'We are not afraid': Glenn Beck, Allie Beth Stuckey, and Alex Stein jump into the breach to complete Charlie Kirk's tour



Blaze Media co-founder Glenn Beck and BlazeTV hosts Allie Beth Stuckey and Alex Stein are among the conservatives who have agreed to step into the breach and complete Charlie Kirk's fall campus tour in the wake of the Turning Point USA founder's assassination earlier this month.

Turning Point USA, now under the tutelage of Erika Kirk, announced on Monday that the tour would resume, starting with a stop at the University of Minnesota.

The widowed mother of two evidently meant it when she told the nation, "If you thought that my husband's mission was powerful before, you have no idea. You have no idea what you just have unleashed across this entire country."

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"Nobody can match the energy and hard work and drive that Charlie had — I mean, literally nobody," the eponymous host of "Prime Time with Alex Stein" told Blaze News. "So it's going to be up to a team of people to continue Charlie's mission of defending the First Amendment as well as the entire Constitution."

Beck, whom Kirk asked to participate in the tour prior to his assassination, told Blaze News, "I begged them not to have me help them complete the college tour because I'm not Charlie Kirk. I can't do what Charlie Kirk does."

Nevertheless, the bereaved conservative indicated that he will do his best on Oct. 9, teaching young Americans about their country's history and honoring his late friend.

RELATED: How Erika Kirk answered the hardest question of all

Photo by PHILL MAGAKOE/AFP via Getty Image

Following TPUSA's announcement regarding the tour, Allie Beth Stuckey noted, "Honored to join Turning Point’s college tour this fall. We're not going anywhere. For Jesus, for America, for Charlie."

'We have to keep Charlie's mission alive.'

Stuckey, who will be at Louisiana State University on Oct. 27, subsequently revealed that Kirk had asked her to join him on the tour prior to his assassination by a leftist coward and noted that while the date has changed, the directive remains the same.

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The shooting on September 10 serves as a painful reminder of the continued threat posed by the radical left.

Beck underscored to Blaze News that the message sent by the tour's completion is, "We are not afraid. We will not sit down. We will not comply. We will not hate. We will not respond in kind. We will love you. We will serve you. But we will continue to speak."

"You have to live fearlessly," said Stein, who has been attacked on numerous occasions by violent liberals. "You have to live unapologetically."

Stein, whose next date on the tour is Sept. 24 at the University of Central Florida, suggested further that the refusal to throw in the towel after the bloodletting earlier this month is "going to inspire a lot of people to actually go out there and have difficult conversations."

Other guests and speakers on the tour include Megyn Kelly and Tucker Carlson, along with Republicans including: Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, Utah Sen. Mike Lee, and Ohio gubernatorial nominee Vivek Ramaswamy.

"We have to keep Charlie's mission alive because that's what Charlie would have wanted," Stein said.

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The anti-reality crowd’s new anthem: ‘You can’t make me!’



Our digital age has brought many benefits. Lately, though, I’ve noticed how it’s enabled the spread of a persistent malady.

Call it the digital-era version of “spaniel selective hearing.”

Sometimes it’s willful ignorance. Other times it’s just denial. Either way, it’s intellectual evasion wrapped in self-satisfaction.

In her book ”The Invaders,” paleoanthropologist Pat Shipman explains that modern humans and dogs have been partners for 40,000 years. Over time, we developed specific dog breeds optimized for various jobs like herding, protection, and hunting. Once firearms became common, even ordinary people could hunt waterfowl. So we developed spaniels with excellent noses, all-day energy, non-territorial instincts, and a gentle, cooperative temperament.

The latter qualities were especially important: You and I might bring our personal gundogs to the field to hunt together, so each one needed to be attuned to its human and not challenge the other for turf control. Today we see their sweet spaniel faces with big eyes and their love of people in homes and as therapy dogs.

But something changed.

Back then, spaniels were often kennel-raised and fed once a day. They depended on their humans, so they stayed alert and focused. Today’s dogs? They’re beloved pets — well-fed, spoiled, and sometimes a little too independent.

This phenomenon was dubbed “spaniel selective hearing”: the condition in which your dog “can’t hear you” because it would rather be doing something else. It’s real. And it’s made worse by how cute and cuddly these dogs are otherwise.

In today’s world of digital abundance, I’m seeing the human version of this problem — and you probably are too.

You share an article that lays out certain information and reaches a conclusion. Immediately, someone in your circle dismisses it outright, saying, “The author is a partisan,” simply because she disagrees with him.

RELATED: When the mainstream media’s left-wing bias costs them credibility

SvetaZi via iStock/Getty Images

Press further, and she will respond with three “neutral” links — maybe NPR, the New York Times, or one of those permanently anti-Trump conservatives who call themselves principled.

Then, if the facts from your original article prove difficult to refute, she might pivot. She might offer her own “analysis,” which, oddly enough, ends up reinforcing the exact same claims made by the author she just dismissed.

But don’t expect your interlocutors to admit that. Why?

Because they’re neutral. Because context doesn’t count. Because you can’t make them go there.

Sometimes it’s willful ignorance. Other times it’s just denial. Either way, it’s intellectual evasion wrapped in self-satisfaction.

Like spaniel selective hearing, this rapidly spreading malady is the product of abundance — in this case, the overabundance of digital information and opinion pieces by a plethora of people with a wide range of actual expertise and insight.

Maybe we should call it “deflective data deployment” or “convenient data fencing.” Or, better yet, “I won’t go there, and you can’t make me!” syndrome.

Whatever we call it, we need to call it out.

We need a label that diagnoses this behavior. Confronting it is the first step toward reviving healthy public discourse and breaking us out of our echo chambers.

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