Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the Three Stories version of The Todd Herman Show.
AOC versus Tosi Gabbard. Two videos, two women, One simple conclusion.
Story number two, when everything is racism, nothing is racism?
Part one billion, this having to do with why black
people are apparently fat some of them. And story number three,
(00:21):
a TV comedian admitted he has absolutely no idea why
human beings have free speech.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Rise.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
We'll talk about this with the help of Bisible. If
you're a smaller medium sized business owner and you do
not have actual corporate credits, you have put yourself at risk,
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My friends at Visible will help you with that in
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we don't do anything here that matters, not in any
(00:51):
eternal sense at all, without the help of God Almighty,
Thank you. Lord Todd Herman Show.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
Prove by big pharma, technocrarats and tyrants everywhere from the
high mountains of Free America. Here's the Emerald City. Exide
Todd Herman.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
Today is the day the Lord has made, and these
are the times through which God has decided we shall live.
You can learn a lot about a culture by looking
at who leads that culture. Because culture is something that
comes down from the top. People observe what happens in
a culture. They observe how leaders behave. And you can
(01:46):
see this in any culture, you know. When I worked
in the Fortune five in the world at Microsoft, some
of my friends gave me a kind of heads up
into the culture. Some things you could do to appear
to be a hard charger even if you weren't get
to the office early. Never eat lunch alone, find out
what time your boss leaves, and never leave before he does.
(02:07):
Always be available to email. And that was annoying, but
it was also very very true. And when that happened
to me, and I started to go to the gym
really really early in the morning so I could get
to Microsoft and get work done before meetings began. I'd
be in the cafeteria at seven o'clock in the morning,
you know, eating and answering email. It happened that's where
(02:28):
I met a bunch of senior vice presidents and big
wigs because they eventually noticed that I was sitting there
and introduced themselves, and it made this impression. So you
can tell a culture by how the leaders behave, and
the leaders aren't always the bosses. And in Washington, d
C leadership has different qualities. And in the Democrat Party
(02:48):
versus the Republican Party, we're going to look at two
women who I would argue are both camera jenic, both
video jenik. The camera loves them. I would argue that
in each of their own way, there's somewhat effective in communication,
but there is a distinct difference in them. You can
know people by their followers, you could know people by
(03:09):
their antagonists. So let's start with AOC and she is
being touted and it's not just it's not just by
DNC acolytes and people who are freakishly slavishly devoted to
the letter d because it's beautiful, because it's got that
straight part and that bulbous part, that's such a lovely letter.
It is, in fact, people with influence, people like Joe
(03:34):
Scarborough saying that she should be a presidential candidate for
the left. AOC bartender become congressional candidate by virtue of
a campaign of auditioning. They auditioned people to be congress women,
and it was about being camerogenic, videogenic. So here's AOC
(03:58):
leading her people. Remember, we can culture by the leadership.
You can judge someone by their followers and their antagonists.
Here's AOC.
Speaker 3 (04:06):
And now what DHS is trying to say again, they're
using public intimidation because they know that they cannot come
for us all. They know that they are not that
they cannot come for us all. And recently what they
said is that DHS is allegedly looking into arresting members
of Congress who were showing up for their legal and
(04:29):
constitutional obligation to conduct oversight. If anyone's breaking the law
in this situation, it's not members of Congress, it's the
Department of Homeland Security. It's people like Tom Holman and
Secretary Christy No, you lay a finger on someone, on
Representative Bonnie Watson Coleman, on Representative or any of the
(04:51):
representatives that were there, you lay a finger on them,
we are going to have a problem.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
So let's stop and analyze. Are they being arrested for
trying to provide oversight? Is that it Are they being
arrested because they showed up to look around if they're
going to be arrested. No, Now, she makes the argument
that members of Congress have the right to show up
(05:17):
at any time and look around any federal facility. Okay, okay,
let's say that's true. And let's say the DHS agents
acted improperly in denying them. That the mayor of Newark
doesn't have that right. He was there with them. But
let's just say this is true. So if a federal
(05:37):
agent is violating your civil rights or your rights as
a member of Congress, you then get to hit them.
