Episode Transcript
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0:00
Happy Monday. Welcome
0:15
to Sarah Gonzales Unfiltered. Hope you guys
0:17
had a great weekend. Happy
0:20
belated Mother's Day to all of you moms
0:22
out there and I appreciate all of you
0:24
who sent me messages of
0:26
well wishes yesterday on Mother's Day as
0:28
well. It was a wonderful day. So
0:32
I'm really excited about the
0:34
show today because you
0:36
know so often we talk
0:39
on the show about how you
0:41
know DEI is rotting corporations from
0:43
the inside out. I mean it's
0:46
extended everywhere. It's not just on
0:48
college campuses now. It's not just
0:50
affirmative action. It's like everyone has
0:52
a diversity requirement. And by
0:55
the way if you're white you're screwed. And
0:57
every time another story comes out
0:59
whether it's the FAA wanting to
1:01
hire like they're like we want
1:04
to hire mentally incompetent people and
1:06
also people with violent histories and
1:08
also definitely not white people basically.
1:12
Or maybe it's Mark Cuban literally saying
1:14
he's going he's planning on violating discrimination
1:16
law by saying he is going to
1:18
hire based on race and gender. My
1:21
commentary is always someone needs to
1:23
sue. Okay. Because
1:25
woke monsters are not going to be compelled
1:27
out of these hiring practices by convincing them
1:30
out of their woke ideology or I would
1:32
say at least convincing them to drop the
1:34
act pretending they actually believe this garbage and
1:36
aren't just doing it for virtue signal points
1:38
which I would say the vast majority of
1:40
them the Mark Cubans of the world don't
1:42
believe any of this. They just want the
1:45
virtue signal points. But regardless as
1:47
I often say for the issue of
1:49
you know the genital mutilation of children
1:51
this won't change their radical ideology. But
1:54
they'll stop if they're threatened with going
1:56
bankrupt. They'll stop if
1:59
the money train runs out. You want to discriminate against
2:01
straight white people? Someone's going to sue the hell
2:03
out of you. And that is how we stop
2:05
this. Well, someone is
2:07
doing just that. I want to
2:10
introduce you to Sarah Spitalnick. She
2:12
is a former law student who
2:14
is suing King and Spalding, a
2:17
major law firm that posted a
2:19
job application online that stated candidates,
2:21
quote, must be ethic, ethnically and
2:24
culturally diverse or a part of
2:26
the LGBTQ community to apply. You
2:29
can't do that. It's illegal. And the
2:31
EEOC has given her the green light
2:33
to pursue legal action in the form
2:35
of a determination letter stating she did
2:37
in fact have reason to believe she
2:40
was discriminated against. Welcome to the show,
2:42
Sarah. I'm so
2:44
happy that you're here. I am so happy
2:46
that you are doing this. I have been
2:48
calling for this for so long. Why are
2:50
we not suing the hell out of these
2:52
companies? And you are doing just that. Tell
2:54
me how all of this started. Well,
2:57
thank you for having me on. I'm really excited to be here. But
3:00
what happened was I was looking
3:02
for a summer internship for my
3:04
1L year between my 1L and 2L. And
3:08
I was on our job posting
3:10
site and found this site, which actually
3:12
worked well for me because an undergrad,
3:15
I worked a lot with diversity groups. I was
3:17
part of my major. So I was like, I'm
3:19
perfect for this. And then I read exactly what
3:21
they wanted. And I was like, well, I'm very
3:23
white and I'm very straight. So I'm not any
3:25
of that. So I immediately
3:28
filed at the EEOC because I was really
3:30
angry. I remember calling my mom telling her
3:32
like, oh my God, who does this? Right.
3:34
And I can't believe it's okay. So
3:36
I filed at the EEOC. And now
3:39
three years later, after a position statement,
3:41
a response going through mediation, we finally
3:43
got the right to sue and they
3:45
found a reasonable cause that came spalding
3:47
did discriminate against me. So my race
3:50
and sexual orientation. And
3:52
now we totally sued and we're
3:54
ready to hit the ground running with
3:56
everything. That's amazing. And so just for
3:58
reference. This took
4:00
how long three years? About
4:04
three years in a week because
4:06
I filed originally like February 4th
4:08
I believe or February 5th and
4:10
we got the determination letter and the
4:12
right to sue on March 13th. Wow I
4:15
mean just think about for a second now
4:17
you you're saying when you saw it back
4:20
back then three years ago a little over
4:22
three years ago say you were shocked would
4:24
it shock you if you see if you So
4:27
would it shock you if you saw it today
4:29
because it feels like since then you this
4:31
happened you three years ago It feels like
4:33
since then it's just been ramped up to
4:35
an unprecedented rate where it's just like everywhere
4:38
you turn They're just blatantly violating discrimination law
4:41
Yeah, it's getting worse and worse. Like I don't
4:43
think we've done any better since 2021 and Just
4:47
King's Baldwin's reaction to the
4:49
entire EEOC charge just showed
4:51
they don't care and they thought that this is no
4:53
big deal and I was just complaining
4:55
about nothing and that they were doing nothing
4:58
wrong when is Blatant blatant
5:00
violation of title 7 at
5:02
minimum. So they so they
5:04
denied all liability then Yeah,
5:07
they denied all liability They used all different
5:09
arguments trying to say that this was an
5:11
employment and it wasn't paid and all this
5:13
other stuff and EEOC could obviously
5:15
three see right through that and So
5:18
could me and my attorneys and that's why we ended
5:20
up filing the suit So just
5:22
for for reference here, too I mean, I
5:24
would imagine The time span of
5:26
three years there are a lot of hoops that you
5:29
have to jump through with the EEOC They have a
5:31
lot of complaints I'm sure there are a lot of
5:33
Karen's out there who don't actually have a case like
5:35
you do and they just want to Complain anyway, and
5:37
so they've got a they've got a sift through all
5:39
of these different complaints But I
5:42
read that this only the EEOC actually
5:44
green lighting a case Such
5:47
as the way that they did yours
5:49
only happens in like 2% of all
5:51
EEOC complaints. Is that right? Yeah,
5:54
most of the EEOC complaints they
5:56
get that actually get to a
5:59
decision phase immediate, they don't settle,
6:01
only about 2% actually
6:03
get found to
6:05
have reasonable cause that they think that
6:07
this was discriminatory employment practices. Wow. So
6:09
what happens next? What's the next step?
