The Michael Knowles Show - Ep. 1447 - Kamala Harris Plans For Grotesque Abortion Clinic Photo Opp
Episode Date: March 15, 2024America's evil tophat gives life sentences for social media posts, The Vice President visits an abortion mill, and Zoomer Dems worry the TikTok ban could hurt Biden. Click here to join the member e...xclusive portion of my show: https://utm.io/ueSEl Ep.1447 - - - DailyWire+: Enter to win a year’s worth of Jeremy’s Chocolate: https://bit.ly/3Pmel9I Get your Yes or No game here: https://bit.ly/3X6tlKY - - - Today’s Sponsors: Food For The Poor - Donate Today! Text ‘knowles’ to 51555 or visit https://www.foodforthepoor.org/knowles Helix - Get 20% off + 2 free pillows at https://helixsleep.com/Knowles - - - Socials: Follow on Twitter: https://bit.ly/3RwKpq6 Follow on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3BqZLXA Follow on Facebook: https://bit.ly/3eEmwyg Subscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/3L273Ek Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hot on the heels of Belgium jailing a former member of parliament for sending spicy memes to a group chat,
America's evil top hat is proposing life sentences for tweets.
Canada's Online Harms Act, which was introduced.
last month with the backing of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, would allow judges to imprison adults
for life if they advocate genocide online and would further allow provincial judges to impose
house arrest and fine people if they perceive reasonable grounds that a defendant will commit
an offense in the future. Huh. Who do you think is going to be prosecuted as a result of this law?
Is it going to be the prominent liberals in media, politics, and academia who regularly call for abolishing whiteness?
That sounds pretty directly genocidal?
Or is it going to be the conservatives who say that men and women are different and are consequently accused of advocating genocide?
Which group do you think is going to be prosecuted here?
And what exactly constitutes reasonable grounds that a person will spread hate in the future?
Perhaps being found in possession of a leftist-tears tumbler?
Is that evidence?
Perhaps liking a few too many Jordan Peterson tweets?
What's the reasonable grounds in Canada for the future crime of being conservative?
The Online Harms Act is designed to protect the Liberal Party from electoral harm from conservatives online.
It's about criminalizing conservatives, not only for what they say, but before they eat.
even have a chance to say it. I'm Michael Knowles. This is the Michael
Knoll's show. Welcome back to this show. The liberal media are continuing to
exploit the death of a teenager who identified as non-binary to try to attack conservatives,
even though the facts of this very sad death totally contradict their narrative. We will get
into the political lesson from that in just a moment. First, though, a few things. One,
subscribe to the Michael Null's YouTube channel. Smash, ding-dong, ring, hit the thing, do
whatever you want to do. Second, while you're smashing and ringing and dingin, you might want to
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Okay.
Speaking of neighboring governments descending into tyranny, have you been following what's going on in Haiti?
What's going on in Haiti right now is that the government has collapsed.
Haiti is officially a failed state, and it is currently being run by a lot of different little gangsters,
but the most prominent gangster is a warlord named Barbecue. That's his name.
And the gangs in Haiti are going around eating people. It's cannibal gangs now governing the country.
country. Not great. According to New York City Mayor Eric Adams, however, we should have a lot of empathy
for what's going on in Haiti because, I'll use his exact words, quote, we call New York City the
port our Prince of America. We feel the pain of our Haitian neighbors feel as the situation grows dire.
To the people of Haiti and our own Haitian community here in New York City, know that we stand
with you today and always. So, okay, that's nice to we stand with you, we support you, whatever.
The first sentence, it was a little confusing to me. We call New York City the Porto Prince of America,
capital of Haiti, right? I was born in New York. I grew up in New York, lived in New York for a very
long time. I never heard anyone call it the Porto Prince of America. And there's a great community
note that was added to this tweet, says, not one person.
has ever said this before Eric Adams.
And you can check it out.
You can Google it, look at it over there.
No one had ever said that until the New York City mayor.
However, while everyone is mocking Eric Adams for this pandering and ridiculous statement,
I want to defend it because while no one has yet had yet called New York City,
the Port-up Prince of America,
Eric Adams is doing such a bad job as mayor.
They might soon call it that.
We don't yet have cannibal gangs terrorizing New York most of the time.
but we might soon. That's how terrible a job Eric Adams has done. And actually, in Eric Adams's
defense, it's been imposed on him largely by the Biden administration through this mass
influx of illegal aliens, which Adams has called out until he was threatened with a corruption
investigation and then he kind of dropped the issue. This is not good. We don't want failed states
in America, even in New York. We don't want failed states in the Caribbean. We don't want failed states
anywhere. There's a lesson from this for conservatives, which is one, you know, keep a little order here.
