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August 14, 2025 • 32 mins
Joe Jameson of Gays Against Groomers joins Ryan to discuss his role with the organization.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
The mainstream wing of the party is scared the death
of the moon wing. They won't speak up and they
don't stand for anything anymore. All they stand for is
whatever is against whatever President Trump stands for. That's why
we find ourselvesselves in the extraordinary position of mainstream Democrats

(00:24):
have now come out firmly and passionately in favor of
crime in Washington, d C. Why and Trump we know
something about it?

Speaker 2 (00:34):
Chucky Schumer, Hakim Jeffries, they're quote minority leaders in name only.

Speaker 3 (00:40):
They'll never stand up to that wing, will they? No,
they could.

Speaker 1 (00:46):
And I don't mean any disrespect. I don't know mister
Jeffries that will. I know Senator Schumber very well, So
I say this with respect. Chuck and Hakim need to
go to Amazon by some testicles and stand up to
the moon wind of their party and willing to do that.

(01:09):
I haven't heard Senator Schumer say anything bad about Mondammie.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
I mean, the guy's like socialists, he won't They white shop, Yeah,
but they're afraid of the whack shop.

Speaker 3 (01:22):
Can you explain something to me. I didn't know that, Senator.
I appreciate you.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
I appreciate you educating our audience about that. I have
no idea they sold that. Sure, you can say anything
these days, very cheap you can buy.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
You can buy anything on Amazon, Sean.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
Apparently I'm learning a lot tonight. Hey, Kelly, Kelly, are
you laughing? She's laughing.

Speaker 4 (01:48):
Yes, I love John Kennedy.

Speaker 3 (01:49):
Okay, you ready for this one?

Speaker 5 (01:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:51):
Not interrupting cow or also known as interrupting Hannity. This
is the thing.

Speaker 6 (01:58):
There's a couple of different ways in to go with
that clip And why I wanted the listeners to hear
it because I have a special annoyance with Sean Hannity.
You do as I know others do, and that's because
he gets these big interviews.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
So at times I have to watch him.

Speaker 6 (02:15):
But it drives me nuts doing this job as I do,
how much he interrupts his guests, and especially when Senator
John Kennedy's on a heater like you.

Speaker 3 (02:24):
Just heard you get out of the way, correct.

Speaker 6 (02:27):
For instance, when Sean Ferrish is on this program as
President Trump and he's iconic and he's given us gold,
the last thing I want to do is.

Speaker 3 (02:36):
Interrupt and step all over him. So what do I do? Kelly?
I turned my mic off because I'm laughing. You're laughing.
I tell you what, It's true.

Speaker 7 (02:44):
It's a very it's a very behind the scenes kind
of thing, you know. I don't we call it inside baseball? Yeah, no,
I agree with you. I think Sean Hannity has gotten
really bad over the last few years. He wasn't always
like that, but he now seems to. I don't know
if it's his ego or if he's you know, he's

(03:08):
engaged to.

Speaker 4 (03:09):
What's Ainsley Earhart, whatever her name.

Speaker 3 (03:12):
Good job, sir, well done, sir. And I'm getting props
for that one.

Speaker 7 (03:16):
But it's still it's it's kind of like yes at
some points, and you, unfortunately have to make me listen
to this at times, and I myself am like, shut
the hell up, eh right.

Speaker 6 (03:31):
And I don't even think he knows he's doing it if.

Speaker 3 (03:34):
He had people around him who he trusted.

Speaker 6 (03:36):
And this is this is key for anybody in any
line of work, including those of you out there. Whatever
you do, you need an inner circle of people, at
least one, hopefully several that they are willing to tell
you what you need to hear rather than what you
want to hear. And sometimes what you need to hear
is not what you want to hear.

Speaker 4 (03:56):
It's true. I don't think he has those people.

Speaker 7 (03:58):
I mean obviously you you oh yeah, one person in
particular that tells you exactly what that'd.

Speaker 6 (04:05):
Be, you, Elly Cacheron. Yeah, well we got the Texters.
The Texters too, and I answer to the listeners.

Speaker 4 (04:12):
That's another thing too. But you know, I just go
back to my.

Speaker 7 (04:16):
Ladder statement of saying, I don't know if it's his ego.
He got a very big contract. He does score all
these big interviews. But even to your point, when he
has President Trump on, he ignores, he literally interrupts President Trump.

