PBD Podcast - Moms For Liberty Co-Founder Tiffany Justice | PBD Podcast | Ep. 368
Episode Date: February 21, 2024Patrick Bet-David sits down one-on-one with Moms For Liberty Co-Founder Tiffany Justice! Tiffany Justice is a wife, mom of four school-aged children, and co-founder of Moms For Liberty, a grassroots ...organization dedicated to fighting for liberty and parental rights in education. TIMESTAMPS: 2:31 - Tiffany discusses her appearance on MSNBC and her debate with Joy Reid. 9:30 - Tiffany explains what parents with limited resources can do to combat public school agendas. 13:22 - Tiffany discusses debating former NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio regarding graphic sex in books in schools. 26:50 - Who is behind the push to get books containing graphic sexual content in schools? 29:40 - The message parents need to hear about the power of the teachers unions. 37:05 - How Moms For Liberty is funding the fight to keep books containing graphic sex out of schools and who is funding the opposition. 41:27 - Tiffany discusses how Moms For Liberty handled the Bridget Ziegler sex scandal. 45:29 - Trans influencers and their effect on children via TikTok and other social media platforms. 56:36 - How parents can fight back against the National Education Association. 1:10:54 - The effect COVID had on students and child care in the United States. 1:15:45 - What the National Education Association fears the most? 1:24:07 - Is there a way to fight back against the CDC's WSCC Program (Whole School, Whole Community, Whole Child)? 1:40:32 - Are public schools violating parental rights and causing a rift between parents and children? WIN FREE TICKETS TO MARCH'S LIVE PODCAST: Purchase $100 of "Future Looks Bright" Gear & Qualify to Win A Pair of VIP Tickets to "PBD Podcast LIVE w/ Candace Owens and Chris Cuomo" on March 8th: https://bit.ly/42Ctj0F PBD LIVE W/ CANDACE OWENS AND CHRIS CUOMO: Purchase tickets to PBD Podcast Live w/ Candace Owens & Chris Cuomo on Friday, March 8th: https://bit.ly/42EBFF0 MINNECT: Connect one-on-one with the right expert to get the answers you need with Minnect: https://bit.ly/3MC9IXE Connect with Patrick on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3OoiGIC Connect with Tom on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3UgJjmR Connect with Vincent on Minnect: https://bit.ly/47TFCXq Connect with Adam on Minnect: https://bit.ly/42mnnc4 CHOOSE YOUR ENEMIES WISELY: Purchase PBD's Book "Choose Your Enemies Wisely": https://bit.ly/41bTtGD BET-DAVID CONSULTING: Get best-in-class business advice with Bet-David Consulting: https://bit.ly/40oUafz' VT.COM: Visit VT.com for the latest news and insights from the world of politics, business and entertainment: https://bit.ly/472R3Mz VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: Visit Valuetainment University for the best courses online for entrepreneurs: https://bit.ly/47gKVA0 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! YOUR NEXT 5 MOVES: Want to be clear on your next 5 business moves? https://bit.ly/3Qzrj3m ABOUT US: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Fanduil Casino's exclusive Live Dealer Studio has your chance at the number one feeling,
winning, which beats even the 27th best feeling saying, I do.
Who wants this last parachute?
I do.
Enjoy the number one feeling, winning in an exciting Live Dealer Studio,
exclusively on Fanduil Casino, where winning is undefeated.
19 plus and physically located in Ontario.
Gambling problem?
Call 1-866-531-2600
or visit connexontario.ca.
Please play responsibly.
Did you ever think you would make it?
What did you ever think you would make it?
I feel I'm so loose like a tape sweep victory.
I know this life meant for me.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Why would you bet on your life when we got bettavid?
Value came in, giving values contagious world entrepreneurs.
We can't no value to hate is running homie.
Look what I become.
I'm the one.
Episode 368 today with Tiffany justice from moms for liberty.
If you're not aware of who she is, you've seen her on joy read.
We commented on it. I want to say a couple of weeks ago, we'll show the clip here in a minute as well
when we get started where they were going back and forth and the debate was over what
is wrong with a child book in schools talking about dildos and joy was talking about what's
wrong with that. And Tiffany has a mother of four saying, I think there's a problem
with that. And we shouldn't even sit there and talk about whether I know the guy's name or not the guy
that wrote the book that had a tough life.
So here's what I did to prepare for this.
I went ahead and got a list of the books
that many of these schools are recommending
for their kids, the students, and I bought them.
I called Barnes & Noble locally yesterday.
Before we get into it, I'll properly introduce
our guest as well.
Gender Queer, a memoir. I called Barnes & Noble.
I said, do you have this book?
Oh my God, it's a favorite.
Great.
Please put one on hold.
No problem.
Do you have the book?
All Boys Aren't Blue?
About every single one of these books.
And she said, so many of these books were sold out because going back to school, you're
so lucky to get a copy of them.
I'm like, fantastic.
I said, Mickey, Mickey went and picked it up.
We didn't tell Mickey what book she's picking up. And then afterwards she says, now I know
why you don't want to go pick up these books. I'm like, I would
have gone, but at the same time, it's much better for Mickey to
go to pick up the books than me. So if you're parents, you're
watching this, you got kids, you're sick of it. A lot of stuff
was escalating specifically during COVID, which shut down
kids staying home. That's how these guys got started in 2021.
I want to say January of 2021, when they started with a couple co-founders
and they grew it from what it was to now having 300 chapters in 48 states with
120,000 members. And she was formerly a school district stepped up to serve four years on the
school district of Indian River County in Florida and then said, I'm going to step away to do this.
We got a lot of things to talk about with that being said.
Tiffany, thank you so much for being a guest on the podcast.
Thank you so much for having me today.
So, you know, I wanna start off with the joy read.
Let's just get it out so everybody knows who you are,
because some people who maybe watch the content
for other reasons may not know,
but I want the audience to see this clip, Rob.
If you can pull it up, and yeah, if you can just
play, is this the specific part that we're talking about, right? This is where they're discussing
context and the perfect. That's the one. Go ahead and play this clip. Everybody pay attention to
this. I'm assuming you have common sense. You have logic. The folks who watch this content,
whether you agree with us or not. And if you're a parent, tell me you're comfortable with this
exchange. Go ahead. You can do keyword searches and find certain keywords like rape. You can find key
Yeah, or anal rape or you can ill-do you can find all those types of words
But wait, let me finish my okay, then I'm gonna give you time to answer black as your verse
Oh, yeah
And so what you find is the keyword that you find the n-word anything words like you just use
I don't think this is it out of I think this is later because you have, there's one, if you go on Twitter where she's asking
right off the bat where the exchange is about, the exchange is about, let me see if I can
find it, Mom's for Liberty.
The exchange is specifically about, you click on that, see what it is, where right off the
bat, it's like, you mean to tell me, have you read this book? You think it's okay to have this book?
See if it's talking about there in the corner with the content. Play this to see what this
is. How it starts.
Here's my question.
Here's my question.
You didn't answer my question.
No, no, no. I'm going to answer your question.
Great. I would love to hear that.
Absolutely. Well, I'm interviewing you and you're not interviewing me. So let's just
make sure it's a conversation.
Okay.
So what I'm saying to you is that as you are not an expert in this book, I don't
have to get an explanation for that. One moment for public school. I mean, this book.
No play. Is that it? That was it. So you're seeing this exchange while you're sitting there
and she's trying to logically argue that what's wrong with Dildos being in a book and you know let
the parents decide if you don't want it go ahead and you know sign this and say
I don't want my kids to have access to this what are you thinking of them I
want to talk in a jewelry do you sit there and say she can't believe this
because she's got kids herself right what are you what's going through your
mind during that moment yeah I mean you have thinking of a lot of things first
of all I knew it wasn't an honest conversation right it felt like a fencing match more than I'm thinking of a lot of things. First of all, I knew it wasn't an honest conversation, right?
It felt like a fencing match more than anything.
So there were a lot of different things going through my head
about how to engage with her.
Previously, I had said to her, explain to me the context.
I think that was the clip you were talking about.
Explain to me the context around the Strap on Dildo
that makes it acceptable for public school.
And she couldn't answer that.
She refused to answer it the entire time
we were having the conversation.
So yeah, I mean, what you really wanna ask Joy is,
Joy, you're gonna read this to your kids at bedtime,
you're gonna open up the book and talk about how
the young man and all the boys aren't blue
was anally raped by an adult family member as a child?
No, of course not.
No one's reading that to their kid at bedtime.
So it's a disingenuous conversation.
I told her that when we were talking about it,
but I was, again, I was happy she had me on.
It was an incredible opportunity to be able to, you know,
engage on this issue in a way where people could really see
how, you know, what a horrible argument they have.
Yeah. So, first of all, why don't we go back to, you know,
you starting this company for some of the, you know,
you and yourself and the two founders that started it.
Motive, what was it? Was it a call?
Was it a tipping point? Was there one thing, event that took place where you said, you know what, this is too much and we got two founders that started it. Motive, what was it? Was it a call? Was it a tipping point?
Was there one thing, event that took place where you said,
you know what, this is too much
and we gotta do something about it.
When did that happen?
So there are two co-founders, me and then Tina Deskovich
and Tina served in Brevard County, Florida.
I served in Indian River County.
So just a few hours north of here.
We served on school board.
We saw some of the ideology creeping in.
I'll be honest, I think, especially my county,
a bit of a bubble.
So a lot of the ideology that you're seeing around the country
wasn't in our school system at that point.
It certainly is now, but during COVID,
there was just, I mean,
it was the obliteration of parental rights.
It was shocking to me.
You'd have parents coming to the podium, Patrick,
talking about masks for hurting their child.
Tina remembers a story about a mom coming to the podium and speaking to the school board
and saying, my daughter's deaf. She has trouble seeing out of one of her eyes. She's being forced
to wear a mask. I have a mask exemption. You're not letting my child use the mask exemption.
And when she wears her glasses and the mask, you know if you wear glasses, your glasses fog.
And so now she can't hear, she can't read lips
and she's having trouble seeing
out of the one good eye she has.
This sounds, I mean, it's shocking.
And the school system was like, sorry, no mask exemption.
And so a system that normally is about making accommodations
for kids, right?
Because you have four kids, every child is totally different
and they need different accommodations.
So a system that used to do that and try to do it well
had totally thrown that out the window
and just really elected officials
abdicated their authority to bureaucrats.
That's what I saw time and time again.
And so we saw parents coming to the podium
and they were upset and they didn't know how to advocate.
They were yelling, they were getting frustrated, their mics were getting caught off across the country, they didn't know how to advocate. They were yelling, they were getting frustrated,
their mics were getting cut off across the country,
they didn't know who held the levers of power
in order to make change happen, right?
Someone would say, I'm gonna report you
to the county commission.
Well, in Florida, the county commission has nothing to do
with the school board.
And so we knew that parents needed a roadmap
on how to be effective advocates.
And Tina and I were prepared, you know,
through by the grace of God in our time on School Board
to be able to show parents how to fight back.
Was there a tipping point where it was kind of,
cause some of this stuff,
it seems like it just happened suddenly
in the last four years prior to that.
I mean, I remember living in LA and you know,
Prop 8 or whatever that was going through.
Hey, here's what they're gonna be doing.
And gay marriage is going through this.
And you know, you saw President Bill Clinton,
marriages between man and woman.
And then afterwards, you get to choose who you wanna marry.
So it's been a gradual evolution
that's been taking place the last 30 years,
but it's been gradual.
All of a sudden it's like, boom, in your face, nope.
Here's what we want the kids to go through.
Was there a tipping point of that taking place?
For us, for starting Moms for Liberty
or just in general across?
Syria and America.
Yeah, that's really interesting.
I was talking to someone about MTV Awards,
the last MTV Awards,
there was like a lot of Satan stuff happening, right?
And you've got a lot of cross-dressing.
And I said, I remember when I was little
and I would watch MTV Awards in high school,
my parents would be like, why do you watch this garbage?
Look at this, right?
And so you try to step back as a parent
and say, am I overreacting?
Is this just getting older?
Or has this been a slow boil?
It's been a slow boil, I think.
Because now we've reached the point
where we have adults who are talking about taxpayers needing
to pay for this ridiculous graphic sexual content
in schools. I hope we get to talk about today just the destabilization of kids
in school through social emotional learning and gender ideology being stuck into kindergarten
classrooms.
And so I think it's just been education is a captured institution and it's just taken
a period of time for us to get to this point where now everyone really sees it and the
left is fully operational.
And that means that we get to see all of the things that they're doing very clearly.
As a parent that's listening to this, you know, who feels helpless, right?
You're like, hey, I don't have money to put my kids into private school.
I don't have the ability to do homeschooling because I need my income and her income.
So we're both working.
I can't take the kids out.
So I can't do homeschooling.
I can't do private school.
What can I do to fight against the stuff
that's being fed to my kids when they're coming home?