6:14
So next is my attorneys
6:16
will have the King's
6:18
balding served. They'll have 30 days to
6:20
answer and then we move on with
6:22
the regular court processes. So we do
6:24
motions and discovery and then if
6:26
nothing happens, we go right to trial. Wow.
6:29
So I just, it's
6:31
just getting so ridiculous, Sarah, that,
6:33
you know, I mean, I'm
6:36
saying this a little bit jokingly,
6:38
but kind of not that don't you
6:40
imagine what is, what is the, what
6:42
is the meeting like if you actually
6:45
apply for this position? Or do they
6:47
ask you like, what, what sexuality are
6:49
you, you know, what percentage
6:51
are you of minority? Like, what
6:54
in the world would this look like if someone were
6:56
to go in and they had questions about it? How
6:58
can you, how can you prove these things? Yeah.
7:01
I, you can't really prove your sexual orientation.
7:03
I'm pretty sure that's the whole case. Not
7:05
behind it. Right. Keep your mind closed. Don't worry
7:08
if someone can get you. That's
7:10
not the thing. You could have a lot of disagree with
7:12
that. And like
7:15
minorities, before
7:17
they said, you know, if you were like
7:19
5% black, you were a minority and now
7:21
it's like, oh no, no, I don't think
7:23
that's enough. Like the standards are ridiculous. Yeah.
7:25
It's just gotten so crazy. So, so tell
7:28
me you're suing them. Tell me what, what
7:30
are you suing for? What do you wish
7:32
for King and Spalding to do now? So
7:35
we have sued for both
7:38
monetary damages and then injunctive relief. So
7:40
the injunctive relief is to stop them
7:42
from doing this ever again and to
7:44
issue a public apology and a few
7:47
other things relating to that. And then
7:49
the monetary damages are due to any
7:51
kind of suffering I dealt with.
7:53
So The loss of pay I
7:56
could have made in that internship, the eventual pay
7:58
I could have made if I lost it. There
8:00
are hiring an associates and you say no
8:02
to damage and him for and on the
8:04
most of the shirt they call it because
8:06
I don't like going online. And.
8:08
The first time trying to get a
8:10
lot position and held back because of
8:12
my sexual orientation my least. I. Not
8:15
allowed to apply yeah not through a
8:17
lot as what I wanted to apply
8:19
for a michael that the that play
8:21
in should I apply to things and
8:23
keep hidden my sexual orientation in my.
8:25
Race or over soon. So really?
8:27
Threw off like really, how I could
8:29
apply for a lot of jobs? Yeah,
8:32
yeah. and and of course, with characteristics
8:34
that like you can't do anything about
8:36
you can't You can't change the fact
8:39
that you have white skin. You can't
8:41
change the fact that you ought don't
8:43
happen to like women like that. Stats
8:46
does. Unchangeable. Ah, I'm so. I.
8:49
Commend you in all of this. I
8:51
appreciate what you're doing. I hope that
8:53
you win. For. Everything
8:56
that you are asking for because this
8:58
is not going to stop until more
9:00
people say you cannot do this. I
9:02
am suing and like I said at
9:04
the beginning of the show B C
9:06
Bomb King and Spalding This is A
9:08
This is a major law firm, correct.
9:11
Yeah. There's huge international like billion
9:13
dollars for not sit around like
9:15
eighteen hundreds. right? So I
9:17
mean they are Huge! The amount of
9:19
experience that you could have received. At.
9:22
That law firm under their wing had
9:25
they are given this position to the
9:27
most qualified. Rather, Than you
9:29
know to the most gay I don't
9:31
know then you could have potentially gotten
9:34
that experience. So I am one hundred
9:36
percent in your corner. I appreciated it.
9:38
Sounds like a lot of work. Obviously
9:40
it's taken you over three years to
9:42
get to this position and you know
9:44
I'm I'm sure that it's also not
9:47
cheap, so I am just I commend
9:49
you. I appreciate what you're doing. More
9:51
people need to stand up and do
9:53
this and you know I would happen
9:55
to. Also. Know. Your attorney
9:58
John growth he is also my it. And
10:00
I would just like to say you are in very
10:03
good hands. I think he's going to take great care
10:05
of you in this particular case.
10:07
Oh, he's a phenomenal attorney. I wouldn't have
10:10
trusted anyone else with this. And
10:12
we also have Eden Quentin, that's also
10:14
co-counsel. And both of them are phenomenal.
10:17
I mean, they're amazing attorneys. I can't
10:19
imagine having anyone else represent me, especially
10:21
being an attorney myself. You know, I'm
10:24
very specific on my attorneys. And
10:26
the two of them are absolutely amazing.
10:28
They're actually starting a nonprofit that's going
10:30
to help do cases
10:33
that deal with political
10:35
impact cases that, you know, you may not make a lot, but
10:38
they make a huge difference in the country. So
10:40
they're both really excited to start doing that and really
10:42
fighting for every person in America, not
10:45
just who the ACLU deems as
10:47
appropriate. Right. Yeah. This
10:49
is how we change things, I
10:51
think. Follow the money always. Sarah,
10:54
will you keep us posted?