Speaker 4 (04:32):
Who does that.

Speaker 3 (04:34):
It's tough if you have a finite amount of time.

Speaker 6 (04:37):
So I get it with Trump on one premise, and
that is President Trump. He likes to do what he
calls the weave and he'll go over on a tangent
and he'll come back. But it's kind of on his timetable.
And if it was an unlimited, you know podcast, And
I had two three hours with President Trump, like maybe
THEO von did I don't the other talk about cocaine.

Speaker 3 (04:58):
Oh you're like an owl man, one of the great
So it's a big high, is it?

Speaker 6 (05:05):
Like President Trump he's so it's so sweet, like he's naive,
he has no idea. President Trump's never done cocaine, obviously
with the way he asked that question.

Speaker 3 (05:14):
But theo Vonn had and that is if.

Speaker 6 (05:16):
You are let's say you get twenty minutes, or you
get forty minutes, or you get a solid sixty, and
that's it, and you want to get these questions in
and the President's kind of rambling and not answering your question.

Speaker 3 (05:26):
I do endorse from time.

Speaker 6 (05:28):
To time gently steering him back, but yeah, you can't
keep interrupting him. And if he's gonna do what he's
gonna do, then that's President Trump. You take what you
can get.

Speaker 5 (05:36):
Now with Senator Kennedy there, I think they should go
online on Amazon and buy them some testicles.

Speaker 4 (05:46):
We would.

Speaker 7 (05:48):
You remember what he put on our Christmas list at
like eleven.

Speaker 4 (05:54):
No, you don't remember this.

Speaker 3 (05:56):
I've never heard this. Your daughter Hayley, Yeah, yeah, the
little one.

Speaker 7 (05:58):
On her Christmas list when she was like eleven. She
put on because this was when she was thinking about
becoming a doctor.

Speaker 4 (06:05):
And she asked for a cadaver.

Speaker 3 (06:07):
That's a big ask. But I know where you can get.

Speaker 7 (06:10):
One, and they actually believe it or not sold them.
Then also cadavers, get out of here, Mison. You had
a way that you could actually apply to purchase a
cademic a human cadaver, a human cadaver. Now this is
what we true. Now, this is what we did. We

(06:33):
got her a little suiture kit that's.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
Better and it well, Doctor Frankenstein.

Speaker 7 (06:39):
Here basically kind of mimicked human skin. So I wasn't
still really glad with that. But yes, there there was
a questionnaire that you had to fill out. You had
a few steps that you had to take. It usually
was for educational purposes.

Speaker 6 (06:55):
Well, it's a great advertisement for Jeff Bezos and Amazon
with Senator to Kennedy giving that full endorsement.

Speaker 3 (07:00):
Can buy testicles on there. I'm not sure.

Speaker 6 (07:02):
About that, But Zach, how often do you use Amazon?
I always like checking in with you, gen Z and
how you're purchasing habits kind of unfold.

Speaker 8 (07:10):
I'm surprised I don't do it that often. No, Okay,
sometimes I'll do it for things that I can't easily
be gotten from the store, but I live really close
to a grocery store and a Target, and so most
things I just I don't want to wait till three, however,
many days fair enough?

Speaker 6 (07:26):
What is the most outlandish Amazon purchase you have ever made?

Speaker 3 (07:29):
Short of testicles?

Speaker 6 (07:31):
If you want to share that at five seven seven
three nine, by all means, do so.

Speaker 3 (07:35):
But Senator Kennedy's just trying to help.

Speaker 6 (07:36):
He said it with all due respect, like Talladega Knights.
I'll say, with all due respect doesn't mean you can
say whatever you want.

Speaker 3 (07:43):
Yes, it does.

Speaker 6 (07:46):
Little Farrell who Kelly does not like, Let's get some
tax five seven seven three nine, Ryan, I agree, Hannity
pisses me off when he does that. I also agree
with Kelly. I love Senator Kennedy. He's always got good stuff.
You know, he's just got that.

Speaker 5 (07:59):
Luisy and a accent in the references.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
They come out of nowhere.

Speaker 6 (08:04):
I mean, this is like your favorite grandfather, but like
on steroids, totally.

