The Charlie Kirk Show - When Will the Russiagate Scandal Produce Russiagate Indictments?
Episode Date: August 15, 2025More and more evidence is coming out that implicates Adam Schiff, John Brennan, and other members of the Obama cabal in an effort to use calculated lies inside the intelligence agencies to bring down ...the Trump administration. Sean Davis joins Charlie to lay out when indictments might be coming, and what they would be for. Acting U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli talks about the plague of street takeovers wrecking California cities and how Senate stonewalling is blocking federal efforts to stop them. 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, Charlie Kirk here live from the Bitcoin.com studio.
Sean Davis joins the show to talk about Adam Schiff, the leaking, the intel agency,
and also a ferry throws a subway sandwich at a federal agent.
We then have the acting U.S. attorney in Central California, Bill Isaley, joins us,
and then a chart that is chilling.
We have it at Charliekirk.com.
I want you to see it.
Email us, as always, freedom at charleykirk.com and get involved with TurningPointUSA.com.
at tpusa.com. That is tpusa.com.
Buckle up everybody here. We go.
Charlie, what you've done is incredible here.
Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus.
I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk.
Charlie Kirk's running the White House, folks.
I want to thank Charlie. He's an incredible guy.
His spirit, his love of this country.
He's done an amazing job.
Building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created, Turning Point USA.
We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed.
countries, destroyed lives, and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the
country. That's why we are here.
Email us, as always, freedom at charleycirk.com. Joining us now is Sean Davis from the Federalist.
So, Sean, we got a renewed investigation in Tacoma leaking in 2017. We have Tulsi
exposing Clapper for cutting corners in 2017 and a DNI report admitting it after the NSA
director warmed he wasn't comfortable with the intel. What is the latest here?
do you think we'll actually see indictments?
Yeah, so I think the most important thing about all these new releases, and there have been a
ton within the last couple of weeks, some of them was more flesh on the bones of information
we already had. Some of it was really, really new, but they all tell the exact same story.
And that story is that after Donald Trump won the election in 2016, there was an orchestrated,
deliberate, widespread conspiracy within the Obama administration that continued for years to,
overthrow Donald Trump, overthrow the presidency, initiate a coup against the government,
and it was all done based on lies by people who knew they were lying, by people who knew
they were leaking. And every single new release that comes out just shows us more facts about
why that was the case. So do you think then a indictment is likely? I mean, what, what chatter
are we seeing from the Department of Justice? And if so, what would the crime be? Yeah, it's hard
to say, because so much of this stuff is cloaked in grand jury secrecy, having watched this
stuff, you know, for eight, nine, ten years now, having watched and covered the whole John Durham
investigation, which didn't turn to much, I've gotten, I think, a fairly decent sense of kind of like
the rhythms and where I think things are going. It seems to me that this administration is dead
serious about holding people accountable for their criminal conspiracies. And I see a couple
different possible charges. One would just be a conspiracy against right.
under color of law. Another could be a conspiracy to defraud the U.S. I think there are some people who
are still at jeopardy for having made false statements to Congress or federal investigators. But what's
interesting is that if you look at this whole thing as a conspiracy, each new overt act in furtherance
of that conspiracy, whether it's lying or leaking or trying to obstruct justice or trying to tamper
with witnesses, that tolls the statute of limitations and basically starts it over. So the conspiracy
charge is really what I would expect to see if we do eventually see indictments here.
So let's play some piece of tape here. This is Adam Schiff about the Adam Schiff deal here.
Let's go to cut 393. These people put our country at great danger. And Adam Schiff, it was all made up.
It was a hoax. The Mueller report came out. They all hated me. They had 18 Trump haters.
And they said, I did nothing wrong. They couldn't, they couldn't believe, they couldn't find anything after years.
of investigation.
And one more here.
Let's play cut
438.
A Democrat whistleblower
repeatedly was warning
the FBI beginning
in 2017
that the congenital liar
Adam Schiff
had authorized leaking
classified information
to smear President Trump,
which by the way
could be a violation
of the espionage act.
So is that a violation
of the espionage act?
And what would the timeline be?
Wouldn't we start to need
to see these indictments
move in pretty quickly?
