
Unashamed with the Robertson Family
Ep 1087 | Missy Serenades Phil with a Gospel Hymn & How Mamas Are Fighting the War for America’s Kids
Wed, 07 May 2025
Missy opens up about taking on Miss Kay’s mantle of mentorship and good cooking, and shares the sweet moment she serenaded Phil with an old gospel hymn. Kimberly Fletcher, founder and president of Moms for America, recounts some of the cultural victories mamas across the country have won and are fighting to win for family, the Constitution, God, and country. Meanwhile, Jase relives his one and only trip to school orientation—and how it went completely off the rails thanks to one four-letter word. “Unashamed” Episode 1087 is sponsored by: https://andrewandtodd.com or call 888-888-1172 — These guys are the real deal. Get trusted mortgage guidance and expertise from someone who shares your values! https://vom.org/unashamed — Request your free copy of When Faith is Forbidden today by visiting the website or by calling 844-463-4059. https://fastgrowingtrees.com/unashamed — Save up to half-off on select plants and when you use code UNASHAMED at checkout you’ll get an additional 15% off! Get an extra 25 cents back for every gallon on your first tank of gas when you download the FREE Upside App and use promo code UNASHAMED! Listen to Not Yet Now with Zach Dasher on Apple, Spotify, iHeart, or anywhere you get podcasts. — Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Chapter 1: What does Missy share about her cooking and family interactions?
I really do love you, babe. I'm sorry.
It's just something about having the Missy Truth Detector in the Unashamed podcast that just makes me...
She says I have a tendency to embellish some of the stories. I wonder where you got that.
You're like mom when dad says she's not a hoarder, but she has hoarding tendencies. And I tell her I'm doing the best I can.
Okay, okay. You're using my words against me now.
Yeah, that's Missy's line for every time I say something.
Critical.
Critical. She's like, I'm doing my best. Well, there's no way to argue that.
30?
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Chapter 2: How are mamas across America impacting culture?
I just wanted to tell him, I was telling him about this weekend and I'll tell you about that, but our listeners too, because it was amazing. But I had some young ladies in and I was telling them about the experience that I was able to mentor them. We had four different Bible sessions and we talked about women in the Bible and how Jesus reacted to them.
But one night we just talked about who Jesus is. It doesn't matter what he says or does if you don't know who he is. And it's like, you know, growing up, worshiping, we didn't really call it worship growing up. We just call it singing.
Yeah.
And every song had the same kind of marching stance, no matter what the words or the meaning was. But if you really look at some of those words and think about how the author and the writer wrote that music and wrote those words, it would change the way you worshiped.
Right.
You know, the one I sang was how... I stand amazed in the presence of Jesus the Nazarene and wonder how he could love me, a sinner condemned unclean. How marvelous. And I sang that. Oh, how wonderful. I sang that. You're almost marching.
Well, she did. She did like the old version when we were kids, and it was kind of a bit of a crusty atmosphere, and she was like, I stand in the presence.
But if we sang it the way it was written, it would just be worshipful and slower, more meaningful, more quiet, not hollering and screaming. So I was kind of doing that for Phil and Kay, and I just started singing.
Yeah, you just sang. You know what I thought was weird? We never talked about this. it's cause you know, they're, they're with a group of people there. And, uh, but when she started singing, it just got eerily quiet everywhere. Oh, I'm sure they were, you know? And I thought, no, this is, this is the Lord's presence breaking through.
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Chapter 3: What is the significance of mentorship in women's lives?
So you get left out. You don't get a pie. Nothing for you. No pie for you. And so but it was really amazing because sometimes dad doesn't always remember things we're talking about when we're telling stories. But when I came as a dad, I made a pie. Do you remember my pies? He said, oh, yeah. So it's like, oh, yeah, I hadn't forgotten that. Remember that pie? He was like, mm-hmm.
And he was trying to think of what to call the cherries. And it was like, oh, yeah, I want some of that. But he enjoyed it, which was great. Made me feel good to be able to offer something like you're doing. And we talk a lot about legacy on there. And I want to hear about your weekend because, you know, discipling people.
is building long-term legacy into families, into training your children, into Godliness. And so you have taken that on in a powerful way. And even one of, I think one of the people that were at a part of your session left this beautiful note for Lisa and I, because she had read some of our stuff and, had had some issues that some of our things we've talked about had helped her.
And I was going to let you know that. And she just left it in our mailbox. So when I got up on that Sunday, I was able to read it. It was very touching to me.
Well, what I've learned about this season in life and just in generality, this age group of women in their 20s is they are lacking mentorship. And I had it my entire life and took advantage of that because I didn't know any other way. I had multiple women pouring into me every single week of my life. And I went to them about parenting advice. I went to them about marriage advice.
I went to them just about relationship advice. And I got it. I got godly wisdom from these ladies. And I did not realize, and really until Brighton married into our family, she didn't have that growing up. I mean, she has a mom, but other biblical women pouring into her life. And I have become that to her as well, just someone on the outside looking in and giving her advice when asked.
But Kendall, who runs our business at Logtown, said, you should do a mentorship weekend. And I was like, just for random strangers? And she said, they're going to come. And they did from all over the country. And so this was our second time that we did that. But mentorship is such a huge need right now because information is in such abundance that
in the world, in media, that you don't know what you can trust. You have no idea. And Brighton said that about parenting. She's like, there are so many parenting manuals, basically, and books out there. Who do I trust? Because the advice is all over the board. And so you have to find those mentors that you can trust.
So the mentorship that Kay did also for these women, those 13 women that are now in this group text, What they're doing now is totally sacrificial. This is not their family. They are cooking. They are going and buying. They are organizing things. Paula Godwin went up there when Kay fell recently and went to the hospital.
