Caroline Stout Left Turning Point USA After Realizing She Was Creating Propaganda to Control the Masses

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Caroline Stout Left Turning Point USA After Realizing She Was Creating Propaganda to Control the Masses

Caroline Stout joined Turning Point USA as a teenager searching for belonging in Houston's megachurch culture. She rose through the ranks from student activist to media staff, creating the viral memes and articles that defined the organization's early years. But something shifted when she realized she was deliberately amplifying fear and anger beyond what was necessary. In this conversation, Caroline shares her journey from the inner workings of TPUSA during the 2016 election cycle to questioning everything she believed about politics, faith, and the conservative media machine that shaped her worldview.

December 15, 2025

From Megachurch Culture to Political Activism

Caroline Stout grew up in the suburbs of Houston attending Second Baptist Church, the megachurch led by Dr. Ed Young. She thought it was completely normal for churches to have swimming pools, racquetball courts, film studios, and beach resort summer camps. Fourth of July church services with flags and political figures like Ted Cruz, Trey Gowdy, and Ben Carson speaking from the pulpit seemed like standard Christianity to her.

As an awkward eldest daughter who didn't feel like one of the "chosen ones" in her youth group, Caroline found a sense of belonging she desperately craved when she got involved in conservative politics as a teenager. Before Turning Point USA entered her life, she was already active in Harris County Republican politics, showing up to events as a young person eager to debate and prove she was smart.

Meeting Charlie Kirk and Joining the Movement

In late 2014, when Turning Point USA was only two years old and had just crossed a million dollars in fundraising, Caroline met Charlie Kirk at a small gathering of young conservatives in Houston. There were only about 10 to 12 people there. Charlie pitched the organization and offered to sponsor young people to attend CPAC, the Conservative Political Action Conference.

For Caroline, attending CPAC as an official Turning Point student activist was transformative. As a teenager who felt she had no place anywhere, riding escalators with John Bolton and shaking hands with Rand Paul made her feel important and validated. She was willing to adopt their talking points and wear them on a shirt in exchange for that acceptance and belonging.

During her senior year of high school, Caroline attended CPAC. Her freshman year of college, she founded the Turning Point chapter at Texas A&M University. The following spring, she joined the staff as a field organizer, becoming one of those students with clipboards at campus tables, handing out what they called "voter education materials" but what she now recognizes as propaganda.

The Early Days: Limited Government and Fiscal Responsibility

Caroline emphasizes that Turning Point USA in 2014-2016 was completely different from what it is today. Charlie Kirk would explicitly say the organization only focused on limited government and fiscal responsibility. He claimed they didn't focus on social issues because "that's what divides us and that's why the left wins."

Looking back, Caroline recognizes this wasn't actually true. The organization was creating a culture war from day one by deliberately not talking about social issues, creating a big tent that included people who worked with Jeb Bush, Rick Santorum, and Ben Carson. But the real shift toward the far-right MAGA movement and overt Christian nationalism happened around 2017-2018.

Caroline clarifies that she wasn't in the inner circle where big decisions were made, as she didn't come from a donor family. She believes that if there were long-term strategic motives to tap into alt-right Christian nationalism, it likely came from the original backing donors rather than Charlie Kirk himself. The playbook Turning Point followed came from established institutions like the Leadership Institute and the Heritage Foundation.

Creating the 2016 Meme Culture

After interning with Turning Point's media team in summer 2016, Caroline went full-time doing media work. At the time, the organization's media presence consisted mainly of a Facebook page, Twitter account, and Charlie's personal Twitter. It wasn't the media empire it is today.

Caroline was involved in writing articles, making videos, and creating those viral 2016 memes. She was literally in the Turning Point office when she found out Harambe had died, right at the center of meme culture taking over politics.

As she wrote articles and created content, she believed in what she was saying, but she knew she was ratcheting up the intensity beyond what was necessary. Once she realized there was a clear bias and agenda in the content she was producing, it was like scales fell from her eyes. She could suddenly see that Fox News was propagandizing, that Breitbart and Campus Reform and all the players in the conservative media space were feeding fear and anger.

The Awakening: What If Democrats Aren't Evil?

At 19 or 20 years old, Caroline had a realization that shook her foundation. She realized she had gotten involved in politics without even thinking about what policies she believed in. She just wanted a sense of belonging and community, and she was willing to accept whatever politics and issues would get her a ticket to the table.

The biggest moment came when she was back in College Station during her sophomore year, driving down the street. She thought to herself: "What if Democrats aren't evil?" It sounds like such a basic question, but for someone raised in that environment, it was revolutionary. She gave herself permission to consider that maybe Democrats were just trying to do the next best thing like every other human being on the planet, and they weren't trying to destroy America and lock up Christians.

