The Tucker Carlson Show - Tucker Carlson: America After Charlie Kirk
Episode Date: September 17, 2025Tucker Carlson is joined by guests, Megyn Kelly, Scott Adams, Cenk Uygur, and Fr. Josiah Trenham, to discuss Charlie Kirk’s influence on American politics and how we go forward from here. Learn more... about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
During the Volvo Fall Experience event,
discover exceptional offers and thoughtful design
that leaves plenty of room for autumn adventures.
And see for yourself how Volvo's legendary safety
brings peace of mind to every crisp morning commute.
This September, lease a 2026 X-E-90 plug-in hybrid
from $599 bi-weekly at 3.99% during the Volvo Fall Experience event.
Conditions apply, visit your local Volvo retailer
or go to explorevolvo.com.
Hey, I'm Tucker Carlson. Last week, within just really minutes after Charlie Kirk was shot at that event in Utah, a kind of proxy war broke out over his memory. Who gets to own it? Who gets to use it? Well, the rest of us were still reeling in shock, trying to figure out what happened. A ton of people appeared online, not just in this country, to tell you exactly what happened, exactly what it meant in exactly what we should do next. And you can see why. With this,
This level of emotion, rage, and grief in the air, it's pretty wise to leverage that much energy.
It's almost like nuclear power.
It can be used for good or bad.
And a lot of people wanted to use it.
There's no question about that.
So they begin telling you, Charlie died for this.
He lived for this and he died for that.
So the crazier reaches of the left, it was Charlie was a Nazi.
And the lesson is Nazis get killed.
It makes sense.
He was a bad guy who got what he deserved.
And a lot of them said that out loud.
certain parts of the right immediately told you that actually this was about something completely different.
You know, Charlie died for Israel. Many began to say the prime minister of Israel said that and so did
a lot of other people. Charlie was a defender of Israel, which he was, by the way, and therefore he died for
that cause. But none of these explanations, all self-serving, are really satisfactory. They don't
capture who Charlie Kirk was and on some basic level, they're dishonest. Charlie was not a Nazi. He was not
killed because he was a Nazi. Yes, he was a defender of Israel. He didn't die for Israel,
however. Why did he die? What was his life about? What was the sin, the core sin, that Charlie
Kirk committed against somebody, power, that got him killed in the end? And the answer is right
in front of us, but certainly those of us who knew him. Charlie's life was defined by his Christian
faith, not his religious faith, not his spirituality, but his belief in Jesus, his life as a Christian.
Everything in his life flowed from those beliefs. Everything, everything he did, said, and believed
came from the fact that he was above all a Christian. And that is and was, and in fact, has always
been deeply provocative and offensive to the rest of the world. And why is that? It's worth
thinking about it for just a second. Christianity doesn't seem like the kind of religion that
provoke people to anger and violence. In fact, it seems just the opposite. It's the world's most
profoundly nonviolent religion, maybe the world's only truly nonviolent religion, a religion based on
a man who Christians believe was also God, who as he was being led away to be tortured to death
on made-up charges, scolded one of his disciples for fighting back. This is a religion committed
to love above all and to living in peace and harmony, truly. It's a universalist religion
that believes that every person has a shot at heaven. It's not exclusionary at all.
And so you would think it would make sense that if you're a government or if you're in power that you'd want a lot of Christians living in your country because they're not going to cause massive problems. Not a lot of sincere Christians are fomenting insurrection at any given moment. Pretty much none most of the time. They're tidy. They get married. They love their children. They pay their taxes. They're commanded to pay their taxes. So why wouldn't you want a nation full of Christians? Why wouldn't you encourage this religious belief, even if it wasn't yours? Why would you hate it?
Well, there are a couple of reasons.
There are a couple of things about Christianity, and these were evident throughout Charlie's
public life, that are deeply provocative to the people in power.
And the first is the insistence that Christianity comes with inherently that you are not God.
You are not God, and neither are your leaders.
God is God, and all of us stand before him in the end to be judged, and all of us will be found
lacking.
Christians believe the only way to heaven is through Jesus.
that's the only way. But all of us, whether we believe in Jesus or not, are fallen. We are
sinners. We are less than we ought to be. We are not gods. And neither are the people who lead us.
And this has a lot of implications. The first being, if you're not God, you don't get to do whatever you
want. There are limits. There are rules that you didn't write that you have to abide by.
That's not a judgment. That's a statement of fact. Some call it natural law. It's been the basis of
every functioning society since the beginning of time. But the basis of our society is the
Christian understanding of justice, which flows from that belief. You are not God. God is. He writes
the most basic rules. You abide by them. Period. That's the basis of our law. That's the basis of
Western law. And that is a threat, a challenge to people who would ignore the limits on their
behavior, very much including our leaders and very much including the most powerful people in our
society, whether they're elected or not. Nobody wants to be told you're not allowed to do
something. And Christianity inherently tells people that. It doesn't judge them. It just states
it clearly. No, you do not have the power to kill except possibly in self-defense,
but you can't just go killing people. And you can't go killing people because, and this is
the second thing about Christianity that tends to set the teeth of the powerful on edge,
Christianity insists that every human being is created by God, every single one, and that means
that every human being has a soul, a distinct, unique soul created by God. It is, once again,
the only true universalist faith there is. And the New Testament is the story of this, an under-read
collection of books. That is not the story of the Old Testament, is very much the story of the New Testament.
In the New Testament, all people are God's chosen, every single one. And the story itself makes that point.
The founder of most Christian churches in the early Near East was a former Pharisee, a Jew who was in charge of killing Christians, until he famously met Jesus on the road to Damascus.
His name was Saul. He became Paul, and he is the most prolific author in the New Testament and the basis of a lot of Christian theology.
And his life tells the story.
people can change, no matter what they look like, no matter what they previously believe,
no matter where they're from, no matter what language they speak, because they are created by God
in every person, every single person, whether you like them or their relatives or the way
they look or not, has that chance because all were created by God and all were loved by God.
That is the basis of Christianity. That's the Christian story. And so a sincere Christian
proceeds with that belief. There is no tribalism in Christianity. There is no identity politics. It's
the opposite. You may prefer to be with people who look like you. That's fine. But God doesn't
prefer to be with people who look like you. God prefers to be with all people because he created all
people. He's the God of the universe, not just of the people you like. And that, again,
has massive implications for the way that sincere Christians live and for the way that Charlie Kirk
lived his life. And the first is, if other people have souls, if they like you were created by
God, then they have freedom of conscience. You can tell them what they ought to think, but you can't
make them. You can tell them what they ought to say, but you can't force them. Christianity does
not convert by the sword. It can't. It requires free will, and it requires free will because
it respects the individual conscience emanating from the distinct soul of every human being.
And that is why in the West, which is based on Christianity, our civilization is a Christian
civilization, tattered though it currently is, collective punishment, hurting people for the sins
of their relatives is unthinkable.
It's a crime, because each person will stand alone as he was made before,
God and every person is equal before God fundamentally. Does it mean each person is equal in his
ability? It doesn't mean each person is equal in the choices he makes? Of course not. But it means
that every person is a human being with a divine spark inside. That is the core assumption of
Christianity. And it was obvious when you watch Charlie Kirk that he believed that. Charlie's been
famously quoted for the last couple of days saying he abhors anti-Semitism. That is a
absolutely right. And he did. He said that in public, and he said it very often in private. He meant it, too.
But he abhorred racism and bigotry on the basis of genetics of all kinds, because he was a
Christian. And he believed that God created each person. Now, why is this a problem for temporal
authorities? Why is it a problem for the people in power? Because once again, it circumscribes
what they can do. It sets a limit on their powers. If God created each person,
including the infuriating, annoying,
disastrously wrong person I'm talking to,
then I can't force him to repeat my creed.
I'm not in charge of his conscience.
Only he is.
And that is a limit.
So when Charlie Kirk said,
I believe in free speech,
he didn't simply believe in free speech
because it was in the Bill of Rights.
He understood that it was in the Bill of Rights
because it's in the New Testament.
He understood that that's a right that comes from God
bestowed on all of us.
us at birth. And he felt his job, his duty, was not simply to protect it, but to live it,
to show people what that looks like. I just want to play of the many clips we could play of
Charlie Kirkland College campus that he spent his whole life worn out most of the time.
As an older man, I often said to him, how the hell do you get on plane after plane after
plane? But he felt an evangelical duty, small evangelical duty to do it, to get out there and talk
to people. Why? Not simply to build a coalition.
or get this or that person elected, but because he believed as a Christian that convincing people
voluntarily with words in the beginning was the word, and the word was with God, and the word was God.
So the gospel of John begins. Words are the key to winning people's minds and their souls.
And he really meant this. He wasn't just repeating the words. He meant it. And it was obviously.
obvious in the way that he interacted with people who disagree with him and people who hated him.
Here's one clip that tells part of the story.
Would you want someone who is not necessarily stable or ready to bring a child into this world
and provide that child the life it deserves?
Would you want them to still bring that child into this world?
Without a doubt, every life has a moral obligation to be able to live.
If I can't give that child the life it deserves, why am I bringing it to?
Got it. This will be my last question. I want you to think about it. If a single mom has two two-year-olds, twins, and she wakes up one day and says, I can't do it anymore. I can't give them the life they deserve. But that's just not the circumstance. Hold on. Should she be able to take out a shotgun and kill both those kids? No. Of course not, because you think that would be objectionable. That's why I think it's objectionable to eliminate two babies that are six weeks old, because they're morally the same thing. One just happens to be bigger. One just happens to be older. One just happens to be outside.
of the womb. They're both human beings. And you have something in you that says, no way, is it okay to
kill two-year-old? That's called your soul talking. You have something in you that tells you the
truth. You can call it instinct, if you like. Charlie Kirk referred to it as the soul. But both mean
the same thing. You have the spark of the divine, God's spark inside you, and it reacts. It
hums. It vibrates a catooning fork. And you know on a basic animal level like your dog knows
when something is wrong. You can feel it. And the whole purpose of modern society, it seems
sometimes, is to get the rest of us to ignore what we know, that vibration inside us that
tells us the truth. Always, it never lies to us. Charlie did not ignore that. And you'll notice that
in the end he appealed to it with that young woman. He didn't scream, you were a murderer in
his face, though he considered abortion murder, which it is. He felt that deeply. This wasn't
a performance. He wasn't another non-profit phony in D.C. feigning outrage about something. He really
believed that taking innocent life was wrong in the womb or in crowded cities anywhere. He thought
it was wrong because his faith tells him it's wrong and because his conscience confirms that
belief. And so does yours and so did hers. So did all of ours. We know when something is wrong.
and the people above us shouted us, no, really there's an explanation for it.