Speaker 7 (08:08):
Every show that he is on, he absolutely makes a
clip that we pull. I don't remember the last time
he was on Laura Ingram Newsmax. Any of the shows
that we have, we always pull his clips because you
know he'll pull out the well, you know, the short

(08:30):
tailedcare short tailed cat in a rock and chair, you
know kind of thing.

Speaker 3 (08:36):
I think it's a lot of catay.

Speaker 4 (08:38):
We had a room fill rocking chair about you know
what I'm talking.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
Yeah, I do.

Speaker 7 (08:43):
He'll come up with these references and you're just like,
oh my god, there's nobody else in the Senate like this.

Speaker 6 (08:49):
Jim says, Ryan plus Hannity whistles when he speaks.

Speaker 3 (08:52):
Does he notice that? Maybe on the radio?

Speaker 6 (08:56):
I know, Okay, well, full disclosure here my program. I
think at least the first hour, maybe both both. I
think airs during Hannity over on Freedom, so you know,
you can flip back and forth. I don't dislike Sewan
as a person. I am critically analyzing him as an interviewer, though,
and there are some that were masters at it.

Speaker 3 (09:17):
Larry King was one. You know, he would have Ross
Pero on and I'd be.

Speaker 6 (09:21):
Fascinated why Larry would ask a question and then get
out of the way, and then he would follow up
why because he was listening with a good question. You know,
Larry King gets spoofed a lot, and Kevin Neelan did
a good Larry King impression. And Larry's no longer with us,
but I thought he was great. I thought he was
fantastic at what he did. Another guy along those lines,
from that same era, from that same generation.

Speaker 3 (09:43):
Was Johnny Carson.

Speaker 6 (09:44):
Johnny Carson did some of the most fascinating interviews, And
again you asked.

Speaker 3 (09:48):
The question, the guest is the guest.

Speaker 6 (09:50):
You treat them like a guest, be our guest, be
our guest, and the listeners want to hear the guest.
I would hope, I would hope you get a guest
the listeners want to hear like John Fabricato. Sorry and
coming up here at the bottom of the hour, making
his first appearance on the program, Joe Jamison and Gays
Against Groomers. We're happy to have him along and happy
to hear from you via text five seven seven three nine.

(10:12):
Let me see Hannity whistles when he talks because his
teeth are capped. Oh okay, that done will work. Yeah,
that'll do it. That will certainly do it. Ryan agree
one hundred percent on Hannity. He's insufferable, like Kelly, I
just say shut up whenever he's on. Talks way too
much about himself now, But he wasn't always like that. See,
I think you're right because I've been listening to Hannity

(10:32):
going back, you know, to early two thousands after nine
to eleven.

Speaker 3 (10:35):
I listened to him a lot then, and what's going on?

Speaker 4 (10:37):
He was really good for me in Combs if here, I.

Speaker 6 (10:39):
Love danaitin Coolembs the Owen Coombs seemed like a decent guy. Yeah,
kind of a nerd, but whatever. And he's no longer with.

Speaker 7 (10:45):
Us, but I will compare his and your approach whenever.
And I'm sure your listeners textures you got to give
Ryan some love here, okay, because I can tell you
it's really hard when I book Sean Ferri for this show,
because Ryan cannot break his character.

Speaker 3 (11:07):
That's true of the.

Speaker 7 (11:08):
Interview got to play the street newsman interviewer, and Sean
will absolutely just run with it. But you let him talk,
and that's what people respect about it, and that's why
it makes for a really good bit, and that's why
we keep having him on.

Speaker 4 (11:25):
Plus he loves to give you crap.

Speaker 6 (11:28):
Let's get him on next week. Love Sean great guy
lives in Tennessee. Wish I did. I mean, I love Colorado,
don't get me wrong, but if I had another state
that I could move to besides Colorado, kind of the
Steve Martin thing, and if there were any other state,
it would be Tennessee.

Speaker 3 (11:41):
And if there was another state other.

Speaker 6 (11:43):
Than Colorado where I would like to live, my first
choice would be Tennessee, and my second would be Oklahoma.

Speaker 3 (11:49):
And if there was three states.

