Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the super show version of The Todd Herman Show,
where my friends and producer Alex Overall shows me the
only things that matter during the week. Everything else, you said,
Todd goes into the dustbin of history. Sept these things
and this is what Alex has suggested.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
They wanted Kamala to be elected California.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
The whole nation is counting.
Speaker 4 (00:21):
Why is there this societal taboo around criticisms of Israel?
Speaker 5 (00:26):
The laboratory rats, one of them was showing all types
of harms. You guess we're ta tailand all.
Speaker 6 (00:32):
But Todd Herman Show is one disapproved by big pharma
technocrats and Tyrn's everywhere from the high mountains of Free America.
Here's the Emerald City EXI Todd Herman.
Speaker 1 (00:57):
Today is the day the Lord has made, and these
are the times to which God has decided we shall live.
So I'll do play by play here because there's no sound.
This is this guy named Gunner Schubert. My friend Ari
Hoffmann surfaces. Ari is a very successful talk show host
in Seattle. Also at the post millennial. This guy is
Gunner Schubert was the sergeant at arms to the Washington
State Democrat Party. Convention, and that's Olympia, that's the state House.
(01:21):
He's driving up in his white car, and everybody knows
that entire campus is under surveillance. So he makes a
loop around and drives by the Sis. By the way,
those are the steps where the Satanic temple poured blood
and oil, when the perverse pornographic sex ed thing was
shoved down the throats of parents. That's where they had
their religious lip. So he parks in the walkway because
(01:45):
that makes him less obvious, leaves the doors open to
his car, and the camera's following him, and so this
would mean probably there's a human being with that camera,
because they don't think it's just movement recognition, you know,
because they're taking a shot of his car. Both doors
are opened, because that says sane. He walks down the
hallway and what's said. He's kicking off buttons on the
(02:07):
fire alarm or the elevator. Kicking the buttons off. Oh,
let's knock down some of the some of the ropes,
velvet ropes. Knock those down. He's got his arm in
a cast and what's he carrying. Oh, he's carrying them.
Well you'll find out. So let's knock down these flags.
(02:27):
Let's knock down these flags. And walking upstairs, is that,
oh you know what that looks like? Lighter fluid. Let's
kick these things down? And is after Matthews see that
there's a George Washington statue that was knocked down. There's
some of the flags that are knocked down, some of
the county flags. And incidentally, he apparently also burns in
(02:50):
American flag in the state capitol. Okay, this is what
the Washington State Patrol says. He was offering a mental
health crisis. Okay, that happens. It does. People have psychotic
breaks and I'm not saying I know this about this guy,
but people who smoke pot fifteen times a day can
(03:13):
give themselves drugs and do psychoses. People who are a
member of a party that is their god, who's no
longer getting to do anything in their parties, in their
party can have a mental health crisis. Okay, fair enough,
that's it. Maybe he's gotten is that's just the whole explanation.
(03:33):
All right, that's the baseline. So the baseline in this
discussion is Gunner Schubert's Is he actually having this mental
health breakdown? Okay, let's take them at their word. So
let's examine some other people. Abigail Spaanberger running to be
governor of the state of Virginia. Now, she's been asked
(03:55):
super simple question, probably a one hundred times, do you
agree with the policies of letting boys go into the
showers of girls in schools even when the girls don't
want that? Because shocker, most girls don't want that? Do
you agree with that? She has had countless times to
(04:17):
answer that question. She's also been asked a very very
simple question, you have made a decision to run on
a ticket with the guy running to be Attorney General
of the State of Virginia. His name is Jay Jones.
Jay Jones. So Jay decided to go out and text
a friends explaining that he has a fantasy where he
(04:41):
wants to either kill or watch killed watch be killed
the children of his political opponents while they're forced to
watch their children murdered, and then Jay wants to then
either kill or see them killed. And his friends and
this text message said, she just really bothers me when
(05:03):
you do this, And he didn't say, you're right, I've
gone too far. My gosh, what's wrong with me? I
need Jesus? He didn't do any of that. He doubled
down and he talked about dictators like Hitler and Mao.
And now he's come back and had sort of this
weak apology. And there's been some Democrats who said, oh,
the comments are indefensible. But I've known Jay for three
decades and Jay is a by the way, his NEPO baby,
(05:25):
so add that to the mix. He has no discernible
real accomplishments. Yes, he was a deputy attorney general, but
it was his turn to be that. He got into
the legislature in the state of Virginia, then stepped out
because it's his turn to be attorney general. So Abigail
Sparnburger has asked a very simple question, smammer, do you
still support him? And her opponent in this asked during
(05:49):
the debate, do you still support this guy? And she
had this response. Now watch this as a Republican is
asking her this question. Wins series is asked, you heard
this question.
Speaker 7 (06:02):
Would it take him pulling the trigger?