That's just your super ego barking at you.
No, you know, in your heart, deep inside what every person has known, and that is the murder
of innocence is a crime.
It's a moral crime.
And that girl knew it.
And in the end, that was Charlie's appeal.
Listen to that divine spark inside you.
Listen to your soul.
Speak to you.
Turn off the music.
get off the drugs, push the distractions, which it's hard to believe aren't actually designed
to crowd out that humming inside us, and be still for a moment and accept what you already know,
what you were born knowing, listen to that. Only someone who appreciates the person he's
speaking to as an actual human being could speak that way. Notice how rare that is. It's been noted
in the past couple of days, Charlie was a free speech champion. Absolutely he was. And I
pray that that's his legacy. But I also think it's important to explain why that mattered to him.
It was not abstract. In any sense, it was central. It was the core. Because consider what it means
if you don't respect free speech, which is another way of saying free conscience, the right of other
people to make up their own minds about the basic questions of what is right or wrong and to express
their views on those issues. If you don't acknowledge the right of other people to do that,
and if you take steps to prevent them from doing that, what are you really saying?
You're really saying, I don't think you have a soul.
I think you're a meat puppet I can control.
I think you're an animal, maybe sub-animal.
You're a slave.
You're a person to whom I can dictate belief.
I don't acknowledge that you have the right to come to your own conclusion is another way of saying,
I don't acknowledge that you're a human being.
It's dark.
There's nothing darker than that.
And trust me, they believe it, the ones who've thought about it,
And there are a lot of those.
But for a lot of people, particularly those who are just repeating what they think they should say or responding to the momentary rage of the moment, they just throw stuff out.
And we've got to hope that the Attorney General of the United States, Pam Bondi, is in that category.
She said this just yesterday.
Watch.
There's free speech and then there's hate speech.
And there is no place, especially now, especially after what happened to Charlie in our state.
society. There's free speech and then there's hate speech. This is the Attorney General
of the United States, the chief law enforcement officer of the United States, telling you that
there is this other category called hate speech. And of course, the implication is that's a
crime. There's almost no sentence that Charlie Kirk, and I'm not running the risk of appropriating
his memory for my own ends by saying this, it's provable. There's no sentence that Charlie Kirk
would have objected to more than that. And you've got to think the
Attorney General didn't think it through and was not attempting to desecrate the memory of the person
she was purporting to celebrate, that she just threw that out there, that she hadn't thought
about it. You hope that. You hope that Charlie Kirk's death won't be used by a group we now
call bad actors to create a society that was the opposite of the one he worked to build.
You hope that. You hope that a year from now, the turmoil we're seeing in the aftermath of his
murder won't be leveraged to bring hate speech laws to this country. And trust me, if it is,
if that does happen, there is never a more justified moment for civil disobedience than that,
ever, and there never will be. Because if they can tell you what to say, they're telling you
what to think, there is nothing they can't do to you because they don't consider you human.
They don't believe you have a soul. A human being with a soul, a free man, has a right to say what he
believes, not to hurt other people, but to express his views. And by the way, that thinking,
and not to pile on the Attorney General, who's a very nice person, but that thinking that she just
articulated on camera there is exactly what got us to a place where some huge and horrifying
percentage of young people think it's okay to shoot people you disagree with, to kill Nazis
for saying things they don't like. Why do they believe that? How did we get here? Is it the video games?
Is it the SSRI? Yeah, probably. But what it really is is 12 and then 16 years of indoctrination in our schools at the hands of people who tell them that, who say exactly what the Attorney General just said. Well, there's free speech, which of course we all acknowledge is important, so, so important. But then there's this thing called hate speech. Hate speech, of course, is any speech that the people empower hate. But they don't define it that way. They define it as speech that hurts people, speech that is tantam out to violence. And we punish violence, don't we? Of course we do.
they've been taught that every year of their lives.
And so naturally most of them believe it.
When Charlie Kirk is shot in the throat with a 30 out six on camera,
I doubt very many young Americans want to see something like that
or actually applaud the death of a man, a father, a husband.
But they've been told for their entire lives in schools
exactly what Pam Bondi just told them.
Well, there's free speech, but then there's also hate speech
and woe to those who engage in it because it's a crime.
That's a lie.
And it's a lie that denies the humanity of the people you're telling it about.
And so any attempt to impose hate speech laws in this country, and trust me, there are a lot of people who would like them,
there are a lot of people who'd like to codify their own beliefs by punishing those under the U.S.
Code who disagree with their beliefs, any attempt to do that is a denial of the humanity of American citizens
and cannot be allowed under any circumstances.
That's got to be the red line.
Because again, when they can do that, what can't they do?
And this is something, by the way, that Charlie thought about a lot
and that I had occasion to talk to him about a lot.
And I really don't want to make any of this about me
because it has nothing to do with me.
But I did have reason to have these conversations with Charlie a lot,
many, many times over the past three or four months.
And this began at an event
that he held in Florida in July, the TPSA MFest event, turning point event.
I often go. I always have the best time. I always see Charlie ahead of time. We have a cup
of coffee in a hotel room, talk about what's going on. In addition to being, of course, a conservative
advocate, he was also a conservative organizer, a coalition builder, and he was very involved
in politics in a way that I'm not, so it was interesting as hell. But it was also a way to
learn what young people are thinking about, talking about, because he was on college campuses all the
time. And what is the state of a couple of big debates that are happening within the Republican
coalition, particularly around foreign policy? And Charlie's views on foreign policy, which I think
are fairly well known now, a lot of people lying about them, were evolving, but had really evolved.
And who knows why he reached the conclusions that did? I think his Christian faith informed them
mostly. It was also the experience of talking to young people, and his views were very much like
theirs. He believed that the war on terror had been in net loss for the United States and it caused
incalculable damage, not just economic and physical damage, but spiritual damage to the United
States. It was bad. We got nothing out of it. We were only hurt. And he didn't want to see that
again, and he felt very strongly about that. And of course, I agreed. And so before that speech that I gave
in July, we had a conversation about this backstage right before I went on. And I was fulminating
and getting all red in the face like I often do to my shame. And I was mad thinking about this
and thinking about the effort by the neocons in the United States to draw us in to another
forever war with Iran. Not a defense of Iran, of course. It's merely an acknowledgement that we've
done this before. This happened in Iraq, which we entered into at the behest of those same
foreign policy strategists. And it didn't work. And so I was going on.
at some length backstage with Charlie, and I said, you know, probably not going to talk about
that. I'm not going to torture you. I know your donors hate this when I say that. And also
Epstein was in the news, and it was clear to me that, you know, Epstein's probably not like a
Mossad agent or something, but Epstein clearly had contact with Israeli intelligence and American
intelligence and French intelligence, but the only one you're not allowed to talk about is
Israeli intelligence. But it seemed true to me, and I had done some work on that. I knew
a bunch of people pretty close to that story.
So I thought that.
And I said that to Charlie.
And I said, but I'm not going to say that because I don't want to make your donors mad.
And I know it's just going to be like an endless flurry of text telling you to stop or you're going to lose a bunch of funding.
And he looked at me, I'll never forget it, and said, go all the way.
Do it.
Go all the way.
I said, man, you know, a lot of things I can talk about.
I don't need to talk about that.
And he said, do it.
So I did it.
By the way, I think that that conversation hit a mic on, and so did I, probably exist somewhere on somebody's server, but that's, I think, a faithful rendition of what he said.
And by the way, I'm not trying to blame him for my remarks.
You can agree or disagree with those remarks, but I'm saying this only because I was shocked and sickened by the reaction of the ghouish and really repulsive reaction of the Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, to Charlie's death.
basically made it all about him and all about his country immediately trying to take the energy,
the sadness, the grief that people felt over Charlie's murder, and redirect it towards support
for whatever project he's involved in.
And by the way, Benjamin Nanyahu is not the same as the nation of Israel at all.
Bibi is despised by many people in Israel.
And if you know people who live there, you know that that's true.
There are huge divisions within the Israeli government.
I mean, there are certain parts of the intel world in Israel that do not support some things that Benjamin Netanyahu has done recently.
So it's not the same as attacking Israel, attacking Bibi.
But I don't think I've ever seen anything lower than his attempt to hijack Charlie's memory and use it for his own political ends, particularly because what he said was completely untrue.
Charlie didn't hate Jews.
He loved Jews.
He had tons of friends who were Jews.
He loved the state of Israel.
He loved going there.
He did not like B.B. Netanyahu, and he said that to me many times.
times and he said to people around him many times. He felt that BB Netanyahu was a very destructive
force. He was appalled by what was happening in Gaza. He was above all resentful that he believed
Netanyahu was using the United States to prosecute his wars for the benefit of his country
and that it was shameful and embarrassing and bad for the United States. And he resented it. Didn't hate
Netanyahu. He wasn't out there with a placard saying.
that, but he certainly expressed that to me and a lot of other people. And there's no question
that BB's defenders on the internet will call me a liar or a kook. But that's a fact. And
enough text messages exist that I think it can probably be verified in pretty short order,
not that it needs to be, because that is true. Shortly after that speech, there was a very intense
attack on Charlie, and to some extent of me, not that I really noticed, but on him, I have no donors.
He had $100 million worth of donors.
And so because he was involved in a different project from just yapping on the internet,
which is what I do for a living, he was dependent to a great extent on his donors, of course.
It's a nonprofit.
And they went after him and tormented him.
Not all, of course, many were supportive, but the ones who were offended by my speech,
and there was a small, very intense group who were tormented Charlie Kirk until the day he died.
Two days before he died, he lost a $2 million donation because he had.
publicly pledged to bring me to the next turning point conference in December.
And he told me, over the past couple of months, he was losing a lot of donations over that
pledge. They put out a flyer basically saying that I was going to be at this event giving
a speech. And so he would text me and say, man, I'm really taking a lot of heat for this.
