Two outspoken podcasters launched a blistering attack on homeschooling and Christianity, calling parents who raise kids with faith “child abuse” while trading explicit insults and political jabs on-air.
After a day of heated commentary aimed at public figures, Jennifer Welch and Angie Sullivan returned to their microphones and aimed squarely at parents who homeschool, framing the choice as evidence of a broader cultural problem. Their exchange threaded personal attacks, political labels, and blunt condemnations of faith-based parenting. Listeners heard a mix of mockery and moral certainty presented as if outrage equals argument.
Sullivan opened the segment by ridiculing the idea of parents wanting their children at home day and night, declaring that it’s “f*****g weird as f**k that you want your kids around you all day and all night.” Her tone left little room for nuance, treating homeschooling as both a character flaw and social pathology.
She went on to say she doesn’t trust people who want to be with their kids 24/7 and suggested “a lot of dumb people do it cause it’s just easier.” That dismissive line ignores the very real sacrifices many families make when they trade wages, benefits, or career time to teach their children at home. Parents choose homeschooling for many reasons, including concerns about schools that host drag queen story hours or embrace critical race theory materials that clash with family values.
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Sullivan handed the conversation to Welch, who escalated the rhetoric by asserting that “Christians who homeschool their kids” “fear critical thinking more than anything on the planet.” Warning: Explicit Language.
“This is trickle-down stupidity,” Welch said, calling homeschooling parents “the dumbest people she knew” who want to “project a script” onto their kids. She labeled the practice “trad wife” and “MAGA on steroids” before concluding that America has a “fundamental crazy Christian problem.” Those barbs framed faith and parental authority as extreme threats rather than legitimate alternatives to the public school model.
Welch’s rhetoric went further, juxtaposing teaching children basic Biblical morality with support for gender surgeries on minors, arguing that Democrats are sometimes not progressive enough on those measures. The contrast in their worldview is stark: what looks like protecting children to millions looks like indoctrination to these hosts. That ideological gulf is why ordinary parents feel under siege from cultural elites.
According to Welch and Sullivan, genital mutilation of minors is not child abuse, but raising your kids in Christian values is. Those claims flip common-sense distinctions on their head and reveal a moral inversion where radical medical interventions are framed as enlightened and faith-centered parenting as oppressive. The conversation traded nuance for spectacle.
Warning: Explicit Language.
“I think it’s selfish for parents to push a religion onto their child before they are old enough to decide for themselves…I think it’s all child abuse,” she says. “You know I agree,” responds Sullivan. Those lines make clear that their hostility is aimed not only at particular policies but at the very idea that parents might intentionally transmit beliefs to their children.
The two hosts previously drew headlines for crude language aimed at public figures, including a mocking line about a senator saying he “liked c**k and killing.” Their willingness to deride faith-driven parenting while slinging vulgar attacks at opponents exposes a deeper contempt for traditional institutions. For millions of families, raising children with faith and moral boundaries isn’t abuse, it’s a conscious, time-consuming, and often sacrificial choice rooted in long-standing cultural norms.




