Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You know what John Thune is.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
If you were going to go out and be a
clamation cat and make clamation videos, you'd probably fashion a
cat that looks like John Thune to be a senator.
Right met a month, hadn't ever really paid attention to him,
saw him walking down the hallway, said bet he's a
senator because he was fashioned out of a clamation stuff
(00:25):
to be a senator. Incidentally, last night one of my
friends I was speaking of the youth group and referred
to someone as a cat, and one of the fifteen
year old boys next to me said, cat. Wait, doesn't
he mean person like? It means like dude. So that
sort of cat. So John Thune ignorance and arrogance with
a strong chin and a snappy suit. In other words,
(00:47):
this is a classic shiny shoe Republican and we're seeing
classic shiny shoe Republican stuff going on, and sadly, in
my judgment, President Trump has fallen for it. President Trump,
the very best Buddy Farmer Dunn ever had well next
to the figurehed then again, Joe wasn't running nothing. We'll
talk about this with the help of Bower Capital Management,
(01:09):
that Know Your Risk podcast dot com, and with God almighty, but.
Speaker 3 (01:14):
Todd Herman show is one disapproved but big pharma technocrats
in tyrone cebrianwhere from the high mountains of Free America.
Here's the Emerald City, exiite Todd Herman.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
Today is the day the Lord has made, and these
are the times through which God has decided we shall live.
So I don't need to pick on John Thune other
than it's fun to pick on John Thun and he
deserves to be picked on. And the reason I'm doing
that is because soon is responsible for a slow down
and approving President Trump's judicial nomin He.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
Played that game.
Speaker 2 (02:02):
He's played the game of continuing to let Democrats have
say over some President Trump's nominees.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
He doesn't have to do that.
Speaker 2 (02:11):
For instance, when you're talking about federal prosecutors, there's a
tradition in the Senate.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
It's called a blue card where that.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
State senator has to approve of a federal prosecutor being
brought into the state.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
It's a tradition, it's not constitutional.
Speaker 2 (02:28):
President Trump very correctly said it's a stupid, outdated tradition,
right it is. It came from a time when we
weren't a country that is going through the offensive approach
of a color revolution. That's the deep state and the
left one and the same against US. People who'd like
to remain a constitutional republican have turned to god based
(02:51):
populism to try to achieve that that is a godly
constitutional republic and a conservative one. So Thune has done
all those things. But it was a clip that Thune
provided the world when you decided to sit down and
have a conversation on one of the weekend news shows
that speaks of John Thunness. And of course John Thune
(03:14):
went on MSNBC because that's where all good shiny shoes go,
MSNBC that hates Republicans, so John Thune felt pretty much
at home there.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
So here's John Thune. John Thuning.
Speaker 4 (03:27):
I think some of the members in your caucus who
are having those conversations with other Democrats are people who
might be leaving Washington. I'm thinking about Tom Tillis, I'm
thinking about Joony Ernst. You've also got Bill Cassidy and
Susan Collins coming up for reelection. We'll see how their
bids ultimately fair, but those are some of the names
that we end up talking about the most because they
are willing to at least sometimes question this White House
(03:50):
is what your party is driving towards the potential for
a party of no dissent? And is that a healthy party?
Speaker 5 (03:56):
No?
Speaker 6 (03:56):
And I don't think that's true. I mean I would
argue and I dessent a number of times just in
the last few weeks, for example, well on tylanol for example, Okay,
f CC, I mean there are you.
Speaker 4 (04:08):
Go back and check Junior is talking about that is dangerous?
Speaker 6 (04:12):
Well, I've said that. I think that if I were
if I were a woman, I'd be talking to my
doctor and not taking advice from r FK or any
other government bureaucrat for that matter. But I just think
that there are subjects and issues on.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
Gosh, he's a clever man.
Speaker 2 (04:30):
And by the way, can we go back to that
shot real quick? I ain't no expert in the makeup division,
but is he caked a little thick? I don't know
that that's exactly skin tone? But then again, he is
claymation and that claim age is poorly doesn't it? Under
a harsh lighting, I think the clay begins to dry out.
(04:53):
I would talk to my doctor if I were a woman, good,
because then your doctor can.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Tell you to get shot up with a gene sequencing
device like that.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
Or your doctor could tell you, well, we have to
give your baby in HB and B vaccine have to
babies life's at risk. Well wait, isn't that mostly sexually transmitted? Yeah,
but got to give them the vaccine because your doctor
can tell you that, And the mother could say, well,
(05:29):
I'm not hepatitis be positive, or maybe you should test
me before I give the baby the vacut No, got
to get the vaccine and the human popol upavirus. Gotta
got to defend your child against that. Wait, isn't that
sexually transmitted to Well?
Speaker 1 (05:44):
Why wait?
Speaker 2 (05:47):
You never know what those infants are gonna do when
they're in the hospital bed. We sometimes will see the
infants crawling out of their their little beds and getting
in bed with one another and go it at it.
So John Thune being clamation, I mean, he gets put
away at night, so he doesn't follow the news cycle.
(06:10):
Isn't aware of what we're aware of in terms of
what RFK Junior is trying to do.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
Isn't aware that thailand Hal's makers.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
Do not recommend it for pregnant Well, they say people,
which is yet another reason to not trust them because
only women can get pregnant. He's not aware that the
company that owns Thailand All had discussions about the signals
that it was harming people and causing liver damage, etcetera.
