All Episodes

October 17, 2025 49 mins

Just the News No Noise on Real America's Voice

Segment A: BOLTON PLEADS NOT GUILTY, AND MORE
Segment B: TEACHING OUR KIDS AMERICAN CIVICS
Segment C: HOW TO TEACH OUR CHILDREN TO LOVE AMERICA
Segment D: JUST THE NEWS HEALTH UPDATE
Segment E: WRAPPING UP THE MOMS FOR LIBERTY SUMMIT

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Hello America, Happy Friday. Yes, we made it through a
crazy week that started with a historic peace deal, ended
with the possibility of peace between Russian and Ukraine, with
a big meeting today, and a whole lot in between,
including three major indictments. Yeah, I'm your host, John Solomon.
As you know, this is the Justin He's No Noise
television show. But I'm not in Washington, DC like I
nermally Am. I'm in Orlando at the Moms for Liberty Conference.

(00:44):
Here an amazing day. I spent here meeting some of
the new young voices of the conservative movement. I even
met a woman who is a liberal who came here
because her own views are changing, she said, and she's
been canceled for questioning liberal Heaterdoxy. It's been an amazing day.
I'm gonna get you caught up real quickly on the headlines,
and then we're going to turn you out to Amanda Head,
who's in California. Had an amazing backdrop at Camp Pendleton.

(01:06):
We're going to bring her in a second. But first
the news. YEP. Today President Trump met with President voldemor Zelenski,
the Ukrainian president. They had a working lunch trying to
get towards that elusive peace deal between Russia and Ukraine.
President Trump made one thing clere today. He's not ready
to give long range, high powered Tomahawk missiles to the
Ukrainian set. It's just not the time now. He hopes

(01:28):
he can get to peace before that. Now, before this happened,
President Trump had a very productive meeting with President Putin
in Russia. I had President a chance to talk to
the President for a little bit this morning. He was
very confident that Putin's in a little bit different state
of mind and maybe in a way that could potentially
lead to a real deal, not just a promise of
a deal. That was really important. We'll get you to

(01:50):
one of those indictments. Also because today the former National
Security Advisor John Bolton appeared in court charged with eighteen
federal felonies, most of them violations of the ESPNA for
mishandling classified information. He pleaded not guilty. This is going
to be a difficult and long case for him and
his family because his family's involved. The allegations are he

(02:10):
moved classified information and other sensitive information to family members
via email. Some of that information eventually got intercepted by
our enemies in Iran, so a very big case that
we're keeping a close eye on that. For all the headlines,
go to justin news dot com. We got you covered.
I want to bring in my amazing coast, Amanda ad
she is at Camp Pembleton. Tomorrow is the two hundred

(02:31):
and fiftieth birthday of the US Marines. I am so
proud to know many great marines that I love across
the street from them, I go to the barbershop with him.
I love them, and we honor you on your two
hundred fiftieth birthday, Amanda. I wish I was there where
they have a little jealous of that backdrop.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Well, yeah, the backdrop is spectacular.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
The weather is made to order for such a wonderful weekend.
Tomorrow is going to be incredible, John, We've got all
sorts of military.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
Equipment going to be here.

Speaker 3 (03:00):
C one thirties, FA eighteen's, F thirty five c's. There's
going to be flyovers, there are going to be amphibious
demonstrations at high mars. It is going to be incredible,
an incredible show of strength and might and unity.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
By the way, between the United States.

Speaker 3 (03:15):
Marine Corps and the Navy, A lot of people know
of their very close coordination in a number of wars, Vietnam,
World War Two, of course our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
So they were setting up today, John and we were
there on site doing our our media and equipment set up.
My guys were I wasn't really helping all that much.
It was amazing to see the production, you know, I

(03:36):
think it is definitely on par with the Naves two
fiftieth the Army as well in Washington, d C. There
are going to be a lot of folks here, obviously
Vice President J. D. Vance, the Secretary of War Hegseth,
and a lot of other dignitaries.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
Who are going to be here speaking.

Speaker 3 (03:52):
So it's going to be pretty much an all day
affair going up until about four pm. And we're going
to have live coverage of that right here on Real
America's And like I said, I can't wait to be here.
Southern California weather this time of year is just amazing.
It's warm, it's breezy, and we are right here on
the coast at Camp Pendleton.

Speaker 2 (04:09):
It is quite picturesque.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
Well, we got both coast covered, two amazing locations. By
the way, tomorrow all day live coverage, folks here on
Real America's Voice Moms for Liberty in the morning, not
to Camp Pendleton with Amanda in the afternoon for that
spectacular celebration. To anyone who wore the uniform in the
service of this country, and particularly to all those who
are proud Marines, we honor you today and we thank
you for your service. All right, We've got a great

(04:35):
show for you today. We had that incredible interview with
FBI Director Cash Bettell a couple of days ago. People
still talking about that. Today we got one of the
greatest voices I know when it comes to helping us
understand what's going on in the FBI and law enforcement.
He's the retired FBI Executive Assistant Director and he's the
author of one of my favorite books, Wanted the FBI.
I wants to do so many agents I know. I've

(04:56):
read that book and they agree with it. He's our
good friend, Chris Piota. Chris, good to have you on there. John,
pleasure to be with you this evening. Yeah, we love
having you on. All right. We had a lot of
nuggets in our interview with Cash. Mattel. I thought one
that was most telling, and that has gotten a lot
of buzz today, is him saying that they found more

(05:18):
examples of criminal behavior weapon weaponize criminal behavior by law
enforcement and intelligence personnel in the United States government. He
expects more indictments in the next few months. He said,
by the year's end, there'll be quite a few. The
idea that we're getting to the bottom of it, punishing
the things that deserve to be punished, getting rid of
the things that don't deserve to be punished, and not

(05:38):
to deal with them anymore. Kind of a big moment
of accountability, isn't it? Absolutely?

Speaker 4 (05:43):
And I think Director Patel and the people of the
FBI are committed to set anything straight, putting the FBI
back on the right track with the American people, and
re establishing that trust and confidence that people used to have.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
In the FBI.

