The Charlie Kirk Show - "Trust the Experts" Failed. What Now?
Episode Date: January 7, 2026The present American political moment is defined by one word: Disillusion. All over the country, ordinary people have realized that the bureaucrats, professors, and other elites who dominated their li...ves were never acting in good faith and declined long ago. Novelist and thinker Walter Kirn examines the great turning point in American life in the 21st century, and ponders — what's next? Trump’s 2024 win, Kirn argues, wasn’t just political, but a reckoning for every institution in American life. Watch every episode ad-free on members.charliekirk.com! Get new merch at charliekirkstore.com!Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/supportSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
My name is Charlie Kirk.
I run the largest pro-American student organization in the country fighting for the future of our republic.
My call is to fight evil and to proclaim truth.
If the most important thing for you is just feeling good, you're going to end up miserable.
But if the most important thing is doing good, you will end up purposeful.
College is a scam, everybody.
You've got to stop sending your kids to college.
You should get married as young as possible and have as much.
many kids as possible.
Go start a turning point U.S.A. College chapter.
Go start a turning point you would say high school chapter.
Go find out how your church can get involved.
Sign up and become an activist.
I gave my life to the Lord in fifth grade.
Most important decision I ever made in my life and I encourage you to do the same.
Here I am.
Lord, use me.
Buckle up, everybody.
Here we go.
The Charlie Kirk Show is proudly sponsored by Preserve Gold.
leading gold and silver experts and the only precious metals company I recommend to my family,
friends, and viewers.
All right.
Welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show.
I'm very excited about this next guest.
I think he's one of the most impressive and important thinkers, political commentators of our current moment.
And not enough people, in my opinion, I've told him this, know about his thinking, his thought work,
his writing. And that is Walter Kern. He's the editor at large of County Highway, and he's co-host of
This America Week. I think that's what it is. America This Week. That's what I got.
It makes a little more sense. That makes a little more sense.
Yeah, America this week with Matt Taibi, who's a great journalist in his own right. It's very
accomplished. Walter, welcome to the Charlie Kirk Show. I'm glad to be here. I'm really sorry that
I postponed my last invitation while Charlie was around. It was the first.
invitation. And I just wasn't sufficiently prophetic to know how short time was. And I thought
I could do it later. And this is the visit that I'm doing later. And it's a sad one for me because I
would have so wished to have talked to him. Yeah, I know. And you and I actually got to meet
backstage at the Megan Kelly event here in Glendale. And I got to tell you, I got to fanboy a little
bit. I do that rarely. Very rarely. But, you know, I, I, Blake understands this because we, we, we make
content and there's only so much content you can consume when you're making content as well.
You've got, you know, you, it's true. But America this week, which is funny that I got the name
wrong, I listen to that often with you and Matt, because I think you guys have a way of breaking
down the news that's swirling, the big stories of the day. And so I wanted to have you on the show
because I think like I said in the intro here you are an important thinker you're an important
I think distiller of these larger stories and you make them make sense and you bring out the most
important through line right so what what do you really need to pay attention to so this is
we're going to have you on the entire hour here Walter and we just want to we want to make sense
of what happened in 2025 maybe go back to 2024 and back further but we want to also look
forward to 2026 in this new year that we've just embarked on a year that I'm grateful that
we have. And so I haven't been so grateful for the passing of a year into the next as I have
this one. I will tell you that much. So let's start at the big question. Help us make sense
of our current moment. If you had to distill all of these disparate pieces, Somali fraud and
Democrats are now pro-Moduro. And you know, you've got cultural elements.
weaving throughout. What are you observing? What are you thinking about right now, Walter Kern?
Well, let me, just for those who don't know me, introduce my point of view and my reasons
for having it. I'm chiefly a novelist, and I was a literary critic and a kind of columnist
for all kinds of magazines from time to the New Republic, Harper's Magazine, fairly liberal
magazines. And I see us as living inside a story. There's a big story that goes back thousands of
years and there's a smaller story that goes back, you know, just years and then weeks and then days.
And what I try to do is examine what's going on in terms of narrative, but not in the sense of
pushing a narrative as we, you know, often see the mainstream media doing, trying to get us
to pick a preferred version of reality. But in terms of a real drama, a drama that involves
the big things, our lives, our freedom, our history as a culture, and the big events that
affect it. So if I were to take this moment in time, January, 2006, and tell you where we,
are in the current story, as I see it, I would say we're at a first act break in which we suddenly
look around and realize that not only were we right to distrust certain kinds of authority
in the media and in government, particularly, I think, under Biden, when we weren't even
treated to the facts about his health situation and mental condition.