That's what we're being told. You get to body check
them and push them around and threaten them. That is
not how our system works, but it's how emotions work.
The Democrat Party cannot move away from emotionalism. They cannot
(06:01):
move away from some specific emotions. They are rage and
anger and resentment, which leads to sin feelings like coveting.
They lid to sin feelings like unliving people, those fantasies,
the sort of demonic impulses, and it leads to mass confusion.
(06:21):
You can know a culture by their leadership. You can
know a leader by their acolytes. Now you can say
this is an unrelated clip, it's not. It's a woman
at Pine Richland School District in Pennsylvania. Now, just listening
to how she speaks and what she is thanking the
school district for doing. You can guarantee yourself that she
(06:44):
would be a voter of AOC if she had the chance.
Definitely sympathetic to AOC. And listen to this woman trapped
in confusion. And in this case, it's not even anger,
it's sad levels of confusion of need. This is how
women like this are taking advantage of by leaders like AOC.
(07:06):
And I warn you this is bizarre. Thanks to libs
of TikTok for pointing this out.
Speaker 4 (07:11):
I would like to recognize miss Mansfield, especially, who is
the best teacher my daughter has ever had. She lets
her be as weird as she is, and she encourages
it and she enjoys it. And that is really meaningful
to me and my family because not having like a
(07:33):
kid who's so She calls my daughter Ellie cat because
at it during attendance, my daughter mews instead of saying here,
And she doesn't make her feel bad about it. She
just embraces it and she loves it. And that's really
cool for me as a parent, and it's really cool
for my daughter to feel seen in school. So I
(07:54):
really appreciate that. And that's all I have to.
Speaker 1 (07:55):
Say, furries are a precursor to preferring a different body,
and not every kid who goes the furry route is that,
but adults who welcome kids into the furry world are
often that, and often helping kids along the way into
(08:16):
that form of confusion. It's emotionalism. It's not the worst,
but it's confusion and emotionalism. And it's tied up right
back up into AOC and the Democrats pushing anger, coveting, rage, resentment, emotionalism,
and then coming and affirming all that and affirming the
communication of confusion that comes with that. We could know
(08:40):
this about AOC's followers. They are emotionally driven, confused people
who've been pushed into sin impulses because of these emotions.
So we're going to contrast that with Tulci Gabbert in
a second, well contrasts this during a time where our
country is really right now facing a mass precipice. We're
(09:01):
on the edge of a cliff, and the cliff is this,
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In this contrasts and compare, you have a corrupt set
of ideas that are being pushed under the cover of
emotionalism by leaders, in this case a woman AOC. Let's
contrast AOC with Tulsi Gabbard, obviously a woman on the
(10:26):
Republican side of things. Tulsi Gabbard, I would argue, is
just as camera jenic, as videogenic as AOC. I would
argue that she's a better communicator, although she is not
as bubbly. She doesn't do the kind of wacky thing
sometimes AOC does. That's not who Tulsi is. Show seems
to be communicating on a level basis, but on an
intellectual basis. She makes an arguments. This is prior to
(10:50):
her getting into office in the D and I. This
is during the campaign. She makes an argument naming officials
in American government that she thinks are domestic and means
to this country. Listen to how she does it and
compare it to AOC storm.
Speaker 5 (11:04):
The Capitol on January sixth to try to stop Congress
from carrying out its constitutional responsibilities. We're behaving like domestic
enemies of our country. But let's be clear, the John Brennans,
Adam Schiffs, and the oligarchs in big tech who are
trying to undermine our constitutionally protected rights and turn our
country into a police state with KGB style surveillance. Are
(11:28):
also domestic enemies and much more powerful and therefore dangerous
than the mob that storm the Capitol. John Brennan said.