Speaker 4 (05:57):
It's going to take them a little bit of time, though, John,
because you know, they have to go through a lot
of documentation, they have to look at the circumstances that existed,
and they have to look at what the outcomes of
certain I guess you could say referrals and prosecutions could be.
So they're on the right track, and I'm glad to
see that they're bringing some accountability.

Speaker 3 (06:19):
Zing Chris, how how do folks who are supportive of
this administration, this FBI administration, how did they dispel.

Speaker 5 (06:28):
What we're America from left to.

Speaker 2 (06:30):
John Bolton that this is a witch weaponization? How do
we dispel that?

Speaker 3 (06:36):
All?

Speaker 1 (06:37):
Right, So I'll try to get that to you, Chris.
It sounds like we couldn't rot the audio, right, But
Amanda asks, how do we begin to dispel that distrust
in the American public with the f guy and also
to reinstill trust in the agents on the front lines
that they're going to do the job the way the
book says it should be done.

Speaker 4 (06:55):
Well, first of all, it's going to be done through
action and deed. Well, you're going to see is the
FBI operating in a manner that is honest, an objective,
and a political and professional That's what it's going to take.
And it's going to have to be all the time,
every time, and the culture of the FBI is being

(07:15):
shifted right now by the Director and the senior leadership
of the organization. They have to be uncompromising in their
standards and expectations for FBI agents to conduct their business
on behalf of the American people in liign with the
constitution and in the service of the laws of our country.

(07:36):
So it's going to take some time, but I think
if they keep hitting the marks and they keep pushing hard,
they're going to be able to reinstill that confidence and
look for that respect that the organization once had that
previous leadership squandered.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
Man so important. I think we got Amanda back. Amandy,
you want to see if we can chin you in here.

Speaker 3 (08:00):
Yeah, I would love to ask you about Antifa because
one of the things that we spoke to director Patel
a few nights ago about was, you know, obviously finding
the money trail. In practically any criminal organization or something
that you suspect to be a criminal organization, you gotta
follow the money. And he indicated to us that he
was getting closer and closer to reaching that source. If

(08:20):
he does get there and it seems that there is
some type of mechanism, some type of infrastructure to these
protests to the people who are funding them, does that
open up reco charges?

Speaker 1 (08:33):
It could.

Speaker 4 (08:34):
It depends on how they want to try and take
the organization on. What you're looking at is the investigative
effort is going to identify logistical funding and facilitation networks.
That's what they're looking for. They're looking for people who
make these groups operate. And then they have to decide
whether they're going to go for some shorter term tactical

(08:54):
interruptions or interdictions, or are they looking for an entire
enterprise take which will take them a little bit more time,
but it could destroy the organization from the inside, taking
away their resources, taking away their training and their facilitation.
And I'm sure there's going to be a balance of that,
and I'm sure that the investigative strategy and then the

(09:16):
intent of what they're going to do to prosecute is
being worked out now between the FBI and Department of Justice.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
Yeah, it's an amazing thing. And for a while people
are saying, oh, Antifa is not an organization. Well I
got news for folks. Last night the Justice Department charged
a sell of Antifa with clear crimes of terrorism. They
have the names, they have the command structure, they have
the acts that occurred in that terror attack. It's time
for people to stop lying about Antif. It's amazing, Chris.

(09:45):
I want to turn to something that Cash said in
the interview, He said that the key to what he
wanted to achieve with the FBI was something very simple.
Let good cops be cops, get out of the way,
get the politics, and let them solve crimes. He said,
That's how we caught Charlie Kirk's assassin in just thirty
three hours. It's how we took nineteen thousand people off
the streets who were violent felons during this important summer operation.

(10:10):
What is your sense of the men and women of
the FBI right now. Are they feeling like they're able
to do their job without worry about the politics anymore.

Speaker 4 (10:19):
I think the new leadership has moved them away from
some of that political I would say distraction that they
had over the past few years in the peripheral matters
of DEI and other things. And I think what you
see is the effectiveness of the FBI when they're allowed
to be the FBI, and whether or not Director Patel
is prioritizing or putting his boot in some tail ends,

(10:43):
the FBI is effective when it's allowed to be effective.

Speaker 1 (10:47):
And the FBI is the home to.

Speaker 4 (10:49):
Some of our best manhunters in the world. So you're
seeing the FBI right now take direct action against crime
in our community. And you saw over the course of
the summer, the Director Patel gave a rundown of the
statistical Accomplishment's remarkable work by the men.

Speaker 1 (11:09):
And women of the FBI as.

Speaker 4 (11:11):
Well as their law enforcement partners. So letting the FBI
be the FBI brings great results.

Speaker 3 (11:20):
Yeah, Chris, you spent so many years at the agency,
and I'm really really disheartened and concerned to see what
we saw apparently out of Chicago, where you had city
leadership who was pressing down on local law enforcement to
not coordinate with federal law enforcement in this case ICE,
in most of the situations when you.

Speaker 2 (11:39):
Look at that relationship, because Director Patel.

Speaker 3 (11:41):
Indicated to us that when they speak to rank and
file officers in those cities like Chicago PD, that the
rank and file they do want to coordinate with federal
law enforcement. It's basically the bureaucrats. It's the suits at
city hall that are pushing against this. Are you concerned
that that type of mentality in city hall is going
to propagate to other cities and therefore obstruction cederal law enforcement.

Speaker 4 (12:04):
I think what you're seeing is a breakdown in the
law enforcement enterprise due to ideological beliefs and politics, and
those two factors, ideological beliefs in politics have no place
in the law enforcement enterprise. When law enforcement is enforcing
the laws of our nation and they need help from

(12:25):
each other. That has always been an unspoken rule that
was sacrosanct that whenever another law enforcement in our officer
was in trouble, you went to help. And the fact
that the I guess it was the Chief of Patrol
stood people down while ICE was being attacked was disgusting
and it was so disappointing to see.

Speaker 1 (12:46):
It shows how.

Speaker 4 (12:46):
Our law enforcement community has been infiltrated by what I
would consider to be low quality leaders or non leaders,
and we have to get rid of those folks. And
I hope that swift action was taken so that type
of behavior doesn't show up in others cities.

