All Episodes

July 6, 2025 • 56 mins
Great news. We are expanding
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
Yeah, welcome, it is time for Constitution Radio. DOUGLASI Gibbs,
glad you could make it. Enjoy spending this time with you.
Glad you're here. Uh So, before I get started on
the first topic, something wonderful has happened, something great. I
think I haven't told too many people about it yet.

(00:29):
Email went out from my followers website, but I haven't
really talked about it on the radio yet. So uh
some of you may be familiar Zachie Farm's Chicken. Well,
the great grandson of the guy who started that company.
His name is Leo Zaki. Hey, he's worth a couple

(00:50):
of million, a few millions, something like that, and he's
into radio, big time conservative, and he has a network
called America Matters Media. Zachi Radio is the other part
of his network, and America Matters has affiliate stations throughout

(01:11):
the country, but the main station that they that he
broadcasts his America Matters on the I guess the home
base station would be let's see KPGF ninety three point
seven and ten sixty AM and Arena, Nevada. Well, thanks

(01:33):
to a number of things, you know, I've been in
radio since twenty eleven. I've made friends, I've networked, I've
developed a growing community of people follow what I do.
I've added to my radio lineup, adding those two stations

(01:54):
to San Diego Salem Media kPr Z K Praise, k
CBQ the Answer San Diego for the Mister Constitution Hour.
And you know, I've got a friend of mine named
Josh who helps me out with my website and he's
you know connected. I've developed friendships of students like like
Brady the war Hamster for example, which is a part

(02:16):
of this story. And so through all of this relationships
have developed. And as of last Wednesday and Thursday, I
have also begun to broadcast at eleven am Pacific on
Zachi Radio America Matters Media. So for sure that station

(02:37):
areno plus. I don't know all the other affiliate stations.
I'm trying to figure it out, so I can, you know,
you know, put that on my website. But so we
just took a big step. Here's what's awesome about it,
h the station is well the network America Matters. Leo

(02:57):
Zaki is uh because one of the things about me,
let me back up a little bit, as an independent
broadcaster and as someone who finds that it's important that
my point of view, which for many is controversial because
an originalist is just you know, the the legal system

(03:19):
and the academia and the and the political you know,
and industrial complex and and the media and all of that.
But they've got this academic, legalistic, uh, judicial review view
of the constitution. So to be an originalist, to to

(03:40):
be in leagues with people like Thomas Jefferson, James Madison,
why that's controversial and so uh And so I've been blocked.
I've been shut down on you know, like YouTube a
few times and Facebook stuff like that because what I
talk about is outside the quote quote accepted narrative. So

(04:03):
I so I value my independence as a broadcaster. One
of the things I love about km E T fourteen
ninety am and why I've done everything I can to
stay on this station, even though I've been expanding elsewhere.
My growth of audience has been minimal here. But one

(04:24):
of the main reasons why I hang on to this station,
why you listeners are so important to me on this show,
is because of that independence. Those two stations in San
Diego are owned by Salem Media. Now while they have
not interfered, not said, oh, don't talk about that they could,
you know, and even Zachie Radio ultimately could. Here k

(04:47):
me T has always been about as independent as it
gets for me. But I buy my airtime for that.
I'm not hired by a network. I'm not owned by
any station. Therefore, my thoughts go into my mic from
an original place, uninterfered with, unfiltered, undiluted. That's what you get.

(05:15):
So buying my airtime is important. Now, that said zachy
Radio Wednesdays from eleven to twelve with war Hamster Refederalist
Radio and Thursday solo. Mister constitution, a radio is not

(05:40):
I'm not paying airtime. The station is covering it. The
owner has got it. Now that said, there's for every
pro there's a con. And one of those cons is
I've got like the one, two, three commercial breaks that
aren't mine during the program. They got to pay for
us them out, so I lose you know, uh see

(06:04):
two minutes here and two minutes there and two minutes
so about six minutes in their advertising. But this has
been added without hurting my funding. Now I'm already short,
usually pulling up ket because I k et K praise
k CBQ at all. You used to get paid for it.

(06:25):
By Our two sponsors are two wonderful, wonderful advertisers as
Guard Energy and All Star Collision, Carstar Collision All Star
Collision Carstar UH, and they definitely help bring these episodes
to you. And then my constitution classes paid the balance.