But due to this Somali fraud, which I think is just an aperture into a bigger story,
we're suddenly realizing that we've been in the middle of a daylight theft,
a theft of our resources, of our money, of our attention, of our ability to interpret things.
Suddenly a new filter is dropping, and we're seeing that politics is not.
just about ideology, but it's about resources and what I think is the ongoing cover-up of a great
diversion of our resources. So as Americans suddenly think about themselves, you know, paying the
bills, paying their taxes, raising their families in light of what seems to have been an almost
full scale across the board. You know, we have the Minnesota example as a microcosm, but the
macrocosmic example extends, you know, to the federal government and to many, many states.
We ask ourselves, are we in a society anymore that we can go on supporting?
Just as the revolutionary colonists wondered if they could survive under the British,
we're starting to realize that we may be in a situation in which the very legitimacy of our
government, you know, and its promises to protect.
us to use our resources wisely to provide for the common welfare such as we believe it's necessary
are all empty and in fact we've been in the middle of a con job it's like it's i knew a big con man in
my life a guy who called himself clark rockefeller and who was a friend of mine for years turned out
not to be a rockefeller turned out in fact to be a murderer and i remember the week after he was
exposed in the news as a German immigrant who, you know, had a whole other name and a whole
other history than I had known him to have for 10 years. I suddenly felt like I was floating in
space. I was like, I don't know the guy's real name. All the stories he told me seemed to have
been a cover up for a life of crime. I don't know his motives. I don't know if I'm in danger
when I'm around him because he was exposed as the suspect in a double murder, a grisly double murder
many years before. And I went to the bank that day and I thought, I'm giving the bank my money,
but I don't know where it goes after I hand it over. I was giving a key to a contractor who had to
work on my house. And I said, but what if he is part of a burglary ring? And suddenly everything that I,
all the bonds of trust and all the expectations of reciprocity that go into daily living
were broken.
And I think we're in that as Americans.
We suddenly looked around and realized we're on a spacewalk when we thought we were secure
inside a spaceship.
Hmm.
Yeah.
I really relate to that, actually, because, you know, given what we're going through
with, you know, the trial for Charlie's assassin coming up and.
You know, all these conspiracy theories swirling.
It's, it suddenly occurred to me that, you know, listen, we went from don't trust the experts to never question the non-experts.
You know, it's like, but that's what you're talking about.
It's like the legitimacy of the system when it becomes in question in such a massive way, especially following COVID and some of the revelations that we learned in the wake of that, it's, it feels like there's.
no solid ground to place your feet.
Imagine a drama in which you find out your wife is cheating on you, but then you find
a letter and find out she's cheating you with your best friend.
Oh, not only your best friend, three of your best friends.
And you look around and you think, can I trust anything?
How do I go forward?
To what do I cling now in order to have solidity?
And that's, I think, where we are.
President Trump walked into a catch-22 when taking office.
do nothing in America would be staring at a ticking debt bomb, the kind of crisis that could
cripple our future. Instead, he's taken action with strong policies to slow the train and buy us some
time. But the effects of past administration's spending are still working through the system,
and experts predict dramatic price increases and market uncertainty. Trump is doing all he can,
but no matter who's in office, protecting your retirement savings is ultimately up to you.
And that's why many Americans are turning to real assets like gold and silver. Preserve gold is our go-to choice.
here at the Charlie Kirk Show. We use them because they make it easy to own physical gold and silver,
even inside your retirement accounts like an IRA or 401K. Now, hear from Charlie in his own words.
Preserve gold is my go-to choice for all my precious metal needs. They are the real deal,
and I recommend them to my friends, family, and viewers. Get their free wealth protection guide now
by texting Charlie to 50505. President Trump is fighting for America's future. Now it's your term to help protect yours.
Yeah. So, but yeah, how did we get here to this moment then, Walter? How did we get to a point where we can't trust the ground under our feet?
Well, I think it's Act 1 because the Trump presidency and the re-election of Donald Trump provided a kind of refresh to the whole cycle.
You know, that was a point at which people who had anticipated and worked hard to bring about a result on the behalf of Donald Trump's election succeeded.
and sat down for a minute, reflected on their expectations and the promises that they felt
they'd been made and started over.
And that first year of Trump is a pretty natural, a pretty natural time span to review.
When it came in exactly almost a year ago, I think people were expecting justice.