And people are really mad. The American Jewish committee called in a statement, Charlie Kirk,
an anti-Semite and, quote, dangerous. Charlie Kirk, an anti-Semite. He was not an
anti-Semite. He was the opposite, and he was not dangerous. He was a great lover of people and a
purveyor of peace. He was the opposite, and he was very stung by that. Those of us who've been
called names for a long time are a little bit harder to offend. Charlie was deeply offended by
that and expressed some of those feelings on Megan Kelly's show and in other places. But that
did not let up. The reason I'm telling this story is because he called me and then came to see me at my
house about this topic. And I said to him every single time, look, I've got my own way to
communicate my views. This is actually not the most important issue to me. Lots of things I can talk
about. I don't need to come to turning point. I can take a year off. No problem. I hated seeing
how much he was suffering the hassle he was getting from people. And I was being attacked too.
By the way, it was a huge effort. I wasn't fully aware of it actually because I don't go online that
much, but there was a huge effort by people, some of whom I know and have helped and like Seth
Dylan, the Babylon B, for example, someone who had his own problems with free speech, who was
famously canceled. I like Seth Dillon. I had him on a couple of times. I had dinner with him
to show support. Seth Dillon was out there demanding that Charlie Kirk take me off the roster,
pull me off stage, because I had said things that Bibi didn't like or that he didn't like or
whatever. Shocking that someone whose whole persona is wrapped.
up in the idea that we all get to speak, and if you don't like it, make a more compelling
case, that that person and many others like him were advocating for me getting pulled off
the stage because they don't like what I'm saying. This is a trend and one that we should
be really concerned about. It's not just about Israel, by the way, at all. The trend is really
simple. People with power don't want to hear disagreement. They don't want to be challenged,
ever. That's why we have free speech to acknowledge that even those of us or people with less power
still have a right to talk because they're human beings. You don't own them. So time after time,
Charlie would call me or come to see me and let me know, wow, or show me text messages. These people
are really mad that you're speaking. And I would always have the same thought. Well, I feel pretty
moderate, actually. I've never been an Israel hater. Obviously, I'm not an anti-Semite. I just don't want
more wars. And I don't want a foreign country humiliating.
my country and telling us what our laws have to be. I mean, this seems like pretty basic America
first stuff. And he would say, I totally agree with you, but they want you off the stage.
And I would always say, no problem. And he would say, no, it's important. It's a matter of principle.
I want you to be there. Great. By the way, I'm not accusing anyone of being involved in that murder.
I'm not trying to mutter darkly or imply anything. We don't, there's a lot we don't know about
who murdered Charlie and why. But I don't know, and I'm not going to pretend that I do. But I think
it's important to say that out loud because it's a fact, and there are many liars out there
trying, Bibi Netanyahu, number one among them, shamefully, who are trying to distort the truth,
a truth that I know and can prove. And the last thing I'll say about Charlie is that his
views were changing on topics that had nothing to do with foreign policy, you know,
the famous kind of red line, third rail, can't talk about it. But it's possible.
that the subject that makes people even matter in Washington, New York, and L.A. than having
nonconventional foreign policy views is having nonconventional economic views. Man, they really
don't like that at all. And Charlie's views on economics and on the way that wealth is distributed
in the United States were changing fast, really changing fast and hardening. Not because he was a socialist,
hardly. He was about as much of a socialist as I am. Not at all. But because he lived here. And he's
spent a lot of time with young people, and he couldn't help but notice because he was an
observant and honest person, that they're not thriving at all, and that the chances they'll have
lives comparable to the ones they had growing up are very small. Most of them won't have
houses. They won't own anything. They'll be in debt. And for that reason, they won't get married
or have children. And so the people who are born here won't continue their legacy in the United
States. It's the end of our civilization. And the root of a lot of this is spiritual, but the
Root is also economic. And it raises a question, a basic question of fairness. And I tried to
address us in the speech that I gave for Charlie in July. I don't think I did a very good job
and it was misinterpreted, but I invoked Bill Ackman. And the point I was making, nothing to do
with Bill Ackman being a criminal or even being an Epstein friend. I mean, I don't really know
anything about that. I don't know much about, I'm not accusing Bill Ackman of a crime and I'm not
accusing him of, you know, being a sex creep or a massage age or anything like that. I don't
think that. I don't know that for sure. And I wasn't trying to say it. What I was trying to say
is that Bill Ackman is not creative, not particularly intelligent. Bill Ackman is worth
$7 billion. So you have to ask, like, how? And it seems to me that Bill Ackman is rich for the
same reasons that a lot of other people I know are rich because he's hyper aggressive and he's
well connected. And my only point was if you live in a society that awards the spoils to people
on the basis of those two qualities, like the most aggressive, the best connected people get the
richest, that's a dysfunctional society. There should be a reward for creativity and decency and
hard work, steadfastness, following the rules. Like you should have to add to the sum total
of your society, you'd think.
It's not an argument against the free market.
It's the argument against whatever we're living through right now.
This is really dark and ugly.
And if people like Bill Ackman are getting the richest,
what does Bill Ackman done shorted the market or something?
Talked down herbal life?
I mean, I'm not even saying that should be illegal.
All I'm saying is, if that's one of the richest guys in your society,
you've got a very sick society.
I don't think Bill Ackman's like a drooling idiot or anything,
but like, what was the last time you heard Bill Ackman say something constructive or creative?
Like, never?
So it's just bad.
And it's not just about Bill Ackman, of course.
I mean, he's just a minor player in the life of the world, but he's a kind of metaphor for how
off track we've gone.
And that doesn't seem like a socialist point.
Once again, I'm hardly a socialist, and neither was Charlie Kirk.
That seems like a Christian point.
Fairness is at the root of the Christian story.
People will be judged not by who their parents were or by how they look, but on their
hearts on themselves, on choices that they made. That's fair. So again, fairness is essential to
the gospel and it's essential to any working society. In a fair society or a society that
its citizens believe is fair, people will comply voluntarily with the rules because they don't
think the game is rigged. But in a society in which Bill Ackman, Bill Ackman, makes $7 billion, and like the
smartest, hardest working, most interesting, creative young people you know can never own a home
in a society like that, you're going to get Mum Donnie as mayor. You're going to get a lot of
bad things because people will opt out of the society because they know it's not fair. It's rigged.
That's the only point I was trying to make. And Charlie, not surprisingly, made it much more
eloquently, I thought in an amazing interview, the last interview I did with him, late July
of this year. Here's part of it. We know how to create wealth, but we don't know how to
to create it for the generation that needs it most. If you look at the economic conditions,
you would think the other conditions surrounding it are like abject poverty. These are the problems
that like third world nations have. I know. Our young people can't afford stuff and they have to
finance their basic necessities. And yet we're the wealthiest nation in the history of the world
on the planet. We have a 37 trillion dollar GDP. We have the greatest companies and we've all
this stuff to brag about. And yet all of our problems would beg the question. And it's like this
inherent contradiction. We're super wealthy on one side, like a powerhouse juggernaut.
And we are like an economic nightmare on the other side. How did that happen?
So if there is such a thing as the left in the United States, if it still exists, you would think a message like that would at least get a hearing, a respectful hearing.
Like, hey, what about wages? What about the ability of young people to just buy a little house, the little yawn in some long?
on in some subdivision.
Like, isn't that kind of what they say they want?
Empower, you know, the most vulnerable, the people who try hard and play by the rules.
They called him a Nazi.
They didn't care that Charlie Kirk, in real life, spent his time trying to stop war,
trying to, you know, figure out how young people could buy a little house somewhere.
Aren't those like left wing goals?
No, they didn't care at all.
and in fact they hated that because they're for war because they're for death because they're for the
inequality he described because it leads to a volatile society that empowers them of course
they're not a check on power the professional left the trans community they're the shock troops
of power charlie kirk was a check on power charlie kirk inspired by his christian faith stood up to
people fearlessly to say what he thought was true. And for that, I will always love and
admire him. I want to go down to someone else who loved and admired him and knew him well and
played a pretty, I think, important role in the final months of his life. And that is my
old friend, Megan, Kelly. Megan, thanks so much for coming on. Tucker, thanks for having me.
That was a barn burner man. You hit on some really important big points.
I don't even remember what I said, but I meant it.
So I just want to start to you.
You had this experience last week that I, you know, I've always prayed I never have.
You were on live, you were live when the news came in that our friend had been shot in the throat.
And your reaction was captured for all time on camera.
And I just want to start by playing it.
I thought it was just an incredible moment that said so much about you and about him.
So here it is.
Oh.
except we don't have a side. Well, in it, you said, the line that stuck out to me, your first
reaction was he was sent by God. That's the first thing you said. You'd not heard this news
before. Why was that your gut reaction to his shooting? Because I had spent so much time with him
over the past few years, just on the air, Tucker. You know, I never went out to dinner with Charlie.
I didn't know him quite like that, like a personal friend. But I'd had him on the show more than 15 times.
I'd been on his show repeatedly.
I'd been to multiple turning point events and, you know, talked with him backstage quite a bit.
Just done a lot with him professionally, a lot.
And, I mean, I wonder if he's been on anybody's show as much as he was on mine over the past couple of years.
And I got to know his thoughts on virtually everything.
And I saw what people are seeing now, how they were all infused with his Christian faith,
that he was a truly happy warrior,
that he gave almost everyone the benefit of the doubt,
that he had a much more positive
and optimistic outlook on humanity than I do,
and I think than you do.
I mean, I think we're a couple of cynical mofos.
And Charlie wasn't, Charlie was, he was like an angel.
This picture that the left is painting of him in the news
is totally foreign to my understanding.
of Charlie or to anything I've known. And I watched Charlie on his show, too. I know,
I know the things they say he said that were controversial. They just fundamentally choose to
misunderstand and misinterpret him. I mean, he was, you need look no further than Erica in order
to see that he was real. Like her goodness, her love, their love story, her strength in the wake
of his death. That's the woman he loved and that's a woman who loved him. Why? Because
he was some devil figure, the opposite. These two were as wholesome as you could find. And everything
he said was from his love of humanity and his belief that they could do better. I mean, I'm much
more like, no, they can't. Let's move on without them. Like we've got to, you know. And Charlie,
I mean, in all of these college campus exchanges, whenever talking about most people,
he would feel like everyone was, could be redeemed.