(06:45):
He can't go do the Google search my wife did.
My wife said, finally, Thomas, what do mean tayland All?
She said, no, Todd, this stuff is really bad. With
that strong chin and that snappy suit and that ignorance
and that arrogance. Is living back in nineteen sixty two
(07:10):
when his claymation first came about, when we could trust
the White Coats. He's living back in nineteen sixty two,
where our country was not under attack from within, not
the way it is now and through bureaucratic agencies like
it is now.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
I'll tell you something I learned the USDA is doing
in a second here that the USA is.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
Doing and they didn't see fit to ask you permission
before they did this, says John thun Is, saying just
go trust your doctors.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
Okay, all right.
Speaker 2 (07:49):
I wanted to tell you the stuff at Bone Frog
Coffee is it's it's we're right on the edge of something.
Did you know that Bone Frog the coffee is in
the new Tail Tom Clancy Books. Did you know that
made it into the New Tom Clancy Books. It's written
into the plots, which is very very cool. Tom Clancy's
passed on, but the legacy of his authorship continues. And
(08:11):
this is happening at a time where we're trying to
push bone Frog into a physical location. And I still
didn't say push, because it's going to be Tim's decision
to do that. He's the founder and CEO bone Frog Coffee.
He's my good friend. He was in Navy Seal, did
three diploments on our behalf as a medic attached to
the teams. Bone Frog is from that, the bone Frog logo,
(08:32):
the insignia. It signifies a fallen Navy seal. Ten percent
of proceeds go to the families of Navy seals. And
the coffee itself is utterly seller. It's the very best
coffee in the world. And it got that way because
Tim recruited Dave Stewart, who started Saltle's Best Coffee, to
mentor the team and to make and to make many
of the roasts. So we're on right next to it.
(08:52):
I know for a fact that Tim has looked at
commercial real estate. So you can help push us into
a position. Or Tim, it's his company where you could
actually drive up get the coffee.
Speaker 1 (09:03):
Now you can go do that.
Speaker 2 (09:04):
You can go buy it from him physically at the
warehouse and he's get a little storefront in Seattle. But
we're talking about brood for you, imagine driving through the freeway,
done the freeway and seeing a big bone Frog store.
That's what we're talking about. You can help us with this.
If you've tried the coffee. Upgrade to subscription. It's that easy.
If you're buying it single handedly, you're spending too much money.
(09:26):
So go to Bonefrog Coffee dot com slash tod, upgrade
to a subscription, use promo code TOD. At checkout, you
say fifteen percent on that subscription coffee Bonefrog Coffee dot
com slash todd.
Speaker 1 (09:37):
The USDA and jump Thud. Doesn't he work run them?
Speaker 2 (09:42):
I think he could have, Like we could have the
Thune Claymation thing, Get Claymated over to the USDA and
it could go knock on the door and we could
have a little play where the mister Bill Claymation John
Thundude knocks in the door and claymation.
Speaker 1 (09:58):
Dude says, what.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Where are you infecting bats with a vaccine that the
CDC warns can infect human beings through a virus, a
vaccine virus that crosses animal species.
Speaker 1 (10:17):
Did you know they're doing this six states?
Speaker 2 (10:21):
Now, keep in mind, they would never spray garbage onis
from the sky.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
That's all those are just that's a conspiracy, that's just
steam six.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
The Epic Times is reporting this. Vigilant Fox picked this up.
You're not going to find it on the Google machine.
But what they're doing is they're putting up this this
fish meal and inside it has a recombinant vaccine, comminant
vaccine that can cross animal species.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
It's designed for bats, and I did some quick research.
Speaker 2 (10:54):
Bats fly, so it doesn't stay at the site. They
admit it can cross animal species. The CDC says, yeah, you.
Speaker 1 (11:03):
Know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
You might end up with a virus that came from
a vaccine that was put into bats and made it
into mice and other animals.
Speaker 1 (11:17):
But it's all good.
Speaker 2 (11:18):
We've done safety tested this, but they haven't. There's no
independent safety analysis of this. But John Thune, well, you know, if.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
I guess if I were.
Speaker 2 (11:33):
If I were a citizen of America, not a rule
of America, I would trust the USDA before I trust
uh RFK Junior, do you see.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
The shiny shoeism.
Speaker 3 (11:47):
I trust.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
I trust the authorities super trustworthy.
Speaker 2 (11:53):
Now this is gonna sound like I'm just in it
to bang on President Trump, but I'm not. If you noticed,
I opened this by talking about out what they've done.
Foon has done to slow the parts of President Trump's
agenda with which I agree and I think you probably agree.
Now I do not agree with once again Donald John
Trump being Donald P. Trump, which is Donald Farmer Trump.
(12:15):
And in this case, it's this explosion of IVF pregnancies
and the selling of babies.
Speaker 1 (12:23):
And I will say this again.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
I know a couple and we used to hang out,
lives to do a lot of things together, and they're friends,
and they had to use IVF and they're the sort
of people we want to have kids. And yet they
could have adopted and they made a different decision. So
I am not saying that IVF should be eliminated. Now
(12:49):
there are people who are saying that friends of mine,
Katie Faust, for instance, who fights for children's rights, thinks
it should be eliminated. She thinks it should be illegal
on an ethical grounds. So does the Catholic Church, or
not the Catholic Church, but many Catholics, a lot of
Evangelicals things so because they're leave behind fertilized eggs that
can be human beings, and in many people's views, are
(13:12):
human beings.
