The Michael Knowles Show - Daily Wire Backstage: March Madness Edition

Episode Date: March 14, 2019

Does International Women's Day help or hurt women's causes? Are you deserving of a pinch from St. Patrick for not accepting the Green New Deal? Is a March Madness style tournament the best way to narr...ow down the ever-growing list of Democrat presidential candidates? Join this roundtable discussion featuring Ben Shapiro, Andrew Klavan, Michael Knowles, and Daily Wire god-king Jeremy Boreing, as they discuss all of this insanity and more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, everybody. This is Michael. You're about to listen to our latest episode of Daily Wire Backstage, where I joined Ben Shapiro, Andrew Plavin, and the man who will one day fire me for real, Daily Wire God King Jeremy Boring, for a great conversation on politics and culture, and where we answer questions from Daily Wire subscribers. Without further ado, here is Backstage. Fake laugh in three, two. Welcome to the Daily Wire backstage. March Madness. What is March Madness? Who writes this crap?
Starting point is 00:00:33 Is that the one with basketball? Basketball. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. The one with the hoop. It's where you pay somebody to say that your kid's a basketball star. They can get into college. Oh, yeah, March Madness. That's how I got into junior college.
Starting point is 00:00:46 We've really hit a new low in terms of titling these shows. It's a slow news month, my friends. I'm Jeremy Boring, the God King of the Daily Wire with a lowercase G and a lowercase K. And tonight we are going to do our honest best to fill something like 90 minutes. Has that always been our theme song? God knows. I've never heard that before.
Starting point is 00:01:18 Tonight we're going to talk politics. We're going to talk culture. We're going to talk about Tucker Carlson's response to Media Matters, hit job, and why that matters to all of us. And we'll also be taking questions from our subscribers. Go over to DailyWire.com slash subscribe. Give us your measly $99 a year. We're going to send you leftist tears hot or cold Tumblr. And we're going to do something tonight that we have never done before.
Starting point is 00:01:41 So pay attention. If you sign up and become a Daily Wire annual subscriber during this actual live broadcast tonight, you and a guest will be entered into a raffle to win. Drum roll, don't do a drum roll, a free trip to Los Angeles to sit in on a taping of this very show. So I'm going to say it all again. If you give us your $100, you will not only get access
Starting point is 00:02:05 to the greatest conservative content online, the Ben Shapiro show, the Michael Knowles show, whatever it is that Drew does for a living, you will not only get the leftist tears, hot or cold tumbler, you will also get to get onto an airplane, fly your rear end to Los Angeles, put on some sort of masks so that you can cut through the cigar smoke
Starting point is 00:02:24 and sit in on a taping of the Daily Wire backstage. We look forward to getting to meet you, take one picture with you, never talk to you again, and catch the sweet, sweet checks. All right, with me tonight, Ben Shapiro, Andrew Claven, Michael Knowles, and the lovely Elisha Krauss. Why don't they always make me say
Starting point is 00:02:40 the lovely Alicia Krauss. Like, imagine of what I said, with me tonight, the lovely Ben Shapiro. The old old Michael Knows. The, oh, so talented, Michael Knows, the piercing eyes of Andrew Claven and Alicia Krauss. She'll be joining us here a bit later to bring us your questions.
Starting point is 00:02:57 Get over to dailywire.com slash subscribe. Become a subscriber, enter for a chance to fly out here and meet us as we tape an episode of this show. In the meanwhile, can we add to that offer that they sit in for me? Yeah, so it'll be like, and for a piercing political analysis is Bob. Bob. Hey, Bob. What do you do?
Starting point is 00:03:23 Yeah, no, they can't sit in for you. I think meeting used the only reason anyone will do this. They don't know me. That's the only reason that's any way of healing. We were originally going to say, you get to fly out and spend a day shadowing, Daily Wire, God King, Jeremy Boring. And then when even our own staff said, Who's that?
Starting point is 00:03:41 It's not going to get anywhere. We're going to talk about all kinds of things tonight, Tucker Carlson. We're going to talk about International Women's Day, which happened over the weekend. I'm still getting over the celebration. I did see Captain Marvel because Drew is a sadist, so he sent me down there. I think we'll talk a little bit about college and why you shouldn't go. Since I'm the only one who didn't go, I have a perspective on this. But first, I know a lot of people tune in from my clunky segways.
Starting point is 00:04:08 That's why I'm here. You know who is named Bravo Company Manufacturing. Who? Bravo Company Manufacturing. Wow, that was good. When the founders crafted the Constitution, they enshrined a bunch of rights. The first right was making sacred the right of the individual to share their ideas without limitation by the government. The second right was your ability to protect that first right with a gun.
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Starting point is 00:05:07 forces from Marine Force reconnaissance to U.S. Army Special Ops Forces who can teach the skills necessary to defend yourself, your family or others. To learn more about Bravo Company manufacturing, head on over to Bravo CompanyMFG.com. And there you can discover more about their product, special offers. Upcoming news, Bravo CompanyMFG.com. I've met the founders of the company. They're spectacular people and their product is great. If you need more convincing, check them out at YouTube.com slash Bravo Company USA. That is YouTube.com slash Bravo Company USA. Bravo Company Manufacturing, not only a great sponsor of the show, not only produces a great product, but is a great sponsor of the show.
Starting point is 00:05:42 And if you're like me, you're particularly grateful for sponsors on a newsweek like this week when we're watching Tucker Carlson face down a hit job from Media Matters. Media Matters is the worst organization in America. Yeah. They're truly, it's an evil organization. It was started, for those who don't know the background of Media Matters, media matters was started by essentially Hillary Clinton
Starting point is 00:06:01 as a way to target the so-called vast right-wing conspiracy. The starting conjunction, David, what's his name? David Brake, David Brahe, the smear artist, who the formerly, allegedly cocaine-addled smear artist, who has spent his entire career just going after his political opponents while mistreating his own employees, allegedly. And Media Matters was specifically designed to go after people on the right. It is not a media watchdog. The media lie to people. They say, how it's a media watchdog.
Starting point is 00:06:29 No, a media watchdog is an organization that follows the entire media and then calls people out on their mistakes. Media Matters is the kind of organization where internal memos showed several years back that they were actively talking about hiring private investigators to shadow hosts at Fox News to dig up crap in their private lives so they could use it against them and take them off the air. Media Matters is now designating, obviously, with Tucker Carlson, some poor sap who's using their sociology degree to good benefit by watching 100 hours or listening to 100 hours of Tucker Carlson on old episodes of Bubba the Love Sponge from 2006 to 2011. 11. And this was, and we have been told that what Tucker said on there is deeply important to everyone. They are deeply offended. Now, a couple of quick notes and then, and then, I'm just giving the
Starting point is 00:07:12 intro here. A couple quick notes. Media Matters is badly motivated. We all know this. When Joy Reid of MSNBC was caught in battle blog posts, Angela Coros said on the head of MMFA, Media Matters for America, came out and said, now this is a right wing smear. Of course, we shouldn't go after any of her advertisers. It's all a right wing smear. He himself has now been caught in a bunch of old posts. There will be no consequences. to any of that and Media Matters deployed a bunch of protesters to Fox News, not to call for Tucker's ouster, but to call for a complete advertising boycott of the entire network of Fox News
Starting point is 00:07:42 because they don't like Fox News. Because Tucker Carlson was on Fox News when he said those things on the Fox News. No, no, no, he was on MSBC when he said all of those. And here is the kicker to all of this. Media Matters designed as a hit group is being given all sorts of credibility by people who do not give two craps what Tucker said. I was never a fan of Shock Chalk Radio. I don't like shock jock radio.
Starting point is 00:08:03 A lot of what Tucker said was a joke. Some of what Tucker said wasn't. It's shock jock radio. It's specifically designed for people to go on and say the most offensive things they can possibly say for the listener. And the attempt to go after Tucker for this old stuff is not in good faith. It's not an attempt to ask him what he meant by it. It's not an attempt to garner his views.
Starting point is 00:08:20 It is the same deal they do with every prominent conservative figure. They try to go back, find something that they can cast as embarrassing. And then call for an apology. If you apologize, then they step on your neck and say you did something wrong, obviously, that means advertisers should pull. If you don't apologize, they say you obviously still believe that bad stuff, so your advertisers should pull. They go after you to destroy you.
Starting point is 00:08:38 It is despicable. It is despicable. Because, again, it's not about you said something in the here and now that was bad, and now we're all reacting to the here and now. It is you pretending to be outraged about a thing, about which you are eminently non-outraged. It's also funny to me. You bring up that it was on a shock jock radio show.
Starting point is 00:08:54 You know, if you take yourself back in time 10 years, the heady days of yesteryear, conservatives weren't the audience for that show. Right. Right. So Tucker Carlson, of course, at the time on MSNBC, goes on Bubba the Love Spunge, something that almost every conservative in America when they read this story yesterday thought, who?
Starting point is 00:09:12 What? Because that entire format existed. Basically, as a rebuke of the right, it basically was a left-wing comedy format. And to me, that's actually the worst aspect of it is we now live, we talked last time we were together about how we live in a graceless age. I think that's a really important subject matter. We also live in an era where there is no comedy. Absolutely no comedy is allowed.
Starting point is 00:09:36 You're not allowed to be satirical, satire is dead. You're not allowed to parody, or totally through the looking glass on parody. I've never, like you, I've never cared for the shock jock format. Maybe when I was 16 years old, I might have grinned a few times listening to, was it Tom Likas? You ran that guy?
Starting point is 00:09:54 Once or twice, but never a format that really did anything for me. But we live in a better country when someone can go on a shock talk radio show and say outrageously terrible things and everyone snickers at them and then we move on with our life. There's something I want to add
Starting point is 00:10:09 to the media matters picture though. David Brock was the former boyfriend of the guy who ran the pizza parlor that was the center of Pizza Gate. When the pizza gate rumors started, that was when the idea of fake news before Trump took it over started to spread. And David Brock said openly,
Starting point is 00:10:27 we are going to use this to impose on social media, censors who will cut down conservative voices. Barack Obama picked up the thread, Hillary Clinton picked up the thread. This is a very, very sophisticated organization meant to silence the voices of the opposition. It's not, as you say, it is not meant to call people out. It is not meant to question ideas.
Starting point is 00:10:47 And this thing, I mean, look, as far as I'm concerned, for that day, when Tucker Carlson stood up to these guys and made that incredibly precise opening speech, about the outrage mob. For that one minute, he was the most important person in America. And the reason I say that is the right to joke around and make stupid jokes and say things that maybe you shouldn't say, that's part of free speech.
Starting point is 00:11:08 And I don't think it should cost you your job. And by the way, this whole thing he said it 10 years ago, I don't care if he said it yesterday. I don't care if he was sitting in a bar and somebody heard him have a couple and say something he shouldn't have said. That's part of being a human being. It's part of being a guy, especially.
Starting point is 00:11:21 Guys say stupid things. We like to step over the line. We're jockular. We like to step over the line. We say them sometimes to make a point, sometimes because they strike us as funny in the moment. We all do it, and everybody can be caught it. I will say, I do think there's a difference between old material and new material.
Starting point is 00:11:35 New material, we get to react in real time to the stuff that's being said now. There's something particularly off-putting about digging up old stuff. You were not outraged over a decade ago. I agree. But we have to distinguish between the jokes people make and the things that they are actually saying and believe. Of course I agree that we should make a distinction between jokes and people's actual beliefs. Of course, I believe that we should be able to say terrible jokes. I think that it's not only fundamental to freedom.
Starting point is 00:12:01 It's an essential aspect of how men express themselves. It's a form of de-escalation. Like racist jokes, there are two kinds of racist jokes. There are racist jokes that are meant to demean people of other races, and people who make those jokes are racist. Then there's racist jokes which are meant to diffuse differences between the races. And those jokes traditionally were made by all kinds of people of good faith. By the way, you would have comedy troops where these jokes would be made between the races toward each other,
Starting point is 00:12:31 and that was a part of the de-escalation during the civil rights movement. So this brings me to what I actually hate, and the reason that I fundamentally agree that it's even worse to go back into the past, is because the rules have changed. I disagree with the new rules, but I do recognize that there are new rules. I want to fight against them. I want to push back against them, but we push back within a certain framework. It's particularly disturbing to go back to a time when, you know, like next we're going to go back to Howard Stern and start finding all kinds of things that were said on the Howard Stern show.
Starting point is 00:13:03 Well, they already have. I mean, right? They go back to Friends and they say you can't watch the show Friends anymore, the most popular show of the 1990s. You're not supposed to watch it anymore because there are episodes in which people are joking about gay marriage or people are making jokes about fat people or people making racial jokes. It's like, oh, well, you can't do that. You're trying to superimpose modern sensibilities. Yes. back on to people in a different era who abided by different sense of rules. I mean, it's fundamentally dishonest in an extraordinary way. And that is that once you, what exactly is the ask? So if you want to make society better, there has to be an ask. So what exactly is the ask? So I say something on my show today that's wrong.