Speaker 1 (13:02):
Yeah, so important to eradicate it, There's no doubt. I
want to ask you a little bit about the news
of the last twenty four hours. The third major accountability
indictment in the last month, James Comy for lying Letitia
James for alleged bank fraud. Today John Bolton stood in
the courtroom charge with eighteen felonies, saying he mishandled the
most important secrets that he was entrusted as a national

(13:22):
security advisor. I think you've had a chance to look
at this indictment. It's pretty serious allegations and pretty extensive behavior.
Could you handicapital little bit for us, Chris.

Speaker 4 (13:33):
Well, what you're looking at is a senior level official
who on his own volition and knowingly transmitted classified information
across non secure systems, and then he maintained information of
a classified nature at his residence, not authorized to have
that information, and he violated the Espionage Act. It's pretty straightforward.

Speaker 1 (13:58):
Now.

Speaker 4 (13:59):
I will tell you that he as a former national
security advisor as well as he was the ambassador to
the UN, so he had received numerous counterintelligence, defensive briefings
and security briefings, and he still decided to do this,
which to me abuses the trust of the American people

(14:19):
and it shows poor judgment. And as his court case
moves forward, I think, as.

Speaker 1 (14:24):
You said earlier, it'll be a long it'll be a.

Speaker 4 (14:27):
Long courtroom experience for him and his family members. And
I'm just sorry to see that our senior officials sometimes
they don't set the example for the rest of the
government folks.

Speaker 1 (14:39):
And you know he's going to have to be I
guess you can say.

Speaker 4 (14:44):
He'd say punished, but he's going to have to suffer
some consequences for those actions.

Speaker 1 (14:50):
Yeah. Yeah, some of our enemy that night.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
Yeah, Chris, before we let you go, I wanted to
ask you when President Trump came into office and FBI
Director Cash Battel and Deputy Director Dan Bongino came in,
one of the ideas that I think would be very
very successful in restoring trust to the FBI and bringing
it back to its roots of just good cop work
that was taking people out of Washington and moving them

(15:18):
out into the communities.

Speaker 2 (15:19):
Have you seen that happening.

Speaker 3 (15:22):
To the degree that you would like to see it?
Is it successful? Is it bearing fruit?

Speaker 4 (15:26):
I think what you're seeing is is under the direction
of Director Patel, you're seeing much more community level engagement
and operations by the FBI, especially during this past summer initiative.
So you're seeing him move resources to the issues and
the problems and the crime elements that are affecting people's

(15:48):
day to day lives, and he has to balance that
with the larger strategic issues such as the National Security mission.
You're looking at the counter terrorism counterintelligence issues, and he's
got a difficult job to balance those two competing programs,
crime versus national security. But I do see that he

(16:09):
is moving those resources into the community. I just think
I knew from the beginning when he was talking about it,
that it would take him some time to move those resources,
to integrate them into operations, and to start augmenting effectively
the work of the field offices. So they're moving in
that direction. It's just going to take him more time
than I think people understand from a logistical perspective to

(16:32):
make that happen completely.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
Chris, I have a funny feeling there'll be a sequel
to your book called Got It the FBI once we
may got it back. I hope we get it there.
It's always a great honor to have you on and
thank you for writing that book. I can't tell you
the number of agents that come up to me and
say how much they love what you said, the courage
you showed writing that book. Great to have you in
the show, my friend. All right, folks, we're gonna take
a qui commercial break when we come back. One of

(16:56):
the super moms here She's been one of the driving
forces behind Mom's America. She's also doing incredible work at
the America First Policies Institute. Our Good friend Erica Donald's
next right after these messages. Hey folks, if you snore
and your partner hasn't moved to another room yet, congratulations,
you've either found true love or your partner has their

(17:18):
other place to go. Let's talk about what your partner
really wants in bed silence, stop keeping them awake from
your storing and giving them eight hours of uninterrupted sleep.
ZEPA is the only FDA approved and patent anti snoring
solution invented by a leading sleep doctor that stops snoring
at the source. ZEPA has a ninety one percent success
rate back by a ninety one night sleep guarantee. That's

(17:41):
pretty great for a limited time. Go to zepa dot
com and use the code JTN or text JTN to
five eleven five eleven and get the absolute best solution
guaranteed to stop your snoring with a happy z pack
and save over twenty four percent off. Plus, ZEPA will
donate ten dollars to breast cancer research. Visit zepa zyppah

(18:01):
dot com used to cod JTN or text JTN to
five eleven five eleven and save over twenty four percent
off with a Happy Z pack and start improving your
sleep health today. That's a good thing. Remember ZIPA is
happy Z spelled backwards. Text fees may apply. Welcome back, America.

(18:29):
We're live here in Orlando, Florida with the Moms for
Liberty event. Here an amazing day. I was so energized
meeting so many young people here. It wouldn't be possible
what has happened the last four years in the Parents
Right movement without our next guest. She is one of
the founding forces here at Moms for Liberty. She is
one of the chairwomen at the America First Policy Institute,
which gave us that great Trump agenda. And soon I

(18:50):
have a funny feeling we're going to be adding a
new title to her incredible resume. First Lady of Florida
joining me right now, Erica, Donalds Erica. Good to have
you here.

Speaker 6 (18:58):
It's so good to be here right The energy here
is absolutely amazing.

Speaker 1 (19:02):
It's amazing. And the age difference I've been I think
I've been to every one of the four months for
the national events and Philadelphia. I remember backstage in DC
with President Trump. So many young moms here today and
intersecting with grandma's and moms older than them. There's something
special going on here. Well.

Speaker 6 (19:19):
The America First movement is multi generational and growing. I
just kicked off a college tour at Florida International University
and hitting a bunch of colleges around the country, and
just like turning point chapters, new women conservative women's chapters
have exploded. When conservatives come on campus, they are eager
to hear what we have to say. They have great questions,

(19:40):
they're curious, and hey, they want us to start putting
America first because that means we're putting them first in
their generation.

Speaker 1 (19:46):
What a difference from just a couple of years ago.

Speaker 5 (19:48):
Amen, it's really god for President Trump, without a doubt.