10:56
Absolutely. I'm an employment discrimination attorney
10:58
myself. So
11:02
I love being on this side of it because it
11:04
gives me an idea of what my clients deal with
11:06
so that when they come to me, I
11:08
can represent them to the fullest and from every
11:10
point of view. I'd love to, you know, help
11:12
anyone that has been faced with
11:15
unlawful discrimination who shouldn't have to deal with
11:17
that. Great. Yeah. It's always helpful when you're
11:19
like, well, I've been the client in these
11:21
cases. So I kind of know what you're
11:24
dealing with here. So Sarah, thank you so
11:26
much for joining us. We are fully in
11:28
your corner. Let us know what we can
11:30
do to help you and we look forward
11:33
to a favorable outcome. Thank
11:35
you so much. I hope everyone keeps fighting and
11:37
we can hopefully bring this to an end at
11:39
some point soon. Yes. Amen, sister. All
11:41
right. We'll talk soon. Thank you.
11:43
Thank you. So
11:47
more people need to sue the hell
11:49
out of all of these woke companies.
11:52
It doesn't matter if it's the children's
11:54
hospitals that are chopping kids healthy body
11:56
parts off. It doesn't matter if it
11:59
is an employee. who is
12:01
openly being racist and saying if you're
12:03
white, you need not apply. It
12:06
doesn't matter. Find an attorney like
12:08
John Gross or someone else that is in
12:10
your area. Find an attorney
12:12
that will take on your case and sue
12:14
the hell out of these places. They cannot
12:16
get away with this stuff. So we
12:19
got to go to break. We'll be back with more. But
12:21
first we want to thank our sponsor, Preborn. So as we
12:23
sit here today, the lives of babies are still in
12:26
the womb, are still hanging in the balance. People
12:29
may think, well, Roe versus Wade was overturned, so the fight
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is over. No, no, no, no, it's not. It
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single day. And what Preborn is doing is
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they are empowering young expectant mothers in crisis
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you who just celebrated Mother's Day, it's
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life changing when you hear that heartbeat and you see
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your baby for the first time. And
13:01
the majority of time, she's going to choose life
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for her baby. I am so proud to be
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affiliated with Preborn. They are also,
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I will just say, you know, the left likes to
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always say, you guys just want the babies to be
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born and then you don't want to care for them
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afterwards. Well, Preborn is actually proving them wrong in
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that regard as well, because they are helping the
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not just the babies, but the women as well up
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securely over at
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preborn.com/Sarah. That is
13:40
preborn.com/Sarah. We
13:56
got more fun on the way. I
13:58
want to introduce my panel. Steve Baker
14:01
is in the house, of course,
14:03
Blaze Media's investigative journalist himself, along
14:06
with a Blaze TV contributor, Matthew
14:09
Maudson, actor and producer
14:11
extraordinaire. I'm glad that both of you guys are
14:13
here. Thanks for joining me on this wonderful
14:15
Monday. I want to remind
14:17
you guys, those of you, well, those of you
14:20
who are watching on YouTube, make sure to tap
14:22
that like button. You can just give it a
14:24
gentle tapping. We like the gentle tapping from time
14:26
to time. And make sure to comment and make
14:28
sure you're subscribed because almost every day I hear
14:31
from someone who says, it unsubscribed
14:33
me. I don't know how I didn't unsubscribe, but
14:35
I am unsubscribed. YouTube is very tricky about that.
14:37
So make sure that you are subscribed and then
14:39
go over to where you get your audio podcast,
14:42
subscribe, rate and review the show. And you may see your
14:44
review read live on air. I want to read a couple
14:46
of them right here before we jump into the news here.
14:50
Here is one from ID Sargent. I
14:53
think it's Sargent, SGT56. I
14:55
absolutely love the show. I
14:58
absolutely hate the new theme music. Next
15:00
time, don't contract out to Bollywood for
15:02
the music. I
15:07
love it. So it's staying. Okay. One
15:09
more. They gave me five stars. So I said I'd
15:11
read it anyway. I'm there. I
15:14
listen. It's very easy. Constructive criticism. Yeah, that's
15:16
what I'm saying. You can write mean things
15:18
and I'll still read it. Just give me the five stars. Okay.
15:21
One more here from LBD7778. Absolutely
15:26
love the new show. Glen's theme music
15:28
was definitely not the better fit. Please let
15:30
Jason know that Matthew Marsden is tied for
15:32
my new Blaze Crush. That's
15:34
Blue Eyes and oh, that
15:36
accent. LOL. Keep it up. So
15:39
happy for you. Lori F&D. I'm going to
15:41
take it. I'll take it all day long. Yes.
15:45
So I need to have
15:47
a show where I have you
15:50
and Jason on. And we just
15:52
give him shit the whole time. The whole
15:54
time. That he's been superseded by
15:56
you. At least
15:58
for Lori F&D. So I
16:01
look forward to that. And that's all that matters. So
16:05
okay, so I want to go through
16:07
some of these headlines here. Did you
16:09
guys see the Donald Trump rally in
16:11
New Jersey over the weekend? Oh yeah.
16:14
Holy crap. There were reports suggested anywhere
16:16
between 85,000 to 100,000 people on the
16:18
Jersey Shore. Those
16:22
of you who are watching can
16:24
see just this vast crowd,
16:27
just all packed in to go
16:30
see Donald Trump speak. This
16:32
is, I just want to, New
16:35
Jersey. Okay. New
16:37
Jersey. And
16:40
New Jersey Republican representative Jeff Van Drew
16:42
called the rally the biggest political gathering
16:44
in state history. New
16:47
Jersey of all places.
16:51
Should I be thinking positive? All
16:54
I could say is that, oh, Matthew and I were talking about
16:56
it in the makeup room before we came in here, is that
17:00
if these people that are gathering in
17:02
these blueish or dark blue areas
17:04
and states don't start getting
17:06
more active in, well,
17:09
kind of what you and I talked about last
17:11
week, it's time to start showing up, not just
17:13
for a rally. We've
17:15
got to start making impact where it matters.
