📄 Extracted Text (4,977 words)
[00:00:07] Whoop. Let's get into it, guys. Let's
[00:00:09] go. This is very odd.
[00:00:12] This whole episode, I mean, this is a
[00:00:14] weird one. This is like Baron Coleman
[00:00:17] opening statements. Okay, that's what
[00:00:20] this is like. Opening opening statements
[00:00:23] right now. Obviously, this is always my
[00:00:25] opening statement. I like I like to open
[00:00:27] it up with memes. Okay, I I'm not saying
[00:00:30] I I'm also a high IQ outfit, but I just
[00:00:33] we open up with memes, not with
[00:00:36] articulate uh monologues, but today
[00:00:40] today is a little different. As you can
[00:00:42] see here, it says grieve different on
[00:00:44] Erica's forehead. Shabbat shalom on her
[00:00:47] arms. I mean, it's just uh it's
[00:00:49] something. And the reason that we have
[00:00:51] this today is because there is something
[00:00:55] that has been released by Elizabeth
[00:00:57] Lane. Candace Owens was the first to
[00:00:59] bring my attention to it. She said,
[00:01:00] "This is a must-read about Erica. Every
[00:01:03] single word of this is accurate and
[00:01:07] there is not enough money in the world
[00:01:11] that can force us to deny our human
[00:01:13] instincts."
[00:01:15] When I saw that and I saw Elizabeth
[00:01:17] Lane, I was like, "Oh, what is this?"
[00:01:18] Elizabeth Lane, if you don't know, she's
[00:01:20] an investigative journalist and she's
[00:01:22] been known to kind of believe in the
[00:01:25] official narrative in regards to the
[00:01:27] Charlie Kirk case. Um, or at least at
[00:01:30] the very much she was investigating the
[00:01:33] the um the official narrative. She was
[00:01:37] uh someone who tried to get to the
[00:01:38] hospital where Charlie was. She tried to
[00:01:40] get inside, but she wasn't allowed
[00:01:42] inside. Uh the first court hearing, she
[00:01:44] was there. Pretty much every court
[00:01:46] hearing, I'm pretty sure she's been
[00:01:47] there. Uh she's been following it quite
[00:01:49] closely. She tried to contact Tyler's
[00:01:51] parents. Um she's she's been, you know,
[00:01:55] watching this story very closely like we
[00:01:57] all have and she's been boots on the
[00:01:59] ground for a lot of it. She actually
[00:02:01] lives in Utah, so she's able to just
[00:02:03] stop in really quickly. Um unlike a lot
[00:02:06] of other people who are just all over
[00:02:08] the country right now, she releases this
[00:02:11] about Erica. Now, she has never had
[00:02:14] anything bad to say about uh Erica. Uh
[00:02:17] she has been quite like Candace, kind of
[00:02:20] like me, kind of like a lot of people uh
[00:02:22] who wanted to not say anything for a
[00:02:26] while because you have this thing where
[00:02:29] you go, "Well, that's Charlie's wife."
[00:02:31] And you don't want to be the person
[00:02:32] being mean to Charlie's wife. Um even if
[00:02:35] you think that there's no tears on that
[00:02:37] tissue because you're like, "Oh, that's
[00:02:39] a square that would, you know, it would
[00:02:40] be soaked by now." And you don't want to
[00:02:43] say that.
[00:02:45] And that's how Elizabeth was until now.
[00:02:47] And then Elizabeth makes this. Now,
[00:02:50] we're going to give this a read. Okay,
[00:02:52] we're going to go through this. Check
[00:02:54] out what Elizabeth Lane has to say. Uh,
[00:02:57] she also defended Candace in front of
[00:02:59] Bal Tones. Uh, Bex and her had a heated
[00:03:03] debate where she was defending Candace
[00:03:05] and thought Candace should be able to to
[00:03:08] do what's right, to do what's wrong. She
[00:03:10] should be able to look down uh avenues
[00:03:12] where there's nothing and then turn back
[00:03:14] and figure things out. She's like,
[00:03:15] "That's how investigations go." Unlike
[00:03:18] Bal, she is a real investigative
[00:03:20] journalist. Now, let's jump into what
[00:03:23] she had to say. She said, "I'm going to
[00:03:25] be blunt. I've reached a point where I
[00:03:27] find Erica Kirk deeply disturbing. Not
[00:03:31] because I haven't read this yet either,
[00:03:32] not because of rumors or gossip, but
[00:03:35] because of consistent observable
[00:03:37] patterns of behavior. To be clear,
[00:03:40] everything I say in this post is my
[00:03:43] opinion. I'm not claiming that this is
[00:03:45] fact. I'm just saying what I think Erica
[00:03:47] Kirk is. I come from a world of acting
[00:03:51] and modeling. I've spent years around
[00:03:53] social climbers, opportunists, image
[00:03:56] curators, and people who treat
[00:03:57] relationships like ladders.