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Chapter 4: How does Missy describe her experience at Mar-a-Lago?
So Thursday night of the night of this event at Mar-a-Lago, there was a reception. And I told Kimberly, I said, usually we blow those off. Sorry. I mean, it's just we usually just don't go to those. And Bonnie was there with me, and none of my family had gotten there yet. And I was like, let's just go and hear what they're about, like update on what this movement is.
I am so glad we did because the women in that room, I just thought it was Kimberly and her team. No, it is women all across America in their tiny towns or in their large towns. That sweet little girl from San Francisco. Yes. She's changing the world. She is. And she's from Africa. She is.
And so she came to this country for freedom and realized she's not finding it because these schools were telling her how to raise her children and it was not in a godly way. So she was just one example, but I told her every single mom and lady who opened their mouth, I was in awe of, of what they believed that they could do. They're not famous. They're not a celebrity.
They may not even have college educations, but they knew what they wanted for their children, and they were joining with Moms for America because they knew they could make that happen. grassroots, door-to-door changing, flipping counties in California. When you said how many counties y'all flipped in California for the election, that was it. I was like, I'm hooked.
I'm in. And it was amazing because there were so many people who were like asking us, why are you wasting time and money in California? California's lost. And I was like, you know what? If that's what they said back in the 70s, then it would still be a very conservative state.
But those who are trying to destroy the country, they realize if you can go after the big states where the vote matters, you take the culture, you take the vote, then they silence us. And I'm not going to be silenced anymore. And that's Nancy, our San Francisco mama. We have Moms for America groups. We don't have chapters.
And the reason why that is is because, first of all, chapter is a legal term. And you have to have certain rules, bylaws that all of those chapters live by. And I didn't want to do that because nobody knows what that county or that community needs more than the mom who's there. And so we have autonomous groups. We franchise them. And so they can wear our brand.
But the other thing I said was you have to make it about local. Because if you just go and wear your Moms for America t-shirt, then they're going to look at you like some national organization, button your nose into their community, their business. But if you show up with San Francisco Moms for America or whatever the school district or county is Moms for America. With the color purple.
With the color purple. And I'm so glad you brought that up because people said, why purple?
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Chapter 5: What is Moms for America and its mission?
And you realize, to me now, just kind of looking at it from a 30,000-foot view, at how most of the cultural things now, especially on the left, are being led by women.
They are. Women are destroying the country.
It is. And, you know, again, as a man, you say, all right, you're sexist, you're this, you're that. But just look at it. Just look at who's protesting, who's out there. And so when organizations like yours, from a person who doesn't know that much about it, but when I see the engagement, it just reminds me how important it is to be in this battle.
Because, I mean, I thought these issues that you mentioned, whether it's men and women, sports, trans, all the different things, they're being led by women. No doubt about it. And they're dedicated and committed.
It's the, quote, empathetic side that we're supposed to align with.
Don't you think it's ironic that all these women's organizations, their main objective now is to erase women? To destroy women. It's like...
Yeah, isn't that crazy? Yeah, especially with the athletics and all that. I mean, you're demeaning these women who have practiced. Your friend, what's her name?
Riley. Yeah, Riley Gaines.
I mean, she's like, that's her whole point. But you told a story last night, and there was a lot of legal things going on, but you just told about all these moms going to the court. And y'all weren't like picketing and being violent, but just the power of a bunch of moms. In the courtroom.
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Chapter 6: What grassroots efforts are being made in California?
And they were going to be pushing all of this. They were going to be promoting homosexuality. And I just want to make it clear. I don't care if you want to marry a tree or sleep with a bird. I really don't care. You do you. I do me. But let's leave the kids alone. I think we can all agree on that. Yeah. And it shouldn't be pushed through the school system where you're confusing these kids.
And now to the point where they're telling them they aren't who they are. Taking away your identity that God has given you, that is probably the most heinous thing that you could do. And it's confusing these kids. All of this was being shoved into the curriculum.
So we found out about it and we pulled together a network of organizations and we sat around a table at the first meeting and we're like, okay, what can you do? What can you do? And Moms for America was in charge of rallying the moms to be there and show up. And we were in charge of the messaging and you have to, it has to be clear, has to have some cute little pictures or icons and one page.
And so we put that together and we gave it to all the moms so they could then share it, make phone calls and call the different members of the legislature, call the school board members. So they were trying to pass this in the midnight hour because they knew that we were going to win the state school board. There was a rate, the election was coming. We were going to win in November.
So they were trying to pass it before the November election. And so they had a scheduled a September or late September, early October date. And we had like five and a half weeks to prepare for this. And so it was the most beautiful, amazing thing because the whole room in the committee room was just filled. And they had it being live streamed as well. So I was listening to it.
Here I am in Missouri, and this is happening in Texas. And we've got moms all over the country who are aware of this. They're listening to it because they've all contributed and made phone calls. And the seats are filled with women. Women with moms. They were all moms. And it affected all of us around the country.
So all the moms around the country were calling in and saying, no, don't let this happen. And there was a mom who got up. She's Hispanic. And she did her speech in English. And then she said, no, my time's not up because now I have to do it in Spanish. And so she did it in Spanish for all the mamas who were listening in Spanish. And it was incredible. We were able to win by one vote.
amazing and then they tried to do a another last minute thing they had they held back one little piece of this that could have opened the whole door again and so they had a vote that they had scheduled for november like right before the election quietly and very quietly they weren't telling anybody about it but we started blasting it out everywhere and we won by four votes So it stopped.
And now the Texas educational standards is actually full of love America, respect Texas, and families are cool. See, is that not amazing?
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