Speaker 5 (06:04):
Is that what would do it?
Speaker 7 (06:05):
And then you would say he needs to get out
of the race. Abigail, you have nothing to say, Abigail,
What if he said it about your two children, your
three children. Is that when you would say he should
get out of the race, Abigail, you're running to be governor,
Miss earl Sears. I mean we're talking about murder. We're
(06:28):
talking about someone's life being taken from them.
Speaker 1 (06:32):
Have you nothing toes?
Speaker 7 (06:35):
Are you not going to address it.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
And trying not to laugh?
Speaker 7 (06:44):
Are you saying political murder is all right? Have some
political courage. What you have done is you are taking
political calculations about your future as governor. Well as governor.
You have to make hard choices and that means telling
j Jones to leave the race.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
That is a devastating ad and that's the That's the
Lieutenant governor of the State of Virginia, Winston Earns earth Sears.
And the music's added. The silence isn't how much of
a role you gov? Asked in a poll, how much
(07:25):
of a role do you think Donald Trump played in
the recent peace deal between Israel and Hamas? How that's
interesting they didn't say President Trump. I wonder why A
major role thirty four percent. Fifteen percent of Democrats say
a major role independence twenty six Republicans sixty three percent,
A minor role twenty four percent, and Democrats is thirty
(07:47):
six percent say minor role, not sure or no role
at all, sixteen percent say no role at all, twenty
seven percent of Democrats say no role at all, three
percent of Republicans say no role at all. None. The
very fact that he pushed it is playing a role. Now,
this is a view from another perspective. This is a
(08:08):
former Israeli hostage. He has a view on the election.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
Yes, it seems he got me out. He got the
hostages out before we felt like nothing is happening, you know,
and I remember there for me there. Ever, since he
came into into the road, they were very scared of him. Yeah,
they wanted two terrorist.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
We're afraid of Trump.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
Yeah, they wanted Kamala to to be chosen.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
You talked to politics with them.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, they wanted Kamala to be elected. But
as soon as as a as a as a Donald
Trump was elected, they understood that he wants to bring
the hostages back home.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
And something about Trump, he's on predictable. The United States
has been utterly predictable at the state department level because
what's bad for the United States is what they pursue,
because that's their ideology. At the state Department. The United
States is the source of all evil. So as that's
going on. Here's Chuck Schumer, who represents a bunch of
Jewish people in the state of New York.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
Watch this.
Speaker 8 (09:19):
It is just such a hallmark of tyrannical, autocratic dictatorship
societies that they use the Prosecutorial Department as a political weapon.
It is a disgrace and every American, I don't care
if you're a Democrat, Republican, liberal, conservative, moderate people should
(09:39):
be forcefully rising up against.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
This, forcefully rising up as a peace deals done in
Israel and say what you want about it. He's talking
about more violence here, Chuck Schumer. This is a response
to all of this. So there's brands of soap that
are world class, instantly recognizable, such as you get Dove Boom,
instantly recognized. Where's it made and who makes it? How
(10:05):
many chemicals are in it? What's their position on DEI
do they give money to the chemical and surgical abuse
of kids? Alan soaps doesn't. Where's Alan soaps made? It's
made in the Midwest in the United States of America.
Who makes it? A family? How long have they done it?
Three generations? Are the chemicals in it none. Is it
gentle in your skin? Absolutely? Are the fragrances unique? Yes?
(10:29):
Does it come in non fragrance yep. Does it have
a mission beyond soap Absolutely, to employ people like Alan
who the rest of the world wanted to have been
unalived in the womb. Does he work there today yep,
every single day, quality control, packaging, inventing new soaps. As
brother works there as well. Both of these boys would
be turned away from employers. Can I buy it? Yep?
(10:49):
Alan Soaps dot Com slash todd. They get a special discount.
You do, You get ten percent off all the products there,
and if you love it, then subscribe and continue to
support a company that supports the fact that all lives matter.
It's Alan Soaps dot Com, Calm slash Todd. So Barack
Ussin Obama knows he cannot allow the current crop of
the squad elin Omar to be the face of the
(11:09):
Democrat Party. He can't allow that. He can't allow Nancy
Pelosi to do this. That frightens everybody. So Barack Obama
sticking his nose back into politics. Here's Obama talking about
Proposition fifty in the state of California. The message here
being we can't continue, so let Republicans decide how we
vote in California.