(06:45):
There are no constitution classes anymore. While I do have
people who send me checks every month and and their
members patrons are at Douglas b Gibs dot com. You
go to hit the join link at Douglas Gibbs dot
com become a nine dollars month patron. We do have
some of that, but it's not enough, and so I
couldn't add. I've been wanting to add, I've been wanting

(07:06):
to grow up, been wanting to add stations to my
little empire here, but we just don't have enough sponsorships yet.
And then comes the opportunity with Zachi Radio America Matters Media.
Now I've got two more hours of radio, not only
on that station a reno, but all the affiliate stations.

(07:27):
And they have an agreement also with interestingly enough, Salem Media,
so a lot of Salem Media stations around the country.
So we have introduced I don't know the number yet,
dozens I don't know, but we have now more people
listening to mister Constitution on the radio radio than ever before.

(07:49):
Here's what I want you to do. Spread the word
about this show and these other shows. Go to Douglas P.
Gibbs dot comery and get all the links there were,
and get everything you know in place. We're gonna make
sure that now you can do that. And also one
of the things I'm working on, and we're about thirty
days away from finally launching this on my website, I've
been working feverishly on is trivia pages. I want you

(08:12):
to learn questions with answers, Constitution, Declaration, the War for Independence,
early American history, the presidents, and so on and so forth.
We also have a glossary there which is still growing.
When you read my articles, you'll notice that certain words

(08:32):
pop up with a little link. If you hover over
that link, a box will peer with a definition all
of that. But that costs money, so anyway, so feel
free to donate, Feel free to become a nine dollars
month patron. But I'm excited because we just added I mean,
we have added so many stations. Here's the thing, though

(08:54):
they're different shows. Constitution radios came me to you. Only
mister Constitution Hour are ABQ and k p raise only
mister Constitution Radio is Zachi Radio only. Eventually, we're gonna
have to get all of this stuff to meet up
and combine or something. But anyway, so I'm feeling pretty good.

(09:16):
I'm pretty happy about that. And then, of course, just
in time for Independence Day. And for those of you
who appreciate what I do, notice I don't say happy fourth,
Happy fourth of July, Happy July of the text messages
and emails. That's what folks. July fourth is a date

(09:40):
on the calendar. It's an important day, it's got a
significant history. But the day we are celebrating is not
because it lands on the fourth of July. It's because
it is the anniversary. And really July second is and
then they did some some style changes on July third.
July fourth is really when it got presented to the public.

(10:02):
So that's why it's July fourth. But they were celebrating
is the anniversary of the decoration of Independence, and the
decoration of Independence is when we said, hey, we are
our own country. We are no longer a bunch of colonials.
There's a meaning that bounces around every year, and I

(10:23):
get a kick out of it. It's got the the
British jack and it says happy Treason Day, ungrateful colonials.
But it's it's America's birthday, some might say. And but
I'll be honest when it comes to Independence Day. When
it comes to and and don't get me wrong, what

(10:44):
a cool Independence Day I had. I now live in
my you know, my my bunker, somewhere on the h
on the Oregon coast, and I love it here. But
I'm a huge sports fan, baseball games, football games, and
where I live not a lot of not a whole

(11:05):
lot of pickens for that. I'm a huge baseball fan.
I love going to baseball games. I've gone it. It's
funny too, because I was just telling my wife this
last night. We lived in southern California, surrounded by baseball.
The Lake yelsinor Storm and the Rancho Cucamaga sixty six ers,

(11:26):
and you know, the San Diego Padres and the Anaheim Angels.
I won't call them what they call themselves at their
Anaheim Los Angeles Dodgras, not that I would be caught
dead at that stadium. After the last half decade surrounded
by baseball. And I can't remember the last time we

(11:46):
went to a ball game down there. Two three years ago,
maybe four years ago, something like that. We went to
see the Padres last time. I always saw the Angels.
I think it was about ten years ago. Lake Elstow
Storm probably about six or seven years ago. Now I've
got two teams in my area. I've got the Humboldt

(12:06):
Crabs about an hour forty five minutes south of me
in Arcada, California, so a little ballpark that high school
ballparks are nicer than this one. And then we've got
the Medford Rogues, which is about two and a half