They wanted an immediate kind of redemption.
and even revenge for the sins of COVID,
for the deep state hoaxes,
coup against him that had been going on for years,
and for the deceptions that had come from the opposite party
and from our own government in an attempt to unseat him,
from the legal cases that were flimsy to the charges about Russia and so on.
So everybody got in their seat and they prepared for a gun,
fight at the OK Corral. And it didn't happen. And there was a lot of instant dissatisfaction.
A lot of it fomented and aggravated by his enemies who want to create dissatisfaction and his
followers. Look, he's not doing anything. Nothing will happen. He's not what he promised. He's not
the gunslinger. He's not the agent of justice. He's just another politician. Well, I think that's
just changed because both the revelations of this fraud, which are really an extension of the Doge
revelations, but with much more vividness, have suddenly come a spate of actions on his part,
whether it's this Maduro raid, whether it's what we're seeing right now in Minnesota,
which is a 2,000 agent descent of federal force on what appears to be a criminal racket of almost unimaginable riches and financial dimensions.
And so this is the year of action.
So combined with that sense of floating and displacement that I described before,
we're also getting a feeling, oh, wow, we just shifted gears.
the thing that we maybe some longed for and felt frustrated that they hadn't gotten immediately
is now going to come very swiftly. And whether or not it's too late, whether or not it's,
you know, people have gotten too cynical to even believe justice as possible, I don't know.
But it's an action time, and he's telegraphing it all across the board.
I guess it's interesting me.
As Andrew pointed out, you've been around a little longer than us.
I do think if you want a reason for optimism...
Twice as long.
Yeah, if you want a reason for optimism, you can look at in the late 70s, America was in Malays, as Carter called it.
Even in the 90s, you get, you know, Chuck Palinac is writing these novels about how everything's fake and terrible.
In the 90s, everything's awful.
They said that in the 60s.
And, of course, maybe I'm only going off the movie here, but I know one of your books up in the air is about a lot of the Onwee from
you know, since the corporate world is getting detached from human values and such.
So is there anything to be said this might just be a constant?
Are things truly worse now?
Or maybe are we just psychologically worse because of the Internet, for example?
Worse isn't a word I like to use because the framing around better and worse is always changing.
You can look at it in the short term, the long term, and so on.
I think that things are actually starting to become hopeful because we've started to reach the roots of some of the problems that before we were confused, baffled and depressed by.
I think people are starting to feel a sense of agency and comprehension about how these bad systems work and what might disrupt them.
And I think they are moving out of a period of cynicism about, bred by their, I think, over exaggerated expectations of action into a sense that maybe it's possible for the bad guys to be defeated.
We now know who they are.
We know how their formulas work.
We know how their crimes are set up.
We know the scale of them, which I think is shocking people.
And it's not Elon Musk anymore, as it was last spring, sort of putting himself out front.
It's people like Nick Shirley and, you know, the commoners who are suddenly picking up the pitchforks.
But they're picking up the pitchforks in a pretty constructive way.
You know, they're not baying for revenge.
They're not rioting.
They're not, you know, just foaming at the mouth.
They know where to look and they're finding the evidence.
They're gathering it, they're sharing it, and they are, I think, preparing themselves for action.
And they're also persuading their neighbors and friends.
I think all of this new critical information dropped over the holidays was a great opportunity for people to share it and discuss it and meditate on it.
So just as January is when the New Year's resolutions kick in, I think this is kind of harmonically timed for people who want to kick into gear.
yeah and you know it's i have so many thoughts walter you know it i agree with you know we had
jonathan keeperman on just before the new year and one of the things that he was saying is it was
similar in tone to what you're saying he was saying you know the ship is pointed in the right
direction for probably the first time in living memory you know and it's hard to communicate that
to a base that is not going to be satisfied until you know fouchy is strung up by his entrails in
the public square right so you've got you've got these exact
You always have to remind people, guys, we secured the border overnight.
That's such an unthinkably huge win that seemed impossible five years ago.
A thousand percent.
And, you know, and yeah, there's other monsters to slay here.
But, you know, you talk about this sense of agency and you talk about this new footing that we found in Trump.
And I couldn't help think about Charlie's reaction on election night.
And I know what that was.
I don't know if you've ever seen the clip.
I have it ready to play.
I haven't.
It's a beautiful clip.
and we were all here, what was happening in that moment was Charlie wouldn't let himself believe
that it was possible until it was done. Because he knew that he was, he needed to, he needed to keep
pushing, pushing, pushing, because the, the agency that we had been robbed of in 2020, in 22,
it was, we were almost had PTSD from it. And you could see this wiping away from him in the moment.
and I think that's why it went so viral.