Speaker 3 (11:31):
Like many of you, I've become increasingly concerned about the
rising wave of authoritarianism sweeping the globe. We're seeing politicians
target civil society, undermine freedom of the press, weaponize the
justice system, and no one is being spared. Even countries
that thought they were immune from wholesale assaults on democracy
(11:53):
now understand. We're all part of this struggle. That's an
enormous challenge, but it also means we can learn from
each other. I recently sat down with three leaders who
are part of the Obama Foundation's alumni network to discuss
their work in Hungary and Poland to countries on the
leading edge of confronting autocracy, people like Stephania from Sandor
(12:20):
and Susannah. They give me hope.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
So he goes and talks about the Obama Foundation, wanting
to make sure that we don't fall into tyranny. This,
of course, the guy who used the justice system tyrannically
to go spy on Trump Land, tyrannically to put in
prison some of his employees and team members, tyrannically used
our system to block the prosecution of drug gangs bringing
(12:43):
heroin into our country. Tyrannically decided to against the law
give Iran hundreds of billions of dollars. During the same session,
Barack Obama recorded a message about California about this hyperpartisan bill,
this Prop fifty, that he's deeply, deeply against California.
Speaker 3 (13:05):
The whole nation is counting on you. Democracy is on
the ballot November fourth.
Speaker 2 (13:09):
Uh huh.
Speaker 3 (13:10):
Republicans want to steal enough seats in Congress to rig
the next election and wield unchecked power for two more years.
Prop fifty You can stop Republicans in their tracks. Prop
fifty puts our elections back on a level playing field,
preserved independent redistricting over the long term, and lets the
people decide. Return your ballot today, vote yes.
Speaker 6 (13:31):
On fifty two.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
Barack Obama telling black people again, Republicans tend to intend
to come and steal the elections. Look at the visuals
and the ads. That's exactly what this is meant to do.
This unchecked power that Trump has, you know, while the
government shut down while he wants it open, This unchecked
power he has where he's being told now by a
rogue judge in California that he doesn't have the right
(13:55):
to fire people from the executive branch because she finds
it icky that unchecked power. See Baracossi in Obama is
transmitting all of this when the fact is California has
independent redistricting. They voted it in Prop fifty undoes this.
And you don't have to go far into California, if
far into Los Angeles to see the effects of Democrat
(14:17):
policies on black families. Simply go look at their black
on black crime. They're black on black victimization, black perpetrators
who are victimizing black young people. You don't know to
look forward to see that. Barack Obama and Catangi Brown
Jackson are a lot of things. Their duplicitus, their liars.
(14:37):
Catangi Brown Jackson is unqualified for anything. They are also
perpetrators of black on black mental abuse. And may God
forgive them for that, because he's going to have to
if they want any future. So God takes words very
very seriously. And in the Book of Revelation there's a
word that relates to modern pharma. We'll talk about this,
(14:58):
but first some of the pharma origin stories that people
have missed. There was a gentleman who appeared in a
podcast to talk about the basis of pharma and how
it began, the origins of pharma and if you have
ever read anything about this, what Gerald Postner says here
will remind you of something reminds you of some camps
(15:20):
in Germany at one of the darkest times in the
history of the.
Speaker 5 (15:24):
World, by or aspirin. We think about them. They had
smart guys inside the lab. The Germans dominated the pharmaceutical
company and over a five year period from eighteen ninety
eight to nineteen oh three, their scientists in their labs
discovered four different drugs. The first one in eighteen ninety
eight is a set of menaphin what we call taylanol.
Speaker 1 (15:44):
They came up with that pretty amazing.
Speaker 5 (15:46):
And then in nineteen eighteen ninety nine they come up
with aspirn, a wonder drug. In nineteen hundred they come
up with a better morphine and they name it after
the German word for heroic heroche heroin. They market it,
they trademark heroin in the United States, and they sell
it as a cure for morphine addiction. It's fantastic. Yeah, no, no,
(16:10):
I'm kidding you not. And it does, of course cure
for morphine addiction. You'll give up morphine, You'll go to heroin.
They also sell it to be able for babies for
cop and then in nineteen oh three, at the end
of this five year period, they came up with the
first barbituate, Phoeno barbitol, which they also had.
Speaker 1 (16:26):
So now think of this.
Speaker 5 (16:27):
They've got tylanol, they've got aspect, I've got heroin, they've
got phoeno barbital. And they made decision not to put
one on the market because inside their laboratories with laboratory rats,
one of them was showing all types of harms. Guess
which one Thailand All, they did not put a sena
minefit on the markets.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
From the Patrick David Bett podcast. So, if you've ever
read about the history of pharmaceutical companies and the death
camps and the camps in World War Two, you know
the camps, then you know that this was also tested
in human beings. You also know that the first sex
(17:05):
change church surgery ever done was done against the prisoners
will He was done twice. There are a lot of
those sources of experiments going on in those camps at
the time because people had been owned, they'd been stolen,
taken captive, and a bunch of spiritual captives were doing
to other spiritual captives horrible, horrible things. So this is
(17:27):
part of the origin story of pharma. But I want
to ask again, do you think God uses words accidentally
or haphazardly? Do you think that he's a sloppy author,
because we're going to look for a second in the
Book of Revelation and how it relates to pharmacies and
pharmaceutical companies with the word pharmakia. Now, look, not all
pharmacies are bad. Not all pharmaceuticals are bad. You know,
(17:49):
he mentioned aspirin. It is a wander drug. And by
the way, Native Americans knew that, other tribal people knew that.