I mean, let's not allow the voodoo and the, you know, gangs and everyone to kind of run roughshod over your
society. Another lesson would be that revolution is usually not that great. I mean, people now are
blaming the problems in Haiti on recent government policies. I saw someone preposterously
try to argue that the problem in Haiti was DEI policies being imposed. Like, that's it. That's the
problem. Haiti had been just terrific until those woke, you know, world economic forum liberals
went in there with their DEI. No, Haiti has been pretty much hell on earth ever since the slave revolt that
that led to the Haitian revolution. There was so much promise. There was there was so much hope at the
moment of that revolution. This is the only successful slave revolt in the history of the world
led to this revolution. But then the hope never paid off because Haiti has been a hellscape ever since then.
The United States had to occupy Haiti for something like 15 years or more in the early 20th century.
And every so often they get some dictator who keeps a little bit more peace, but it's always been just absolutely
terrible, and now it doesn't even have what little government it once had. The real lesson for
conservatives here is not just that revolution is usually terrible, and it's not even just that we
probably don't want to import a lot of pathologies from around the world that could create
problems in our own country. The lesson to me is government is good. I know conservatives are not
supposed to say that. We're supposed to say government is the most evil thing ever, and we want to get
rid of the government, and we just want to privatize everything. Government is good in principle.
Government can go bad. Government can become too big and overbearing. Government can become too centralized
and unresponsive to the real needs of people. But government in principle is good. We are the
political animal. We live in society. And when we figure out how to live in society,
we call that politics. And part of politics is a civil authority. We call that government. And the civil
authority does not bear the sword in vain. The civil authority protects people's rights and maintains
order and administers justice. And that is not just something that we have to deal with. It's not just a
sad fact of life that we individualists have to put up with. That is a good thing. We want justice.
None of us wants to live in Haiti. We don't want to live in the Portaau Prince of America,
and we don't want to live in the Portaau Prince of Portaau Prince. Speaking of politically sanctioned
violence, Kamala Harris is about to make history by being the first vice president to ever visit
an abortion clinic. This will be the first visit by a vice president or a president to an abortion
clinic. She's going to go visit a Planned Parenthood in Minnesota. This is part of her fight for
reproductive freedoms tour, which started in January, and the point of it is to promote abortion.
I just got back from Madison, Wisconsin. Had a really
fun time there. If you missed my speech, it was on this topic. It was on abortion. It's called
the case against murder. I lay it out in ways that sometimes are missing from the pro-life
movement. So if you want to hear a relatively dispassionate, historical and legal and philosophical
account of why abortion is bad, I think I laid it out as pithily as I possibly could. But the Q&A
was what was really, really fun in Madison because we had a transvestite man, a student come up
and, you know, object to the things that I have said. And we had a relatively, I think, respectful
exchange that's gone a bit viral. Then I had some Looney Tune Gale come up and scream at me about
abortion and then call me Matt Walsh. And so anyway, it was wild. It was all over the place.
I guess it came at a good time, though, because the vice president now is not only
saying what Democrats used to say, which is, you know, abortion, it's a very sad thing, a very
tragic thing, we got to keep it safe, legal, and rare. Now she's saying, oh, it's a good thing.
And so when you just think of the mechanics of what's going to happen on this tour, the sitting
vice president of the United States is going to go into a place where babies are being murdered,
where extremely predatory, evil doctors are taking money from poor women to murder their children,
These desperate poor women, many of whom are being pushed into killing their children by their boyfriends or by their families or by the social expectations.
Some of the women want to kill their children and they're happy about it.
Most of them don't, though.
Most of it are just being duped into this.
Virtually all of them are going to live with a lot of regret and psychological trauma as a result of it.
And this psycho vice president, Kamala Harris, is going to go in there smiling.
There's a lot of tears in abortion clinics, okay?
And those tears are indicative of the moral repugnance that's going on, the great, great evil that's going on.
Lots of babies are actively being murdered in these places.
Lots of women are being forced to commit a crime that is just about as horrific a crime as one can imagine for a human being,
the murder of a child by his mother.
And this woman's going to go skipping through there with her Kamala Harris cackle giggling about it,
saying it's a positive thing.
How did we get here? How did we get to the point where abortion should no longer be safe,
legal and rare, but it's a wonderful thing that the vice president's going to go celebrate?