[00:04:01] That is why is very I' I've come from
[00:04:04] that too in Hollywood. That is why I
[00:04:07] left that world. Most of those people
[00:04:10] are shallow and harmless. A few are
[00:04:14] dangerous. Erica falls into the latter
[00:04:17] category, not because she is ambitious,
[00:04:20] but because of how calculated and
[00:04:23] performative her ambition appears to be.
[00:04:26] I believe she may be a psychopath. Wow.
[00:04:30] Wow. I'm reading this blind with you
[00:04:33] guys. I did not think it was going to go
[00:04:34] there. Okay. All right. We're we're
[00:04:37] getting into it. This is it. Uh what
[00:04:40] stands out immediately is the reaction
[00:04:42] she provokes in people, which is very
[00:04:46] common with psychopaths across the
[00:04:48] board, including the people who support
[00:04:50] her publicly. The private reaction is
[00:04:53] the same. I can't watch her. Not
[00:04:55] criticism, just physical discomfort.
[00:04:58] People turn off interviews because the
[00:05:00] presentation feels uh
[00:05:04] artificial to the point of being
[00:05:06] unbearable. Let me explain. That is so
[00:05:08] true. That is so true. So true. I
[00:05:12] noticed that with the first speech. The
[00:05:13] first speech I was like, well, this is
[00:05:15] his wife and you know, this is what she
[00:05:17] has to say. But it was like what really
[00:05:19] got me was the memorial. The memorial
[00:05:21] where she said, "I forgive him." And
[00:05:23] then she she actually took a break for
[00:05:26] applause because I'm a comedian. Listen,
[00:05:30] I know about breaking for applause.
[00:05:32] That's like a learned thing. You have to
[00:05:34] be very conscious of that because you
[00:05:36] don't want to try to speak while
[00:05:38] everybody's going crazy and you don't
[00:05:40] want to interrupt their applause. It's a
[00:05:42] whole thing. It takes a while to learn
[00:05:44] how to do it right. So when I saw her do
[00:05:45] it, I was like, "Oh, that's that's like
[00:05:48] that doesn't h it doesn't happen by
[00:05:50] chance." It doesn't happen by chance,
[00:05:52] especially in emotional moments. It
[00:05:53] never happens by chance. Um, so let's go
[00:05:57] here. Uh,
[00:05:59] what stands out is her reaction, blah
[00:06:01] blah blah. Um, let's go here.
[00:06:04] What stands out immediately?
[00:06:07] Why? Why is it at a different point now?
[00:06:09] Okay. Um, let me explain. The kind of
[00:06:12] response does not happen accidentally
[00:06:15] and it does not happen often. Research
[00:06:17] in psychology shows that humans are
[00:06:20] highly sensitive to emotional
[00:06:22] inongruence.
[00:06:25] Mismatches between facial expression,
[00:06:28] tone, and content. When effect appears
[00:06:33] simulated rather than genuine, the brain
[00:06:36] registers it registers it as a threat
[00:06:39] signal. Interesting. This activates
[00:06:43] discomfort and avoidance. Even if the
[00:06:46] person cannot consciously explain why,
[00:06:49] so many of us felt this way, but we
[00:06:52] could not explain why we could not watch
[00:06:55] her. Yeah, a lot of people would have
[00:06:58] the explanation of it just being sad,
[00:06:59] like, oh, it's just so sad. It's too sad
[00:07:01] to watch. That's why I didn't watch the
[00:07:03] memorial at first and then I went
[00:07:04] through it and I was like, oh man. uh
[00:07:07] studies in uh psychopathy, studies on
[00:07:10] psychopathy, particularly
[00:07:13] those building on the work of
[00:07:16] psychologists like Robert Hair, describe
[00:07:19] traits such as rehearsed emotional
[00:07:21] display and shallow effect. These traits
[00:07:25] can create uh what observers experience
[00:07:29] as an uncanny
[00:07:32] interpersonal dynamic.
[00:07:35] Hm. It's like the uncanny valley with AI
[00:07:38] and machines. When you see something,
[00:07:40] uncali uncanny valley is when you see
[00:07:43] something and it just seems so fake. You
[00:07:46] can't describe it and it just makes you
[00:07:48] uncomfortable and makes you want to back
[00:07:49] away. It's like if you saw a person that
[00:07:51] just didn't look like a person, it it
[00:07:54] immediately becomes scary because you
[00:07:55] know they're not like the rest of us.
