This episode of The Reagan Faulkner Show examines what Reagan calls the “silent power” of Gen Z: a generation that is loud online yet too often absent when it comes to real-world political work. She contrasts Gen Z-led uprisings abroad with American Gen Z conservatives who talk, debate, and go viral but rarely show up to knock doors, lobby school boards, or help campaigns, despite evidence that 18–21-year-olds lean Republican. Reagan warns that failing to act locally is how conservatives lost critical 2025 races that shape everyday life far more than the White House.
She also calls out older conservative leaders who beg for youth involvement but then ghost young volunteers or sideline their ideas, arguing that both Gen Z and their elders must change. The episode lays out specific action steps—petitioning for the Ten Commandments in schools, fighting for the SAVE Act, calling representatives, uncovering local corruption, and turning online influence into mobilization—while urging Christian Gen Z to see political engagement as a moral duty in the face of radical left ideologies that she believes cannot coexist with Christianity or America’s founding principles.