Play cut 223 for Walter.
Fox News decides Donald Trump is president of the United States.
We've got our republic back, folks.
Let's go.
There it is.
Everybody should remember this moment.
Look, I'm going to echo Charlie from earlier.
Remember where you were when this happened.
Remember where you were when you really.
realized that the unit party and all these, you know, just the establishment, you said it's
time to actually participate. And look what you guys have done. And if anyone deserves to get
tears in his eyes, it's Charlie. I think we all agree.
Think Erico is not one has worked harder than the break room. No one has worked harder than Charlie
for this. We got to hear some words here from you, Charlie. You put all this together, my man.
Let's hear it. I am just humbled like I. It's all got.
it's all got it got alone got alone
decision desk has it
Pennsylvania it's done
it's beginning
it's great clip
boy still get choked up watching it yeah
that's poignant I just remember feeling like
I couldn't believe it until it was true either
and
let me tell you where I was on election night
I was here in Livingston, Montana, where I live, and I was at the Elks Club in downtown Livingston, Population 7,000.
My magazine slash newspaper, the one I help at it, County Highway, which is an only in print paper, had announced on X that we were having a party at the Livingston Elks Club for election night.
It was not a partisan party.
Any of our subscribers were welcome, and so were people from town.
Anybody who wanted to come was welcome.
It was not going to be a Donald Trump celebration or a Joe Biden celebration.
It was simply going to be a party for whoever showed up.
Well, hundreds of people showed up.
All we did was announce the invitation.
They came from Europe.
They came from all over the country.
They were not all uniformly pro-Trump by any means, by any means at all.
We turned on the news at about five.
There were three TVs in the Elks Club.
And then we started talking with each other and people started meeting for the first time
and talking about how they got into Livingston, Montana, which is, you know, a popular place to vacation,
but it's also an obscure spot.
Well, hours went by in which people were more interested in talking to each other than they
were looking at the news.
And I finally, you know, tip my head back up at the screen, and I see Trump as one.
And I flashed back to 2021.
when I was alone in a cabin, and I tweeted this, it was called Twitter then, when there was that
pause in the vote counting, I said, uh-oh, everybody's now assessing, and by that I meant
democratic power structure, is assessing what they need and how they're going to go get it.
And then, you know, we waited for a couple of hours.
I'm on mountain time.
And suddenly everything reversed, all the trends reversed.
That's where the PTSD came from.
Well, in 2024, when I looked up and it seemed, you know, Trump had won, I thought, this isn't Trump winning.
This is for all the closed churches.
This is for all the closed businesses.
This is for all the families that were set at each other's throats over minor things like masking and so on.
This is for Russiagate, which undermined the entire journalist structure of America and enrolled them in a major lie as far as I'm concerned, which they had to
a certain point knew. This is for everybody who pretended they didn't realize we were being led by a
zombie. It wasn't a win for Donald Trump. And Charlie says it was God. That I think might be
truer in this case than it is in many cases. I don't like to somehow think that God moves all
politics. It's kind of sometimes a low affair. But in this case, it seemed like there was an
opportunity to start climbing again.
stop falling down the stairs, stop taking the blows, stop taking the whipping.
And I felt in that room, even though there were a lot of people who weren't supporting Trump, a sense of refreshment.
And I think getting ready for year two was what year one was all about.
Even a fighter jet needs a runway to take off.
There are some that can lift straight off.
Most of them have to run along the ground before they can get airborne.
And I think we're getting airborne at the moment.
Yeah, I mean, would you even agree with that?
Yeah, no, I think we saw that in the first admin, too.
I would often tell Charlie, I thought the last year of the Trump administration was the best one.
Not ignoring COVID, all the background stuff was so good.
It finally got appointments were really humming.
That's when you only got, for example, they got anti-DI stuff year four.
It was finally like, wait, we should do something on this.
It just took too long.
now we're seeing a lot of stuff that we saw in year three or year four happening in year one
and I think the valid hope is everything can accelerate even more in the years to come
they'll find more levers they can pull on at the DOJ at the state department at all these
different agencies there's a lot more awareness of what they're capable of doing and I have
I see every reason to be optimistic about what they'll be able to do in the years to come
on that front, at least.
I think a lot of people walked into Washington.
I'm thinking of my friend Jay Batacharya at NIH.
And they had, they'd fought, he'd fought COVID.
He'd been a kind of COVID realist.