Speaker 6 (11:51):
Steve Martin's just the master at that I saw him
with Marty short of how Marty were friends. No, I'm
just kidding. I wish we were at Red Rocks. It
was phenomenal. It was so good. Those two are so good.
And I love Steve Martin so much, so highly recommend that.
And Kelly add this to the Adam Assassin pursuits.

Speaker 3 (12:09):
That he does for us behind the scenes.

Speaker 6 (12:11):
If there's any way I don't know if he does
radio interviews a lot, but if we can get Centator
to John Kennedy on this program, just because I've tried,
you have, Okay, that doesn't surprise me, but you've tried.

Speaker 4 (12:20):
I have.

Speaker 7 (12:22):
I have one person who I have not asked, but
I think I have an inn and I think you
know who I'm talking about, Brian.

Speaker 6 (12:31):
The Divine Perhaps, Okay, I guess right. More texts on
this topic. Ryan Hannity, I think has his heart in
the right place, But jeez, he talks way too much.
Kennedy is a gem, absolutely, yes, correct, Yeah, I don't.
I think Sean from everything I've heard, he sounds like
a really good guy. And what you hear are behind

(12:53):
the scenes, and you know what I hear. You know,
a couple of degrees of separation here or there. But
I know people who know people who are on the
inside or have done these things. And I've never heard
a bad thing about Sean Hannity. And frankly, just between
me and all of you listeners out there, don't tell
anybody a nightmare. Laura Ingram, she's a nightmare and she

(13:13):
sometimes shows that on the air. I love Raymond Arroyo.
I think he's funny. I think he's witty, he's pithy,
he's great make some keen observations.

Speaker 3 (13:23):
He's very close with Laura.

Speaker 6 (13:24):
I know they're personal friends, but that gets heated between
those two sometimes because she's just not getting what he's saying,
and he's funny and she's kind of I don't know.
Here's sense of humor needs some work, needs some work.

Speaker 3 (13:35):
Ryan.

Speaker 6 (13:35):
I love Senator Kennedy, by the way, but I'm going
to change the subject just a little bit.

Speaker 3 (13:39):
Do you know where the heck. CJ. Pearson is so
my favorite.

Speaker 6 (13:43):
Kid to follow anyway to get him on your show,
J Yeah, he's I love talking to bright young minds
in the conservative movement Republican Party, the gen zs, people
like Zach because they're the future. And I'm not gonna
sing in Houston right now, but I could. And maybe

(14:03):
you'll play that song coming back from break. It might
be appropriate. I don't know, but it's interesting to get their.

Speaker 3 (14:09):
Take on things. There's not a Hugue. Go ahead, Kelly Heire,
you go, yeah.

Speaker 6 (14:14):
This one from you, great American Eric Manning. My dude,
Kelly is magnificent. So when she has to go downstairs,
please don't holler at her when you can't find her. Okay,
I love that texture, but that's.

Speaker 3 (14:29):
Eric, you have no Eric. Yeah, Eric Manning, Hey, we got.

Speaker 4 (14:33):
You fifty percent off your car bag.

Speaker 3 (14:35):
Called Martino, right.

Speaker 6 (14:37):
Yeh, So I heard Eric wasn't real happy with Tom
at one point, though I'm not.

Speaker 7 (14:41):
Supposed to say that on there, because we got the
gentleman on the air, okay, from the place that fixed
his car, and then he called Eric back and basically
cut the bill by fifty.

Speaker 6 (14:54):
Well, I said this before and I'll say it again, Eric,
our thoughts, our prayers are with you, sending advibes to you.
He revealed that he had stage four cancer, and uh,
you got this man. You hang in there, Okay, you
don't give up. We do, And I'd be looking to
do a little something special for mister Eric. Keep that

(15:14):
in mind. Ryan, you are a phenomenal interviewer. Well, thank
you very much. I try again. I there's this pantheon
of the best that I aspire to that I know
I'll never reach. But in that area Larry King, Johnny Carson.
I talked about those two. Another one is right here
mentioned in this text, Steven Littleton, retired law enforcement officer.

Speaker 3 (15:39):
Thank you for your service, Steve. Ryan.

Speaker 6 (15:41):
Don't forget Rush Limbaugh's comments about the testicle lock box.

Speaker 3 (15:48):
Isn't that what he said?

Speaker 6 (15:49):
That Hillary Clinton cut bills or tried to or who
are you referring to there?

