“I love the sound of babies in this room,” Allie Beth Stuckey told the audience of 6,700 Christian women who traveled from across the U.S. (and as far away as Australia) for her “Share the Arrows” conference. [Compartilhe as flechas, em tradução livre]held in Texas, on October 11th. Mother of three children, the conservative podcaster who has more than 2 million followers on her social networks is seen by many of them as the natural heir to Charlie Kirk’s mission – of whom she was a friend and advisor – to propagate traditional Christianity.
After the conservative activist’s death, the conference received 2,500 new registrations, according to her, who is part of the list of speakers on the “This Is the Turning Point” campus tour, alongside Erika Kirk (Charlie’s widow), the American vice-president, JD Vance, and Tucker Carlson.
“This is a spiritual battle that is fought in our homes and in our neighborhoods, at school, at your work. Every step you take, every decision you make and every word you say is a declaration of war against the enemy,” Stuckey said at the opening of the conference, drawing an “amen” from the audience.
When giving her lectures, she says in an interview with Wall Street Journalalways imagines a fictional woman. “The suburban mother of three or four children, 35 or 40, who is busy trying to do her best to glorify God in her own life, study the Bible more, and then raise her children in a godly and courageous way,” she sums up.
His advice, which has attracted women, involves questions such as what a family should do when faced with the apprehension of having more children, especially in the current economic scenario: “Trust in the Lord, and He will make the path bearable”, he says, evoking the Scriptures.
Raised in a suburb of Dallas, Texas, Allie Stuckey attended a Christian school and Prestonwood Baptist Church, one of the largest congregations in the United States. She is the daughter of Ron Simmons, who served in the Texas House of Representatives for three terms and serves as a senior advisor to the Heritage Foundation, responsible for Project 2025, a conservative strategy to dismantle the US “Deep State”.
About ten years ago, Stuckey created the blog “The Conservative Millennial” [O Millennial Conservador, em tradução livre]where she gained prominence by sharing her opinions on topics such as abortion and traditional gender roles. Noticed by Fox News and Blaze Media (founded by conservative commentator Glenn Beck, and which now hosts his podcast), she was invited to comment on cultural and political issues. In 2018, the podcast “Relatable” started [Relacionável]with the aim of debating culture, news and politics from a Christian perspective, today with more than a thousand episodes. During this period, she married Timothy Stuckey, now her business manager.
Among the “Christian things” that the podcaster says the Bible considers true are the existence of only two genders, determined at conception, and marriage between a man and a woman. According to her, abortion is murder, and in vitro fertilization and hormonal birth control are mistakes, even within marriage. She also states that Christian empathy needs to have a limit, submitting only to what is biblically true, and not bending to what progressives want.
Stuckey still believes that families should be able to decide what is right for them when it comes to harmful vaccines and chemicals, and despises the so-called “longevity idolatry” since we will not live forever here on earth. “One day we will receive new bodies and they will be healed, and we can look forward to that,” she told women at her conference.
Since Kirk’s death, Stuckey says he has reinforced his security at events like this, whose tickets range from US$99 (R$530) to US$5,000 (almost R$27,000) – the most expensive of which include private meals with the speaker. “Sharing the arrows means we are looking into the darkness together,” it says, in reference to the name of the conference, urging women to apply the message that “Jesus is King” in all areas of their lives.