These lockdowns aren't necessary.
We're trying to stop something that's already spread too far.
It's not a deadly disease if you look at the actual number of casualties versus those
who've been infected and so on.
Well, he came into Washington an honest man from Stanford University and represented, I think, as much as purely as anyone, somebody whose voice had been suppressed, somebody who had been marginalized and was going to represent real change.
My conversations with him over the last year suggest and imply to me that when he got there, he suddenly realized that running a gigantic bureaucracy and being an honest person are a difficult pairing in this world.
and especially in Washington, getting people to explain to you how the workflow worked,
getting people to, you know, not only say yes to an order, but perform on it was hard.
Going through your staff and bringing real outsider, honest energy to a situation which had been inert,
obscure, self-satisfied, often corrupt, takes a lot of the time.
the other side was whipping up dissatisfaction with the pace.
It was all of a sudden, well, he's not delivering his promises fast enough.
The promises they didn't want to see him deliver at all.
The other side was saying weren't being performed on quickly enough.
It's a brand new year and a brand new opportunity to change the world for the better.
This is one of our most important partners.
It's easier than you might think you can save babies by providing ultrasound.
with preborn. Together during this sanctity of human life month, we're going to save babies right here
on the Charlie Kirk Show to show the world that not only do we believe life is precious, but we're going
to do something about it. Your gift to preborn will give a girl the truth about what's happening in her
body so that she can make the right choice. What better way to start this new year than to join us
and saving babies and $28 a month will save a baby a month all year long. A $15,000, and I know there's
some of you out there that can do this. A $15,000 gift will provide a complete ultrasound machine
that will save thousands of babies for years and years to come, and will also save moms from a
lifetime of regret. So start this year right by being a hero for life. Call 833-850-2229. That's
833-850229, or click on the pre-born banner at charliekirk.com today.
all right so walter you know it occurs to me that so much of uh what we're talking around here
is either a byproduct or a relative close cousin to this media industrial complex that was
blown up at the advent of the internet and then it's been sort of this slow death march uh you know
cable cutters things you know we've been moving more digitally that's created a massive opportunity
for shows like this.
Creators like Charlie, now myself and Blake are now public figures.
But it's also created a conundrum for truth, for veracity.
How do you verify things?
Now we've got AI.
Blake was just telling me he couldn't verify whether Madur.
It was crazy.
That story that you've almost certainly heard where they blew up Chavez's mausoleum.
Yeah, Hugo Chavez.
I can't, I literally can't figure out if it's true or not because people are posting photos
and other people are saying that is an AI.
fake photo and I haven't been able to look in deep enough and it either could be true so so what do we
do in this landscape there was another one someone posted a thread that was like I work at uber
eats and they're scamming everyone and like all their stuff like they're doing all this scummy stuff
like special expedited delivery stuff that's all fake it's just done to get more money out of you
and he had all this evidence and he sent it to a journalist and that was all AI fabrications it was like an
AI done hit job against a food delivery company.
Well, all of these examples underscore the question I'm asking, and I haven't really distilled
it in a very good question yet.
But Walter, you strike me as a guy who is very concerned with what is the ultimate truth,
what is the deepest truth, what do we do when you have a population of 350 million people,
not to mention the global population, all trying to suss through these different, you know,
of disparate information streams.
How do you get everybody on the same page?
How do you get truth across?
What do we do in this landscape?
You don't try to get everyone on the same page.
That was an illusion and a grandiose,
mythological white whale
that was pursued in the age of television and mass media.
It's no longer possible,
and I don't think it's any longer desirable.
One of the virtues of people not knowing what's real
beyond the horizon is that they start concentrating on what's within their horizon.
We have spent far too long in the United States, knowing what's going on in New York,
knowing what's going on in Los Angeles, knowing what's going on in Washington,
and not knowing what's going on across the street.
The difficulty of obtaining truth about what's going on around the world should cause us, I think,
to slightly give up on it.
because there is a family, a house, a street, a town, a neighborhood, a church, a group of friends
that needs your attention. I promise you, those were the things that they tried to break up
during COVID when the powers that be tried to leverage that pandemic into permanent rule for
themselves. They knew that their first strike had to be at your church, at your hardware store,
at your grocery store, at your family, at your dinner table.
Well, those are the things you have to reclaim first.
You know, I have a friend who's very into solar magnetic storms and sort of doom and
apocalypse around, you know, big earth changes and so on.
And I thought to myself one night, he'd warned me that there was a big ejection of plasma
from the sun and might all the lights might go out.