Speaker 1 (13:13):
Just frozen in stasis.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
Now, the people I know who did this, friends who
used to spend time together, they organize over this a lot,
and it's tough for them.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
So what President Trump has done is he has radically
lowered the cost for IVF.
Speaker 2 (13:34):
And what he did, of course, is he went to
these companies and said, abusing the bully pulplit, you're.
Speaker 1 (13:38):
Going to radically lower the cost.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
No streamlining, bureaucracy, passing savings onto them, promoting it. Now,
let's just pay attention to some things, because we talked
about claymation man John Thune, the Claymate clamation created United
States Senator. Remember when he said, trust your doctor. If
I was a woman, trust my doctor. The same doctor
(14:01):
who made it difficult for you to conceive naturally, that doctor.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
Who got you shot up with the Pfizer or the Maderna.
Mr anda shots that has caused many women to not.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
Be able to sustain a pregnancy and not be able
to get pregnant. The same farmer that has helped to
lower sperm rates in men, that that pharma, the farmer
that has caused women to end up with terrible problems
like the softening of the walls of the momb and.
Speaker 1 (14:35):
The babies died that way.
Speaker 2 (14:37):
They are all relatively new things. So as this is
going on, hey look let's let's let's have IVF. We've
done everything else to bottom out the population, let's boost
it with IVF. So in vitro fertilization is a solution
(14:58):
some people have had to use. I'd be glad to
talk to people who've had to use it. But the
ethics of it are absolutely questionable. And there is a
guy named Reverend Tad's Potulisk is a senior ethicist at
the National Catholic Bioethics Center, and he talked about this
(15:20):
and how he says God used this. Now President Trump,
as I see it as a baby Christian, he's developing
in his faith and everybody starts somewhere. But President Trump
is once again proving himself to be the very best
friend of pharma because on one hand they've driven down
birth rates. On one hand, they've driven up spontaneous abortions
and miscarriages. On one hand, they continue to push birth control.
(15:44):
On one hand, they continue to push abortion. They're all
rolled up under the same organism. On the other hand,
having invented problems, they come now with the solution. And
the biggest pro pharm estates are the ones where you
can go and purchase babies in bulk, writ in yourself
a check and people know, I know who did this,
(16:08):
used their eggs and their sperm, their kid, just with
the in vitual part having been done outside the woman.
So we'll go through some of these objections that the
Reverend Tad Patril, the Taz the senior ethicist in a second.
(16:29):
There are ethical concerns when companies don't want you to
read the fine prints.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
Have you ever been in a situation like I remember
we were.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
Buying my wife a car and this guy really really
tried hard to push us into this, and and I
kept telling him, I just hey, listen, all I'm saying
is I want to see the vehicle records.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (16:51):
I just want to see the mechanical records, and he said, well,
that's not doing a lot for me. Okay, Well, I'm
not here to do for you. I may end up
buying the suv, but okay, if I give you the records,
are you.
Speaker 1 (17:04):
Going to commit to buying the car? No?
Speaker 2 (17:07):
But when I see the records, I'll be one step
closer to making a decision.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
Yeah, I don't. That's not doing a lot for me. Okay,
Well see you later. You're leaving.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
Yeah, but you like the car, A tester of it? Yep,
I'm leaving. Sorry, I'm not going to put up with this.
We walked out, went and found the same suv a
year earlier, very recent, nicer, fewer miles bought it with
cash on the spot. A couple days later. I drove
it there. I just asked to be see the sales manager.
(17:40):
Just told them, Hey, here's the story.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
What happened.
Speaker 2 (17:42):
I just want you to know. This should have been
your sale. Here, said this guy should me. So you
don't want to have me have the details. Your bank
did this to you. In all likelihood when you started
your company. Your bank did not tell you. We're not
really going to base any of this. We're not going
to actually respect you as a corporation. So we'll put
corp on your card, we'll create a business account, we'll
(18:06):
even loan you money. And if you have a corporate
credit card, you're on the hook for that personally in
all likelihood. And if you have a bigger loan, let's
say you did a capital expenditure loan and you're on
the hook for that. That's not your corporation. They're gonna
treat that as you unless you have the corporate veil.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
That's one issue.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
The other issue is if God forbid, your sued and
you think you have the corporate veil but you don't,
the lawyer can go after your personal assets, your home,
bank accounts, retirement accounts, et cetera.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
And one of the first things.
Speaker 2 (18:39):
The lawyer will do is to check to see if
you have the corporate veil. So find out right now.
This is a free service, my friends at bisible gobisible
dot com. That's what the z gobisible dot com will
tell you if you have the corporate veil for free.
If you do not, they will then fix it for
you in seven easy steps. And that part they charge
you for, but it's pennies in comparison to the risk
(19:01):
you're carrying right now, So.
Speaker 1 (19:04):
Go to the website. It's gobisible dot.