I feel kind of helpless.
What do you say to those parents?
What can they do?
Parents have the fundamental right
to direct the upbringing of their children.
That means the government doesn't give you that right
and they can't take that right away.
And so you have the right to know what your children are
being taught in school before they're
being taught what that information.
You have the right to direct their education.
And you can't direct something if you're constantly
reacting to it.
And that's why we fight so hard for transparency.
So what can parents do?
They can get involved.
They can ask to be able to see what their children are
being taught in school.
They need to build a relationship with their child's teacher
right off the bat. Hi, my name is Patrick. My son, David, is going to be in to see what their children are being taught in school, they need to build a relationship with their child's teacher right off the bat.
Hi, my name is Patrick, my son David
is gonna be in your class today.
This year, I'd like to talk to you
about how you feel about some different issues,
how you approach different issues in the classroom.
The best thing that parents can do is build relationships
with their teacher, with their school principal,
with their superintendent.
And that's why Moms for Liberty was really created.
Because again, we want parents to be effective advocates.
Going and yelling isn't gonna get you what you want.
You have to learn how the system works
and then how to engage with that system.
So how does the system work?
Well, the system unions have an undue influence
on your kid's education in public schools right now.
And so the system is really broken.
How does the system work?
The system protects the system.
School systems do two things well, public school systems.
They protect themselves and they celebrate themselves.
And they often celebrate themselves to protect themselves.
They're known for being the largest union, right?
I mean, they got, I don't know how many
exact members they have, but that is probably, you know,
one of the most powerful political organizations today in America where, you know, once, you know, that's one of them.
Totally, if you go to the entire union, that's just Florida. But if you look at the biggest unions in America, just type in the biggest, largest unions in America.
I think it's 3.2 million members and they're number one. If I'm not mistaken, Zoomin right there, National Education Association since 1857,
three plus million members is what they have.
This is a behemoth of an organization.
So...
They run the Democrat Party.
No question. No question.
So that level of influence,
how do you fight against a level of influence that powerful?
Well, I mean, it's not easy.
I'll be honest with you.
And I don't know that funders on the right really truly understand the amount of money
on the left that the unions are able to put into elections.
99% of the donations by unions, the NEA, the AFT, the AFT as part of the AFL-CIO, that's
the American Federation of Teachers.
That's Randy Weingarten.
So NEA, Becky Pringle, AFT, Randy Weingarten.
Everybody knows that you've seen Randy Weingarten.
She was very cozy with Joe Biden.
He had his arm around her, right?
They're big, big buddies.
They are the foot soldiers of the Progressive Far Left.
They make stuff happen.
How do you fight against it?
You get involved.
I mean, Moms for Liberty, we are building
a grassroots army, Patrick.
That is what we are doing.
Every day, it's about decentralized leadership,
finding the very best leaders across the country
to serve as chapter chairs,
and they are building an army of people to fight back
and to reclaim our public education system.
For a long time, the conservative movement
has really ignored public schools,
and we've seated the ground to the left.
We focused a lot on school choice,
and I believe in school choice. Parents should have the ground to the left. That we focused a lot on school choice,
and I believe in school choice.
Parents should have the right to choose
where their kids go to school,
and we believe in education freedom.
But at the same time, there is always going to be
a very large percentage of kids in America
that are going to public schools,
and they are being taught to hate our country
and to hate each other right now, and that has to stop.
So you recently had a debate with Bill,
with the blast you have, right? You guys had a debate and that was what, an hour and 20 minute debate.
How was that experience? Because you know there's a lot of videos going around of guys
that are TikTokers or YouTubers taking pictures with Bill and saying, hey, you ruined the city,
you destroyed the city, you're a piece of this. I mean they're just not fans of what
that guy did. What was that experience of you and him debating for an hour and 20 minutes?
Yeah, it was interesting.
So it was at the Orlando Public Library,
a group called Incubate Debate.
James Fishback, he's great.
He's been helping high school students
to bring debate back, honest debate back.
Conservative positions in debate
are being totally squashed in high school debate.
And so he asked me if I'd come debate, Bill.
I was happy to go do that. It was an interesting experience.
We started off, he came up to me and he said,
wow, you're tall.
And I said, you're tall too, Bill.
And he said, well, I think we'll be able to find
some things to agree on.
And I said, well, great.
I said, like, what is a woman?
And you can see at the beginning of the clip of the video,
he goes, oh, Tiffany, Tiffany, Tiffany,
you're starting already.
And I said, I'm just getting warmed up.
Right?
That's cool.
And then we sat down, yeah.
I mean, and I, you know, you have some of the books.
There's a book called, this book is gay, that shows,
you know, I don't know what I'm allowed to say on your show.
Am I, am I pretty good?
You can say it, yeah.
All right, so there's a book that shows how to give hand jobs
and blow jobs and tells, you know, don't use your teeth
and how to use two hands.
And I don't think you, yeah, you might have it.
Yeah, it might be in here.
Or actually the book I'm talking about is Let's Talk About It.
But there's some really interesting things in here as well.
And so I showed him the book
and there are these pictures of drawn penises
and handjobs and I was saying, you know, Bill, look at it.
Hold it.
Like this is what we're talking about.
Let's have an honest conversation and he wouldn't even touch the book, wouldn't even look at it, hold it. Like this is what we're talking about. Let's have an honest conversation
and he wouldn't even touch the book,
wouldn't even look at it.
Why wouldn't you touch the book?
I mean, I think it's just much easier
to pretend like it isn't happening
if you're not actually holding the book
and looking at the pictures.
Rob, can you pull up one of the things
you have here on the excerpts on,
this book is gay, Can you pull this up?
I think it's the third one that you have right there.
Is this the one that we were talking about?
Go up a little bit, right there, zoom in a little bit.
That one is perhaps the most important skill.
This is the written by transgender author, Juno.
It's marketed as a bestselling exploration
of sexuality and gender for young adults.
Dawson writes in one of the chapters,
perhaps the most important skill set to master
as a gay or a bi man is a classic timeless,
the hand job, right?
And then it continues talking about,
you know, what you do to finish off your partner,
being on the bottom makes a dude less manly
than his partner, he is literally taking it like a man,
like this book is in schools,
this book right here is banned apparently only in 15 states.
You mean the other 35 states
allowed this book to be in their schools?
Yeah, taxpayers shouldn't have to pay for leftist propaganda.
What's their logic of saying
it's okay to have this book in the school?
Well, I mean, it's really boiling down to what, you know,
Bill was saying was that there's a First Amendment issue.
He kept saying this is a slippery slope.
If you take this book out of school, then where do you stop?
And I just, when it comes to kids and sexualizing children,
that's a hard line.
I'm willing to have a conversation, Patrick,
about the fact that, yeah, of course,
I think if you start taking everything out of schools,
then I think it's important to have an honest conversation
about what should be taught, what the standards are,
what the curriculum is, and we should talk about that, right?
How do we decide what actually gets taught in school?
It turns out it's not, you know,
the teacher just doesn't wake up every day
and decide what to teach.
There's a very clear cut roadmap for teachers,
especially in Florida, about the standards
and the curriculum that's chosen
to accompany those standards.
But the truth is that this is just nonsense.
So who was the author, Rob, that they just automatically banned all his books and they
went out selling it and it was offensive and this is not appropriate.
This was like two, three years ago, four years ago.
Who's the most famous author that wrote books for kids and he had a TV show or something.
What's his name?
Are you talking about JK Rowling?
Not JK Rowling.
I'm talking about he's dead.
He's not around.
Do you know which one I'm talking about JK Rowling? Not JK Rowling. I'm talking about he's dead. He's not around.
Do you know which one I'm talking about, Kids Books? You know his name.
Dr. Seuss.
Dr. Seuss, right.
Which books did they ban by Dr. Seuss?
And why was it banned?
So Dr. Seuss books that were banned,
what were the list of books that they're no longer publishing?
And they were changing some of them.
Here goes, six Dr. Seuss books won't be published for racist images
Is the reason okay, so dr. Sue's who helped raise a lot of kids, okay?
He was loved he did great things
They're worried because of a couple these are the titles right and to think that I saw it on Mulberry Street or Fire and the Zoo or on Beyond Zebra, whatever these names of these books are, these were
banned because they're somewhat offensive today. But no, no, no, it's totally okay to
have a book teaching other boys how to give handjobs. And by the way, it doesn't stop
there. These books continue. I have another one that says all boys aren't blue.
That's that's the stuff that they say in this book, which is ridiculous. Can you tell the story about all boys aren't blue? I think this is the one that you were talking about with Joey Reed. Yeah, I can. And so in this book, there's a young
man and it's called a Memora manifesto. And yeah, absolutely. And so this young man is anally raped
by his adult cousin, I believe.
And so, I mean, there's a passage.
We just recorded 60 minutes.
Here's the problem.
I've done CBS Sunday Morning.
We've been on Cuomo's show.
We just recorded 60 minutes
and we show them the pictures in the books.
What'd they tell you?
They won't show the pictures.
CBS Sunday Morning, Martha Tykner.
I mean, we showed her the books.
My PR person was there with me that helps me.
And she was saying, Martha, look at the content.
And yet when the show airs, they don't show the actual subject matter that we're talking
about.
And so in this book, this man is anally raped.
He goes into very, very graphic detail about the experiences.
And then Joy said to
me in the interview, she said, well, what if a child, a parent wants that child to read
that book? Maybe we could show that clip because, you know,
that's the clip I was looking for. Rob, it's not 19 seconds, Rob. It's, it's a, I just
watched it this morning. Can you play this clip to see if this is it?
You have, and other moms with liberty advocates have,
to decide that an award-winning book like All Boys Art Blue
isn't appropriate for students to read.
What are the tragic stories of a young man
who's annually raped by his adult family member?
So you have incest, rape, pedophilia, joy.
You said you'd let me answer, so I'm going to answer for you.
In what context is a strap-on dildo acceptable for public school?
I mean, that's my question to you.
Tell me what the context around the strap on dildo
or the rape of a minor child by a teacher.
Hold on a second. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
We're talking about public school.
One moment. All right.
So now you've asked me questions.
Sure.
And I'm going to answer it.
Okay. Well, who is the main character? What's the name of the main character in all boys?
You're asking me right now. You just gave me very specific information about this book
So you're presenting yourself as somebody expert
It's the general debate. Who's the main character? The main character is the author. Who's that? What's his name? George?
I believe this is first because you're giving me very specific information that is you're asking me
Remember the name of an author. You just remember very specific joy. Here's my question. You're talking about your question. You didn't answer my question.
I'm going to answer your question. I would love to hear that. Absolutely. Well, I'm interviewing you and you're not interviewing me.
So let's just make sure it's a conversation. OK. So what I'm saying to you is that as you are not an expert in this book,
I don't have to explain those are inappropriate for a moment. I mean, this book is a full context story,
as you said, of the author's
experience. Why is it your
right or a mom's for liberty
activists right to say that a
parent who wants their child
to have access to this book,
which gives a personal
experience of this author that
they the why doesn't a liberal
parent, for instance, or a parent of an LGBTQ kid.
Why don't they have a right for their child to just have access to this book.
Why is it your right to say they can't.
So again, we're talking about incest, rape and pedophilia.
And each parent when I'm going to eat one moment, no, no, no, no,
each parent has to decide what is appropriate for their child to read.
So I want you to answer.
I'm going to ask you one more time. What is your right to tell a is appropriate for their child to read. So I want you to answer, I'm going to ask you one more time.
What is your right to tell a parent who wants their child,
who might feel seen by this story,
why don't they have the right?
Why don't they have the right as a parent
to say my child can have access to this book?
If a child feels seen by this story,
that means that they have been the victim of a predator.
That means that they have either been raped of a predator. That means that they have either been
raped by a family member. They've experienced rape. And your proof of that is what? You just said that the child feels seen by the story. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, didn't like that. Not only, no, but the average parent,
so a person that doesn't have kids,
they're gonna be like,
Joe, he's making a great point.
He ain't got kids.
A person who's got kids who,
maybe even as a liberals, like,
look, I don't have a problem if my kid wants to go through
this later on in life when they're an adult.
But as a kid, why would I wanna influence them
to go through this themselves?
Why would I wanna do that?
The lot, there's a lot, it's lacking logic in the argument.
It's just being more tolerant to say what's wrong with having that being available for
kids.
Somebody wants to go buy that Barnes & Noble, go for it.
I don't have a problem with that.
It's the kids that becomes the issue with the parents.
Yeah, and that's been the thing, what you just said was 100% correct.
Write the book, print the book, publish the book, sell the book, sell it at Barnes & Noble, put it in the public library.
If your community and your library board
wants to pay for these books, put them in there.
But we're talking about a public school library.
The second thing is, Patrick, I've spoken to people
about the fact, what if you did have a child
who had been the victim of sexual assault
by an adult in a classroom,
and these issues are being brought up and discussed
or they're coming across a book in a library,
that could be very triggering for that child.