And not all modern medicine is bad. I support President
Trump immigration tactics. Sometimes they seem harsh. I support it.
You're leading it when you should be firm. Eventually you'll
be cruel when you should be kind. I support not
(18:09):
having our electoral college overthrown by illegal immigrants. I support
not allowing countries to flood ours with their criminals and
gang members. I support that. And we can be kind,
we can be actual Christians, We can be kind to
peoples who put them in jail. Cell's we can be
kind to them as we deport them. We have to
(18:33):
do that or to be kind to sojourners. But that
entire video cast Jesus only as not not the judge,
not the heavenly judge. He's marching at the head of
an army, of a human army, something Jesus could have
done and didn't. It's also very very clear that the
dark people are the enemy. That's very clear in that video.
(18:57):
Now that's being pushed, it hasn't taken off. But one
of the problems that conservatives set up on others when
they take Israel and make it the perfect country, not
most favored nation, perfect country, is you have people who
are taking a realisticcuse say, wait a minute, wait a minute,
Israel's made mistakes. There are people who've taken a view
(19:17):
of the war Gaza who've changed their mind saying no
enough enough. I've people I dearly love who've looked at
that and said no, no enough, No, you've flattened Gaza,
it's destroyed. No, no go after the terrorists. We have
to be able to say Israel, like other nations, can
go too far and we have to be able to
(19:39):
say God has a special relationship with the Jewish people,
it's a covenant, and a remnant of them will come
back to Christ. That is a fat accompany because when
God says the thing will happen, has already happened. Glenn
Back took some questions from some young people about Israel,
and some of these questions Glenn, I mean, he did
a good job of handling it. It made Glenn sort
of uncomfort.
Speaker 9 (20:00):
Israel has an overwhelming lobby over the United States government,
and we have unconditionally supported them.
Speaker 1 (20:05):
We have fought their wars in the Middle East.
Speaker 9 (20:07):
Bb and Antya, who came to our Congress in the
nineties told solicit countries that we need to take out
somewhere Syria, Iraq, Iran, uh Libya, et cetera. Through those wars,
we have lost trillions of dollars. We have lost American servicemen.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
We're lobbying everybody else and they look, I went to Latin.
They're saying America first or Israel first. It's an easy question.
Speaker 6 (20:35):
A lot.
Speaker 4 (20:37):
Could I answer my question?
Speaker 6 (20:38):
Did I answer the question?
Speaker 1 (20:38):
Please?
Speaker 9 (20:40):
You're talking about one thing they don't teach in school.
They don't teach about the USS liberty where Israel literally
came blew up an American ship because they want us
to get in their war with Egypt, and they don't
teach that in school. I mean, I'm just saying, hey,
thank you, thank you for your quch.
Speaker 4 (20:54):
I have a question why is there this societal taboo
around criticisms of Israel. For example, APEG doesn't have to
register as a foreign lobby, but like the Australia lobby does,
and it just that should.
Speaker 1 (21:07):
Be changed, that should be corrected. Look, I am not
going to say Israel should have any special privileges.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
None.
Speaker 1 (21:15):
Now after this, I'm told that Glenn went on stage
with an Israeli flag and waved it or up. Okay,
he supports the country. When you take a nation and
you ignore its ills and you ignore the voices of
young people saying, wait, wait, wait, why do we have
to go on to war on their behalf? We haven't
(21:36):
praised God, but why do we have to have an answer?
And an answer has been whether the one democracy in
the Middle East? Okay, that's an answer. We have a
special relationship, that's another answer. They lobby the heck out
of us, They give us a lot of money to politicians.
(21:58):
That's also an answer. The realist view is this, I'm
not a theologian. I've not been to Israel. I've not
studied the Tellmud, I read the Bible. We're all broken
by sin. We're all broken by sin. Problems we have
in our country the result of deciding to have human kings.
(22:22):
The prophet Samuel warned us about human kings because God
told him to Israel has human kings. They're going to
be fallible, many of them corrupt. When we communicate that
realist view, it takes the pressure off of other people
and allows them to separate the Israeli government from the
Jewish people, and it can defeat anti Semitism. My friend
(22:44):
Tim Krukshank, three separate times went and it was deployed
on my behalf in yours. I'm wearing one of tam
shirts today bone Frog Classic shirt, and three separate times.
He did that as a medic attached to the seal teams,
so he was in the business of reviving and saving
the lives of terrorists they confronted on the battlefield so
(23:07):
that they could be interrogated. He was in the business
of rushing to try to save the lives of fallen
teammates and often succeeding, sometimes not being able to save
their lives, and being with them as they passed on.