Speaker 2 (19:53):
Absolutely, where are you?

Speaker 1 (19:54):
We got you out there right.

Speaker 3 (19:57):
On this policy, on on what the Trump administration is
doing with the Department of Education. Do you see it
going in a good direction? Do you want to see
it go even harder?

Speaker 5 (20:09):
Absolutely, it is going in the right direction.

Speaker 6 (20:12):
As you know, earlier this year they were able to
reduce force by over half. Now that the shutdown has happened.
There's no budget for a lot of these positions that
we already knew were wasteful, and the department within the
shutdown has also riffed another almost five hundred positions.

Speaker 5 (20:29):
So we're getting.

Speaker 6 (20:29):
Closer and closer to the promise that President Trump made
to the American people to shut down the Department of Education.
But guess what, classrooms have had no effect. They're still
getting all the funding that they need to meet the
needs of students. Teachers are still in classrooms doing everything
they can to make sure these students succeed. And it's
just another reason that we say we don't need the
federal Department of Education any longer.

Speaker 5 (20:47):
We should get rid of it.

Speaker 1 (20:48):
I bet your scores go up when we do get
rid of it. I bet you that's what's going to
happen Erica. One of the forces that I talked to
so many people about to say that they're still worried
about are the teachers' unions. They are the driving force
of radical as they in a lot of these school districts,
and there are many great teachers who have to suffer
inside those unions. Are we getting to a point where
there could be an alternate union system.

Speaker 6 (21:08):
Well, we don't want an alternate right. We want to
get rid of it completely. We want the free market
terrain in our education system. We want teachers to have
more choice, not just parents, because school choice and education
freedom also means freedom for teachers to be able to
teach in ways that they have not been allowed to.
They've been hamstrung by the bureaucracy that tells them what
to teach, how to teach, what to say, and scripts

(21:30):
everything that they do every day. We don't want that
for teachers anymore. We want them to be able to
teach classically online using AI, not using technology however they
see fit, so that we have the maximum number of
options for families. I'm a proponent of getting rid of
teachers unions and teacher certification.

Speaker 5 (21:46):
Break down those barriers and let teachers teach.

Speaker 1 (21:48):
Liberation Day for educators. That that's what we need.

Speaker 5 (21:52):
We'll celebrate it together as.

Speaker 2 (21:57):
We see the school choice movement exploding.

Speaker 3 (21:59):
You know lot of folks who are looking at homeschooling
or homeschooling, co ops, charter schools, religious schools, things like that.

Speaker 2 (22:06):
What are you finding is surging the most?

Speaker 6 (22:09):
I suppose, well, homeschool is the fastest growing way of
schooling in our country by far, It's not even close.
We've doubled the number of homeschoolers in the country since COVID.

Speaker 5 (22:22):
Not only that, though, polls show that we have.

Speaker 6 (22:25):
About seven percent of our family's homeschooling right now, that
number would be fourteen percent. It would be double if
money were no object. Parents are saying that if they could,
they would also homeschool. That's why we're such a proponent
of educational scholarship accounts. It would be fourteen percent. And
that's across the board. It's independence, it's democrats, it's republicans,

(22:45):
it doesn't matter your political ideology. You want what's best
for your children, and parents know what's best.

Speaker 1 (22:51):
Education.

Speaker 6 (22:51):
Scholarship accounts are expanding across the country. Universal choices in
seventeen states now. That allows families the resources that they
need to buy curriculum, to buy online courses, and to
really customize their children's education.

Speaker 5 (23:03):
So we need a lot more of it.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
What a great idea. Amazing. I was here today with
a young man, his dad, and he's growing as an influencer,
and he said to me, I said, you know, how
do we fix the education system, and he said, I
got a simple prescription. Make Florida America. This is the
laboratory of free education. And I think the next generation
of education ideas. What do you think is the next

(23:24):
big idea to come out of Florida.

Speaker 6 (23:26):
Well, I believe that every education dollar needs to be
parent directed. That completely changes the culture and education right.
For so long we've been telling parents leave it to
the experts, we don't need your help. Right, here's where
you're going to go to school, Here's what you're going
to learn. But even if they were to choose their
neighborhood school, putting parents in the driver's seat saying this
is how much money is going to be spent on
your child this year, where do you want that money

(23:48):
to go, and giving parents that power of a consumer,
they're going to be more confident to hold those schools
accountable for their results, for the safety and their schools
and all of these things. So I think that's the
big thing next is not just having school choice available,
but making choice the default, not zoned neighborhood school.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
You think there's initiatives in the legislature with Governor Santis
that move that along.

Speaker 5 (24:09):
Not quite yet. We've come a long way.

Speaker 6 (24:11):
There's some things I think that we're going to do
that are really good this year, but I think maybe
after that, maybe Governor Donalds.

Speaker 5 (24:17):
Yeah woah.

Speaker 3 (24:20):
Firstly, Erica, I want to ask you what's aboutening right
now in this country. This is the two hundred and
fiftieth anniversary of the United States Marine Corps that we
are celebrating tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (24:30):
Next year is America is two fifty.

Speaker 3 (24:32):
And I know that AFPI has a Civics initiative to
I guess reinvigorate the youth love for America and patriotism
right now.

Speaker 2 (24:41):
Tell us about it.

Speaker 7 (24:44):
Well.

Speaker 6 (24:44):
I have been asked and I'm honored to co chair
the America two fifty Civics Education Coalition, partnering with the
Department of Education and of course our beloved Lynda McMahon,
Secretary McMahon and forty other national organizations including Turning Point, Hillsdale, Collegeritage,
so many great organizations that are going to help us
promote civic literacy in this country. Unfortunately, our adults are

(25:08):
not proud to be Americans anymore because they don't know America.
You need to know America. When you do, you will
love America. You will understand why this is the greatest
country that man has ever known. So we are going
to be promoting that in all fifty states. Also encouraging
states to pass policies that promote civic education up with
reading and math, and making sure that our students are

(25:29):
not just able to read and do math on grade level,
but they know how to defend this great republic.