17:18
And I hate to say it, and I'm saying it again,
17:20
just like I said last week, I'm not suggesting anything, but
17:23
if these equal and opposite
17:26
activists are allowed to shut down
17:28
events and allowed to shut down
17:30
schools and allowed to shut down
17:32
highways, bridges, then maybe they
17:35
should shut down some courthouses. I'm
17:39
just saying. Control
17:42
room. The clip of Lawrence Taylor.
17:45
If you can. OK. Yeah. So
17:48
even NFL Hall of Fame linebacker Lawrence Taylor was
17:50
there and he was basically like, I
17:53
was a Democrat my whole life. I voted
17:55
for Democrats until this guy came around. And
17:57
they're just I Mean, they were coming out of. Would
18:00
work in in New Jersey and it just
18:02
really see your point Steve if they all
18:04
show up know you would think that they
18:06
would cost of are you gonna wait in
18:08
line and go see another in the sun
18:10
and be packed in like sardines to go
18:12
watch him and then not go to the
18:14
polls in November and cast your vote? I
18:16
mean you would think that. They what I
18:18
don't know you would bring. You know what's
18:20
really important about this and again when we
18:22
spoke about it. inside is the and when
18:25
we keep going on about it all the
18:27
time about how you have to get involved
18:29
but you have to get involved bus this
18:31
matters because. You. Become undeniable.
18:35
right? You. Become absolutely undeniable. They
18:37
can't go on this time and go.
18:39
I mean, there's no way. look on,
18:41
care what anyone says is no way.
18:43
That guy. eighty one million legitimate votes.
18:45
There's not a chance the other guys
18:47
that some said no way, no way.
18:49
you got more votes and Barack Obama
18:52
assist assist Impossible. I don't care what
18:54
anyone says and you can call me
18:56
whatever you want, but that's just that's
18:58
just the way these but what this
19:00
does number one is it makes people
19:02
feel more emboldens to step out themselves.
19:04
right? We said this about. Cove it
19:06
is that if people actually stood up,
19:08
if there were more people standing up
19:11
against the the tyrannical actions that the
19:13
government was taken then they would stop.
19:15
A it's by people have to understand
19:17
you do actually matters. And the whole
19:19
thing about January the six was about
19:21
cooling that off. The was about shutting
19:23
people down is bad. Science Looks you
19:26
cannot you. You go out to the
19:28
since a new exercise you first memorized
19:30
and you're going to be shut down.
19:33
I'm. Sorry going to be shut down
19:35
anyway. If we don't get trump
19:37
pain it's it's over. Our main
19:40
office I'm thinking is gone past.
19:43
look make coming over here from the
19:45
uk auto his hair news on new
19:47
shows this is the most important election
19:49
in our lifetime about you be like
19:51
cz really is he really the most
19:53
important what's this is the most important
19:56
election in our lifetimes it really is
19:58
slow we are not coming back from
20:00
this unless that guy gets
20:03
in. He's got to get in. It's
20:05
going to be irreversible. Are you
20:07
saying George Bush the second
20:09
wasn't more important than Al Gore? Do
20:13
you know I sat behind him once, Al Gore on a
20:15
plane. He's got a massive head. He's
20:18
got like, he's got, he's like,
20:20
head, you, head, dude. Look
20:22
at the size of that boy's head. It's like an
20:24
orange on a toothpick. It's
20:26
got its own weather system. He
20:28
cries himself to sleep every night on
20:30
his huge pillow. Al Gore. I
20:33
was about to go there and you beat me. Well,
20:36
that's a lot of hot air in between ear to
20:38
ear, I would say. So,
20:40
okay. So over the weekend we
20:43
saw this massive rally, which was
20:45
heartening, I would say. But then
20:47
we also saw an Axios article
20:50
that, you know, of course, take it for what it's
20:52
worth. It's Axios. It's
20:54
a report that several anonymous sources were
20:56
saying that the Trump campaign was considering
20:59
Nikki Haley as an
21:01
option for vice president, which,
21:04
you know, you read it and you're like, I
21:06
mean, he was not, he did not
21:08
have kind things to say about her
21:10
when the primary was still in full
21:12
swing. And that would be
21:14
very awkward to think that he would just
21:16
be like, you know what, let's let bygones
21:18
be bygones. But then he
21:20
posted shortly afterwards on Truth
21:23
Social. Nikki Haley is not under
21:25
consideration for the VP slot, but I wish her
21:27
well. Which I thought
21:30
I was surprised that he even was sure well,
21:32
to be honest. But
21:34
so then it becomes who, who is
21:36
this person going to be? And I
21:39
cannot wait until July, which they've speculated
21:41
we might not find out until July.
21:43
I cannot wait until July to find
21:46
out who he's going to choose. I
21:48
mean, obviously it needs to be strategic. I get
21:50
it. I would love personally, I
21:52
would love Senator JD Vance because
21:55
I just, I like him, but I just,
21:57
A, I don't think that two. Their
22:00
starters would work well together and. Also,
22:02
he doesn't pull any one from
22:04
the middle in. So. Then
22:07
who is that person? Is
22:09
gonna pull a woman's began poor minority of
22:11
some sort right over unaccompanied annoyance? It is.
22:14
It is annoying. Why do we have the
22:16
plate identity politics we have? We have to.
22:18
We have to think that way because of
22:20
these margins as as they are as they
22:23
are finally given to us are going to
22:25
be. So the oil he's gonna win by
22:27
ten points in order to win by one.
22:30
Day. A light. Gas
22:32
which is called spade a Spade right? That's
22:34
what's gonna happen. So. That means
22:36
that we have play that game unfortunately
22:38
and I think that as as is
22:40
all of the potential candidates and I've
22:43
gone through my it I can't. I.