He had the experience of shooting ats and being shot at,
placing explosives and such, and he came home decided to
(23:29):
teach other people how to become Navy seals. He did
that for a while at Buds as a Buds instructor,
all the while in his mind he was constructing the
coffee company he runs today, called bone Frog. It began
with this, what will I call my coffee company? He
went through several names, landed on bone Frog, and the
insignia of the bone Frog indicates a fallen Navy sealed.
Makes sense since he was a medic or some people
(23:50):
say Corman Tims's medics or I'll say what he says.
And then the coffee company began to take shape. Coffee's
a big thing when you are down at all and
you're one of the instructors and you get to have coffee,
and the people going through it don't, but you do.
And when he founded the company, then he went and
was very honest with himself. I don't know a bloom
(24:11):
and stinking thing about making coffee. So he went and
did what Seals did. He put together a team, brought
on Dave Stewart as a mentor. They he makes some
of the roasts he mentors the team. Dave started Seattle's
Best Coffee, which is a legendary coffee company. When you
buy from bone Frog, you are supporting the fallen. The
families have fallen Navy Seals. Ten percent of proceeds go
to them. Every time. You're supporting a company that stands
(24:33):
proudly with God. H Beg says God Country Team, and
you will enjoy the best coffee in the world, made
either through the mentoring or the direct work of a
coffee legend who got in the way of Starbucks so
much that they had to give him a ton of money.
To buy Seattle's Best Coffee, there's no downside. Go subscribe
to their coffee Bonefrog Coffee dot com, slash todd. You
use promo code Todd to get fifteen percent off subscription
(24:55):
in Coffee for Life. And yes, there are people buying
Christmas presents already. I know Halloween's not but yeah, you
could buy this shirt Bonefrog Coffee dot Com slash Todd
so this guy decided to look into the death Stephenjimenez,
I had to look into the death of Matthew Shepherd,
and Revolver News pointed you to this in their article. This
month marks the twenty seventh anniversary of one of the
(25:17):
most powerful us ssyops. So, writing in The Guardian about
Matthew Shepherd's story, read this, But the Matthew Shepherd story
is not yet finished. A new twist came last year
with the publication of another book, this one by investigative
journalist Stephen Amenez, who spent thirteen years interviewing more than
one hundred people with a connection to the case. His conclusion,
(25:38):
outlined in the book of matt Hidden Truce about the
murder of Matthew Shepherd, is that the grotesque murder was
not a hate crime, but could instead be blamed on
crystal meth, a drug that was flooding Denver and the
surrounding areas at the time of Matthew's death. The new
theory has understandably caused a lot of anger. Jimenez faced
a barrage of criticism since the publication was booked, and
has had readings to promote the book. Boycott Jmenez claims, however,
(26:01):
that many of his critics have not yet actually read it.
The Advocate Americans Leading LGBT so called t LGB so
called TA magazine published a piece last year entitled why
I'm not reading the Trutherism About Matthew Shepard. Amenez has
been accused of being a revisionist, a criticism you should
reserve for extreme right wing ideologue to deny the Holocaust,
and labeled a homophobe. In this thirteen years he spent
(26:25):
investigating this, there is no sign that he was a
right wing homophobe. There was no sign that he was
right wing at all. He intended to make a screenplay
about a tragedy. Back to The Guardian, Jimenez found that
Matthew was addicted to in dealing crystal meth and a
dabbled and heroin. He also took significant sexual risks and
(26:48):
was being pimped alongside Aaron McKinney, one of his killers,
with whom he'd had as occasional sexual encounters. He was
HIV positive at the time of his death. This does
not make the perfect poster boy for the gay rights movement.
Sisimon is, which is a big part of the reason
why my book was so trashed Matthew's drug abuse in
the fact that he knew one of his killers prior
(27:09):
to the attack was never export in court. Neither was
the rumor that the killers knew that he had access
to a shipment of crystal meth with a street value
of ten thousand dollars which they wanted to steal. Matthew
was born into an affluent family and at attended State College,
a state school in Casper, whoming the twenty one year
old political silence major to a major at Laramie University.
(27:31):
Stood only five to two inches tall in his blonde hair,
embraces and slight frame given him air vulnerability and innocence.