I'm not sure it would qualify as an espionage act. I think it probably could be a conspiracy
to violate classified information rules. You know, re-reported based on an IG report that came out in
2024 that there was this whistleblower there. But what we didn't know until there were these
documents out was how much detail the FBI had been given about a wide-ranging conspiracy
with specific allegations, with specific names and times and places that the FBI had. And instead of
fully investigating and prosecuting that when they were given the information. The FBI, instead,
lawlessly, based on nonsense from Democrat staffers on the same committee, went and spied on
Republican staffers in both the House and the Senate for years and then tried to cover it up.
So it's just fascinating to see what the previous FBI investigated and didn't. As far as timing,
I don't expect anything particularly quickly. This DOJ, I think, is looking at
things differently than past DOJs where they're trying to learn all the documentary facts and
evidence, which takes time because they have to go through the mounds of documents that were
hidden from them for years. They have to interview low-level witnesses and learn what they can
say about the documentary picture. And then they'll eventually have to bring in the big dogs
in and interview them. So I would expect a multi-month process, maybe even a year-long process
before we really get to the point of indictments. So, so Sean, your commentary here is terrific.
Let's go to, so put four or three up on screen.
The newly declassified top secret emails sent on December 22nd, 2016.
Now remember, that is during the lame duck period.
This is critical, okay?
So Donald Trump has won the presidency.
He is in transition.
And this is during the transition at Trump Tower.
This is the framing and the timing is important here.
The newly declassified top secret emails showed that complying with President Trump's order
to create the manufacturers.
2017 ICA about Russia expose, how DNI James Clapper demanded the intelligence community
fall in line behind the Russia hoax.
Clapper admits that it was a team sport that required compromise on our normal modalities.
What on earth does that mean?
Well, I think it means that Clapper and Brennan and Comey were breaking the rules.
They were ignoring the process.
They were cutting corners and they were doing it all in furtherance of a narrative which they knew to be false.
And bravo to Tulsi Gabbard for finding this information and getting it out there because we've suspected it for a long time.
We knew that Brennan cooked the books when it came to the ICA.
We knew that he was putting in garbage so-called evidence that he was the one who put in the steel dossier because, quote, it rings true, doesn't it?
He's the one who lied to Congress about whether it was in the ICA.
But now we have information about Clapper himself, basically trying to hijack the process to get to a particular endpoint, not based on the evidence, but based on what he had been ordered to do and what he wanted to do.
And we now know exactly, by the way, why Clapper and Brennan were calling for NSA director, Mike Rogers, to be fired in late 2016.
And it's because, based on these emails, we now know that he was, although he eventually signed on to the sham process, that he was highly skeptical of what they were doing.
and that his analyst didn't actually believe that the evidence that these people were using was sufficient to support the claims they were making.
And Clapper says the timeline is not negotiable.
So to put this into kind of just, you know, to distill it down to the essence for people that might be.
It's very hard to follow, right?
We need like charts and we need like a Glenn Beck chart here, right?
You need like a big whiteboard because it's all over the place.
Basically, it was a, hey, either you're on the train or you're on the tracks, the president, which was Obama.
gave the orders to resurrect Russia as the primary thing that will then use to be a subversion
exercise of the incoming President Donald Trump. Your thoughts, Sean Davis, then I want to go a step
deeper. Yeah, so the timing was critical because all of this had to be set in motion before
Trump took office. So recall that in early December, they pulled a presidential daily briefing
that said Russia's cyber activities weren't meant to elect Trump. And if they had been, they
weren't effective at all. That was pulled, at which point they went into this new ICA process,
which later became the foundation of the entire Russia collusion hoax. We focused a lot on collusion
itself, but without the baseless claims in the ICA that Russia wanted Trump to win and it interfered
for him to win, none of the collusion claims would have been possible. So they had to basically
set this timed detonation device in motion before Trump took office so that it could explode once
they were gone and then they wouldn't be around to have to deal with the fallout.
Yeah. And so what we're searching for right now is the clip, and you might remember it,
where as a context to this, this shows that there was a gang of people that were aware of this.
And in a kind of vulnerable moment, Chuck Schumer went on Rachel Maddow's show in early January
of 2017, just weeks before the president took the oath of office the first time.
And Chuck Schumer in a rare vulnerable moment was obviously angry because,
Remember, Donald Trump was getting whispers about this.
This is very important.
So Donald Trump was working in transition, and there was chatter.
And so Donald Trump was getting whispers about, hey, like the CIA is doing some goofy stuff, you know, incoming President Trump.