Speaker 6 (11:38):
So I know looking forward that the members of the
Biden team who have been nominated or have been appointed
are now moving in laser like fashion to try to
uncover as much as they can about what looks very
similar to insurgency movements that we've seen overseas, where they
germinate in different parts of the country and they gain strength,
(11:59):
and it brings together in unholy alliance frequently of religious extremists,
so authoritarians, fascists, bigots, racists, nativists, even libertarians.
Speaker 5 (12:12):
Now, President Biden, I call upon you and all members
of Congress from both parties to denounce these efforts by
the likes of Brennan and others to take away our
civil liberties that are endowed to us by our creator
and guaranteed in our constitution. If you don't stand up
to these people now, then our country will be in
(12:34):
great peril.
Speaker 1 (12:35):
Is that emotionalism? She provides examples. She on the Republican side,
in her opinion, admits that there were people on jan. Six,
and there were people on Jan. Six who tried to
break into buildings, albeit they were getting help from DC
Capitol police officers and their FBI agents undercover there, so
they were getting got help. She lays that out in
a calm fashion. It's not emotional. I don't think anyone
(13:00):
following Tulci Gabbard for emotional reasons or revenge reasons. And
in her role as the Director of National Intelligence, she
just decided to fire some people, which bosses get to do,
and then to reorganize. So she fired a guy named
Mark Collins, is the acting chair of the National Intelligence Council,
and his deputy, Maria langen Rikoff. And the reason she
(13:20):
said she did that that these people were radically opposed
to President Trump. President Trump runs the executive Tulci Gabbard
reports to President Trump as the Director of National Intelligence.
These people oppose President Trump's efforts, his policies, and his agenda.
They don't belong there. Tulcia reorganized this so it's closer
to her. She has more oversight. You can look at
(13:43):
a culture and judge it by its leaders, and you
can judge leaders by their followers and their antagonists. Here's
John Brennan responding to someone who's a new boss, firing
a couple of employees.
Speaker 2 (13:54):
All things. Just makes me livid.
Speaker 7 (13:56):
It's appalling and outrageous and demonstrates why Tulsi Gabbert never
should have been confirmed. Respective of national intelligence, Michael Collins
and Marie Langen Raikoff are two of the most experienced, accomplished,
and talented analysts in the entire US intelligence community, with
over sixty years of combined experience. They have worked for
(14:18):
successive administrations since the nineteen nineties. They have demonstrated time
and time again their capabilities, their competence, their integrity, and
they have served as role models for a generation of
intelligence officers inside of CIA.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
Really, did they come forward and say, hey, stop, wait
a minute, Hold on a second, Donald John Trump doesn't
work for Vladimir Putin. Did they come forward and say,
wait a second, there is no urine tape. This is
Hilary Clinton manufactured APO laundered through a corrupt law firm.
(14:54):
Did they do that. Did they come forward and say, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, no,
the hunter Biden lapt I think that's not Russian propo,
that's real. We have it. We have the hard drives,
images of the hard drives. Did they do that? Nope, Nope,
they didn't. They can have all the experience in the world.
(15:14):
But were they then lies like that affect an election
the outcome of election. They absolutely should have been fired
before this. Tolcy Gabbert did the right thing. Two women,
two videos, one conclusion, one side selling emotionalism and confusion,
the other side making executive decisions. Story number two. When
(15:40):
everything is racism, nothing is racism. I started to say
this during the Black Lives Matter Incorporated riots because I
care about Black lives, their lives. God values human life,
were to value it, which is why I cannot support
the mauise organization Black Lives Matter Incorporated because I care
(16:01):
about Black people. So I started to talk about when
everything is racism, nothing is racism. This is a guy
who's a finalist to be the president of the University
of Florida, and he's a DEI activist, and he's talking
here about his view of racism, and he sets up
this discussion about everything being racism, therefore nothing is racism.