Speaker 1 (25:34):
I was thinking as I was flying here and I
saw some of the Antifa guys starting to set up
their silliness for tomorrow the no Kings in d C.
What an incredible contrast. In DC, there'll be people doing silly,
mean things, and here there's a generation of parents securing
their future for their children and saying it's possible that
we can get this done. It feels like Moms for

(25:54):
Liberty has been around for twenty five years. It's only
been four years.

Speaker 5 (25:57):
Right, that's right.

Speaker 6 (25:58):
Actually, the founder's Tina and Tiffany and I were all
on school boards together here in Florida and we saw
under the curtain before COVID happened and parents got to
see what was really going on in schools. The three
of us saw it, and we recognize that we need
parents to step up and take that mantle, understanding that
they are the ones who should be making decisions about

(26:19):
their children's health, welfare and education. They've done an incredible
job building this organization which has really moved mountains in
the education arena and continues to do so.

Speaker 5 (26:29):
I'm so proud of them. I'm so proud of all
of the.

Speaker 6 (26:31):
Moms here that are really taking up the torch to
ensure that our children are protected and that they have
the maximum capability to achieve the American dream.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
Somewhere tonight there's a child doing homework or tomorrow over
the weekend, and they're able to learn the way they
are and their parents are in control of that situation
because of the work that you and Tina and Tiffany did.
This is a groundbreaking organization. I've covered a lot of
things in my life as a reporter. Nothing changed history
more than this group last few years. It's an amazing thing.

Speaker 6 (27:01):
Well, it's a great time to be alive. We're seeing
so many wonderful things happen in this country. So proud
to be an American, Proud to be a Floridian. I'm
very proud of moms for liberty and to be able
to serve alongside them.

Speaker 1 (27:12):
Well a lot more fun tomorrow. I can't wait to
see the conference tomorrow. All right, folks, we're going to
take a quick commercial break more right after these messages. Hey, America,
the FBI has been warning about a type of real
estate fraud on the rise called home title theft, and
your equity is the target. Here's how it works. Criminals

(27:33):
forge your signature on a single document, use a fake
notary stamp, then follow with the county, and just like that, boom,
they're on record as owning your home using your ownership.
They didn't take out loans against your equator, even sell
your property, and you're not going to know about it
to get a foreclosure or collection notice in the mail,
and that's not going to be a good moment. That's
why I partnered with Hometown of Lock so you can

(27:54):
protect your equity and find out today. If you're ready
a victim, use my promo code JTN at hometitle lock
dot com. You'll get a free title history report and
a free child They're million dollars triple lock, protecting us
a great ten million bucks to protect your home. That's
twenty four to seven monitoring of your title records urgent
alerts to any changes and it fraud occurs, They're a
US based restoration team will spend up to a million

(28:16):
bucks to fix it. Find out why I trust home
Title Locked. Protect yourself like I did. Don't be a victim,
protect your equity. Take go to hometitle lock dot com
and use that promo code JTN. That's home title lock
dot Com promo code JTN. Welcome back, America. I'm not

(28:40):
the only one coming to Florida today. If you're looking
at the bottom of your screen, there you see President
Trump's plane arriving in West Palm Beach. He's going to
spend the weekend at his Mar A Lago home. We'll
keep you up to date. If he makes any comments
that we'll break away in a second. But we've got
a great guest right now joining us, the Senior Director
of Government Affairs for Defending Education, the former chief of
the US Office of Citizenship, Alfonso Alfond. It great to

(29:02):
have you on the show, John, Always happy to be
with you. We love everything you're doing. And when I
think of you, and I think of the passion that
you have for our citizenry, for the culture, for the
education we have a very civic, illiterate population right now,
how'd that happen?

Speaker 8 (29:19):
Well, you know, conservatives, we're not paying attention, sadly, and
the left occupied the space. And sadly, the left has
compted our schools. Teachers have become activists. That's what they
learn in schools of education, in colleges. Obviously, they have

(29:39):
the support of the teacher unions that want to promote
a leftist agenda. So when they go to public schools,
this is what they want to teach. A culturally Marxist
vision of America. Tell kids that our country's bad, is evil,
is systemically racist, that the institutions of Western civilization are evil.
They follow this oppressed versus suppressor narrative, right, that our

(30:03):
institutions marginalize and oppress every single minority group. And this
is what our kids are being taught. They co opt
at our schools, and they're not only teaching this to kids,
they're inductrinating them, but they're also teaching them to be activists.
That's why we see so many kids, so many Gen seers,
going out there and embracing socialism. I don't know, I

(30:25):
don't know if you saw that recent I think it's
a Gallop poll from a few months ago. Less than
forty one percent of Gen seers are very or extremely
proud of being American.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
That's a problem.

Speaker 8 (30:39):
So the left knows that they can expedite cultural change
by capturing, by engaging our youth, and that's exactly what
we're doing. So we have to move quickly. So it's
great the pressident Trump is talking about. This is right,
signed several executive orders to stop the teaching of DEI
and other race identity narratives in schools. But at the end,

(31:05):
in terms of curriculum, the leadership has to come at
the state level. Because states are responsible for education. They
have to set the curriculum, and they have to do
a better job of ensuring that we go back to
teaching Civics, that we go back to teaching Western civilization.

Speaker 1 (31:24):
Teaching it accurately. That's the other problem you gets, Tonijack
so often. We've got Amanda Head in los in California.
She's at the Marine base. She's gonna wig in with
some questions that mandam.

Speaker 3 (31:33):
Yeah, Alfonso, thank you so much for being here. I
want to draw on your experience with the Citizenship Office,
because you know, not teaching citizenship and civics in schools
is obviously an issue, but.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
For people who come here.

Speaker 3 (31:46):
This is something that President Trump has talked about with
respect to the citizenship tests and making it harder so
that people have to learn more. And it's not just
you know, memorizing it and then spitting it out regurgitating
it on a test. But there is going to be
a bureaucratic blob in his way as he is trying
to increase the difficulty of that test. You see that
being successful, and is that another avenue for increasing civics

(32:10):
literacy in this country.

