do not
think you should have sex for marriage.
I know, I know that's a provocative take. I think sex is holy. I don't, and by the way to marriage. So in dating, look, I do not think you should have sex before marriage. I know that's a provocative take.
I think sex is holy.
And by the way, it's not just a religious take.
I actually think that if you introduce sex into dating,
then all of a sudden, there's kind of like a dilution
of what exactly will be the ultimate physical crescendo
of marriage.
You can actually make a rational,
reasonable, non-religious argument for that.
Anyway, that's like a whole other topic that we could discuss another time,
but I will defend that.
I actually think bring back purity, bring back saying yourself for marriage.
Okay.
But other top other things is this.
You should go on a road trip with the person you're dating.
It's very important.
You should find uncomfortable, high pressure travel situations.
That's not just like flying first class to Aruba.
And you should try to be in places of discomfort intentionally with who you're
dating. And you'll find out a lot with that person. Number, number three,
this is going to sound incredibly sexist. I don't care.
If it is a woman that you want to get married to,
and she says that she wants to be a traditional wife,
see if she's actually up to it. Say, okay, cook me a meal.
I'm not kidding.
No, I think that's a really like-
Just leave a mess.
No, no, no, but honestly,
she says she wants to be a traditional wife.
And by the way, be like, does she enjoy it?
This is important though.
And then ask her, no, I'm not even just,
is she a good cook?
Be like, did you enjoy doing that?
And she's like, oh, I loved it.
I loved getting the ingredients.
I loved looking at the cookbook.
I loved the recipe. I loved thinking about you when I was cooking the food. You're like, okay, this is gonna be awesome. Right. Or otherwise, she's like, it was a disaster was this like, okay, well, then we might have a little bit, you know, and by the way, I'm not saying that every wife has to cook every meal for husband, but honestly, a lot of women out there want to do that. A lot of women want to provide for their man in that way. They want to run the house, they want to shepherd the kids. Going into marriage, though, I'm a big believer
in premarital counseling.
I think that there are several questions that
are not answered when most people go into marriage
that should be answered.
And I might freak you out with this,
because I don't know if you did this.
No, we did this.
Yeah, OK, great.
I looked at every divorce statistic,
and we did everything we could to lessen
the chances of a divorce.
So yeah, money is number one, right?
Who's going to handle the finances?
Here's one that you might not have done
that you should do while you're still in the honeymoon phase.
Are you gonna have an open or closed house?
I don't even know what that means.
See, it's big.
So were you raised in a house
where a lot of friends came over all the time?
Or were you raised in a house
where almost no friends came over?
A normal amount.
It wasn't yet, you know, open or closed.
It was, you know, maybe like once a week, we'd have like a date or something like that.
Do you know what kind of house your wife was raised in?
Probably about the same.
Okay, it's an important question
because I was raised in a very closed house, right?
I know people that are raised in open houses
and it's destroyed their marriages.
You know the type where they're always having people over?
Yeah. That was my family.
Okay, so you get that. Yeah.
Imagine if you were to marry a closed house person
and all of a sudden you were like,
hey, we're going to constantly have a stream of people and you don't talk get that. Yeah. Imagine if you were to marry a closed house person and all of a sudden you were like,
hey, we're going to constantly have a stream of people and you don't talk about that before
marriage.
All of a sudden you're like, it's total chaos for a closed house person because they're
raised in a place where evenings are very quiet.
Make sure, this is another important, make sure that you get along with each other, that
you really like each other, not just love each other. That you like spending time with that person.
One of my favorite words in English language is like.
It's very unique.
Only the English language actually has that.
Do you like spending time or do you just love that person?
That's because liking is like, Hey, do you, can you talk to that person seven
hours uninterrupted on a park bench if you needed to, or is it just kind of
like an annoyance and is it just purely physical?
Other questions and other pieces of advice I think are really important. In-laws matter.
They really do. They shouldn't always necessarily be deal breakers, but boy, you should know the
in-laws because your wife will take the form of the mother more times than not. So you should at
least get along with your in-law, kind of know the in-law. Children, how many children? When are you going to have children? Is it a priority? Will it be
early? Will it be late? Religious questions, are we going to raise them religiously? Are we
really some secular? Other questions that I think are really important that actually don't always
get flushed out. How many vacations are we going to take? What type of vacations? Are we an RV
family? Are we a go to a private, you know, island family? Are we a, are we going to splurge on one vacation a year?