Speaker 2 (19:05):
Com with a zegobisible dot com. So Reverend Tad Poscholis,
senior ethicist at the National Catholics Bioethics Center, talked about
IVF and his view at least of how God sees
this ethically speaking.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
And here he is talking about that, Father, Tad.
Speaker 4 (19:25):
Why is IVF a moral.
Speaker 5 (19:29):
Well, you know, the issue here is that each of
us is entitled to be brought into the world in
the marital embrace. And what has happened with modern technology
is we have stepped completely outside that arena. We've turned
to technology, we start creating life in test tubes and
glassware and Peatrie dishes. And what happens is then you
(19:52):
treat that life, that gift of infinite and inestimable value,
as if it were object. You know, something you could
pay for, go down the street to the clinic, make
a down payment, purchase and effect offspring. I mean it
is a kind of objectification, to use a fancy word,
(20:14):
where we treat our children as objects to be acquired
rather than as blessings to be mysteriously received in the
intimacy of the marital embrace between a husband and a wife.
Speaker 2 (20:28):
Now, there's been alternate ways of getting pregnant forever. There's
been cases where a couple cannot get pregnant and they'll
have a sister of the wife's step in to carry
the baby, and that the baby's adopted, and that baby
lives with the mom and dads, and sometimes they tell
the baby, hey, here's what we had to do so
we could have a gift of having you as our child.
(20:50):
That's happened forever. I've f in one way is an
extension of that. If it's the father's sperm in the
mother's egg, it's an extension of that.
Speaker 1 (20:57):
And it is done really really carefully by a lot
of people.
Speaker 2 (21:02):
So in those individual cases where it's done very perfelly,
it's very difficult for people who have a heart, particularly people.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
Who serve the Lord.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
Like my friends. They both serve the Lord. They both
agonize over the fertilized eggs, and this is something that's
going to be between them and God, and it is,
and I'm here to tell you that they absolutely praise
God for the outcome, cheerfully, gratefully. So there are cases
like that, but that's what we're talking about we're talking
(21:31):
about a mechanization of this. We're talking about a normalization,
a commercialization of this. And then the subtext to this
is further, further harmful. There are organizations like Men Having
Babies dot org, and their entire function in life is
to serve usually same sex attracted men. So same sex
(21:54):
attracted men can have babies. Now it's same sex attracted
single men having babies. The further away we step from
God's design, the further we are into our own flesh.
Think about this, there are two ways of doing things.
There is God's way and there is our way. In everything,
(22:19):
the further we step away from God's design, the further
we step towards our own wants, the further we give
into our own desires and our own flesh. Step away
from God's design. When we step into the realm of
parenting way outside of God's design, we're stepping far back
(22:42):
from the godly. So in the case we talked about
last week, this single, same sex attracted man who always
dreamed of having a baby, but he was same sex attracted.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
He hadn't found the right partner yet.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
Not that that matters, because two men cannot produce a
baby together. That never did happen. He did not find
the partner he wants to raise his child with, so
he purchased the baby for himself, and he named her
after a Greek god of sexuality. That's how he named
(23:15):
his baby, after a Greek god of sexuality. The further
we step back from God's design, the more squarely we
are in our own design. And there are two ways
of doing things, ours and gods, which one is most.
Speaker 1 (23:34):
Likely to plant us into.
Speaker 2 (23:37):
The design of satan. God's design are our own design.
I mean, you can do something as simple as when
the devil tempted Jesus in the desert. All those years
are those probably all that time the thirty days and
tempted the Lord after he'd been fasting for thirty days,
and he said to Jesus, if you're truly the son
(23:58):
of God, turn these zones into.
Speaker 1 (24:00):
Breads and feed yourself.
Speaker 2 (24:01):
Because Jesus was hungry, and Jesus could have said, you
know what, there's no harm in that.
Speaker 1 (24:06):
I am pretty.
Speaker 2 (24:06):
Hungry, So yeah, I'll do it when the devil's gone.
I'm not gonna do it in front of them. That
would have been his flesh super hungry. So yeah, I'll
do a deal with the devil. I mean, it's just
a food. Plus I could ask forgiveness later. Jesus is
(24:28):
the only person ever to do this all perfectly. So
he didn't give into his fleshy design and his flesh
he needs.
Speaker 1 (24:34):
He abided.
Speaker 2 (24:38):
If you take this to the level of mechanization that
we're talking here about IVF, where people purchase babies in bulk,
it's not just now the fleshly design of the people
who are having the babies, like the people, my friends.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
And that's not even a fleshly designed.
Speaker 2 (24:54):
They prayed and prayed and prayed about this. They tried
and tried and tried in a traditional sense, their child
this in a great home, in a godly home, lucky
to be there. But on a mechanized sense, we're not
even at this point talking now about the fleshly design
of just the parents, because this has gotten so far
away from God's design. And when President Trump lowered the
(25:14):
cost of this, you know, the people at men having
Babies dot com, they didn't give.
Speaker 1 (25:20):
Trump credit.
Speaker 2 (25:23):
Because they are well entrenched members of the sexual left
that serve the sexual left.
Speaker 1 (25:30):
They simply said, now we can offer lower prices.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
The outcomes for kids raised in homes with same sex
parents is lower across the board in every category of
mental health.
Speaker 1 (25:49):
How could that.
Speaker 2 (25:50):
Be because it's further away from God's design.