[00:07:57] So, it's this kind of thing here. uh the
[00:08:00] discomfort arises and people want to
[00:08:02] shut it off because most people rarely
[00:08:05] encounter extreme effective mimicry in
[00:08:09] everyday life. So the brain struggles to
[00:08:12] categorize what is being detected.
[00:08:15] Comment below if this is what you felt
[00:08:19] like when watching her. I mean, this is
[00:08:22] just coming from her just straight up
[00:08:24] wanting to say this because she is not
[00:08:26] the type she has not been going at Erica
[00:08:28] at all. Not at all. I mean, she's been
[00:08:31] studying things, looking at at the
[00:08:32] situation, but she has not been going at
[00:08:34] Erica like and she's not like a a super
[00:08:37] Candace supporter or anything like that.
[00:08:39] She uh anyway uh Erica is attractive
[00:08:43] enough and she has had every tool in her
[00:08:47] position to sell this organically except
[00:08:50] for one thing emotion. The entire story
[00:08:53] of what happened could have helped her
[00:08:56] sell this fully. She really would have
[00:08:59] had been she would have she really would
[00:09:01] have had been the last person on earth
[00:09:04] to be a suspect if not for the FBI's
[00:09:07] terrible mistakes, turning points lies,
[00:09:11] and her very fake performance. Honestly,
[00:09:14] she should have been the first suspect.
[00:09:15] I mean, that that's just like normal.
[00:09:17] Plenty of attractive, ambitious women
[00:09:20] move through media spaces without
[00:09:22] triggering that response, even though we
[00:09:25] know what they are. This is about
[00:09:28] something else. An extreme disconnect
[00:09:30] between presentation she puts out and
[00:09:33] perceived authenticity.
[00:09:36] I mean, hitting the nail on the head. I
[00:09:38] mean, h surgically hitting the nail on
[00:09:40] hitting the nail on the head with a
[00:09:42] scalpel. You know, Erica is not the
[00:09:45] archetype of a model and an actress
[00:09:47] seeking money and fame and then settling
[00:09:51] into a quiet life with a wealthy,
[00:09:53] good-looking husband. She's the wolf
[00:09:56] type who wants to be in the place
[00:10:02] of that husband. Yeah, she's 100. She's
[00:10:06] right.
[00:10:08] She's right. I actually just finished
[00:10:10] recording an episode that I'll probably
[00:10:12] I probably released on Friday where they
[00:10:14] were talking about the text messages
[00:10:15] between her and the girl Jillian. And
[00:10:18] there were some of those posts that she
[00:10:20] had where
[00:10:23] and again it this is not I'm not saying
[00:10:24] it in I'm saying it in a way like she's
[00:10:27] sitting in a very masculine way like her
[00:10:29] legs are very wide open. I'm saying it
[00:10:31] in a masculine like what is it
[00:10:33] manspreading she's doing that and the
[00:10:36] and the the captions are all very much
[00:10:40] like a woman who is a wolf type. That is
[00:10:43] a very good observation. She is not born
[00:10:46] for a supporting role. Yes, she is.
[00:10:50] She's a decision maker type. She wants
[00:10:53] to be at least. Yeah, definitely. She
[00:10:55] appears to pursue proximity to power,
[00:10:59] moving fluidly between television,
[00:11:02] nonprofits, branding opportunities,
[00:11:04] ideological spaces that maximize
[00:11:07] exposure. Oh, it hits a nail on the
[00:11:10] head. That's how she got with Charlie.
[00:11:12] That's exactly why. It wasn't cuz he was
[00:11:14] so cute, so handsome. It wasn't because
[00:11:16] of that, you know. It wasn't because of
[00:11:19] that. It was because of who he was and
[00:11:21] who he was gearing up to be. That's
[00:11:23] exactly why. And he was young.
[00:11:26] I don't know. Her previous partners are
[00:11:30] guys
[00:11:31] are guys women like uh like her would
[00:11:35] date. Muscular, jacked, good-looking.
[00:11:38] Even though they are not people with
[00:11:41] huge potential, they are all somewhat
[00:11:44] established. They are good stepping
[00:11:47] stones until the right person shows up.