Speaker 4 (15:54):
I think it was. That's brilliant. I forgot about that.

Speaker 6 (16:01):
This is something I've been pondering and this text might
have sent me over the edge. You know, we revere
Rush on this program. I can't speak more highly enough.
Would be more effusive with praise for any individual who's
ever done this than Rush Limbaugh. He was the master
of the craft. He he had wisdom. I miss him

(16:21):
every day. When we lost him, I honestly felt like
we lost a family member. I mean, that's how I felt.
I mourned his death much the same way that I
did Ronald Reagan.

Speaker 4 (16:31):
I cried, oh, I know you did.

Speaker 6 (16:32):
When I heard his wife come on the air that day.
I get a chill just thinking about it right now.
I go, oh, no, I know the words, and I was.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
We all knew what I want to do.

Speaker 6 (16:43):
You know, I've tortured our listeners for however many years
with moments of Biden. I'd like to have kind of
a Rush minute something like that bring him back, because
the things that he would talk about in that program
are still pertinent today. They're based in his rooted philosophy,
and he was He was much more dug in against

(17:04):
liberals than I am.

Speaker 3 (17:06):
And it's not that I'm not.

Speaker 6 (17:07):
It's just that he was ahead of the curve and
the things that he would say, Well, Rush, you don't
come on at all liberals are that bad or not
all democrats are that bad.

Speaker 3 (17:16):
And he would say this is we remember this.

Speaker 6 (17:18):
You cannot reason with them, you cannot negotiate with them.

Speaker 3 (17:22):
You must defeat them liberals. That's it. And how true
is that today?

Speaker 6 (17:27):
It's truer today even than it was back then when
he was talking about it.

Speaker 3 (17:32):
And he was right then, but he's even more right now.

Speaker 6 (17:36):
And I saw a clip from President Trump asking him
if he would meet with a Keen Jefferies. I'll get
this after the break, and it was it was based
in rush limboss philosophy.

Speaker 3 (17:46):
He goes, I'll meet with them, but there's no point.

Speaker 6 (17:47):
They're not gonna do anything, you know, And it was
Keen Jeffries who quote tweeted it, I'll meet with President Trump. Yeah,
but what are you really going to do? Are you
gonna find common ground? Absolutely not, So what's the point
of doing it? Donald Trump is about out the art
of the deal. If you can't make a deal with you,
he doesn't want to meet with you. But yeah, I'm
considering because I believe. And I'll talk to mister Snerbley

(18:11):
about this. He follows me on X and I follow him.
I've messaged him from time to time if it would
be okay, if we would do that or you know,
royalties all I don't want to get in all legal
ease of it. We'll see, we'll definitely see. Stay tuned.
Joe Jamison gaze against Roomer's next He's Good, He's good.

Speaker 4 (18:34):
Wasn't that our City Hall?

Speaker 6 (18:35):
Uh No, that was just a little guy that's kind
of in the barber shop and they all show up
for this fundraiser and Randy Jackson of a Sexual Chocolate
is singing this song your greatest love of All and
the little guy he's good, He's good, and the bar yeah,
good and terrible. Eddie Murphy, genius that he is. I

(18:58):
watched that movie when I was younger several times before
I realized it was Eddie Murphy playing the old Jewish
white man in the barber shop.

Speaker 7 (19:07):
Like correct, and our Cineo Hall was also in that
shock shot and Lili Yeah, yeah, I mean that whole
movie is just fantastic.

Speaker 3 (19:18):
It's one of the greatest movies of all time.

Speaker 7 (19:20):
I think it's one of the most perfect, Like I
will I will tell you perfect movies. Back to the
Future Coming to America.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
The first one. The sequel is a big disappointment. Yeah,
that was, but the original you can't be brilliant. Yes,
in the face.

Speaker 7 (19:34):
Mcdowells has the Golden arches right, Golden arch.

Speaker 6 (19:40):
He's constantly in legal trouble. John Amos playing that character
with McDowell's so many quotable lines from that, Oh man,
I gotta go back and watch that tonight, I think, so,
of course, where does my mind go? Zach's trying to
tie it all in with I believe the children in
our future.

Speaker 3 (19:56):
I believe gen Z is our future.