There is so much more to say, first though, go to food for the poor.org slash knolls.
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The Democrats had to resolve the tension of safe, legal, and rare.
Ideas have a momentum of their own, and we had to reach the conclusion of this.
We had to work out the conflict and the contradiction.
If abortion is no different than getting your tonsils taken out, then there's no reason that it should be rare.
if abortion is in any way morally similar to murder, then it shouldn't be legal.
Period. It's simple as. So the Democrats had to pick one. Which one did they pick?
They pick legal, and they pick to give up rare. And so to do that, they have to grit their teeth, even if they're aware of just the profound evil of going into a building, the purpose of which is to slaughter babies.
they got to go in there and even if they feel uncomfortable with it, they got to grit their teeth and smile.
Because the only alternative would be to say this is barbaric and evil and we're going to ban it.
But they've decided they're the party of abortion at all costs.
The vice president's going on a tour about it.
And so she's going to go and she's going to take that tour all the way to the infanticide factories themselves.
Speaking of taboos, really, really interesting article in vice.
Or not vice. Vox.
I think vice is gone now. It's the other left-wing outlet, Vox. VICE, at least sometimes was kind of funny. Vox is just a pure establishment liberal journalism. And the headline is, why the blank does everyone swear all the blanking time? Curse words shift a lot over time. They're in the middle of a big shift right now. You know I'm interested in words and how words change over time. I wrote a book about this called Speechless Controlling Words Controlling Mind.
Thank you. And we're plugging a lot of products today, aren't we, on the show? But they're relevant.
And this conversation is especially relevant when we're talking about the major political shift that's going on.
Major political shifts will coincide with cultural shifts. And cultural shifts will always coincide with standards and norms and taboos changing.
So what the Vox author is recognizing is something I've recognized. I'm sure you have too, which is that people swear much more casually these days.
It used to be that there were seven words you couldn't say.
on TV. That was George Carlin's special.
Used to be that Lenny Bruce would get arrested for saying what we would today consider very mild
curse words if we considered them curse words at all.
And now you can say pretty much anything anywhere to the point that it's banal.
And so the author here at Vox says that swear words have undergone major shifts.
Back in the middle ages, when people were religious, the real taboo words were blasphemous.
you know, G.D. or different versions of that, words that we don't even say anymore that
referenced the wounds of Christ or other religious imagery in a way that would be in vain or sacrilegious.
That was really taboo. Now, bodily functions, that wasn't really considered taboo, according to
the author of this article, because, you know, people didn't have a lot of privacy. They all
live together. We didn't, they didn't have, you know, indoor plumbing in a lot of places. So,
that didn't really bother people. As you shift later on, especially culminating in the Victorian era,
all of a sudden, the bodily functions, that became very taboo. So, you know, the F word, the S word,
the this word, that that word, all the kinds of things that until pretty recently you weren't really
allowed to say. The C word, it's one of the last words that's still even semi-taboo in that category.
that sort of stuff you couldn't really say. But what about now? What is the swear word now?
According to the article, the last one is the C word, which is just another bodily part, you know, refers to certain bodily functions.
That's the last one you can't really say. But you kind of can. People use it more flippantly now.
I think a lot of this article is smart, but it's missing the point.
I can say any of those words on this show, if I want to.
I don't want to because I think swear words are vulgar, and we try to class up to join a little bit.
This is a family show, but I could say that.
If I wanted to, I could use all sorts of sacrilegious terms on this show.
There would be no cultural taboo today.
If I wanted to, I could use all sorts of nasty words to refer to bodily functions
and fluids and acts and all sorts of things that were banned from TV for the 20th century.
I could do that, no problem.
The only words that I truly could not say on this show are racial and sexual epithets.
It's the N-word, right, and other words like that.
I can't do that anymore.
Not that I would exactly like to do that on the show, like to class the place up, you know,
and this is a family show.
I'm just talking about the taboos.
There's no real taboo around sacrilege.
There's no real taboo around the F word or even the C word.
The taboos are around racial and sexual epithets.
Why?
Because that's now what is considered sacred.
In the Middle Ages, God was sacred.
God remained sacred, but God was considered widely to be sacred and off limits for casual
conversation.
As we got a little bit later on, these kinds of bodily functions, they were considered
to be taboo, unmentionable.
They're just fascinating, but you want to keep them in an arm's length.
Now it's just race and sex.
We have made an idol out of race and sex.
This is like when the libs say, you know, we need to read banned books.
You don't really want to read banned books.
If you really wanted to read banned books, you would not be reading To Kill a Mockingbird.
