real change, were pivotal in the movement for civil and human rights in this country. it is called righteous troublemakers. trouble makers, in the words of john lewis say good trouble, that were righteous, fighting for equality, fighting for empowerment, even though they knew their name was not going to be in the paper. they were not going to be on television. do you know there was a young woman that sat in the front of the bus in montgomery, alabama, before rosa parks? i tell her story and why they didn t rally around her. do you know there was a woman that wrote legal papers, that some of those theories thurgood marshall used in historic supreme court case of brown versus the board of education? they did not give her the credit and the limelight she deserved because she was a woman and lgbtq. i tell stories of those people because i have this use of platform, i want people that should be household names to be
but you can t see it at the time. strange things. i sure did. and you end with friends like these trouble makers. buehrle, buehrle. buehrle. bret: but when you grow up and become an adult you look back on those days and laugh at how foolish you were. your clothes, your hair, your friends, you realize you were completely wrong about everything. that s what the democratic party is going through right now for the last few years acted like children. pushing asinine policies hurt the american people. pretending like they know best when their foolishness was completely obvious. they supported riots. worshipped wokeness. the squad democratic hood ornament. recognizing their mistakes and when i say adults, i really mean
which is everything the stereotype of the right is not. we didn t always have to be judgmental. i didn t have to like culture to the left. they had their mary pranksters, they might be on to something. and then came andrew breitbart. his thesis was simple. politics runs everything so fight back with fun. when i was younger i wrote a piece called the dean warmer effect. based on this fella from the movie and animal house. 0.2. fat drunk and stupid is no way to go through life s on. you are out, you re finished. i want you off this campus at 9:00 monday morning. speak to to to mike to greg: they were always animal house. the cheerful trouble makers. the wise guy.
never spoke to me, mr. mayor, you re responsible, you re the leader of the city, the acts of anti-semitism in new york have nothing to do with the right, have nothing to do with the president, take responsibility and deal with it instead of blaming washington. heather: what does he need to do? he needs to look, no question that additional police forcing. heather: patrols. they send additional police, when things quiet down they go back to normal, there has to be a concentrated effort not just police in uniform but police officers who may be look like me and people in the communities, let s find the trouble makers on the streets who are ready to attack a person only because of religion, let s have police officers dress like i don t have to tell them what to do, he
i thought about carl had been arrested for sitting in the front of the bus. no one knew her name like rosa packs or attorney murray who fought many legendary cases like many civil rights lawyers. i decided since i had these platforms and had become high profile, i wanted to write a book about righteous trouble makers, people that marched, some spent nights in dale and some even died, and knew they would never be on television, never have their name in the newspaper, but they went anyhow. they were the ones that made movements work, made this country sit around, whether women s rights, lgbtq americans, asian-americans, latinx. i wrote a book about some no one