Starting point is 00:13:38 And the ask is, okay, I have to come on the show tomorrow and I have to correct it. That's a fair ask. I say something that is offensive or terrible. It's my job to apologize to the people that I was wrong to. I'm not going to say the people who were offended because that puts the onus on them. If I did something wrong, the onus is on me. But what is the ask
Starting point is 00:13:57 when somebody said something bad 13 years ago and no one took offense? Is Tucker supposed to apologize to media matters because those people can go F themselves? Is Tucker supposed to apologize to people who are offended now by comments that didn't make O'Dent 13 years ago?
Starting point is 00:14:10 I mean, like here's a situation in which I would say Tucker should apologize. So Tucker, for example, said, made some comments about Warren Jeffs, who was, I guess, tried and convicted for facilitating rape he was the cult leader and he was facilitating child marriages
Starting point is 00:14:23 between a 27-year-old and 16-year-old, and Tucker made some comments about how he thinks that guy should be free. Let's say that Warren Jeff's victims had come forward and said, I was offended by that. And Tucker said, listen, I was on Bob of the Love Spunge, I was saying stupid stuff. I apologize to you. That seems to me that that would be a fair recompense.
Starting point is 00:14:39 But who is Tucker supposed to apologize to? The world at large, he's just, like, he doesn't owe me a damn thing. He doesn't owe me an apology for something that he said. Why? This is what the left does. The left gets. that's offended on behalf of other people.
Starting point is 00:14:51 You'll notice nine times out of ten, it is always white liberals who are pretending to be offended on behalf of every allegedly aggrieved minority. And it's even further, context is so important. Context, particular circumstances are important to everything in life.
Starting point is 00:15:09 And so when I speak in public, I don't swear. I just try not to, I don't like to do it. When I'm at the bar, I talk like a dirty sailing. And I'm not sorry that I do that. don't think it's wrong that I'd do that. I think it is right and just. I think it is perfectly appropriate to those contexts. So Tucker Carlson is invited on this shock jock show. Now, you could say, maybe you shouldn't go on a shock jock show. Maybe that's career advice. Maybe the leftists at MSNBC should have told him to stay off of it instead of encouraging him to go on it. But instead,
Starting point is 00:15:38 he goes on the show. Is he supposed to go and play Bach in a rock band? Is that what he's going to do? Is he going to go start playing the Brandenburg concerto when he's with the Beatles? This is interesting. And I think that the feminization of Christianity, which led to the feminization of American society generally, really contributes to this, which is men do compartmentalize behaviors. Women, generally speaking, compartmentalized relationships. There's a lot that's interesting to unpack from both of those points, from that distinction. But if you take men who compartmentalize behaviors, it doesn't just apply to behavior. within a sexual or romantic relationship. It is a compartmentalizing of all kinds of behaviors
Starting point is 00:16:23 within certain contexts. And it is a legitimate, I agree with you, there is a legitimate argument to be made that what is wrong in one context is not wrong in another. I mean, obviously we can come up with huge examples. Killing someone in wars, different than killing someone on the street so that you can take his air box.
Starting point is 00:16:42 Killing someone on Bubba the Love Sponge is different than killing. Right. But even with course language, even with body jokes, even with sort of the sort of ways that men use disparagement as a form of camaraderie, things like that are not always appropriate. I'm not saying universally people should be allowed to behave this way. I'm saying in certain contexts it's appropriate for people to behave that way. But this is a weaponization of shock.
Starting point is 00:17:09 And it's been used now for 30, 40 years against the entirety of Western culture before the show began. We were talking about all the references, anti-Jewish references that go like a thread through all of Western literature. Now, when they teach literature, they go back and say, well, here's an anti-female thing. Here's an anti-black thing. You know, every, the famous one was the attack on Jane Austen for supporting the English Empire, simply, the British Empire, simply by writing her books. I mean, that was this Edward Said argument.
Starting point is 00:17:38 It's been an attempt to silence all of Western civilization by this targeted outrage that doesn't extend to everything that everybody does. I mean, nobody is going to say, oh, Don Lemon demonized white people, which he did, white men. Nobody's going to say he should be sides. Here's a great example of this that I've heard you talk about with our friend Dave Rubin, that in one context, your position towards Dave Rubin's part is political and as part of your public advocacy that you do as a political voice. In another context, it's congenial because it's based on your friendship with Dave Rubin, your general support of his well-being and his happiness.
Starting point is 00:18:18 Right. Another example might be the use of certain pronouns. Right, I've said this about transgender pronouns. Absolutely. This is exactly right. In public, if somebody says, are transgender pronouns, the right pronouns use, I will say no, because I don't believe
Starting point is 00:18:29 that there is a set of pronouns that is not connected to biological sex. If I'm sitting across the table from a person who's transgender, I'll use whatever pronouns they feel like because we're out to dinner. Why would I be a jerk, just to be a jerk? It's called being polite. Because context does matter
Starting point is 00:18:42 when trying to make a moral determination about someone's bank. Of course it does. The way that you can tell that this is supreme bad faith is the Pod Bros today, Pod Save America, they came forward, the Obama Bros. They came forward and they were actively stumping for people to attend MMFA's rally outside of Fox News.
Starting point is 00:19:01 These guys make their money the same way that we do. They make money off advertising on programs like this one. And because I make my money off this, although I held this position before we ever did this. Of course. With that said, understanding how advertising works in this space, and that advertisers should be able to advertise on a wide variety of political programs
Starting point is 00:19:21 without being perceived to have endorsed any of the views on those political programs, I have never called, nor would I call for a boycott against the Pod Save America bros, even though I think that they are actively promoting policies that are detrimental to the country, actively promoting a vision of America that I think is false, dangerous, and harmful, I still think that the advertisers who advertise on Pod Save America have every right to do so, and boycotting them is morally wrong. And it's good for America that many of the people who advertise on Pod Save America also advertise with us. That's exactly right.
Starting point is 00:19:50 But the comfort level, you can see that there's a tool of power because the people at Pod Save America, if they truly believed that the boycottability was mutual, if they truly feared for the possibility that we were all going to go after their advertisers, they chipped their position in a heartbeat. But this is what was so good about Tucker's statement is that he pointed out that we're not playing by the same rules. We're in a conversation. They're in a jihad. We're trying to argue our point of view. and win, they're trying to silence us.
Starting point is 00:20:15 They do it everywhere. And what Tucker said was that the right too often plays along. The right too often pretends that there's some kind of legitimate thing going on and we have to pull back. And I don't think we do, especially, I mean, because I do all the satire, I say all these absurd things that I know are absurd and you know are absurd and I'm kidding around. But I know that you could take those out of context and nail me with them. I just don't care, you know, because I do not feel, I do not feel they have the right
Starting point is 00:20:39 to do that to me. And so I feel it's only right for me to stand up to him. I think that is the argument. But this is where the left really plays on, I think, the morality of the right, meaning that we all acknowledge, for example, that Tucker said some stuff that we don't like. Of course, yeah. Okay, that stuff is wrong. So instead of, so what the left will do is they'll find the thing that they say is what he did wrong.
Starting point is 00:21:02 And we may agree that it's wrong. And we'll say, like, as a broader principle, we're not going to call for boycotts or his destruction for a thing he said 13 years ago. And they say, ah, you agree with the thing that he said 13 years ago. Right. This is where, and you saw some of this from the right. This is where Tucker is right, but the lesson can be extended too far in the other direction. So where Tucker is right is he says, okay, well, what you guys are doing is in bad faith. You are not attempting to police the dialogue.
Starting point is 00:21:23 You are attempting to come after me and destroy me on the basis of these old statements, and there are people on the right who fall for this. And you saw this. You saw some people on the right going, well, Tucker is not the hill to die. And you really want to die on this hill defending this kind of rhetoric. That's the worst thing. Which is a bunch of nonsense. It's a bunch of nonsense.
Starting point is 00:21:37 Because if there's any hill to die on it's the hill of, you don't get to dig up people's old crap. use it against them without even asking them what their opinion on is it now, specifically in bad faith to destroy their career. Like, you don't get to do that. It's a bad thing to do. But on the other side, what will happen is people will say, okay, well, then I'm just going to double down on everything. So somebody says something bad today, like an actual bad thing.
Starting point is 00:21:58 And it's today. Should that person apologize for it? And people on the right will go, listen, if I apologize, I'm acknowledging the left point, no, sometimes you have to apologize. This is what I liked about Tucker's monologue. Tucker said, good people, when they do something wrong, they apologize. And I'm not going to apologize to hyenas. I'm not going to apologize to the jackals who have no interest in receiving an apology.
Starting point is 00:22:17 And who are looking to destroy me on the basis of this old stuff. As I said, I'm sure that if a victim of Warren Jeffs came to Tucker and said, listen, what you said, I'm Bubba the Love Sponge in 2007, I found I didn't even know about it. Now I heard about it. I'm offended. I'll bet you that Tucker would say, you know what? I shouldn't have said it. It was a wrong thing to say. But this brings us back to our conversation last time we were together where we're discussing the graceless civilization.
Starting point is 00:22:39 and you made the point that from a tactical point of view, it's always wrong now to apologize. Yes. If you apologize now, you are putting your neck in the guillotine. You saw it with Chris Cuomo. Did you see Chris Cuomo did this insane monologue? Oh my gosh.
Starting point is 00:22:55 Objective journalist Chris Cuomo, Block of Wood, less smart of the Cuomo brothers, which is an amazing statement. And Chris Cuomo did a monologue on CNN, where he said, Tucker Carlson is a coward. How do I know he's a coward? Because he's not apologizing for these statements. And he's also not going on his show tonight
Starting point is 00:23:10 and saying the same statements over again. Right. And it's like, okay, in that one sentence, you have set up a catch-22 for him, which is if he apologizes, then you were going to say, ah, you see, he knows that he was wrong, and that's why he should be boycotted
Starting point is 00:23:21 because he's that kind of person. He should never have said it in the first place, and even he acknowledges that. And if he doesn't apologize, he's not apologizing because he still agrees with it. So why doesn't he just double down on it today? You know, but beyond this, and this is something that really bothers me
Starting point is 00:23:34 is the entire definition of the offense, usually it's racism they come after us for. And the entire definition of racism has now become any glitch, any tribal glitch in the human mind that causes you to behave in a certain way when, for instance, a black guy gets on an elevator. If you get in a car, a near side swipe of a car, and you see the guy in the car is black, or Jewish, or female,
Starting point is 00:23:59 you're very likely to shout, you know, you stupid, blank, whatever the kind of person it is. I'm sorry, that's not racism. That's a little glitch in the human person that we can overcome by goodwill. You know, it's not, it is not racism to sort of think like, oh, you know, I grew up with people who look like you. I kind of feel more comfortable with that. You can overcome all those things. And what the left does is it takes these human foibles, which we all have, and we all say, and it makes, turns them into an aspect of your philosophy, which is not true.
Starting point is 00:24:29 Racism is a philosophy. I know racist people. I know people who believe that other people are inferior to them because of the way they were born. That is true racism. I oppose it with all my soul. I truly do. You guys know I do. You've heard me rant about it. But it's not the same thing as the fact that we're all human beings and we have these flaws and we have these little tribal glitches. To call people out for that. The left has elevated perfection as the only acceptable standard for behavior. And it has to be perfect perfection because if you were ever imperfect, this is like you can't even tell a story about how you were once imperfect as a cautionary tale. is the Liam Nusser.
Starting point is 00:25:04 Yes, the Liam Musil. And what they do is they take one instance, what you're talking about. And I'll disagree with you to the extent that I think that if you're in the car and somebody side swipes you and it's a woman and you just start shouting at her as a woman, that that would be a sexist incident. But that does not mean that you are a sexist. In other words, that's what I'm saying. Right. I think we're saying the same thing. I'm trying to hone in a little more precisely.
Starting point is 00:25:26 A racist moment does not make you a racist for your entire life because all we are as human beings are a series of moments. That's all we are. And then the way we judge your character is by weighing up the totality of those moments and your viewpoint. And that's how we decide whether you're a good person, whether you're a racist or not, whether you're somebody who we should trust or not.
Starting point is 00:25:45 There's no one who's perfect on this earth. And what we have decided is that we are going to take one instance, one moment, where you did a wrong thing, and we will use that as the key moment that is the flashpoint that shows your behavior. The left does this about America, by the way. This is their favorite thing to do.
Starting point is 00:26:00 I was ranting about this on my show, I think yesterday, it was really terrible. There was a young man named Victor, I think it was Victor McElaney, and he was a young black man who was shot to death near USC just last week. And his mother is a city councilwoman in Oakland. And the reason that this hit my radar is because somebody emailed me and said, this is a person who asked you a question at USC at your appearance just a couple of months ago. And I remembered the kid.