Speaker 1 (25:56):
And the father here, Father Ted, So she calls her.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
Father Tad talked about infertility and God's plan, and.
Speaker 5 (26:05):
That's the Lord's plan. I mean, the Lord's plan is
a beautiful one. It's set up where we are truly
recipients of an incredible gift, one that expands way beyond
ourselves in every and any fashion, something that you know,
we are not meant to preponderate over. We're not meant
to be the ones who call the shots. And a
(26:29):
lot of times in the United States, I think that's
the temptation we feel we need to be in control.
This is just another aspect of me pursuing what I
want for my life, rather than you know, pushing a
little bit at the boundaries here and saying to the
Lord Lord, what is it that you're doing here? What
is it that you want in our marriage? And if
(26:50):
a couple is struggling within fertility, as sometimes they are,
when they considered the possibility of doing in vitro fertilization.
So to ask, you know, is what is his plan?
Does he have another way for us to be fruitful
as husband and wife if it turns out to be
the case that they really cannot get pregnant.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
Now I respect the father of what he's doing here,
Father Tad. I respect him as an ethicist. He's way behind,
so far behind, because we're no longer dealing with just
the fleshly desire of people who really want to be parents.
And they're not like my friends. They can't use their
sperm in their egg. So the same sex attracted man.
(27:35):
He's a single parent. He went baby shopping, and he
went looked at a whole series of women and what
they look like, and oh, you know, I like her,
but I don't know if I like the cheek well,
not quite high enough of the cheekbones, and you know.
Speaker 1 (27:50):
What, I prefer a darker hair. So let me page.
Oh you know this is good.
Speaker 2 (27:57):
Yeah, yeah, I'm gonna name my baby after that looks
like an aphrodite.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
Yeah yeah, I want that one.
Speaker 2 (28:05):
That's the one I want. How much is that one?
And that's just one person. But now you're dealing with
the fleshly desire of the people at Men having Babies
dot Com. And they want to make money, and they
got their commissions. They have massive conferences where they all
(28:26):
get together and talk about this and the process, and
people pay to fly to these locations and spend the
weekend and hang out. And so now you've got event
planning and CEOs and coos and vps, and then they
have vendors built around this.
Speaker 1 (28:46):
That's not even the big problem.
Speaker 2 (28:47):
The big problem is in the separate countries where you
purchase babies in bulk. Now we're not even talking about parents.
We're talking about middlemen who can begin to look at
this as a stock market, and they fly in desperate
women and put them in hospital beds and pregnate it,
(29:10):
and pregnate them.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
Twenty thirty, forty at a time.
Speaker 2 (29:14):
The numbers don't matter so long as you can stroke
the check. You visit once, no background check, you fly
back to Russia or Yugoslavia, China, wherever. And when nine
(29:35):
months comes around and all the women have had the babies,
you come and you scoop them all up.
Speaker 1 (29:42):
To do whatever with.
Speaker 2 (29:46):
Now, how far outside of God's design is that? And yeah,
we could go back through the cases of our people
have legitimately done this with the pre planning mind, the
forethought and planning, knowing.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
Their intent was to.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
Traffic the babies to pedophiles or in some cases to
inflect their own lust upon the bodies of the little babies,
and then sell the footage before they finally.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
Sell access to the child. I could sit here and
name fourteen or fifteen cases. We could go back up
and pull up the links.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
President Trump is funding this, He's lowering the cost of this.
So my friends who had the baby through IVF, their egg,
their sperm, it's maybe one step.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
Away from God's design.
Speaker 2 (30:50):
Maybe you could argue, and they're aware of these arguments
that you know what, you should have accepted this and
adopted their ware of there's arguments. They went through this,
they made their decision. I'm thrilled that their parents again
in this time, I do be thri IVF if you
were to take that and say, okay, but one of
(31:10):
our egg are either our egg or sperm is not
working at someone else.
Speaker 1 (31:13):
Okay, this is a little bit further away. But again
there's precedent.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
For a sister coming in and carrying the baby if
the woman, the wife cannot, So this sort of president.
Now we get into the Okay, no one here has
any relationship to the baby biologically at all.
Speaker 1 (31:31):
We're just eggs and sperm.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
And now you're getting pretty far away, even really far away,
because there's no marriage. Then you get into the single,
same sex attracted person who browsed a catalog and found
(31:53):
a baby that looked like it would grow up to
be an aphrodite because that's the name. The same sex
attracted man gave his little baby a Greek sex goddess.
Now you're way outside when you attach a price tag
to this and the browsing of catalogs which happens, and
it's I mean, they're they're virtual catalogs. And we've done
(32:16):
this on the show. I've shown you videos of same
sex attracted men who are documenting their process here and
have actually done reality shows where they start with one
hundred perspective women who are going to carry their babies,
and then they do a reality show and they whittle
it down.
Speaker 7 (32:32):
Daddies, daddies, how did you make me? Well, we browsed
the catalog, then we did a reality TV show. We
chose you because of the bone structure.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
Years ago, on radio, I was astonished that there was
a same sex attracted couple of black women who adopted
a baby and started to raise the baby, and the
demanded that the baby taken back because the baby you
had too white a skin.
Speaker 1 (33:05):
They gave interviews and the Mockingbird media treated them with.