And if he could just get to them, if he could just talk to them, if he could just buoy them up with hope, they would do better.
They could see themselves as Charlie saw them, as God sees them.
And I just ran into that optimism and that positivity from Charlie so often that I really did see him as God's messenger, Tucker, as an angel sent to us.
And it's like we didn't deserve him.
I feel like he's gone now because we didn't deserve him.
Man, you are too deep for cable news.
No wonder you left.
That's just such a beautiful summation and so insightful.
I'm not sucking up.
I mean it.
I wish I had said half of that in my open.
But why is that so provocative?
I've been thinking about this since he was murdered.
Like, of all the people that we know in our business, you know, the kind of, let me give you my opinion business.
I think it's fair to say he was the kindest.
I mean, for real.
And in private, too.
even people he was really mad at he would always say well i try you know i understand where that person's
coming from it's like wow he his decency was a challenge to me who struggles to be that um why
why why why was that so offensive to people yes it was power it's it's so much more powerful
frankly than negativity negativity negativity yeah it's infectious you know it's a contagion it it's like a
magnet for people, whether they like him or not. They're drawn to him, and he was converting
people. So he was a huge threat. That's really, like, I've been asking myself this question a lot
over the past week. You know, let's take the accused shooter in this case. Yes. And let's say,
okay, this was, it was motivated exactly as the authorities say. And he was, he thought Charlie is,
too hateful. And this is a guy who's into furries and he's into trannies and he's living with one
and, you know, all the things. Why would Charlie have been targeted by this guy for that?
Why would it be Charlie? You say all the same things. I say all the same things. Most of the people
in our space and in conservative or independent media say those things. Why? Why Charlie?
And sadly, I think it's this factor. It's this magnetism from him, this positivity that
this aura, like that this angel-like aura around him that was so incredibly threatening, way more
threatening than the rest of us because it was powerful. And it was winning people over.
It was converting people at a rapid rate. And not just any people, but young people, you know,
the people who had never been converted before, the people for whom people who talk like you
and talk like me had never even tried. They weren't even players on the field. It was,
they were seated in the whole battle. And he said, no, no, no.
no, no, no, we're not seeding them. I'm going to start at 18 to speak into them in a way that they
can hear and understand me, and I'm going to practice it. You know, for the past 13 years, he practiced.
He went out campus after campus. Then in the beginning, he wasn't as good as he was in the end.
He was good, but he wasn't as good. And so it was a skill he developed over time that made him
more and more threatening, more and more effective. And you look at the numbers just in the presidential
election. It's not an overstatement to say that Donald Trump has Charlie to thank for
his election in November 2024, swinging the youth vote by nine points. We've never seen
anything like it in the past hundred years. You don't swing the youth vote toward a Republican,
nothing in modern presidential politics. So he was a really integral, hugely important player,
even though he was so understated and projected zero ego. So you didn't see him like that.
He didn't have sort of the swagger of that in most of his public opinion.
appearances. He was quick to subjugate himself to whomever he was talking to, but he was way more
important than he ever let on. And I think that's why he was perceived as such a threat. That's why
him saying the things others would say carried an extra layer of threat, both to this shooter
and to Charlie's many detractors. And I just want to add as a period to this, as a footnote, I guess,
to this, Tucker, you have a lot of it too. And it is the reason why Charlie is not the only one
who's been threatened or was threatened to cut ties with you or not platform you. I too have gotten
that, especially since you've been more outspoken on Israel. And I couldn't care less the amount
of pressure they put on. I'm like, what are you talking about? This is madness. Why would you want to
silence such a powerful, important voice just because you disagree with them on one subject,
one on which we've all watched you sincerely evolve. As you grapple with principles, you've been
espousing for years like America First, like what's happening to Christians, like what's best
for us and our kids here? How do I keep them safe? That's my number one priority. And I've been
just absolutely disgusted and recoiled from people who have tried to pressure me on it.
It, of course, never happened. But I know from speaking,
to Charlie, he felt it to. You've heard it from Charlie that he felt. And there is a layer here
of nefarious pressure to have certain narratives go only one way. Yes. That must be called out and must
be fought. Well, I should have said in my open that when Charlie was denounced as anti-Semitic
and, quote, dangerous by the American Jewish Committee, you were too. That was a press,
I don't know if you've ever even seen it. And I just remember when I read that at the time thinking,
okay these are like two of the most pro-Israel basically pro-Israel people on the internet i don't
understand so i do i maybe we show this offline but let's just have it now i don't get that
why would you attack there are definitely people who hit israel who are not anti-semites or people
who are israel who are anti-semites there's a whole range and then there are like people who
have like you know religious reasons for wanting to blow up israel those are all threats
why would they be attacking you and Charlie and honestly I feel like me I mean what is that
why attack people who are pretty reasonable who don't want to get into a fight on the topic
who just want to like have their country thrive why denounce them as dangerous anti-Semites
what is that and let me just underscore for your audience what I had said I mean the sum total
of what I had said when they started coming for me just to show the absurdity of this I had
said on Pierce Morgan that Israel was losing the PR war, that they had lost the Democrats and
the independents and were starting to lose the Republican Party in America. And it was time to
wrap it up, which was a quote from Donald Trump who had said it a year earlier when he was
still a candidate. Time to wrap it up. That's what I said about Israel. And then at turning point
at the at the Student Action Summit with Charlie, we talked all about Epstein in my appearance
there. It was all about Pam Bondi, frankly. And we talked about whether he might possibly be
an asset for someone. And I said he might be. And Israel, yeah, would make sense to me. Didn't know,
but that's one of the things we should consider and look at. And that will conclude the list of
things I said about Israel, that after two years of going on the air and defending them every week
turned some weird crowd into she's an anti-Semite. So I mean, F these people, because it's a lie.
it was even more of a lie about Charlie who had said even less than me.
He had said nothing, like absolutely nothing.
And they use those terms about him because he was on the other side of me when we had that
discussion and because he hosted you and because he had the nerve to invite Dave Smith
in a debate because he allowed one side to be represented.
And he had the Israel side fully represented too.
So this was just such an unfair accusation.
And I don't know why the, you know, these very very.
very ardent advocates don't accept friendship when you offer it, when you've proven that you are
genuinely a friend. I've said openly, Tucker, there's no, I'm not, I don't want to debate.
I'm on their side. There's no reason to put somebody on this show so they can convince me that
Israel's right. I'm on their side. I agree with that. But in response to those comments and then
ultimately having Marjorie Taylor Green on where we criticized APEC, I mean, who defends a lobbyist
group? They treated me like I was Medi Hassan. Not everybody.
you know, but like the loudest Israel defenders.
And to turn around and call Charlie Kirk and anti-Semite is such a disgusting smear.
Then you're right, he's young.
You know, he was young and wasn't used to being attacked like that by people who supported
him and people whose donations are actually really important to the ongoing existence of
his organization.
And it took a lot for him to say no to them.
And it took a lot for him to be honest about the fact that his opinions had evolved.
And let's face it, Charlie was like.
an unofficial spokesperson for the youth of America, in particular conservative youth.
And I don't know if people have checked, but they no longer support Israel.
Everybody under 30 is against Israel. Charlie was 31.
And so as a friend, he's saying to them, as same way I, as a friend, I'm saying,
I am telling you, you've lost Dem's independence and you're starting to lose Republicans.
You need to wrap it up. You've had a two-year long leash.
I know you want your hostages back, but this cannot go on until you have every hostage
that's just not going to, you're going to lose every friend you have. And that's what he was saying
because that's what he was hearing from his constituency. And so what he did to them was
brave and noble to the donors who were very, very pro-Israel. It was brave and it was noble.
He did not deserve to be smeared over it. And look, I like you, have zero belief that this had
anything to do with his death. But it's part of the larger narrative that you're making, that he
was a truth teller, that he was a fearless truth teller, and that there were a lot of pockets
when he turned to them and said those truths that grew extremely uncomfortable. And whether it
was some too online, disgusting, messed up, 22-year-old in Utah or, you know, somebody who
couldn't stand his messaging that was very frank around race or around Islam.
whatever. Take your pick. He's said the hard picks, hard truths on all of these things. I think a lot of
people have to have a really ugly conversation with themselves now in the wake of his death about
whether they added to the hate surrounding him. And for Benjamin Netanyahu really tormented Charlie,
we talked about it many times. He tormented Charlie and his advocates tormented Charlie.
For him to run around saying that Charlie died for Israel is just too much. It's just disgusting.
And as his friend, I feel morely bound to say that. That statement was out of line.
No, I agree with you. And I'd never talk about BB Netanyahu. I don't really, I don't think much about him. I don't. I just don't. I have the opportunity to interview him a couple months ago, and I declined. I'm just not, no, I just don't want to. I just don't want to platform him. I didn't actually, frankly, want to do all the work that I would have to do to sufficiently interview him in a way that would be, you know, tough as I do when I have any foreign leader in my crosshairs. I just wasn't interested. I, whatever. For him to do what he did was wrong. It was deeply, it was a
moral wrong to sit out there and read part of Charlie's letter and try to have the final say
on Charlie's pronunciations about Israel. And he knew that they weren't the full story. And he's a
foreign leader. He's not an American leader. So how dare he? You know, at best, you come out there,
you say, I'm so sorry for this loss. My prayers to his family. That's it. He was out of line, Tucker,
and I as not even a Netanyahu critics saw it very clearly and talked about it today on the show, too.
Can I ask you about next steps? I'm always wary of people who want to. I just want to ask you about two issues. One, are hate speech laws, which I'm paranoid about, but I think we should be. And two, is the effort by one person in Congress, Marjorie Taylor Green, to get the federal government to ban sex changes for children. And she can't seem to get that done. So are we going to get hate speech laws, do you think? Pam Bondi seems to suggest we are. And two, are we ever going to ban?
the mutilation of kids.
So on the hate speech comments, that was an absolutely ridiculous comment she made today.
I mean, it was absolutely foolhardy.
There's just no way she doesn't know what she said is legally unsound.
There's just no way she was attorney general of the state of Florida and became U.S.
Attorney General and doesn't know that.