Starting point is 00:26:26 He was 21, and he was really nice, cordial. He disagreed with me, but it was really cordial, was really warm-hearted and really good. And it didn't make the national news for more than a blick. It didn't because he was killed by people who were killing him as a part of a robbery. It was just a criminal act in a high-crime neighborhood near USC. And so this doesn't make the national news. If he'd been killed by a white cop, then it makes the national news.
Starting point is 00:26:49 And I connected this to the fact that there was this long article in the New York Times magazine about what they called the tragedy of Baltimore, where they're talking about how Baltimore has completely fallen apart. And ever since Freddie Gray, particularly, the murder rate has skyrocketed. because the police have just stopped policing, because they don't want to be held up on all of the, every time they go out there, there's 10 people with cameras
Starting point is 00:27:09 who are attempting to get them fired, ruin their life and put them in jail. So they've just stopped policing. So the murder rates have risen in Baltimore. What the left likes to do is pick instances that reinforce a narrative that they have already pre-written. That's what's happening with Tucker.
Starting point is 00:27:21 That's what happens with people like me or Rush or Mark Levine or anybody who achieves any level of prominence in the conservative movement. And it's what the left does with America. Instead of looking at the broad trend of where is crime happening and why is it happening? By the way, it's happening in areas where there is high level of single
Starting point is 00:27:34 motherhood, not enough men in the community and not enough police. That is the answer. That's where all crime is happening. And that's not a racial thing. That's true in white communities too. Instead of looking at those trends, instead, what they'll do is they'll pick out an incident that they think reinforces the true narrative, that the real problem in America is racism. They'll feature it for months on TV. Then there's a riot about the false narrative. And then they say, well, that that riot is proof positive that our narrative was true in the first place. You know what it is, too, especially on this. point of these incidents, these series of incidents, these series of actions. The way it works,
Starting point is 00:28:05 we're all guilty of it, the left takes it to an extreme, is we judge others by their actions, we judge ourselves by our intentions. And so Andrew Carousone, the head of Media Matters, he had these blog posts unearthed from 2005 around the same time that Tucker was going on Bubba the Love Sponge. And they were degrading and mocking transgender people then called transvestites, degrading Japanese women who were sexually abused, degrading Bangladesh's. Jews. The Jews as well, of course. The Jews always.
Starting point is 00:28:38 That's just the game. That's just throwing the Jews for a time. And all of these people, but they'll of course not go after them for it. First of all, because Media Matters itself is a bad faith organization, but also because the left judges itself on its intentions, solely on its intentions. When they say vile things about Sarah Palin, vile things about Nikki Haley, whoever, They can't be misogynists because they support abortion. They have wonderful intentions for women.
Starting point is 00:29:02 They're feminists deep, deep down, and us, one action, one little incident, one guy yelling at a car who sideswiped him, you are dead, you're wicked, you're evil, you're bound to perdition. I think we can all agree that if you're going to boycott Tucker Carlson, it should be over that Luddite crap he said about stopping self-driving vehicles. Get rid of that nonsense. I do want to say, in the interest of disclosure, three of the four of us once worked for an organization
Starting point is 00:29:27 that Ben and I started together called Truth Revolt, and our premise was to be a right-wing sort of answer to media matters. And we did successfully lead a few actions against a few prominent left-wing people who said, not jokes, they said some legitimately horrible things. Martin Bashir talked about excreting into Sarah Palin's mouth. Correct. But there was nothing disingenuous about Truth Revoltaud. No.
Starting point is 00:29:52 It was so honest. We had a mission statement. And our mission statement was, this is a vile, horrible tactic that has no place in a free society. But the only thing more immoral than doing this action is allowing this action to continually be done to one side with absolutely no answer. And so Ben and I had this premise called Mutually Assured Destruction, which was, when the left stops doing this, we'll stop doing it. Until the left stops doing this, they have to also know what it feels like to lose your advertising base. And we pursued that for a short amount of time and then... And it was successful.
Starting point is 00:30:26 And this is the thing that I think that advertisers need to start understanding truth is that all this crap is astroturf. It is absolutely astroturf. There have been good studies on the effectiveness of boycotts. Boycotts are almost never effective. Like, it's almost impossible to name an effective boycott. You remember when they tried to boycott Chick-fil-A, and Chick-Fillay stock went up.
Starting point is 00:30:45 It's a great example, yeah. Every single time there's an attempted boycott. Nike stock went up when they put Colin Kaepernet. This is correct. Anytime you piss people off and they're in the headlines more, the truth is that the sales tend to go up because all earned publicity is still publicity. The Wall Street Journal did a piece about the University of Wyoming
Starting point is 00:31:00 where they had their thing, there should be more cowboys, the world needs more cowboys. And of course, the faculty came in and said, oh, this is eliminationist and heterosexualists and all this stuff. And they told them to go pound sand. They made thousands of dollars. Their applications went up.
Starting point is 00:31:14 It's like stand up to these people and you win. The reason I mention this is because since we know this from the inside, since we actually did this operationally, it's not hard to astro-turf this stuff. People assume that Media Matters has this vast crowd of people who are doing things. They got like five people to show up for this protest. And that's all it takes, by the way,
Starting point is 00:31:29 if advertisers don't actually sit there for 40 minutes and think to themselves, guys, is this real? Is this like an actual thing? Because here is the truth of the thing. Okay, when we did it to MSNBC, we went after a couple of their advertisers, we got a couple advertisers to pull from Martin Bashir, and Martin Bashir ended up losing his show.
Starting point is 00:31:44 We had 80 activists. I kid you not. 80 activists. We sent them an email, and it said, here's the number for the customer. customer service line at MSNBC, here's the customer service line for this advertiser. Call them up and tell them you're angry at them for advertising on Martin Bashir. Within two days, Martin Bashir's show had been pulled.
Starting point is 00:31:59 Okay, that was not a vast groundswell of people who are never going to shop with this advertiser again. That was us. And again, it's a bad tactic. And we said openly, it's a bad tactic. We said, you know what, you know what would be great is if we didn't have to do this tactic. So how about this?
Starting point is 00:32:12 You guys stop all this crap. We'll stop all this crap. And then we can go back to a system where you can advertise wherever you want. And that's that. You shop wherever you want. You know what the actual boycott should be if you don't like Tucker's show? Don't watch his damn show.
Starting point is 00:32:25 Boycott a show. You don't like my show. Boycott my damn show. Don't watch my show. You think a single person pissed off at Tucker Carlson has ever watched two straight episodes of Tucker Carlson, not a chance in the world. This is again why I'm so appreciative for our advertisers.
Starting point is 00:32:37 And you know who's a advertiser with a genius policy? What a great segue. That was a fabulous. A genius. Genius. Wow. Policy genes. Oh, man.
Starting point is 00:32:47 This guy's a broadcasting genius. It's pretty impressive. I will say that those pictures are so strong that when I die, I hope that they read them in my will to others. But if I should die, what you actually want to make sure is that you have some life insurance. That's where policy genius comes in. If you've got a mortgage or kids or anybody who depends on your income, you need to be an adult. Go get some life insurance right now.
Starting point is 00:33:10 Policy genius is the easy way to get life insurance. Two minutes. You can compare quotes from top insurers and find the best policy for you. When you apply online, the advisors at policy, Policy Genius will handle all the red tape for you. They'll negotiate your rate with the insurance company, no commission sales agents, no hidden fees, just helpful advice, personalized service,
Starting point is 00:33:25 and PolicyGenius doesn't just do life insurance. They also do home insurance and auto insurance and disability insurance. They're your one-stop shop for financial protection. So if you find life insurance puzzling, head on over to PolicyGenius.com in two minutes, compare quotes, find the right policy. Save up to 40% doing it. Policy Genius, again, the easy way to compare and buy life insurance.
Starting point is 00:33:42 Be irresponsible human. Don't be an irresponsible human. Make sure that your family is taken care of. Don't be buried into Popper's grave. Go check out policy genius. What if you have against Popper's? This is popperphobic language. Popperphobic language.
Starting point is 00:33:56 So we're going to check in with our Daily Wire subscribers. They keep the lights on as much as our advertisers do. And some lucky DailyWire subscriber who subscribes during this broadcast, go at DailyWire.com subscribe and becomes an annual subscriber, will win a chance to sit in this room, breathe in our secondhand cigar scope, and see how the magic is made. That's second prize. First prize you don't have to come, right? Alicia Krauss, we're checking in with you to hear from our subscribers.
Starting point is 00:34:23 Hey, guys. Hey, hello. Hello. How are you all? We can't see you, but we hear you. We're happy to hear from you. No, happy to be here, you know. Where are you?
Starting point is 00:34:32 Well, I'm on backstage where women are either prostitutes or barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen. Which one are you? Wow. Are you actually barefoot and actually pregnant? actually in the Daily Wire kitchen? Yeah, yeah. I love this organization. I mean, at least it's a shiny new kitchen, right?
Starting point is 00:34:55 And I'm making chocolate chip cookies. Don't worry, none of them are for you. They're for me. Entirely for being the baby. So I will be down here, at least I'm not in Michael Mills's broom closet anymore, but I will be down here taking subscriber questions, and don't forget, how do you submit those questions? Well, become a subscriber.
Starting point is 00:35:12 And not only could you win the chance to maybe be stuck barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen, with me, but you also get to sit in on a future episode of Backstage if you become a subscriber right now. And you get to ask a question of the guys. So, go to the Daily Wire Backstage banner on the top of the page to watch the live stream and
Starting point is 00:35:30 submit your questions there. And now we can't smoke around Alicia. That's true. So say the doctors. Is that why I was sent down a whole floor? Have we officially become the most conservative out of America? Elisha, do we have any questions? I do, actually. One comes from William. He wants to know what's the constitutional definition of a natural-born citizen.
Starting point is 00:35:52 If a person is born in the U.S. to two illegal aliens, can that person go on to be president? Michael Knowles. Well, because I'm the one who went to Harvard Law here, I'll certainly be happy to describe this one. There actually is, correct me when I inevitably get something wrong, there is a longstanding debate over the exact meaning of natural-born citizen. It seems to me that if you are born to the child, or if you are the child of an American citizen, you are a natural born citizen. At the time of your birth, you are an American citizen. So the whole birther conspiracy was a little bit superfluous because Barack Obama, even if he were born on Mars, would have been a natural born citizen. This seems to be in dispute in any case, but if you're born to illegal aliens here in America,
Starting point is 00:36:32 you are also a natural born citizen since at least that case in, what, 1898? Yeah, Wong Kim Ar. That's right. The Wong case. After that, it seems to be resolved that you are a natural-born citizen. There's been some discussion of repealing birthright citizenship or clarifying birthright citizenship. We've had that since 2016. But the question, as far as I can tell, remains somewhat unresolved.
Starting point is 00:36:54 That's right. There's one phrase in the 14th Amendment, specifically, that is read to maybe exclude birthright citizenship. The truth is that in the British Empire, the idea of birthright citizenship was sort of tradition. So going back to Blackstone, the news. notion that of natural born citizenship is fairly well established in Anglo-American law. The sort of countervailing viewpoint is that in the 14th Amendment, it says that if you're born in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof. So that's the phrase subject to the jurisdiction thereof that comes up in these legal debates because the question
Starting point is 00:37:24 is if you are a citizen of another country, like you're, let's say you're a Mexican citizen and you commit a crime in the United States, well then they have to contact the consulate of Mexico because you are a Mexican citizen. Your child, presumably, is not subject. Do you accepted American law upon yourself, so you're not subject to the jurisdiction of American law, neither is your child. That at least is the argument against birthright citizenship. I think that it's an open debate. It's a live debate. It's interesting to remember that the subject of the jurisdiction thereof came into play when John McCain was seeking the nomination to be president because he was born in Panama. Panama. So two American
Starting point is 00:38:03 parents, so born as citizen of the United States. They're born, born, born, born, born, with the opportunity to be a citizen of the United States. The question was, was Panama at that time, was he subject to the jurisdiction? That's exactly right. And the way that the courts traditionally have interpreted subject to the jurisdiction thereof would be to exclude, for example, foreign ministers. So if you're a foreign minister from Mexico and you have a kid in the United States, your kid is not necessarily a subject of the United States because you're a foreign minister and therefore you're not subject to the jurisdiction of the American law. And this is the part that does pain me as someone who thinks, I think, is probably, we all do the,
Starting point is 00:38:37 birthright citizenship has been abused, it's created very bad incentives at the southern border, is it does seem explicitly to take out diplomats, to take out the children of diplomats or whatever. But other people, even if you're a foreign national in this country, perhaps you are subject to the jurisdiction of this country. Yeah, it's not supremaclure is the truth of it, but it's also not a precedent that's going to change anytime soon. Someone like me who's immaculately conceived, is that naturally born? That's the question. This raises not just political, but theological questions. It's also interesting to think about it from the point of view of the frame.