In his junior year of high school, Matthew moved his
family to Saudi Arabia. There were no American high schools
in Saudi at the time, so he was sent to
the American school in Switzerland. By the time he enrolled
at Laramie, he spoke three languages had aspirations to be
human rights advocate. Somewhere along the line, however, Matthew fell
(27:53):
from being a Grade AAY student to a drug addicted
prostitute who diced with danger. He suffered periods of depression,
possibly as a result to being gang raped a few
years earlier while on holiday in Morocco. Hmm, gosh, wasn't
I asking earlier in the show what went wrong? That
(28:22):
seemed idyllic? What went wrong? I would think being gang
raped would be horrific. I would think it would feel
(28:46):
as if Satan was pouring out wrath on you. I
would think one might even be tempted to be ashamed,
even though you never did anything. I would think Matthew
Shepherd was haunted by that. I would think that's an
(29:12):
important detail. I would have hoped that Matthew would have
had the Lord to turn to. He did have the Lord,
but maybe not the knowledge. He had money, affluence, college,
(29:36):
but didn't have the capacity to go to the Lord
and to say, why me, why me? What am I
to learn from this? Help me forgive, help me be cleansed.
(30:03):
Though it wasn't my fault. He didn't have that. He
had what a lot of people in twenty twenty five
America have. He had people telling him brave and stunning,
(30:24):
embrace who you are. Don't worry about how it came about,
Just be that. Jesus Christ cannot bless Christian nationalism for
a number of reasons. And let's start with one, one
example or one statement as to why why would he
take a demotion? Why would Jesus say, yeah, I'll be demoted.
(30:46):
He already did that. He went from being part of
the triune godheads. And he still is, always was, always existed,
always has existed, always will exist, the Alpha in the Omega.
Through him, all things were made for him, all things
were made. And so for a time in his life
thirty years or so, he sacrificed part of his deed,
(31:07):
and he become fully human and fully fully God, and
he took on the form of a little tiny baby.
And if you know what he went through and what
he did, and this ended for three days on the cross,
and then of course he rose again. But in that
period of time he experienced human suffering, human temptation. He
walked with us, he saw our suffering. He's the only
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one who did it flawlessly. He fulfilled the law, he
was sinless, all the things we can't do. And in
doing that, of course, then he conquered death and gave
us this free gift of redemption that we can choose
to accept or decline. But this was a voluntary demotion.
I'll do it. I'll go after them, I'll go get them,
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I'll bring them back. I'll do what I can to
get the lost sheep if they'll accept me. So he
had already had a temporary demotion, why would he do
it again to be what president of the United States?
Why that's That's like someone who you know owns one
hundred and forty grocery stores in this country, taken a
(32:10):
night job at seven eleven, you know, And there's nothing
wrong with night job at seven eleven. If that's where
you're at in your career, your job, you need to work,
there's nothing wrong with that. But why would someone who's
the CEO of one hundred and forty chain grocery store
give that all up and say, yeah, I'm gonna go
take the night shift at a seven eleven. God is
Jesus is the lord of the universe. His kingdom is
(32:31):
not of this earth. Why would he possibly say yeah,
you know I I Secondly, Jesus never forces and the
concept of Christian nationalism is we become a Christian nation,
and that theocracy then forces people to either convert or
be locked out of society. Jesus didn't do that. He
(32:54):
didn't lock people out of society. We are in this world,
not of it. Even when he was being handled horribly
by the Romans, he allowed it. He didn't need to
allow it. He could have stopped it with he could
use one angel. He didn't need a legion of angel.
One angel could have stopped it. He didn't. He allowed
(33:17):
them to care at their plan because it was his plan.
Now he wants God the governance. Well, how do I know?
Because he wants people to convert to following him and
he wants them to be in jobs, and those jobs
include being in government. So he wants a Christian government,
(33:38):
just not Christian nationalism. Now I needed to know its
view on faith chat GPT, so I asked that you're
a college professor with a master's degree in world history.
That's the prompt. This is who chat GPT is. You're
outlining a lecture on the role of religion in the
development of morals. Write a section and the key differences
(33:59):
between Jesus Christ in the Prophet. Mohamed certainly blows a
lecture section suitable for college level world history or religious
studies courses. Lecture series Jesus Christ in the prophet MAHADIV
Mohammed comparative roles in religious moral frameworks. Both Jesus and
the prophet Muhammad are foundational figures in two of the
world's largest religions, Christianity Islam respectively. Well, each is seen
(34:23):
as a moral exemplar, their roles teachings in historical context
different ways that shaped how each religion conceptualizes moral authority
and community. So Jesus Christ born into Roman occupied judea
Jewish teacher and reformer.
Speaker 6 (34:38):
He was.
Speaker 1 (34:41):
Is a reformer. I mean he taught the Pharisees that
they were abusing people by absurd extensions of the law.
But he was here to reform. Nope, Jesus had one
role to build the Kingdom of Heaven, to announce himself
and prove himself as a the Siah, the only way through,
(35:03):
the only way to the Father, through the Lord Jesus,
the truth to life, the way, the truth and the life.
