Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The date is August twenty six, twenty thirty five, and
we're going to take a look back to twenty twenty five,
ten years ago and what a wild time that was.
We'll do this with the help of Bisible. There is
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Thank you for this look back. God Almighty, thank you
for the present day and all the things you provide,
(00:45):
which is in fact everything.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
The Todd Homan Show is one hundred percent disapproved. But
big pharma technocrats and tyrants everywhere from the high mountains
of Free America. Here's the Emerald City exile Todd Herman.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
Today is the day the Lord has made in these
the times through which God is decided who shall live.
I know it's not really twenty thirty five. I haven't
gone completely Biden brains, but I wanted to look at
their time that we live in with the let's say,
the fortune of hindsight. Now, can we really do this?
I think we can because we can take where we're
(01:32):
at and look back to other times. Let's look back
twenty years ago. Twenty years ago. If I came to
and said it will be legal to kidnap children if
their parents will not pretend their son is an elk Oh,
I'm sorry a girl, same thing, just as much scientific evidence.
(01:53):
Twenty years ago, people would have laughed. People did laugh
ten years ago, ten years ago, when it was going on,
people said, you're paranoid, that never happens or this. Would
you look back ten years ago and say, hey, it's
perfectly natural that in our society we're going to have
(02:13):
Democrat politicians and Republican politicians both agreeing.
Speaker 3 (02:19):
That crime is a good thing.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
Because there's plenty of Republicans who are riding this wagon
as well. Crime creates instability, and on a massive basis,
how many things happened during the COVID era that surprised you,
even with your cynicism about government. So can we take
a look at twenty twenty five from a future tense.
I think that we can we can look at some
(02:43):
of the things now that strike us as bizarre and
go forward ten years if things don't change. And in
regard to crime, at President Trump and I know, look,
I'm not wild about the National Guard troops rolling into
the cities.
Speaker 3 (02:55):
I've said it, I'm not wild about it.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
I think that he needs to have permission from that
States and there needs to be an emergency. And I'm
much less wild about the fact that gangs own our
cities and many of our major cities are run by cartels.
So in two extreme circumstances, I guess I'm going to
err on the side of the extreme circumstance of bringing
the Guard in to capture a bunch of these criminals.
(03:19):
I guess I'm going to air on that side now,
airing on that could be ten years from now. We've
got National Guard troops every year everywhere. It could be
ten years from now. We forget what it's like to
not see National Guard troops or army troops when you're.
Speaker 3 (03:32):
In the airport.
Speaker 1 (03:32):
If you've been to countries like Mexico, expected you know,
and that's to our advantage in places like when I
go to Port of Arta, that's to an advantage for
me because I'm a tourist and they're not really going
to go touch me. Now, if you're a citizen there,
I think it would be pretty tiring. There's seven police forces.
So in twenty thirty five, would we be looking back
and going remember when we made that decision to put
(03:54):
guards just in cities, and now guards are everywhere. That's
one possibility. The other possibility is this, if the crime
goes unchecked, we will eventually get to a point where
we are.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
A low trust society.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
Low trust meaning that people no longer follow the law
because no one else does. So let's take that point
of view and let's look at some current stories. One
just came to my attention, and it's pretty difficult to
shock me in relation to the separate crunchy of Seattle,
and it might be difficult to shock you.
Speaker 3 (04:23):
And this is a tough story.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
So if you're watching or listening with young kids, I
want you to be very very careful about it.
Speaker 3 (04:28):
And I'll tell you about this the second.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
It involves a toddler and a mother and some payments online.
Obviously that's a tough topic. It's less tough to talk
about our bodies as adults. There's things our bodies need
and they don't get. One of the things that you
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the myocardia. This is the little tiny energy centers inside
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(04:53):
does other things as well, but that's one of its
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and it just continues to happen, you can talk about
hormones and maybe that's worth looking at. I have a
hormone doc I see once a quarter. You can look
at your energy levels of course that should be higher probably.
Speaker 3 (05:10):
And your water intake.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
But even with all that, you can end up with
bad mitochondrial health. How do I know this because it
happened to me. The guy who drinks three hundred and
sixty ounces of water every day because I have three
hundred and sixty grams of protein every day, guy whot
tracks everything he eats, who exercises pretty vigorously two and
a half hours a day, five to six days a week.
Speaker 3 (05:32):
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Speaker 1 (05:33):
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Our bodies are one thing. The bodies of children should
be sacrosanct. The bodies of children should be absolutely sacrosanct.
Speaker 3 (06:20):
If we're looking back and we're playing a game.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
We look back at our society, look back at where
we're at now, and act like we're in twenty thirty five.