Speaker 8 (32:14):
Well, the citizenship test that he's talking about is for
prospective citizens, right, And as Chief of Citizenship, I actually
developed the naturalization exam, the citizenship exam that prospective citizens
have been taken until now. It's not a question of
making it harder, but better ensuring that by starting for
the test and taking the test, they develop an attachment

(32:36):
to America, that they understand the foundational principles of our country.
I think the naturalization process actually works in America, and
what the administration is doing is actually improving it, making
even it, making it more substantive. They're actually keeping seventy
five percent of the questions that we were asking.

Speaker 7 (32:56):
I don't think they're making it harder.

Speaker 8 (32:57):
I just think I just think they're making it better
to ensure that people it can be an SAT for citizens.
You know, we're receiving immigrants from uh, you know, different
countries with different educational backgrounds. As long as they study
UH and UH, they should be able to pass it.
But the important thing is to use the test to

(33:17):
encourage assimilation and love of country. But that's you know,
that's what we're doing for prospective citizens, for immigrants. We
should at least be doing that for our own citizens. However,
and you know, schools are now teaching ethnic studies, and
we just came out of our organization defending Education with
a report about ethnic studies. And they're using this program

(33:40):
to promote this oppressor oppressed narrative crt BLM, creating curriculum
school lessons to say that our country's racist uh uh,
develop resources to uh to teach or for teachers so

(34:01):
they can teach about queer studies, implement queer pedagogy, equitable grading,
things like that that are really strange, but this is
exactly what they're doing. And and they're spending a lot
of money. In our report on ethnic studies, we reviewed
fifty five school district Wow. And in those fifty five

(34:22):
school districts, they spend over seventeen million dollars on ethnic studies.
That again teach you how to hate America because they
say that American is inherently racist.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
Out of that.

Speaker 7 (34:33):
Seventeen million, ten million came from federal funding.

Speaker 1 (34:37):
Wow.

Speaker 7 (34:37):
So that's and that's only fifty five school districts.

Speaker 1 (34:41):
That's amazing. If you're a parent listening or you're a
parent walking around here, should you be asking about the
ethic studies program in your school district right now? Oh?

Speaker 7 (34:48):
Absolutely so.

Speaker 8 (34:49):
I would encourage them to go to our website Defending
ed dot organ so they can see this report. We
also have an inductrination tracker. They can find out through
that tracker in each in their district what they're policies
are on di I, on ethnic studies and a number
of things.

Speaker 1 (35:04):
Wow. That's an amazing thing. What an amazing resource that
you've created. It's really remarkable.

Speaker 8 (35:08):
Well, I think parents need to be involved and learn
what's going on. We need to strengthen parental rights and
this is something that the Trump administration is doing an
amazing job in terms of restoring an understanding of what
what what the term sex means for in terms of
Title nine, it's it's it's it's it's it's by biological

(35:29):
sex men and women. And the Parent Education is actually
taking action to investigate school districts and schools that are
allowing men into girls spaces uh and and and girl sports,
and they're investigating them and actually starting to cut funding
to those schools.

Speaker 7 (35:50):
So the adminstration is doing a great job to ensure.

Speaker 1 (35:52):
That consequences for not following the law final.

Speaker 7 (35:55):
Absolutely and they're doing something to protect their girls.

Speaker 1 (35:59):
That's so important. Well, you do so much to serve
your country. And now with the group you're doing, we
just give everybody one more time the RL because you've
got a lot of great resources.

Speaker 8 (36:06):
There is defunding at dot org and uh, I think
they're going to find a lot of resources that can
be very helpful.

Speaker 1 (36:13):
I can't wait. Everyone, we should go there. I found
some great honor to have you on the show. To you,
my friend, thanks for joining us here much. John. That's
a great venue too. All right, folks, you saw President
Trump has landed at mar a Lago will be heading
over to his home. We're gonna take a quick commercial break.
When we come back, time for our weekly just to
News health update. We'll have that in just a few minutes. Hey, folks,

(36:40):
did you know that by the time the average person
hit sixty years old, they've lost and regained several hundred pounds.
Doctors call it weight cycling, and half of Americans do it.
If you do it enough, you are at risk of diabetes,
liver damage, heart attack, even throw bottom line, most people
need help to stop weight tycling, and I have a
great way for you to do it. Not prescription Lean
created by doctors. Lean is an oral supplement and the

(37:03):
science is impressive. It's studied. Ingredients also target weight loss
in three powerful ways. Lean helps maintain healthy blood sugar,
It helps control appetite and cravings, and it helps burn
fat by converting it to energy and burning fat helps
keep the weight off. If you want to lose meaningful
weight at a healthy pace and keep it off, add
Lean to your diet and exercise lifestyle. Get twenty percent

(37:24):
off when you enter the code just news at takelean
dot com. That's code just news at takelean dot com.
Welcome back, to America. One of my favorite segments, the
justin Who's healthype Man, We're all making America healthy again.

(37:44):
It's time to make ourselves healthy again. Where this segment
is brought to you by our good friends at Natapath
Jointing Us now the co founder and chief culture Officer
at Natapath, doctor Chad Walding, Doctor, good to have you
back on.

Speaker 9 (37:56):
Hey John, Amanda, thank you for having me.

Speaker 1 (37:58):
It's so good to be here. Absolute and I want
to get to a topic that I know is dearer
to my heart. I said all the week long in
an office, long days under the lights and cameras. On
the weekends, I get out to my cabin, I'm in
the sunshine, and by Sunday night, I feel a ton
better that I spell fen through Monday through Friday. That
isn't an accident, is it.

Speaker 9 (38:18):
It's not an accident at all. I mean, it turns
out the sun is really really good for us. It's
important to have a good relationship with the sun. And
it's interesting, you know, I think about what we grew
up being told about the sun, as we were told
to stay out of the sun, you know, don't don't
go outside, and whatever you do if you do go
get sun like make sure you put on a whole

(38:38):
lot of sunscreen like that the more SPF the better, right,
And it turns out that that can have a problem.

Speaker 1 (38:44):
You know.

Speaker 9 (38:44):
It turns out the sun is extremely important for our bones,
our immune system, our mood, our ability to fight off disease.

Speaker 1 (38:51):
Our metabolism.