Speaker 2 (33:13):
Respectability, so resolving the underlying issues of infertility.
Speaker 1 (33:20):
A father Tad talked about that. We'll get to that
in just a second.
Speaker 2 (33:23):
Now this can sound like I just don't like medical advances.
That nothing could be further from true. I love medical advances.
I love how God has let us understand the design
for the human body.
Speaker 1 (33:35):
I love that, and I.
Speaker 2 (33:37):
Love the miraculous I am fascinated by stem cells ever
since I first learned about them when I tore my
left shoulder and my friend Boris, who was spotting me,
heard it tear. And he's the guy who introduced me
to Renew. He did that because he'd screwed up his shoulder.
He's a competitive swimmer. He's a master's level Olympic athlete,
(33:57):
a swimmer, and he wasn't able to swim him. He
thought he was gonna have to have surgery. He went
down to Renew in Mexico. They put stem cells in
his shoulder, and in a few weeks he was back
to swimming. Now I didn't have that advantage. It was
a very very terrible tearor but when I got my
right shoulder done, it recovered thousands of times fast as
my left by my left shoulder is probably never going
(34:18):
to be right, it's ever gonna the mechanics are probably
always going to be off.
Speaker 1 (34:22):
Not so with my right shoulder.
Speaker 2 (34:23):
Mechanics on my right shoulder are solid because seven days
after surgery, I got the stem cells and that destroyed
the inflammation in my arm and immediately began rebuilding the tissue.
At the six month point, I mean, at the twelve
eleven week point, I was further along that I was
with my left shoulder at forty eight weeks. Now that's
muscular skeletal. These stem cells, because they team with building capability,
(34:49):
they can get you to a point you may not
need to have a knee replacement. If you have enough
cartilage that they can put stem cells in there and
the cartilage can reconnect, you can go down, get injected,
and in a few months be back not getting cut up.
Friend of mine had so destroyed his body being a
world class powerlifter.
Speaker 1 (35:09):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (35:10):
I mean his process of waking up in the morning
is hours long. I didn't know this, but he had
to walk upstairs sideways. He went down to renew. The
next day he's walking upstairs like a normal person, in fact,
jumping out of bed. This is the inflammation being destroyed,
and then these stem cells go back and rebuild muscle, tendon, bone, cartilage.
It also helps with things like traumatic brain injuries.
Speaker 5 (35:33):
ED.
Speaker 2 (35:33):
Why again, because the stem cells go revitalize that portion
of your body male pattern baldness again, revitalizes the hair follicles,
actually bringing them back to life, so to speak. This
is a medical advance I stand by, and they're the
very best at this. They're so good they're not even
allowed to do this in America because Big Pharma won't
allow it. They've lobbied to make sure you can't do
(35:54):
it this way good or renew, it's our e nue
dot healthcare. Stem cells come from only abilical cords, period
and they screen out eighty to ninety percent of the
stem cells they get because they're that good. Renew r
e n ue dot healthcare. So Reverend had Paschalitz, Senior ethicist,
National Catholic Bioethics Center talked about resolving the underlying issues
(36:18):
of infertility. He's discussing IVF, which President Trump is bragging
about lowering the costs of.
Speaker 5 (36:24):
You know, I'll just say quickly that many times when
there are impediments to a pregnancy, it's very possible to
resolve those impediments, like if the woman has a blocked
fallopian tube, or maybe the man has a low sperm
count because he's been taking some kind of medication and
he could temporarily go off of it, et cetera, And
(36:45):
one needs to work with specialists to resolve the underlying issues.
Speaker 2 (36:51):
So when you hear that and you think, okay, but
yeah you could, you could, Sure you could. But let's
connect this back to something God's design. Was it God's
design that men walk around with terribly low sperm counts
because of pharma, because of those sort of work we
(37:12):
no longer do, because of the foods we've been told
to eat. If you look at the processed foods that
we've been pushed through our system, is it any wonder
that we've got all these problems? Take it back to
God's design. The closer you get to God's design, the
healthier going to be. You know, having weighed almost four
hundred pounds at a time, about almost three or ninety pounds,
people sometimes ask me for shortcuts for regaining metabolic health. Okay,
(37:35):
never eat anything you can't look at and know what
it is. So, hey, that's an apple, I'm gonna eat that.
What does if you saw fruit leather walking around and
you were just walking through your house and you looked
on the counter and there was this stuff laying there
pressed out against the counter, would you walk up, go
do you.
Speaker 1 (37:53):
Know what a bit to do?
Speaker 2 (37:54):
I'm gonna eat that. You'd probably think the cat vomited
wouldn't be something you'd eat. Likewise, with processed foods, you know,
when you have to take something and shape it like a.
Speaker 1 (38:07):
Turkey breast because it's.
Speaker 2 (38:10):
All the bits left over from the turkeys that went
through and the stuff that fell on the side, and
so they take it and they and they squeeze it,
but they make it look like a turkey breast.
Speaker 1 (38:23):
We were not designed for that.
Speaker 2 (38:25):
Now, a turkey breast, you know, you take out the
knife and you cut it and it's got the it's
got the right texture, et cetera.
Speaker 1 (38:32):
It's actual Turkey.
