Navigate Select ESC Close

The True Meaning of Memorial Day | Nick Freitas & Ben Shapiro

2026-05-25 News & Politics
229.6k
2.1k
402
Ben Shapiro
Ben Shapiro
7.0m subscribers

Unlock all features

FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.

Description

Legacybox - Go to https://Legacybox.com/SHAPIRO and save 50% to preserve your family memories. In this special Memorial Day interview, retired Green Beret combat veteran Nick Freitas joins Ben Shapiro for a conversation about sacrifice, combat, honor, and the true meaning of service. Follow Nick Freitas here: https://youtube.com/@Nickjfreitas?si=p5CtLRn93G4CptUZ LIKE & SUBSCRIBE for new videos daily: https://youtube.com/@BenShapiro DailyWire+ Become a Daily Wire Member and watch all of our content ad-free: https://www.dailywire.com/subscribe 📲 Download the free Daily Wire app today on iPhone, Android, Roku, Apple TV, Samsung, and more. 📰 Follow me on the Daily Wire app or DailyWire.com to read my daily articles and receive my Friday newsletter. 📘 My book "Lions and Scavengers: The True Story of America (and Her Critics)" is available here: https://dwplus.shop/LionsandScavengers 👕 Get your Ben Shapiro merch here: https://dwplus.shop/BenShapiroMerch Connect with me on social media: Facebook — https://www.facebook.com/officialbenshapiro Instagram — https://www.instagram.com/officialbenshapiro Snapchat — https://www.snapchat.com/officialbenshapiro TikTok — https://www.tiktok.com/@real.benshapiro X — https://twitter.com/benshapiro #BenShapiro #TheBenShapiroShow #News #Politics #DailyWire

Top Comments (10)

@joylee6968 2026-05-25

Respect for our American soldiers.

121 12 replies
@Iron-Lion-Zion 2026-05-25

When someone says American - i see Nick. Respect.

70 1 replies
@mikealvarez2322 2026-05-25

I remember my best friend who did 2 tours of duty as a combat Marine in Vietnam. He died 24 years after the War in 1997. He died from complications of exposure to the herbicide, dioxin aka Agent Orange, that our government sprayed over there from 1963 to 1971. A few years ago I met a Vietnam War Veteran at the clinic where I go to see my doctor. I struck up a conversation with him and he told me he was there because he had been fighting many complications from his exposure to Agent Orange for the past 20 years. He looked pretty sick at the time so I'm sure he is no longer with his family. I grew up in a lower middle class neighborhood in the 1950s. Our front porch was the gathering place of some of the men in our neighborhood in Miami. These men drank beer, talked politics, and talked sports. Four of these men served in WW2. My Dad, who was wounded in North Africa, Domingo who served in the merchant Marine, Raymond who was wounded when a Kamikaze hit his ship, and Augie who fought for Mussolini. As an 8 - 11 year old kid I would ask them about their experiences. To my childish mind their stories seemed like real adventures. As I grew up I came to realize that what I pictured as adventures were the stuff of nightmares. I have always honored these men and especially the ones that never came home.

57 3 replies
@RandMan1956 2026-05-25

GOD BLESS AMERICA 🇺🇲🙏🏻🇺🇲🙏🏻🇺🇲

30 2 replies
@MokDuX 2026-05-25

Thank you for your service, Nick 🫡

29
@AgnesLinks 2026-05-25

I am a non-white South African and I love all that Nick Freitas stands for,Americans should be proud of him❤

25 6 replies
@Azula3570 2026-05-25

Excellent interview! Thank you for inviting Mr. Freitas, he is an admirable American man, father and veteran.

15
@rikki.lamass 2026-05-25

Respect to our veterans and all those who have served.

12 2 replies
@robertbridges517 2026-05-25

They must never be forgotten.

10
@donhathaway3234 2026-05-25

My dad was a WWII U.S. Army combat veteran who fought in the South Pacific as a Lead Scout. He’s been gone now for 24 years. Members of the 10th Mountain Division stood guard at his service and burial. All 4 of us children (he outlived our mother for 5 years) were at his bedside for 3 days before he passed. He passed quietly I in the middle of the night but, that day we were privileged to accompany his march across the island of Mindanao. A month long slog starting at Parang on the west coast to hack their way east, 100 miles across extremely dense jungle to attack Davao City from the jungle rather than face the heavy defenses facing seaward. He never really talked about his service so this was very special to hear him in his delusion talk as if it was happening right now. Talking to his men, calling them by name, giving orders to clear huts and warn of danger. That night, he came back to the present and looking at his 4 children, our spouses and grown grandchildren and said, “I don’t believe you are all here and that you still love me.” There wasn’t a dry eye (tears as I write this) in the room. I miss him everyday and pray that I get to see him again. I love you, dad.

8 1 replies

Unlock the Data Inside
Turn Videos into Knowledge

  • Get FREE 10/day: transcripts, summaries, chats
  • Chat with videos, export text & PDF
  • $1 free API credit for RAG, chatbots & research

Free forever plan • All features unlocked

App screenshot