One job. Announce the Kingdom of Heaven is near. Repent
of your sins, be baptized because the Kingdom of Heaven
is near. Reformer, he came to form his church. That's
not reforming. Christ Church didn't exist before then, that's not reforming,
(35:23):
it's forming. Jesus preached during a time of political oppression,
religious legalism true, viewed by followers as the son of God,
divine and messianic, never held political military power. Muhammed on
their end, born in Mecca, tribal polytheistic society, preaching a
fragmented tribal society lacking centralized authority, viewed by followers as
the faun of prophet, fully human but divine, the guided,
(35:45):
established religious, political and military community. Now nature and source
of moral authority. This is fascinating. Jesus moral authority rooted
in divine embodiment of love, forgiveness and grace. It is
is moral authority. His moral authority is he is the way,
the truth in life. He is God, He is God's Son.
(36:09):
They are one and the same. That's the moral authority.
He is the embodiment of love, forgiven and grace because
he is those things by nature. But that is a
part of who he is. That's not his moral authority.
Muhammad's moral authority derived from being the messenger of God.
Do you see this Allah conveying divine laws Shariah, So,
(36:31):
Jesus' moral authority is he's nice. Muhammad's moral authority is
derived from God. See this taught in parables. Jesus taught
in parables and moral teachings Sermon on the Mount, whereas
Mohammed delivered direct revelation and embodied them in practice. There's
(36:54):
this book called the Book of Revelation that John got
because John walked with Christ. He was the last of
the apostles to die. They couldn't kill him. Jesus told
his followers prophetic things we are seeing today. He told
(37:14):
them directly because they wouldn't have written them down otherwise.
Emphasize inner transformation and transformation, humility and mercy, Jesus, whereas
Muhammad emphasized communal responsibility, justice and legal moral structure. Jesus, Christ,
as you treat the least of these, so you treat me.
(37:37):
The Christian Church is founded. One of the first jobs
is who will feed the Greek widows. They shared all
things together, They worshiped daily, They followed the teachings of
the apostles. That's community, that's communal responsibility. Jesus emphasized inner transformation. Nope,
because the transformation doesn't come from within. He emphasized, we're
(38:02):
all broken by sin. We need the holy spirits. We
need him to even be changed in become sanctified, holy
like him, holier like him. Jesus opposed rigid legalism and
stressed spirit over the law. Jesus Christ made more stringent
(38:23):
the ten commandments. You've heard it said you shall not
commit adultery. But I tell you, the man who looks
at a woman with lust in his eyes has already
committed adultery with her. He made it more stringent. That's
making the law harder to follow. And he brought with
(38:45):
that the component of grace and forgiveness. Muhammad introduced legal
and social reforms to unify tribes and promote equity. Equity
with nine year old bride and such equity approach to
(39:05):
violence and power, Jesus advocated nonviolence, turned the other cheek,
rejected earthly kingship. No, he said to follow earth the
kings Romans thirteen. He himself was not of earth, and
therefore made clear his kingdom is not from here. He
also told people the apostles that you needed to take
some daggers on the road in case you're attacked, be
(39:29):
able to defend yourself. Role and moral development of followers
jesus model of personal moral perfection, especially in love, compassion,
and sacrifice, and coming back as judge. Book of Revelations
makes it very clear, kind gentle, Jesus the lamb will
come back as the lion. Mohammed's model of comprehensive moral leadership,
(39:53):
including governor's law and daily life. And Plus, it's okay
to lie if you're spreading this li Plus it's okay
to force people to convert if you're spreading Islam. Plus
it's okay to bash babies heads against rocks if you're
spreading Islam. That's comprehensive moral leadership. Jesus emphasis on universal love,
(40:14):
forgiveness and salvation. Universal love, okay, God loves everybody. Universal forgiveness,
no universal salvation. No Muhammed emphasis on justice, social reform
and submission to divine will. Really, Jesus didn't preach submission
(40:34):
to divine will. Really, Father, let this cut pass from
me if there's another way, and yet not my will,
but yours be done. He didn't stress it. He lived
it to the point that he sweated blood. Role and
(40:55):
moral development of followers. Jesus morality often presented in universalists
use universal individual terms. What does that even mean no
morality was presented in following the word of God. By this,
people will know you are my followers, you keep my commandments.
(41:19):
And Mohammed morality often grounded in communal obligations and duties.
So the side by side comparison of the false prophets
Mohammed and the Savior of all mankind Jesus Christ shows
further how jet GPT has been programmed and how its
lies are clever, just like the lies the devil told
(41:40):
in the garden. We're not to fear. God told us
not to have hearts of fear, to know that He's
in charge. But jet GPT is something we should pay
very very special attention to because remember we're building robots.