There's two ways stories like this could go. And again,
if you're with young kids and they're next to you,
be careful about this story because it is very, very tough,
and our job is we're living in twenty thirty five,
we're looking back. Let's think of the two ways this
could go. This is a headline from twenty twenty five
(06:46):
in Seattle, Washington. My friend and former colleague, Jason Ranch
broke this story headline mom Monster mom accused of raping
her toddler on camera for money, released by.
Speaker 3 (06:57):
A judge in twenty thirty five.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
As we look back at a headline like this, there's
two places we could be.
Speaker 3 (07:05):
We could be well, of course she's released.
Speaker 1 (07:06):
That's no longer legal. I mean, love is love. We
can look forward to that. At twenty thirty five is
saying wait, wait, are we still talking about sex as
if it's a crime. I mean, hey, toddler's can enjoy that.
Who knows that the tiler didn't like it? Maybe the
tither identifies as a sexual being. That's one path ten
years from me, you think that's bizarre. Ten years from now,
(07:29):
if we continue to caudle criminals like this, and we
continue to push the boundaries of sexuality, who are we
to say? Or in twenty thirty five, we could look
back and go do you remember that insane era where
things like this happen?
Speaker 3 (07:44):
This is Jason's story, a Pierce.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
County judge ordered the release of a mother without bail
despite accusations that she filmed herself sexually assaulting her two
year old son for profits.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
Trinity Carol. Wow, what a name. Trinity Carol, a twenty two.
Speaker 1 (07:59):
Year old Edward Edgewood resident, was charged in Pierce County
Superior Court with rape of a child in the first degree,
promoting sexual commercial sexual abuse of a minor in animal
cruelty in the first degree. Gosh, I wonder what police said.
Carol use Snapchat to send sexual explicit videos to a
man for payment, which included sexual suspicious videos of her son,
for what she thought would be a fifty thousand dollars payment.
(08:22):
She said the Snapchat user asked for a video of
her changing her son's diaper while fondling him. So she
provided this service and if Pierce County judge.
Speaker 3 (08:35):
Let her go.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
In twenty thirty five, we can look back at stories
like this and go, how did we get to that point?
How did society get to that point? We could study
it as a bleep or a blip. We could study
it as an extreme moment. We could study it in
criminal justice classes as this is what happens when activist
judges and activist das get purchased and pushed into office
(08:59):
with the money of people intent on taking down America.
Speaker 3 (09:02):
That was a dark period.
Speaker 1 (09:03):
Twenty twenty five or twenty thirty five, You and I
old people could be saying, told you so. So when
President Trump starts rolling the National Guard into these cities,
is it to stop this happened to two year Old's
not really, but it's to stop a prevailing notion that
crime is normal, and that defending crime is now a
(09:24):
stance that a national political party can take. We don't
have enough crime, we need more of it. So while
I can stand in twenty thirty five and say thank
god President Trump meant it. He sent the national Guard in,
he cleaned up those cities, and he pulled them out,
there's been no normalization of that. Do you remember when
President Trump was willing to do that in twenty thirty five?
We could look back and we could have had eight
(09:44):
years of JD vance. Or the media can win on
this front and make this seem so extreme. This is
why I'm presenting the things as two extremes. It is
extreme to roll the National Guard into American cities, and
we conserned it. She'd admit this because we're all about
small government, right. Even populists should admit this, because populists
(10:06):
don't want a big, strong government bullying them around. But
we also must present the fact that our cities have
been made into extreme zones. When a cartel or cartel's
own cities and when criminals know they're not going to
be punished, that is just as extreme as a national
Guard rolling in. With one big difference, the National Guard
is not going to roll into these cities and go
(10:26):
out and discriminately take lives. They're not going to go
do dry by shootings. They're not going to traffic human beings.
They're not going to sexually exploit little children. That's not
what the National Guard does. They're individual members who can misstep. Sure,
because we're all broken by sin. We can look in
twenty thirty five. If we're looking back at twenty twenty five,
and we could say, man, thank.
Speaker 3 (10:46):
God there was that religious revival.
Speaker 1 (10:49):
Thank god so many people came to Christ, and we
could look back at what was the backbreaking moment. Maybe
it was a whole bunch of series of things like
this with a woman named Trinity as in the Holy
Trinity apparently doing this to her little boy for money.
Maybe there were tough cases like this that enough people said, man,
things have gotten awfully dark. Thank god there was this revival,
this Christian revove of the country. Thank god that the
(11:10):
schools changed, or we could look back and go you
remember when the left broke the back of the churches.
Now Jesus has said that his church will stand against
the gate of Gates of Haites. It can't stand against it.
So it's not going away. But is it going to
be vibrant in America? Here's another example. If we're at
a criminal justice class in twenty thirty five and we're
studying the era of twenty twenty five, I think this
(11:31):
had be something.
Speaker 3 (11:32):
That might get played.