Speaker 9 (38:52):
There's actually nothing in our body that doesn't improve when
we absorb natural vitamin D from the sun. And I
want to stress that there's there's a distinction between supplementing
with vitamin D and the bioavailable availability in the potency
that you get from natural sunlight.

Speaker 1 (39:08):
So a native path.

Speaker 9 (39:09):
We always we always look at this stuff like what
what has changed in our environment over the past one
hundred years, right, And where do we get off the path?
Why why is our chronic disease rates so high, you know,
and what do we need to do to get back
on the path. And to me that the sun is
one of the foundational principles of the path. These are
these are things that worked one hundred years ago, they'll

(39:29):
work one hundred years from now for humans because it's
essential to human health. So it's really important that we understand,
as you were saying, you know, in most modern humans
these days, they're they're working in front of a laptop
inside all during the day with artificial lights, and we
go home and then the sun goes down and then
we turn on these big bright screens and watch Netflix,

(39:51):
and it just throws off our entire circadian rhythm. We're
not absorbing vitamin D and it sets us up for
all kinds of issues like mental disorders, immune system disorders.

Speaker 1 (40:00):
So we really have to bring this back right.

Speaker 9 (40:02):
And I'm going to share a study with you that
got my attention right. So this came out not too
long ago. It turns out that people in the hospitals
that are sleeping or staying with their hospital beds next
to the window where natural sunlight is coming in, on average,
they're getting discharged from the hospital much faster than people
who are in rooms without natural sunlight and who are

(40:24):
not exposed to it. Right, So it shows you right there,
even even people who are in who in rough states
with their health, that's the sun exposure, even if it's
coming through the window, can do radical things for our healing,
to overcome health challenges for our immune system. It is profound, right,
But I want to stress the relationship.

Speaker 1 (40:42):
Right.

Speaker 9 (40:42):
We don't want to think, well, I'm going to go
in the sun for you know, three hours a day
without sunblock, and that can be a problem, right, That
can burn your skin, that can that can lead to issues.
But it's also not good to never go outside and
where you know SPF ninety if you do, and of
the natural sunlight. So I really want to encourage people to,

(41:02):
as we like to say, get on the path with us,
start incorporating a good relationship with the sun. And what
I would encourage people to do is build up to
fifteen minutes a day, right, especially before we head into
the winter, because you're going to have less sun exposure
as we head into the winter, But try to build
up to fifteen minutes of sun exposure a day. An
easy thing to do, as we've talked about before Amanda,
is wake up and have good sun exposure in the

(41:25):
morning that regulates your circadian rhythm, you know, go outside
during the day. If you can to have little frequent
microdoses of sun exposure, you can you know, ladies can
wear a sports bra min if you really want to
go for it, take off your shirt. But that is
a critical thing to your health that doesn't get talked
about enough, right, the ideas you do not want to
get burned. And I also want to say that the

(41:46):
darker your skin pigmentation is, the more natural sun exposure
you will need. Your genes are expecting you to get
more sun exposure. So we have a lot of people
with dark skin pigmentation that are livering in northern climates
that their health is really suffering because they're not getting
enough sun exposure. Right, So we want to correct this,

(42:06):
have a good relationship with the sun and get back
on the path, and then just think about all the
things that can also help you with what the sun
helps you with. Right, What are we doing when we're
skin exposure sun exposure. We're improving our bones, We're improving
our immune system. Take care of all the practices around that,
as it's foundational your health.

Speaker 3 (42:24):
Gosh, as healthy as the sun is, it's almost like
there was intelligent design to the universe.

Speaker 2 (42:27):
It's unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (42:28):
Is it fazing?

Speaker 3 (42:29):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (42:29):
Right, exactly.

Speaker 3 (42:30):
I want to ask you because last the beginning of
last year, I cut out seed oils and I didn't have.

Speaker 2 (42:35):
Any sun pretty much.

Speaker 3 (42:37):
Everybody knows that LA summer really doesn't even hit until
July or August because you have May gray and June bloom.
So last July, fourth of July, I'm out there for
a barbecue. I'm out there starting at about eleven am.

Speaker 2 (42:48):
I go all the way through the day.

Speaker 3 (42:49):
I get home that night and I noticed that I
have no sunburn. I didn't wear any sunscreen or anything.

Speaker 2 (42:55):
The only thing that changes that I cut out seed oils.

Speaker 3 (42:57):
And what I learned is that seed oil can inhibit
your vitamin D receptors, which prevents the production of melatonin. So,
as far as I can tell, maybe that was a
woo woo study, but it sounds like there is a
direct connection between putting process things like seed oils in
our body and how our body is able to react
and adapt.

Speaker 7 (43:16):
To the sun.

Speaker 9 (43:18):
That is so true, and I actually had the same
exact experience. I grew up as a seed oil kid.
I think we all did, and I used to get
burned all the time. And I started to replace that
with healthy traditional on the path fats like whole real butter,
coconut oil, avocado oil.

Speaker 4 (43:34):
You know, these are things.

Speaker 9 (43:35):
These are so foundational to our health. And I get
some exposure every day minimum of fifteen minutes. I have
never been burned in the past twenty years. And I
grew up as a kid, as a you know, pale
blonde kid with blonde hair, always getting burned, right, And
what changed with that. I stopped putting on sunscreen. I
changed my oils.

Speaker 1 (43:55):
I had a better relationship with the sun.

Speaker 9 (43:57):
And as you say, like these seed oils, they get
trapped in our cells, right, and they react to heat.
They oxidize.

Speaker 3 (44:03):
Right.

Speaker 9 (44:03):
That's one of the reasons why we don't encourage you
to cook with industrial studios because they oxidize easily under heat.
They become inflammatory to our body when we consume them.
The same thing is happening in our bodies. It goes
to our cells, they get under heat, right, It gets
underheat with the sunlight, and it creates all kinds of problems.
So it's such an important thing you brought up right there.
We want to have a good relationship with the sun

(44:24):
while we're having a good relationship with our food, starting
with our fats. And what you're saying, I've had so
many people say the same thing. I change my fats
and I never get sunburned again. What's going on? And
that's what's going on right there.