Okay, to Kill a Mockingbird is not banned.
Books that are banned today are like, you know, Mind Kampf, Holocaust Denial.
I don't know, like really sort of vicious books.
That's what's banned.
The Bible actually is banned in schools.
That's on a completely different category of book bans.
But it's not to kill a mockingbird.
It's not even genderqueer or any of these books that I would like to ban from schools.
That's not really it.
You can get access to these things, frankly, in most schools over the country,
but certainly in most libraries and most bookstores.
That's not an argument to say.
say that no books should be banned, I have no problem banning certain books. I have no problem
banning certain words. I have no problem having societal standards and taboos. But let's be honest
about what those are. The libs, though, what they say, like, oh, we're so naughty. You know, we said
the F word on TV. There's no taboo around that anymore. That's not how our society functions.
Now, speaking of taboos in politics, President Trump is avoiding a major taboo. The third rail of
politics. President Trump says he will never do anything to harm social security. He says,
I will never do anything that will jeopardize or hurt social security or Medicare. We'll have
to do it elsewhere, but we're not going to do anything to hurt them. There's so many things we can do.
There's so much cutting and so much waste in many other areas, but I'll never do anything
to hurt social security. This brings up a major political battle that has roiled the right for many
years now, but DWs come under fire for it because Ben and Matt suggested that Social Security
is going to go bankrupt. And so I mentioned on the show a couple of days ago that Ben and Matt
obviously have a financial point. They're observing a fiscal reality. But what Trump is observing
here is a political reality. And it's the reality that I think conservatives came to see
from the Tea Party era into the Trump era. In the Tea Party era, in the Tea Party era,
era, there were conservatives who said, we need to have a social truce to get our fiscal house in
order and deal with our national debt. The only way to deal with the debt really effectively
is to reform the entitlement programs. And then that didn't work. And it didn't work because
we live in society. And you can't fix the economic problems without fixing the social problems.
It's the other way around. So I totally get it. I understand if you're an actuary or something.
I understand if you're an accountant and you're looking at the numbers and you say, well,
the easiest place to make the cuts is here because it's the biggest part of the federal budget.
I totally get, I'm not denying that at all.
But what Trump is saying is that that's not really how it works.
It looks bad optically.
It's not going to win over enough voters to actually go in and govern at all.
And in principle, it's not true.
It also doesn't work in principle because we're not just economic agents moving about, you know, trying to maximize our income as our primary goal.
We're human beings, flesh and blood, living in society.
And so if you want to change the way that we treat money, if you want to change the way that we treat our inheritance, if you want to change the way that we treat our wealth, you've got to change the way that we treat all these other aspects of culture. Are we going to have kids? Are we going to get married? Are we going to be responsible in other ways? Are we going to have a stable functioning border? Are we going to care for the common good rather than our own private interest? You've got to transform all of that before you ever even have a
hope of dealing with the fiscal situation. Trump, I believe, gets it. Whether it's conscious or not,
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My favorite comment yesterday is from Cool Papa J. Magic who says it's not identity politics.
It's anti-whiteism.
They're not dividing and pitting us against each other.
They're uniting all other groups against white people.
You're partly right, Cool Papa J. Magic, but you're not totally right.
It's true.
The Libs hate white people.
I'm not denying that at all.
They have campaigns to abolish whiteness, as I mentioned at the top of the show.
But they also hate men, and they also hate Christians, and they also hate people of normal sexual behavior who engage in traditional customs.
So it's not as simple as all that.
I agree.
In as far as the liberal's identity politics are racial, and they are largely racial, then it is directed against white people.
No doubt about it.
You and I both agree.
But there's more to it.
And at the heart of it really is religion.
All human conflict is not ultimately racial.
Race can play a role in it, but all human conflict ultimately is theological.
It gets down to how we view ourselves and our place vis-à-vis other people and all of our place in the creation relative to our creator.
It gets down to that fundamental point.
And I don't think there's any question that the secular lives hate Christianity and are trying to take it out of public life.
Speaking of electoral politics, Zuma Democrats are worried.
They are worried that Joe Biden's TikTok ban or that the Republicans' TikTok ban in coalition with the Democrats,
unclear if Biden will support it, could hurt Joe Biden's reelection chances.
According to Representative Maxwell Frost, Democrat from Florida, who is the first Zoomer member of Congress.
He says, this legislation, I think, is a mistake.