So he starts tweeting about it.
And we can go find that.
And everyone said, oh, my goodness, Donald Trump's attack in the intel community, how dare he do this?
And then Chuck Schumer did a mask off moment.
Playcut 446.
Take on the intelligence community.
They have six ways from Sunday at getting back at you.
So even for a practical, supposedly hard-nosed businessman, he's being really dumb to do this.
What do you think the intelligence community would do if they were motivated to?
I don't know.
But from what I am told, they are very upset with how he has treated them and talked about them.
And we need the intelligence community.
We don't know what's got.
Look at the Russian hacking.
Without the intelligence community, we wouldn't have discovered it.
Do you think he has an agenda to try to dismantle parts of the intelligence community?
I mean, this form of taunting hostility.
Whether you're a super liberal Democrat or a very conservative Republican, you should be against dismantling the intelligence community.
Woo, and you got a little nose touch at the end, a little like, you know, that clip right there is that that is a masterclass what was happening.
Let me go through the three parts.
Number one, he does a threat shot across the bow.
You better be careful, President Trump.
Number two, he interjects the Russia thing.
Oh, you know, if it wasn't for.
the intel community, we wouldn't know about Russia. And the third component is basically,
we work for the intel agencies. That's basically what Chuck Schumer, who was a representative
of the Article I legislative branch, basically being like, you better, you better not touch them.
They run this super government. Sean Davis, 40 seconds. Well, Schumer was correct. We saw that during the
COVID thing. We saw it during the Russia collusion hoax. We saw it during the Ukraine impeachment
hoax. Recall, the Intel community cooked up a complaint against Trump that he wasn't listening to
them, and they used that as the basis to try to impeach him. So yeah, Chuck Schumer in that clip
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So apparently there was the subway chucker.
We could put the B-roll up here.
So apparently someone threw a subway sandwich at a federal.
agent. And we said, okay, you know, fine, some typical lib that probably works for, you know,
some trans organization. Nope. Turns out, who was he, Sean Davis? Who was the subchucker?
Yeah, the sassy subchucker is I believe he is now known, is a 37-year-old international
affairs specialist, a non-attorney who was hired in 2022 by the Biden administration at the
Department of Justice. Oh, there you go. That's what we care about.
you know, which is remarkable.
So wait, so to tell us some more, he is also an openly gay guy, and so he works for the Department of Justice.
So let me just get this straight.
So someone who works for the DOJ is throwing objects and breaking federal laws against federal law enforcement?
Apparently, and there's some more hilarious connections here.
It's bad enough that he works for DOJ and was assaulting federal officers.
But according to court records that we looked at, his attorney,
is something of a famous criminal defense attorney. Her name is Sabrina Shroth,
who is known for having represented Billy McFarland, who is the Firefest huckster,
who also got in trouble for throwing out some filthy sandwiches to concert goers at Firefest.
Ah, that's depressing.
So, look, the left has gotten used to the idea that they can get paid a lifelong salary
to be a political operative on a tax paradigm and never face any consequence.
and so look of course this guy should go to jail he should be put you know put behind bars but
Sean do you think that this is a a window into who is actually in the deep state of our
government like that guy who like forcibly throws the subway and like he runs away like a
little fairy look at that oh wow I run in my pink little shirt and my yeah I love those guys
just hunting them down um so tell us how many of these kind of anti
American, you know, ferries are in our government.
I think the worst thing I can say about that guy is he throws like Barack Obama.
That's right.
But the federal government is full of people like this.
And it's actually why they all freaked out when Trump went and shut down USAID, this
gajillion dollar massive industrial complex, which seemed to only be used to fund the left.
This is what they do, whether it's through sue and settle, whether it's through NGOs that
survive entirely on taxpayer money, or whether it's through the permanent.
bureaucracy with people like this. This is how they control the government and this is how they're
able to get paid to do their activism under the color of just normal federal service. And it has to
stop. And quite honestly, it's no wonder that conservatives and Republicans have such a hard time
implementing their agenda because at every single step on every floor of every building, they have
people like this subverting the agenda while pretending to just be nonpartisan objective civil
servants. And it's got to stop. Look, I mean, those should
not go nearly far enough. And we have a budget fight coming up this fall. The Senate and the
House, they're going to probably try to do some omnibus. And we need to just draw the line,
not allow it. Why do these people still work for the U.S. taxpayer? We need mass layoffs, mass
firings. And by way, start with guys like this. I mean, what good is he bringing to the Department
of Justice? He's throwing subway sandwiches being hunted by federal officers. Why do we need
gay 37-year-olds working in international affairs at the Department of Justice?