22:45
Can't land on one team either.
22:47
Oh. Oh I can.
22:49
Ah, Is Not happening All. Who.
22:51
Really? Move? Said
22:54
last time I got crap for. I
22:57
don't remember. Rent Rent.
23:00
Tulsi. Gabbard, That's right out
23:02
of that Rgb crap for that
23:04
was given. Grew up them with
23:06
you be crap for them. Camber
23:08
on right? right now I'll try.
23:10
I looked out. I don't care
23:12
what any politician says to me,
23:14
I look they're voting records and
23:16
she had a seven Percent Liberties
23:18
Gore who have been during her
23:20
time and co not seventy like
23:22
Speaker Johnson says. Seven. Lower
23:25
than Hillary Clinton. Oh.
23:27
That's bad math, but
23:29
ah ah, We
23:32
all like to think the people
23:34
can change. Look here's the thing.
23:36
She is: smarmy Ship lately destroyed.
23:39
Star. Was. Who. Was
23:42
his shoes on the debate stage with
23:44
the she duties absolutely destroys to my
23:46
wrestling which isn't really that difficult. When
23:48
she was running for president she destroyed
23:50
or issues very good. She's attractive, she's
23:53
a star. whatever you think of another
23:55
thing that really does it really matter
23:57
who the vice present Israeli army I
23:59
mean. When you're talking about two 80 year olds,
24:01
yes. Yeah, but
24:03
I just know I just, I think
24:07
it's more important that Trump gets in. And
24:09
I think that we get all caught up
24:11
in it. Like, like, what did Mike Pence
24:13
do? Really? I mean, look at Kamala Harris.
24:15
What is Kamala Harris done? Like nothing. Thank
24:17
God. Well, right. But I mean,
24:19
when you're talking about, again, like I'm not, I
24:21
don't wish anyone, you know, to,
24:23
to die before it's
24:25
time for God to call them home. But like, let's
24:28
say Donald Trump gets in. And
24:30
is inaugurated. And then like
24:32
the next day he kicks a bucket. And
24:35
then we have president Tulsi Gabbard for four
24:37
years. That doesn't
24:39
scare you? No. But
24:42
why? Because I think, because I think that winning
24:45
right now is more important. And I
24:47
think that he needs to have a woman and I think
24:49
he needs to pull people across. And
24:51
you think Nikki Haley's any better? I mean, she, no, no,
24:54
no, no, no, no, no, no, I'm not, I'm not here
24:56
to, I'm not here to like argue with the friends of
24:58
Nikki Haley. Look, at the people that they've spoken about, I
25:00
think she's, she's going to be the one. I do. I
25:03
see because I'll just don't
25:06
think that anyone who is broken from
25:08
Donald Trump is going to vote for
25:10
him regardless. Like, I don't
25:12
think that they're gonna, that they're gonna say,
25:14
well, all right, he's got Tulsi
25:16
on the ticket. I'll vote for him. I just,
25:18
a lot of these people that you hear from,
25:20
they're just broken. Like
25:22
he has just completely broken them. And
25:26
I don't know if there is
25:28
a candidate, a vice presidential candidate
25:30
that exists that would make them
25:32
say, I hate Donald
25:34
Trump with every fiber of my being, but I'll vote
25:36
for him because of this person. I just don't, I'm
25:39
not even sure that that person is so divided. The
25:42
only person ideologically that checks one of
25:44
those boxes for me is Larry Elder.
25:47
I do love Larry Elder. I like Larry Elder. A lot. And
25:52
if I was advising Trump, that
25:54
would be my choice. That's a
25:56
great, that's actually a great choice. And he's
25:58
just vanished from the conversation. Because
26:00
he was running wasn't he? California.
26:03
Yeah for governor Originally,
26:06
and I think he was he had briefly
26:08
announced in the primaries, but didn't it didn't
26:10
go anywhere a couple of days That's
26:13
actually a great suggestion Okay
26:15
so anyone who has a line into Donald Trump
26:17
if you could just Float that
26:19
that would be great because he hasn't been mentioned
26:21
on any sort of shortlist. In fact since we
26:23
have to talk about You
26:26
know some sort of identity Politics
26:28
here they keep talking about Tim
26:30
Scott and I'm like, please for the love of God
26:32
do not pick Tim Scott. He is so Corny,
26:35
no one's gonna be able to stand them He
26:38
just he came off as so unlikable in
26:40
the primaries. We do not need Tim Scott
26:42
So if you're gonna have to pick someone
26:44
who checks a box, I would much rather it
26:46
be Larry Elder. Oh Larry's
26:49
super super smart and he's of course he's
26:51
he's very conservative. So I mean that will
26:53
be a good call very libertarian Yeah. Yeah,
26:56
which is what I like, right, right Okay.
27:00
So let's go ahead and we're gonna
27:02
take a quick break here And
27:04
then we are going to be back with
27:07
more but first we want to thank our
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sponsor MD hearing
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know What shocked me so
27:16
my husband? I'm sorry Stephen. I'm gonna tell on
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It was shocking to me that That
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First of all, I think that he lost his hearing because I was yelling
27:27
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27:29
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27:32
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that special now. We'll be right back. Students
29:12
walk out of university's commencement
29:14
ceremony over the weekend to
29:16
protest guest speaker Jerry Seinfeld
29:19
over his support of Israel during the
29:22
war. And I mean, he
29:24
is he's Jewish. So I would
29:26
expect that he would support Israel, but you're not
29:28
allowed to do that apparently. And so
29:31
I want to play these, these students
29:33
walking out during the middle of Jerry
29:35
Seinfeld's speech. Watch cute
29:46
little moron taking their moment
29:49
carrying their little flag. Now I would
29:53
like to say I'd like to point
29:55
out so
29:57
Some people are booing. But
30:02
later on, ah, apparently the
30:04
the crowd started chanting jerry
30:06
and word. Of course. Making
30:08
more noise than you know, those booing and
30:10
then there were also reports a sad that
30:12
the people who were booing we're actually doing
30:14
the students. Walking out. so.
