Megyn Kelly caller on Minneapolis shooting: “The vice president was up there lying his self off”
Caller: “Clearly, if you're going to lunge at someone, your left wheel is not going to be turning to the right”
Published
Megyn Kelly caller on Minneapolis shooting: "The vice president was up there lying his self off today"
Citation
From the January 8, 2026, edition of SiriusXM's The Megyn Kelly Wrap-Up Show
EMILY JASHINSKY (HOST): On that note, lots more calls to get to here, I'm going to go now to Nevada in Tennessee. Nevada, what's on your mind?
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CALLER: I do agree with the caller who previously stated that people with positions should say, well, the laws are being broken. But you can't just say it when it affects something that concerns you or that you don't like or that you don't agree -- that you agree with that's happening.
Because, clearly, in the video I saw — I don't care what the vice president was up there lying his self off today — but clearly, if you're going to lunge at someone, your left wheel is not going to be turning to the right and if it's a person that's on the left corner. Now, you know, we've seen lunges, we've seen road rage, we've seen cars lunge. They don't lunge with the wheel turning to the right. And so that's just common sense.
But you can't just say, oh, they need to know the law. So what are we teaching our law school students? Here they are learning on the Constitution, which I'll -- is our abiding document that we are supposed to be following, and then we have an administration that doesn't follow the Constitution. So if we want to talk about following rules, I just ask shows like this one, talk about both sides not following rules.
JASHINSKY: Yeah, yeah.
CALLER: Like when he didn't follow the rules when he invaded Venezuela and didn't get any type of acknowledgment or did not inform the Congress. That's in our Constitution. What he's doing with the DOJ, that's in our Constitution.
But those things — but it's only against the law if it's something that he agrees with and said it's not against the law. He's committed things against the — he's committed unlawful acts and they are doing things and asking people to do things that are against the law. It's just the Constitution. So how do we discuss both things, you know, on an even keel and acknowledge, yeah, this administration is also doing things that's against the law, not just because we're trying to make a point about who's at fault about this very unfortunate death of a mother with two children.