
The Megyn Kelly Show Kohberger Family Whitewashing, Trump on Maduro Dancing, and Symphony DEI, with Glenn Greenwald, Rich Lowry, and Clarinetist James Zimmermann | Ep. 1224
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Jan 6, 2026 Glenn Greenwald, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, dives into the implications of Trump's controversial actions in Venezuela, exploring themes of imperialism and American intervention. Rich Lowry, editor of National Review, weighs in on the traditional approaches to U.S. foreign policy while critiquing radical views on property ownership from Mayor Mamdani’s tenant director. Lastly, clarinetist James Zimmermann shares his shocking story of discrimination and the challenges of DEI policies within orchestras, advocating for a return to meritocracy in the arts.
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Phone Records Suggest Crucial Unanswered Questions
- Megyn Kelly and Glenn Greenwald used the Kohberger family phone-call timeline to highlight unanswered questions about who might have known details.
- They stressed the importance of probing family conversations soon after the murders as a critical investigative lead.
Conservative Shift Toward Interventionism
- Megyn Kelly observed many conservatives now openly embrace interventionist, imperial rhetoric once associated with neoconservatism.
- Greenwald countered this betrays Trump's earlier anti-war instincts and risks expanding the military-industrial complex.
Shifting Rationales Reveal Strategic Risks
- Glenn Greenwald warned the Venezuela operation's shifting rationales signal dangerous, poorly justified escalation.
- He argued regime-change actions were not debated in the campaign and risk long-term geopolitical blowback.