That single thought opened the floodgates. The media had been discredited to her. She had that realization about Democrats. But it took another year and a half to two years before she gave herself permission to think she could vote Democrat and not go to hell.

Faith, Substance Abuse, and Finding God Again

In Caroline's community of origin, faith and political identity were inseparable. Once she started questioning her political ideology, she couldn't ignore questioning her faith and religious upbringing. She went full-on and abandoned faith entirely, Googling books about atheism because she felt so unmoored and untethered from reality.

By 2020, during the George Floyd protests and the pandemic, Caroline was still attending Second Baptist Church in Houston but had abandoned hope. She enrolled in a Master of Divinity program, thinking serious academic study would help her figure out what she believed about the world. Ironically, working on an MDiv didn't help with her spiritual growth.

Caroline ended up in substance abuse treatment, and her insurance tried to kick her out in the middle of the program after only a week and a half because she reported feeling good. The insurance company didn't realize she was doing well precisely because she was in treatment. When her doctor said he'd never seen an appeal go through, Caroline prayed for the first time actually believing someone was listening to her.

She had always prayed before because she was supposed to, thinking the act of praying might entice God to interact with her. But this time she actually felt someone on the other end. That's when she believed she was truly saved. From there, it became about figuring out what spirituality, faith, and religion looked like for her independent from political ideology.

Wrestling With Church in the MAGA Era

Caroline now attends a church in the panhandle of Texas where the pastor has written a book condemning Christian nationalism. The church is involved with helping refugees, which aligns with her values. But it's also a very Reformed church that won't address the social and political issues she thinks are important.

She sits in the pews knowing there are MAGA supporters sitting beside her, hearing the same message but coming to completely different conclusions. It's hard, and there's no easy solution. She told someone at church that her absence was a personal problem—her anger at her brothers and sisters in Christ for being completely deluded by an administration she finds insane.

The cognitive dissonance is profound. She grew up knowing in her bones that Hitler was the enemy before she even learned about World War II or the Holocaust. That was something everyone could agree on. Now she watches white evangelicals approve of an administration where the Vice President can't even condemn leaked messages praising Hitler.

The Power of Talking Points and Buzzwords

Caroline reflects on how talking points and buzzwords trigger immediate reactions that shut down critical thinking. She remembers being on campus with a sign that said "Capitalism Cures Poverty"—something she now finds laughable. When a PhD expert approached and mentioned she thought the sign said "Capitalism Causes Poverty," Caroline's eyes turned red like a Terminator. Anything the expert said after that was dismissed because Caroline, at 18 years old knowing nothing, believed the expert was indoctrinated and trying to trick her.

Looking back, she realizes she was the sheep in that conversation. She was the indoctrinated one being taken for a ride, not the person who devoted their life to understanding the complexities and nuance of economic systems.

This black-and-white thinking shows the impact and value of the talking points strategy. When you're young and being told that everyone else is being tricked but you can see through the lies because you're smarter and know the truth, it's incredibly enticing. You get to feel like you're on the inside of the circle, the one who gets to evangelize the truth about capitalism, limited government, and why billionaires should be able to buy elections. That's how you feel at a Turning Point conference—like you're the one that's going to save America because you're in on the secret.

Life Now: An Attorney Navigating an Unjust World

At 29, Caroline is an attorney who gets to look at the world through a lawyer's eyes, understanding issues with a brain shaped by law school. Her faith journey remains ongoing, as it should be—that's the point of sanctification. She's continuing to learn what her role is in a very unjust world.

It's definitely not easy, especially when it comes to social issues. But Caroline comes back to empathy. She has empathy for people, empathy for herself, and empathy for who she was as that teenager desperately seeking belonging and validation.

She's learned that if God is as strong as she believes, her questions won't dismantle Him. And if they do, He wasn't that strong to begin with. The curiosity that was discouraged in her community of origin—framed as doubt, as evil, as Satan—has become beautiful to her. It opens up her world to new experiences and new expressions of faith.

Caroline now understands faith as a house with many rooms rather than a single basement she was taught was the only option for true Christians. There's the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Protestant church, black liberation theology, and countless other ways of thinking about the world within Christian thought. It's a lifelong journey of exploration, not a destination where you must be right about everything to avoid hell.

The shift from judgment and fear to curiosity has been transformative. Instead of feeling guilty for thinking about things in new ways, Caroline has embraced the freedom of exploring complicated topics that don't fit into neat binaries. Life, ethics, morality, and social issues are complex, and navigating them as a society requires more nuanced thinking than the talking points she once promoted.

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