Speaker 6 (19:58):
I want to hear from them to Whitney Houston's greatest
love of all, and I think a sexual chocolate. I
think of Randy Jackson. I'm not ashamed, I'm proud. I'm
going to embrace it as I think all of us should.
And we are going to embrace our next guest, making
his first appearance on Ryan Schuling Live, putting up with
our Shenanigans, high jinks and tom foolery, and when you

(20:18):
can sustain and endure all three, well, brother, you got
something going. And that's Joe Jamison Gaze against Groomers joining
us now in RSL.

Speaker 3 (20:27):
Joe Welcome, Thank you for having me now, kind.

Speaker 6 (20:30):
Of a hot lead in there for you, Joe, But
I saw you at the Jeff Co Kids first Gala.
Happy to meet you there and wanted to bring you
on the air and introduce you to our listeners. So
we know your friend and mine, Rich Guggenheim Gaze Against Groomers.
He was big with the organization, and it seems like
maybe he's gone on a sabbatical or something. Can you
just update us on what happened with Rich? Where did

(20:52):
he go and what he's doing?

Speaker 9 (20:55):
Yeah, I mean Rich decided to take a leave of
absence on this battle for finding her kids is rough,
Like we get a lot of attack and a lot
of different directions and you know, we all need a
break at some point, and we hope he returns at
some point, but we understand if he doesn't. You know,
it's it is never ending battle that it takes to protest.

Speaker 3 (21:17):
Kids follow him. It's Silicon Joe. It's a great name
on x it's a good handle.

Speaker 6 (21:21):
That's Silicon Joe, just like it sounds Joe, Joe Jamison
our guest. He's the director of content for Gays Against Groomers.
So what does that role entailed, Joe? What do you
do for the organization?

Speaker 9 (21:34):
So I'm the guy that does all the social media
for Gays Against groammers. So that's all my work. We
do have a team that helps the things together, but
I am primarily responsible for seeing everything that you guys
see there and exposing everything that goes on.

Speaker 6 (21:50):
In his bio on X this is hilarious, he says,
for the pronoun idiots, mine are your slash grace. So, Joe,
I think what Gays against groom does a similar I
think I just mentioned my good friend Valdemar Archleotta, the
former president of the log Cabin Republicans, is throw a
curveball at the left.

Speaker 3 (22:09):
The left wants to put everybody in silos, that all gays.

Speaker 6 (22:13):
Would all think the same, and you would all shut
up and keep to yourselves and vote Democrat and never
get out of line, never speak anything against the orthodoxy
that's been established for you. And that could apply to
anyone of a number myriad groups that the Democrats try
to lump people into, that they're a monolith, that they
are just cartoon characters that all think and vote the

(22:33):
same way.

Speaker 3 (22:34):
And we know that's not true.

Speaker 6 (22:35):
So take us through exactly what Gaze against Groomers is,
what it represents, what it does, and why it's important.

Speaker 9 (22:43):
I mean, you're exactly right.

Speaker 6 (22:45):
We're not a monolith.

Speaker 9 (22:46):
Is you know, you're expenses if you're gay to vote
and think the way that we think. And you know,
I can say I'm not alone. I thought I was
alone in this world where I was like this, every
gay person think this way. And then I became a
parent and started to see what was going on in
the name of the lgbt QUIA community and was absolutely

(23:09):
shocked to see what was going on and what they
were allowed to get away with that it was just
absolutely inappropriate for children. And that's how I got introduced
gage instrummers because they thought the way that I thought.
They thought that kids should be kept innocent, protected, and
that sexuality shouldn't be discos when you're five years old,
your pronoun and all this other stuff that wasn't something

(23:31):
that existed when I was in school. And that's what
we're here to fight, is we're here to fight and
stop the sexual and doctrimentization of children under the guys
of LGBTQIA.

Speaker 6 (23:43):
Plus Yeah, a noble cause and Gaye against Groomer is
doing the hard work out there. As Joe mentioned, they
take a lot of heat from people that ostensibly would
pretend to represent LGBTQ issues, and yet once you turn
against the orthodoxy, your persona non grata, your idioactive, you
are cast out. Joe Jamison, our guest director of content

(24:04):
for Gays Against Groomers, I go back, Joe, and I'm
older than you, but even further than that, And I
say this, My mom was a wonderful woman, and she
was actually quite ahead of her time. One of her
best friends in college she told me about. His name
was Ray, and he was actually a chef out here
in Colorado, and I would hear about him from time
to time. And when I was younger, I asked, well,

(24:24):
whatever happened to Ray?