(12:28):
hours east for the most part, and we've got a
two games so far that's here. Went. I saw the Crabs,
went all the Rogues. Rogues was full, lot of fun
last night. Nicer Ballpark had a signed seating with a
little full down seat. There's also you know, bleachers with benches,
and there's a grass area for general mission and all
that jazz. And then we had a fun fireworks show

(12:51):
last night and it was a lot of fun. I
got a kicked out of some of the shirts I
saw and all that not just because the rogues out
of red, white and blue uniform on and so it was.
It was a lot of fun. And you know, and
fireworks shows and fire up here we get we can

(13:12):
buy fireworks down south of California. California, fireworks for the
most part are illegal. Here. I'm surrounded by forest and
fireworks are totally illegal. You can get just about anything.
Not that we bought any this year, maybe next year.
But I remember when I was a kid, fireworks ire
llegal in California. And I remember the bi centennial in

(13:35):
nineteen seventy six. There's a big mural on the freeway
off the ninety one there on the edge of Corona
Ice a tennial two hundred years it got faded for
a while. It's been repainted. One of my joys in
life was to see that get updated and fixed and repainted.
And in nineteen seventy six, during the bikes a tennial,

(13:57):
my family, we had an act and uncle that lived
in Irvine Nice neighborhood up at the end of Culver.
This is this is back when orange groves were all
over the place also, and and we had fireworks in
the street the neighborhood and then later on. I think
we went to a fireworks show later on that evening,
and I still remember there was this one that had

(14:18):
a pinwheel thing and it would spin on the stand
and then the nail worked its way loose and the
pin will wind up going up the street, up someone's
leg at one point, and everybody's freaking out. You know,
I was sending out a I was I gotta, I
gotta pull pull it up real here, real quick. I
was sending out a text of people with an image

(14:42):
that I just got a kick out of. Let's see here,
says says as Smokey the bear, you know, you know,
smoky pointing. You know, only you can stop forest fires,
and it says, and remember, kids don't play with fireworks.
Let the adults who have been drinking all day set
the him off. I think that was kind of the

(15:02):
way it was back on that by centennial.

Speaker 2 (15:05):
It was.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
It was pleasantly chaotic, and it was great. The celebration
was incredible. America had just been able to put the
Vietnam War behind us. It was an election year. There
were hopes that usually of course, we didn't know Carter
was on the going to be the next president, and

(15:27):
threw everything up. That's beside the point. And America was
two hundred years old. Patriotism just seethed through not see
what's the word, Uh just kind of filled every nook
and cranny of the country. The fireworks seemed brighter, the
parade seemed more festive, filled with spectators. Pride for America

(15:49):
was off the charts. It was awesome. I told you,
do you remember the Vice tennial was, did you, guys,
because you were in Corona still at the time. Right,
I'm talking to them, my wife off off to my
right for those of you like who because he talked
Uh but uh, wasn't that wasn't by centennial pretty cool? Yeah,
I just I don't know, it's just who's awesome? And

(16:13):
patriotism was an all time high. It fell only only
for the misery index to skyrocket for the next four
years under Carter. Well, this year the country he celebrates
two hundred and forty nine years. Next year he's to
fifty bit centennial and a half whatever they call that.

(16:33):
And we've got a president at President Trump who's been
making such moves, historical moves, moves beneficial of this country.
Within the first six months of his presidency that has
turned the economy around, and it's pretty much stopped every
illegal entry in our country. I mean, the numbers like zero,
the numbers for illegal aliens coming into this country. The

(16:54):
number has never been that low in the history of
this country. He's protecting it through his immigration policies against
invaders and criminal aliens. Meanwhile, we've got the opponents of
American liberty, opponents of Donald J. Trump, operating in a
manner that just is mind blowing. Did you see the

(17:18):
footage of those mourning and they're like crying and screaming.
They're all in black like them. Ugh, It's like, really,
you don't like to go find a comed country to
be in. I mean, don't get me wrong, I believe
in freedom of speech. I get it if you don't agree,
you know, but there's a mental sickness there. Now, those knuckleheads.