We need to regulate social media, not just TikTok, but all of it.
it. And so he voted against the bill. He said it should be a political concern for Democrats because
the Democrats need to not exactly win over the young voters. They already have a lot of young voters,
but they need to convince them to show up to the polls. And the way that they do that is to
get in their faces where the zoomer eyeballs are and the zoomer eyeballs are on TikTok.
TikTok is used by two-thirds of Americans under the age of 30. So there's another Democrat strategist
who was speaking to the liberal media who said, these voters are not going to,
going to say, this is my guy. You know, they're not going to all of a sudden become Trump voters
overnight, but they might also not say that Biden is my guy. If they're not getting constant
Democrat talking points in Biden propaganda, they might just remain somewhat disillusioned and
stay home. And if they do that, Trump wins, which is probably true. This gets to my
basic suspicion that the TikTok ban is a fine idea. But there's one hesitation I have with the TikTok
ban. It's not government overreach. It's not that they're going to come after the other social
media platforms, quite the opposite, actually. My fear is that the direct beneficiary of the TikTok ban
will be Mark Zuckerberg. My fear is that the direct beneficiary of the TikTok ban will be the other
woke, radical big tech CEOs who are far more responsible for rigging our elections and manipulating
the American population to do bad things than TikTok and the CCP are.
Mark Zuckerberg spent a lot of money in 2020, putting it into left-wing groups specifically
to change voting laws and practices such that Zuckerberg pretty directly was responsible for
installing lots of ballot drop boxes, in some cases illegally, far away from county clerk offices,
this guy rigged the election. And he admitted it. Before he ever did it, he said, I am going to
spend a ton of money, a ton of money to kick Trump out of the White House. So legislation does not
happen in Washington, D.C. because of some pie in the sky idealism. It happens because of
bare-knuckle, often monetary interests. You've got to ask yourself, when you're looking at a piece of
legislation. Who benefits? Who benefits here? As far as I can tell, it's Facebook and it's Google.
Maybe Elon and X benefit too. I guess that would be good. I would be fine with that.
But Zuckerberg and Google, that's not good news. Now, does that weigh out the benefits that
conservatives get, which is that you're killing the main social media channel that the zoomers are on?
Maybe it does. Or maybe those zoomers just go to Instagram Reels and they get
even more propaganda, controlled even more tightly by American liberals in the lead-up to
2024. However you consider this legislation, I wouldn't consider it as just a pie-in-the-sky
ideological matter. Ask yourself, what's this going to mean practically in American politics?
Now, speaking of Zoomers, I mentioned this story yesterday, so I won't go into too much detail
on the lead-up to this conversation, but next Benedict was a teenager.
who identified as non-binary, and this teenager died.
And we were told by the liberal media initially that I think that she was a girl,
that she was beaten up by awful terrible bullies,
and it was the fault of all the evil right-wing transphobes,
and specifically lives of TikTok.
And then that turned out not to be true.
The medical examiner's report is out,
and she died of a drug overdose.
and this has probably been a suicide.
All tragic, everything about this is just terribly sad.
But it isn't what the liberal media told us it was.
This wasn't caused by lives of TikTok or the evil right-wingers
or even the gang of people that was beating up this girl or whatever was reported.
There's a drug overdose, likely a suicide.
Some of us suspected that that would be the case or something like that would be.
the case. How did we get it right? And the liberal media and the liberal media consumers,
even more so, got it wrong. Because of a simple rule in politics. This is just a little rule of
thumb. And before you call me a hypocrite, before you accuse me of having double standards,
just hear me at when a story, when a news story favors liberals, you can assume that the
story is at least somewhat false. When a news story favors liberals. When a news story favors liberals.
conservatives, you can assume that the story is true. Why is that? Because the liberals control the media,
simple as. So it's not, sometimes the liberals will accuse us of saying, well, hold on, when the news is good for you,
you believe it. When the news is bad for you, you don't believe it. Right. Because the Democrats have
every incentive to paint Republicans and conservatives in a terrible light. So when, on the very
rare occasion, a news story paints conservatives in a good light. It means they just couldn't do it.
There was just absolutely nothing that they could even sort of possibly try to twist to make us look bad.
So it means that that story is very likely reliable. Whereas when it comes to stories that promote the
libs, there's really no reason to believe it's true because they have all these kind of crazy
puff pieces all the time. And then when their lies to build themselves up are proven, they retract
the story three months later on page Z 2000 of the newspaper. That's why. It's not hypocrisy. It's not a double standard. It's not picking and choosing. It's not saying, oh, you just want to believe the news that's positive for you. No, I'm, I am just objectively looking at the news media and realizing it's all lives and recognizing the incentives and the patterns and how the stories come and then coming to a rule of thumb because of that. And Ann Coulter has a similar version of this. She says, when there is a mass shooting,
The longer the media don't report on the race of the criminal, the more likely the criminal is not white.