Or are we going to do like three or four?
This is important before you get married.
All of a sudden you're kind of in the marriage thing and you're like,
Hey, I just booked us a vacation.
Like what?
I didn't want to go.
That's not because it's different philosophies of time off.
Last one, which is the biggest.
You want the biggest of all.
What are acceptable and unacceptable vices for our marriage?
For example, is it acceptable for
you know, the husband to smoke a cigar? Has she smelled cigar
before you get married? And does she know what that is? Will
marijuana be allowed in the marriage? I would say no, of
course, is it okay for alcohol to be around? If yes, how often
will you drink on weeknights? Are more than one drink
acceptable? Will we drink socially? Will you drink once you have kids? Will you drink around the kids?
Here's another question. Will you watch TV at night? Will you be okay if you know there's
R rated kind of sexual nudity that your partner is watching? Is completely off limits for
your relationship? I think it absolutely should be. You should talk about that because some
couples are like perfectly okay with what I think is kind of weird, to be honest, right?
These are questions that honestly all the time that people do not always flush out before marriage.
In the course of dating though, I could go on for like infinite.
No, I really enjoy this.
Yeah, like, again, we have an amazing marriage. My wife and I, obviously it's not perfect. No
marriage is perfect, but we actually like each other. We prioritize date night. We're actually doing it right after this tonight, which is awesome.
But I find so often that people in dating don't date with the intent to marry, and when
they end up do wanting to marry, they don't even ask the tough questions before they get
married.
Can we do a couple of rapid fire questions real quick?
Yeah, sure.
Go ahead.
Okay.
What's your biggest insecurity?
Forgetting something I should know.
Will you run for president? No, I'm not running for president.
What's more dangerous?
Ignorance or apathy in voters?
Oh, apathy for sure.
Should there be a maximum age to be president?
No.
What is a worst policy idea?
Universal basic income or open borders?
Open borders.
One government agency you'd shut down right away?
That's a great question.
Department of Education.
Would you rather have dinner with AOC or Bernie?
AOC.
Is it a sin to fly Spirit Airlines?
A sin?
No, but whoever started Spirit Airlines
is in great defiance to God.
Do you think you could win in a fist fight
against Gavin Newsom?
Probably not, if I'm being honest, I don't think so.
Do you believe in aliens?
Maybe.
Debate or a podcast? I like this. I
like podcasts. It's way better. It's more human. Censorship or chaos? What's more destructive?
Censorship, without a doubt. Absolutely. Do you have a random pet peeve? I have a lot of
pet peeves, actually. One of my pet peeves that I can't, I literally cannot stand, I'm actually
a violator of it, is when I'm trying to talk to somebody
and then they check their phone.
I'm really bad with that with my team.
So I'm sure you guys, it bothers you,
but I gotta be a lot better about that.
And finally, oh, sorry.
No, no, I know when people say at the end of the day,
they don't even know what they're saying when they say it,
it's just-
At the end of the day.
It's just literally a linguistic crutch is all that it is.
Linguistic crutches are very annoying in fairness.
Yes, and that is one that drives me nuts.
If everything completely goes away, how do you want to be remembered?
If I die?
Everything just goes away.
If you could be associated with one thing, how would you want to be remembered?
I want to be remembered for courage, for my faith.
That would be the most important thing.
Most important thing is my faith in my life.
Charlie Kirk, thank you so much for coming on the episode.
You guys do a great job.
I wish it could be longer.
This has been amazing.
We would love to do this again sometime in the future.
We only hit half of them.
Are you serious?
Oh my gosh.
We'll have to do a part two sometime soon.
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah, and shout out to your crew.
Seriously, they're incredible.
Incredible.
Thank you guys.
Thank you so much.
Thank you guys for watching until next time. Thanks so much for listening, everybody. Email us as always, freedom at Charlie, incredible. Thank you guys. Thank you so much. Thank you guys for watching till next time.
Thanks so much for listening everybody.
Email us as always, freedom at charlikirk.com.
Thanks so much for listening.
God bless.
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