[00:11:50] Now, looking at her previous partners,
[00:11:53] I'd say Charlie was probably not her
[00:11:56] type visually, but he was exactly what
[00:11:59] she was looking for in a man. A potent a
[00:12:02] potential to be a great power. That's
[00:12:06] exactly it. And she knew that
[00:12:09] from being a part of the Fall Kirk uh
[00:12:13] Institute, I think they were calling it
[00:12:15] that organization. Uh being around
[00:12:18] Charlie and the gentleman Fwell, I
[00:12:21] believe it's Fwell or Farwell. Being
[00:12:24] around those two, being around Liberty
[00:12:27] University, she understood where the
[00:12:31] power was. She was with a basketball
[00:12:33] player and that didn't that wasn't
[00:12:35] enough. Basketball players don't really
[00:12:37] get into positions of power. They
[00:12:39] usually just retire and chill. Maybe
[00:12:41] some businesses after. Kobe was the only
[00:12:43] exception. He became like a billionaire
[00:12:45] after. That's that happens a little bit.
[00:12:48] Shaq, Kobe, some other people, but high
[00:12:52] positions of power. Charlie is more
[00:12:55] powerful than Shaq. Even as a Mason,
[00:12:57] like he is a high level Mason. Uh he's
[00:13:00] more powerful. Presidential power. I
[00:13:03] mean, had the potential to more than
[00:13:06] likely become the most powerful person
[00:13:08] in the world and he was he was he was
[00:13:12] almost ready for the position before he
[00:13:14] was even old enough for the position,
[00:13:16] right? Um, let's keep going here. I
[00:13:19] mean, this this lady's rocking it. What
[00:13:22] Erica was looking for is the same thing
[00:13:24] Hillary Clinton was working for when she
[00:13:27] met Bill. This is I said I just said
[00:13:31] that Erica is gonna be like the new
[00:13:33] Hillary Clinton. I just said that in a
[00:13:36] live stream or an episode, I forget. She
[00:13:38] recognized that Bill Clinton was her
[00:13:41] ticket to power. The power she could
[00:13:43] control and she was right. She realized
[00:13:47] she could create a great brand out of
[00:13:50] him and herself and they would still and
[00:13:53] they still are a brand. the Clintons. No
[00:13:56] one in this world can say they love each
[00:14:00] other.
[00:14:03] It's true. It's true. She was even mad
[00:14:05] from like a business standpoint when
[00:14:07] Bill got caught. She was like, "You're
[00:14:09] just making us look ridiculous." Uh
[00:14:12] she's like, "And I'm not leaving you."
[00:14:14] So now this looks even weirder. Uh they
[00:14:16] are a brand that works.
[00:14:19] This is why she's sticking around
[00:14:21] despite
[00:14:23] redacted Jeff and Lewinsky. Uh, also, if
[00:14:27] you think Bill is a decision maker
[00:14:29] there, is the decision-m there, you must
[00:14:32] have never been in close proximity to
[00:14:34] the Clintons. She moves the game. She's
[00:14:37] the decision maker. That's exactly what
[00:14:39] she was trying to That's what Erica was
[00:14:40] trying to be with Charlie. You could
[00:14:42] tell she was trying to do that with
[00:14:43] Charlie when they would have their talks
[00:14:45] about what they thought about, you know,
[00:14:47] getting married young or getting married
[00:14:49] older, family,
[00:14:51] a mother and career. You could see the
[00:14:54] little friction that would happen. And
[00:14:56] Erica would always try to kind of one up
[00:14:59] Charlie in that respect instead of being
[00:15:01] in the position of listening to him. And
[00:15:04] listen, some people don't like that, but
[00:15:06] you would think if you're with someone
[00:15:08] like Charlie, you would be like that.
[00:15:10] But if Elizabeth is right, you want the
[00:15:13] power. My wife's very powerful. My
[00:15:16] wife's very very smart. Extremely smart.
[00:15:19] Really smart. Uh you know, uh really
[00:15:22] capable. Uh not just not just like f
[00:15:25] like physically capable. Could like fix
[00:15:28] things and do things and then really
[00:15:29] mental mentally capable. But if I say
[00:15:32] something in the house, that's what we
[00:15:34] do. Like very traditional that way. She
[00:15:37] she could easily leave and be okay, but
[00:15:41] she stays in that place because she's
[00:15:44] not like Erica in terms of being like a
[00:15:47] wolf type. Um, in fact, she was laughing
[00:15:50] the other day about never wanting to get
[00:15:52] a job again. She She's like, "I don't
[00:15:54] want to work." She's like, "I want ice
[00:15:55] cream and I want to be in bed." And I
[00:15:57] was like, "All right, well, you know, we
[00:15:59] got beds. We got ice cream. You're
[00:16:01] good." Uh, Erica Erica saw a brand with
[00:16:04] Charlie. She also saw that Charlie could
[00:16:07] one day become president of the United
[00:16:09] States of America if he wanted to.