If it goes two days, you don't know what the race of the shooter is.
That shooter is not white.
Every time.
When the shooter is white, they report it immediately.
When the shooter is a straight man, they report it immediately.
When the shooter is a trans-identifying person, they cover up that story for years.
We're still waiting to get the full story in the Nashville trans-shoes.
of course. If the shooter is black, it's, you know, a youth or an individual or a young man or
whatever. When the shooter is white or even not white, when a killer is Hispanic, like the case
of George Zimmerman who killed Trayvon Martin. George Zimmerman looks extremely Hispanic,
but he had a name that sounded almost like it could kind of plausibly be white. So the news media,
they said he's a white guy. They got him. He's a white guy. Then they found out he's not a white guy.
And so they didn't want to totally walk it back.
They said he's a white Hispanic.
He's a white, white Hispanic.
What is it?
He wasn't even all that white.
Anyway, that's the rule of thumb.
And Ann Coulter's version of it is right.
And I think this version at a general level is right too.
Now, speaking of lives and women, this is a story I wanted to get to last week.
I do want to touch on it now.
Kirsten Cinema is out of the Senate at the end of this year.
Cinema has announced this.
and if you don't know who cinema is, she was a Democrat, but she's kind of moderate and she's been
relatively independent in the Senate. And it's been a big problem for the liberal Democrats who want
to ram through their agenda. Here she is saying she's out. Through listening, understanding,
and compromise, we deliver tangible results that make America safer, stronger, and more prosperous.
Yet, despite modernizing our infrastructure, ensuring clean water, delivering good,
jobs and safer communities, Americans still choose to retreat farther to their partisan corners.
These solutions are considered failures, either because they're too much or not nearly enough.
It's all or nothing, the outcome, less important than beating the other guy.
The only political victories that matter these days are symbolic, attacking your opponents on
cable news or social media. Compromise is a dirty word. We've arrived at that crossroad, and we
chose anger and division. I believe in my approach, but it's not what America wants right now.
I love Arizona, and I am so proud of what we've delivered. Because I choose civility,
understanding, listening, working together to get stuff done, I will leave the Senate at the end
of this year. She's out. Okay. Cinema's out. That's sort of unfortunate because she was one of the two
even semi-reasonable Democrats in the Senate, the other one being Joe Manchin. But in a way,
it's not the worst thing because it raises the stakes. Not only are we looking at the presidency being up
this year, but this raises the stakes for 2024 considerably. The one of the two kind of moderates
in the Senate, she is gone. So now the race is going to be between Kerry Lake, the Republican,
and Ruben Gallego, who's the Democrat. The election could determine which party controls
the Senate. Now we're going to see who controls the White House. Who controls the Senate?
Who knows? We've got a razor-thin majority in the House. The whole government is up for grabs.
This could potentially be the biggest swing election in our lifetimes at a time when the Democrats have
become extraordinarily partisan, openly encouraging an invasion across our southern border,
visiting abortion mills and celebrating infanticide. They are as
plain and out in the open as it possibly comes. Republicans finding their voice too,
finding a little bit more of a coherent vision too. What's it going to be? One hopes it'll be
a fair election at the very least it'll be a clear choice. One year ago, Hershey's announced
that a man would be leading their Women's Day campaign. Our response, in 24 hours we launched
Jeremy's chocolate because you should be able to buy delicious chocolate from a company that does not
hate your values. To celebrate one year, Jeremy's chocolate is giving one year's worth of chocolate away.
To enter, simply purchase one Jeremy's chocolate product from Jeremy's or the Daily Wire Shop,
but hurry, today is your last chance to enter to win one year of Jeremy's chocolate. Go to
Jeremy's Chocolate.com or any Jeremy's chocolate section of the Daily Wire shop. Head on over
to DailyWire.com slash shop today. No purchase necessary void wear prohibited. Finally, finally,
we've arrived at my favorite time of the week when I get to hear from you in the mail
Our mailbag is sponsored by PureTalk.
Go to puretalk.com slash Knowles, KnaWLAS,
to get an additional 50% off your first month.
Hey, Michael.
My sister's now fiancé,
finally proposed after about a year and a half of dating.
He is very smart and very sweet and kind,
but he considers himself a Democrat.
I think it is because he is very kind and non-confrontational.