Speaker 1 (11:34):
This is the dictator of Chicago, Brandon Johnson, and he
has a point of view on crime. President Trump has
been talking about bringing the National Guard into Chicago, a
city where it's not unusual to see eighteen to thirty
shootings in a weekend, or to see five to seven
people shot and killed in a weekend.
Speaker 3 (11:50):
This is the dictator of Chicago, Brandon Johnson.
Speaker 4 (11:53):
We cannot incarcerate our way out of violence. We've already
tried that. If we've ended up the largest prison population
in the world without solving the problems of crime and violence,
the addiction on jails and incarceration in this country, we
have moved past that. It is racist, it is immoral,
it is unholy, and it is not the way to
(12:15):
drive violence down.
Speaker 1 (12:17):
So is the argument that incarcerating people drives violence get down?
And Brandon Johnson was standing there with one of the
most corrupt dictators of the states in the nation, and
that's JB.
Speaker 3 (12:28):
Pritzker, part of the disastrous and.
Speaker 1 (12:30):
Truly truly obviously obviously spiritually fallen Pritzker.
Speaker 3 (12:34):
Family, unbelievably corrupt, harmful people.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
Is the argument or was it in twenty twenty five
that putting people in prison solved violence?
Speaker 3 (12:44):
It solves this.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
When truly violent people go to prison, they only get
to impart violence upon people in prison, and in that
case it can be easily stopped because they're within reach
of corrections officers. They do not get to go out
and parted upon society as a whole. And if they
continue to do that in prison, and they continue to
act out violently and attack people, they can be put
(13:07):
in solitary confinement for all but an hour a day,
and in that case they can try to assault guards,
but they're not going to be able to assault fellow inmates.
This is a game that was played in twenty twenty
five the shifting of the goal posts, and the goal
post here that was shifted was we think putting people
in prison is going to stop human beings from being violence.
(13:28):
But here's what hasn't been tried in Chicago, and maybe
in twenty thirty five we can look back at this.
Do you remember when President Trump sent the National Guards
into the cities and they found out that eighty percent
of crime is carried out by twenty percent of criminals,
and eighty percent of violent crime is carried out by
ten percent of criminals. And when President Trump rolled the
(13:49):
Guard in and they took those people off the streets
and they took the guns away from the people who
weren't legally allowed to have them, violence did go down.
Because what Brandon Johnson's doing in Chicago, it was the
same thing that they're doing in Portland and the.
Speaker 3 (14:02):
Separate countries of Seattle.
Speaker 1 (14:03):
They're letting child rapists go in Seattle, They're letting gangsters
go in Chicago.
Speaker 3 (14:09):
So from a twenty thirty five.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
Criminal justice class, we can look back at this moment
and say, there was a belief among leftists that the
only way to solve crime and violence was.
Speaker 3 (14:22):
What what would be their theory? What would we look.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
Back at twenty thirty five and defend their theory based
upon non compliance, letting people go.
Speaker 3 (14:34):
What is their theory on crime? What was it?
Speaker 1 (14:36):
As we look back from twenty thirty five, we look
at twenty twenty five, what was the operating theory of
the Democrat parties that relates to crime? It didn't exist.
What did exist was an overwhelming desire to call to
criminals and to have more of it. Brandon Johnson, the
dictator of Chicago, said that it's racist to put people
(14:58):
in prison for committing cri that it's racist, meaning of
course that it's just black people are put in prison,
which of course isn't true. And again, if we're looking
back from our perspective of twenty thirty five, two separate
ways we could go. Jimmember when President Trump put those
twenty percent of people who committed eighty percent of crimes
in prison and then came and announced a refurbishing of
(15:22):
the schools that the federal government will no longer allow
the disappearance of special classes for people who achieve that
the federal governments no longer going to allow racial segregation
in the schools where black kids are given special disciplinary waivers,
where black kids can't be expelled, where they can't be
(15:43):
sent out of school, they can't be suspended. Only white
kids or Asian kids can do that. And if you
doubt me, this is what happens in the separate countries.
These are literal policies, Jiman. President Trump took away federal
funding from schools that did that, and we communicated to
black kids that we expect the same from you as.
Speaker 3 (15:59):
White kids, because you're capable of it, because you're human beings.
We're all broken by sin.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
But nothing about having dark skin or a higher melanine
level means that you're inclined to crime. Nothing, nothing about
that means that you cannot live by the rules. We
expect it, just like we expect it from white kids.
When President Trump created that and pushed it into schools
by threatening federal dollars and taking them away, and when
some state officials followed up with some positive incentives, all
(16:29):
of a sudden, we saw this change somewhere around twenty
twenty five or in twenty thirty five. We can look
back and say President Trump gave it a shot, it
didn't work, or it wasn't allowed to work. Which one
do you think is more likely? It doesn't work or
it's not allowed to work. The Democrats are setting up
it's not allowed to work from twenty thirty five. We
(16:51):
could also look back at a past that changed racially.
