Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
A quick channel line weather here at cloudy. He's got
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Shock ingram on fifty five k R a CDE talk station.
Speaker 1 (00:50):
To shove me thirty fifty five KRC detalk station, A
very happy Friday to you when time's please to welcome
to the City five KRC Morning Show offer of a
couple of books we're going to be talking about today.
My guest Richards author of the two books we will
be speaking about today, as I mentioned, the DNA of
Democracy Volume one and Shadows of the Acropolis Volume two.
Born and raised in the Midwest, education took him through
Loyala Academy, University of North Caro, North Texas, and graduate
(01:13):
career at Southern Methodist University. He's been a lifelong admired
of the written word, which has led him to a
literary pursuits as a poet, essays and screenwriter. Also a
third generation printer. Welcome to the program, mister Lyons. It's
a pleasure to have you on today.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Oh great to be with you, Brian. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:29):
Now this let's start with the DNA of Democracy. You
do a long history analysis of this from the Ten
Commandments all the way through modern times. How democracy is formed,
you know, And I'm thinking about the Ten Commandments and
I've always tried to contemplate this. I try to be
Switzerland in my approach to the Morning Show. I have
many in my audience who are very religious. I have agnostics.
(01:49):
I've got adeists. But I've always thought to myself, you
know what, if you weren't religious, You're Moses sitting on
a mountain, and you were the head of the tribe,
and you left a sort of contemplate life's problems, you
probably would have come up with the Ten Commandments as
you sit there and contemplate, why is it that our
neighbors are fighting amongst themselves? Why is it something? Well,
it's because you coveted your neighbor's wife, or but it's
(02:10):
because you cover your covetous and greedy generally, you know,
don't do that stuff, and you live a happier life.
Speaker 4 (02:17):
No, that's great, Brian, and very true. It's common sense,
isn't it.
Speaker 3 (02:20):
It is?
Speaker 4 (02:20):
But it's also it's also the first And people don't
get this, and everybody should, even humanists, that the Ten
Commandments were the first common law. They were the first
law that entailed both kings and priests and had a
common law to which which applied to the whole society,
(02:41):
not just some I like that. I look at that,
and that is that is a real foundation of British
common law and our common law. So that's where I
see it as a as a contributing element to our democracy.
And also there are rights entailed to that right. If
you don't covet you have a right to your own property, right,
(03:02):
thou shalt not steal. You have a right to your
own life, Thou shalt not murder. These are things that
are also cornerstones of democracies.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
Unalienable rights. And I always think of things, Hey, I
derive from God. It derived from God because the greatest illustration.
And I talk to Judge Enna of Palaton about this
all the time on my program. He's on every week.
If you were in the state of nature, if you
were plunked down in the field before there was organized police, religion,
a government, you have the right to defend yourself. You
have the right to own property, You have the right
(03:34):
to hunt and gather and eat, and all of these
things come built into the package. And only a government institution,
or perhaps sometimes religious organization can take them away from you.
Speaker 4 (03:46):
Yes, correct, that's right. But if derived from God, as
from the mount brought down by Moses, no power on
earth can take those rights away. And that's the point.
They're inalienable.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
Why are we as a people so willing to want
to give those up? I understand we must interact and coexist.
But that's where a system of laws comes in that
are supposed to be designed to protect these unalienable rights.
And yet people are almost fearful of being free and
being able to have these choices, but being also responsible
(04:20):
for these choices.
Speaker 4 (04:22):
Yeah, I think you know, there's an allure to big government.
And we've been subject to that now, Brian, for decades. Yes,
where the people look to big government and they.
Speaker 3 (04:31):
Say, you know you can.
Speaker 4 (04:33):
And it comes from World War two, the great success
in World War Two. After that, people said, well, the
government can do no wrong, and we should look to
government to solve all of our problems because they solve
the problem of Hitler and Japan. And it became a
mindset in America that a centralized government in Washington, DC
(04:54):
can solve all of society's will was and the allure
to people is, well, if they are solving my problem,
I don't have to think about it, I don't have
to deal with it. And so we fell prey to
that for decades and now we're just waking up to
the other side of that coin, and that is that
governments can also oppress. Yes, they can also overtax you.
(05:15):
They can also spend your money really stupidly. So this
is a good mindset we're discovering now with Donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (05:24):
Indeed, and you know, it's interesting on the heels of
my conversation with doctor James Thorpe, who exposed how devastating
the COVID nineteen VA vaccine is and was for pregnant mothers.
That's that that Woodrow Wilsonian, a government of experts kind
of thing. Just let us tell you how it is,
and then you just listen to us and just don't
(05:45):
deny anything we tell you, and we find out we're
being lied to all the time.
Speaker 4 (05:50):
And Fauci was the poster boy for that really.
Speaker 3 (05:53):
And for a government, well think about this, Brian.
Speaker 4 (05:57):
For a government to have the suppose right to inject
something into your body, I mean, there's nothing more invasive
than that.
Speaker 3 (06:07):
And to give government the right to do that is.
Speaker 4 (06:12):
Anti democratic really, And when you don't question what they're doing,
that's very anti democratic.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
Well, I think fascinating reality we're living with here. Do
you think we are all actually collectively waking up to this?
Do you think we're going to have some movement back
toward these fundamental liberties that we shouldn't take for granted,
that based upon all the lies that we now perceive,
and thanks in large part to the Internet, that these
alternative voices and these realities can actually be brought to
(06:39):
the American people, that there's going to be maybe a
renaissance of that type of attitude.
Speaker 3 (06:45):
No, and think about your show, Think about what you know.