Speaker 3 (24:25):
Where is he?

Speaker 6 (24:25):
And unfortunately he died of aides in the eighties, and
at a time when a lot of people were living
in a state of fear. It was somewhat comparable to
the COVID pandemic, because we weren't really sure how the HIV,
how that spread and whether you can get it from
a toilet seat or a handshake, or somebody sneezing or
coughing near or around you.

Speaker 3 (24:45):
And there was a rumor at my middle school in Pinkney.

Speaker 6 (24:49):
That one of the teachers one was gay, but the
two had like hepatitis C and this was a precursor
perhaps to other diseases, and she requested that I not
have him. And to this day I feel kind of
not right about that because it was labeled the gay
cancer in the eighties. And when you think even back
to the seventies with Harvey Milk and his name's been
taken off a cruise fighter a USS Navy, and that

(25:12):
is he had an underage boy that he was having.

Speaker 3 (25:16):
A relationship with.

Speaker 6 (25:17):
And these are the stigmas and the stereotypes, Joe, and
I've talked about this with auDA Marchallette as well, that
the gay community has fought against for years, that gays
aren't automatically trying to groom young children and doctrinate them
into doing gay things. That a person is either born
gay or they're not. It's not a choice. You don't
just check a bouck. You know what, I'm gonna be
gay today. I'm gonna make that decision today. And I

(25:40):
think it's along those lines, Joe, why a group like
yours gays against groomers, Why log cabin Republicans are so important,
because all of these rights have been battled for and
won over the years, including the right to equal protection
under the law with marriage and everything else. That you
don't want to give up that ground by now going
back down this path of grooming and cross dressers dancing

(26:01):
for kids at parties and kind of crossing the line
in that way.

Speaker 3 (26:04):
Is that about right on?

Speaker 9 (26:07):
Yeah? I mean, we want to make sure that you know,
we fought for our rights in one and that doesn't
mean that we can just do whatever we want. And
for whatever reason, permission has been given to this community
to do just do whatever they want to children, and
if you question it, you're a bigot. And you know
we're here to say that that is not true. Is

(26:28):
you can question this behaviors that just because you're day
did not give you the right to sexualize children any way,
shape or form or more importantly, it's more with the
trans community does than anything.

Speaker 6 (26:39):
Joe Jamison our guest at Silicon Joe on X And
because you were at the Jeff Co Kids first of it,
I'm so glad that you were.

Speaker 3 (26:45):
Joe.

Speaker 6 (26:46):
I want to bring up an incident that happened in
Columbine at the high school there. In my opinion that
it was kind of brushed under the rug, and those
in power looked the other way because of the dynamic
that was in play.

Speaker 3 (26:58):
And it kind of goes along the lines.

Speaker 6 (26:59):
What we were saying, what you were saying there about
that grooming in any kind of arrangement is not okay.
And yet we had a teacher who began praying upon
a female teacher began praying upon a female student when
the student was fifteen years old and a sophomore in
that teacher's social studies class. But my opinion is that

(27:19):
because that dynamic was it was a woman with a girl,
it was a lesbian relationship, that that was not viewed
with the same kind of severity that it might occur
if it was a male teacher with an underage female student.

Speaker 3 (27:31):
I don't think that would play out the same way.
Would you agree one hundred percent?

Speaker 9 (27:35):
Agree with thought?

Speaker 3 (27:37):
And why do you think that is?

Speaker 6 (27:39):
Do you think people in these school systems are just
too afraid to speak out that they think they won't
be politically correct if they questioned the lesbian relationship because
of you know, the kind of bullying that we get
from the left on these issues.

Speaker 9 (27:51):
Well, I think that you know, in the LGBTQ community
is they were given permission to, you know, kind of
foster and protect kids with their parents and understand. And
you see this narrative called the trust of adult narrative,
and this is specifically what Jeffco's schools uses, and so
it's hey, I'm that trusted adult. You can keep your
secrets with me, like, don't worry, and it gives them

(28:13):
that avenue to sit there and manipulate that child and
the parents in this specific situation had no idea this
was even going on because this narrative was created, and
they've created this ability for children to be groomed because
of that narrative.