Do you remember when Barack Hussein Obama is running for president,
is supposedly the first black president, that he was going
to heal racial divides. This is one of the big
pitches that having a black president would heal a racial divide.
I remember liberal friends of mine who worked at Microsoft
celebrating this. I'll never forget the night he was elected
(17:12):
seeing and it wasn't social media because that wasn't a
big deal. Then it was emails amongst friends. There were
some notes on Facebook. I take it, no, there wasn't.
Actually at that point, Facebook was just still for young people.
It was emails among friends. It was posts at work.
We had shack groups at work, and I'll never forget
seeing managers at Microsoft posting internally. I'm excited for the
(17:36):
first time because racial healing is here. Well, Barack Obama
didn't want racial healing. He was an Olynskyite divider from
the very beginning. That's how he was trained. So we
saw what happened under him. If out of Sawn he'd
look like Trayvon Martin, the police acted stupidly.
Speaker 3 (17:54):
Hispanics need to.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Need to punish their enemies in twenty thirty five, look
back at a turning point. We could look back that
President Trump did arrest the twenty percent of criminals who
charged who cause eighty percent of the crime, That we
did begin to go after corrupt judges, that we did
arrest corrupt public officials and frog march them, and there
(18:17):
was a change because we stopped being a low trust
society or what was becoming a low trust society. We
could also look back at humor. Maybe there's a resurgence
of humor that you can have ratio humor. I wish
I knew this black comedian's name, but listen to what
he says, or watch it and see if this doesn't
relate more to society today. If this isn't a better
critique of what's going on racially, then you'd see even
(18:40):
on serious news channels like MSNBC. I'm sorry, ms now
that's the new brand.
Speaker 4 (18:45):
Press I saw in the CNN. Nobody knows black plug
like white winsor.
Speaker 5 (18:59):
I thought I was a good life until like.
Speaker 1 (19:07):
It's a great bet waking up to realize that you
didn't know you're oppressed until a white lady came along
and told you. From a perspective of twenty thirty five,
we could look back and say, do you remember when
President Trump killed the soft bigotry of low expectations? Do
you remember what he did that in the schools by saying, yeah,
there's going to be advanced placement courses if you take
(19:28):
federal dollars, we're going to reward advanced placement kids who
do well in school. We're going to have one set
of disciplinary rules. We're going to reward kids with college discounts.
President Trump could put a bunch of pressure on the
big universities. You'd take all these federal dollars saying hey,
not just scholarships discounts, kids who come from tough areas
(19:50):
are going to get a discount. Or you can just
stop taking federal dollars. You choose, Hey, Harvard stop taking dollars.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
They can't.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
They screwed up their finances too bad. They're too leveraged
into private capital.
Speaker 3 (20:01):
They can't. They can't walk away from federal dollars. Or
we could look back.
Speaker 1 (20:05):
And say we let the mockingbird medium make President Trump's
move quote against the cities into the extreme. I'm going
to be communicating to my friends who are liberal and
family members who are liberal, that I am uncomfortable with
the troops rolling in.
Speaker 3 (20:21):
I don't like the way it looks.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
I am praying that it is not normalized, that it
is not President's Trump's plan to carry this.
Speaker 3 (20:27):
Out throughout the country. I don't think it is.
Speaker 1 (20:30):
And I'm also going to communicate I am sick of
Democrat mayors and Democrat governors being allowed to allow crime
to absolutely run rampant and to set up the cartels
to have supply lines. They have little supply lines.
Speaker 3 (20:44):
Think of this.
Speaker 1 (20:45):
They've got soldiers selling drugs, They've got soldiers delivering drugs
in the separate countries like Seattle. They are not arrested
for DUIs. If you utter the phrase you're here arlegally,
you're letting go. They are operated on and cash brought
in and out. That's a supply chain. The drugs are
brought in, the money's brought out, that's a supply chain.
The human flesh is brought in and brought out. That's
(21:08):
a supply chain. That is a military operation. The cartels
are militarized. When the cartels, Russian, Honduran, Mexican, Chinese cartels
have supply chains in and out of our country. They
have surveillance in our country, Alex was told me the
other day. Then in Los Angeles there's these live streamers
(21:30):
set up, and there are not people being charged with
the job of going down and taking down these livestream
cameras because they've figured out, oh, this isn't social news,
this isn't citizen journalism. These are cartels running ops to
identify the cops. I've told you that Antifa has facial
recognition software on cops that they.
Speaker 3 (21:48):
Stole out of Seattle.