Robots are going to be lifelike, and there's nothing in
the Bible that says that the Antichrist is going to
(42:01):
be flesh and blood. You should correct something of a
coming catastrophe. If you don't correct it, you could get
sued as a business owner, and it could be you
did nothing wrong. It could be that you get someone
who's a disgruntled an employee they want to sue. It
could be that they did not get enough workers comp
when they did get hurt on the job, and so
(42:21):
they sue. It could be that a competitor sues this
is the sort of society. It could be lawfare, or
it could be God forbid. You experience a really tough
loss of your business and you've been running on a
corporate credit line. You're probably counting on if God forbid
that happens, that at least you know the only thing
in exposure are the assets held by your business, your equipment,
(42:43):
the money in your accounts that no lawyer or bank
could get at your home, or your equity or your
retirement account or your stock account. That may not be true.
You could be in business fifteen years and if you
have not established actual corporate credit, it's not true. You
don't have the corporate veil. So take me up on
a free offer, a free no obligation consultation with my
(43:06):
friends at Bisible B I Z A, B L E. Bisible.
The website is gobisible dot com. They will tell you
if you have the corporate veil or not. If you do, hey,
praise God, go about your business. If you don't, Bisible
will offer to fix it for you in seven easy steps.
And by the way, the money you'll spend on that.
(43:27):
That's clown show easy decision, the risk reward ratio there
is all on the side of getting this done and
taken care of. It's gobisible dot com. So Jesus was
not shy about correcting the Pharisees. And this is what
I asked Grok about Jesus correcting the Pharisees. Grek writes,
jesus correction of the Pharisees application of Old Testament law.
(43:47):
The Pharisees, as religious leaders in the first century Judaism,
were known for their strict adherence to the Mosaic law
and their extensive oral traditions, which they believe clarified and
expanded upon it. However, Jesus freak challenged their application of
Old Testament law, emphasizing its true intent over their legalistic interpretations.
This paper explores key instances where Jesus corrected the pharisees misunderstandings,
(44:10):
drawing from the Gospel accounts to highlight his teachings on
the spirit of law. So when he's where they're talking
about the oral tradition expanding or clarifying. In other words,
they added to the Bible the thing we're told not
to do we're not to add or subtract to the Bible.
So the Pharisees already screwed up. So this is some
examples that Groc wrote into this paper. One Sabbath observance,
(44:34):
prioritizing mercy over ritual. The Pharisees rigidly enforced Sabbath laws,
viewing any activity resembling work as a violation. Jesus confronted
this in several instances healing on the Sabbath Mark twelve
nine through fourteen, Mark three one through six, Luke thirteen
ten through seventeen. When the Pharisees criticized Jesus for healing
a man with a weathered hand or a woman bent over,
(44:56):
Jesus responded, is it lawful to do good on the
Sabbath or to do evil? Or to save life or
to unlive a person? He emphasized that the Sabbath was
made for human benefits, not to hinder acts of mercy.
The Pharisees focus on prohibiting work missed the law's purpose
of promoting human flourishing. My Father desires mercy, not sacrifice
(45:19):
disciples plucking grain. Matthew Chapter twelve, verses one through eight.
When the Pharisees accused Jesus disciple of breaking the Sabbath
by plucking grain. Jesus cited David's example of eating consecrated bread.
First Samuel twenty one, verses one through six declared the
son of Man is the lord of the Sabbath Matthew
twelve eight. He also referenced Hoseiah sixty six I desire mercy,
(45:40):
not sacrifice, showing that compassion supersedes risualistic observations. Correction, Jesus
taught that the Sabbath was intended to serve humanity, not
enslave it to rules. Pharisees legalism neglected the law's deeper
call to love and mercy, so he said that the
Sabbath was made for man, not man. For the Sabbath
ritual purity in a righteousness over external observance. The Pharisees
(46:05):
emphasize external rituals such as hand washing before meals, as
extensions of purity laws. In Mark seven one one through
twenty three, they criticized jesus disciples for eating with unwashed hands,
and Jesus rebuked them, quoting Isaiah twenty nine thirteen, this
people honors me with their lips, but their heart is
far from me. He explained that true defilement comes from
(46:27):
the heart, evil thoughts, malice, and sin, not only from
the external impurities like unwashed hands. Correction, Jesus redirected the
focus from external rituals to internal transformation, aligning with the
Old Testament's call for circumcised heart deuterrotomy chapter ten, verse sixteen.
The pharisees obsession with outward purity missed the law's aim
to foster genuine holiness. Jesus, also, by the way, called
(46:50):
the Pharisees whitewashed tombs, looking clean and fancy on the outside,
but dirty and filthy on the inside. That's the super
show for the week, the things that alex As matters.
If you disagree, we'll be doxing him. So you can
go visit him in person, or you could just leave
a comment on any of our social media platforms YouTube, Twitter, etc.
Or just email meme at Todd Herman Show dot com. Now,
(47:12):
please go be well, be strong, be kind, make every
effort to walk in the light of Christ, and remember
to do as I get to do. Please make sure
you go get to spend time with your beloved wife, family,
husband and family