[00:16:12] Charlie had the ear of the most powerful
[00:16:16] segment of any society, students. He was
[00:16:20] going to be very a very important player
[00:16:22] in politics and she was not missing that
[00:16:25] ride. What's striking is how completely
[00:16:30] how completely her public identity
[00:16:33] reshapes itself after that relationship
[00:16:36] begins. Yes, exactly. The aesthetic, the
[00:16:40] tone, the values,
[00:16:42] the the presentation all change
[00:16:45] overnight. The persona shifts into the
[00:16:48] role that best fits Charlie's world.
[00:16:51] Devoted Christian, modest, supportive
[00:16:54] housewife. That kind of rapid adaptation
[00:16:58] is quite impressive for a usual person,
[00:17:01] but not for a psychopath. They do it all
[00:17:03] the time.
[00:17:06] True. True. I I think someone even said
[00:17:09] this in the group chats or sorry, in the
[00:17:11] in the live stream, they said she's
[00:17:12] fluid. Like she just she Oh, she's a
[00:17:15] shape shifter. That's what somebody said
[00:17:16] that she's a shape shifter. And again,
[00:17:19] yeah, solid solid takes. Um, what's
[00:17:23] striking Oh, okay. No, no, no. We're
[00:17:25] here. In my head, in my head, story goes
[00:17:29] like this. For a moment, it works. She
[00:17:31] becomes the wife of a rising political
[00:17:33] figure with access to donors,
[00:17:36] institutions, and national platforms. At
[00:17:38] that point, the ceiling isn't social
[00:17:41] media influence. It's empire building,
[00:17:44] foundations, global reach, and a legacy
[00:17:48] brand. Kirks,
[00:17:50] man, she's she's hitting it, man. I I
[00:17:52] she's calling Erica perfectly. And I
[00:17:55] have to say this is what most women saw.
[00:17:57] Most women were were saying this as much
[00:18:01] as they could, as frankly as they could.
[00:18:03] Uh from day one, it's obvious that
[00:18:06] Charlie listens to her. Whether it's
[00:18:08] about donors or the trajectory of
[00:18:11] Turning Point USA, the most influential
[00:18:14] figure in any
[00:18:16] mentally healthy man's life is his wife.
[00:18:20] she is going to be the biggest influence
[00:18:22] and that's just how it is. That is why
[00:18:25] you need to pick the partner that you
[00:18:28] have wisely. So true. So true. And and
[00:18:33] again, when Candace talks about them
[00:18:34] fighting, it makes sense because Erica
[00:18:38] wouldn't know how to deal with that if
[00:18:41] Charlie had been listening to her. in
[00:18:43] the one thing, the super important thing
[00:18:45] that jeopardizes the brand that
[00:18:48] Elizabeth is talking about is Charlie
[00:18:51] changing his stance on Philadelphia.
[00:18:54] When Charlie changes his stance on
[00:18:56] Philadelphia and says, "I don't care.
[00:18:59] Yeah, he offered me $150 million. I
[00:19:02] don't care. I'm not taking it. Yes,
[00:19:04] we're losing donors. I don't care. Yes,
[00:19:07] I'm getting these messages and people
[00:19:08] are questioning my moral character. I
[00:19:11] don't care. Yes, I'm gonna bring Tucker
[00:19:13] back. I'm gonna even start bringing
[00:19:15] Candace back and I don't care what
[00:19:17] happens. That in Erica's eyes is
[00:19:21] completely jeopardizing the brand, the
[00:19:24] power. It's fine for Charlie. Charlie's
[00:19:27] like, "Who cares? I started with a desk
[00:19:29] and a tent. I can just go back to that.
[00:19:32] We're good. I'll still make good money.
[00:19:34] I have a crazy YouTube channel. I still
[00:19:36] have this organization. We'll be able to
[00:19:38] pull through this. might be some
[00:19:40] layoffs, but at the end of the day,
[00:19:42] we'll still have the power of the
[00:19:44] students.
[00:19:46] That's probably not enough for Erica,
[00:19:47] right? Especially when you've watched it
[00:19:49] grow to almost like to nine figures. You
[00:19:52] want to see it grow to 10 figures.
[00:19:54] Interesting. So,
[00:19:57] everything was going well until Charlie
[00:20:00] makes decisions based on his conscious.