Maybe he doesn't like the thought of imposing moral standards on people.
I have tried talking to him about how things like gender confusion
are not good for society, and he doesn't disagree, but he still identifies as a Democrat.
I haven't found the root of his political leanings, but I'm not too concerned because his dad is a
Republican, and he is going through the RCIA program. My sister and my family are already Catholic.
Plus, as he gets older and as kids, I think he'll lean more right. My question is, can you recommend
a good book for me to get for him for baptism and confirmation present? I'm looking for
for something that will be appropriately religious for the occasion, but something that would
also help shape his political views. Thank you for your advice, and I appreciate all that you do.
Absolutely. Marvelous question. I was a little nervous at the beginning. Then you said,
though, okay, he's in R-CIA, so he's becoming Catholic. He's taking that kind of seriously.
I mean, if you're Catholic, practically speaking, you just can't really be a Democrat today
because the abortion issue is non-negotiable and the nature of the human person, the nature of sex,
you know, the so-called transgender ideology, that's a non-negotiable, that's, and many more bioethical
issues just basically prohibit a faithful Catholic from practically being a Democrat. So hopefully
he'll come to that conclusion. You could get him the catechism of St. Pius the 10th. It's a pretty good catechism.
in terms of political books, I would say here maybe lean a little toward Chesterton.
You know, Chesterton's orthodoxy.
He actually wrote it before he was Catholic, I think, but it's quite Christian, obviously religious,
but it gets to much, gets to a lot of political issues.
Maybe some Hiller-Bellock books could be good.
Lewis is always fine, though I would maybe lean toward Chesterton or Belloc for the occasion,
and then just kind of slowly push him a little bit more and more and more.
If he's going to raise his kids as faithful to the church,
practically he's going to have to ditch that Democrat stuff.
That's good.
Okay, next question.
Hey, Mr. Knows, my name is Eli.
I'm 21, and you are my favorite out of the Daily Wire cast
because of how well-spoken you are.
Every sense you speak is laced with philosophy, history, theology, and virtue.
truly the Holy Spirit lives in you.
My question is, how can I get like you?
Well spoken, educated with wisdom.
I am a Christian.
I know wisdom comes from the fear of the Lord,
so I go to church, listen to sermons,
and seek guidance from our church elders.
I read when I have free time,
perhaps a book list from you,
your fans would appreciate.
I'm considering going back to school,
I had dropped out to learn a trade
so I could always have a skill in demand.
I know you view college is to educate yourself
and not to get a job,
so I'm not sure what major is.
best for me and if it's the best choice because of how crazy expensive it is, but I'm thinking
the education will pay itself off. Any advice? Thank you. Well, thanks, man. Really nice. Appreciate
that. You forgot how handsome I am, but that's all right. The other ones are very nice.
It seems like what you're focused on in particular is trying to cultivate your ability to speak,
which expresses some of the other things that you've touched on there. If you can
speak well, if you can argue well, especially if you can write well. What that implies is you've
probably read a fair number of books and you thought about things and you've taken education at least
somewhat seriously and that's what you're asking, right? So what I would recommend is I don't need to
give, I mean, I can maybe give you a book list, but you can even look, Harold Bloom, the late
literary critic, has a great book list. It's huge and it's a list of great books. Going back to
antiquity all the way to the present. I would go through that. I wouldn't go through it in any particular
order. Maybe if you want to start at the beginning, I'd read a little Plato and Aristotle first,
and then maybe I'd throw in, I'd read a little Homer, you know, so you get your philosophy,
Plato's going to be a little saucier than Aristotle. Aristotle's going to be a little more nuts and bolts than Plato,
and then you're going to get your blood and gore and guts and poetry with the Iliad and the Odyssey,
maybe the Aeneid too, which is sort of the Bible of Empire, as Dante considered it.
And then maybe you jump to the Middle Ages.
You read some of those tracts, obviously, you know, speaking of Dante, I'm big Dante fan.
You toss in some great, you skip it way ahead.
You toss in some great novels there, maybe the Russian novelists.
What I'm saying is you don't need to go in any particular order.
Follow your desire.
And then as you read, as you educate yourself, your desires will become more finely.
tuned. They'll be pointing even more in the right direction. And so I wouldn't make it just so rigorous that you have to start at the beginning of the Western tradition and finish at the end because you'll just get tired of it and probably give up.
Desire is a very important part of education that we downplay now. In terms of going back to school or whatever, I don't know how old you are. I don't know your circumstances.
