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Birthright Blues

6/30/20264 min

Live by the SCOTUS, die by the SCOTUS. On the same day it upheld keeping men out of women's sports, the Supreme Court issued a huge letdown decision on birthright citizenship. But this is a no-blackpilling show, so the team asks: What can conservatives do to contain the damage and work toward a country with sane citizenship laws? Sen. Rick Scott and Mike Davis have some ideas. Former DOJ Chief of Staff Chad Mizelle explains the decision itself. Plus, the FCC's Brendan Carr joins to discuss a dramatic spat with Disney that could lead to its TV stations losing their licenses.

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First 90 seconds
  1. Mike Davis· Guest0:00

    17. And then Dianne Feinstein has that clip where she says, "The dogma lives loudly within you," goes very viral. A lot of people are very much going to her defense. And it was almost just, it was baked in at that point practically that if we lose, uh, RBG, if Bader Ginsburg leaves, this would be who Trump would replace. I think even Trump himself signaled that would be the case. And I guess it's just- Yeah ... a good warning. You have to be careful about these things because even if you took the position we need to have a woman to replace RBG, there actually were other options out there who had a longer track record on immigration, on citizenship-type questions, that showed they were good on that. And y- we just have to, we have to have new, uh, we have to new, have new litmus tests for judges going forward that we're sure that new people are going to pass, and that's just part of the, part of the ordeal of politics, so to speak. We had 50 years of overturn Roe litmus tests. We need new ones in place ASAP.

  2. Charlie Kirk· Host0:57

    So this, this brings us to the next question, though. NPR publishes this, I guess, erroneous report that Samuel Alito, who he and Clarence Thomas are the standard-bearers if you're a conservative on the court, don't wanna lose them, but they're both in their mid to late 70s. They're getting older, so NPR says he's retiring. Then they retract it, NBT, N- NPR, you got the image here, re- retracts the story, right? There you go. And but i- i- this kind of signals like there's something in the ether. Is this, are we,

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