Matt Walsh Tells Megyn Kelly How He Kept A Straight Face Talking To DEI Grifters In ‘Am I Racist?’

Daily Wire podcast host Matt Walsh recently joined Megyn Kelly to discuss his upcoming film, “Am I Racist?,” including how he kept from laughing at the absurdity of the conversations he was having.

Kelly began by asking Walsh about how he stayed in character for his 2022 smash hit documentary “What is a Woman?,” and again with this latest project, which has the podcast host speaking with people who are fully indoctrinated by DEI propaganda.

Walsh said the question he gets asked a lot about the process of making these kinds of films is about how he keeps a straight face.

“The truth is, stopping myself from laughing is pretty easy, it turns out, because when you’re actually in the room doing this and you’re in the room with these people in real time … it’s pretty intense. And these are really unpleasant people most of the time.”

Walsh said looking back on these conversations may be humorous, but that “in the moment, it’s actually not all that funny” watching “grifters” trying to break down normal people.

“It’s like this brainwashing session that you see in the movie that goes on over and over again,” he added.

Kelly commended Walsh for putting “all the craziest DEI pushers” into a single film to show people what’s going on in this industry. “They hate America, and they really don’t much like white people,” she said.

The pair next discussed Walsh’s disguise and how he didn’t need to go to great lengths to conceal his identity. The podcast host mentioned how it’s probably because most of the people he encountered exist in a bubble and don’t often associate with anyone who disagrees with them.

“We’re using their arrogance and false sense of intellectual security against them…” @MattWalshBlog on how he exposes grifters brainwashing Americans in new movie, “Am I Racist?”

Watch below, and subscribe:https://t.co/Y12z2uLeBJ pic.twitter.com/2cmzYiso40

— The Megyn Kelly Show (@MegynKellyShow) September 3, 2024

Walsh said he and the film crew used the participants’ “arrogance and false sense of security” to secure interviews with a variety of race hustlers, including “White Fragility” author Robin D’Angelo.

Next, Walsh spoke about the frivolity of getting a DEI certification card, which requires little effort yet is used by certain individuals to make themselves sound important. “It’s all completely made up and really all it’s about is showing ideological alignment with these race hustlers,” he said.

During the same conversation, Kelly debuted a new clip from “Am I Racist?,” which involves Walsh speaking with anti-racist educator Kate Slater, who is proud of developing the “anti-racist road map.”

Tickets for “Am I Racist?” are on sale NOW! Buy here for a theater near you.

In the clip, Slater laments how her young daughter prefers “white princesses” when watching Disney movies.

Walsh responded by saying his 3-year-old daughter’s favorite princess is Moana. But he points out a challenge with that, mentioning how he’s concerned his daughter would be guilty of “cultural appropriation” by dressing like Moana for Halloween.

“Do I go and buy the Pacific Islander native attire for my white 3-year-old?” Walsh asked Slater, referring to it as “The Moana Problem.”

“I wouldn’t. I f***ing wouldn’t,” she replied.

“It’s almost like no matter which way you go, you end up back in racism,” he pointed out.

Slater blamed the issue on “living in a white supremacist society.”

“Is America an inherently racist country?” Walsh asked, to which Slater replied, “Fundamentally, yes, America is racist to its bones.”

“Am I Racist?” will hit theaters on September 13. Fans can purchase tickets to a showing near them at amiracist.com.

U.S. Charges 6 Top Hamas Leaders Over October 7 Attack

The U.S. Justice Department announced criminal charges Tuesday afternoon against six senior leaders in Hamas, an Iranian-backed terrorist organization based in Gaza, over their role in carrying out the October 7 massacre against U.S. and Israeli citizens last year.

The six Hamas officials who were charged in the indictment include Ismail Haniyeh, chairman of Hamas’ Politburo; Yahya Sinwar, the leader of Hamas; Mohammad Al-Masri, commander in chief of the al-Qassam Brigades; Marwan Issa, deputy commander of the al-Qassam Brigades; Khaled Meshaal, chairman of Hamas’ Politburo from approximately 2004 to 2017 and who is now the head of Hamas’ diaspora office; and Ali Baraka, 57, Hamas’ head of National Relations Abroad since approximately 2019.

Of the six who were charged, three have been killed in recent months in response to the terrorist attack that they carried out. Those killed include Haniyeh, Al-Masri, and Issa.

The Justice Department said all of the defendants “have orchestrated, overseen, and supported Hamas’s decades-long campaign of terrorism, including the October 7 Hamas Massacres.”

The DOJ highlighted other acts of terrorism that the Palestinian terrorist group is responsible for, including suicide bombings of restaurants, markets, public transportation systems, and other public spaces.

“As of the date of the complaint, over 40 American citizens were among those murdered, and at least eight American citizens were taken hostage or remain unaccounted for,” the statement said. “Most recently, Hamas executed a U.S. citizen who was taken hostage by Hamas during the October 7 Hamas Massacres and remained in captivity until he was murdered.”

Prosecutors said that Hamas’ ability to carry out terrorist attacks is fueled by the Islamic Republic of Iran, “particularly the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and its Qods Force (IRGC-QF) — the element of the IRGC responsible for conducting external terrorism operations and providing support to terrorist groups — which has supported, supplied, and trained Hamas, and by the Lebanon-based Shia Islamic terrorist organization Hezbollah.”

“Hamas raises money to fund its terrorist activities through a variety of methods, including by soliciting and receiving cryptocurrency payments, advertising the ostensible anonymity of such transactions,” prosecutors said, noting that the terror group has raised tens of millions of dollars from supporters around the world, including in the U.S., who have knowingly given money to the group for the intent of financing terrorism.

Tickets for “Am I Racist?” are on sale NOW! Buy here for a theater near you.

Each of the defendants were charged with conspiring to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization resulting in death, which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison; conspiring to provide material support for acts of terrorism resulting in death, which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison; conspiring to murder U.S. nationals outside the United States, which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison; conspiring to bomb a place of public use resulting in death, which carries a maximum penalty of death or life in prison; conspiring to use weapons of mass destruction resulting in death, which carries a maximum penalty of death or life in prison; conspiring to finance terrorism, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison; and conspiring to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.

Attorney General Merrick Garland said that the indictment was just one part of the U.S.’ efforts to hold Hamas accountable for its acts of terrorism.

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