Speaker 1 (21:49):
They stole the faces of cops when they got to
take over a police building. They're militarized. The cartels are
military units within our cities. President Trump as bringing the
National Guard in to meet force with force. He should
be communicating this. It's the cartels who are mostly benefiting
from this crime. And if we were to look back
(22:11):
from twenty thirty five, we could look back at a
time where President Trump killed the cartel presidence in our country.
Praise God, were that the case. A lot of things
to praise God for. If we'll just take a time
and step back at this.
Speaker 3 (22:24):
If you are able to.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
Think about retirement, if you're able to ponder retirement, Praise
God that you've got the ability to do that. Praise
God for the nest egg you have. And then also
remember that we're told time and again to be good
stewards of our money, and we're told to seek wise counsel.
I'm giving you an opportunity to get free wise counsel
in three separate meetings with my friend Zach Abraham, chief
(22:46):
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Speaker 3 (22:49):
Three times.
Speaker 1 (22:49):
He'll meet with you. No time is there and any
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No one's going to feel bad, No one should. The
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Speaker 3 (23:03):
If you like.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
You can be in person, on video, on the phone,
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(23:24):
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Speaker 3 (23:26):
Tell me this.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
The second meeting is really going through your retirement plans,
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(23:48):
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rends for investment advisor investments involved risk and are not
guarantee past performance, isn't guarantee future results Truck twenty five.
Speaker 3 (24:14):
That'sh two five two. If we were in twenty thirty.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
Five America and we were looking back, we could look
back about a discussion regards slavery in a fascinating comparison
that people on the left have started to offer, particularly
when they're talking to a black female officeholder who's the
Lieutenant governor named wins Sears.
Speaker 3 (24:36):
Let's start with a discussion of slavery.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
Yep, that topic, because in twenty thirty five we can
look back and say, do you remember when the Democrats
got away and the left got away with pretending there's
a new form of slavery even as they ignored slavery
around the globe or things could change.
Speaker 5 (24:54):
Let's be very clear. The reason there is no slavery
in the world today. I mean, there's a lot of
slavery in the world today, but in parts of the
world where there's no slavery is because the British Empire
ended it. That's why there is no slavery.
Speaker 1 (25:07):
So this is a production of the Qatar Foundation, and
it appears to be going on in the Middle East,
and that doesn't seem to be a very popular point
of view in the Middle East, where there still is slavery.
Speaker 5 (25:18):
That is well, the fact that you are uneducated about
history doesn't mean it's funny. So let me educate you. Now,
Let me educate you. Now, let me educate you.
Speaker 3 (25:28):
Now.
Speaker 5 (25:29):
I know that the work narrative and the anti Western
narrative on slavery. Well, you're not practicing free speech very well,
are you. You're not practicing free speech very well, are you?
Speaker 3 (25:38):
Mum?
Speaker 5 (25:39):
And I say something you don't like. You're not practicing
free speech very well?
Speaker 3 (25:42):
Are you saying?
Speaker 5 (25:43):
I thought you were all about free speech? How about
you let me finish my point. Here's the point, and
then I'm going to now and then I was the
work narrative and the anti Western narrative on slavery is
there was no slavery, and then the British or the
Americans came along and they started slavery. Slaves were the
first good that were ever traded between human beings. Ever,
(26:06):
they were the first good ever traded. Native Americans had slaves,
Ottomans had slaves, African had slaves. Everybody had slaves. The
reason there is no slavery in the West is the
British Empire, having practiced slavery for a long time like
everybody else.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
Ended it.
Speaker 5 (26:22):
Not only that, not only that the British Empire then
he spent in a tremendous amount of blood and treasure
to force the Middle Eastern slave traders, with the Transaharan
slave trade being much worse than the Transatlantic slave in
terms of the number of people who were killed, in
terms of the way that they were bringing, in terms of.
Speaker 3 (26:44):
How long it lasted.
Speaker 5 (26:45):
It was much worse, and we spent a tremendous amount
of blood and treasure to stop it. That's the true
history of slavery.
Speaker 1 (26:52):
Unbelievably brilliant approach, dealing with the Heckler's unbelievable brilliant approach,
just continuing to speak, ignoring the so called markerator. Unbelievably
great job. America followed in suit. America came and ended
slavery here, not perfectly, not quickly enough. And then the
Jim Crow came along after that, again not perfect, not
(27:13):
quick enough to bring back the vote or to bring
the vote to black people into women. Not quick enough,
but it happened. So in twenty thirty five we can
look back. We can say, remember when the Democrats tried
a stupid thing. This is a sign that is going
on being held by leftists around the country. And in
this case, they're approaching a black officeholder Lieutenant governor Win
(27:34):
some seers South Carolina and sid Enter North Carolina, North Carolina. Hey,
win some If so called trans can't share your bathroom,
then blacks can't share my water fountain. In twenty thirty five,
can look back and remember when they tried that. They
tried to make people who are gender dysphoric, or gender
(27:54):
rebellious or gender denying into slaves. Now you can't deny
being black. I mean you can, I guess, because we
can pretend to be anything. And yes, you're born a certain.