And so this idea that somehow, you know,
we're helping a kid by throwing a book on a library shelf
and hoping that they're gonna stumble across it
and that it's gonna be useful to them.
I mean, if we have an epidemic of kids
being sexually assaulted by adults
in the United States of America,
we need to do a lot better than, you know,
throwing library books on shelves
and hoping kids come across them.
So what argument are they making that's resonating?
Like what are, because I wanna know
how they're winning and making progress.
What argument do they make that's becoming more and more,
you know, continuous by others to say,
this is why they have the right argument and you guys are wrong.
It's being used as a political legend. Just the idea of book banning, I think it's a fear-mongering tactic.
No one keeps using that, yeah.
Yeah, and DeBiden did in his first campaign video.
We're gonna be against the MAGA book banners. Like, no one's banning books.
Honestly, we're talking about sexualizing kids and we're also talking about content in public libraries, public school libraries, excuse me.
There's only so much money and so much space.
So when we're talking about public school libraries,
no one's having a conversation about what books should be
there, what books are enriching the learning experience
of the student or an extension of the curriculum.
So in public schools, you have standards.
We'll talk about Florida for a moment.
And the standards are a roadmap. Here is what should be taught in this grade, you have standards. We'll talk about Florida for a moment. And the standards are a roadmap.
Here is what should be taught in this grade,
in this year, and here is the sequence
that it should be taught in.
And then there's curriculum.
And as a parent, you can be on a textbook adoption committee,
an instructional materials adoption committee,
where you can have your voice heard,
other community members can,
teachers have their voice heard as well,
and they adopt curriculum.
That happens every few years, different curriculum is adopted.
So it's not like a free-for-all in the classroom.
There's not academic freedom in K-321 Public Schools where teachers can just talk about
whatever they want, anytime they want.
There's a roadmap to what should be taught.
None of these books are aligned with that roadmap.
And again, when we talk about books in the schools, there's an argument to be made. How will do your kids
12 10 7 2. Okay, mine are 1916 14 and 12. What the 12 year old does is different than what the 19 year old no question. Right. And so in high school, can we have a conversation about what books might be appropriate for grades 10 11 12 that might not be
appropriate. Sure.
grades 10, 11, 12 that might not be appropriate. Sure. Let's have that conversation, right? But again, that's an issue of local control. And so it's
just it again, a disingenuous argument. What's their argument? It's fear
mongering. Kids don't have unfettered access to the internet at school. You
can't just go and type up, you know, how to give a blow job or how to build a
bomb or how to do coke. You can't just go and search for these things in school.
There are filters on the internet sites, but no one actually have them.
Filters. Oh, yeah. You know, meaning you can't go search how to give a block.
You can't do that. And no, it'll block you.
It won't allow you to go on the internet. Why do they block up?
That's my question. Why do they not?
Why would they not want children to have access to that content?
And then why is it somehow different when it's in a book versus on the answer?
What's their answer when you ask them that?
There's no answer.
There's no answer.
I mean, we're right.
So they have no answer to it.
Well, what do they spend?
How do they spend that?
It's not been answered for me.
Joy wouldn't answer it.
DeBlasio wouldn't answer it.
It's just they just do a pivot on the issue and say,
this is dangerous for democracy.
And we can't, you know, no, it is not dangerous
to recognize that children do not need sexualized content.
Is there a pattern on the people that are being involved
in imposing these policies, meaning the individuals
that are pushing this stuff?
Is there a pattern?
Are they married?
Do they have kids?
Are they single?
Are they all from the left?
Is there a pattern to use analytics to look at and say,
who is really pushing this on the back?
And of course we know where the money's coming from
and what the involvement were, the Soros
and how much money he's funding
with different organizations.
We know the names that are behind,
but is there a pattern on who is endorsing
and supporting this message?
Yes, it's the left.
It is the left.
It is, I mean, the issue is never the issue. The issue is always the revolution. So it doesn't really matter what
issue that we're dealing with, whether it's the sexualization of children, whether it's
critical race theory and the division being sewn in the classrooms. In that respect, it
is always about destabilization of the family unit and about driving a wedge between the
parent and the child. That relationship that you have with your children, raising your children with your values,
your traditions is a threat to the left
being able to transform our country.
And so that is what we continually see.
When we did this CBS Sunday morning,
they had a teacher that they interviewed
who now works for the New York Public Library.
She had a teacher and it it said education is activism. And so what we know is that
parents' expectations for public school, when you send your kids to school, I do.
What do you want your kids to learn? Math, history, you know, reading,
things like that. Yeah, how to share right? You're comfortable with those types of values right be kind to other people generous
But the goal of public education has changed it is not about giving children practical skills
It is about awakening a critical consciousness in the child making them a little social justice warrior
This is why in Rhode Island
warrior. This is why in Rhode Island, Tiara Mack, you remember Tiara Mack, the one who did the twerking on her hands? Yep, lovely. So they've got like 7% of kids reading on
grade level in Rhode Island in fourth grade, 7%. But when you've all the shooting happened,
Tiara was able to get those kids out on the steps of the state Capitol covered in fake
blood. Right? Because they know how to be activists. They're being trained to be activists. Well, I mean, they're going to lose there because if you can't show results academically
and you're taking a hit there, but you're pushing this agenda, you're going to lose
long term if that's what's going to happen. However, I'm trying to more look at the folks
who have kids who are supporting this, wondering what part of
this logically makes sense if you're okay with the books being there yet you're not
okay with the internet being there, you know, where I can search the same exact thing. There's
got to be a reason why there's the filter but not the books. And then the states, is
it eventually, are we going to get to a point because you're doing all of this stuff while
you're in Florida? It's very bad in LA. It's very bad in California.
We're all over the country.
But I'm saying yourself or with your kids. So if you're living in Florida, you got a
governor like the Santas. He's easier. A lot of people are moving here, right? But in some
of these other places in California, I mean, I know the ladies in Glendale Unified School
District, they were fighting hardcore against it. There's a bunch of them in California
that are doing it. What do you tell those guys, as you're the founder of the organization, one of the founders
of the organization, what do you tell those parents in blue states?
It's not about blue state, red state, purple state.
I don't care what color your state is.
The institution of education is captured.
It's happening here, Patrick.
Your kids are not safe in Florida schools right now.
As much as Governor DeSantis is doing
and the legislature is doing with different bills
that we're passing, the institution of education
is captured.
So you have ideologues, not every teacher.
We love teachers, first of all.
I think there are a lot of teachers
who are scared to speak up about this.
The union is very powerful.
I remember watching a teacher speak at a podium
at a school board meeting saying that she was very concerned
about some of the things that she was happening.
When she went back to her seat, another union member,
all dressed in red, always in red, went like this to her.
I mean, it is no joke.
Are you kidding me?
No, I am not kidding.
Is that video public?
No, I was sitting in the audience.
We were sitting in the audience.
Went like this? It is happening all over the country. Teachers, I was sitting in the audience. We were sitting in the audience. It went like this.
It is happening all over the country.
Teachers are scared to go against the union.
So I think it's important for people to understand
that if you're in a red state
and you think you're safe from this, you're not.
You have to get your voice heard.
You have to step up.
That's why we only endorse in school board races.
I mean, I'd love to talk to you about how we're set up
at Moms for Liberty,
the way that the chapters are structured. I'd love to talk to you about how we're set up at Moms for Liberty, the way that the chapters are structured
and what they advocate.
That was, I'd love to know.
Okay, great, so we started with two chapters.
And now we have over 300 chapters in 48 states
with over 120,000 members.
So a true grassroots army, there's a chair,
a vice chair, a secretary, a treasurer,
and then they have a membership of the chapter.
And we only, again, endorse in school board races
because we recognize that in any given county endorse in school board races because we recognize
that in any given county, your school board is normally
or your school district, excuse me,
is normally the largest employer, that's a big deal.
And normally is taking up and using the largest amount
of money in your county, right?
The largest amount of the taxpayer money
is being spent on schools.
In fact, in Florida, 50% of your Avalorum taxes
go to your public school system.
So we know that the focus needs to happen
in every backyard in America.
And if people know who they're voting for for school board,
when they go to vote at the ballot box,
they're voting up ballot.
They're gonna know who they're voting for for house
and for Senate and for Congress.
They are gonna know who is in charge
and who is gonna stand for parental rights.
And so that's why the focus on school board.
What's the most important position locally?
What's the most important?
School board, 100% school board.
And it's been so ignored.
I mean, the unions have been running
school board elections for years.
And so when I was on school board, I would watch.
The union would have people on the school board
and then they would be at the bargaining table as well.
They're just bargaining against each other.
And it's all about adult wants and not about kids' needs.
Unpack them. Well, so is your kid eating lunch at 9.30 in the morning? You know,
you've got little kids. So if they eat breakfast at home and then they go to school and they eat
lunch at 9.30 in the morning by 12 o'clock, they're going to be pretty hungry, one o'clock, right?
But they're probably eating lunch because the bargaining contract says that they have to.
We had early release days that were once a month
every Wednesday where kids would get out at 12 o'clock
and it wasn't working for parents.
What are parents supposed to do once a month on a Wednesday
to have their kids be released early?
The union knew that it was something
that the parents didn't like
and they used it as a bargaining chip.
New York City public schools.
Right now, you can't go to back to school night in person
or meet your teacher night in person
because it's in the bargaining contract.
The union actually put in the bargaining contract
that parents can't come into schools in person
for back to school night.
Like, what is going on?
And then when you look at the unions and their summer,
if you could pull up the unions agenda
for their summer meetings, they talk about abortion,
they talk about foreign aid in Ukraine,
they talk about all these different things.
Guess what they don't talk about?
Kids' educations.
So I don't have a problem with unions in general,
I understand if workers wanna come together
and advocate for good wages and all of those things,
the problem with the teachers' unions
are that they pretend like they are representing
families and kids.
They pretend like they have the kids' best interests at heart.
And that's just not true.
And so I wanted to debate Randy Weingarten.
I continue to ask her to have a conversation with me.
She refuses to.
That's actually how I got on Joy Reed.
I had Joy had said she would moderate a debate
between me and Randy, and Randy wouldn't come.
But you know.
She was supposed to be there that day.
Yes, she had been invited, but she said she couldn't make it.
She couldn't make it.
Now, have you tried to do it at a time
where her schedule permits?
I will do it at whatever time she would like.
Randy, if you'd like to debate me, just let me know. Why do you think she won will do it at whatever time she would like. Randy, if you'd like to debate me,
just let me know. Why do you think she won't do it? Do you think she thinks she thinks she's
above you? You think she thinks she's an elitist that you're not at her level? Or you think she
thinks your argument is ludicrous? Or you think she thinks she knows she's got a terrible argument
and she's not going to be able to stand it against you? I think she knows she has a terrible argument.
I mean, look what happened during COVID, Patrick. I mean, we've closed schools in some places for
two years. We have lost a generation of children. There are kids who still
haven't come back to school. That falls on the Union's shoulders. On March 13th,
we closed schools in Florida. And then Governor DeSantis on July 6th
said, we're gonna open schools in person. And you know what the teachers unions did?
What's that?
Suit them to keep schools closed.
Wow.
That's right.
For what?
I mean, they can't think they,
are you thinking the last four years
they made more progress or they're getting more exposed?
More progress, money.
You think they're making more progress?
Oh, they've got so much money.
They held their kids hostage.
They wanted more and more and more money to come back into the classroom and who's funding
them? Where are they getting their money from? The government. I'm not talking about the
unions. I'm talking. Is there any other organizations that are fighting off against you guys that
Oh, yeah, we can share these nonprofits that they're getting funded by billionaires?
Yeah, the left has 21,000 single issue organizations
that they are continually having a relationship
with their voters.
So if you think about the way
that the left and the right operate,
the right has like 4,000,
but the left has a continued engagement with voters, right?
They're constantly grabbing them on the issues
that they care about
and they're building a relationship with them. What does the right do? We get ready for elections, right? They're constantly grabbing them on the issues that they care about and they're building a relationship with them.
What does the right do?
We get ready for elections, right?
Oh, there's an election coming up.
Let's get ready for elections.
And there's no sustained engagement.
So the way that money filters into all of the nonprofits
and then the way that the nonprofits
are doing their work all throughout the year,
24 months a year, someone described it to me like this.
If I told you that I would give you 24 months
and you got a team of C grade people,
or I gave you 14 months
and I gave you a team of A grade people,
who's gonna win?
Which team do you want?
You want more time?
The thought becomes how you fight this, right?
Because you said, this is the article you were talking about, Florida's largest teachers
union sues the state over reopening schools.
The state is grappling with a significant surge in coronavirus.
Okay, so how much money are you guys raising?
Who's supporting you guys?
Like when you guys first got started, where did the money come from?