So it does worry me because does that mean she's actually pushing for a policy change?
Because it's just no way she doesn't already know what she said is wrong.
There has been reams of Supreme Court precedent on it.
And she knows that. So is this about policy change? She tried to wiggle off of her original point as the day went on, as incoming came almost universally from the right, that she had said something very, very wrong constitutionally and vile as a moral principle. And we've been fighting against this for decades on the right. Like what is she saying? She sounded like a Merrick Garland. She sounded like an attorney general Kamala Harris would have put in place. And so she tried to pivot off of it as the day went on and tried to
make it smaller. And you know, all I'm saying is violent threats, criminal threats are
going to be punished. Well, yes and no, it depends on the threat. There's actually only a sliver
of threats that is actionable under the law. So you're getting closer, but you're not quite
there. You're giving, again, still wide a birth to attacking free speech. But yeah, it is true
that certain threats, true threats can be ruled unconstitutional. You could go after somebody.
So she does worry me. And, you know, I'm not, Trump was asking.
about it, and he kind of made a funny joke about it going after the ABC news interviewer who
asked him the question. But I think Trump will see that there's so much resistance to this
on the right that he won't let her do that. He won't let her push for it. He won't let the
Republicans do it. I just have to think Trump reads his base better than she does. Yeah, I agree
with that. And speaking of reading your base, and I've got to thank the president's for this.
I don't know why Speaker Mike Johnson has held it up. But I mean, we don't like kids get tattoos
or smoke cigarettes, but we do let ghoulish doctors who are getting money for doing it mutilate
children. Like, why can't Marjorie Taylor Green get a hearing on this legislation? I don't understand it.
I don't know. I don't know the answer to that. I mean, like this, they chalk this up to,
oh, it's a spending resolution. We're just going to continue, you know, the spending that's in place
until, right? It's like, okay, you're funding mutilations of children. And not just the mutilations
that are done with surgeries, you're funding with these, you know, puberty blockers into cross-sex
hormones, sterilization of minors who cannot possibly consent to that. And not just sterilization,
but actually the end of all potential for sexual pleasure. How does a 12-year-old understand
that he's sacrificing that with your weird experiments on him? It is truly a moral scourge
what we're doing to our children. And I don't actually, I'm sorry to say I don't have a lot of
faith that that's going to get a ban at the federal level, which means it'll be left to the
states, which means if you live in a blue state, it's, it's go, you know, have at it,
go ahead and mutilate children and sterilize them and deprive them of sexual pleasure
because it makes you feel good. It's not dissimilar to the left saying Trump shouldn't
add additional law enforcement. They shouldn't accept additional law enforcement where he wants
to send it because it's racist to let black people live. It's racist to let them live in peace
to not be carjacked in these inner cities, which are predominantly African American. That's
the left is telling us that it's racist for Trump to send those troops or even volunteer.
And they're saying the same that what's good for children, what's kind, what's, you know,
the honorable thing to do is to let deranged parents chop off children's healthy body parts
and sterilize them because that's what that's what an evolved person would do.
And so that like that's another thing that this angel sent to us would speak very frankly about
and threaten all these people.
who have a constituency, whether it's someone with a last name Pritzker, who actually has money
invested in the transing of children, that governor's cousin is one of the big funders of all these
school pushes on the trans issue, or somebody who just gets Jones out of saying they're, you know,
going to open the prisons and let black people not get arrested for the crimes because they just
think that's beneficial, I guess, somehow to other black people who are usually their victims.
Never mind the race of the victim. It's not beneficial to any.
of us. In any event, I don't have hope on that front. We're going to keep fighting. But if they
don't ban it at the federal level, which I don't think they're going to, we're never going
to get all 50 states to ban it. I think it would be worth reading a daily roll call of people standing
in the way of that because that's the kind of crime that historians will reel in horror
that we allowed. I think your remarks about Charlie at the beginning were like some of the wisest
I've ever heard. And I'm actually going to look at the tape because I was so impressed by what
you said and moved by it. So Megan Kelly, thank you for taking time late at night to do this.
I appreciate it. Great to be with you, as always. Thank you.
All right. Well, we have someone joining us now who are just really, really grateful to have,
someone who has been famous for decades for a different skill. And in the last 10 years,
has really emerged as a consistent voice of wisdom online.
And never interviewed him before, but really happy to, I don't think.
Scott Adams joins us now.
Scott, thanks very much for doing that.
Thanks for having me, Tucker.
Yeah.
We talked once before quite a few years ago.
And it was on Fox News, and I've just erased that whole part of my brain.
It's like CTE or something.
I can't really remember what I did there.
I think I'm ashamed of some of it.
But anyway, tell us what you think.
the lesson of Charlie Kirk's life and death are.
What strikes you immediately?
Well, you know, one of the big questions is how did somebody get to that place
where it seemed perfectly reasonable for them to get a gun and shoot a living human being?
Yes.
And some people know in your audience that I'm also a hypnotist.
I'm a trained hypnotist.
And so I tend to look at these situations through that filter.
And through that filter, you can see a really clear cause and effect.
You know, starting around, let's say, 2016, there was wall-to-wall, Hitler, Hitler, Nazis, 24 hours.
Before that, there had been other Republicans who had been accused of being Hitler.
But I think that everybody treated it like hyperbole.
You know, it's just, you know, it's a political insult.
And it's the most common one.
So you don't take it too seriously.
Yes.
But imagine being a young kid and growing up when the news, the people in nice clothing would go on TV.
And they would say, in all seriousness, you know, he's basically Hitler, the Nazis are coming.
And you would create a mass hysteria.
Now, a mass hysteria would be worse than TDS or Trump derangement syndrome,
because that would be sort of what happens to an individual, you know, that could have TDS.
But if you have a lot of people who have TDS and they start talking to each other, pretty soon you've got a mass hysteria.
And the mass hysteria created this, what I call a Hitlerian bubble, meaning that a lot of people are living in what they think is a reality that is just completely Hitlerized.
They see Hitler everywhere, and they see it in Trump, they see it in his lieutenants.
And this is different.
So this is not like what we've seen before.
All it takes to completely brainwash somebody to believe ridiculous things,
even things that their observations should tell them are not true.
All you need is people in good suits whose job makes them seem incredible
to say day after day, it's the repetition that matters.
Hitler, Hitler, Hitler.
And you convince people that they're living in the hellscape,
and they better do something about it.
So the main thing I saw was that.
And once the bubble is formed, it's hard to get out.
You mean, you can't talk people out of it.
There's no amount of information will change their mind.
Cognitive dissonance will kick in if you show them a counter example.
And the weird thing about Charlie, who I never met, by the way,
I didn't have the pleasure.
The weird thing is that when I started hearing all the accusations,
and there were a lot of them, I said to myself,
well, I bet some of these might be a little bit true.
So I started to look for the original quotes, et cetera.
None of them are true.
And there were a lot of them.
They were all either a made-up quote or a quote and a context,
and nothing else.
And when you hear people talking about it,
especially the young people.
They'll say things like,
he was a bad hater person,
but there's no example.
So that's sort of the sign that's, you know,
a mass hysteria because they can't give reasons.
And they don't seem too interested in the reasons.
They're just sure that something has to be done.
Now, on top of that, for the young people,
there's probably also an economic pressure.
You know, they might feel that life doesn't have a positive path.
So that might be playing into this a little bit.
as well. But I do wonder what will happen, and I predict that there's going to be another big
bubble of psychological distress, when the people who have said such bad things about him in
public realize that none of it was true. Because over time, it looks like he's going to be
talked about so much that we'll finally have a complete body of information about him so we can
understand them and it won't happen to most people most people will just have cognitive dissonance
they'll still believe he was you know Hitler Jr but there's there will be some people you know not
not a big percentage we're going to realize that they did something so shameful that it will
haunt them for the rest of their lives that that they were part of saying something terrible
about one of the best people that we've witnessed I mean he genuinely was a
high character in person and you can see him and everything he did so uh there's something big
coming up yeah but then another thing that happened that was fascinating to me because i didn't expect
it which was the democrats have always had what i'd call them machine which is that since they
worked with the media you know they had the media in their pocket you would see it happen when they'd
have some all right our message this week are these words and then everybody would say the same
words and then the media would just pump it out so it's like this big well-functioning
machine and then they had the NGOs and all the funding tricks etc but when charlie kirk died
you could almost feel this massive energy being released you know he he sort of controlled it
but when it was released you know his his mortal coil was no more i feel like that energy just
went into people and suddenly tens of millions of people simultaneously said what can I do what can I do
right now that's different people don't say I'm going to stop everything tell me what to do I'm going to
church a lot of people did I'm going to say stuff on social media I'm going to hunt down the people
who said bad things and cancel them but I'm going to do something you know we're we're going to
figure out how to start another chapter of T.P. USA. And all of that's happening. And it doesn't
seem to be slowing down, you know, the vigils, et cetera. If anything, the energy, it might be
growing. And I've never seen anything like it. In my life, I've never seen the Republicans turn
into their own machine. And now it is a machine. And it's going to be incredible. So, you know,
I was thinking yesterday it sounds like a joke but it's quite serious the thing that protects the
Democrats from you know also having some kind of problem like this is that they don't have any
leaders that are worth taking off the board I mean if you said to me somebody's got a plot
to take Tim Wals off the board I would say oh no no if you're a Republican you want to keep
it there because he's not doing a good job you know
your Jasmine Crocas, your Chuck Schumers, I say, please, keep them right where they are.
They're doing a great job.
Nobody needs to harm them.
But on top of that, I don't believe that Republicans, conservatives ever even think that way.
I've never heard one say anything suggesting violence, like not even in just a casual conversation,
the joking way you might do it in private, nothing like that.
And I think it has to do with the fact that overall, the conservatives, the Republicans,
maggot people tend to look at Democrats almost as if they're clowns.
They say things that literally make me laugh.
No joke.
I sound like Biden there, but I literally, that frightened me a little bit.