How is that making us safer?
It's not about like, okay, the gay thing or whatever.
It's just the point is that it's obvious that he has an agenda.
He's like open about it.
He's not there.
It's just like a sense of entitlement.
And he's chucking objects at federal law enforcement as he himself is a federal employee.
Final thoughts, Sean Davis.
Yeah, well, a big problem here is you've got a bazillion different employees.
It's hard to know who all the bad ones are.
You've got to have good people in place at the political level to fix this.
And the Senate so far has only confirmed a hundred something of Trump's political nominees.
There's still hundreds waiting to be confirmed, waiting to take their jobs in these agencies.
And you just can't expect one person at the top to go in and be able to know where all the bodies are buried and who all the extra weight is to get rid of it.
You've got to have your full team in place.
And for reasons that I just don't understand, the Senate's being allowed to just obstruct.
and dicker around and prevent Trump from getting his full team in place, which leads to this type of nonsense.
That is a window. I hope ever the takeaways this, as we say goodbye to Sean Davis and the Federalist,
I want you to extrapolate a standing army of 600,000 ferries that throw subway sandwiches.
That's who staffs your government. We should fire them all. Thank you, Sean Davis.
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There are street takeovers happening in Los Angeles. We have crime all across California.
to get our U.S. attorneys in, but the Senate needs to figure themselves out.
But joining us now is the acting U.S. attorney for the Central District of California
with a lot to discuss. Bill E. Sayley, Bill, great to see you.
Thank you for joining the program. What are some of the fights that you guys are engaged in
in California to bring down crime? Please walk us through it.
Oh, Charlie, thanks for having me on. And since I've gotten here in April, we have
taken on a huge initiative here. I would say the first thing,
I've made a priority is going after this homelessness fraud that happens here in the state of
California. We've had $24 billion spent over five years, and it's only gotten worse, and there's a lot of
people who've seen been enriched off that. So we have open investigations into that, and I think
you'll be seeing some of the fruits of that here very soon. We are going after sanctuary cities and
jurisdictions. We have Operation Guardian Angel, where we are getting warrants for criminals in state
custody, and they are required to hand them over to us, which they are.
are not required to comply with the detainer, but they have to comply with a warrant.
We're going after street gangs just yesterday at 5 a.m.
We did a takedown of the Hoover Street Gang in L.A., in the Figueroa Corridor, which is one of
the worst sex trafficking corridors, probably in the world.
It's horrendous what happens there.
You have young women and children as young as 14 years old being pimped out by these gang
members. And yesterday we indicted and took out 11 of the leaders of this organization who are
pimping out these girls and these children. And we're very proud of doing that. That's the work
that the Department of Justice is doing to clean up our communities where the prior administration
was busy weaponizing. The department, we're out there making the American people safer.
That's what we're doing here. Yeah. And so how is that being received by mayors, local leaders,
are some Democrats fighting this crackdown on crime?
actually behind the scenes they all they're begging us to take these cases they understand that they don't
have the ability to go after these thugs in the state system california's watered down their criminal
justice system they have no real punishment for their for their felonies uh they're closing prisons left
and right so they don't have the ability to incarcerate people and to have meaningful consequences
so they beg us to take these cases where they are fighting us charlie's on the immigration
enforcement we are having our border patrol and ice they're going out every day arresting
hundreds of illegal immigrants, criminal legal immigrants, and they are fighting us tooth and
they're sending out these thugs to resist our agents. And we are charging people. I filed over
53 cases for assaults and interference with our agents. And that's where they're focusing their
opposition. Yeah. And so what is your status in front of the U.S. Senate? I mean,
are you confirmed? You're acting. Tell us. My status in front of the U.S. Senate is I have no
status. I've never been nominated to the Senate because the senators here, Alex Padilla and
Adam Schiff, have refused to even, my understanding is meet with the White House or have discussions
with the White House. So I was appointed by the Attorney General as the interim U.S.