(16:22):
Let me just quickly explain that if you tell your
child that everything is hot, then nothing is hot. If
you tell your kid, don't touch the dog, the dog
is hot. Don't touch the ball, the ball is hot.
When you tell your kid don't touch the stove the
stove is hot, he's going to touch the stove because
there's never been any real hot Watch this, and then
we'll get to an example of everything being racism. Therefore
(16:45):
nothing being racism.
Speaker 8 (16:46):
He systemic racism is embedded in every corner of any institution,
and so the only way to saw what is to
have everyone doing their part first being truthful about the
fact that there is racism.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
But sec okay, pause, of course there's racism. It's a
human sin problem, but it's embedded at everything. Institutional racism.
What is an institution, Well, it's pieces of paper, it's
a building. So everybody has racism that goes against the rules.
We're told that black people don't have.
Speaker 8 (17:19):
Racism, and actually we're looking at themselves inside and asking
what parts of me are racist? And what steps do
I have to take to move beyond that. Everybody has
an implicit bias, and an institution can only change if
everyone takes ownership of and responsibily for changing the place.
(17:43):
And so I'm trying to address some pretty difficult issues.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
We could start with this, Why don't we just go
to racism being applied against other people? Why don't we
just recognize that institutions cannot solve a sin problem, nor
can laws. Why don't we then protect people with I
don't know laws against Let's say, blocking, oh, I don't know,
Asian men from getting into Harvard. Oh wait, wait, that
(18:11):
was racism because they're doing that, they're blocking Asian men
from getting in. But that's virtuous racism. But when everything
is racism, nothing is racism. Right now, when this all
unfolds and you start to understand what has become of
this thinking that there is institutional racism in everything and
everybody and all people are racist, and even if they
(18:31):
don't know what they're racist, then it makes sense that
you get to an incredibly sad position with a woman
explaining that her obesity is the fault of institutional racism.
And I'll show you that in a second. Right after
I tell you how you can do something for your
body that can help you feel better about what you're
doing for people's lives, you're going to wash your body
(18:52):
for the rest of your life with soap unless you
want to be a stinky, disgusting hippie. And if so, well,
that's your choice. You can wash your body with soap
that's made in China or other countries. In the case
that China's probably made with slave labor, might be tested
on people against their will. That is not the case
with Alan Soaps. Alan's is made in America by a
family with three generations of soap making expertise. And that
(19:15):
name Alan. That's a person. He's thirteen. He's been through
about eighteen operations. He's effectively nonverbal. This soap company exists,
so he has a place to work, and work he does.
He invents fragrances of soap. He works in packaging, he
works in quality control. His brother Ian works there now,
so does Amy. They're both impacted by autism. So make
(19:36):
a decision. Wash your body with something that shows all
lives matter to you. Go to alansoaps dot com slash todd,
get tempers out off all of their products there alansoaps
dot com slash todd. When everything is racism, nothing is racism,
When all institutions are racist and none are racist. When
everything is hot, nothing is hot, and this constant drumbeat
(19:57):
of everything is racism has created utter, tragic circumstances where
people have decided that something they have absolute control over
is the result of racism. This woman is talking about
obesity in the black community.
Speaker 3 (20:13):
When people talk about black women being obese, I hate
it because it becomes a way to blame us for
a set of conditions that.
Speaker 1 (20:19):
We didn't create.
Speaker 3 (20:21):
They are living in the Trump era, and look, those
policies kill our people.
Speaker 9 (20:25):
And what public health.
Speaker 3 (20:26):
Practitioners think is that our stress responses in the body
change our metabolism.