Starting point is 00:39:07 of the Constitution at the time that they were conceptualizing these ideas that no person in America was a natural-born citizen of the United States. So they were specifically thinking about loyalties, right? They were thinking about where your loyalty would be, to what sovereignty would your loyalty be. They didn't want someone to be elected to be president of the United States who had a divided, a divided sense of national allegiance. And I think that that's at the very least the spirit of it, which is why I think that, you know, probably if an American diplomat, if John Quincy Adams had been born in France or been born in the Netherlands, he was not. I still think that that would not have, at the time,
Starting point is 00:39:53 at their time, they would not have thought of him as not eligible to become president. He was, it took a long time to travel back then. He was born over there because his father was there in service of the country. So they would have seen John, they would have seen that child. If you read more about the debate, John U takes one side of the debate in favor of natural born citizenship, and Mark McCorrie and the folks at Center for Immigration Studies tend to take the, John Eastman, they tend to take the other side of the debate. Interesting. Alicia, question. Oh, I just want to know, can Dan Crenshaw run for president? Because he wasn't born on American soil. That's the most important thing. Oh, interesting. Where was Dan Crenshaw born?
Starting point is 00:40:30 I believe that on a military base in Germany. So military bases are exempt, too, right? I thought he was born in Asgard. His birthday is coming up, by the way. Yeah, it is because he's... I'm never going to forgive him for making me arm wrestle him. And you losing? What the more humiliating?
Starting point is 00:40:46 It was close. Wasn't it close? It was not close. It was so good. It is actually true, though. That's what was determined in the McCain question is that since he was born basically on a military base, he was still in that moment.
Starting point is 00:40:59 You should have had him wrestle all four of us. We all go flying out the window. All right, here comes a question from Joe about college education. He wants to know, for those of us who are majoring in a useless liberal arts major with the intent of entering the academy, what do you believe is the best mode by which we can improve it? You know, unfortunately, I know too much about this, but, you know, ever since 2008, people have been talking about the liberal arts collapsing for a long time. But ever since 2008, the liberal arts have collapsed.
Starting point is 00:41:26 And there are very few jobs in the liberal arts. And if you do get one of them, the thing that really has to be changed is you have to understand what it is to teach the liberal arts. To teach the liberal arts means to teach, first of all, the history of the liberal arts, for instance, literature, the history of literature, but also to teach what the people who were speaking at the time were trying to say in their moment. It's not about telling them how they can be eradicated by me overlaying my philosophy on top of them. It is what Plato was trying to communicate. what Shakespeare was trying to communicate. These are hard things to study, and really worth knowing, because they make you wiser and they make you more involved in your culture.
Starting point is 00:42:06 I didn't go to an actual university. I went to a junior college and majored in country music and then dropped out. That's true. I told this story about you. Did you? Yeah. But with my limited amount of education that I have, I know that the word liberal is associated with liberty,
Starting point is 00:42:23 and that therefore the liberal arts could be translated literally to mean the freedom arts, and that the entire purpose of a liberal education, as we understand it in later days in the West, was so that you could learn the art of freedom. That you were studying the architecture of the West, the philosophical and liturgical and liturgical and literary history of the West, so that you would understand the art of being free. You would understand and earn your freedom that we have. You know, you almost said like you have one of those fancy degrees. That is actually what the liberal arts are.
Starting point is 00:42:55 That is the entire purpose of liberal education. that up. It absolutely seemed true. You know, people don't even know this. And this is why the debate actually matters. I think a lot of conservatives want to, in our kind of reactionary way, we want to say, get rid of it, we hate it all. The liberal arts really, really matter.
Starting point is 00:43:11 A free society is not going to remain free for even five seconds if liberal education dissolves. And the problem is... Well, it's already dissolved. It's been hollowed out from within. Game over, man. You could count on one hand the number of programs in the liberal arts.
Starting point is 00:43:27 that are still actually carrying on that tradition. You know, my new book, not to pitch it, but the right side of history, available right now, but not really available until next Tuesday. It is kind of a layman's read on Western philosophy. There are people who've spent generation studying this and know this way the hell better than I do.
Starting point is 00:43:43 And my very basic gloss, which you guys have read, and it is, you know, I think it's quite good, but it's obviously not to the level of expertise as people who have spent their entire, like your son spends his entire life studying this stuff. He knows this stuff better than I do. you know, that has been completely lost to the extent that if I even speak about this, there was a, I spoke at University of Michigan last night, the history department has not read
Starting point is 00:44:04 my book, it's not out yet. They held a panel called dilettantes in history, the power of the enwitement. If you study the enlightenment and all you got from it is it's white people, then you don't know what the hell you're talking about and the classics are dead. I think that this does. I bet I was heavily attended. Oh, yeah. There were professors. I think they ended up with about 35 people. We had, by contrast, a thousand people who showed up to ours, an overflow room with another 106,000 people on the waiting list.
Starting point is 00:44:33 Oh, wow. The University of Michigan. So there's some appetite for this stuff, which shows how badly the universities have botched it, because there is appetite for all of this stuff. But, you know, quick note, this person is asking they're already in the liberal arts and they intend on teaching. So you're actually doing a career path that makes sense.
Starting point is 00:44:50 I've ripped down the liberal arts as a career path if you don't actually intend on going into the liberal arts, because it seems to me that, this whole college scandal that's happening right now, these Uber-rich parents who are paying for their kids to get into places like Yale, there are two questions that deserve to be answered. One is, why would Uber-rich people pay for their kids
Starting point is 00:45:06 to get into Yale when you could just give your kid the $500,000 and just set them up for life in a trust fund or something? That's question number one. And number two, if these kids are really unqualified, if they're getting into Yale with 1,200 SATs, shouldn't they fail out? Shouldn't they fail out?
Starting point is 00:45:21 No, because it's very hard to get in, but it's very easy to stay in. Well, and this is the point that I make about colleges. What the public thinks colleges are for is not actually what colleges are for. So we all think that it's for developing a skill set and being educated and learning about Western civilization. Bulls. That is not what colleges are for. Colleges are for two things in reality, unless you are studying in the maths or the sciences,
Starting point is 00:45:44 in which case you're actually learning something. It's not about skill set. What it is about is two things, credentialing and social group. That's it. That's the only thing college is for. That's why all these people go... There's a third thing that Michael got out of college. It was treated with penicillity.
Starting point is 00:45:59 I count that as social group for Michael. I mean, he created his own human social group. They are his children. And one day he'll go back and take responsibility for his past sin. Well, New Haven's very far away. I don't know. That's a long flight. But this is why these rich parents will pay
Starting point is 00:46:12 because they want the credential for their kid. And the credential matters because it's the imprimatur that you're a member of the elite. And they want their kids to be members of this airsat social fabric so they can go to the alumni dinners and they can know friends who are in very powerful positions. And I know this because when I went to a very highfalutin universe, when I went to Harvard Law School, the very first day,
Starting point is 00:46:30 I was at Harvard Law School at orientation, Elena Kagan, who was then the dean of law school. Now she's Supreme Court Justice. She gets up in front of a class of 500 of us. And the first thing she says is, you know, you're all worried this is going to be the paper chase. It's going to be super competitive. You're going to have to really compete for your slot.
Starting point is 00:46:43 You're going to have to work really hard. Let me tell you you already won. You're in. The competition is over. You will all have jobs. She said, you will be running the world. The people in this room will be running the world. Look to your right, look to your left.
Starting point is 00:46:53 These are the people who are going to be running the world. And I remember thinking myself, really, why? Why? Like, because we did well on our LSATs, that's why we should run the world. But the question was how to improve this. And I mean, I think you're absolutely right. I agree with everything you're saying, but it doesn't have to be that way. I mean...
Starting point is 00:47:07 So let me give you my quick solution on how to improve all of this. One, employers need to stop using universities for credentialing, and they need to start taking apprentices directly out of high school to learn how to do a business because most people in America learn to do their job by actually doing their job, not by going to some program that taught them philosophy. Like philosophy majors make a lot of money because they're lawyers. Right?
Starting point is 00:47:27 That's why philosophy majors make a lot of money because they're accountants and they're lawyers and they're in marketing. And how many of them are philosophy professors? Three. Right. So when people say philosophy major teaches you something, it may teach you something, but it's not worth $200,000 of something that degree is worth $200,000 because it's a credential. But what you learned in your philosophy courses in undergrad is not.
Starting point is 00:47:46 Let me push back in this a little bit. I was a – I was a terrible student. I was an awful student, and I really got my education after I left school when I read all the books that I had bought in school. But while I was in school, I did kind of listen and kind of filtered in. And I remember walking down the street, and this will sound like the dopiest thing on earth. But I remember walking through the campus of the University of California at Berkeley and suddenly thinking, oh, wait a minute, I get it. First came Greece, then came Rome, then came Europe, then came us. And each one of those things built on the other and reflected on the other and actually was changed by the fact that the other.
Starting point is 00:48:20 existed. And when I saw that, that changed everything for me. And that's, that to me, that's a priceless piece of information. I completely disagree. When you attended the University of Berkeley in the late 1800s, a liberal arts degree was, was an elite thing to accomplish, an inexpensive thing comparatively to accomplish, and a valuable thing that required rigor in order to accomplish. You can't, you can't connect that experience. I think one of the big, I think one of the major, what it is now. I think one of the major problems with the modern academia is that people send their children there. And they send their children there because they hear things like, oh, American campuses are liberal. And they kind of fondly hearken back to 25 years ago when they were in school. And they're
Starting point is 00:49:02 like, yes, I remember I had that one professor who were a beanie and that one professor who talked in a black scent, even though they were white and, you know, was one of the early black studies professor. And we all knew that they were kind of a dope. But they did expose it. to some ideas we had never thought of. My kid can make it because I made it. What they fundamentally don't understand, that is not what the university today is. If you want to know how to fix academia, you don't fix it from the inside, you fix it with the government. I say that as a conservative who believes that the government isn't the solution to anything, but the government created our current university fiasco. And they created it when they basically decided
Starting point is 00:49:46 that they would fund schools on the basis of square footage. The square footage of your buildings would determine how much money you actually received from the federal government, and they started this enormous push at the university level to grow the physical footprint of universities, to grow the structural footprint of universities, and to fill those big buildings with as many people as possible. And that's when it became the case that the credential no longer has a value
Starting point is 00:50:13 because it's no longer that the elite go to college. Yep. Everyone goes to college. College is high school with a quarter million dollar price tag. But why should the government fix that? The government fixes it by stopping paying. Oh, by not doing things. Because the government has to stop. I mean, I'm a believer that the government should get completely out of the business of college. I agree.
Starting point is 00:50:34 This is weird. Like, if you want to go and study the classics at a university, then go out and get a second job. And pay for it. It's not my job to do that for you. And by the way, civic education should not be taking place at the college level. You should be knowing a lot of the stuff that you're supposed to know long before you are 18 years old. Then how are you going to learn your gender? That's what they have to teach you much. The thing we're overlooking here is the point that Elena Kagan made to you, which is true,
Starting point is 00:50:56 which is that this isn't true in the world of business, but this is true in the world, at least of government. The people who run the government went to Yale, Harvard, Princeton. They all went to at least an expensive private school, whatever it is. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is the evidence that we need to rethink. and rehabilitate the liberal arts. Because STEM, broadly speaking, at least engineering, is a skill. It's a job. It trains you for a job. The liberal arts don't do that.
Starting point is 00:51:23 They train you to think about the world to understand your own civilization. If you don't understand your past, you won't understand your future. And the idea that we now have someone in the government, like AOC, who is scolding Tim Sloan of Wells Fargo, a man whose IQ is seven times what AOC's is. I'm going to push back again.
Starting point is 00:51:42 You went to Yale for how long? Well, you know, it depends on the year. No, I went for four years. You went for four years. How long did you go to public school before that? 13 years. For 13 years. So it doesn't make sense to me.
Starting point is 00:51:56 If the government's going to pay for education, and that education is supposed to result in you know anything or two and being prepared for the real world, how is it possible that they should be able to accomplish this in four years when they have been unable to accomplish anything of the sort in 13 years? No, your point is so right. I mean, the way to fix it. because I am actually a great defender of liberal arts education over the trade schools.
Starting point is 00:52:20 It really matters for some people. The problem with democratic egalitarian society is we've decided if one person goes to a four-year private college, everybody has to go to a four-year. And if everybody's going to do it, then the government has to pay for it. And then everyone's going to get in. Standards are going to be lowered. A bunch of fake academic disciplines are going to be created. It's just utterly leveling.
Starting point is 00:52:43 It harms people who have two. $250,000 worth of debt. It harms taxpayers. It harms the government. It harms the university. And all those books are available for free. Yeah. Parents and students have been lied to. They were told that when they sent their kid to college, a couple of things were going to happen. One, the earning potential would inevitably rise no matter what they did in college. And two, they were going to exit with a skill set. And both of those things are essentially false. Yeah. The earning potential may rise, but only as an adjunct of sorting, meaning that employers look at a person who went to Yale differently than a person who went to Juko.
Starting point is 00:53:12 That's just the way that it works. even if the person who went to Juckel ends up being a much better business person than the person who went to Yale. I mean, this is a point that... Hypothetically. Hypothetically. Wait, hold on. Where's my giant media? Hold on the room.