And I said, well, if the lights go out, where do I start?
what do I do next? I figure out who I can trust. I figure out what I have to trade. I figure out
what I can defend and who I'm going to defend. And all those questions that would come in the
wake of a disaster are ones that we need to be asking right now because the disaster is this,
as you say, melting of reality. And starting on first principles and starting at home and
starting with the world you can look around and see with your own eyes is the solution.
And then those pods, as it were, those cells, just like the body.
The body isn't made of some big, giant piece of, you know, chicken McNugget.
It's got cells in it, little active, isolated engines that link up and work together.
And at the cellular level, we have to, I think, renew.
our you know renew our contracts if we're going to have a bigger social contract and this vain
thought that everybody is going to be guided by some obelisk that beams truth down from the
central authorities is does not serve us well it causes it to ignore our own garden
yeah i love i love what you're saying i mean we've been you know saying for a long time politics
starts local and you're kind of broadening that conversation to sort of say look we just got an
email today someone who said they were inspired to get involved in uh maricopa county politics
great charlie well yeah absolutely i mean that is that is where it starts um you know walter
i mean i gosh my problem with you walter is i want to talk about too many things and there's just
not enough time i'm well i'll come back i'm still bound by the clock here i yeah i would be remiss if i didn't
give you an opportunity to talk about what charlie's assassination meant for our country and you know as
i'm hearing you talk earlier you you mentioned nick shirley and this sort of new wave that is
slowly kind of forming you've got dan bonjino that's coming back and he's right you know he's saying
he's going to wage war on certain uh you know influences within maybe the conservative movement and
beyond i i just think it's interesting i i believed in my whole heart especially
after we got past the memorial that there was going to be this sifting of the movement.
There was going to be this like this changing of the guard, sort of a new, out of necessity,
this newness that was going to be created out of the chaos and the loss.
And I just, so without feeding you answers, I want to hear what you have to say,
but I believe that there is something that we are observing it.
It will not become clear to us until some time now.
But what did losing Charlie, what did you observe?
What did it mean and where are we going next?
Well, to be very cold about it and systematic as though I don't have a heart,
a power vacuum develops when someone of Charlie's magnitude and competence and gifts is lost.
And in that power vacuum, all sorts of opportunistic creatures come rushing in.
And they live by the law of the jungle.
How much space that has been left vacant can I occupy?
How securely can I occupy it?
How can I fend off competitors?
And that was a frankly ugly process to watch.
And I guess it still goes on to some extent.
But in another way, it's a tribute to how big a space he occupied that it left so much vacant for so many sort of competitive Darwinian struggles over power and attention.
But I think the real meaning of the thing is the meaning of the moment after that I felt and others felt,
which was someone has just given in what it was not understood as a war, but suddenly looks like one because of the combatant falling, given everything.
And he's given everything in the purest way.
He, you know, he wasn't a man behind a plexiglass.
He was someone openly sitting with a square stance before a crowd of his fellow Americans taking all comers, listening, and speaking back.
He was the avatar of openness.
And that that openness was rewarded with destruction was, I think, a shock that showed us how far we'd gone, how far we'd fallen.
You know, when truly, you know, when demagogues and people who are, you know, have armies behind them and so on, are assassinated, well, you know that they kind of lived by the sword.
But to live, but to live by the word and die by the sword is a whole other thing.
And to watch someone who lived by the word die by the sword was a terrible moment.
And it affected me deeply.
I'll be honest with you.
I'm a little old for, you know, campus activism and a lot of the other things that Charlie would take you, Walter.
Well, yeah.
But, but, you know, I was, I was, I was aware of him in my peripheral vision.
And suddenly when he moved to the center of my vision in this terrible way, terrible way, I saw the best and worst of America in one lightning flash.
I saw someone who still believe that freedom of speech, a sort of candor about your spiritual and religious beliefs, in dialogue with people who maybe flat out oppose them, can still lead to a happy ending.
That faith lives on.
It was liberated from his body, but it's spread everywhere.
And I think it's starting to reassemble itself after a period of darkness.
I mean, everybody was traumatized, whether they know it or not.
And some people aren't their best under trauma.
You know, they become very selfish or even kind of evil.
But there is a waking up to the fact that this was a good force.
it was almost too good for the world.
It was dispersed by hatred, envy, resentment, jealousy, perhaps, even.
I mean, you won't think of it's really, I think it is the best thing about this horrible tragedy that I've brought up is Charlie truly was cut down at his absolute peak.