I literally will watch the news and watch Republican, you know, prominent people.
talking because I think it's funny. And when they watch, when the left watches the right,
they think they're watching monsters. Yes. So you can imagine how that somebody wanted
to kill a monster, but nobody wants to kill a clown. Well, maybe somebody does, but, you know,
so far Republicans have not wanted to kill any clowns. And I do think, well, first of all,
the cancellations we're seeing, I have a little bit of mixed feelings about it.
it because my point of view is that the people involved who are getting cancelled are themselves
brainwashed and i don't mean that in sort of the um i don't know they the hypothetical way or anything
like i mean actually literally they've been exposed to the strongest brainwashing you could have
which is about eight years of wall-to-wall hitler hitler hitler and you know charlie's one of the
generals so if you can't get to the hitler you're thinking well you're you're thinking well you're
You know, maybe one of the generals would be less protected, and that was the case.
But I feel a little bit bad for them because they're victims, too.
But at the same time, the way society works, you can't let them get away with that.
So, you know, there has to be some reckoning.
And I am enjoying, I have to say, being a canceled person myself,
I am enjoying the Chadenfreude or the, you know, the catharsis.
of seeing that it can go both ways, at least for now.
And by the way, I do think that the violence goes in both directions,
but I don't think that there is an equivalent to a massive machine
that's been creating a situation that guaranteed there would be violence.
If you just keep saying Hitler and you're selling it not as hyperbole,
but you're selling it as absolute fact,
the people who don't have access to alternative theories
are going to believe that, and they're going to act on it.
So, and I like the fact that there's a little mutually assured destruction.
The left is getting to see a little bit of payback, reminding that the Republicans
aren't going to take infinite abuse.
You know, there's going to be a point where it's going to come back.
I kind of like that.
But I just, you know, overall, I wouldn't be proud of it.
you know the cancellations i do believe that they're they're brainwashed victims so me and i do wonder
yeah go ahead well i thought your description in brainwashing seems accurate is very distressing
to think that could happen in our free republic you know um the free and brave united states
i thought the people were more independent minded than that um so that's sad it's probably just human though
a weakness that we all share, the susceptibility to propaganda. But that, why would you want to hypnotize a
population or a portion of it? Like usually there's a goal in mind. What's the goal here?
Well, power. Democrats know that they can win an election that way. If they had better ideas and
better policies and charismatic leaders, I imagine that's what they'd go with. But, you know, Trump,
Trump enters the contest, and you have the most charismatic leader with sensational ideas,
according to at least his base, what are you going to do?
He's the common sense guy.
Are you going to say, we really do want the border open?
We really do want a little bit of more crime in our urban centers?
What are you going to do?
You don't have any kind of a rational attack to the common sense president who's been here before
and knows how to get this stuff done.
So it's just all they have.
And I don't know that it's,
I don't know that it's intentional
that they did it is so hard
that it guaranteed violence.
I don't think violence was the intention.
I think just winning elections was the intention.
Yeah, that sounds right.
So thank you for this, by the way.
Last question, where do you foresee this going?
Well, you know, it's unpredictable
because the cognitive dissonance
will cause people to think in a way that's non-standard.
That's exactly what it is.
So there might be a lot more of that coming.
But one of the things that's going to happen is it might be the last, what we call it,
the last straw that makes the entire Democrat situation collapse.
Because if you look at their situation, they're running out of money, they don't have good leaders,
they don't have ideas that can beat the competing ideas.
And they don't have momentum.
They don't have the podcast world.
The conservatives have that pretty nailed down.
Basically, they have the best talent for just about everything right now.
Just an amazing amount of talent in the right side of the world.
But then you add on top of that the emotions and the feelings that people got because of Charlie Kirk's death.
And that was probably the only thing missing was no.
matter what, I'm going to get to the voting booth.
You could have a hurricane and conservatives are going to crawl through glass to get to the voting
booth.
So I suspect we will see a number of votes from the Republicans like we've never seen before.
It could be sensational.
Scott Adams, I really am grateful that you took time to do this.
You look great.
Thank you very much.
Godspeed.
thanks so thanks i got a text earlier today from someone i sort of know saying
chank yuger why why is he on your show the young turks guy um isn't this a tribute to charlie
kirk why would you have some like screaming lefty on your show well precisely because
charlie kirk's life work was speaking with not just two but with people he disagreed with
vehemently i thought that our next
guest who's run the young Turks for probably almost 20 years now, I think. He can correct me if
I'm wrong. It was one of the most visible daily broadcasters on the left. The fact that he had
this kind of amazing exchange with Charlie Kirk, well, a couple of them, but one pretty recently.
I thought it would be worth hearing what he thought. So it is with pride that we announced our
next guest. Thank you, check for coming on. No problem, Tucker. Thanks for having me on. I think
It's important that we have a moment like this where we try to bring the country together.
Amen. I so strongly agree. You had this kind of famous exchange with him. I think it was 2018 at Politicon and it got super heated and bitter. And it was like, I don't know, things were viral in 2018, but it was viral.
And then you came back to a TPSA event. And I was amazed and impressed, both that he invited you and that you came.
and you still disagreed on some things, but it was, I mean, the tone was completely different.
Can you explain that? And better and great, I thought. Yeah. So first of all, in 2018,
that was the Politicon that I debated you.
Oh, okay. Sorry. We got along pretty well, as I remember. We did. We did. And Charlie was
debating my nephew, his son, Assam Piker. And, but I couldn't help myself because that's who I am.
And I, in the middle of their debate, I said something to Charlie when I, I wasn't on stage.
I was in the crowd.
And he yelled at me, I live like a capitalist every day, Chank.
And by the way, some people then thought that it was a racial slur.
No, that was just my name.
He was just slightly mispronouncing it.
So then actually something happened in between that moment and turning to point USA, America Fest.
So we were at R&C in 2024, and Charlie came by at our booth and said, hey, do you guys want to talk?
And we were a little bit taken aback by that.
We were really surprised by it.
And Anna and I, Anna Kaspare is my co-host on the Ann Terts, talked to it over and said, yeah, yeah, we would like to talk.
And so he came on the show.
And so we had our disagreements.
So it's interesting that you have me on here.
partly for the reasons that your friend texted you about how well that's strange right left and
right and and so i i don't agree with everything that you megan and and scott said about charlie i'm
sure right but but i think that's what makes it more interesting uh so the willing that the willingness
to talk to us even though we were so entrenched uh on different sides right and and so then when we
started the conversation, what wound up happening surprised us. So did we still have our disagreements
about the black pilot line, this, that another thing? Of course we did, right? But when we started
talking about corporate rule, he agreed. And I remember, like, I want to go back and watch the first
interview we did with him at the RNC there, because I was kind of shocked by it. It's like,
really, you're also worried about corporations having too much power.
and right because Tucker you can understand that that was a that was a left-wing position for a long time in this country
it was but but the battle has been joined and so that is an incredible development in American politics
that mainstream media I think has chosen to ignore because it's inconvenient for them then we got
into a specific topic which was banning private equity from buying
residential real estate and the idea behind that is private equity is the biggest bankers in the
world basically they they're the biggest financial institutions and they've started to buy all of
our homes now that creates a huge number of problems number one it drives up housing prices
that is why they are artificially high because so much more demand has come into the market
and i went to wharton business school so this is not complicated though this is econ 101 supply and demand
And so secondly, what the number one wealth creation asset that the American family has is their homes.
That is how we created the greatest middle class the world has ever seen.
And they're taking that from us.
And they're going to turn us all into renters.
And then we're going to be indentured servants to them.
Okay.
And the way that they are doing this is they are giving collectively billions of dollars to our,
politicians so this issue connects actually the the money and politics issue connects to
everything connects to corporate rule compared it connects to capitalism by the way which i want to
get back to connects to israel because it isn't about israel or any other particular lobby being
evil or dastardly or in charge it's the money that's in charge and so if uh big pharma
of Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, et cetera, give money to our politicians.
Well, then they pass absurd laws.
Like, we're not allowed to negotiate drug prices.
Right.
What in the world?
In capitalism, you're not allowed to negotiate prices?
Right?
I know.
And we talked about that, and he said, you're right.
That is absurd.
And we on the right already believe that, that it's absurd and that it's against capitalism.
Fantastic.
So look, you're right. We've been around a long time on the Young Turks. We were actually the longest running show in Internet history. And in that time, we've had, you know, we've been on for 23 years. We've had about 21 to 22 years of hardened battle, right? Fighting back and forth, fighting back and forth, right? And as anybody who's seen me online knows, I can get emotional. I can get passionate. And I'm not a wilting flower. I fight back for sure.
Sure, right? So what was amazing, though, was all of a sudden I didn't have to fight back, that on those issues, not every issue, and not on all the cultural wars, but on these economic issues, we have begun to agree. And why? Because the average guy is getting screwed, period. It doesn't matter if you're on the left or the right. You're both going to get screwed. You're both going to have higher housing prices. You're both going to have lower wages. You're both going to have higher drug prices.
And the people that brought you that is the donor class.
And so when we agreed to that, then I said, okay, well, now conversation has become productive.
We're not just yelling at each other.
For the first time ever, we are talking to one another, and more importantly, we are listening to one another.
So we did it again at the DNC, and then Charlie invited me to America Fest.
And I went there, and again, we disagreed on gun rights.
We disagreed on some trans issues, but we wound up agreeing on Dick Cheney and Mitch McConnell, for example.
Neither one of us like them, like either one of them.
I agree.
And, you know, Tucker, I'll say this.
And there's a lot more to talk about in that context.
But if you told me, you are going to go to a massive right-wing conference in the year 2025.
And what's going to happen is the crowd in unison is going to boo Dick Cheney.
If you told me that when we first started the Young Turks and we're railing against Dick Cheney,
don't go in Iraq, don't go in Iraq.
Cheney's lying, right?
And people are yelling back to support the troops, you're for Saddam and all this stuff.
If you told me, oh, don't worry in 27 odd years, that crowd will be booing Dick Cheney.
And that crowd will be booing Mitch McConnell.
they realize that the corporate class, the donor class is in charge and they hate it, I would have
said, oh my God, that must be a beautiful day in America.
Well, so this is what I admire about you. You're totally sincere about your principles.
Like you almost don't care who's agreeing with you. You believe in the idea, the principles.
So you're willing to make common cause with people you don't agree with in everything.
You're not partisan. And the second thing, I should just, I just want to say it out loud.
is that young Turks, whatever you think of your politics,
has had a stated commitment to nonviolence
from the very beginning, and you mean it.