Speaker 2 (38:36):
So the further a way we get from God's design
medically nutritionally, the worse off we are. So it is
with IVF. Now, yes, these things can be solved, but
then we wouldn't have pharma having invented a problem and
then selling a secure and that is what they're doing.
And there are alternatives to this. Father Tad talked about
(38:57):
some of these alternatives.
Speaker 5 (38:58):
But if it turns out at the end of the day,
this couple really cannot get pregnant, then what else is
the Lord doing? How else should they be fruitful? Maybe adoption,
maybe big brother, big sister, outreach in the community. You know,
there's so many children today who need parental figures. Even
becoming a school teacher you really fulfill a genuine parental
(39:22):
role in the lives of these children. So, you know,
I think here the root issue is that the Lord
God has a wisdom in the way that he has
determined and set up for us to receive life as
a gift.
Speaker 2 (39:36):
It always is better to rely on God's wisdom. Always
his wisdom is far above ours.
Speaker 1 (39:41):
The fear of the Lord is.
Speaker 2 (39:42):
The beginning of wisdom. The beginning wisdom comes from acting
within God's design. Abiding with God, we gain wisdom this way,
positive knowledge gained over time. And incidentally, when you volunteer.
Speaker 1 (39:55):
With young people's I disagree with the father.
Speaker 2 (39:58):
It's not like being a parent because you put stuff
away at night, but you do get to get involved
with watching God change young people's lives.
Speaker 1 (40:07):
And I'm here to tell you that, as a guy
in my.
Speaker 2 (40:10):
Very late fifties, what a blessing, What a blessing to
walk into a room and have a young man who,
the first time he met you couldn't decide if you
wanted to beat you up, slash your tires, maybe trust
you to say seven.
Speaker 1 (40:28):
Words to you, but absolutely, absolutely.
Speaker 2 (40:32):
Defiantly objecting to any direction you gave and showing it. Hey,
you know what, we have a rule in the class.
Can you please put away your phone? And him just
slow whirling putting the phone away and then taking it
out a minute later. Oh, I was just making sure
(40:52):
it was off to hugging you when you walk into
the room in front of a whole bunch of people,
in front of a whole bunch of people saying man,
I'm thankful for you. Now that sounds like a me thing.
Speaker 1 (41:12):
I just look at it.
Speaker 2 (41:12):
Astonishing grace of God. So these things are available. I
encourage you to take advantage of that. And I know
there are people saying yes, but I've always dreamed of
being a parent. Okay, how close can you be to
God's design? I think adoption of married couples, male and
female adopting is right down the center of God's design.
Of course, kids need parents, and Tad den din Father
(41:38):
Ted did talk about the evil of the industrialization of IVF.
Speaker 4 (41:44):
And Father, there is an entire industry built around IVF.
Speaker 1 (41:48):
Can you speak to some of the immoral.
Speaker 6 (41:51):
Issues with that and how it perpetuates evil?
Speaker 5 (41:55):
Yeah, you know, the industry has become a multi billion
dollar industry, and when you have dollar signs that are
that big, it becomes almost impossible to initiate a good
ethical discussion. You sort of back yourself into a corner
where profit margins are driving the whole discourse. And I'm
afraid that's where we are. You may recall at one
(42:17):
point there was a judicial decision in Alabama that accorded
rights to embryos that have been created in infertility clinics,
and the infertility industry rose up like a gargantuan monster.
Really and pushback made them completely reverse this in Alabama
(42:38):
so that the industry could get what it wanted. They
have incredible power and incredible amount of funds. So you know,
we've gone quite far down the slippery slope of in
vitro fertilization, and now it's going to be a very
tricky matter for us to get back up when so
much money and such a big industry are so heavily invested.
Speaker 2 (42:58):
Something about President Trump is he loves big industry. He
loves big business because big business is successful, Big business
makes money. He likes to be around the money making process.
And President Trump is to big business what John Thune
is to the federal government. John Thune trust the USDA
(43:24):
can't stand this. Outside of RFK Junior coming in to
the health world, President Trump loves big business.
Speaker 1 (43:33):
It's all good. It's the race. It's one of the
great holes in his character.
Speaker 2 (43:41):
And he continues to do some great things for the
country and will shift gears on this because there is
another example of Thunism being a claymation character and has
to do.
Speaker 1 (43:52):
With the mustache. We'll talk about this in a second.
Speaker 2 (43:55):
Because President Trump, praise God, is brave enough to go
after the John Boltons of the world. There's a bravery
in doing what God tells you to do even when
things are hard. Our friend John at Alan Soaps is
continuing to run the soap company even as he is
being now in the.
Speaker 1 (44:11):
What is sort of the twilight of his life.
Speaker 2 (44:15):
The cancer has got to a point where Jean is
not all in on fighter gets. He's seen an extension
in his lifetime and he may well make it to
next summer. Praise God, and may make it so, May
God heal him still, but it continues every single day
to run the soap company, and he's right now teaching
his wife to run it. This is important because this
is an enormously great product. First of all, unlike soap
(44:38):
that you're using now, there's no chemicals in it, hidden
or otherwise. It is completely natural. The family that makes
this for Allan's they've done it for three generations. They
don't get into the big business of this and that
sulfur dioxide. It's all about being natural, and in the
case of Alan's it has to be because Alan's skin
can't stand anything.