[00:20:03] His conscious rather than the expansion
[00:20:06] and money. He turns down money. He
[00:20:08] refuses to play dirty politics. I'm
[00:20:11] assuming someone like Erica who married
[00:20:13] into this because she had a vision for
[00:20:15] this brand. Oh, like look, I I was
[00:20:17] ahead. I I got ahead of her. She's
[00:20:19] saying the exact thing. Would not be
[00:20:21] very happy with that. The life she
[00:20:24] appears to have signed up for power
[00:20:26] couple expanding influence historical
[00:20:29] relevance was collapsing into something
[00:20:32] else entirely.
[00:20:34] Domest domest domesticity.
[00:20:39] Domesticity.
[00:20:40] Is that what she's saying? Uh housewife
[00:20:44] kids. Housewife kids. And now Charlie's
[00:20:47] refusing to accept the money that can
[00:20:49] make him a global power.
[00:20:53] A supporting role instead of center
[00:20:56] stage is not her thing.
[00:21:00] Very interesting.
[00:21:03] I'm like, I I can't wait to hear what's
[00:21:04] next. She could do a whole series like
[00:21:06] this and I would love it. She should
[00:21:07] make a post like this every week. Uh,
[00:21:09] her husband died a few days ago. Her
[00:21:13] husband died a few days ago and she
[00:21:15] walked on stage as if she were born
[00:21:18] there. It comes naturally to her. She
[00:21:20] knows it. She wants it. Just days after
[00:21:23] her husband's death, she's already
[00:21:26] laying out ambitious plans for the
[00:21:28] company over Zoom. It's obvious she was
[00:21:31] always always deeply involved in the
[00:21:33] business and knew exactly where to pick
[00:21:35] up when her turn came. When people
[00:21:39] struggle to watch, what makes the screen
[00:21:43] unbearable
[00:21:45] is not grief. It's the absence of
[00:21:48] emotional continuity.
[00:21:50] Performances can be learned. Trust me,
[00:21:52] as a former actress, I can speak to
[00:21:55] that. But emotion can't be improvised.
[00:21:58] It can't be mimicked if you've ever
[00:22:00] experienced it. That's why I think we
[00:22:04] are dealing with a psychopath
[00:22:06] who has never really experienced
[00:22:10] here never really experienced these
[00:22:13] emotions and does not know how to play
[00:22:15] them and audiences feel it instantly.
[00:22:19] It's fake. Again, just my opinion.
[00:22:24] This is an accusation of crime. I'm not
[00:22:26] claiming this is what happened and it's
[00:22:29] a fact. It's an analyst I made after
[00:22:33] watching her long enough and it's quite
[00:22:36] and quite honestly I am sick of this
[00:22:39] stuff. Wow, Elizabeth. And then the
[00:22:43] picture here. I mean just like I mean
[00:22:47] perfect picture. There's no real emotion
[00:22:49] here. This is not someone who is upset
[00:22:54] that their husband's gone. This is
[00:22:56] someone who's looking at the crowd and
[00:22:59] seeing how Again, again, I'm a comedian.
[00:23:01] I know about looking at a crowd and
[00:23:04] you're gauging where the crowd's at.
[00:23:06] You're gauging how they feel you. If
[00:23:09] they feel you, right? If they believe
[00:23:12] you.
[00:23:13] That's what's going on here more than
[00:23:15] anything. And again, this is over her
[00:23:18] mouth. It's touching her eyes, but
[00:23:21] there's no tears. None. And there were
[00:23:24] none. Throughout that entire memorial,
[00:23:27] throughout that entire first speech,
[00:23:29] throughout an entire Jesse Waters
[00:23:31] interview, there was none. There was no
[00:23:33] tears.
[00:23:37] Really, really interesting, man. And and
[00:23:39] again, you know, shout out to Elizabeth
[00:23:41] Lane for uh for for breaking this down
[00:23:44] for us the way she did, right? You want
[00:23:47] to know who Elizabeth Lane is? That's
[00:23:48] Elizabeth Lane. She was a a model and an
[00:23:52] actress. Uh she seems to uh she seems to
[00:23:57] be very good at that and she left that
[00:23:59] to be an independent journalist. So I
[00:24:03] think she knows what she's talking
[00:24:04] about. Again, Candace shared this. Said
[00:24:07] it's a must readad and I have to agree.