Speaker 3 (28:09):
So called race. You can choose to adopt that, to
magnify it, to ignore it, to deemphasize it in your life,
to make it just part of you, or you can
make it your whole person. Might advise the latter, make
it part.
Speaker 1 (28:21):
Of you, but you can't change it. An attitude towards
your body can change. Everybody knows this, So why are
they holding the signs? Because they're aware that there's a
twenty thirty five around the corner. They're aware of the
slippage of time. They know that twenty thirty five might
(28:43):
be an era where we look back and say, remember
the trans trials. Do you remember all those former so
called doctors and nurses put on trial in the United
States of America for what they did to kids?
Speaker 3 (28:58):
Do you remember the testimonies of the families.
Speaker 1 (29:01):
In twenty thirty five, we could be looking back at
a massive documentary about the jailing, the taking of assets
from doctors like this when they finally admit the financial
ties to this, the billions and hundreds of billions of
dollars bet on this by people like the Pritzker family.
Speaker 3 (29:19):
I mentioned JB. Pritzker earlier.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
His family went all in on so called trans warfare
with the Human Rights campaign where his brother is on
the board, his brother who pretends to be a woman,
Oh and by the way, pretends to be only partly human,
he's a transhumanist. Or in twenty thirty five, we can
look back and say, remember when they got away with that,
and they pretended that being gendered as fork is the
(29:41):
same thing as being a slave. There's lots of ways
to enslave people. One of them is through education or
lack of it. In twenty thirty five meanway, we might
look back at a time where President Trump addressed the
school situation, after he addressed a national guard situation in
the eighty percent of criminals who take on or commit
(30:03):
or twenty percent of criminals who commit eighty percent of
the crime. We might look back at that time and say,
remember when they cleaned out Chicago and Saint Louis and
New York and Washington, d C. And then they came
in for programs for kids. All kids of all races
are going to be expected to perform the same way.
All kids of all races are going to have the
same disciplinary standards all kids of all races can achieve.
(30:25):
And President Trump put this pressure on the colleges, the
big universities. Hey, it doesn't need to be scholarships. It
can be discounts or this. If you take federal money,
you're going to provide a form of your education for free.
You're going to put classroom cameras in every single classroom,
and kids who can't.
Speaker 3 (30:40):
Afford to go to your school, will be able to do.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
This from home, and they're going to be able to
take tests and quizzes from home.
Speaker 3 (30:47):
They can't go meet with the professors.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
They don't get the advantage of an in class experience,
they don't get the dorm rooms, they don't get the meals,
but they get the education for free, and they get
to take tests and quizzes from people who grade those
outside of the university system. In twenty thirty five, we
could look back and say Wow, massive change, or we
could look at more stories like this.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
There's lots of ways to enslave people.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
A young woman thinks she's been freed because she got
to go to college, but in fact she's been enslaved.
Speaker 3 (31:16):
I'll show you this in a second as well.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
Got a note this morning from a dear friend of ours,
very very very dear friend, one of our closest friends
in Idaho, and she's dealing with something that's bone on bone.
So she'd asked about Renew. This is something Renew Healthcare
could help with, So I would ask her to go
to join stem cell talks dot com. We're putting on
a free live webinar coming up on September eleventh at
eleven am Pacific.
Speaker 3 (31:40):
I'm going to be there. Doctor Navarro is a great doctor.
Speaker 1 (31:43):
For renew He's a spinal specialist, specialist on regenitive therapy.
Speaker 3 (31:47):
He's going to be there.
Speaker 1 (31:48):
If you have questions about stem cells, For instance, can
it help regenerate the tissue in your body, in your knees,
the cartilage. The answer is yes, it depends on how
much tissue is there. Go ask your a question at
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your specific question about how long you've had it, how
much you've suffered with it? At Joined stem cell talks
(32:09):
dot com. Can it help with anything that is let's
say aesthetic, Yes, instead of having bovine stuff shot in
this is not bovine.
Speaker 3 (32:18):
What is it cowstuff?
Speaker 2 (32:20):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (32:20):
No, it is botox. Is at cowtoxin shot up in
your face for wrinkles? How about if you just revitalize
your skin?
Speaker 3 (32:27):
It works that way as well. Take your specific.
Speaker 1 (32:29):
Questions, submit them at join stem cell talks dot com.
We're gonna answer as many as we can. We're gonna
look at side by side results of stem cells versus Therapy,
and everybody who attends and goes through the entire live
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Speaker 3 (32:43):
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Speaker 1 (32:45):
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stayed there three times.
Speaker 3 (32:50):
It's extraordinary.