So use your prudence here. I wouldn't take out a lot of debt if you're not in a position to do that right now to get a degree that maybe you won't be able, even to use.
use in your leisure time. Don't forget, you know, a liberal education is about cultivating
your ability for leisure, ultimately, because it's not about learning a trade. You go to trade
school to learn a trade or you get an apprenticeship, or you just start working and train at your
job. So there, I would just use prudence. And then if you are working, you say, in between this
time, I can read a little bit, I would listen to Spencer Claven's podcast. I would listen to,
I have a book show over at Prager You. You can listen to that. I would listen to lots of free lectures.
you can get them open courses are great.
And I would follow your desire, then practice it, formulate your arguments, say those arguments out loud, bring them up in conversations with your friends, and then find other friends who are interested in this too, because education is a group activity.
Next question.
Hey, Smoky Mike.
It's Isaac, a longtime listener and huge fan.
Back in July, I was involved in a hit and run.
motorcycle accident that left me paralyzed. And I was hoping that you would consider asking the
creme de la creme who are believers in Christ to please pray for my healing. Appreciate everything you do,
man. Bye. I certainly can. Simple enough. Very sorry to hear of the trouble you've gone through.
we were just talking today. A friend of ours, mine and sweet little elaces,
underwent kind of a trauma, you know, real tragedy. And we asked how she was doing.
And she said, oh, you know, there's just been so many graces and it's been wonderful to suffer
along with Christ. So, wow, what a, that's an amazing saintly way of dealing with
things that are so horrible. So, you know, you're dealing with a lot of suffering and really the only
consolation that can possibly come from that is, is binding it up, you know, drawing you
closer to God and binding you closer to our Lord who suffers the utmost. And then we can also pray
for your healing. Absolutely. So encourage everyone to do that. Next question. Hello, Michael. I'm a fellow
Roman Catholic. I love your show. On one of your recent shows, you brought up an informal rule of thumb
that if everyone who supports a given X
tends to be wrong about everything else,
then there's a good chance that there's something wrong about X too.
And I bring this up because in my hobby, Dungeons and Dragons,
I have very much struggled to get any interest from my Catholic friends.
And when I kind of go into the D&D community,
everyone is left-wing into weird sex stuff.
you know, big libs,
etc. So my
question is, why is it
that it seems sometimes
that Christians hate
and distrust fantasy, and how does
your rule about, if
everyone that supports this tends
to be wrong about
everything else, they're probably wrong
about this too. How does that play out
in the current
rejection of fantasy
by Christians? Thank you very much.
I love your show. Thank you very much. I don't think
Christians reject fantasy. I kind of do. I don't really like fantasy stories and, you know,
it's just a taste of mine, but Christians don't. I mean, the most famous fantasy story of the last
several hundred years is a deeply Christian story written by a devout Catholic named Tolkien,
right? The Lord of the Rings is extremely Christian. Same with Narnia, right, written by his,
by Tolkien's buddy, who's another obviously extremely prominent Christian.
the very genre of fantasy, we see, you know, its origins. Well, the Penn Dragon cycle, we're making that here at Daily Wire. And then those early Arthurian legends, Shretti and de Trois, you know, all of these, all of the medieval literary tradition, which is obviously very Christian. So I don't think it's that Christians don't like it. But maybe Christians don't like Dungeons, dragons. I don't know. I don't know anything about Dungeons and Dragons. So I'll have to defer to some other experts. But if you're noticing, even within fantasy, that the Christians who like
fantasy like all these other parts of fantasy, but they don't necessarily love D&D, then, yeah, I don't know,
maybe something about D&A is just not, just doesn't totally jive with the sort of things Christians want
to do. And in that case, I don't know, I mean, look, I'm not telling you you got to quit your
Dungeons and Dragons Club, but in that case, probably just naturally over time, you might lose interest
in it. That's just how these things go. Okay, we have a mailbag question from Alex.
Michael, so many are determined to get the Michael Lowe's stamp of approval for divorce.
Here is my attempt.
My wife watches love is blind and won't watch die hard should I cut my losses, thanks.
You know, sometimes people have suggested there might be an exception to the hard and fast Christian prohibition on divorce.
And if there were to be, I'm no theologian, what do I, but if there were to be, love is blind.
That's, ugh.
Oh, yikes.
There's much more mailbag to get to.
You probably shouldn't divorce your wife?
I don't, you know, look, this is going to occupy me.
I'm going to, as we transition into the member block,
I'm going to have to give this even greater thought.
And then we will have even more mailbag questions.
And then we will have fake headline Friday.
Head on over.
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