And I just want to say that for people who don't know that,
and I want to thank you for that,
because I think it's really important.
And anyway, but so let me ask you,
how were you treated at Amfest at Charlie's event?
Yeah.
By the way, thank you for saying that, Tucker.
And the principle of nonviolence extends through everything.
so do not be violent to each other violence is intellectual surrender that's saying i can't win the
debate with my mind so i have to act like an animal and try to defeat that person physically but that
means you're surrendering and you're giving up it is it's the most immoral thing you could do it's
also the weakest thing you could do yes i go and but that's on not just on an individual level
that's also on a societal level so when we go to war that is in a sense weakness saying we could
not use our minds to resolve this issue. We could not resolve this issue as fellow human
beings. So now we're going to kill each other. So that is why we're anti-war and that is why
one of the most encouraging developments of my life is how anti-war the right-wing movement has
become. So that another great day in America. So it's still plenty of things we disagree on.
Yes. But agreeing on anti-war, agreeing on how the donor class is robbing both of us blind,
I mean, those are huge developments, right?
So now, how is I treated at Amfest?
I've got to be honest with you.
And so the reason why I preface it by saying I got to be honest with you is because sometimes when we go and talk to the right wing, and as you say, we haven't moved on a thing, right?
So folks come to us, and I have a simple principle, take the win.
Okay.
Take the win, exactly.
Like, so, okay, now you agree with me that anti-war is the right position.
position. Is my correct answer that I still hate you? No, that is not the correct answer. The correct
answer is, oh, thank God. Exactly. Right? And now we'll work on the next thing and the next thing and
the next thing. But for now, at least we had no agreements before. Now we have had a number of
really important agreements. So, but nevertheless, I had my share of critics on the left. You're
platforming it. I went to his conference.
I wasn't platforming him.
He was platforming me, right?
And second of all, stop with all the nonsense talk of platforming people, okay?
I agree.
Just listen to one another.
Talk to one another.
That's not a bad thing.
That's a good thing.
But what if you disagree?
And, of course, you're going to disagree.
It's America.
We're free.
We have no two human beings are the same.
Of course, we're going to disagree on some issues.
So if you can't handle that, then you can't handle
politics you can't handle media you can't handle America right so okay so with that giant
preface I'll say the people there honestly were universally wonderful um so they were and so you can
say oh well you know ha ha that means jen with the right way no I'm just telling you what happened
if they were jerks I would tell you that they were jerks but they weren't okay and and I've got to
say like this cancel culture it's not
exclusively left wing.
No, I know.
Tell me about it.
I mean, the efforts that some people made to keep me from speaking at the next TPSA thing,
people I agree with on a lot of things, by the way.
I don't disagree with Seth Dillon and everything, Mr. Free Speech Guy, trying to cancel me.
But I was, like, shocked by it.
Like, they really hassled Charlie and just drove him to, you know, to really fret and
drove him to anxiety over this.
Oh, no, no, no.
impulse is a human impulse and we need to resist it yeah so I love what you
guys said about hate speech and how it's unacceptable to pass laws on that not
acceptable yeah under no circumstances so and this is what I say on that
time so Charlie says some things about Islam that you know having grown up
Muslim I'm atheist now but my family's Muslim my background's Muslim I'm
proud of it he said some things about Islam that I was not a fan right at to say
the least i bet so so you know what i did in return uh i made my case so what so what's why is it so
like debilitating if someone says something that you find offensive i've said things that i'm
sure others have found offensive you have charlie has megan has so what then you say something
back okay we don't cancel we don't kill and killing is the most of
extreme form of cancel culture. So I despise cancel culture. And I have the honor of being,
having been canceled by almost every part of the political spectrum.
I know. Man, what, that was, that was really inspiring. And I'm going to text back the person
who texted me and say, did you watch that? That was wonderful. And I so appreciate you're doing
this. Thank you. And I hope you don't take too much abuse for it. And I'm,
sure you will, but I guess you don't care, so good for you. Thank you. That'll bounce off
me so quick. I just say this one last thing, Tucker. I mean, the idea of making laws against
hate speech in honor of Charlie Kerr. No, I know. Okay, that's like if I passed away and they're
like, in honor of Jenk, we're all going to go on a diet. Tell me about it. Or the Tucker Carlson
no pizza law? No, I agree. I agree.
Come on, that is the opposite of what I've did in my life.
And regulating speech is the opposite of what Charlie did in his life.
So let's all keep talking to one another.
Let's all keep listening to one another and hopefully use this moment not to create
further tragedy, but to begin to end the tragedies.
I'm proud to agree with that, you know, really, really strongly.
So thank you for saying it very much.
Thank you, Doug.
Great to see you. Thanks.
You too.
So we want to end tonight the way we began by talking about Charlie's faith and the effect on all of us from a spiritual perspective of his life and particularly his death.
There were reports that this Sunday church attendance was up dramatically, as people suddenly felt stirrings within them, that this, you know, had cosmic significance and that God is real, and this is a reminder that he is, which he is.
Josea Trenum is a Christian minister, and we are honored to have him now to put this in a broader spiritual context.
Thank you very much for coming on, Father Trenum.
So how would you say we should think about where this goes from here?
Like people seem to have a heightened spiritual awareness in the days after Charlie Kirk's murder.
How should we proceed?
Well, thanks a lot, Tucker, for having me on.
I appreciate your interest and desire to bring a priest into this conversation.
I think it's valuable.
I would say up front, we should be very careful to make any sort of conclusion from this
during this very intense time of mourning.
Yes.
You know, we Christians have a tradition, 2,000-year-old tradition on how to respond to death,
and we take our time.
This is day seven.
This is day seven.
Usually for 40 days, we mourn very, very seriously.
In the Orthodox tradition, for instance, when a bishop or a major leader of the church dies,
he's not replaced until the 40 days is done.
And that's not just out of respect for the person in this case.
Mourning Charlie, really processing what his loss means is very,
necessary to do and it takes time to do that and we're not going to be able to make good decisions
about the future without calming down and processing what we've gone through so this is the time
I think that we should be very careful we should mourn we should consign all bad memories
to the memory hole bad experiences is what we do for our loved ones when they die we
There's no benefit in remembering the bad.
We instead honor the good and try to imitate the good.
We try to, in the person's name, do good.
So this is my first thought, is really we should mourn.
We should be who we are.
And this is what Christian people do.
We should take our time about this.
I'm unfamiliar with this.
I'm embarrassed to say I don't know enough about it,
but I sense that it's rooted in something important and wise.
Can you explain a little more why 40 days and what Christians have done traditionally during
that 40 days?
What does it mean to mourn seriously?
Yeah.
Well, I share your sense of it not being something common anymore, which is why I'm presenting
it because it is so universally human, actually, and it's not just Christian.
The number 40, of course, is humongous in the Holy Scripture.
It's absolutely humongous.
And the 40 Days of Christ fasting, for instance, in the desert.
40 is a very important length of time that allows us to truly not make immediate reactions that we would regret.
And right now, everything is so raw.
Everyone who knows and loves Charlie, like you, this is a very dangerous time.
It's a very dangerous time.
dangerous time. You're being very courageous and you're actually processing this with people who
have known and respected Charlie, which is a fantastic thing to do. But a lot of people who are
in the conservative political movement are raging. They're very angry. I was watching a clip from
Matt Walsh yesterday and I saw that Matt was just out there saying that he is just overcome
with anger. I think that's understandable. Completely understandable. I have felt that. Yes.
I'm sure. I'm sure. But for us to respect this Christian tradition, to pray, typically in the Orthodox and the Catholic tradition, both, during the 40 days, we do good in that person's name. We actually do ams. We do charity in that person's name. In fact, you're doing that.
Maybe you weren't intentionally trying to do it in a traditional Christian way, but that is what you're doing by trying to help.
Erica and support her. I was very, very happy to see that you're doing that because it's
what we do. It's what we do in this period. We usually also pray for the person. We don't think
that a person when they die, Bing, they've made the transition to the next life
instantaneously. There are some in the Protestant tradition who think that. Not all Protestants
think that, but there are some, but the vast majority of Christians, Catholic, Orthodox, and some,
like the Anglicans. We actually pray for the souls of the departed. And we think, we use the image
of the story of Lazarus and the rich man from the Gospels, where Lazarus is the poor beggar. He's
neglected by the rich man. And when he dies, what happens? An angelic escort comes and picks him up
and takes him on the journey to the bosom of Abraham. For us, that is a journey. The
this process is a journey of for Christians of going towards the kingdom of God, but we don't
think that it's instantaneous. And so we're collaborating. It's part of what our funerals are to.
Our funerals are us gathering around the person and asking the Lord in his great mercy to receive
our brother or our sister and place them in paradise until we can see them again.
And we're also learning the lesson of sobriety.
We're learning the lesson of death.
We have to think about death and stare it in the face
because one of the great reasons we are so undeveloped, spiritually speaking, as a nation,
is because we don't face death.
Yes.
One of the reasons that we have an incredible revival going on all over the United States right now
is because of COVID.
COVID faced, it caused us to face death.
we had been hiding it you know we've moved our old people our parents and the sick
into old folks homes and hospitals and they die there usually not surrounded by their family members
and then some christian traditions now even do funerals without the body that is just nuts
it's just nuts and it steals it steals from us the very very important process of mourning
and uh facing death and it changes you you know in the orthodox tradition
In the Orthodox Christian tradition, the funeral service was written by one of the great theologians of the church.
His name is St. John of Damascus.
He lived from 650 to 750, an incredible hymnologist, incredible scholar.
He actually was a very important political figure at the time that Islam, his father and grandfather,
governed the city of Damascus.
And when it was taken over by Islam in the 7th century, the Muslims left the Christians in place,
for about 50 years because Muslims were Bedouin peasants.
They didn't have cities. They didn't have development.
And they couldn't run a city like Damascus.
So they let the Christians do it for about a half a century.
And then about 706, that was it.
And no more Christians in leadership.
And he became a monk at that time, John of Damascus.
And he wrote this incredible funeral service for one of his dear brothers.
And it's used to the state for the last 13 centuries.
