Greg Gutfeld
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I don't think the polls are real, but I do think that there has been a shift due to redefining in the last, I would say, 15 or 20 years, redefining common sense,
patriotism as intolerant, xenophobic, but most important, mean.
So if you think about every segment that we do or every position we're on, we are always portrayed as mean.
So when you say men cannot be women, men cannot be in women's sports, you are intolerant and you are mean.
If you say illegals need to be deported, all illegals, I think the worst first, but in the long run, you never know who the worst is first because you let them all in.
Every single policy that the Democrats try to shove down your throats is based on the fact that somehow when you take a stand to protect your country or your family, it's somehow mean.
This is likeβI really do think this is a dangerous culture.
Now, I keep thinking to myself, what ifβ
The supporters of birthright citizenship were gung-ho patriotic Americans who said, we need to do this, and we align it with a dedicated citizenship assimilation path.
So we have the American ideal protected, valued, cherished.
I'd be like, wow, that's pretty amazing that these people feel that way.
But the problem is the people that are pushing birthright are the people who reject citizenship.
American culture, who reject assimilation, who embrace the so-called tenets of diversity and identity politics, who believe that America as an idea is not just flawed, but evil and in need of radical change.
So I don't trustβthis is why all the arguments about birthright citizens are what-ifs, analogies.
Kenjen Jackson Brown, my favorite artistβ