attorney, which gave me the ability to serve in that position for 120 days. At the end of that
120 days, the judges had the opportunity to make me the permanent U.S. attorney. They declined to do so
here, which is unsurprising. But they did not name a replacement, like, unlike what they
tried to do, Alina Hava there, to impose their own prosecutor. They just did nothing in this
district. So because of that, I am now what's called the acting U.S. attorney. I am a DOJ employee,
and I'm the top DOJ employee in the office, so that effectively makes me the acting U.S. attorney
here. And that's our workaround right now, because my understanding is there's no appetite in the
United States Senate to modify the blue slip process, which allows Democrat senators like
Adam Schiff and Alex Bedia to have a veto over the president's appointees. It makes zero sense
to have this process. We spoke out against the blue slip and Chuck Grassley is the kind of one
overseeing it. Just so we are clear, you're doing a great job, but you will not be able to be a
permanent U.S. attorney as long as a Democrat vetoes you. So basically, we win an election and then we don't
get to have our U.S. attorneys, even though we voted for secure border going on cartels,
because you have a couple U.S. senators of a non-constitutional, purely procedural
gentlemen's club where they say, oh, you know, we're going to able to kind of get in the way of this.
It is a ridiculous system. It will not allow us to get President Trump's people in Oregon,
in Washington, in California, in Arizona, in Georgia, in New Jersey, in New York, in Massachusetts,
and in Maine. Well, Maine, we have Susan Collins, but still Angus King getting the way of it.
those blue support supporters they need to get a pink slip basically we said so so walk us through
what are the other issues that we are fighting that you are fighting firsthand in california and how
present is the cartel activity um and real quick on the blue slip they try it's not just u.s
attorneys you're talking about judges when you look at all the judges who are issuing
tROs or injunctions we had a judge issue a tRO against our border patrol agents here because
they don't want them to do the immigration enforcement.
All those judges are basically, they have to go through the senators.
The senators, through this blue-slip tradition, it's really a tradition, it's not a law or anything.
It allows them to be the kings of their states.
So these Democrat senators walk around like their kingmakers.
They pick the U.S. attorneys.
They pick the judges.
They run the place.
And what I've seen does not happen in the reverse, Charlie.
In Republican states, Republicans don't exercise their power that way.
You know what they say?
Barack Obama won the election.
he deserves to have his people.
And so they allow the president to pick his people in Republican states.
But in blue states, Democrats refuse to do that.
So it's a bigger issue than just U.S. attorneys.
On cartels, there is no shortage of crime here.
Even though we are not a border district, we're not technically on the border.
We are still considered a border district in the eyes of the DOJ.
We do some of the largest, most impactful drug interdiction cases.
We have a lot of illegal immigrants in this district, millions of illegal immigrants in this district.
We filed what's called 1326 cases.
This is when someone is deported and they reenter.
It is now a federal felony.
Under the Biden administration, they stopped filing those cases.
We have filed over 900 just this year.
So that's just a little flavor of the work that we're doing here.
every day we're indicting some drug trafficker, gang member, someone with guns and drugs,
some child molesterer trafficker. I mean, there's no shortage of crime. It just doesn't get reported
the way the other stuff does in the media. Okay, let's now go to cut 435. This is Karen Bass
fighting Trump's raids. I'm going to play this and say, isn't it time to start indicting
these mayors? I mean, they're allowed to just fight against President Trump's immigration policy
play cut 435. We're all here today in solidarity to say that we will continue to resist. We are not
going to accept this behavior from this administration and that Los Angeles stands united.
So again, that's not she's like standing with the immigrant community fighting against. I mean,
is it legal for a mayor to defy federal law enforcement? It is not legal for a mayor to defy federal
law enforcement. It is it is illegal for her to interfere.
with federal law enforcement.
What they do is they try to kind of walk this line
where they say, we're not going to cooperate,
we're not going to help you,
and we're just going to make it very clear
that we don't like you.
The thing that would cross them
into the criminal territory
is if they took actions
to actually impede or interfere
with our ability to do our job.
And Charlie, if I could say,
first of all, I'm not going to talk about
any investigations that we may or may not have,
But this, to me, is a problem that is easily remedied by Congress.
Sanctuary cities have been challenged in the courts.
And what the courts have said is that states do not have to use their state resources to help the federal government.
Now, what Congress could very easily do is say, fine, you're not going to get a penny from the federal government unless you get rid of your sanctuary policies.
This is how we regulate highway speeds.
That's why we have a speed limits in every state.