So I brought you some presents today because we started with selling t-shirts. We
started in Tina's back bedroom with $500. We got t-shirts made.
They said we do not co-parent with the government. And I said
that to the superintendent when I was on school board. He wanted
to start a medical committee and he was going to have this
medical committee make recommendations to the school
board. You and I both know that if the experts during COVID
told you to do something, you were a murderer basically, right? I would have been an idiot to go against them. You and I both know that if the experts during COVID told you to do something, you were a murderer basically,
I would have been an idiot to go against them.
Patrick, I said, why don't we open up the windows
on the buses and in the schools to increase ventilation?
They laughed at me when I said that.
Like that was a joke.
I mean, it turns out I wasn't wrong, right?
But the way that we went about doing things during COVID
was horribly wrong for kids.
God forbid we have another pandemic that actually affects children.
The decisions that we made in schools with the masking and all of the things would never
keep kids safe.
And that was part of my issue.
I felt like we were lying to parents.
If you had a child who had some type of immune issue, telling them that a mask was going
to keep them safe or keep them well was a lie.
And that was a dangerous thing to say to parents.
So, you know, we started with t-shirts
and sold about $150,000 worth of t-shirts in our first year.
That's how Moms for Liberty started.
Purely, off-t-shirt.
Yeah, we started with t-shirts.
OK, so are these the ones that are being released tomorrow,
by the way?
Yes, those are.
I brought you one of our new t-shirts. We the parents
We the parents mom's for Liberty
2021 that's right. We're gonna put the link below folks if you see it right now the video the video is showing you all the difference
New merch that they have right here
If you if you want to support them place an order buy
Supply from them to support these guys, but you're talking about a hundred fifty thousand dollars other guys that are out there
What kind of money are there reason on the left? Oh millions and millions?
I mean, you know, so we're very lucky that we've had some larger funders that came in
We have small dollar donations, but you know, we're nowhere near funded the way that we could be
I sometimes feel like I am sitting in my driveway in a Ferrari with no money for gas, because
there are so many things that we should be doing to get people energized, to be having
that authentic parent-to-parent communication.
Nothing means more.
You can pay people to go knock doors and go talk to people, but it's not authentic.
But if I'm a parent and I say, hi, my name is Tiffany, I live in the neighborhood next
door to you, I just wanted to let you is Tiffany. I live in the neighborhood next door to you
I just wanted to let you know that you know
These books are in the library or this issue is being discussed in our schools and we've got this school board
Member running Susie and Susie is going to fight against that
So, you know, can I tell you about Susie and why you should vote for her that authentic parent-to-parent engagement is what is going to
Change the country we have to create those connections
And so, you know, that's what we're trying to do at Moms for Liberty,
really build that grassroots army.
Is, is, is donors, are donors increasing, is sales increasing, are members increasing,
has it flatlined a little bit?
What is it like right now?
Is the attention more lower or the same?
Um, I think people are waking up.
I think they're really, you know, I think for a long time, donors on the right didn't
want to engage in this idea of a culture war.
But we are in the middle of a cultural revolution.
It has been foisted upon us and our schools are one of the battlegrounds and we can ignore
it no longer.
And so right now, I think funders are beginning to understand the fact that we need to fight in the culture war.
You can't win a culture war unless you engage in the culture.
You can't just ignore it.
But the issue is this, I don't think everyone
always completely understands,
if you give me a million dollars today,
that's worth a lot more to me than five million in October.
You have to build the army, right?
You think about an election that's happening in November.
It takes time to build and to grow.
And so, no, I mean, we're in a point right now
where I think a lot of funders have been waiting
to see what was gonna happen with a presidential election.
They're about to make some decisions
about how they're going to fund different organizations
going forward.
And I'm here to tell you, again,
we have huge plans that we'd like to work on,
but we need funding.
So who are some of the bigger names
that are supporting you guys?
And on top of Moms For Liberty,
who else is out there that's doing what you guys are doing?
Because it can't just be one.
There's gotta be a ton of them out there as well.
Yeah, well, I wish there were more, to be honest with you.
And I wish more people were engaging in the grassroots
in the way that we are.
You know, what we're doing in the way that we are.
What we're doing, the work that we're doing is difficult.
I'm not going to lie to you.
It's very vulnerable work because you
need to get a lot of people together.
And people are fallible.
I was speaking at Harvard recently,
and there was a gentleman for Alliance Defending Freedom.
His name is Ryan Bangert.
He takes care of their national public policy.
And he gave a talk to the students,
and he said, people are amber sands.
And I thought that was a really interesting way
to talk about people.
He was talking about our founding fathers
and just judging people in history based on every little flaw
versus everyone has good things and bad things about them.
And so when you're building a grassroots army
and you're building up leadership, it's difficult work.
And not everyone is willing or able to engage in that way.
I think Tina and I had a certain level
of comfortability with it because we were on school board.
And when you were on school board,
you're representing a school district
with lots of teachers and lots of students.
And stuff, I mean, you've owned a company,
stuff happens, right?
People make mistakes and you have to work
through those things.
The thing about moms.
You're talking about Bridget, Is that what you're talking about?
Anything. We've had lots of different things.
How do you handle that? With a chairman of a Republican party, here, Christian, her husband,
they get caught with the whole threesome story and the Santas comes out and says, hey, he
has to resign right off the bat. And yourself, it's one of the co-founders. How do you manage
that yourself with the PR side?
Yeah, I mean, we just keep moving.
Again, we have over 300 chapters in 48 states.
So Florida is one of the states that we work in,
but it's not the only state we work in, certainly.
And the truth is, Patrick, we have gay members.
We have members who have gay kids,
who are children who have grown up who are gay.
So for us, this is about being a parent.
When I was on school board,
I didn't sit in judgment of parents
when they came to the podium.
You know, I mean, I didn't say, oh, where did you go
to college?
Do you have enough money to be able to advocate?
You know, do you have a criminal history?
Nothing about those things takes away your right
to be a parent.
This is not a Christian organization, right?
No.
So it's not like a faith-based organization
where you're held to those standards.
I can see how I saw Midas Touch,
is a Midas Touch or whatever their name is.
They came after you guys a little bit.
I saw Joy Reid brought it up
and I'm watching to see how,
she's still part of the organization
or she's no longer part of the organization?
No, well, Bridget was a co-founder
and she stayed with us for like the first 17 days.
But she was never, but she had a job
and she was still elected and then she chose
to take a step back.
So, you know.
So after 17 days and 01 she stepped away.
So she wasn't like a involved day-to-day co-founder.
No, no, she wasn't, but to be fair, I love Bridget.
She is incredibly smart and funny
and I've never seen her speak a bad word about anyone.
She loves kids and she really believes in education.
She's been on that Sarasota school board for a very long time.
Is she still involved? Is she still on the board?
Yeah, she's still on the school board.
So she's not off the board.
No, no, no.
Okay.
And she won't resign. I mean, she's going to do, continue to stand up for what she believes
in. Moms for Liberty. What we're standing for, parental rights, is such a threat to the
left. It's such a threat to communism that they are willing to do or say anything to try
to take us down. Yeah, but you also got to be be careful to to not make it easier for them, right? Because when you take a
position like this
Like I remember when the whole thing would Jerry Falwell, right when that happened. What is what is it his son, right?
His son is his
Son's wife. I don't know. It's a Bridget. I don't know what her name was. I think something like that. What's his wife's name?
I don't know it's a Bridget. I don't know what her name was. I think something like that. What's his wife's name?
Becky yeah, they had the whole issue with the pool boy and all these stories were coming out like oh shoot You got to step down and was he from Liberty University?
Which one was it that he was it was it Liberty or Hill? It's Liberty right if I'm not mistaken now
That's faith-based, so it's very different, but they would have to recover from it all I'm saying is
Anything with you you guys are a massive target.
Slightest little thing you do, they're gonna come after you and they're gonna target you.
You know what's interesting?
I saw a video the other day, I wanna show you.
Rob, can you pull up this video of this guy on TikTok, okay?
Which he looks like a girl if you look at him here.
And he's doing this, what do you call it, this whatever you want to call it,
where they turn him into a hero and he wants to become a female superhero. But TikTok's
algorithms doesn't understand, Rob, watch this here and you got to give him credit because
he looks like a girl here. Watch what happens. Go ahead and play this.
He's misgendering me. Look this he's misgendering me look
tiktok's misgendering me
no no fucking way no way
watch this
okay we're gonna try this
hell no oh my god oh my god oh my god
okay let's try again.
Look at this, no matter what you do, bro.
It's cause you're a dude, bro. So, I mean, it's your reaction to that, Rob.
You seem to be getting kicked out.
You see some like this, even TikTok is part
of a common sense community where the software can read
that this is a, you know, boy it's not a girl we're talking about. But when you see things
like this, okay, because these guys have influence over kids. Kids are nowadays on TicTac. Kids
are nowadays, you know, watching what's being said and how it's being done. How much influence
do you think these influencers have over kids today over what the union is doing? Meaning, is the danger more the influencers
that are LGBTQ on TikTok or is it more the unions and schools that we have?
The danger is that in Montgomery County, Maryland, they're teaching kids in kindergarten,
five-year-olds. You could be a boy or you could be a girl or you could be neither. And that is
now curriculum, Patrick. And parents are not allowed to opt out of it.
So there are two court cases in Montgomery County, Maryland.
One is Jane and John Doe, and that case was regarding secret transition happening in schools.
And that was dismissed because the court said that the parents had no standing because their
child had not been transitioned.
The parents had come out and said they're concerned.
So my analogy is this,
why do you make your kids wear a bike helmet?
Safety, in case they fall.
Do you do it because,
but you don't do it because they've already gotten hurt.
You know, it's because they could get hurt.
Of course.
Preventative.
Right, so parents don't wait for harm
to come to their kids,
but right now, as far as our court systems are concerned,
your child has to be harmed by these policies
before you have standing in a court of law.
Nope, 100% true.
And in Montgomery on the second case right now,
there are parents wanting to opt their kids
out of this curriculum.
They said there is something called
a rainbow storybook collection.
As I said, it's part of the curriculum now.
So this isn't just sex ed class.
This is any time of the day there's a storybook collection that could be brought
into the classroom that the teachers could read from with books like Pride Puppy or My Maddie,
which one of the lines is when my Maddie kisses me goodbye in the morning, her face is scratchy.
And this is being read to five year olds.
There are a number, a group of parents.
It's Beckett Law Group who actually has this case.
And we're waiting to hear now what's gonna happen with it.
But parents are not being allowed to opt out.
I did a town hall in Montgomery County, Maryland.
We had Muslim parents, the Council of Virtue,
this gentleman, Karim Monib.
I had Jewish parents, Bethany Mandel,
who's now running for school board
in Montgomery County, Maryland. I had Christian parents. There were parents who were atheists. This
issue is, is totally bringing parents together. And one of the parents said, I feel like my
child is being baptized into another religion when they are at school.
Oh, I think it's fully as a religion. I don't think this is a organization. They're baptizing kids is what they're doing.
Let me read this one to you just because of what I want to know is out of the 120,000 members,
how many of the members are Muslims?
Here, why?
Here's why.
St. Louis Park School District to allow Muslim families to opt out of LGBTQ reading lessons.
So in the district in Minnesota, which we know who's in that district has to, has decided to allow Muslim families to opt out of LGBTQ reading, following requests from six Muslim families
asserting that such lessons violate their religion freedoms.
The opt-out decision comes after concerns arose when third and fourth grade students were
exposed to LGBT content in October of 2023, causing significant confusion and distress
among families.
Renee Carlson, counsel of true north legal
Emphasize the need to safeguard religious freedoms and collaborate with families and school district to uphold
constitutional rights. Are you noticing
Muslim mothers
Joining you to want to fight the fight as well. Are you seeing a rise with Muslims as well? Yes
We're seeing a rise with all parents joining us across the country. People are very, very concerned and I would kind of push back
about religion. I think woke is a cult. It is, there is no room for dissent. People
do not like to have their thoughts challenged in any way. They will not
challenge their own thoughts in any way and there's no room for any questioning
of any of it. So, but parents are, it's very valid for parents
to be concerned about this ideology.
But specifically, Muslim is what I wanna know.
Okay.
Because the reason why I'm asking about Muslims is
that the left doesn't know how to handle Muslims.
Someone explained that to me, actually,
when I was in Michigan.
We did a town hall in Troy, Michigan.
And one of my friends, actually, who lives in Michigan,
who used to write from one of the papers there said
that the Muslim community in the Dearborn area
and other areas will speak out very loudly about this
because it's a fairly insular community.
And from a business perspective,
they don't have a lot of fear of their businesses being hurt
so that they have a lot of room to be able to advocate.
You know, in a lot of areas people are concerned
if they come out and they speak out against this,
will they be doxxed in some way, called a transphobe or those things. to be able to advocate. In a lot of areas, people are concerned. If they come out and they speak out against this,
will they be doxxed in some way,
called a transphobe or those things?