Speaker 1 (32:51):
It's joined stem cell talks dot com. I'll see you
at the free live webinar on the eleventh of September
eleven am Pacific joined stem cell.
Speaker 3 (32:58):
Talks dot com.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
So there's lots of ways to be enslaved, and this
is a very clever way to enslave a girl. So
she is living the dream of attending college, and she
thinks she's free, but she's been enslaved. And listen to
this local news report and listen very very closely at
what the catch is to the story.
Speaker 6 (33:17):
Do you ever think you'd be going to college here?
Speaker 2 (33:20):
No?
Speaker 7 (33:20):
Never, never, many years.
Speaker 6 (33:23):
In some ways, Alicia Ortiz is living an American dream.
The nineteen year old began her freshman year at the
University of Connecticut in Hartford this fall. She's excited to
study public policy. The culmination of hard work. After moving
north from Puerto Rico as a child, do you remember
when you first came to Connecticut.
Speaker 7 (33:41):
Yes, I remember. I was very nervous, but I know
it was gonna be i'm better opportunities for me to learn.
Speaker 6 (33:51):
But Alicia says those opportunities never came to fruition even today.
Could you read this or would it take you a
long time?
Speaker 7 (33:58):
Is in passive seeing were anywhere?
Speaker 6 (34:01):
Alicia graduated from the Hartford Public School System last year,
but she says today she is illiterate. She still doesn't
know how to read or write. When she was in
early education.
Speaker 7 (34:12):
They would just either tell me who stay in a
corner and slee or just draw pictures flowers for them.
Speaker 1 (34:24):
She graduated with honors from the Connecticut Government school System
and she can't read or write. And she's been accepted
at the University of Connecticut and she's enslaved until she
learns to read or write. There's knowledge she'll never have
in ways she'll never communicate or by the way. Her
(34:47):
specialty her focus in college, she's studying public policy, which
is perfect because public policy in twenty twenty five was
about how do you look on camera? What is your
SOB story? How do you connect with people emotionally? What
(35:07):
are you willing to do on camera? What extreme thing
you're willing to say? What extreme position are you willing
to take? How much a victim are you willing to be?
She could be hailed and I could see it happening
as the first illiterate member of the United States Congress.
Speaker 3 (35:23):
I could see that happening. Could you?
Speaker 1 (35:25):
In twenty thirty five, we could look back and say,
remember when they started to allow people who couldn't read
or write to become lawyers? I mean that couldn't happen,
and yet graduated high school with honors, is in college
cannot read or write.
Speaker 3 (35:40):
So again, it's a choice this President.
Speaker 1 (35:42):
Trump and the let's say, doing away with the Department
of Education, but using federal dollars to force states to
do the right thing. Do we kill the soft bigotry
of little expectations that has enslaved that girl? Would you
agree to enslaved her? In the meantime, we can do
another comparison. Another federal judge recently blocked Christy Nome's move
(36:04):
to terminate temporary status for Nicaragua, Honduran, and Nepali immigrants,
and he found that the cancelation was likely.
Speaker 3 (36:14):
That the policy was likely rooted in racism. Did he
have proof of that?
Speaker 2 (36:20):
No?
Speaker 3 (36:22):
Did he have anything to indicate that that might be proof? No,
he said, it's likely.
Speaker 1 (36:27):
In this case, we have people who've been brought into
our country, and you can make a very very data
driven argument that they've taken jobs from native native born
Americans or citizens of America, that they've taken jobs from
citizens of America.
Speaker 3 (36:40):
You can make that argument. You can make the argument
that they've taken resources from citizens of America, and you
can make that based on data. You could say, we
feel like it's racist, But there is anyone making that
claim about that girl? You think she's the only one.
Was it because she was especially.
Speaker 1 (36:56):
Sweet and winsome that they did that for her or
to her? We could look back in twenty thirty five
and say, wow, remember when there was the religious revival,
Remember when all those people came to Christ and began
to understand that, in God's eyes were all the least
of these. Do you remember when there was that change
in policy. We began to understand that we have a
(37:18):
country to steward that God gave us with these enormous resources,
And do you remember when there was this change and
we became willing to do the hard thing to choose
Christian pain. What what it mean by choosing Christian pain?
Being a society that allows girls like that to graduate
into college and into jobs is painful. Speaking truth to her,
(37:40):
saying honey, you can't be, you can't go study public policy, you.
Speaker 3 (37:44):
Can't read or write. It might not feel good, but
it's honest. It's not lying.
Speaker 1 (37:48):
You're choosing Christian pain. You're speaking to her out of
truth and love. We could look back at a time
like that and things would have changed, or we could
look back and say, remember, we let them get away
with that. One of the things about President Trump is
he's not letting people get away with stuff. One other
thing about him is he seems to have a true,
abiding love for America in all of its quirky wonderfulness.