Starting point is 00:53:23 I mean, I made this point on my show. I told the story that I probably shouldn't have told about a human who will remain unnamed, cursing you out for not having gone to college. Because this is what people... They went to Harvard after all. This person did go to Harvard. And that was deeply, deeply important because it was credentialing. They knew that in the elite strata of American society, that credential matters.
Starting point is 00:53:42 But the reason originally the credential mattered was not for the sorting is because the assumption was not only that you were smarter if you went to this university, but that you learned more and better things at these top-level universities. That is no longer true. The only thing that Ivy Leagues provide is the credential on the wall unless you are learning an actual thing. And the actual things, and here's the thing, once it got watered down and you weren't learning actual things anymore and it was just the credential, this is how you get to the point where colleges now have an active interest in not exposing people to uncomfortable ideas. Because if you go there just for the credential and just to build a social fabric, the last thing you want is somebody spoiling the party with things like tough grades or ideas you've never heard. This is why Harvey Mansfield was forced not to give actual grades to his own students.
Starting point is 00:54:23 At heart rate inflation was bad. It was an inherent bad. At what point does the fact that you can go on the Internet and learn so much of this stuff and get even classes and lectures from people who actually know things or get the great courses, DVDs and listen to those? At what point does that kind of overcome the branding? When employers stop being full of crap. It's really about the employers, because the fact is that if there were not a market interest
Starting point is 00:54:45 in you spending $200,000 for a four-year education, which you learn nothing, okay? Because if you were a polyscied major, I'm a policy major, you didn't learn anything. Right, of course. They didn't learn how to write, you didn't learn how to think, you learned nothing. Okay, if you didn't learn any great country riffs on the piano? Nothing. Legitimately, you probably learned more in Jucoe studying country music than I did studying political science at UCLA. If employers were instead to look, like, they're, honestly, you want to know the actual solution to this?
Starting point is 00:55:13 Real credentialing. Okay, what this would be is you would take the SAT. You wouldn't go to college. The SAT and your GPA would determine where you were. You'd publish those. You would just go straight there or you'd go straight to trade school on the basis because that's what they're doing. Okay, that is exactly how employees. Well, go ahead.
Starting point is 00:55:27 Well, you've identified the problem, which is there is this idea that we all have now, which is that four-year liberal arts college is supposed to give you a skill. That isn't true. You are not supposed to get a skill from the liberal arts. You are explicitly not supposed to have any skill. You were supposed to study history, math, English. You have a skill and you have the art of freedom. That's right, yeah, that's right.
Starting point is 00:55:47 I want to get to another question, but I'll close out with this. I have a theory, and it's the 5% theory. Alcoholics Anonymous has a success rate of approximately 5%. That is true. If you're an alcoholic and you go through the program at AAA, 5% of you will get clean. It's AAAAAA fixes your tires. I'm sorry. Alcoholics, not a lot.
Starting point is 00:56:10 The interesting aspect of that is that if you don't go through Alcoholics Anonymous, you also have a 5% chance of getting sober. So statistically, a drunk in Alcoholics Anonymous has the exact same chance of getting sober as a drunk outside of Alcoholics Anonymous. And you could look at that and say, we'll see Alcoholics Anonymous as a sham. I don't. Put a pin right there. My theory is that this same thing will apply across the board. Dave Ramsey is a pal of ours, kind of a hero in broadcasting and somebody that I personally look up to an awful lot for the business that he's built.
Starting point is 00:56:44 I have some disagreements with Dave Ramsey's financial philosophy. I think it has a great sort of understanding of human nature, but I think that it also has a few problems with it. I suspect that something like 5% of people who adhere to the Dave Ramsey philosophy actually managed to save up a successful nest egg for retirement. And I suspect that also 5% of people who don't listen to Dave Ramsey will manage to save up a successful nest egg for retirement. I think college and a liberal arts degree, your son Spencer is a grand example. Spencer knows a thing or two about the liberal arts for his trouble.
Starting point is 00:57:31 I suspect that 5% of people who go through the university system will walk out knowing a thing or two about the liberal arts. I suspect 5% of people who don't go through the system will know a thing or two about the liberal arts. I'd use you as an example. You're kind of a hybrid. You went through the system, learned nothing about the liberal arts, then got out and learned a bunch of everything.
Starting point is 00:57:48 I'm an order to act, yeah. My 5% theory doesn't mean that a liberal education is bad. It doesn't mean that Dave Ramsey's financial freedom universe is wrong. It doesn't mean that Alcoholics Anonymous is useful. It means that some small part of the population is going to find the answers. And for that small part of the population, the answers that are provided in the form of Alcoholics Anonymous, in the form of Dave Ramsey, in the form of a liberal arts education, a university education, become the mechanism by which they affect that betterment.
Starting point is 00:58:24 And similarly, they might find some other path. They might find a book by some other financial theorist other than Dave Ramsey. A program outside of school. They might read the books that they didn't read in college. The only part of this I disagree with it, because I basically agree with that, but the only part of this I disagree with is in this system that teaches civics, history, math, science. In the lower grades, not in the college grades, you have a better society. And that has actually broken down.
Starting point is 00:58:51 If what you're saying is that we ought to have those things, then I think we all agree. I think what we're saying is just we don't. But we, well, I think that is right. We are saying that we are saying that there's no reason that we should give up on that. When the guy says, when the guy asks the question, how do I improve this? That is what we should be. And this is where we disagree. My solution is fire.
Starting point is 00:59:09 I think you solve the university problem with fire. I don't think, I think that it is so bad and so rampant and so big. Yeah. A trillion dollars still loan industry. I don't think that you can, through incrementalism, fix the university system. The left took it over by incrementalism. I don't know why we can't take it back. We don't operate the way that they're not.
Starting point is 00:59:26 But that may be a mistake. By the way, I also don't think that's true. I don't think the left took it over by incrementalism. I think there was a massive revolution in the 1960s, and they turned everything on its head. And then they just waited for the old people to die. But they did, but they did. No, but they did move into the universities on purpose, with purpose.
Starting point is 00:59:41 God and man at Yale was written in the 50s, right? It was Buckley's first. Yeah, that's right. And there's no reason that we can't do that, except that we won't. I mean, you're right that we don't. I think there should be like 15 colleges in the country. This is exactly the thing. This is right. Fewer people should go to college. The government shouldn't pay for it. The people who should not go to college will thrive doing something else. They won't be burdened.
Starting point is 01:00:03 Kids, kids, unless you want to be a doctor or a lawyer or a rocket scientist, a rocket scientist. Or a congresswoman from New York. Be like me. Get college and become a millionaire. I'llisha, we have time for one more question. I mean, all you really need to know about colleges is that Michael Knowles got into Yale and his mommy and dad. Daddy did not pay them five or five. I know. I could imagine, I would have gone to Oxford if they'd actually been willing to pay. I don't know why I didn't do this.
Starting point is 01:00:30 My kid deal. Nils got in on a water polo. This was super implosed. Yeah, and it was real weird the first time you showed up to the pool riding a horse. This is the guy that actually posted a picture on Instagram from the University of Michigan
Starting point is 01:00:45 while tagging his location at the University of Michigan and said, where am I? That's a Yale degree. Well, there were a lot of, like, there were transvestites. Now I'm sounding like the Media Matters guy. I can't say this. All righty.
Starting point is 01:00:58 So speaking of Noel's illegitimate children that he probably created at Yale, Ryan says that he's been seeing some interesting Twitter parenting advice floating out there. Ryan, don't follow the Twitter parenting advice. It says, quote, never punish or praise your children. What are your thoughts? That's the stupidest idea I've ever heard, yeah. So those of us with children get to answer first. What are you going first?
Starting point is 01:01:22 That's it. Glenn, you want this? You have kids are grown, so. Yeah, no, that's absolutely absurd. And they turned out all right. They did turn out. My kids turned out great.
Starting point is 01:01:31 Well, first of all, you've met my wife, you know. You understand why. My kids turned out well. But I mean, no, that, that of course is absurd. What you shouldn't do is you shouldn't praise your kids for nothing, and you shouldn't punish them for nothing. You know, there should be, you have a moral system. And when you say something is going to hold,
Starting point is 01:01:46 this is the most important thing you can be as a parent, it's consistent. When you say something is not going to be done, it's not going to be done. When you say there's going to be a consequence, that consequence has got to be there. It doesn't have to be fire and sword. It just has to be some kind of limitation on where you're going.
Starting point is 01:01:59 Yes be yes and your no being. And honestly, the biggest threat to consistency is... That was very good. Do you make that up? The biggest threat to consistency as a parent is not your kid, it's you. That's right. Because it sucks to be a consistent parent. It does.
Starting point is 01:02:12 It's so terrible, right? It's so terrible. When you have to punish your kids, it's the worst thing in the world. When you threaten, like, we're not going to do X. And you know that everybody wants to do X, In five minutes when the kid apologizes, that you're still going to want to do X.
Starting point is 01:02:25 You're going to want to go back on it and then you can't. It's just awful. You want to reen goodness on your own. You want a good piece of advice. It's your responsibility. That's the advice of parents. Everything is your responsibility. And if parents really understood that from education to feeding their kids,
Starting point is 01:02:40 then it would solve 98% of the problems in the United States. What I don't understand, though. It's hard to be a parent. It is hard. But what I don't understand is, but at the same time, it's innate. You're saying that parents have to be good in response. and you're against abortion.
Starting point is 01:02:54 I don't understand why you're forcing children to live in worlds with suboptimal parents. I'm for abortion, but only after birth. It was so funny. So last night I was speaking at University of Michigan, and a guy got up and he was asking me about the food stamps program. Now, there's yet to be a, in childhood nutrition, who's specifically asking about school lunches and the fact that they're really not nutritious. And the fact is that Michelle Obama tried to make them more nutritious, the kids didn't eat it, they threw it out, and all the rest.
Starting point is 01:03:17 And he asked, what's your solution to that? And I said, abolish school lunches and have parents feed their food. their own damn kids. Because I am a parent. You know what my number one priority is? And the only priority of the matter is, feeding my child. And if you can't feed your child, you shouldn't have that child. It should be removed from your home.
Starting point is 01:03:31 The notion that it is the government, like, you have, legitimately, the one thing you have to do today is feed your kid. End of story. And we have a society where it's like, no, you know, if I don't feel like feeding my kid today, we'll just make sure that the government feeds my kid. Or if I don't feel like punishing my kid, well, I'm sure my kid will get educated at school.
Starting point is 01:03:46 And you're seeing it, parents abdicating duties to, it's not just public schools, Parents, religious parents, abdicating religious education to religious day schools. Okay, I'll send my kid there. That's where they'll learn everything they need to know about religion. Or my kid's a bad discipline problem? I don't do anything at home.
Starting point is 01:04:00 That's their teacher's job to deal with. I mean, did you not have the experience? The experience I have, I have a visceral memory of this. I can call it up in my skin is bringing that first baby home and realizing, oh, no, I have to do this. This is my responsibility. This kid lives or dies on me. I've got to make a living.
Starting point is 01:04:18 I've got to keep, you know, it means, There cannot be water on my kid. There's got to be a roof over that kid's head. That to me is the moment you grow up. That was the first and last thought Michael Knowles ever had as a parent. I do actually have a thought on parenting, which is this for all the people
Starting point is 01:04:32 that have ever been told that Michael Knowles is their father. There's a lot of cats with that name. There's a lot of cats with that name, all right? So if you're enjoying this conversation, what's wrong with you? If you think I'd like to be in a smoke-filled, small, overly hot studio with these guys as they do this live,
Starting point is 01:04:52 we'll go on over to dailywire.com slash subscribe, become an annual subscriber. That's one where you give us $99. Not only do you get the shows, you get the leftist tears, hot or cold Tumblr. Here, by way, I know there's a lot of imitations out there. There's a lot of wannabes, a lot of posers.
Starting point is 01:05:08 And they are also useful, just not for drinking out of, my friends. They're useful for, you know, other things. You get the leftist tears, hot or cold Tumblr. You get the Andrew Claven show, you get the Michael Noel show, you get the Ben Shapiro show including... All nine hours of it. Including two hours of the radio show, which are now available exclusively to our subscribers on demand. And you will get entered into a chance if you do it during this broadcast.
Starting point is 01:05:33 You'll be entered for a chance to fly out here in the future at our expense and, you know, hang out with it. Since you're the god king of the Daily Wire, you're small geek. How do Nils and I get our scotch recharged? This is the real problem here. I thought we were running a series operation. What kind of what place is this? I think that the answer is obvious. You had them served in those glasses instead of in the leftist-tuce-tiered popcorn.
Starting point is 01:05:56 We could still have scotch. No matter how much you drink. Just automatically. It automatically is the free fill. The real problem here is that the popcorn here just doesn't have enough flavor. That's a real problem. That's better. That's what gives you that special tang.