30:17
Not quite clear who the booing
30:19
was intended for, but the overwhelming
30:21
majority of the students Of course,
30:23
we're happy. That. Tom that
30:25
Jerry Seinfeld had come to our to
30:28
do that. I just. Like.
30:31
I watch these people on their
30:33
graduation day and I'm like. Really?
30:36
And all this time your parents didn't teach you better.
30:39
Honest. Time. I. Should live
30:41
in Durham, North Carolina so. I'm
30:43
run around the corner from. Duke University
30:46
and I can tell you that this
30:48
was one moment because mentally we refer
30:50
to that campuses gonna like Little Moscow
30:52
written across on Interstate Forty two miles
30:54
away we got you and see Chapel
30:56
Hill which we refer to as the
30:58
People's Republic of Chapel Hill. We've got
31:00
you know if this is not just
31:02
you know basketball Mecca Calais askable Mecca
31:05
You can come to the same exit
31:07
on I forty intake speed or right
31:09
on fifteen Bible one and go to
31:11
do girl left and go to have
31:13
you and see if they're that. Close.
31:16
In and so. Watching
31:18
that. When. It happened a first
31:20
I was like bow not not again.
31:22
But then all the sudden I realized
31:24
it was only about thirty kids It
31:27
did they have, they gotten her, Jerry
31:29
got up there he was never interrupted
31:31
wants nobody chanted him down or you
31:33
know interrupted his his remarks. it was
31:35
very non ideological. it wasn't political at
31:37
all, it was it was like he
31:39
was like and a dad giving funny
31:41
you know advice to his children's is
31:44
all it is what it was in
31:46
it came across a great is them
31:48
following a little bit. closer or realize
31:50
that duke has rules and there
31:52
was reason why there's no encampments
31:54
there's no chairs know chad there's
31:57
no way to phone that campus
31:59
and that's They actually have rules
32:01
against this. Well, that solves
32:03
it, doesn't it? What a novel idea, Steve.
32:05
Yes. Wow. You
32:08
mean to tell me if they actually set rules
32:10
for these morons and they'll actually, you know, think
32:12
twice before they break them? Shocking.
32:15
Fancy them. Yeah. I mean, look,
32:18
this whole thing is because
32:20
people, these little people who
32:22
clearly haven't been taught how to
32:25
think for themselves, want to
32:27
be a part of something bigger. That's
32:29
what they want. You know, if you take God or meaning
32:31
out of their lives, they want to be a part of
32:33
something bigger and this is it for
32:36
them. But again, I say
32:39
this, I think because we get
32:41
a lot of these, we get at least one
32:43
a week of some ridiculous student protest, is
32:46
that if you're not sending your kids to private Christian
32:49
colleges, then
32:51
it's on you, it's your
32:53
fault, to be honest. Right. You
32:55
know, that's what you've got to do
32:57
as a parent. What matters is not
33:00
just these moments because I think these moments are
33:02
windows into the four years that
33:05
your kid has been at these institutions and the
33:07
people that they've been around. Right. So
33:10
yes, they're obeying the rules, but it doesn't
33:13
mean that, like you said, these little communists
33:15
there aren't having an influence on your children
33:18
or moving them away from the
33:20
values and morals that you brought them up with. So
33:23
it's really, really important to
33:25
send your kids to somewhere
33:27
where morally they're going to be
33:30
with their peers, like people that are going to
33:32
reinforce what they believe. And I'm definitely not saying
33:34
that Duke is that university because it
33:36
is not right. I mean,
33:38
their medical school there is leading
33:41
the nation in lopping children's gentleness.
33:43
So this is, I mean, they're
33:45
starting younger and younger and experimenting
33:47
there. This is
33:50
maybe little Berlin right
33:52
now. It's not a testimony in
33:54
favor of sending your kids to Duke,
33:56
certainly. So on the topic
33:58
of all of these. college campuses and
34:01
higher education, I came across a
34:03
headline that said nearly half of
34:05
all master's degrees are not actually
34:07
worth getting. And
34:09
so when you look at the, yeah, there it is.
34:11
So when you look at the, it
34:13
says, what 23% of bachelor's degrees programs
34:16
and 43% of master's degrees programs have a
34:18
negative ROI. So
34:22
why are you sending your children to Duke or
34:26
Harvard or all of these
34:28
places, Columbia, we've been talking
34:31
about because the protests and the encampments
34:33
have been so prevalent there. We
34:35
looked it up $83,000 a year, $83,000
34:38
a year that you're spending for
34:42
four freaking years. And
34:45
that's if your kid does well. If
34:47
you got a kid that's like, kind of
34:49
on the short bus a little bit, you may need to
34:51
pay another year. And
34:53
that is all so they can come out
34:56
and not have a positive
34:59
ROI. And on top
35:01
of that, be completely indoctrinated into
35:03
all of this woke ideology. Why,
35:05
why would you do it? I
35:07
understand if it's like, well,
35:10
not a doctor that's lapping children's genitals off, but
35:13
a specific like you have to go through medical
35:15
school or you have to go to law school.