And it's a deep reflection on the me.
misery of death, where John is looking into the grave and he is contemplating how horrible it is
for a Christian person to die and to see his soul be removed from his body, which is what
death is. It's the separation of the soul from the body. It no longer animates the body and it's
lifeless. And to see the body decay. And he says it happens to the rich and to the poor
exactly the same way all of the human you know uh differentiations that we make to
honor the rich and to neglect all gone all gone all normalized all brought to the dust by death
so i don't mean to belabor this but i think it's important for us it's important of course for
the immediate family for all of charlie's close family and friends to take their time
not expect that they're going to be able to just bounce back instantaneously and
get right back at turning points work. No doubt they will eventually, but I hope that they'll
take the time right now to pray, to mourn, to think deeply about the future and about how they can
honor Charlie's name. This is my hope. I think that's such a profound thing to say.
And anyone who has been present at the death of loved ones, I think it confirm that it
It's one of the most powerful and obviously crushingly sad, but also beautiful and inspiring things.
I mean, it absolutely changes you.
And it's hard to remain an atheist after something like that.
And we have been robbed of that experience.
So what are the signs of hope that you see now?
You know, I would say before hope, the sorrow of what has happened to Charlie is so illustrative.
of a dissent into a level of violence that, at least in my lifetime, and I'm only two years older
than you. I was born in 67. I think you were born in 69. You're a San Francisco. I'm an Angelino,
born and raised in Los Angeles. I have never seen anything like this, Tucker. I have never seen
anything like the violence that exists today in our towns. When I grew up in Pasadena, I as a young
boy, I went walking to school.
My mother let me stay out every night until the lights went on.
When the lights went on, I had to be home for dinner.
If I wasn't home for dinner, I was in trouble.
But she had no worries.
She had no worries.
No, in this last period, 10, 15 years, especially, violence has just absolutely exploded.
You know, Charlie reposed on the 10th of September.
Of course, the next day was the horrible, you know, remembrance of 9-11.
He died on 9-10.
have 9-11. This coming December is going to be the 10-year anniversary of the terrible terrorist
attack right here in the inland empire, just 10 miles from where I am right now, when 14 people
were murdered and 22 people wounded by a Pakistani Muslim couple that thought that they would
do something for Islam by shooting their co-workers. They were from a mosque, one mile from me right
now. That mosque already had two of their members in prison because of terrorist ambitions.
My own parish, just four months after that, was visited in the middle of a Sunday liturgy by a group
of Muslim young men who thought it would be fun to bring bullhorns in the middle of our service
and come outside the church and scream Allahou Akbar at our church.
church. And then, and this is, of course, Muslim terrorism, but now we also have this
rise of very, very serious leftist violence. And the whole country, I think, is reeling from
the assassination attempts on our president. And now an attack on, on Charlie, who wasn't a
politician at all. So I would say that if we're going to look for hope, it can't be fake. It can't be
We have to assess where we are.
And violence has a sin.
Violence has a very special, serious place.
You know, if you read the patriarchal histories
in the opening books of the Bible,
if you read Genesis, for instance,
Chapter 6, this is the account of God regretting
that he had made the human race.
What could the human being have possibly been doing
to make God regret having made us
And the consequence, Moses tells us, is that he sent a worldwide universal flood.
Moses articulated the reason.
The reason God did that and had to start over with Noah.
And in fact, he made Noah a second Adam.
He gave the same commission to Noah that he gave to Adam.
Be fruitful and multiply, fill the earth, rule it, and subdue it.
Why did he do that?
It says because the world had become full of violence.
Yes.
When you attack another man, when you attack another man, you attack God.
because every human being, as you were just saying so beautifully, is made in the image of God.
And so to attack a human is a direct divine offense.
Violence is extremely serious.
I'm not surprised that we have this level of violence in a culture that murders unborn children at the rate that we do
and have sustained it for the decades that we have.
Yes.
Really is any violence surprising.
do we have hope that's what you asked me so forgive me but that's the background that is how black
it is yes that is how black it is do we have hope and what's the future i would say that from without a
without a belief that god is merciful and that he loves the human race and that there's no sin so great
that if we repent of it, he will not send his love and forgiveness.
Without that belief, certainly we have no future.
The statistics are horrible for our country.
We are so captured by an ideology that is hopeless, atheism, strict secularism,
which is running our country now.
It is extremely hopeless.
Yes.
Without a major reconsideration on the part of our people,
a return to classic American virtues,
a recovery of Christian faith.
Without that, certainly we're doomed.
But we know from Christian history
that repentance is possible.
And it usually takes, in a national sense,
in a personal sense, it's up to us to repent and to believe.
In a national sense, it takes leadership,
leadership that is willing to address the important things
at the heart of national catastrophe.
We have been living through national catastrophe.
We have lost our faith in God.
All of our institutions have been captured by strict secularism.
Our law is godless.
Our universities exclude God.
our country has gone down a very, very serious, deep hole.
If we're going to get out, if we're going to have hope as a nation, we need leadership.
Leadership in the likes of George Washington.
I think our forebears, our forebears are ashamed.
My grandparents and America, they're ashamed at where we are, Tucker, as a nation.
our relationship to faith
our explicit commitment
to God are excluding him from
everything that's important in the miracle life
we have to repent and we need someone
give us God someone like a King David
give us someone like my patron saint
Josiah who was the last great king of Israel
who himself lived at a terrible time
his father and his grandfather
were both awful kings who had completely apostatized
abandoned the heritage of Israel
led the people to copy
the pagan practices of the surrounding nations
and forgive me, we're way worse than
pagans. I always tell
people, look, don't call
the secular nonsense that's
going on in America, pagan. That's an insult
to the pagans. The
pagans believed in the divine order.
They believed in the gods.
Okay, we don't believe that there are gods.
There is one god.
But the pagans at least knew they were
accountable to the divine order.
They were accountable to the gods and that they
had to live with respect to the wishes of the gods to call America, which has no reference,
most of our leaders make no reference to God at all. They act as though they are not accountable
to God's law. And I think that's far, far worse than paganism and a full-blown insult to
pagans to call it pagan. No, unless we have a leader who's going to address this, it needs to be
addressed, right? Directly. We need to repent and we need to recover our faith. If we do that,
times of refreshing will come from from god we couldn't we can be changed a new day can arise but it's
not going to be with a little fix it's not going to be with a little something here or a little
something there i've never seen i've been a priest for almost 33 years i've never seen
the radical interest in faith that we're seeing right now i'll tell you if i'm
I use my parish just as a little example. I have maybe, I don't know, little more than a thousand
active parishioners that are here regularly. And over the years of my ministry, I've catechized,
I've instructed and prepared people for baptism. You know, maybe 20, 30, 40, a really great year
would be 40 people. I have over 200 people in catechism right now. And this is happening all
across the country people are moving towards god moving towards faith if this continues and it
translates into lives that are rooted lives that are where faith is important where true repentance
has happened where this quest for just biological life as though that's somehow the sum
total of value is rejected. You know, if you study the scriptures, there's three types of life
that are described in scriptures. There's biological life. In Greek, it's called Dios, from
where we get biological, right? There's the life of the soul. Many Americans don't even know that
that exists. That's called Psyche. It's the life, it's the most noble part of you, right? Even
the Greek pagans, to use this again, knew that. The body is like a chariot and the soul is like
the charioteer, leading the person in nobility said that the body does virtue. The body does
something beautiful, right? If you don't think you have psyche, if you think you're just a body
and you don't have a soul, which by the way is the worldview of the major tech titans of our
country. This is why someone as noble as Elon Musk is becoming would stand up and speak to
the protesters in England when they were saying, what can we do? What's our future?
and he said what? He said, technology and AI. I promise you, Tucker, technology is not going
to save us. It is not going to save us. And to say that is so hopeless. If we are soulless
and we have greater technology, then the soulless are going to use that greater technology
to oppress us. Of course. We need to affirm what all reasonable human beings in civilized
countries except the modern nuts secular west if we don't recognize that a human being is more than his
body he has more than vios more than biological life he has the life of his soul siki and then there's
something that's most important which is eternal life aeonia zoi it's called in the scriptures
eternal life this is the life of god's kingdom these are the three fundamental lives two of them
we have stopped talking about for many decades, and the consequences have been tragic.
What a wonderful explanation.
Charlie Kirk was very interested in orthodoxy, as I'm sure you know.
And he was knowledgeable on it, too.
I'm not.
But I know that, but I'm interested.
But he was very interested in it.
Were you aware that?
He interviewed a friend of mine, Father John Strickland,
was a very respected Orthodox priest and a Russian scholar who's published extensively on Russian history.
And Charlie was very interested in that.
And I watched that interview and a few comments that he made afterwards in which he actually got very much into the mind of us Orthodox Christians
and explained why so many people are converting to Holy Orthodoxy.
And I thought actually he was spot on, very much spot on.
He said people are becoming Orthodox because they want something that.
is time-tested. They want something that's substantial. They want something that actually
informs culture, something that isn't just a plaything and can be categorized over just here.
Orthodox Christian, traditional Christianity in general, it is a lifestyle. It impacts everything
because Christ is king, and he's king over every aspect of our life and over civilization.
This is common knowledge. Europe, of course, you take a train through Europe.
Every town you go through, you're going to go through a town that has the best land given to the church,
and the church is going to be the highest building.
Because everyone knew, if you don't enthrone worship at the center of your community,
if you don't make the heavenly attachment to your earthly life,
you're robbing yourself of significance and you're trivializing yourself to just be limited to time.
The best thing that can happen in America is that people go to church,
root themselves in the one holy Catholic and apostolic church
because the river of life comes from the altar
out the doors of the church and vivifies society
and do we ever need to be vivified today?
Beautiful.
Father, thank you.
And before you go, I'm going to spell your name
for anyone who's made it to the end of this.
I never do this, but I think what you said is so wonderful
that I know that people are going to want to follow up.
J-O-S-I-H-Trenum.
T-R-E-N-H-A-M, senior pastor and director of your church.
So I know that people will want to know more about you, and now they can.
So thanks very much for joining us.
I appreciate it.
Keep going, Dr. Keep going.
Thank you very much.
Well, we're going to.
And we're going to, we will keep going.
We'll see if this format works.
I kind of like it.
Thanks a lot for joining us for an hour and 50 minutes.
We'll be back soon.
Thank you.