Starting point is 01:06:12 So it is International Women's Day just passed us on. on Friday, and I actually just feel like it wouldn't be very Christian or whatever Finn is of us, not to talk briefly. Not to talk briefly about the absurdity that is international women's day. I celebrated Kettlin Jenner. All those track and field stars and I schools.
Starting point is 01:06:31 How condescending is it? Do you know, nobody knows this. They only get one day. 53% of the population. You know, one 365th of the days. International Women's Day destroyed the 20th century. Oh, God.
Starting point is 01:06:45 Very few people. know this. The International Women's Day, on March 8th, it did. On March 8th in, what was it, 1980, 1917, started the Russian Revolution. And Leon Trotsky, no less a communist, the Leon Trotsky, credited International Women's Day, which had been invented in 1909 in New York by the Socialist Party. It then spread in 1910. There were a couple celebrations. Eight years later, fast forward, in Russia, they had an International Women's Day demonstration. Trotsky credited it with launching the revolution, which is why Lenin is. made it a national holiday in the Soviet Union.
Starting point is 01:07:18 And not only that, once you gave them the vote, they stopped letting us have alcohol. I mean, what the hell of these people? This is one of the things about... There's only one thing that matters about International Women's Day. Captain Marvel came out. Finally, equality has been achieved.
Starting point is 01:07:31 Finally, we have a female superhero. Not like the other one from like a couple of years ago. Or the one from like the 70s that all the guys had like posters of in their bedroom. Not like any of the, not like Electra, which no one saw. That was a movie about that.
Starting point is 01:07:45 Yes, I remember. Jennifer Garland. By the way, that's true equality. If women can make superhero movies that bomb at the box office, then they are equal to men. That's right. But yeah, International Women's Day is always shocking to me that on International Women's Day, we're supposed to worry about how difficult women have it in the freest society,
Starting point is 01:08:04 in the history of humanity for women, where they constitute the majority of voters, the majority of people who get college degrees, and a higher earning cohort when they first get out of college before they start having kids and taking time off from the workforce. this is the real trouble. Like, we can't look across the sea where women are forced into hijab or where they are forced into abortion in China or where they are victimized
Starting point is 01:08:25 with genital mutilation. Yeah, yeah. We can't talk about any of those things on International Women's Day. You know, like actually helping women who are suffering. We have to pretend that true suffering is that it took 21 Marvel movies for a mediocre actress like Brie Larson
Starting point is 01:08:39 to finally be cast in a Marvel movie with a female lead superhero. Not like Scarlethal. But I want to know, I want to know why, because what would it look like if we celebrated men? I want to celebrate the things that men discovered. Like, you get everything. Everything. I want to do the things we invented. Like everything. Like everything. Okay, Tucker Carlson. All right, here we go. Medium average. So the greatest, you could argue that the greatest thing that meant, in addition to discovering the entire everything. Except uranium, I think. Right. That one of the greatest achievements of men, particularly in the West and particularly in this country, is
Starting point is 01:09:15 that men afforded to women the right to vote. Absolutely. Which is the largest peaceful, voluntary transfer of power, probably in all of human history, in which the group of people, men, who had all political power, 100% of it, chose to give all of the political power, not half of it, all of it,
Starting point is 01:09:34 because in an electoral democracy, whoever has the majority of the votes, has the political power. And by the way, so women are over 50% of the population, But the voter gap gives women a 15-point advantage. Women vote at a significantly higher rate. And men voluntarily gave that power to women because they recognized an historic injustice.
Starting point is 01:09:56 They thought that there was a better way. They, as you often say, they built on the foundations of previous generations who moved the world toward a freer and freer place. And they elected to give women this. None of this is to ignore the fact that for a long time and continually men are schmots. Of course.
Starting point is 01:10:12 All of this is true. And when we say men invented everything, of course, the automatic counterargument is right, because women weren't in the workforce, because men didn't want them in the workforce. There's truth to that too. But it is also true that men did a lot of good things. Like, I don't understand why we can't just recognize that both sexes have given an enormous amount of civilization or to or the automatic denigration of women who have chosen to be mothers, which is the other automatic. No, see, the whole problem, that's the whole problem. The whole problem is that feminism has imposed masculine values on everybody. So that women are actually. less under feminism than they were when people said, oh, women, the other half of the civilization, who have given birth to every single human being who made every home, who made every life in the cradle of the world. How dare you? What a statement. I mean, the idea that it was somehow more important to build the civilization that we built to protect women than to be the woman that was being built to protect is insane. It is insane. And to sell to women that the only way that they can succeed is to be essentially men,
Starting point is 01:11:13 is to cut short what it is to be a woman. Well, you know, the truth is, though, that this is something that I said, after the death of George H.W. Bush, that it's harder to be a good man than it is to be a great man. That being a great man is about fame and being in a moment where you are needed and lots of people know who you are,
Starting point is 01:11:29 and you step forward and you pick up the flag and you earn the paintings and all that kind of stuff. It's a lot harder to be the good person who is actually making the daily sacrifices to make the world work. And the truth is that for the vast majority of human history, It was men were the people who were in the position to be the great men. Women were not in the position to be the quote-unquote great women.
Starting point is 01:11:46 But it was women who made the world work, of course, because women make every homework. They make every civilization work. And ignoring that is to ignore the historic. One of the problems I have with feminism is that it actually ignores the contributions that women made to Western civilization over history. It's like, oh, yeah, you guys, they actually agree with the statement that you were making half facetiously that men created everything.
Starting point is 01:12:04 They're like, yeah, you guys created everything. All the good, all the bad, the entire civilization. Now, if you just give us all the power, then we'll change everything. It's like, no, you guys were... That is the joke. That is the joke. Once you impose male values on everybody, men win, you know, once you do that. That's right. We should point out too, though, in the realm of political power, perhaps the most famous politicians, political leaders ever, were women. Elizabeth I first, Queen Victoria, Catherine in Russia. I mean, they actually, women did have a fair share of governance and in many cases glorious governance that just that is ignored, I guess, by a feminist ideology. It's also sometimes missed by us, and it probably shouldn't be, that women are smarter than feminists. That women in this country have 53% of the population as women.
Starting point is 01:12:49 As you say, they have a 15-point spread in terms of the electoral vote, which means they have, if they chose to marshal it in a monolithic way, 100% of political power. I often think it's funny when people say, if we were truly an equitable society, then women would have 53% of representatives in Congress, and men would have 47. And I always say, you don't actually know how electoral democracies weren't. Because if all women voted for women, it wouldn't be that 53% of Congress would be women. All of Congress would be women. Every district. Because the majority would win every single race, right? But fortunately, women are smarter than feminists.
Starting point is 01:13:26 And women aren't just trying to create this false equality in the world. Women are using their votes. They use them more than men do. And they don't just use them in these sort of brainless identity. politics, feminist ways. They use them to elect people who they think are going to do a good job, and that results in a world that, again,
Starting point is 01:13:48 have there been historic injustices? Of course there have been. If you go back and say, I mean, up in the early days of the 20th century, women couldn't vote. And I would say, yes, and if we were in the early days of the 20th century,
Starting point is 01:13:59 that would be a compelling argument for why things are wrong. But of course, as time has gone by, we've done a fairly good job of extending the benefits of, of our free society to previously underrepresented people. And fortunately, on top of that, women have stewarded that in a fairly good way and haven't embraced this.
Starting point is 01:14:19 Now it's our turn. We're going to kick all them into the curb. I mean, liberal feminist women have that point of view, but the majority of women who vote don't. It's a bigger point also about activists versus people. When you take feminist versus women, gay activists versus gay people, black activists versus black people, It really, they really give the people they represent or pretend to represent a terrible name because these activists are the worst of the group almost always.
Starting point is 01:14:45 And the majority of the people are oftentimes incredibly smart and incredibly commonsensical. And I think that's true of all. They're people who have ties to other members of the civilization. Activists are their own little bubbles. That's right. And that means that they're only associated with members of the bubble and everybody else is the outgroup for them to fight. Going back to what you said, by the way, about men giving women power, which is also true of Protestants, giving Catholics power and Christians giving people of other religions power.
Starting point is 01:15:11 If a little bit of gratitude were injected into the civilization, I can't see how that would be a bad thing. I can't see how the idea should be, we're here now and you're the old people and you should get out. I can't see why it's not, thank you very much for letting us in. Great ideas that you came up with, and I hope we can participate and add our own great ideas. I don't understand why that's not a better idea, a better approach.
Starting point is 01:15:31 Yeah, the world would be a much better place with some gratitude, which is why, If you're a man in the world, you should be grateful for good women every day, not just on one communist holiday every year. And if you're a good woman, you should be grateful for all the stuff. All machines. All the machines. I'm mostly grateful for Captain Marvel. I'm grateful that you made him watch it. So, Captain Marvel, I'll save you guys if you don't want to go. I mean, you know, I'll be very honest. I hate the genre. I despise the genre. I liked Dark Knight and Logan. Those are the two superhero movies I like. So I'm putting that out there.
Starting point is 01:16:04 At least you pick two good ones. Two good ones. I've seen most of these movies, probably at least half of them. This movie was subpar, even by the genre standards. The reason is that it was extraordinarily boring. It had no stakes whatsoever. And it had a female superhero. And it had this damn female superhero.
Starting point is 01:16:22 And because it had this feminist ideology injected into it, the problem with the feminist superhero is she can't do anything wrong. She's just perfect. It's like Superman without the krypton. She starts out awesome. She ends awesomer. So there's never any stakes whatsoever. And the movie itself had no story. I mean, there was no storyline. There was no narrative whatsoever. It was so tedious. It was so boring. By the genre standards, it was only like 30% worse than most of these formulaic movies, but it was 30% worse. And they say that only male critics are knocking the movie. That is not true.
Starting point is 01:17:01 Major female critics are knocking the movie. It's just bad. It tells you a lot about our society that Rotten Tomatoes is completely redoing their voting system. They're purging negative comments from the board to protect an ideology even through a terrible move. In my own defense, I would like to say that I calculated how much longer Knowles has to live and how much longer I have to live. And if I had gone to see it, it would have been relatively like spending three months in the movie theater. Well, producer Jonathan Hay had a great point about the rotten tomatoes thing. He said, amazing that the left will shift the identity. required to sound off on Captain Marvel,
Starting point is 01:17:38 but they're against voter ID. Which is a great point. By the way, I mean, I haven't seen Captain Marvel yet. I do plan on seeing it at some point. I'll point out that Wonder Woman was actually a good movie. Of course. Oh, it was a really good. Wonder Woman was good because it was not self-consciously feminist,
Starting point is 01:17:54 meaning this, they sort of just assumed that the character is feminist. And then Gal Gadot actually plays a woman. With, you know, actual womanly qualities. This is my great rip on, you know, did you see the movie The Mon with Charlize Theron. So basically she plays James Bond,
Starting point is 01:18:08 but it's like, she doesn't just play James Bond, like they make her quasi-lesbian and all of this stuff. And it's legitimately, which is, you know, they're prerogative, but what is true
Starting point is 01:18:17 is that you could have substituted a male for her character would not have changed one line of dialogue for the entire film. If that's true, you've written a bad movie. Really, because characters are specific.
Starting point is 01:18:27 The best characters are specific. This is my problem with Captain Marvel. And it's not a problem with the film. I have not seen the film. it's a problem with the celebration of Captain Marvel as an archetype for a strong woman. And it's that I love Buffy the Vampire Slayer. I think Buffy's one of the greatest TV
Starting point is 01:18:44 things that has ever happened in the history of television. And people would always be, she's a strong, powerful woman and a great example to little girls everywhere. And I thought, no, into every generation is born a Slayer, and she's infused with supernatural powers given to her across the centuries to fight the vampires. And it's sort of like the conversation we've had about Black Panther,
Starting point is 01:19:02 where it's like, you know, the magic space rock falls down and then Africa got to be Europe. And that's actually kind of a racist premise. It's also kind of a sexist premise to me to say, women are just as powerful as men. If they're given gamma radiation and a secret laser from space. Magic, right. Like, I see Buffy is a great story with a female lead,
Starting point is 01:19:24 and that might be novel and interesting to women. But Buffy can fight men because Buffy has supernatural powers. And Captain Marvel can fight men. Because Captain Marvel has supernatural powers, Superman can stop a bullet, not because he's a man. It's because he's super. Yes. And so I'm not supposed to look to Superman and go,
Starting point is 01:19:44 that's just proof that all men are more powerful than a locomotive. No, it's proof that Superman are more powerful than a locomotive. There is a kernel of an interesting idea in Captain Marvel. This is not spoilers, because I think this was even in some of the previews. It's very early in the movie. Physically, she's not as strong as the men. She can't, you know, jump the rope or whatever. And actually, the main problem she has is she gets too emotional and her emotions run away with her.