And so, yeah, Muslim parents are extremely concerned
about this, but I mean, I would say
that all parents are concerned about it.
And what the judge in that Montgomery case said
about the fact that parents weren't allowed to opt out,
she said that it did not hurt the free religious exercise of the parents for the
children to be taught this in school.
What do you mean by that?
The last part?
The free religious.
Is that the parents, it didn't hurt the parents and their ability to transfer their traditions
and religious values to the child for the child to be taught competing interest in the
classroom.
Got it.
So again, I bring up Muslims because Muslims there's a chart that came out
We did a video on it Rob. I don't know if you can pull it up or not. It was a chart that came out saying
When it comes down to LGBT community, what religion was the lowest supporter of it and a lowest supporter of it were Muslims
And the chart also I think was Gallup the chart was also about which
Religion least supported The chart also, I think it was Gallup, the chart was also about which religion least
supported members of the gay, you know, LGBTQ community to adopt.
Again, it was Muslims at the highest level because that's their, they don't, they don't
tolerate that at all, right?
When it comes down to that.
But I want to be clear.
This isn't about sexual orientation.
This is about the sexualization of children.
Jamie Michelle runs a group called Gays Against Groomers. They've been amazing
allies. We have Frank Rodriguez on. They're fantastic. Yeah, they've been
wonderful. They've been wonderful allies standing shoulder to shoulder with us
saying, you know, don't use our sexual orientation or our advocacy for adults to
somehow sexualize kids. And that's exactly what is happening in schools.
It's destabilizing. Maybe I'm not communicating my message clearly.
I'm trying to get to see if I can do a better job at this.
Is if it's not about the reason why
I keep bringing up Muslims is because
the left doesn't know how to handle Muslims.
And earlier you said the common trend
amongst the people that are trying to indoctrinate kids
and support these books are people from the left.
The left is walks on eggshells,
if you say anything about Muslims.
They have no idea on how to handle Muslims.
If somebody from the Muslim community
goes after what they're doing here, they want to know how to handle that
They don't know how to handle that. They're gonna be cornered. So who are some
Muslim mothers or spokespeople that are spokesperson that's getting out there saying we're not for this
This stuff needs to be taken out of school with our kids because their level of influence
I think can be exponential because the left again is gonna get stuck and I don't know how to handle
these guys. No I think we need more Muslim mom and dads speaking up honestly.
I mean if you ask me I mentioned Karim Monib he's been a huge advocate in
Montgomery County again his group is Council of Virtue I believe and you
know but we need more parents speaking out about the concerns that they have and in bringing people together again
This is an issue the future of our country
You know protecting our kids the innocence of our kids in school
This is something that people can come together on I think that's why the left hates us so much
It's why the SPLC named us a hate group
Because they know Patrick what happens if we can bring people together across all of the device?
That's the point. If you're able to bring people together, like I think what Gays for
Groomers they're doing, I think it's fantastic. The way Frank gets up there and fights the
fight, he's phenomenal. And we had a mom, we had a great time having a conversation with
them. But also I think Muslims would be another one. Again,
gays against groomers, that's confusing. They don't know how to manage that. Muslims, they don't
know how to handle that. The more of these guys are getting involved in a community, they're not
going to know how to handle it. Because when they look at Moms or Liberty, if somebody doesn't know
Moms or Liberty, you know what's the first thing they think about? They think it's a
Christian Republican organization. That's what the media wants them to think of course
But that's what the average person is gonna think that they don't know what and that may be right for majority the members
Let's just say more than 60% are that great
But if you had a megaphone of a Muslim mother with a you know, she's sitting there making the argument
They're they're gonna be,
they don't know what to say to that part, okay? I had a two Muslims here and two
Christians here, we came and we debated and it was a great conversation. It did
very well and the audience was fascinated by it. There are certain things that
Muslims were not tolerate that Christians will. Unfortunately Christians
are, you know, the most tolerant religion on the
Christian side. I'm talking non-denomination. I'm not talking LDS. I'm not talking the sect. I'm
talking specifically Christians are too, too tolerant about all this stuff. Now they're paying
a price. Now you're complaining about it. What were you 30 years ago? The last 30 years you were
very quiet about it. Now you want to be allowed. We're the tipping point this year and it's kind
of too late and they've already had been able to infiltrate
the different marketplace.
You kind of didn't want to be categorized as something.
Now it's too late in certain communities
where they have their hands all over it.
So okay, different question for you.
Union, how do you fight against 3.2 million members?
There are a lot more parents
than there are union members in this country.
And it's by rallying parents and pulling them together.
I mean, some of my best material we get from the left.
One of the things that's very annoying to me,
or very concerning to me, is how the right
will sometimes look at the left and say,
oh, well, they've captured the institutions
and somehow they get villainized
for doing what smart things.
Great, credit to them.
Correct. Absolutely.
And so when Tina and I look at how do you build
an army, when I looked out at a school,
when I would sit on the dais at the school board,
and I would look at the audience,
and there would be a vote that would be coming up.
The union would come out in mass.
They'd have red shirts on,
and they would have their voices heard.
And Patrick, I would watch, I'd go into a meeting,
and there would be other board members,
and I would think I would know where we were all stood
on an issue, because if it was a bargaining issue
or something, there are only a couple meetings
that you can get together as school board members
and have conversations behind closed doors,
but bargaining or litigation, those are two areas.
And so I would have an idea
of what I thought school board members were gonna do,
but having that many people sitting there,
and I've had change thrown at me,
but having that many people
pressuring you and paying attention to your vote it changes people's votes and so you
know while the unions were there guess who wasn't there? The parents. And so that's why
Mom's for Liberty blue t-shirts you have to get out there it's not enough to just get
people elected. You then need to be the army on the ground that is there for them and supporting
them when they need to make some hard decisions. Otherwise, if you're not having your voice
heard, it seems like maybe you don't care. And so we, you know, I have no shame in taking
the left's best ideas and then using those.
Yeah. It's going to be interesting. I don't think this is an easy fight because if you
sit there and you think about the organizations, the left and the right half, let's just say, and imagine you're at the table.
Let's make a visualization. They're negotiating. You got the conservatives on the right and you got the left on the left.
Okay. The liberals on the left. They're sitting there and they're like, okay, let's do draft pick. You go first. All right, we'll take the voting block
of military veterans.
Ah, whatever.
You can have them.
We'll take schools.
Shit, that was a good one.
We should have taken that.
Okay, okay, we'll take churches.
I don't care, it's fine.
We'll take mainstream media.
Oh, shoot, okay.
What do we take? I don't know what to take next. Don't worry, take your time. We'll take mainstream media. Oh, shoot, okay. What do we take?
I don't know what to take next.
Don't worry, take your time.
We'll take the next pick.
What's your next pick?
We'll take universities.
One by one by one by one.
We'll take social media companies
all around by the left, except for one.
And that guy, we're gonna demonize him.
You guys gonna forget about him.
And we're gonna make his life a living kill.
By the way, we just converted one of his kids
into a trans part of the LGBTQ community. Trust me And we're gonna make his life a living kill. By the way, we just converted one of his kids
into a trans part of the LGBTQ community.
Trust me, we're gonna make his life a living kill.
We're gonna convert one by one.
So they have the chips like you're playing Monopoly.
And let's just say there's only 20 properties you can own.
They own 17 of them.
The ride owns three of them.
And they've been quietly sitting on the sideline
and doing their own thing, thinking John Galt's gonna come save come save them and Atlas Shrugs gonna build a smaller community that
they're all gonna live together and then now they don't want to put up their moneys. My
suggestion is the following. I think, you know, for those who are sitting there concerned,
show up with your money. Show up and support organizations that you believe
can do something about it.
Yesterday it's so funny, we're sitting there
looking at, talking on fast fashion,
I don't know if you're familiar with fast fashion or not.
Fast fashion is H&M, Zara, you know, Fashionova.
These are the guys that take a expensive $600 shirt
and they build it in, you know, whatever country
that, you know, they can work it as a sweatshop and they get kids working at this place and
they'll make it for 50 cents and they'll sell it for $17, but it's not going to last a long
time.
It's horrible.
Then the data has come back up and shows in the last 20 years, do you know in the last
20 years we have 400% more clothes in our wardrobe than we did 20 years ago?
400% more clothes in our wardrobe than we did 20 years ago, 400% more.
Okay, and we wear our clothes 36% fewer times
than we did 15 years ago, and on top of that,
do you know how many pounds of clothes
we throw away every year?
Crazy stat, 81 and a half pounds of clothes
we throw away every flip in year.
So guess what, 80% of the stuff in the closet you have,
you wasted your money, you're not gonna wear it.
I do that all the time.
I'm like, I'm never gonna wear this, ever.
You wear it one time, you wash it,
size gets smaller, I can't wear it again.
What's the point?
Then the conversation came about,
maybe we ought to support brands that we support, okay?
That brand, they wear Monster Liberty.
Guess what, what?
I'm gonna go buy Monster Liberty shirt because I'm buying stuff that I support great
Yeah, this is what I like what these guys do. Hey, you love your work. It's hard work. We the
We the parents go for it. I'm gonna go buy that shirt great. I'm gonna support these types of brands. I think more and more people
Need to get a little bit more vocal
Supporting brands out there that will make a contribution
right after this ourselves as an organization will make a contribution to your organization.
But I think starts with that because at the end of the day, what you're doing is tough. This is
not an easy job. It's very hard. You're not liked by the unions because you're annoying to them.
You annoy them. You make their life a
living hell. And I can tell you from the mothers that I spoke to in Glendale, we were looking at
doing a podcast a few months ago when the issues were very, very hot is they're not like the way
they're treated in these, these snobby people are sitting like this and just like, okay, your time's
up. Next, get out of here. Boom, it's like, almost like the mob,
the Italian mob is running it and they control,
even the mobsters were more respectful
than what these guys are, the way they're treating
their parents.
So you don't have an easy job, you're not doing this
because you're trying to be a billionaire or millionaire,
you're doing this because you got four kids
and they're between 12 to 19 years old,
it's not an easy job to have today. And I
applaud you. So for the viewers that are listening, I think it's important for us to support
as well because the left, if there's one thing they're very good at, they are very, very
good at supporting the organizations that are pushing the agendas that they believe
in. Oh my gosh, they're united on it. The one thing about those guys, they're more about
their political party first before America, I believe.
They're more about political party first before America,
but they're losing, they're not gaining.
They're able to do what they're doing purely through control,
but even the people that control don't necessarily agree
with what they're doing right now.
And they have the government behind them.
To be clear, I think people need to understand,
this is a global issue as well.
UNESCO, the Sustainable Development Goals Agenda 2030, if you look at those sustainable
development goals, the NEA, that union that you brought up, they have a curriculum that's
connected to the 17 sustainable development goals that they are pushing into our schools.
Tina went to Jordan Peterson had that art conference in London. Tina was speaking to
someone in Kenya. They were talking about the comprehensive sexuality education that was
happening in Kenya. That's the same comprehensive sexuality education that's happening in America.
None of this is a coincidence, Patrick. This is a real effort to destabilize the family
and to put the government in place of the family. They want our kids to not be able
to read, to write, to do math. They're not concerned about that. Why do you think? Because then they can control the kids.
Then they are driving a wedge between the parent and the child, and the children will
be reliant on the government for everything. You know, part of the CDC. You think that's
the motive? Yes. Absolutely. The schools, think about it. Is there any other, if you think about on the grand scale
of schools across the United States, government buildings,
let's talk about immigration for a second,
what's happening with the schools
and illegal immigrants across the country.
Eric Adams got up and said, schools are community assets.
He said that the day after they had closed that school
in Brooklyn and sent all the kids home
to do virtual learning so that they could use the schools as a shelter. You remember that?
New Hanover County, North Carolina, our moms in New Hanover stopped a special needs school
from being closed and being turned into an illegal immigrant shelter. Oh, yeah, it's happening everywhere.
The schools are considered, as Eric Adams said, a community asset and And they think they can do whatever they want with them.
But it's backfired because when he,
what's the story, Rob, where?
The luxury apartments that the residents fought back.
And so Eric Adams reversed his decision
to house the migrants in luxury apartments
because people in the community need that home,
that housing more.
Yeah, I just saw that they said something like,
over 50% of hotels in New York are being
used as shelters.
Oh yeah, and again, but this is the part though.
So here's my concern.
Here's my concern on what I think is going to end up happening.
I think what's going to end up happening is the bluer states are going to get bluer,
red states are going to get redder.
I think that's what's going to happen. So, and the race is going
to be for the purple states because a person is going to sit there and they're going to
be like, like that one video that came out with a mother's like, you know, I have a transgender
child and I just don't feel safe here because the puberty blockers that he needs, he's suicidal.
I feel more safer have a raise of my kids in California. Go, go to California, right?