And so, in a sense, his peak does live on forever.
he's always as he was on that campus
throughout the year 2025
he was at his peak form in terms of argument
he was at his peak form in terms of how well he lived his life
he was getting better and better
and there's something very powerful about that
that's a lot of the power of martyrs
is the way they can endure forever
you never have to see them make mistakes
or get old or lose their fastball
they're always in that pristine form yeah you blake blake helped uh write the eulogy that we we published
at tpsa.com the day after and i i still don't know how you wrote it blake i as when charlie um
died i basically i was shell shocked like the world didn't make sense i remember trying you know
I was supposed to get out a statement, you know, about Charlie, we had received word that he
had, he was gone, you know, because there was some confusion about that. And I remember trying
to write, you know, whatever it was, I was supposed to write. And President Trump ended up
true socialing that Charlie was dead. And I remember just being so relieved. I mean,
I couldn't put one foot in front of the other. It was like, you know, it was like, that's
seen out of saving private Ryan where it was just you know it's just everything was moving in
slow motion but my body couldn't i couldn't make it function so the fact that blake in the in the middle
of that night got the words out but one of the things he said was that you know charlie will
will never grow old you know we'll never see him you know lose lose any of the grandeur and the
glory of of his youth and i guess in some ways this far removed from it i feel
feel comforted in some ways that I always get to remember him that way, but I hate that I have to
remember him, too. So it's a bittersweet feeling, but I know that he's gone and there's no bringing
him back. This is Lane Schoenberger, chief investment officer and founding partner of Y Reefi.
It has been an honor and a privilege to partner with Turning Point and for Charlie to endorse us.
His endorsement means the world to us, and we look forward to continuing our partnership with
Turning Point for years to come. Now, hear Charlie in his own words,
you about Y-ReFi. I'm going to tell you guys about Y-ReFi.com. That is Y-R-E-F-Y-F-Y-F-Y.
Why-R-E-F-Y-Fi is incredible. Private Student Loan debt in America totals about $300 billion.
Why-ReFi is refinancing, or defaulted private student loans. You can finally take control of your student
loan situation with a plan that works for your monthly budget. Go to whyrefi.com. That is
why refi-refi. Do you have a co-borrower? Why, Refi can get them released from the loan.
You're going to skip a payment up to 12 times without penalty. It may not be available in all 50
States, go to Y-R-R-E-F-Y.com. That is Y-R-E-F-Y-F-Y. Let's face it, if you have distress or default
of student loans, it can be overwhelming. Because of privacy, student loan debt, so many people feel
stuck, go to Y-R-R-R-E-F-Y-F-Y-F-Y-F-Y-Fy.com. Private student loan debt relief,
Y-refi.com.
Well, you know, I don't mean to be disputatious or niggling, but I don't think he was at his
peak. I think he was, I actually agree with you on this. I think he was ascending toward his peak.
He was on an obvious track. He had momentum. He was like a he was like a mountain climber who can suddenly
see the top of the mountain, the top of Everest. They've got their pack and you know they're going to
get there. You know they're going to even get there or beyond and suddenly it's over. What that, you know,
that happens to poets rock stars saints and a lot of people who die young and yet inspire us to pick up
their pack and carry it and i think we're going to have to go where he was going i totally i mean a lot of
people you know speculate was charley going to be president who knows he was he was the kind he was the kind of
guy what i love about him what i love about him was that he seemed like he still had the ability to change
He still had the ability to learn and to formulate new conclusions.
Hey, he might have gotten to age 35 and decided I don't want to be the president of the United States.
I want to be X or I want to, you know, write a book or whatever it was.
I mean, though he was dedicated to action and the turning point I think is most impressive to me in terms of getting stuff done, like turning point people wake up every day and they achieve goals.
that are small in the short term and huge in the long term, and we're not a society like that
anymore. To see anybody be effective anymore, especially in a large scale movement, is astonishing,
you know, and especially without tons of money. But I think that, you know, he, I don't know what
my original point was actually. I strayed a bit there, but I don't know how he would have ended up.
I only know that wherever he chose to go, he would have gotten there, and he would have gotten there superbly.
What if he wasn't kidding?
What if he'd really gone for becoming a college football coach?
That was what he used to.
He always said if he got tired or gave up, he would just quit and coach college football.
He would joke at our chat all the time.
He'd be like, fine, I give up.
You know, I quit.
I retire.
He's like, I'm going to go coach college football.
In the all universe where people are like, did you know that that college football coach used to be a political opportunity?