Starting point is 01:20:08 And it's actually making a sort of a comment on sex. And the real problem facing her is pride. This is quite interesting. This is something that we all face. Because she keeps trying to do. People will warn her against, you know, you can't make that jump or you can't make that. Yep. And she'll do it anyway out of pride.
Starting point is 01:20:25 Yeah. And there was that little kernel there that really could have made Captain Marvel pretty good. and they just overwhelmed it with boring story, tedious slogans, ideology, and it was weak. It actually could have probably been a pretty good movie. It's kind of a sad thing that we fight over these stories as if it mattered. I mean, this is the new theory, basically, on the materialist left, is that everything we have that as human beings is based on stories. This is kind of the Yuval Harari idea that nations are a story.
Starting point is 01:20:57 Money is a fiction. human rights are a fiction. God is a fiction. And these are just stories that we tell and they create something real because we all agree with them. And therefore it matters. These stories somehow are much more important
Starting point is 01:21:10 than you think somehow. I thought Wonder Woman was a good picture too. I really enjoyed it. But women critics, intellectuals cried at that movie as if it somehow changed the estate of women. And that's just not true. That is not the way stories work and it's not the effect that stories have.
Starting point is 01:21:26 That was my take on Black Panther and people got really uptight about it. My blowback on Black Panther was not that it was a bad movie. I thought it was a fine movie. I enjoyed it, honestly. But I had some problems with some basic concepts in it.
Starting point is 01:21:38 Again, the very notion that natural resources are the rationale for civilizations growing is not, I think, a very good one. But with that said, my real problem was all the lead-up to it, as though black people in the United States finally had been empowered
Starting point is 01:21:52 by this movie with a bunch of black people playing superheroes. It's like if you're finding your meaning in superhero movies to the extent that you feel that your entire, that the entire history of race in America has been deeply affected by a superhero movie in 2019, let me suggest that you enter the real world for a second. And I would say the same thing about a Jewish superhero.
Starting point is 01:22:13 I mean, this is not race-specific. But people got so angry at this. It was like, oh, how dare you take this away from people? You're just mad there's a black superhero? I don't care if there's a black superhero. That's my point. My whole point is I don't care if there's a black superhero. That's great. It's fine. Who cares?
Starting point is 01:22:24 I think that's exactly right. And the fact that people are fighting over this, first of all, shows that they don't have enough to do. This is my favorite thing is when people forecast opposition that isn't there. They're like, oh, look at all these guys who are really angry at Captain Marvel. You're angry, aren't you? You're like, no, you're like, no, you're pissed. I can tell you're pissed.
Starting point is 01:22:41 And you're like, no, really not. That's a good 50% of leftist argument. It's like all of it these days, all of it, this assumption that you're angry. And they're like, nope, pretty much not angry at that. I'm pissed that Brie Larson insults 50% of the audience. Yeah. And I'm pissed that Marvel insults.
Starting point is 01:22:56 the entire audience by acting like they're making history. The fact that there's a female Captain Marvel doesn't bother me in the slightest. Right. I'm mostly pissed at Marvel thinks they can get away with this crap where they pretend that they killed Spider-Man. What kind of nonsense was that? By the way, anyone who cried at the end of Avengers, anyone who cried at the end of Avengers, you're an idiot.
Starting point is 01:23:13 If you cried at the end of Avengers, Infinity War, the minute they kill Black Panther, if you were crying, you are so stupid, man, you are so stupid. I actually loved Infinity War. I think it was a fun of it. a mental mistake by the filmmakers to kill Spider-Man and Black Cancer. Of course.
Starting point is 01:23:31 Everyone else who died. Okay. You could have been like, yeah, maybe it's real. It is the big Marvel reset. Maybe they're really gonna kill these people off. And then they kill off two of their billion dollar industry. You're like, well, you guys are sling, man.
Starting point is 01:23:41 So I do wanna go for one more round of questions with our Daily Wire subscribers. They keep the lights on. They give us their sweet, sweet mammon. And if they've signed up as annual subscribers during this live broadcast, which means you still got a little time left to sign up during this broadcast,
Starting point is 01:23:55 you could win a flight to L.A. paid for by Ben Shapiro. He's the only one with any money around here to sit in on a live taping of this, your favorite Daily Wire show, The Daily Wire Backstage. Elisha Krause is going to read some questions from some of our fair subscribers. Elisha, what do you got for us? She's already given birth.
Starting point is 01:24:14 What is she doing? Just making a nice little tea. I love international. Oh, hey guys. I'm just, you know, if I'm going to be stead, in the kitchen, I figured I'd make myself a hot toddy. Elisha, you can't drink when you're pregnant. Tell that to Betty Draper.
Starting point is 01:24:34 I mean, come on. We do have questions from more subscribers. Nicole wants to know. Do you think the key to having a successful business is to start it in your garage? Or might I, Elisha, add, the God King's Pool House. It was definitely the key to us having a successful business. No, I think that the key to having a successful business is to start wherever you. can. And the key to having a successful business is to understand that not all of your businesses
Starting point is 01:24:59 will be successful. Almost everyone who's successful in business has failed at business. Business is very hard. It's sort of why I've made this joke on the show before. I hate it when guys leave the hospital after having their first child and they've got the world's greatest dad ball cap. And I always think you're not even a mediocre father. You've been a father for literally hours. Like there's got to be more that you're going to have to learn than what you have acquired at the gift shop in the hotel. And of course, it's the same with business. You're going to learn an awful lot when you set about to be in business. You're going to fail.
Starting point is 01:25:32 You're going to have to get back up. You're going to have to learn from your mistakes. Where should you do it in your garage? Sure, if you've got an idea that can start in your garage. Not every idea can. Some ideas require seed capital. They require angel investors. They require larger amounts of capital than can be sort of acquired at those levels.
Starting point is 01:25:48 And you're not going to take $20 million worth of investment capital and start something in your garage. Every business is unique, every opportunity is unique. I have a speech that I give to young, typically it's young people who move to Hollywood because they want to make it in the movies. And everybody who moves out here is looking for the same wisdom. They want to know, how do I make it? And when I moved out, I had the same thought.
Starting point is 01:26:12 Like, if I could meet Steven Spielberg, he could tell me how to make movies. I thought I'm a smart guy. He could tell me, then I could do it. And what I came to realize over time is that if I ever got that meeting with Spielberg, I'd go up to him and I'd be like, Mr. Spielberg, a long-time listener first time to call her, how do I make a movie?
Starting point is 01:26:29 And he would say, oh, making a movie's easy. So here's what I do. I read a book or a magazine article that I really respond to, and I call it my lawyer, and I say, hey, are the rights available to this? They say, hey, we'll kick it around. We'll dig for it. They call me back a week later to hey, you know what, we tracked down the author. The rights are available.
Starting point is 01:26:45 They're going to cost about a million dollars. I'm like, great, pick it up. So we write a check for a million dollars. We get the rights to the book. Then I say, well, I'm going to need a screenwriter. So I call up my agents over at CAA, and they go look for a good screenwriter. We set up a bunch of meetings. I meet with a bunch of guys.
Starting point is 01:26:59 I hire a guy who had a great hit last year as one of the biggest hits at the box office. I pay him a million dollars to write a draft of the script. He comes back six months later. I read the script. You know, it's not what I was hoping for. So I go to number two on the list, and I pay him a million dollars. He does a page one rewrite of the thing. At the end of the year, though, I've got a script that I'm really happy with.
Starting point is 01:27:17 So now I call up my partners over at Universal. I say, hey, you know that first look deal that I've got where you have to guarantee 4,500 screens for one movie for me every year because I'm Steven Spielberg? And they go, yeah. And I go, have I got the movie for you? And they're like, okay, cool, we'll open it on 4,500 screens. So then I call my business partners over at DreamWorks. And I'm like, we're going to need $180 million to make this. They say, cool, we'll architect half of it out of our domestic fund. Then we'll go to a bank in India and put the rest together. And before you know it, three years later, I'm on a set with 250 employees and I'm making a movie. And I'd go,
Starting point is 01:27:50 that's awesome Stephen Schuberg. How do I make a movie? And he'd go, oh, how do you make a movie? How the hell would I know? I know how you're going to make a movie. Zero percent of that applies, right? So I always give a speech to young people in Hollywood, and it applies to people in business too. And it's this. It's all my accumulated wisdom. And it's about those who do and those who don't do. And what I have observed, having lived on this life a fair bit now, gotten a few gray hairs, met people who've started podcasts in my full house and become the biggest podcasters in the country. I have friends who star in these big superhero movies that we talk about. I have friends who started businesses worth hundreds of millions of dollars. I have friends who still wait tables. I have friends who washed out and moved back home. I have
Starting point is 01:28:35 friends who found other things like me to do that weren't what they originally anticipated, but they've gone on and had successes. I know somebody who's done it all. And what I have discovered is that the difference between those who do and those who don't do is that those who do do and those who don't do don't do that is great advice that is great advice and when i give this advice people are so disappointed because it doesn't satisfy because what you're looking for the thing that would satisfy you does not exist there is only those who do do do and those who don't do don't do and the truth is, you usually know those who do long before they have done. Like, I have a pretty good average now of being able to size somebody up and determine will they do?
Starting point is 01:29:23 It may be a decade before they do. But they're doers and they're doing. And those who do do. What does it mean? It means they do whatever. They're always doing. They're learning from the things that they've done and trying to do something else. They're not waiting by the phone for an agent to call them.
Starting point is 01:29:40 They're not waiting by the phone for somebody. to discover them down at the soda shop and cast them, you're the next big thing, kid. They're out there making their way. And the other thing that they do is they respond to what God brings into their lives. They basically take the opportunities that come before them. They don't try to will the world into complete conformity with their vision, which, by the way, it's a vision that they formed before they'd done anything, and therefore before they knew anything.
Starting point is 01:30:07 They are willful people by and large. They're strong will. Let me say it differently. They're strong-willed people, but they have. the humility to let God be God and not them. And those people do. So if you want to be a successful business person, you want to make it in the movies, you want to be one who does. Do. And that's it. That's great advice. Yep. Nothing to add to that. My question would be then, what does Michael Knowles do? Well, some do by not doing, really, because I think Michael proved. That was not.
Starting point is 01:30:35 Speaking of Michael, this comes from a subscriber named Michael. Let's hope that his last name is not Knowles, or you've been really busy up there with your phone, tweeting. Tweeting way questions. He wants to know, how can the left and the right converse when they can't even agree on facts?
Starting point is 01:30:50 I actually think it's a language problem. The problem is the only way that you can converse with anybody is if you speak the same language, right? There is an objective reality outside of two people, and you're using words and symbols and all these things outside here to make whatever's going on in your head accessible to whatever's going on in somebody else's head. And what the left does is it constantly is perverting language.
Starting point is 01:31:13 It's always undermining language. It's inverting language sometimes to mean the opposite of what it actually means. They do this famously with justice, right? Justice is now social justice means the opposite of justice. Political correctness is the opposite of correctness, right? So what you have to do is be so precise about language. When we were at Michigan yesterday, I came out to talk to some of the protesters. And they had a sign. It said, trans women are women. And I said, okay, I want to, I am not trying to set you up here. I want you to explain your point of view. We're talking about, you use this phrase trans women, which is very ambiguous. We're talking about somebody born a man, has all the male genitals, has the male chromosomes, had a short haircut when he was a kid. Now he identifies as a woman should that. And as I said the word, he said, I am not, how dare you? I will not speak to you if you use that.
Starting point is 01:32:03 pronoun he to refer to her, which used to be him. And this person that I was just asking, please, give you a million people will see what you have to say. Give your point of view. He walked away because he refused to converse. You can't make somebody come to the table and converse with you. The best way that you can try to make yourself understandable, make someone else's views understandable, is to use really, really clear language. But if they're unwilling to talk, you're not going to make them do it. I'm offended that you said that. Then what do you think?
Starting point is 01:32:36 You talk to a lot of people who disagree with you. I mean, I think that the only way to have a conversation, you need two things. One, a common understanding that a fact is a fact, that facts exist. And two, you need to have a common understanding of the rules of the conversation. Because otherwise, you end up falling apart. Because what you'll do is you'll start a conversation about facts, somebody gets emotional, and then all of a sudden you're into character attacks, and that's not a conversation anymore. Basically, a conversation is sort of like you're building a tower out of blocks with somebody.
Starting point is 01:33:04 And if you put down a block and the person immediately takes that block away, the tower doesn't get built. There's no second level to the conversation. The best conversations are the ones that are happening once you get three or four levels up in the conversation. But you actually have to build the foundations together. So one of the mistakes I see people make is they try to build on the third floor of the building when the first two floors don't exist.
Starting point is 01:33:24 So there's no common agreement as to the rules of the conversation. what are the limits of the conversation? Which issue are we talking about? Is it insulting for me to use certain phraseology with you? If you don't agree on the fundamental framework, is the building going to be a square or is it going to be an octagon? Then you immediately start arguing about
Starting point is 01:33:43 what sort of minaret to put atop the building. There's no conversation to be had. Alicia. All right, this is a pretty good question, one that I've wondered myself. This one comes from a subscriber named Mike, which don't forget that if you subscribe right now during this podcast, you too could be stuck here with me.