Speaker 1 (20:31):
It's literally that.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
The racism that you're experiencing and the struggle to make
ends meet actually means the diet don't work.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
For you to say you've become fat because President Trump
has been in office for one hundred and fifty days
this time, that level of insanity where everything is racism,
therefore nothing is racism, does something deeply, deeply damaging. It
(21:05):
creates mental impotence, spiritual impotence. I am an object affected
through the ether, through the miasma of the air. President
Trump has made me fat. Or you could turn to
the Holy Spirit. God told us we are not to
have spirits of fear, but to have comforted him. You
could turn and know that God is on the throne.
(21:28):
You could turn and know that you're loved, made in
the womb, knitted together. God counted every hair in your head,
and know that He loves you without regard to your
body size. But you'd like to have you take responsibility
for the temple story number three. There's a TV comedian
and I can't stand TV comedians A because very few
(21:50):
of them are funny, at least to me. B Because
they always have one point of view, and that point
of view is very much always anti Trump. I guess
you could give Bill Marris some credit for going outside
the lines there a little bit, and from occasionally he
went and had dinner with President Trump, So let me
just modify that he did decide to do that to
his credit. There's a guy named John Oliver, and when
(22:13):
people write for him and he ends up saying these things,
I want to know how much of this is on
the teleprompter and how much of this is John Oliver.
John Oliver made a statement about free speech, and he
was responding to a video from the Anti Defamation League,
which isn't a particularly good organization. Then on their website
the other day they had a description of anti Antifa flags,
(22:39):
and they said that anti Antifa flags are white supremacists
by nature, because it's opposing Antifa, which stands against fascism. Antifa,
of course one of the parties who's pushing the takeover
of college campuses and the shutting down and the kidnapping
of maintenance workers, not to mention the takeover of cities
and the aggression against police officers leading to many of
(23:01):
them being unlive. That's not anti fascism, it is fascism.
So the Anti Defamation League go put out a video
talking about free speech as a right that comes from God,
and then John Oliver responded to this, his freedom.
Speaker 4 (23:16):
Is a pre political right that rests securely in our.
Speaker 5 (23:19):
Dignity as human beings. It belongs to all of us.
Speaker 9 (23:23):
Okay, although a bit of an issue with a sentence
religious freedom is a pre political rights that rest securely
in our dignity as human beings. Because I've listened to
that up until fifty times and i still have no
idea what she's talking about.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
The Yeah, it's pretty it's I mean, it's a very
difficult sentence to parse. In his defense, I mean, let's
watch it again, and I think you could agree. This
is horribly dense and very very difficult to understand from
a religious, Christian or otherwise God respecting perspective. It's so
(23:59):
just jumbled and difficulty.
Speaker 7 (24:01):
His freedom is a.
Speaker 4 (24:02):
Pre political right the rest securely in our dignity as
human beings.
Speaker 9 (24:07):
It belongs to all of us. Okay, although I'll do
a bit of an issue with a sentence. Religious freedom
is a pre political rights that rest securely in our
dignity as human beings. Because I've listened to that up
until fifty times and I still have no idea what
she's talking about.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
Yes, really, it's really funny because they like to toss
out the F words because that's when they do. That's this.
It's edgy because you never expect it. So I have
a comedian just boom, there's the F word, and I
always hear that. I want to call people and they go, you, guys,
he's using the F word. So let's see if we
(24:44):
can help him here. You know, I'll do that in
the second after I offer you some help. If you're
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lean muscle on your body because it will never go
away except at the age of twenty six, it starts
going away. If you're my age and I'm in my
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(25:08):
trick that. By the way, it doesn't work. If you
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If you don't eat proper amounts of protein, it's not
gonna work. But if you're doing the gym stuff, you're
eating proper amounts of protein. Add this to the toolkit
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(25:30):
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(25:51):
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And that's the only way, by the way, you'll ever
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(26:12):
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So John Oliver has no idea what that statement means.