35:18
Like you have to go through these things if
35:20
you want to be a certain profession. I
35:23
understand, but just the run of
35:25
the mill, English degree or
35:27
whatever, it's like why? Why
35:30
you're setting them up for complete failure
35:32
in life, I feel like at this point, multiple
35:34
levels. Yeah, what we've done is we've kind of taken
35:37
it that this is the process that you go
35:39
through. You go to school, you go graduate high
35:41
school, then you go to college, then you go
35:43
and get your master's and then you come out
35:45
and you've got, if you're lucky, you have
35:47
$250,000, $300,000 a debt. And
35:51
then that makes it impossible for you to start a
35:53
family. Right, and so, I mean,
35:55
and I've said this for a long time is I'm
35:58
a big advocate for trade schools. Yes. advocate
36:00
to go to a technical college and learn how to
36:02
be a plumber, learn how to be these
36:07
trades are being looked down upon and
36:09
it's ridiculous because like you say you
36:11
come out and look I went and
36:13
did a BA in performing arts right?
36:15
Okay so but I
36:17
did make a living
36:20
out of it actually but I am like a very
36:22
very small percentage of that and I have gone off
36:24
and done a business degree as well because I'm not
36:26
stupid but I think that we
36:30
really have to emphasize more
36:32
the trades and because
36:34
you know you can come even let's just say even if
36:36
you went and did went to film school let's say you
36:38
went to film school and you
36:41
went to NYU and it's again it's about $80,000
36:44
a year for four years you come out and
36:46
they send you to the bottom on
36:49
a film set you are a runner you are
36:51
you working so then you have to go through
36:53
your apprenticeship it doesn't matter what you may as
36:55
well do is take that money go make a
36:57
short film or make a movie learn on
37:00
the job and then at least you got something
37:02
you can sell right then you've got something tangible
37:04
and then go and work through the system anyway
37:07
but we've got this this thing we have to
37:09
break this that you send your kids immediately they
37:11
go off to college why
37:14
are we doing this? Well I think that
37:16
it's breaking itself honestly I mean I agree
37:18
it needs total implosion but it's it's breaking
37:20
itself because everything the cost of everything is
37:22
rising people can barely afford to like pay
37:24
their mortgages and fill up their gas tanks
37:26
and then you want to ask them to
37:28
pay that amount of money to send
37:31
their kids to college that's it's just not
37:33
going to become feasible anymore because the tuition
37:35
rates are rising every single year everything is
37:37
getting more expensive colleges
37:39
are not immune to that so then it
37:42
becomes like okay so I literally can't afford
37:44
to send my child to your indoctrination camp
37:46
it's not even a choice I just literally
37:49
can't do it and I mean
37:51
last point and then I want to get you last word
37:53
here Steve I
37:56
also have a degree right I
37:59
might use some skills that I had
38:01
in electives, I don't know, but my degree
38:03
was in like criminology and my
38:06
minor was forensic psychology. Am
38:09
I using that every day when I run my mouth for a
38:11
living? No? Maybe a little
38:13
bit of the forensic. Yeah, the
38:16
psychology sometimes I'm like maybe it's helped me
38:18
read people but I feel like I have
38:20
I just already have a
38:22
very high intuition anyway so I think that was why
38:24
I was interested in that. So
38:26
I don't use it and I'm telling my kid,
38:29
you know, he's 11 and we talk about college
38:31
and I'm like I don't
38:33
actually know that that's gonna be your path.
38:35
It might not be and that's okay. We
38:37
can explore other options because I just think
38:39
that they are breaking the system itself. It's
38:41
unsustainable. I think that I should
38:44
not get away from here without saying
38:46
something nice about UNC. Chapel Hill as
38:48
well. Did you see this morning we just
38:51
learned that they have decided because of what
38:53
it just took place on their campus with
38:55
the encampment and all of the protests they're
38:57
gonna divert and transfer
38:59
some of their DEI
39:01
funding over into
39:04
campus policing. Really?
39:07
So they're breaking themselves.
39:09
They're pushing, they're going over the edge
39:11
so much so that even
39:14
these far leftist administrators
39:17
and of course follow the money, they know
39:19
they will lose those students. They will lose
39:21
because the more of these let's
39:23
call them conservative light you know
39:26
frat boys out there that protest
39:28
against this you know type
39:30
of crap that they were seeing on campus. Well
39:34
those parents might send them elsewhere. They might
39:36
send them to Liberty or to Hillsdale. Right,
39:38
right. Exactly. As well they should. Alright let's
39:40
go we got to take a quick break.
39:42
We'll be back with more but first we
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want to thank our sponsor Jace Medical. So
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medical.com. At
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this point in the program, I would like
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to just say, Steve, remind
41:10
me to never piss you off because
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Steve has a new,
41:16
the latest expose out
41:18
on theblaze.com on Harry
41:20
Dunn and Steve
41:23
just, he just keeps going and going
41:25
after these people. So make sure that
41:27
you read it. Why did a powerful
41:29
veterans pack endorse Harry Dunn, phony
41:31
hero of January 6th? And
41:34
I want you to kind of elaborate on this, but
41:36
so out of 22 candidates, including
41:39
three combat veterans, this pack,
41:41
VoteVets, decided to back Harry
41:44
Dunn? STEVE Yeah, who is not a veteran. And
41:47
as a matter of fact, just yesterday, he
41:49
picked up another endorsement from another military pack.
41:53
This one is, both of them are progressive political
41:55
action committees, but there
41:57
are progressives in the race. who
42:00
are in fact war veterans. One
42:02
is a West Point grad, Gulf
42:04
War veteran, other two guys that are
42:07
in there have also seen combat in
42:09
Afghanistan and Iraq.