Starting point is 01:34:00 So, no, go be sure to sign up for that. Alicia, how do I unsubscribe? I have no idea. I've been trying. You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave. Mike says, hey guys, does the political right run the risk of giving AOC too much exposure and thus giving her more credibility? It seems that Democrats did this with Trump in 2016.
Starting point is 01:34:24 No, no. I mean, yes, yes, in the sense that she's prominent because we give her attention in part. That's in court why she's prominent. By the way, I think that's total crap. I'm going to stop you right there. That is garbage and it is crap. It's not the only reason she is prominent. No, it is not a reason she is prominent. You really think so? You don't think we contribute to it? No, I think the left did is they put her on the cover of every magazine. They elevated her to national prominence. They feature her at every conference. And then they say, oh, she pisses you off, doesn't she? Right? She really annoys you. And you're like, no, I think her ideas are just bad. And it's exactly what we're talking about before. And then they're like, no, no, she really annoys you. We'll show you three times as much of her until you're annoyed.
Starting point is 01:34:59 You're like, no, I think it's a bad idea. Here's why I think it's a bad idea. Oh, you're obsessed with her, aren't you? Because we put her on... I didn't put her on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. And if I had never talked about her, you know what she would be on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. I'm so tired of this. And by the way, I don't even agree with it about Trump.
Starting point is 01:35:12 I don't think that if people had ignored to Trump, Trump would have just gone away. I think that's such wishful thinking that you're in control of a universe, that you're not in control of. Donald Trump was never going away. He was one of the most famous people in the United States. People thought it was hilarious. People wanted to hear what he had to say. And you know what? Every other candidate in the race tried to do with Donald Trump, ignore him.
Starting point is 01:35:32 That's what they did. I mean, go back to the primaries. Republicans ignored Donald Trump, and you know what happened? He won the nomination. Really, we were talking, I was talking to the Cruz campaign and the Rubio campaign. I was like, guys, you can't ignore him. Like, stop ignoring him. You're attacking each other.
Starting point is 01:35:44 And you think that he's just going to go away? But do you don't think a billion, $2 billion worth of free media helped him out? I think that he was going to get that regardless. And I think that the media that was providing him that coverage were people. left wingers and right wingers. Okay, Fox and Friends built him. The guy was going to get media coverage. Celebrities get media coverage. AOC has star power. She's a celebrity. You want to see how well this works. Let's all pay attention to Amy Klobuchar for a week and see if she's suddenly a media. She might throw a desk at us. The reason why I, I mean, I give her a lot of coverage.
Starting point is 01:36:13 Even things that aren't on the cover of Rolling Stone, I play her all the time. The reason I don't think it's a bad thing to give her a lot of coverage is because AOC takes leftist arguments to their lot of. conclusion. And they're wacky, crazy conclusions that knock down every building in America. She's so much more honest than Bernie. Totally honest. I love being able to refug those. I think I can more than that. She's inherently important. She's inherently important. You have to cover. And she is the avatar of socialism. She's attractive. She's self-confidence. She's ignorant and destructive. And that is essentially what socialism is. Socialism is. Socialism looks beautiful. You know, she's very attractive. It says, I'm going to solve all these problems for you. She says that. It knows nothing about human nature or economics, and it ultimately destroys everything it touches.
Starting point is 01:36:57 She said is socialism. She said the great thing this week, which is so honest, which is that if automation comes, none of you will have jobs and that would be great because you'll be able to learn languages and art and music and literature. And Bill Whittle very famously talked about this almost a decade ago, because this is a common socialist-communist argument, that one day you won't have to work so hard, and then you'll be able to learn all these languages. You'll be able to do all this art.
Starting point is 01:37:20 It'll be able to play the violin. And Bill Wittell said, yeah, that happens. though, it was called the iPhone. Capitalism gave it to us. It gave us 100% of all the accumulated knowledge of man that we carry around in our pocket. You want to learn a language, there's an app. You want to learn music, there's an app. You want to know about, you know, the Peloponnesian War, there's an app. And what do you do? Yeah, look at porn. That's all that anybody does. Elisha. Really? On that no? By the way, did any of you on your shows this week cover Mommy?
Starting point is 01:37:53 me porn from the UK? Oh, God. This is an amazing story. I saw the headline and then I closed my computer. I actually read the story. These mothers in the United Kingdom saw online pornography for the first time that their teenage children were watching
Starting point is 01:38:08 and they were moved. Two of them said that they vomited because it's so disgusting what actually takes place in online pornography which is anything, the worst things that the mind can conceive of. And so they were trying to think, you know, what do we do about this,
Starting point is 01:38:21 that our children are being exposed to these horrible dehumanizing, objectifying images of women in all of these exploited sexual positions. And their idea was, let's make mommy approved pornography for our children to watch. So they contact a pornographic production company. And they hire them to make mom approved porn, which is pornography that sort of adheres to the normal customs of sex. You know, there's little foibles and people's bodies aren't perfect. And it doesn't. always work the way you think it's going to work, and it requires, you know, it requires conversation and looking in each other's eyes and a great storyline. And then they premiered the
Starting point is 01:39:01 movie and made their children sit with them with their mothers and watch Mommy approved four. You know, before, I mean, obviously, that's like the worst thing I've ever heard, but these women are clearly the shrewdest mothers in history because they know anything that Mommy does or Mommy thinks is cool, like instantly you'll reject it. They might be able single-hand. There will be no grandchildren. The entire next line, by the way. I have a story about this. Believe it or not, it has nothing to with my own mother.
Starting point is 01:39:28 So when I was at UCLA, you know, studying things that really matter. You had to take some kind of generalized GE courses. One of the course I had to take was a course in Israeli film. So Israeli film, particularly, it's gotten a lot better now, but in the 1990s and 2000s was basically Europorn. So it was just like everything that was the trashiest of European TV was what the Israelis made. This particularly true of 1960s, 1970s film when Israel was.
Starting point is 01:39:53 just getting on its feet as a country. So there's a famous Israeli actress whose son was in the class, and they decided that she was going to come in and she was going to speak about this film and they were going to show this film. And in this film, she is completely nude and she is having pretty graphic sex with a couple of different dudes on the screen. And her son is in the classroom watching this. So this is already awkward enough. And she, and during the Q&A, she asks her son, how did you feel watching? It's like, well, it was pretty awkward, mom. So a couple of weeks later, we're back in the class and you know I'm an Orthodox Jew right
Starting point is 01:40:25 and I'm sitting there most of the it's an Israeli film class most of the kids are Jewish so behind me there I'm sitting with the son and a couple of other kids and they turn to me and they're like oh so you're Orthodox right so you've never had sex right you're a virgin until marriage like right that's my religious
Starting point is 01:40:41 principle I've never had sex and they're like well have you and they start kind of getting mocking and they go so have you ever seen a naked woman and I was like well yeah I mean I live in Western culture it's almost impossible not to see a naked woman at one point. And one of them goes, well, who's the last naked woman you saw?
Starting point is 01:40:57 And I turned the guy and go, your mom. Best your mother joke of a long time. Also true. Yeah, that's so correct. Elisha, save us from ourselves. Oh, God. I don't know if I can. I'm currently sadder than Beto's dog
Starting point is 01:41:12 looked in that entire baby in their post spread. Yeah, man. Kean wants to know. Hey, guys, what are your thoughts on the spread of conservatism, among millennials. It's lucrative. And for $9.99.
Starting point is 01:41:31 Become a daily wire subscriber. You have just, by the way, only a few minutes left. To become a subscriber, an annual subscription during this broadcast, be entered into a chance to win a trip out to see us do this again in the future. Here's what I would say about millennials and conservatism. It's a pretty amazing thing.
Starting point is 01:41:46 The CEO of YouTube was interviewed by Kara Swisher. Carusher. A free code. Kara Swisher, who is a fixture, really, in reporting on Silicon Valley. Very famously interviewed... Reported to the York Times. Yeah, very famously interviewed Bill Gates
Starting point is 01:42:03 and Steve Jobs together. It was a huge thing that she made happen once. And in the interview, Swisher actually asks for YouTube to ban the Ben Shapiro show. And what I loved about it is she says that Ben Shapiro is a gateway drug to the far worse things
Starting point is 01:42:19 They need to be Nazis. To the Nazis. To the Andrew Blame at show in the microphone show. She actually says Nazis because... She says they watch me and then they watch Jordan Peterson and then they watch Nazis. That's the past. But the beautiful thing is... Did they then come back and attack you?
Starting point is 01:42:33 It's just the cycle of violence. The circle of life, actually. The reason she knows about Ben Shapiro is because she walked in to her living room and her son was watching something on YouTube and she could hear the violent, hate-filled, bigoted rhetoric coming from his... screen and she walked over and he was watching bin shapiro yeah and she says to her son uh son why are you watching this evil evil bin shapiro and he said mom no that's ben shapiro he's super smart she says this in the interview because no that's ben chaperro he's super smart she's like no he's not
Starting point is 01:43:06 smart he's clever but he's an idiot and he's immoral and he's terrible and uh and and and the CEO of youtube says uh you don't want us to you're not suggesting we banned ben shapero and she says I would. She was like, I would. But obviously, you can't. No, no, I can't. But then the best thing that she says is, anyway, don't worry about my son.
Starting point is 01:43:26 He's already lost. And I thought, what an amazing thing that we live in a generation where if you are a millennial American today and you want to rebel against your parents. Yes. What you do is you go over to the YouTube and you look for most religious,
Starting point is 01:43:43 buttoned down, a Bible adhering, Orthodox Jew in America. And when he pops, up and he says things like, hey kids, get a degree, get a job, and don't have sex before marriage, and you won't be successful. And it's like your parents are like, oh, back in our day. We were having tons of sex before. It is amazing. I mean, so I spoke at U of M last night. And there's a tweet last night from a person who is conservative who said that they brought a liberal friend. And after the lecture was over, the liberal friend turned to this conservative and astonishment and said,
Starting point is 01:44:12 he's not a racist. And it's like, yeah, no. Right, of course. But this is, but this is, This is why I think that there is hope still for the millennials, is that at a certain point, reality does intrude. I mean, this fantasy world that we've been living in, where you can rip on all of the evils of capitalism while benefiting from every aspect of capitalism imaginable, where you can talk about how terrible personal responsibility is while living in the freest country in the history of the world, where you are told you're a victim every day while being the most privileged people who have ever lived, and where you are told that people who are legitimately not racist and are, in fact, anti-racist. And you are told that true racism is not acknowledging that group identity should trump individual identity. That's real racism. At a certain point, reality intrudes. And you just go, these people are joyless. They're scolds.
Starting point is 01:45:00 They're annoying. And they make no sense. It really is that the left has gotten so irritating and annoying. And this is not a female term. Bossy. Male and female. Bossy. It's just like, I don't want Bernie Sanders running my life.
Starting point is 01:45:14 I don't want AOC running my life. And when I say this, I think there are a lot of millennials who are like, yeah, that's basically right. That's basically right. And as they get older and they realize just how bossy, the leftists have what they have in mind, it's going to get worse and worse.
Starting point is 01:45:26 This is why AOC and Bernie Sanders are wonderful for us because it's like, they're just stripping away all pretense. Like, yeah, no hamburgers, we're going to get rid of the car, it's going to get rid of the airplanes. You're going to watch all of our favorite entertainment. Bread lines are good.
Starting point is 01:45:37 Bread lines are good. Bread lines are good. It means you get bread. Bread lines are good. There is a little bit of a distinction, too, between the millennials who came of age with Barack Obama. They all fell in love with them. There's not a red America.
Starting point is 01:45:52 There's not a blue America. And the Gen Z, the group actually younger than millennials that we were talking to yesterday at Michigan that we see on college campuses, those are different groups. And I think that group has come of age in the age of the woke scolds, in the age of censorship, in the age of AOC and breadlines, and the touting of socialism. Those are very different moments that happen very close to one another. And it gives me a lot of hope for those. youth these days of Gen Z, and hopefully maybe the millennials can learn something from them.
Starting point is 01:46:21 Yeah, because if the left has taught us anything, is that you learn exclusively from the children. Out and the mouth of babes. My friends, my friends, our time together has come to an end. If you didn't get in your subscription, your annual subscription over at dailywire.com slash subscribe, it's too late for you. If you're watching this later on demand, it's too late for you. It was only during the live broadcast. Still subscribe.
Starting point is 01:46:44 We could really use the support. And we'll probably do this thing again in the future because we want to give opportunities to meet more of our subscribers, take more questions from our subscribers. So for Ben, for Andrew, for Michael, for Alicia, I'm sorry, for Ben, for Michael, for Andrew, for the lovely Alicia Krauss
Starting point is 01:47:00 and for myself and all of us at the Day of Wire. Thanks for giving us all of your time and life works this evening. Adios.

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