Karen Hunter warns that the United States is facing what she calls “a very illiterate time,” arguing that political inaction and shallow political debate are allowing dangerous conditions to persist under a second Trump era.
Speaking on “The Karen Hunter Show” on SiriusXM Urban View, Hunter called on listeners who believe change will come through prayer or waiting for leaders to act to think again.
“We are constantly looking for somebody to come and rescue us,” Hunter declared. “Many of us have been raised with these fairy tales where a prince is going to come and save you and you ride off on a white horse.”
That mindset, she argued, extends beyond relationships and into politics and civic life.
“We’ve been conditioned to think the government is going to take care of everything,” she said. “We’ve been conditioned to think that God is just going to come down and make everything right.” According to Hunter, the responsibility instead lies with individuals. “You in the mirror are the God that you’ve been praying about,” she said. “If you’re not doing something, something ain’t going to get done.”
She criticized what she described as a lack of political comprehension among voters. “It’s not that people can’t read the words on the page,” Hunter added. “They can read ‘The Cat in the Hat.’ But when you start to read for comprehension, when you start to dig into geopolitical machinations and political schemes, there’s not a lot of processing and critical thinking going on.”
Hunter also pushed back against online commentary blaming political losses on specific candidates or voter turnout.
“People have a lot to say with no background to say anything,” she noted. “They’re just talking.” She compared voter apathy to a child throwing a tantrum. “It’s like a toddler falling out in the supermarket because they didn’t get the cookies,” she said. “We’re throwing tantrums instead of building the world we want to live in.”
Hunter then urged voters to act pragmatically in elections.
“When it gets down to November and you have two choices, staying home should never be the choice,” she said. “It’s math. Simple math.”