Speaker 1 (44:58):
That's harsh, as a number of health challenges.
Speaker 2 (45:01):
Having been he's fourteen, he's been through these eighteen operations.
He's nonverbal effectively, and this is expressed with the autism
spectrum on which he sits. This is why Allen's exists.
So Allan has a place to work and he does
so fruitfully. His brother Ian is also impacted by autism.
Speaker 1 (45:17):
He works there.
Speaker 2 (45:19):
We look forward to a time where we can hire
back people like Amy. Right now, all hands on deck,
getting this company ready to transfer into John's wife so
she can run it.
Speaker 8 (45:30):
Now.
Speaker 1 (45:30):
If this was just a charity, that would be one thing.
It's not.
Speaker 2 (45:33):
I am asking you to try the soap if you've not,
and make a decision based upon the quality of the soap,
which I think you'll find superior to.
Speaker 1 (45:39):
Anything you use now. And when you do that, you
love it.
Speaker 2 (45:42):
Subscribe, So go to alansoaps dot com slash todd. That's
alansoaps dot com slash todd. Remember John Bolton, of course
you do. John Bolton is now has been indicted on
a number of very.
Speaker 1 (45:55):
Very serious charges, such as.
Speaker 2 (45:57):
Sharing classified material through his say it with Me aol
dot com email account. I actually forgot AOL existed and
actually did a consulting project for AOL years ago.
Speaker 1 (46:09):
Said no offense. I just forgot they existed. So through
his Aol.
Speaker 2 (46:13):
Dot com account, he was happily sharing classified information with
people and joking about it. Here comes some more of
those secrets we don't talk about. L O L ha
haa HAA LM fao L serve it up the goodies,
the thunism.
Speaker 1 (46:29):
Here is this.
Speaker 2 (46:32):
Bolton talked about what happens or should happen when people
do this like President Trump, who wasn't sharing it through
an Aol account or an email account, who did have
the ability to declassify anything he wanted to as president.
Speaker 1 (46:48):
Here's Bolton talking about.
Speaker 8 (46:49):
That, we'll have to prove it than he has committed
very serious crimes. This is This is a devastating indictment.
I speak here as an alumnus of the Justice Department said,
because not only is it powerful, it's very narrowly tailored.
They didn't throw everything up against the wall to see
what would stick. That this really is a rifle shot,
(47:10):
and I think it should be the end of Donald
Trump's political career.
Speaker 7 (47:16):
Now.
Speaker 2 (47:16):
By the way, it happens that there are people who
are committing a sin, and they'll talk about other people
committing the sin, but at the DC level. It seems
everybody was doing this. Hillary Clinton did it.
Speaker 9 (47:31):
With her terrible made up, soft, fuzzy soft home server
with no viral protection shots and no security protection at all.
Speaker 2 (47:41):
Anicked server is called, So it seemed everybody did this.
Nobody got prosecuted, Biden didn't get prosecuted. And then Bolton
talked about Juliana Song's what did Julia Song do? He
did what the people at the Pentagon Papers did. He
did what people have done for years at getting out
access to government information and writing about it.
Speaker 1 (48:02):
In the case of a songe, he just made the.
Speaker 2 (48:04):
Stuff available for other journalists to write through WikiLeaks.
Speaker 1 (48:08):
Bolton talked about what should happen to Juliannassan.
Speaker 8 (48:13):
Well, I think that's a small amount of the sentence
he actually deserves. He's committed clear criminal activity. He's no
more a journalist than the chair I'm sitting on. The
information that he divulged did, in fact put many people
in jeopardy. It undercut the ability of the United States
to have confidential diplomatic communications, not just with other foreign governments,
(48:36):
but in many countries with dissidence. People who even speaking
to American diplomats could find themselves in trouble, and so
you know, he's been complaining about his treatment over the
past period of time. He's the one who sought asylum
in the Ecuadorian embassy. Now he faces extradition to the
United States. I presume he will get due process in
(48:58):
the United Kingdom to determine whether extradition should go forward.
And when he gets to the United States, he'll get
due process here. And I hope he gets at least
one hundred and seventy six years in jail for what
he did.
Speaker 2 (49:11):
You better believe if I was prosecuting John Bolton, when
it came to the sentencing portion of the time, I
would just have John Bolton give the statement. Here's what
I think should happen. Let's see what John Bolton said.
Is it turly gonna object to John Bolton? Oh, incidentally,
the AOL account Bolton was using, according to federal prosecutors,
(49:33):
it had already.
Speaker 1 (49:33):
Been compromised by Iran. So that's pretty helpful.
Speaker 2 (49:41):
John Thune is a shiny shoed Republican. He's a professional Republican.
And on the little clip we played today, his thinking expands.
Speaker 1 (49:49):
Across the board.
Speaker 2 (49:49):
This way, ignorance and arrogance, a strong chin and a
snappy suit, and he very, very blithely has moved this
inches and then multiple inches and feet and then miles
and then tens of miles and now hundreds of thousands
of miles away from God's plan on so many things.
And may God forgive us. This is the Todd Hermann Show.
(50:10):
Please go, be well, be strong, be kind, and please make.
Speaker 1 (50:14):
Every effort to walk in the light of Christ.
Speaker 2 (50:17):
And I hope you like me to go spend time
later with some of your beloved family.