But guess what?
That's just making the disparity
between political ideology wider and wider
and wider and wider.
So what is eventually gonna get to a point
that they're gonna be like, dude,
you're left, go to these states.
You're right, go to these states.
Then that could even lead to what many people
say, it'll never happen, civil war will never happen, America, it's just never going to happen,
that is just not possible. It's already happening, it's just not a war yet,
it's just civil battle, it's civil argument, it's civil debate, it's civil,
but eventually if this tension keeps piling up more and more
and more and you're trying to impose
nonsense arguments to people that just want to go out there and work and support their family,
then take care of their kids, you're going to create a wedge. And it's already happening.
The levels of division that people are having, I was having a conversation with a guy named
Andy yesterday. We had a very, very good conversation. And I was telling him that,
you know, you went on News Nation, I think with Cuomo, right?
You, you talk to him.
Chris and I are talking a lot nowadays.
It's a very weird relationship that we're building.
But you know what happens?
We'll get on a call and we'll argue for 90 minutes, two hours back and forth,
back and forth, back and forth, back and forth, back and forth.
Then it's like, how's the family?
Kids, everybody good?
Okay, I'll see you next week.
I'll see you next week.
Sounds good, man.
Everybody, take care.
We don't have that today.
Right.
And moms for liberty, we're not taking any stars off of the flak.
You know, national divorce, there is no future for America in national divorce.
But the interesting thing Cuomo said was talking about how much money has left New York, that
there are a lot of rich people.
It's going to get worse.
Yeah. And so what does that mean then? Who's going to, who's going to support what's happening in New York, that there are a lot of rich people. It's gonna get worse. Yeah, and so what does that mean then?
Who's gonna, who's going to support
what's happening in New York in the cities?
The rest of America is gonna end up
picking up the bill for that.
And that's a real concern,
but we're not taking any stars off of the flag.
We have chapters in California,
California parents are fighting back,
New York parents, when we went into New York,
I mean, I had that mayor, excuse me,
the Manhattan Borough President, Adam Levine, 25 degrees outside Patrick, I had that mayor, excuse me, the Manhattan borough president, Adam Levine,
25 degrees outside Patrick.
I invited him upstairs to be on this panel.
We do town halls.
They're amazing town halls.
I'd love to have you at one sometime.
And they're called Giving Parents a Voice.
When I bring together elected officials,
we'll bring people together
who have different opinions about things.
I invite him, Adam Levine, to come up.
I invited Chancellor Banks, Eric Adams to come
to be a part of this panel to talk about
New York City schools.
Can we talk about proficiency rates for a second?
Okay, so only about a third of kids in America
are reading on grade level.
That's according to the NAEP scores,
the National Assessment for Educational Progress 2022.
17% of black students, only 21% of Hispanic students,
less than half of white students. New York City, only 11% of black students, 21% of Hispanic students, less than half of white students.
New York City, only 11% of black students are reading it.
Wow, 6% less than national average.
Only 11%, they spend 40.
And the mayor is black.
They spend $40,000 per year on each child's education.
So if you have, there's an average of 25 kids in a class
that's a million dollars that they are spending
every year on a classroom,
and only 11% of kids can read and they have a cap on
Charter schools 23 of the top 25 schools in New York City are charter schools
Why are we blocking education? Why are they the unions?
The unions absolutely the unions are running our cities
The unions are running our schools and we have to take them out
So when you talk about the money and the membership,
we are building an army to combat the unions and parent.
We, we the parents, we have the numbers.
We just need people to get brave,
have their voices heard and get involved.
I mean, that's it.
Get off the comfy couch or else I'll see you in the gulag.
That's the way I always feel about it.
I'll have somebody, I'll have a donor say,
I want to give you money, but I'm afraid that my name might
be out there.
And I'm like, all right, I guess I'll see you in the gulag
then, because that's where we're going to be if people don't
get brave now.
Now is the time to stand.
I truly believe in my heart that we were given an amazing
opportunity during COVID to save our country.
I call it COVID lemonade.
It was awful.
I know there were people that died. We handled it horribly as our country. I call it COVID lemonade. It was awful. I know there were people that died.
We handled it horribly as a country. We didn't protect the people that we should have,
and we closed schools and hurt kids. But Patrick, what an opportunity to pull back the curtain on
the corruption. And now we have a chance to save America, and we're going to take every single
chance we get. You know, it's, I love that. And by the way, at the end of the day,
how are people judged when I'm talking to Bill Maher
and he says, Newsom is a winner.
And I said, based on what though, based on what data,
if there is one thing that doesn't lie is numbers.
And when numbers show in a city or a state
that the way your students are performing is absolutely
horrendous compared to a national average. You don't have an argument, very simple.
Here's the data for you buddy. You guys are doing a terrible job. By the way, the
one question I have for you that I wonder if it's happened or not, Rob, do
you know what, out of all the industry, so we did a video today that just went
live, right when we went live, this video went live on
Vitamint.
The video is about childcare.
Let me give you the exact title of it.
The childcare crisis, why parents are going broke
raising their kids, okay?
So one of the things that, you know, the childcare
industry, the profit margins are 1%.
They don't make a lot of money.
And they're the lowest paid jobs
in America, like if you go to school, and on top of that, they're the only job I believe
that, you know, from four years ago, their salary actually decreased, not increased.
It's the only one that the salary decreased. Now, parents are also sitting there, they're
like, man, I can't afford, I gotta do something with my kids They're losing everything they have when it's coming down to
Do I put them in private school? Do I do this? Do I do that? I want you to see this chart
So check this out. So this is employment within the US child
Within the US child care industry is below its pre-pandemic trend. So if you look at it in 2015
around
880,000 870,000
around 880,000, 870,000 actual employment went all the way up to 2020, out of around 1,050,000, right? COVID happens. Guess what? I don't need childcare industry. Why? Because
I'm doing it myself. I'm staying home. I'm not working, right? So it dropped from a
million 50,000 to 680,000, okay? Almost every industry is fully recovered,
including restaurants and hospitality.
The only one that isn't is childcare.
And look at this here, look how many jobs are like
fewer than it was four years ago, three years ago.
154,000 fewer jobs.
Are you noticing yourself a dramatic increase
in parents that just simply have given up
on the educational system and they're doing homeschooling?
Yeah, I actually saw you talking about this in an interview and you were saying, you know, parents were like, oh, this isn't as hard as I thought.
I think parents were very intimidated, but the public education system or education in general wanted you to be intimidated.
They use a lot of acronyms. They do not invite parents in as partners. They don't want you to know what your kids are being taught.
Public schools would just like you to stay out of the work that they do. Just let them handle it, right?
Well, they're not doing a good job. But I think for a lot of parents, the idea of homeschooling
and being responsible for their kids' education was a little intimidating. And then COVID happened
and they're watching their kids on the Zoom and they're saying, oh my gosh, I thought my kid was
doing better, right? They were getting A's and they're not really doing that well, I'm concerned.
Or I can't believe this toxic curriculum that my kids are being taught or that my child is I thought my kid was doing better, right? They were getting A's and they're not really doing that well, I'm concerned.
Or I can't believe this toxic curriculum
that my kids are being taught,
or that my child isn't ever reading a whole book.
Oh, just excerpts of books, just to be clear.
Kids are not reading chapter books
in public school anymore.
They're reading little excerpts from books
and then being asked about context.
It's very, very concerning.
And so you're right.
Then parents said, okay, maybe I should try homeschooling.
I mean, I certainly can do better than this.
And so I think a lot of parents, you're right,
are taking a step back and really assessing,
what are we spending money on?
Where can we cut back?
And can we take part in our kids' education in homeschool?
And yeah, a ton of them are.
Just in New York City, in District 2,
they had an enrollment of 70,000 students.
They're down to 40,000.
Get out of here.
No, the kids, I mean.
And how long?
From 70 to 40.
I don't have the exact number of years.
Is it four years as I thought?
Yeah, oh yeah.
It's dramatic.
So it's not like 20 years.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
It's dramatically dropped within the last,
five years or something.
I mean, there is a huge movement of parents
that are really questioning what are my children getting
out of education and do I like it?
Now, here's what public education wants,
a couple of things, right?
So you have the schools close and you have the union saying,
we need more money, I want to be very clear with you.
We do not have a funding problem in American education.
We have a priorities problem in American education. We need to get. I want to be very clear with you. We do not have a funding problem in American education. We have a priorities problem in American education.
We need to get back to the basics
and stop paying consultants like Ibram X. Kendi $25,000
to do a professional development talk for 40 minutes.
That happened.
Charlotte Mecklenburg, you know how much money
that guy has made off of public schools?
The anti-racist guy.
Yeah, yeah.
This guy.
That guy.
Who paid him $25,000?
Charlotte Mecklenburg Public Schools, $25,000
for a $40,000 Zoom, 40 minute, excuse me, Zoom talk.
Zoom, not even in person.
That's quite the grift he's got going, don't you think?
I mean, listen, if they're paying this guy
that kind of money to do what?
How to be a young anti-racist?
Right. Wow, what an uplifting book.
Yeah, it's lovely. So again, we need to get back to the basics in American public schools.
It's not a money issue that we have. It's a priorities issue. And that's very important
for people to understand. We'll spend over $840 billion on public education this year
in federal and local
dollars. What does what do what does the Union fear the most? For example, I'm on
Pierce Morgan, he asks me what does Iran fear the most? And I said Iran, the
Hezbollah, the guys at the top, the Chaminés, they fear women, they fear kids,
they fear sanctions because if they have a bad economy they don't know what to
do with that, right? So those are three things they fear. What does the Union fear? The Union fears parents. The Union fears parents getting
involved, running for school board and seeing behind the education curtain, asking real
questions about transparency and accountability. Because the truth is that your kid might be
getting an A, but do you know what that A means? You don't, right? You're looking at a report card.
Is your child actually learning how to read?
Well, maybe they can read the back of a cereal box,
but can they open up Call of the Wild?
Can they actually read a book?
Can they understand and comprehend
what that book says and analyze it?
No, the answer is no.
I challenge every parent, get a chapter book.
Go online and look up quality chapter books for a child that is your
children's age and get it and sit down with your child and have them read out loud to you.
I'm telling you, you're going to be shocked. I'll be honest with you, Patrick, even me during COVID
when I took a step back and I wanted to help my children and really see where they were as far as
learning. I gave my son the book, The Call of the Wild, and we sat down to read it together,
and I was really disappointed in his ability
to be able to engage with that book,
and I realized that I had a lot of work to do.
So we talk a lot about parental rights.
I think it's also important to talk
about parental responsibilities.
But the public education system, as I said, wants you out.
I'd like to tell you, if I could, about community schools.
Can we go a little bit deeper in this?
Yeah, of course. Let's stay on. I'm gonna make a note of what go about community schools. Can we go a little bit deeper in this? Yeah, of course. I'm gonna make a note we'll go to community schools. So what
does union, what do unions fear? So number one parents, what else, what else do they fear?
They fear losing control of school boards. But how would they lose if more parents ran,
they lose control of the boards? How many boards do they not have? Like out of how many total
boards do they have, how many do they not have control over?
Yeah, so there's about 13,000 school districts
across the United States of America.
I would say that they probably have the control of
at least 90% of them.
That makes sense.
And so, you know, those are the people
that bargain with the union, right?
Yeah, I saw a number the other day
that for every English teacher in public school,
out of every dollar they give to a political party,
98% of it goes to the Democratic Party.
I think science was 97%.
The only one that was somewhat reasonable was math,
was 87, 13.
87 went to Dems, 13%, which makes sense
to have the 90% here. Okay, so one is parents two is losing control of boards
Looks like they got a monopoly with the school boards. What else?
They need the government to continue to expand their influence and that's really if I can give you a very
Specific example, which is the CDC
The CDC is very important to the unions right now.
When Randy Weingarten was called before Congress,
before the House, to speak about learning loss,
she said, we need community schools.
We need to take care of what they call the whole child.
So there's a program called the whole school,
whole child, whole community model.
It's called WISC.
Everybody should go look it up.
What they want to do is put health clinics into schools.
They want to put washers and dryers into schools.
Whirlpool has a whole program where they're putting washers.
Oh yes, that is it.
Absolutely.
And so they want schools to be a community hub.
The Education Public Zone is called for greater alignment
that includes integration and collaboration
between educational leaders and health sectors
to improve each child's cognitive, physical,
and social emotional development, public health, and education serve the same children,
often the same settings. The whole WISC model focus on the child to align common goals of both
sectors into a whole child approach to education. You see it says the whole school, whole community,
whole child or WISC model is CDC's framework for addressing health in schools.
And they will have medical clinics in schools.
You talked about NGOs and partners coming in.
They'll invite communities.
That's a scary thought.
Oh, it's happening.
They have a goal of 25,000 by 2025.
Randy Weingarten and the NEA, they are pushing very hard.