[00:24:10] I mean, and then when I went to the
[00:24:11] quotes, I didn't even know you could do
[00:24:13] this on X. I didn't know you could go to
[00:24:15] the quotes. Who do we got here? This is
[00:24:18] the mod team. Whitney, what's going on,
[00:24:20] Whitney? I can't I can't write to you
[00:24:22] right now. Perfect. Um, mod team,
[00:24:25] Whitney Murphy. Uh, best mod, best mods
[00:24:29] in the world, I have to say. Anyway,
[00:24:32] when you see the quotes, everybody read
[00:24:35] this. You will find me in agreement. You
[00:24:38] know,
[00:24:40] this is absolutely brilliant analyst. I
[00:24:42] hope everyone reposts this, right? I
[00:24:45] mean, so many people
[00:24:49] people like you need to burn it out.
[00:24:53] Some people aren't going to like it. Is
[00:24:55] Erica Kirk a heartless psychopath? I
[00:24:58] mean,
[00:25:00] holy s, this is spoton
[00:25:04] 100%. Charlie wasn't a cynic or skits,
[00:25:08] so he didn't see it. His downfall was
[00:25:12] the trust and empathy that ironically
[00:25:15] uh that ironically what made him
[00:25:18] relatable. He was not he was a lot like
[00:25:22] JFK.
[00:25:24] Yeah, that's an interesting take too.
[00:25:25] Yeah, that's true. That's very true. So
[00:25:28] many people, man, quoting this. This is
[00:25:31] a long read, but it's a great take on
[00:25:33] Erica.
[00:25:35] No one is reading this much stuff.
[00:25:38] Low IQ. That's a Joe you just saw.
[00:25:41] They're starting to get it. Yeah, people
[00:25:44] are starting to get it. Uh,
[00:25:45] exceptionally well written and spoton,
[00:25:49] you know. People are just really feeling
[00:25:50] it. Spot on. What we are feeling so well
[00:25:54] thought out
[00:25:56] to two too long didn't read this bee is
[00:26:00] a demon. You can smell it when you watch
[00:26:01] her. That's what the person said.
[00:26:03] Couldn't have said this better myself.
[00:26:05] Man, this person right here, when you
[00:26:07] tag, you tag Erica and you tag Turning
[00:26:10] Point, man, you're instigating. You're
[00:26:12] an instigator, man. Project Constitution
[00:26:14] always does that to me. You're
[00:26:16] instigating, man. You know what you're
[00:26:18] doing. You're trying to You're trying to
[00:26:19] get a little fight going in the
[00:26:21] comments. Look at you.
[00:26:25] She says, uh, that guy says it's crazy.
[00:26:27] Uh, the perfect and most in-depth
[00:26:29] explanation of exactly what I picked up
[00:26:32] on about Erica. that woman is completely
[00:26:34] detached from her soul.
[00:26:36] I share this opinion. This is profound.
[00:26:39] I mean, like there's there's just it
[00:26:40] just goes on and on and on like that.
[00:26:43] She hit the nail on the head. This is
[00:26:45] exactly what people have been feeling.
[00:26:47] Some people haven't been articulating it
[00:26:49] well. Some people haven't seen enough to
[00:26:52] really be able to put a finger on it,
[00:26:55] but she just explained it perfectly.
[00:26:58] And that's what it is, man. A lot of
[00:27:00] people just aren't aren't believing
[00:27:02] this. They're just not believing it. And
[00:27:05] she's right to say it's not an
[00:27:06] accusation of crime. It just seems like
[00:27:09] she's really into the position that
[00:27:11] she's in now. She's really into it. Like
[00:27:13] I mean with and when Candace showed us
[00:27:15] that Zoom call and she said, "My
[00:27:17] husband's dead." Not to be morbid. I
[00:27:19] mean that was God forbid. God forbid
[00:27:23] man. Like I didn't even know my dad that
[00:27:25] well. And if I start talking about him
[00:27:27] being dead,
[00:27:29] uh, it still gets to me. I didn't even
[00:27:31] know him that well. Not not extremely
[00:27:33] well. I loved him. I know he loved me,
[00:27:35] but I didn't I didn't know him extremely
[00:27:37] well. I didn't know him like like I have
[00:27:40] spent more time with my kid than he has
[00:27:43] spent with me. My kids too, you know
[00:27:45] what I mean? Uh, but still I it would
[00:27:49] still get to me, especially especially
[00:27:51] so soon after.
[00:27:54] I mean, you know, God forbid. I don't
[00:27:57] even want to bring up, you know, the
[00:27:58] similar situation. I I just it'd be
[00:28:01] broken. Look, a picture of my got a
[00:28:03] picture of my wife right here. She's
[00:28:04] right here. I mean, I would just be
[00:28:06] broken thinking about that. Having to
[00:28:09] say those words. She said it like
[00:28:11] nothing. And again, what people do is
[00:28:14] what Turning Point does is, well, that's
[00:28:16] strength.