Speaker 1 (44:36):
So I'd love to said that I've got a great
equation sun plus collagen, eCos, a healthier lifestyle, and doctor Chadwalding,
you've made it easy for us to get back some
of the collagen that's been depleted from our body because
of our special partnership with Native Path folks. Here's what
you do if you want to get started today, get
on that path that the doctor is just talking about.
You go to get Nativepath dot com slush Destinies. You're

(44:57):
going to get a special bundle deal to fraction the
retail applies free chiffing. It's a great deal of all
all I gotta do. Go to get natapath dot com
slash just News. I remember over four million jar sold,
thousands of five star reviews and three hundred and sixty
five day money back guarantees offer. That's a great deal.
This is your moment to take control of aging before
sentences take control of you. Go to get natapath dot

(45:17):
com slash just News right now. We'll be right back
after these messages.

Speaker 10 (45:24):
For two hundred and fifty years, they've stormed to beaches,
broken lines, and made history and blood and valor from
the black sands of me with cheap words, see the
streets of pollution.

Speaker 11 (45:40):
No enemy too strong, no mission too hard, no fight
too far. With this sad real America's Voice takes you
to the heart of the Marine Corps legend. Right, We'll
have a front row view of the action, joined.

Speaker 10 (45:56):
By battle tested veterans and military experts who lived the
brotherhood of the Corti. Explosive action, raw power, unshakable pride.
This is Marine two fifty from c to shore. Coverage
begins this Saturday at e noon Eastern only. Orbeal America's

(46:17):
Voice because freedom wasn't given, it was earned.

Speaker 1 (46:32):
Welcome back in America. I'm live here in Orlando at
the Mom's for Liberty Conference. We're gonna have live coverage
all morning tomorrow. Be sure to tune in. Then we're
gonna kick you over to the amazing Amanda Head and
she's gonna take you through that two hundred and fiftieth
birthday of the Marines. So let's bring in Amanda a Manda.
We got a little bit of breaking news here on
a Friday night. As President Trump was departing the plane,
we got word that he commuted the prison sentence of

(46:54):
former Congressman George Santos. I don't think a lot of
people saw that one coming.

Speaker 3 (47:00):
Yeah, he put out a truth about it, and he
said George Santos was somewhat of a rogue, but there
are many rogues throughout our country who aren't forced to
serve seven years in prison. He started thinking about George
with respect to Democrat Senator Dick Blumenthal and the issue
of stolen valor, and he says, you know, what Dick
Blumenthal did was much, much worse.

Speaker 2 (47:19):
So he commuted his sentence.

Speaker 3 (47:21):
He said, therefore, I just signed a commutation releasing George
Santos from prison immediately.

Speaker 2 (47:26):
Good luck, George, have a great life.

Speaker 3 (47:28):
And he credited George Santos's courage for always voting Republican
in Congress.

Speaker 2 (47:32):
So it's a great day for George Santos for sure.

Speaker 1 (47:37):
How about that? Yeah, surprised, I think for a lot
of people. A couple of things that have happened today,
Prince Andrew giving up his royal title, the Epstein allegations
eventually falling, filling him from the family. Two sets of
documents for these today, some by the US government, some
by the Russians. We don't know if the Russians are real.
But it seems like we're getting even more visibility into
Jeffrey Epstein these last few weeks.

Speaker 3 (47:59):
Yeah, and you know, this is what the American people
are clamoring for, John. I know you see it on
social media. Anytime there's a tweet about practically anything so
having nothing to do with Epstein, they will comment great,
but where are the Epstein files?

Speaker 2 (48:12):
People are still very much interested in what these have
to say.

Speaker 3 (48:16):
And for Prince Andrew, you know, the chickens eventually come
home to roost, and yeah, we're seeing it bear out here, John,
I did. There was a news story that I wanted
to pop into. Since I am here in California, it
is fitting for me to talk about the city of Malibu.
They are seeking the arrest of homeless people over the
alleged fire risks that they pose. A lot of people

(48:37):
know that they, you know, start these campfires to stay warm.
You know, I've spent many years here in California, and
especially in the Hollywood Hills. As you are going from
Hollywood on the one on one through the Kouanga Corridor,
I can't tell you how many fires in my life
I have passed just brushfires that can obviously easily spread.
People think Malibu is liberal, Malvou's actually a little bit
more conservative. You have farms in Malibu, and I think,

(49:00):
why you are seeing something like this happened there?

Speaker 1 (49:02):
Yeah, all right, Tomorrow's an amazing day. Heroic Mom's here
in Orlando, and then we kick it over to you.
You are the heroic Marines. What do you expect us
all to see at Camp Pendleton tomorrow?

Speaker 3 (49:12):
Absolutely Well, it's going to close with remarks by the
Vice President J. D.

Speaker 2 (49:16):
Vance.

Speaker 3 (49:16):
But we've also got the Secretary of War Pete Hegseth
here along with Secretary of the Navy John Falin, all
sorts of military aircraft that are going to be streaking
across the sky and swimming across the sea. This is
a Camp Pendleton right here on the Pacific Ocean. It
is an absolutely spectacular display.

Speaker 2 (49:34):
We got a taste of it today.

Speaker 3 (49:35):
It's a good thing that our control room guys were
keeping me off screen because every once in a while
they were fighter jets and I was just jumping and screaming.

Speaker 2 (49:41):
It's so exciting. Tomorrow is going to be brilliant.

Speaker 1 (49:43):
So everybody tuned in for that coverage it's going to
be brilliant. Everybody can watch it right here at Real
America's Voice. I have it on good authority too, to
be sure. I think President Trump will make a cameo
by video or tomorrow here at mon Jeuluis. I'm not.
I'm very good at thority. All right, we're going to
kick it off. I will be back to month
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

It’s 1996 in rural North Carolina, and an oddball crew makes history when they pull off America’s third largest cash heist. But it’s all downhill from there. Join host Johnny Knoxville as he unspools a wild and woolly tale about a group of regular ‘ol folks who risked it all for a chance at a better life. CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist answers the question: what would you do with 17.3 million dollars? The answer includes diamond rings, mansions, velvet Elvis paintings, plus a run for the border, murder-for-hire-plots, and FBI busts.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.