This is why we have a drinking age of 21 in every state.
That is how the federal government compels states to do things.
Simple leverage.
That's right.
Yes.
We are behind you.
We're going to do everything we can to get you confirmed under the current system.
You're not going to get confirmed unless the Senate fixes this ridiculous blue slip thing.
Bill Isayle, thank you so much for your time.
And we really appreciate it.
Thank you, Charlie.
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I don't love charts.
I'm not a big chart guy because they could be very deceiving.
But every so often you find a chart that is a perfect.
depiction of what, not just his reality, but something that you've been trying to put into words.
President Donald Trump, of course, loved a chart. A chart saved his life.
Thanks to Ron Johnson, he turned his head at the right moment and boom, that bullet went by.
Of course, it was the illegal border crossings chart. This chart is one I want to draw your attention to.
This is not a criticism, of course, of any generation. This is a statement of reality.
This is the estimated percentage of 30-year-olds who are both
married and our homeowners in 1950 the world war two generation 50% of 30 year olds were married
and they owned a home in the 1980s it only went down by about 5% 45% of 30 year olds in 1980
were married and owned homes around the turn of the millennium it was okay but obviously
falling it was like 35% when Obama was president it was
was 27%. It is now about 8%. So we went from a country where half of our nation's young people
were married and owned homes right in 1950. And now it's about 8%. Interesting to start to see
the chart drop at 1990. We had the invasion of Iraq and the signing, of course, of the 1990 Immigration
Act, where we went from 0.5 million green cards to 1.2 million. A coincidence, of course not. This
right here is a breakdown of the social compact.
This is what I've been talking about.
I talked about with Tucker Carlson.
I talked about on CNBC.
This is leading the populist nationalist revolution across the West.
We need urgency to restore it.
I believe President Trump can and will.
Mass deportations.
Stop the H-1B scam.
Dramatically reduce legal immigration.
End-chain migration and the visa lottery.
Build 10 million homes immediately for Americans and crushed the college cartel.
and make it easier for you to be a plumber, electrician, a welder, a pipe fitter.
Do you want to save a generation and stop Mom Donnie and Madjione?
Study that chart.
Know that chart.
It's harder than ever for young people to be able to find a mate that is not either incredibly,
let's just say, unappealing or lesbian or gay.
It's just the whole dating pool is all disordered and messed up.
Trust me, I hear about that all the time.
that's a very good topic that we should talk about more is why why are young people not getting married
why are fertility rates collapsing the way they are but you have a choice and we talked about this
choice yesterday and i keep that chart up just for a second i just want to repeat it in in 1980 it
only went by down by five points in 1980 where a lot of people in this audience were about 30 years
old that would be a baby boomer 45% of you were able to get married and have homes and were
married and had homes. And now it's about 8%. This invites radical politics. I'm working on a longer
form thesis as to why homeownership is so important. An argument that someone made to me recently
of someone I really respect who was a private discussion, he said, but renting is the new way.
Renting is better. Renting is better because the argument he made is, well, when's the last time
you used your dining room in your house there's so much inefficiencies in owning there's so much
dead space wouldn't it be better to have a bed come out of the ceiling and your toilet come out of the
wall and you could invest that extra money in a 401k or a stock portfolio while that all sounds good
is efficiency really the thing that we're aiming towards i think there's something uniquely
american as saying this is my land this is my property and those of us that are homeowners you
know that something happened to you as soon as you bought a home you know something changed now
of course people should have a choice if you want to rent go ahead but we actually don't have the
choice that's the point is that young people are being forced into a mandatory rental economy
yeah let's play cut 440 they tell us to stop eating out and rents two thousand dollars a month
oh save for retirement and yet you can barely save for next week to go buy a house
every house is half a million dollars brother i'm not asking for a handout man we're asking for
a freaking fair shot at life our parents did not work harder than we work right now
they were simply just given a better chance their wages covered their lives their bills
their hobbies their passions our wages barely cover our freaking bills for the month dude
No amount of budgeting can ever fix a system designed to keep us down.
We're doing the best that we can, and yet it feels like the outcome has already been decided.
We don't fix it. You get Mangione and Mamdani.
Thanks so much for listening. Everybody, email us as always Freedom at Charliekirk.com.
Thanks so much for listening, and God bless.
For more on many of these stories and news you can trust, go to charliekirk.com.