(26:32):
So let's start with the pre political part, Hey, John,
In the garden of Eden, there was no politics. There
was dignity. We walked with God and He spoke with us,
and guess what out of our mouths came words we
(26:53):
could form and enunciate that began appear in our brains,
and they could travel over to God, who had, at
that time, according to the Bible, since he was walking
with us, had chosen to take on a body form,
and then God could hear them and respond, and we
could ask questions of God. Apparently In fact, God let
(27:17):
us name the animals. If you read the Bible, which
maybe you haven't, it's not in your teleprompter. After all,
we got to name the animals, so God gave us
that right. That's pre political. There are no political parties
in the Garden of Eating, because there was just God.
Now a politician came into the garden in the form
(27:39):
of the serpent, and the serpent used his pre political
free will to speak lies to Eve. Did God really
say you can't eat any of this food, any of
these plants? And he said no, no, no, we can't eat
anything we want here, just not from the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil, or will die, and
(28:00):
Satan's you're not going to die, surely won't die. So
he used his free speech rights, and the words from
his mouth went in the eves ears, and Eve chose
to be misled. She could have gone to God and said, hey,
there's a snake, and the snake says stuff. So she
ate from the fruit, gave some to Adam because she
(28:21):
spoke words and apparently said hey, this is super tasty.
You should try some, and then Adam did. So they
used their free will, pre political John Oliver baffling concept
religious freedom. They had the freedom of the garden of
even go we prefer our own religion. I mean, God,
you've got some good things going. You always existed, always
(28:43):
will exist. You created everything, including us. But we got
some better ideas. So they were cast out of the
garden pre political. Now politics came quickly after that, with tribes,
et cetera. And people. Guess what in a world God created,
even though was fallen, they could go out and create
their own political systems. Pagans had theirs. Eventually the Jewish
(29:06):
people had theirs. They did. That's now, that's the political era,
John Oliver, is that super dense and hard to understand.
Now you see a cousin. True religious freedom is freedom
of speech, and God is pro freedom of speech. He's
also pro accountability. And I can prove God is in
(29:28):
favor of freedom of speech. I could do this in
a thousand ways. Here's a real simple one. Let's go
to Luke eleven, verses fourteen through twenty. Jesus in Beelzebob,
Jesus is driving out a demon that was mute. When
the demon left, the man who'd been made mute spoke,
and the crid was amazed. But some of them said,
(29:49):
by beelzebalb the princes of the prince of demons, he's
driving out demons. Others tested him by asking for a
sign from heaven. Jesus knew their thoughts and said to them,
any kingdom of against itself will be ruined, and a
house divided against it self will fall. If Satan is
divided against himself, how can his kingdom stand. I say
this because you claim that I drive out demons by Beelzebob.
(30:11):
Now if I drive out demons by Beelzebab, by whom
do your followers drive them out? So, then they will
be your judges. But if I drive out demons by
the finger of God, then the king kingdom of God
has come upon you. They were challenging Jesus. In fact,
you could say they committed the unforgivable sin of blaspheming
(30:34):
the Holy Spirit. Here is God himself in the form
of Jesus, part of the tryn Godhead, Father's son and
Holy Spirit. He's casting out demons, and they accuse him
of effectively being the devil. That's I think blaspheming the
Holy Spirit, the one unforgivable sin that was the rules
of a God who created us with free speech, so
(30:57):
free that he allowed us to name the animals and
to add ask him questions, with religious liberty prior to
any politics, so much religious liberty with men. When the
words first politician came in in the form of the
serpents and lied to Eve, surely you won't die. If
you like your plan, you can keep it, get it
(31:18):
then cast out of the garden. The world of politics
began through tribalism, and people had the freedom of religion
at that point, just as they did in the garden.
We just made the wrong choice. I'm glad it could
clear that up for you. John Oliver. I know that
the Bible is not in your teleprompture, but it is
available for reading and understand you can even go rent it.
(31:39):
In fact, it's available on apps. This is the Todd
Hermann Shaw. Please go, be well, be strong, be kind,
and please make every effort to walk in the light
of Christ.