Speaker 4 (06:48):
I attributed to Rush Limbaugh what he started as an
independent voice that king national and alternative and proved to
be right. And so this centralization of power, I hope continues.
My books illustrate how and why our government was created
as a diffused power base. So you have states, localities,
(07:11):
and then the federal government. Shadows of the Acropolis chronicles
the last hundred years, and how power from Woodrow Wilson,
very true concentrated in Washington, d c. Contrary to our
constitutional principles. And so I'm hoping that after that century
now we look at government and and all these discoveries
of Elon Musk about how much money has been wasted,
(07:35):
how it's been how it all happens to end up,
my gosh, in Democrat hands.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
That's really funny, isn't it.
Speaker 4 (07:42):
How you know this cronyism, this this grifter mentality that
you know, issued from the Clinton's on down, when the
Democratic Party, I think when people see this, and with
the vaccine and all these sorts of things, you know,
government can be wrong and in fact, government can be dangerous.
(08:02):
And when people wake up to that, they'll wake up
to the idea we must shrink the size of the
federal government. We must, you know, put barriers to its
ability to invade our lives.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
Amen to that make up just a bunch of intriguing
and wonderful observations and shadow of the shadows of the acropolis.
I guess I wonder you talk about division that exists.
You wonder why the nation feels so politically divided. There
is a constant stirring of the pot of division that
has just become so pronounced over the past fifteen twenty years.
At every turn. You can't have an opinion about someone
(08:35):
screaming at you that you are wrong. It doesn't matter
how infintestinably small any given subject matter is. You're not
entitled to speak your mind. The loudest voice in the room,
perhaps even the smallest group of people that abide by
some particular message, like that a man can be a
woman ends up becoming the dominant narrative in a conversation,
which is flies in the face of logic and reason.
Speaker 4 (08:58):
Yes, but they had such control, Brian of the media
and used it and for decades again, and you know,
it's like someone on the mount preaching to you and
telling you that what is right is wrong and what
is wrong is right, and then demanding that you believe it.
And this is really where I think the Democrat Party
(09:20):
went too far. They think they can literally do this
in America, where you do have an alternative media, and
where the First Bill of Rights, the First Amendment of
the Bill of Rights guarantees free speech, so you cannot
be un American and say you can't speak.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
And isn't that really what that whole anti disinformation campaign
was about. They only wanted one narrative, the one that
they said was the appropriate information. Again, going back to
fauci or this nonsensical green religion that we've been it's
been forced down our throats in spite of the objective
information and scientific evidence that it's nonsense. You know, carbon
dioxide's plant food, for God's sake, Well it is.
Speaker 4 (10:01):
It's a large part of the atmosphere.
Speaker 3 (10:04):
But think about the scheme.
Speaker 4 (10:06):
If the temperature is fifty one degrees, we can tax you.
If it's ninety two degrees, we can tax you. I mean,
it's a real engine for money making. And where's all
the money going the money? We have a virtuous private
economy right large, and it's private ownership and it's private enterprise,
and we've allowed this centralized government for a century to
(10:29):
grow up on top of it as a parasitic organism
that takes all the fruits of all those labors into
itself and distributes that money to its friends and fellow politicians.
And that's what you see when you see the EPA
giving out twenty billion dollars to eight recipients, one of
(10:50):
whom is giving five billion dollars back to his former employer. Well,
who do you think that is. I think it's his friend,
isn't it. Yes, We're giving two billion dollars to Stacy
Abram and then she's funneling it through five other different
entities in this.
Speaker 3 (11:04):
Web of corruption.
Speaker 4 (11:06):
And I really applaud that Elon Musk is going to
go after this. I want the Justice Department and the
Treasury to find out where every dime is going.
Speaker 3 (11:15):
Amen, and illustrate it on.
Speaker 4 (11:18):
Shows like your own, so that people know, My god,
they're taking this money and doing what with it. They're
giving it to their friends and their kids and other Democrats.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
Yeah, eight eight million or ten million or twenty million
dollars that went to Zimbabwe or whatever for male circumcisions
didn't Actually, it didn't make it nobody Zimbabwe, right, It
ended up back in Washington with lobbying groups that ended
up put it back in the pockets of politicians for
their re election campaign. And isn't that part of the problem.
We as Americans tend to select some pretty awful people
(11:50):
as our representatives. We need to wake up to that
and find better people.
Speaker 4 (11:56):
Yeah, agreed, there ought to be there ought to be
a you know, the people are their own vetting. They
are the vetting process, and they should really listen to
what politicians are saying and not just say, well, they
have a D by their name, so I'm voting for them.
They have an R by their name, so I'm voting
for them. You're right, some of these people are not
(12:17):
qualified and really don't think in the people's best interests.
They're looking for a job they can hold for thirty years.
Speaker 3 (12:24):
Yeah, and get paid.
Speaker 1 (12:26):
You know, Richly, guys like representatives who think Guam can
capsize if you put another building on it. I mean,
you know, Richard, Richard Lions, the author of the two
books we're talking about today, The DNA of Democracy and
Shadows of the Acropulus, Volume two. It's been a great conversation.
(12:49):
I really enjoy it, Richard. I know my listeners are
going to love to get the books, and we'll make
it really easy for him by putting a link on
my blog page of fifty five KRC dot com.
Speaker 3 (12:57):
Keep up the.
Speaker 1 (12:58):
Great work, pleasure man. I wish we had more time
to talk, but thanks for spending time. Thanks great. I'll
take you up on that. Have a wonderful weekend, Sir
eight forty two and fifty five kr C DE Talk Station.
Don't go away, folks will be right back.
Speaker 3 (13:14):
Fifty five KRC dot Com O HC.