Exactly. Walter, you and Matt have a great show. I want to make sure people know where to find it and how to follow you on that stuff. We still have about six minutes here, but I really, really love your guys' content there. So please, like, what are you doing with Matt and what should people know about what you're up to?
So Matt Taibi is a muck-raking reporter from the left, really.
I think he was at his greatest fame during the Occupy Wall Street years as he basically took on high finance
and showed they had committed crimes all through what we now call the financial crisis.
But like me, sometime around the first year of the Trump presidency, he started to see his
colleagues fall for this ridiculous and unverifiable story of Trump being a Russian agent.
And it alienated him from his cohort, as it did me.
I was probably a little more to the right than Matt Aibia, a little more to the center.
But we both found ourselves, after a few years, feeling deserted by our supposedly principled
and supposedly conscientious colleagues.
And so we came together in a sense of both being stranded
by not getting on the Rushagate train.
And what we try to do on our podcast, Matt's a huge sports fan,
and is give you a sort of skybox, play-by-play,
a big-picture narration of events as though they were a game.
Now, we realize they're not a game,
but we try to treat them as one with a lot of humor, with a lot of, you know, mischief and
kind of pop cultural reference so that the heaviness of things doesn't destroy people.
It's important to keep a light spirit.
And when you talk about blackpilling.
Happy warrior.
Absolutely.
When you talk about blackpilling, you're talking about the thing that bothers me most
in people who want good things to happen.
despair is a sin and spreading despair is practically the sin that they tell us is the unforgivable sin against the Holy Spirit.
When you try to destroy someone's spirit with pessimism, with cynicism, and, you know, a little bit of that goes a long way.
But when you try to give them the feeling that nothing you can do, nothing you can say, and no one you can appeal to will ever help you.
it's lost and you're just living out the clock on this earth feeling the pain and feeling the
depression you may as well go kill yourself well that for me is that for me is the enemy in all
respect because as long as you have a lightness as long as you have a flow as long as you have
sort of a light on in your heart and in your mind there's a chance for change but that is absolute
death. And the black pill people who tell you, you know, you've been betrayed again, don't expect
anything. And they think they're being grown up and they think they're being sophisticated,
but what they're really doing is sending you to an early grave. And what they're really doing
is opening the way for the true cynics, the psychopaths, the power mongers to own you forever
and enslave you. And so what Matt and I do is, if anything, a, a, a,
assault on the black pillars. You can still laugh no matter how dark things get.
All right. Well, before we go, if you had to recommend one of your books to people who are
watching or listening to this, what would you say? You know, funny, there's a book with a terrible
cover right there called Mission to America. Look at that terrible cover. I mean, they didn't
even have AI as an excuse. And it's a story of, it's a story of two missionaries who grow up in what's
basically a cult isolated in the mountains of Montana, which hasn't gotten out into the world for
100 years. And it's become so inbred, literally genetically inbred, that they're sent out in a van
to try to get female converts in America 2005. And they leave their Mountain Valley, having
never watched television, you know, being as innocent as Martians practically. And they hit the road
to bring people to their belief system.
And it's a story about faith.
It's a story about modernity versus, you know, the old ways.
And it's a story about vulnerability because, I mean,
the first time they sit down in a motel to turn on TV,
they're there for 18 hours.
You know, they have no, they have no immunity to it.
So I try to show modern America from the point of view of people
who aren't immune to its seductions and it's, you know,
It's poisons and so on.
I love that.
The way you describe it, I've been describing things a lot like this lately about we build up this immunity to things.
And next time I have you on, Walter, I feel like since Trump came down those golden escalators, we as a country have been building immunities to the fake news, to the propaganda, to siops, to color revolutions, to hoaxes.
And I would be super curious to have a conversation in depth about the immunities that we're growing now.
Because I think when we're talking about black pill immunities, we're talking about this vacuum of this laws of the jungle.
We're sort of building immunities to that.
I have to believe good will win out.
Truth will win out.
But Walter, it's been an absolute pleasure to happen.
Well, we know it will in the end.
It's the short term and the midterm that we're worried about.
I know, exactly.
The midterms, that's what we're worried about.
Walter, yeah, and I want to talk to you next time about your conversion to faith, because you were not a theist, and now you are, and I would love to hear more about that.
Even in our calls, Walter, that we had after we met you at Megan's, you've hinted at it, but I haven't got the details.
So Walter Kern, the great Walter Kern, we'll have you back again as soon as you'll have us.
Thank you so much.
Thank you, and thank you, Blake.
For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to charliekirk.com.