Speaker 6 (28:33):
And again, when that occurs, then you're creating this kind
of void where it's pitched as it's safe, you can
come to us, you can tell us your secrets and
we don't have to tell your parents. And this is
kind of part and parcel of what was going on
there at Columbine and why it blew up into such
a scandal. Thanks to the investigative work of Lindsay Datko

(28:55):
and Jeff Co Kids First along with that organization, I
could not more strongly recommend a following log Cabin Republicans
both here in Colorado nationwide and gays against groomers. Joe Jamison,
our guest, the director of content for them. Joe, great conversation,
so appreciative of your time. Let's check in again soon,
sound thanks for having me, all right, Joe Jamison joining

(29:15):
us on Run and Shooling Live and like my counterpart
across the aisle, Mandy Connell over at KOA. You know,
I think it is very important that we established this
ground with lesbian, gay, bisexual Republicans out there. They exist,
trans Republicans, Conservatives like our listener Kimberly, they exist, and
we need to embrace that and bring them into the

(29:36):
fold because they share our values. Like you just heard,
they don't want kids to be groomed. They don't want
kids to go to these body parties where there's cross dressing,
and these should be treated in the same way. I've
always said this, like a strip club or like chippin Dal's,
you wouldn't bring a child to that, so you wouldn't
bring a child to a drag show. It's inherently sexual,

(29:56):
and if adults want to do it, have at it.
I am very libertic that do whatever makes you happy.
As long as you're not hurting anybody else. But you
do hurt kids because they're impressionable, they're vulnerable, they lack
that confidence, and when you flood their minds with this confusion,
that's abuse and that's predatory behavior and it shouldn't be happening.

(30:17):
And Gaze against groomer stands up for those kids against groomers.
Joe Jamison, our guests will get your thoughts to close
out five seven, seven, three nine. Right here on Ryan
Schuling Life, Sherry sends in that she's with Zach, I
vote for pumpkin year round. It's outside the box kind

(30:38):
of thought. But here's the other side of that, Ryan.
I've seen pumpkin crap all year, have you. It just
struck me in the store there. It's a seasonal flavor,
I think, because it kind of wears out. It's welcome,
you know, if you had enough pumpkin for a while
and then you're done. And then it goes to this
texter who said, you're complaining about pumpkin stuff in stores

(30:58):
in August. At least it isn't Christmas creamer, and one
of the Christmas flavors typically it's like peppermint mocha. Right,
it's like peppermint everything. And I like peppermint, but uh yeah,
not everybody does. More of your texts five seven seven
three nine. JT says, Ryan, you're the young Carson. That's
some mighty compliment, and I thank you for it. You
need to talk to Sheriff Steve Reams to record the

(31:20):
taxpayer relief shots for our buddy Brownie. I don't know
that that nexus is going to happen anytime soon.

Speaker 3 (31:26):
It's just a hunch.

Speaker 6 (31:29):
Ryan, I didn't know about Eric Manning and cancer. Thank
you for letting us know. Please tell him to let
us know if he needs anything.

Speaker 3 (31:34):
Thank you. He truly is you great American. I love
it when Eric says that.

Speaker 4 (31:38):
It's my favorite always.

Speaker 3 (31:40):
I want to get a drop that says that, would
you put it all the pebar? That's what I mean.
That's not exactly one.

Speaker 4 (31:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (31:46):
And then Eric himself Texas, Ryan and Kelly, I just
flat out love y'all. And Ryan rush Limbaugh was talking
about givin Hillary Clinton a testicle lock box.

Speaker 3 (31:54):
It was it was for bell. I thank you.

Speaker 6 (31:59):
Yeah, we gotta get Darryl Hammond backund and have him
be Bill Clinton and maybe I can interview him that way.

Speaker 3 (32:04):
That's one of my favorite interviews I've done.

Speaker 4 (32:05):
Kevin Nalin.

Speaker 3 (32:06):
We got to get Kevin Knealin on.

Speaker 4 (32:08):
Would that not be perfect?

Speaker 3 (32:09):
He's coming on in November. He's coming to Comedy Work South.
We'll see him. Get him on. I stay tuned. The
Big Man is next. This is Ryan Schruling Live
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