42:13
And the gentleman I interviewed,
42:15
one of the opposition
42:17
candidates to Harry Dunn in the primary,
42:19
Maryland's third district, his name's Juan Dominguez,
42:22
and he said, look, he said, I would have been happy
42:24
if Don Quinn, the other veteran, or
42:27
happy if, I forget the other guy's
42:29
name, I would have congratulated them for
42:31
getting the endorsement. He said, but this
42:33
is reprehensible. But he said it also
42:35
points to the fact that Harry is
42:37
the anointed one. He's the alleged hero
42:40
of January 6th as a former Capitol
42:42
police officer. He's the guy that got
42:44
all the accolades. He started the interest
42:46
in himself when he came out
42:48
and said that he had been chanted the
42:51
N-word at him, you know, 20, 30, 40, 50 people. That's
42:54
a quote, by the way, which never happened. And
42:57
then from there, with all the attention
42:59
he began to do, or get, he
43:01
began to escalate his stories into tales
43:03
of daring do and all these acts
43:05
of heroism, never thinking
43:08
that we would get access
43:10
to the Capitol CCT video
43:12
and then find out that not
43:14
only did none, not a
43:16
thing that he ever claimed he did,
43:18
heroically, ever happen, he spent most of
43:20
the day hiding. We're
43:23
going to show that. Now we've done,
43:25
we've done some video vignettes already, you
43:27
know, five minutes, 10 minutes, whatever, but
43:29
we're developing a day in the life
43:32
of Harry Dunn and
43:34
that's coming. But if
43:36
you are promised to be
43:38
the Democrats puppet, then
43:41
you too can get money funneled to
43:43
your congressional campaign, I guess, is the moral of
43:45
that. And you get, and you get Nancy Pelosi's
43:47
endorsement. And so you get the dark money and
43:49
you get a book deal and you get a
43:51
presidential medal. You get a congressional medal. You get
43:53
all of this, but all of this is payback,
43:56
not just for those things that we're talking about
43:58
there, but also for the. trial perjury,
44:00
which was most important when they
44:03
framed the Oath Keepers and he
44:06
and David Lazarus came
44:08
up with their little story. Right. Right. So,
44:10
I mean, as long as you are a
44:12
lying for the right people, you
44:14
will be rewarded for that behavior. So one
44:17
of the people that are running that have
44:19
been pushed into second place or pushed off,
44:21
why aren't they changing their allegiance? Because clearly
44:23
now they know that it's corrupt. I
44:28
could tell you some things off camera that were off the record
44:30
that I can't talk about, but
44:33
they're upset. I mean, they are. And look,
44:35
we're talking about a field full of Democrats
44:38
and certainly we're not aligned with them, you
44:44
know, philosophically, politically, ideologically. But
44:47
like, for instance, Juan Dominguez, West
44:50
Point grad, good man, you
44:52
know, good man. And he's horribly upset at, as
44:54
he called it, the dark money that's being funneled
44:56
that way right now. And he said, it is
44:59
what it is. And he said it, and he
45:01
said it's corrupt and it's, it is a payback
45:03
and it is exactly what we would think it
45:05
is. And I'm trying to avoid saying the things
45:07
that were off the record. Maybe
45:11
if we keep asking him questions, he'll
45:13
accidentally slip. I want to
45:15
know, Steve, I want to know all these
45:17
details. Okay. So, so I'm going
45:20
to guess that you're not done
45:23
exposing Harry Dunn. No,
45:25
we're, we're, uh, we're
45:28
not, we are not done with Dunn and
45:30
we're not done with the Capitol police. We're
45:32
not done with David Lazarus. Uh, we're not
45:34
done with DC. We're going to dismantle this
45:36
thing if we have to, you know, take
45:38
it apart one limb at a
45:40
time, but we're going to do that.
45:42
And we're going to show ultimately that
45:44
these trial surgeries were the result of
45:46
some relation of perjury by the DOJ
45:49
itself. That's where we're headed. Did
45:51
you hear me? Did you hear me?
45:53
Matthew Graves? Well, I mean, did you hear me?
45:55
Merrick Garland? I just
45:58
know whenever you are on my. I'm
46:01
like, they are definitely watching this
46:03
one. Yeah. What
46:05
up? DOJ, FBI, NSA, all of them.
46:10
And anytime I text with Steve, I'm like, I
46:13
should expect that they are reading these text messages right
46:15
now. So. I
46:19
hope Donald Trump gets in and
46:21
burns all your departments to the
46:23
ground. Market.
46:26
That's why they've made me a single issue voter this
46:28
time. Yeah. You
46:30
know, I didn't come into this as a Trump supporter. I
46:33
know. They made me one.
46:35
They made you one. But what happened to you should
46:37
make every single person a single issue voter. Right. That's
46:40
the problem. Right. So we're talking
46:42
about getting involved. They've got to get involved.
46:44
They've got to understand that they're going to
46:47
do this to absolutely everybody. That's right. Yeah.
46:50
Yeah. All right. Exactly
46:52
right. We've got to take a break. We'll be right back. So
47:00
we have time for this earlier. I want to
47:02
play. We talked about Jerry
47:04
Seinfeld commencement speech. Here is some of that.
47:06
Watch. So on my staff in
47:09
the 90s, we had a lot of Harvard guys. They
47:11
were fantastic. But I could never understand
47:13
why these guys were so embarrassed about being
47:15
from Harvard. They would never talk about it.
47:18
They would never mention it. I'm
47:20
not talking about Harvard now. I'm talking about the way
47:23
it used to be. You're
47:25
never going to believe this. Harvard used to
47:28
be a great place to go to school.
47:31
You're right. I don't believe it. You're
47:34
absolutely right. You know what
47:36
I always am fascinated by? That like I
47:38
read that he got an honorary degree for
47:41
giving the commencement speech. Is
47:45
that not strange? No,
47:47
that's pretty common. But he didn't do any
47:49
work. Glenn Beck's got an
47:51
honorary degree. I know. And I'd
47:53
say the same thing about him. I'm
47:55
like, right. But like, can
47:57
you actually, was that degree worth anything? You didn't do anything. We
48:00
earned it over time. We're all open
48:03
to it. See? We're
48:05
all open to getting one. Alright, I'd take one of it.
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