Where are they at right now?
I don't know exactly the number where they are right now.
It's happening all over the country
and there is no amount of money, no amount of money
that will ever fill the need if schools are going to raise other people's children.
And you just think about the disengagement of the parent, right?
So they're lowering the ages of informed consent down to 12 in many states.
And now you're going to have medical clinics in schools
and children will be able to give consent for their own medical care?
Wow.
Yeah.
So already, if I'm a kid, I'm confused
because I saw that guy on TikTok,
and I'm like, maybe I'm trans, maybe I'm going through this.
And then I go to my teacher and I say,
I'm going through this, but I don't want my parents to know
because I don't want them to do this, this, this and that.
And I'm living in a district or state
that I don't necessarily have to disclose it to the parents. I can automatically choose to go through the procedure
without revealing to the parents because I have this on the campus.
Yep. Yes. Oh yes. And in plan.
Who knows about this? Who knows about this?
Not enough people, but we have been screaming from the rooftops.
Rob, go a little bit higher because you got the 10 components
I want to see the other two no no right there right there where you were at go lower
It says 10 components out yet. Yeah, okay physical education physical activity nutrition environment services health education social and emotional climate
Physical environment health services so depends on what health services is right what falls under health service counseling and
Psychological and social services.
That's a scary.
Did you see Dr. Phil on Joe Rogan?
Did you see what he said?
He said he said he played this clip.
Please.
If you don't have it, I can find it for it's a two minute clip.
I put it on the moms for liberty Twitter feed and I quoted him.
Yeah, this is fantastic.
If you can find it.
It's two minutes and something two minutes and and just go to Mom's Celebrity Account,
and you should see it.
Go up.
A little bit more.
Maybe go to Videos.
Right there, that's the one.
America's not far behind that
because I've talked to a lot of teachers and they're telling
me that they have a duty to the children that if the child is not ready to talk to their
parents about this that it's okay for them to keep a secret from the child.
Let me tell you what my problems with this are and see what you think.
First off, this is either a psychological phenomenon or a medical phenomenon and the
teachers are not trained in either psychology or medicine, they're not any more trained
to deal with that than they are to take out the kids spleen in the home room.
So if that's true, if it's a psychological thing, if it's gender dysphoria or it's a medical issue, then you need someone trained in child
psychology, psychiatry or medicine.
And the teacher's not trained in any of those three things.
Like I say, they're not any more trained in that than they are to take out the child's
spleen.
So how are they qualified to deal with that?
Secondly, it's teaching the child to keep a secret from their parents.
It's teaching deception and interfering between the child's relationship with the parent.
Now their justification for that is, well, if the child goes home and announces this
or if we tell it to the parent, then the child could get abused. The child could get judged.
The child could get kicked to the curb.
But they have to admit statistically that that is very rare.
And if that's the case, that's what we have a child, a Department of Child and Family
Services for.
That's what we have Child Protective Services for.
If that's the case, then you call in for some intervention if the child is being abused
at home for whatever reason, then you get in.
So now WISC is able to put CDC through CDC on schools and they want to go at
$25,000 by 2025? Oh yeah, and they're just getting started.
Okay, so you're not inspiring me. I'm sorry. No, no, what I'm saying to you is,
inspiring me. I mean, no, no, what I'm saying to you is, and from the place I'm going to, is the following. So if these guys are being funded by the government, okay, what can a liberal and a left
president is going to support this? Because historically, that's what's going to happen.
What can really a conservative president do against this?
A fight back, get the CDC out of our public schools
across the country.
But they're gonna come back under a liberal president.
So you know what I'm saying?
Okay, so you do it within four years.
Great, then what?
I'm interested in long term.
So when I'm doing financial planning with a client,
I did this for 20 years.
We sit there and we look at three buckets.
Short term, it's zero to 12 months.
Events that are gonna happen zero to 12 months.
Bills, expenses, that are okay, great school.
So you need six to 12 months of your expenses set aside.
Then you have midterm, one year to 10 years.
Okay, what can we do midterm?
Well, my daughter's 26, she's probably gonna be,
getting married, so we have to pay for it
because in all culture we got to,
so we need to, okay, my son's going through college
with $200,000, so that's midterm one to ten years then long term
is ten to 40 years what's gonna happen ten or 40 years retirement ba ba ba
da da da parents may pass away we have to be ready for this so each is a
different way of thinking short term I get it my interest purely is long term
I'm not interested short term my interest is long term because my kids are
young and one day they're gonna have to do this with their kids. A even a Republican president in the office for four to eight years. Maybe they can fight against
it a little bit. Maybe they can prevent a little bit. But this model is coming here to sit near
you, no? Yes, they are. Yes, absolutely 100%. They want to bring community partners into all of
the schools.
Think about Planned Parenthood.
It's like having Planned Parenthood at every single school across the United States.
Okay, so now what would happen if, by the way, that's scary.
I don't want to go through what you just said right there.
So imagine visually.
Let's just kind of put this in place.
Okay, I need a morning after pill.
I went through this and I don't want to tell my parents, no problem.
Go on school right there.
Go to see Dr. Jones.
Oh, it's okay, honey. We all make mistakes. Here's use go on school right there go to see Dr. Jones oh it's okay honey we all make mistakes here's use
this and that are that's it on campus so plan parenth on campus and they'll
spin it as something else but that's what's available to them you want to
get an abortion you don't want your parents to know don't worry we're all
gone through this you're doing the right thing here you go you don't need to tell
your parents we'll take care of come through here taxpayers are paying for we
don't even know about it that's kind of what you're saying plan parenth within
the schools that they're putting together
Fantastic, so if that's what they're doing and that's where they're gonna go
And I'm asking the question from you on what hurts them. You said parents
You said being on boards which added the 13,000 12,000 they control anyway, so they'll control over 90%
We're working on that. I know you are but you got 12 12,000 out of 13,000. And then the last one was, you know, what was the last one you said? So one was
parents, you know, bored, and then there was one other one. But the direction
where I'm going with this is if we know this is going to be happening, what do
they fear even more?
Do they fear homeschooling?
Do they fear kid stepping out?
Do they fear any of that stuff?
What would happen if all of a sudden there is a mass accident?
So for the longest time, Rob, how long have I been talking about, let's shut down the
border for two years.
How long have I been saying this?
Since the border crisis started, it's been a while. So what would you say? You think I've been saying this for about a year?
Yeah. Okay. So I've been saying that for about a year right now.
I'm hearing some other people saying, let's shut it down for two years,
three years, five years.
I think we shut down the border for 20, two years, not 22 years, two years.
And let's see what happens. We're going to the border.
So we'll put in the whole crew together.
We're going to go in the next couple of weeks and do a podcast from the border.
Is what we're going to be doing. So, but what if parents
go on a one-year strike? What if half of America goes on a one-year strike and they say guess what
public schools what? We're not going. What do you mean you're not going? We're just not going.
And what if if you really want to do something about this Tiffany at the highest level,
what if the 120,000 members that you have, that's a lot,
what if we put a curriculum together to train all of them and bring a level of confidence in
homeschooling and choose out of these 1200, 120,000 members that we have that you have,
moms for liberty and give them the confidence to say, guys, we can do this together for one year.
Let's let them feel the pain.
What if that number now is 12 million kids, okay?
That we can have not go to public schools anymore.
Let's take one year off.
Will the cities, the states, the country feel the pain
if 12 million kids are not going to public schools for one year?
feel the pain if 12 million kids are not going to public schools for one year?
First of all, they are flooding the country with new students.
So for the students that are leaving, there are new students that are coming in and now are becoming a part of the schools.
And often these kids can't read or write in English. And so just to be clear now, if you're a math teacher, you're now teaching English as well.
So the idea of that, listen Patrick,
yeah, it would make a difference.
It absolutely would, and I've heard you talk
about this a little bit.
The thing I wanna talk to you about though
is that we've got a lot of single moms
who are members of our organization.
And school choice is continuing.
There are more and more options,
and there's more and more states that are passing laws
that are, you know, saying the money follows the child and parents can make decisions for
their kids. But Patrick, the truth of the matter is that during COVID, there were moms
who didn't have a choice. They had to go to school. They had to go to work and they couldn't
stay home and home school. You know how many moms I talked to that would love to be able
to stay home and home school and can't. They have to send their kids to school and there
aren't other options around them.
One of the things that we can do is-
How many?
How many fall in that category?
A lot.
Give me a percentage, out of 120,000.
Oh, a percentage of the 120,000.
10%?
Yeah, I would say there's totally 10%.
So 12,000 of them fall in that category.
So them, let's find a different alternative
for them to go to public schools, okay? For them, have them go to public school. My only interest is long term. My
interest is not short term. I'm not interested in short term solutions.
So can I talk about long term solutions too? So the taking back the schools, reclaiming
and reforming the schools is a very intentional choice that Tina and I made. Because our institution
of education, our country in general, we didn't lose it
in the past four years.
They've been working for how long now?
I know, because they're long-term thinkers.
They are long-term thinkers.
Well, but we have to start somewhere.
The local elections are incredibly important.
So you have the United States Department of Education,
the federal government, we need the federal government
out of state education as much as possible.
Who's gonna let you do that?
Are you kidding me?
It's their biggest voting block.
Good luck.
You think they're gonna give their unicorn up?
Really?
Not without a fight.
You think they would, what fight though?
I mean, you gotta think about the,
who is a bigger funder to an institution
than the US government?
Are you kidding me?
Like even the average weed of people
doesn't compare to the US government being funded because they're taking money from the weed of people
And we don't have a choice on the taxation without representation
So they have a monopoly so when you're dealing with a monopoly there needs to be real pain being felt
Because what they'll look at they're like ah, you know what you feel like mom's a liberty what you're like a little pebble
I have on my shoe stop it knock it off
Whatever if I have to deal with a little I will I have on my shoe. Stop it. Knock it off, whatever.
If I have to deal with it a little,
they need to be like, holy shit, what was this all about?
No, we're gonna feel this.
Because when that happens, when the messaging becomes
about a Andrew Cuomo, Chris Cuomo's brother,
saying, listen AOC, what are you talking about? Let Jeff Bezos come here's bring in 15,000 jobs at a hundred fifty thousand dollar your 25,000 jobs at a hundred fifty thousand dollar
Your salary we want them to come to New York. No, we don't want them to come to New York because if they come to New York
They're gonna raise the lifestyle of the average
As I did you realize we just lost this two different states, right?
of the average and da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da get that kind of a pressure to say one year. Let's go for one year. We can do one year.
Why can't we do one year?
Why can't we get a rally cry right now
between now and the end of the year, this year, school year?
And we find there is an absolute way to do this.
I think if more parents knew about this kind of a push,
I think there would be bigger funding nationwide
from real people that would bring real money.
And some of those people may even wanna teach.
Some of them may wanna volunteer.
Like I wouldn't mind volunteering
to teach three times a week to students.
I swear to God, I would teach.
I'd love for my kids to be in your class.
But hear me out, I would teach an entrepreneur class.
I believe it.
To 10, 12 year old kids, and I'll be the professor.
I would do it.
And let's do homeschooling. Let's take kids out of school and I'll be the professor. I would do it.
And let's do homeschooling. Let's take kids out of school with public school. Let's get
them to feel, and by the way, I'm willing to bet I can get other friends of mine that
are also ballsy and have audacity that are willing to do this to say I'll also be a professor.
So now imagine we got successful businessmen and women who actually believe in what we're
doing here. Now they're choosing to become professors, now they're choosing to become teachers.
Now the teachers are like, holy shit,
how do I compete against this guy?
How do I compete against her?
They're inspirational, I'm not inspirational,
I'm bitching about them, I'm dividing them,
I can't do this anymore.
Okay, we're willing to negotiate.
Really, you wanna negotiate?
You're number one.
Boom, that NEA, that whole board you guys got,
that whole union you got, you gotta get rid of it.
If you don't get rid of it, we're not coming back in.
Then we can negotiate. But this type of negotiation, I think this type of negotiation that you're going
through, unless if you have the backing of a Koch, of a Rothschild, and the reason why I'm
giving these names is because of a musk that says, I'm going to put $3 billion on this, let's go.
But unless you have that kind of money to do that, even if that kind of money was being invested, unless if it's something
that's a long term solution that's going to disrupt because today with AI, do you know
what we can do with AI today? Do you know what we can do with AI today? Do you know today
with AI, we have, have you seen what Sam Altman just showed on what happened?
Have you seen the videos of Sam Altman that shown the fact that, hey, a man, can you pull up that one video?
I want somebody to walk in the streets of Japan while it's snowing.
And Chad GBT just designs it, right?
This is not a real video.
This is a fake video that Chad GBT created.
Go a little lower, Rob, to show you.
That got 92 million views.