[00:28:17] Like, that's not strength. Not at that
[00:28:19] point. You know, strength is not being
[00:28:22] able to speak and you're crying that
[00:28:25] hard and you're just falling apart and
[00:28:29] you're able to, you know, maybe walk
[00:28:32] into the office and say, "Thank you guys
[00:28:34] for being here. I can't do this." Or
[00:28:37] strength is just you feeling that exact
[00:28:39] way, but pulling yourself together for
[00:28:41] your children, but not going anywhere
[00:28:44] and just being with your family. You
[00:28:47] know, that that's strength. It's
[00:28:49] something completely different when you
[00:28:51] just walk out and you're acting like
[00:28:53] you're crying
[00:28:55] and you're in Zoom calls and you're
[00:28:57] laughing
[00:28:59] and you're saying, "Hey, my husband's
[00:29:00] dead." Like not to be morbid or
[00:29:02] anything. Like even just to say that and
[00:29:06] not tear up, not like nothing, no
[00:29:09] reaction,
[00:29:12] man. Something else. Really something
[00:29:15] else. I just wanted to read that for you
[00:29:17] guys. Merry weekend. Merry weekend to
[00:29:20] all.
[00:29:22] Great way to start your day. Hope your
[00:29:24] coffee was nice while I was reading all
[00:29:27] that.
[00:29:30] But I had to, man. I had to. I hope
[00:29:33] Baron talks about this. I hope Baron
[00:29:35] touches on this. Uh I hope Candace does,
[00:29:37] too.
[00:29:39] Candace is gonna be gone for a week.
[00:29:41] Hopefully, maybe when she comes back,
[00:29:42] she'll at least comment on it. But I
[00:29:44] mean, again, again, like like I told you
[00:29:46] guys, and I called this perfectly, she
[00:29:48] she's already getting the Candace
[00:29:50] withdrawals. It's not It's not just us
[00:29:51] that gets them. Candace already has
[00:29:53] them. Candace is probably like, "I need
[00:29:55] to She's like, "George, George, I just I
[00:29:58] need to just do one podcast. Just one.
[00:30:02] I'll make it half an hour. I just need
[00:30:05] to." And he's like, "No, no, no. You
[00:30:08] promised. You promised. It is valent. It
[00:30:12] is Valentine's Day. Stop it. Stop this
[00:30:15] right now. You know, can't say no. She
[00:30:19] married a Kendall. She married a British
[00:30:20] Kendall. You know what I mean? I mean,
[00:30:23] married a David Beckham type. You know,
[00:30:25] this wild. Anyway, I just wanted to
[00:30:28] bring that to you guys. I thought it was
[00:30:30] uh very hard-hitting. I think it's
[00:30:33] really something to think about. If you
[00:30:34] have X, I have reposted it just now, so
[00:30:38] you'll be able to see it. If you don't,
[00:30:40] well then you just heard it all there.
[00:30:42] Uh along with a little bit of
[00:30:43] commentary, but uh just wanted to bring
[00:30:45] that to you guys. I'm out of here and
[00:30:48] I'll see you guys tomorrow. If this
[00:30:50] comes out on Sunday, we I will see you
[00:30:52] in the live stream. If you're not going
[00:30:54] to watch the three-hour live stream, hit
[00:30:56] up the clips channel. I can't I can't
[00:30:59] tell you guys about the Clips channel
[00:31:00] enough. I have to I have to bring it up
[00:31:03] again because it's it's just a great
[00:31:06] place for people to be when they want
[00:31:09] some shorter videos because we don't
[00:31:11] make the shorter videos during the week.
[00:31:14] We might have a night shift video. The
[00:31:16] the truth is you got to hit up both. You
[00:31:18] got to be subscribed to both. I mean
[00:31:20] that that's just that's just the basics
[00:31:22] of it. You come here, there's going to
[00:31:25] be short clips for you. There's already
[00:31:27] almost 500 videos for you guys to watch.
[00:31:30] So, just hit that subscribe button on
[00:31:33] the clips channel, turn on the
[00:31:34] notifications, you'll stay up to date
[00:31:36] with the live stream. You stay over
[00:31:38] here, you get live streams, you'll get
[00:31:40] night shift videos. We are revving this
[00:31:44] engine, this Coach Colin engine. It was
[00:31:48] a Honda Civic and now it's a Maserati.
[00:31:51] Rev it. Revving it. Anyways, guys, just
[00:31:54] wanted to bring you that. I'm out of
[00:31:56] here.
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