(38:10):
Because America does have a quirky wonderfulness. Particular if you're
someone who's never visited our country. There was just a
little incident that happened with a dude and a boat
and some visitors, and it speaks to one of the
differences in America, and it's a difference that we should maintain.
Speaker 3 (38:26):
I'm going to offer you a difference in your.
Speaker 1 (38:28):
Lifestyle on a day to day basis, and it's also
a chance to do something very very much in line
with building the Kingdom of Eavan. I'm going to ask
you to change the soap that you use on your body,
but only after you try Allan soaps. Allan's is made
in America. It's all natural. It's made by a family
with three generations of soap making expertise. And Alan the
young man who is the chief soap officer and works
(38:50):
there on a daily basis.
Speaker 3 (38:51):
He's been through eighteen operations.
Speaker 1 (38:52):
He's effectively nonverbal because of his placement on the autism spectrum.
Other autism spectrum communicates that he and Ian, his brother,
who were there, they're going to lose their dad. John,
who runs the company and started to employ his sons,
is dying. John has decided to not fight. He knows
he's going to the Lord. This has been a long battle.
He's been through a ton of medical battles and in
(39:16):
this point he's ready to go to the Lord. I'm
asking you to do this as a Christian or as
a good person. Try the soap and if it is excellent,
or it's at least as good as the soap your
purchase now from some big company who doesn't care about
all lives mattering. If it is not your quality standard,
never bite again. If it meets your quality standard and
(39:36):
you like the mission, please become a subscriber as soon
as possible. I say this because John is passing on
the management of Allan's to his wife, so that Ian
and Allen can continue to have a place to work
and you can continue to have access to soap that
is all natural, made in America, in gentle on the skin.
It's alansoaps dot com slash Todd. President Trump seems to
(39:57):
have a unique love for America, and I think for
real Americans that is, non shiny shoes, non elites. I
don't know how he has this, given the fact that
President Trump was absolutely born with a silver spoon, not
just in his mouth, but in every hand and on
every foot. He had all those advantages. Maybe it's because
(40:18):
he loves building and he spent time around people who build.
Maybe it's because he likes the idea of being a
tough man, a tough guy, so he's been around guys
who are hard men. There's something about President Trump that
ties him to real Americana And it's not a racist thing,
far from it.
Speaker 3 (40:36):
It's an America thing. If you've ever had an.
Speaker 1 (40:39):
Opportunity to show people who've never really been to our
country something about America, what would you choose. Well, a
couple from the UK got to see America from a
point of view that most people in the UK never see.
It's not going to be that new to you, but
it was very, very new to them.
Speaker 3 (40:56):
First time I've ever seen that.
Speaker 6 (40:58):
Really came here looking for an alligate.
Speaker 5 (41:01):
I've never seen one before.
Speaker 3 (41:06):
You don't mind, so guys shuts overjoyed this wind blowing
his face back, fishing out of the rivers. It's utterly beautiful.
Hey wow, little alcohol in the boats. That can't be real.
(41:27):
Oh taking shots from the is that whiskey? I had
his old rope swing?
Speaker 2 (41:30):
What was that?
Speaker 3 (41:31):
He was naked. I've never shot a gun in my life. Okay,
right after the whiskey, and yeah, that's that's safe shooting
across the river where you can't see in the trees.
That's some safe shooting. Maybe no backstop, good check for bodies.
Speaker 2 (41:52):
This has been one of the most amazing is in
my lives. These are some of the greatest people in
the world.
Speaker 1 (41:58):
In twenty thirty five, we can look back at a renaissance.
We can look back at a president who is willing
to do some things that seem very extreme, and they
are rolling the National Guard troops into the cities. Is extreme,
let's admit it. And the cartels are militarized organizations. Paramilitary
at least, this supply chains in and out of our country.
(42:21):
It's military on military.
Speaker 3 (42:23):
They benefit from the crime, They benefit from cops having
to concentrate on street crime and.
Speaker 1 (42:29):
On the destable design distabilizing crimes rather than the drug crimes.
I hope that they'll begin to communicate this. Maybe they
just don't want the cartels to know that they know
that we know. I hope they'll communicate it. We also
can look back at a time where President Trump put
pressure on the colleges in the schools to stop the
segregation going on in schools. Segregation like that Hispanic girl
(42:53):
graduating with honors though she can't read. She's in college
and she can't read. There's lots of President Trump could do.
And in twenty thirty five, I hope we look back
and say, thank God he did it.
Speaker 3 (43:04):
This is the Todd Hermannshaw. Please go, be well, be strong,
be kind, and make a decision today to think about
your eternal future. You think twenty thirty five is a
long time away, how about a trillion years. Choose Jesus
and choose attorney to do with him. I hope you
get to spend time with your loved ones today, as
I will my beloved wife