I want mammoth running towards the camera while it's snowing in the mountains go to the next one here Rob
I want a man with a you know featuring movie trailer of 30 year old space wearing a red wool whatever whatever
Okay, so watch this. What if we use AI for Moms of Liberty and we raise 20 million dollars?
We bring 30, $300,000 tech leads, engineers, okay?
And we bring them in and we say, hey,
build us a private school with professors teaching courses
based on real history and we don't care
what these teachers look like.
And then with your AI, create a test
that parents can use, make it as easy as possible
where a mother can do, let's create an incentive program,
can you put these together and we want 80 teachers, okay?
And these teachers are not real life teachers,
they're AI bots, but they look like teachers
and they can be whatever color you want it to be,
but they're teaching the same thing. I want my teachers to be white. No problem. I want my teachers to be
a Muslim wearing a hijab. No problem. I want my teachers to be this great. Now if we use AI
to fight against our public schools, they're going to be shivering. So I'm so excited to hear you
talk about this. I would love to learn more about Elon Musk's school. He has a synthesis school and
I've actually tried to message him online to learn more about it.
But the fact that people like you and Elon Musk and other people
are talking about education and innovation in education
is exactly what we need to have happen.
And it's what hasn't happened, Patrick.
People haven't cared enough about education
and making this innovation happen.
But we're finally getting to a point where we are.
But the thing I do want to tell you about Moms for Liberty is the endorsement at
the school board level. Local control is important, Patrick.
So yes, you say that you could be a teacher in a home schooling or a pod
environment. That's awesome. But you could also run for school board.
People, real people in their lives who have jobs who are successful business
people need to get out there and run for local office.
For sure. For sure. So remember three buckets, short term successful business people, need to get out there and run for local office. For sure, for sure.
So remember, three buckets,
short term, midterm, long term.
Short term, run for board.
Yes, go impose, go do your part.
But I'm only interested in long term.
I'm telling you, my only interest in building
a better society is long term thinking.
And we have advanced AI and technology on our side to be able to do this
and we have to come to a realization that just maybe, just maybe, we no longer need public schools
and if they realize we don't need public schools, do you know what they're going to do?
Do you know how they go to sleep at night? Because teachers are gonna be like, for example, the jobs, can you pull up the AI thing,
Rob, on who's being replaced the most in there?
Have you seen this thing?
Did you see that?
The report on men versus women,
and then what level of education?
We had this yesterday, Rob, that he texted it to you.
You have it on the text that you have.
If you just wanna pull it up, you texted it to you. You have it on the text that you have. If you just want to pull it up,
you saved it from yesterday.
It's right there.
I'm going to put the thumbs up on it
so you can see it.
It's going to come up to your text.
Just pull that up.
You have it from yesterday.
You see it?
Watch this.
So when you see what AI is disrupting, okay?
What AI is disrupting?
You'll see this chart.
I texted it to you.
Just pull it up from your text, Rob. Yeah. If you see what is disrupting, you'll see this chart. I texted it to you, just pull it up from your text, Ron.
Yeah, if you see what is disrupting,
it shows a level of jobs, 17% men, 21% women.
Women will be affected by AI more than men will, okay?
Why though?
Because women are nowadays more educated with more degrees, men will do construction. Certain jobs that women are now willing to do.
They're not gonna be affected by it. Look at the nationalities. White,
you got 20%, blacks 15, Hispanics least, Asians the most. Asians are the most educated.
Then you have the rest. Now look at the last one here. Less than high school, 3% will be affected by it.
They're not gonna be affected by it.
And if you look at high school diploma, 12%,
some college, 19%, bachelor's, 27% of Americans
with a bachelor degree are gonna be affected by AI.
So what do most school teachers have in common?
They all follow the whatever they told them to do.
Go to school, go be a teacher, you get benefits,
you get tenure, you get the nice 457 or whatever,
TSA, tax shelter, the noody that they can't pay
for their retirement, now they're gonna sit there
and say, man, I can't defend the NEA anymore
because you guys are costing me my bills, my job,
exactly, now you'll realize you guys forced
chapelists and entrepreneurs to innovate
and expose you and get rid of the public school system.
Now what do you want to say politicians?
Now they're scared.
That's a long term solution.
And I'm willing to bet if your messaging for Moms of Liberty was presented in a short term, mid term, long term, you would get the attention of the guys that are more the long term guys.
Musk is not worried about the next year.
Musk is worried about 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 years.
Those visionaries want to know that the plan
is also different long-term.
So what if Mom's for Liberty puts a plan together?
Here's our short-term plan.
Here's our mid-term plan.
Here's our long-term plan.
And long-term plan is what?
To not rely at all on the public school system.
That may be bold.
That may not align with what you're thinking,
but I tell you, a guy like me, that excites me.
Because it's doable.
In my mind, what we just talked about right now, the last eight minutes, ten minutes,
is not something that's unreasonable, impossible, and can actually inspire people to say, I'll
take my kids out of school for one year, I guarantee you, I guarantee you, rally cry,
we can get a lot of people to not take public schools
in 24, 25 and take one year off.
Well, and we need to, to be honest with you,
because what's happening in the schools,
we haven't really talked about social emotional learning.
What's happening in the schools is that the children
are being programmed in the schools.
And when you've got schools telling kids to lean into their discomfort, right?
If you've got little kids, so when I had little kids,
I would tell my kids, trust yourself.
If there's something that bothers you
or you think there's something wrong about a situation,
you need to trust yourself.
You get that funny feeling in your stomach, right?
Social motion learning in the classroom
is driving a wedge between the parent and the child
and telling a child that if they feel
Uncomfortable that it's their problem and they need to change that for the comfort of other people in the classroom
And so what you're talking about is incredibly important because we have a school system
That is again teaching kids that America is a flawed country a broken country
And that maybe they're not safe at home and there's no future in that. Yeah, well, I believe America's the greatest country
in the world.
I believe the future looks bright
and I believe the people that have the audacity,
the resources and the missing a few screws community
that would be willing to fight against this union,
I think they're out there,
I think that community can be waken up and tapped into.
Because that community is interested in long-term solutions.
All the other stuff is great, we need to do it.
Of course, blocking and tackling and all this stuff,
yeah, we have to do all that stuff.
But I don't think these guys are gonna get any weaker
until somebody's willing to finally stand up to them
and for them to realize, oh shit,
you mean to tell me you would be willing to do this?
Yes, guys, this is bad news.
And what if we go one year and the first year,
the amount of people that maybe take whatever off
to go to school, let's just say we get a million kids
to take a one year off from going to public school, what Let's just say we get a million kids to take a one-year offer. I'm going to public school
What if a year later we learn stuff?
What if we're like guys we ain't never going back to public school and a year two is three point eight million
Your three is six point nine million your four is eleven million
You're five now. They're coming begging saying what can we do? We say you have have to get rid of the union, put it in the constitution that you will never, ever have a union and teachers can get fired.
Okay? No more tenure. You can get fired.
You know, there's an article that came out saying Gen Z found a hack
against whatever the new setup is.
You know what their hack is? Work for the government because you will never get fired.
That's right. Right?? Work for the government because you will never get fired. That's right.
Right?
Go work for the government.
Gen Z has discovered a new hack,
which is work for the government.
Would just give me the top right there.
Gen Z has discovered ultimate anti-layoff hack.
Work for the government, right?
What if all of a sudden these guys realize,
oh shit, I could get fired?
You could, you could, Mr. and Mrs. Teacher,
we appreciate your service, but you could get fired. If suck if you're going out there telling I saw one the videos
You guys posted on mom's or Liberty where the teacher is saying listen the moment
I realized my parents are idiots guys your parents are idiots
You're smarter than your parents a teacher saying that to kids. Yeah, you're dividing you're putting a wedge between parents and kids
Can we talk about that for a second before it can you play the clip just pull up the clip while you're while you're putting a wedge between parents and kids. Can we talk about that for a second? Go for it
Can you play the clip just pull up the clip while you're while you're talking about it?
He'll find I'll find a clip and I'll take the wedge between the parent and the child
Yeah, this happens in Florida this there are court cases all over it
I want to say I want to give a shout out to public interest law firms across the country conservative law firms like southeastern legal foundation or Institute for free speech or
ADF, Alliance Defending Freedom,
Goldwater Institute. These are amazing groups that are doing, if you're giving money to
these groups, God bless you because they are doing amazing work standing up for our rights
across the country. But in schools across America, private conversations are happening
between teachers and students, behind closed doors, where kids are making decisions about
what name do they want to use at school what name
Teachers are saying what name would you like us to use when we call your parents and talk about you?
what in
Florida in Leon County, Florida this happened to a mom January little John
That her daughter was put was told what sex would you like to sleep with behind closed doors when you go on field trips?
I mean, honestly, these private conversations
happening in schools.
And when, you know-
No problem.
Well, and here's the thing.
I remember when I was 12, I wanted,
I said I was gonna be a vegetarian.
It lasted for about six months,
but I told all my friends, it told everybody, right?
I'm gonna be a vegetarian, I don't eat meat anymore.
And I remember when I decided I wasn't gonna be
a vegetarian anymore, that I felt embarrassed
to tell people, right?
Now imagine you're 12 years old,
and you've told everyone at your school
that you thought you were a boy.
How hard is it as a kid, right?
After you've been loved, and told how amazing you are.
And that's what schools are setting kids up for,
this path that they can't get away from,
that they feel locked into.
And if you get put into a social transition program
at a school, your chances of going down
the path of medical transition are incredibly increased.
And so schools are completely violating
parental rights right now.
And so I understand your long, you know, short term,
long term, the short term issue that we have right now is that government schools think they know better
than parents for their children. And we have to stand up and fight. So there are court cases
happening all over the United States of America right now fighting back against this nonsense.
And we're going to see how it turns out. But, you know, there's something called the Family
Rights and Responsibilities Act that Senator Tim Scotch has introduced into the Senate.
That is a very important bill that will help us
to address fundamental parental rights
in our federal court system.
Very important bill.
Would Republicans be upset if we took a million,
10 million kids out of public school
and parents voluntarily chose to do it?
Would Republican, would the establishment be upset?
I don't care.
No, okay, so, but the reason why I'm asking it,
I'm asking because I really don't give a shit.
All I'm saying is from their standpoint,
what would their argument be against it?
Are they gonna come out and say,
well, we can't do this because we need the right leverage
to negotiate and all this other stuff.
I think, I think, yeah, I think, oh my God,
we can put a team of Avengers together for this. we can put a team of Avengers together for this.
We can put a team of Avengers together for this.
Rob, go on and play this clip.
Look at this, parents.
How do you feel about your kids going to school and teachers telling your kids something like
this?
Go ahead.
I'm not going to pretend.
I'm not going to lie.
If you ask me a legit question, I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to sugarcoat it either, because y'all need to hear the truth.
Hey, I'm going just a demigod.
You don't have to be, that's the thing.
Most of y'all parents are dumber than you. I'm gonna say that out loud.
My parents are freaking dumb, okay?
And the minute I figured that out,
the world opens up.
You don't have to do everything your parents say,
and you don't have to believe everything your parents believe
because most likely you're smarter than them.
What's the likelihood that this lady's got kids?
Pause it, Rob.
What's the likelihood this lady's got kids? I'd love to know if she's got kids.
Randy Weingarten doesn't have kids. I'll tell you that.
Doesn't?
Nope.
That's why I see the question earlier. What's the trend?
Is there a trend of some of these decision makers that have kids and don't have kids?
Yeah, they want our kids. They don't need to have their kids. They're just gonna try to take ours.
Good luck.
Yeah, that's what I say.
Good luck because there are different kind of guys that that fight in school
There's guys that fight that just pick fights, right? Yeah, and they're the bullies no prom then there's guys that you know
Will will fight to not get bullied fine
Then there's the guys that just fight to correct an injustice
You don't want to wake those guys up. Well, I'm looking at your book choose your enemies wisely
What I would say to the unions is this they picked the wrong enemy because nobody is gonna fight for anything like a mom
And a dad is no fight for their kids. No way. No problem. No, let's have some fun. Let's have some fun and see what happens
Do let's have some fun and see what takes place with this
Appreciate you for coming out gang once again again, if this inspired you, do us a favor. This is not our website.
This is theirs. Go order a shirt and a hat. Go order it and we're in school tomorrow.
Go ahead and support them. Can you show one more time what store, what items they got?
If it's not this, get a coffee mug. If you drink coffee and go to work tomorrow and where
I have one of those coffee mugs with you, but whatever you do, support the fight
because these guys definitely need the support
and it's not an easy job to do.
Like I said earlier, Tiffany,
appreciate you for coming out.
You're amazing.
I applaud you.
I respect the work you're doing.
I think, like I said earlier,
multiple times it's not easy.
It is patriotic to do what you're doing
and we need more of you.
So thank you for inspiring yourself and Tina to the other 120,000 members. You guys
are very important America. Appreciate you. Thank you. Take care. Take care everybody.
Bye-bye.