(17:41):
They didn't make the fireworks any less bright last night,
didn't make the pain, the parades, or the ball game
any less patriotic for red blooded Americans like you and me.
But they are attempting to tarnish the day a bit
because while we're out there celebrating liberty, self government, the
the live fortune and sacred honor that our founding fathers

(18:03):
put on the line to create the greatest experiment and
human freedom ever. These people, the radical, unhinged, truth denying left,
they're actively sneering at it all, mourning that America is
not a socialist utopia ruled by communist leaders are filled

(18:23):
with equality equal misery for all. We've got a Mom
Donni out there, you know, in New York City, which
I'll bring up again in a minute, and he's a
straight out coming. And then I'm getting all these fact
checker type articles, here's why, Mom Donnie is not a communist.
Yes he is. You're all communists, you just aren't willing

(18:44):
to admit it. And then we've got well while mans
of Americans who are honoring the sacrifice of our founders
yesterday and this week, appreciating also appreciating the passage of
the big beautiful Bill on Thursday that I believe will
place President Trump's successes on a mighty rocket and fire

(19:07):
our economy and country into a new golden age of
rocket fuel blasting. Political commentator Elly Mistel told The Joy
Reid Show on Wednesday, we are the bad guys on
the world stage. According to him, America is a menace
to the world. It should be sanctioned as if it

(19:28):
were Iran or North Korea, as if the beacon of
liberty that saved Europe from fascism, brought down the Berlin Wall,
stood up communism until the Soviet Union collapsed, and the
country that sent me into the Moon should now be
punished for existing. That's not just ignorance, that's poison. We
have cultural Marxism in our institutions and in our culture.

(19:53):
They have institutionalized leftism in our key institutions in the
United States, academia, politics, media, entertainment. This goes on and on.
We have a serious problem, and it's bigger than Biden's
bungling or Kamala's word salads. It's a spiritual sickness that

(20:16):
resides in the heart of the American left. A rot.
Remember I've talked about this in the show before. When
you're rotten inside, rot comes out their their profanity and
their screams, and their protests and their violence. This is
all a symptom. These are all symptoms of the rot
that is inside. And it's a rot that despises the Constitution,

(20:40):
abhors the founding fathers, and sees America not as the
last best hope of man on earth, but as the
villain and some twisted ideological horror story. I mean, think
about how bad it is on the side of the
aisle when the Democratic Party their candidate in New York
City for mayor is is Zoren Mamdani, a Muslim communist

(21:04):
at the highest level, whose aim is to seize the
means of production. He opposes free market capitalism, envisions government
runs grocery stores and housing. Wants to eliminate the NYPD
and replace it with police officer, replace the police officers
with social workers. He's promised, and of course the Islamic
part of him still bubbles the surface. So well, Doug,

(21:26):
don't focus on the fact that he's Muslim. Focus on
the fact that he's communists. I've been told by my compadres, No,
he's Muslim and communists. It's two bad things thrown into one.
And he promised to make halal eight bucks again halal
is you know, their version of making something kosher. So,

(21:50):
while he calls himself a democratic socialist, his vision of
a greater distribution of wealth, his philosop philosophical views regarding
the economy, and private ownership. He's about as communists as
they get. And this is the guy who won the
nomination for the Democratic Party in the New York mayoral primary.

(22:11):
What does that say about the Democratic Party. Meanwhile, you
got these radical lefty progressive knuckleheads out there protesting on
Independence Day, protesting our country's birthday, the country that gave
them the freedom to be idiots. They're protesting against that day,

(22:33):
the anniversary of that day when that happened, burning the
stars and stripes, doing their millions of chants that include
no borders, no nations, down with America, no kings, like
they are some deranged cult that is not able to
see the liberty through the trees. And the Democrats not

(22:54):
only haven't made a single peep of opposition to that
anti American crowd, that pro communist, violent, screaming, completely out
of their mind crowd, they're giving them words of support.
And the Democrats themselves the parties. I think the party
might be dead. I don't want to say that, because
you never know how quick it takes a zombie to

(23:16):
kind of rise up again. But they have no vision,
no backbone, no plan, unless you consider dot Trump as
a strategy. They don't want to fix America. They don't
want to make it great again. They don't want to
do what's best for Americans. They want to replace America,

(23:37):
use the Cloward Piven type move to rip up the
Constitution and build their own socialist system to take its place,
something global, something borderless, government run and authoritarian, something that
is anything other than liberty with God given rights. And
what is happening has gone way beyond political disagreement, my friends.

(23:59):
This is the about existential opposition to what America is,
what it was founded to be, what the founder's founding
fellows intended it to be. Independence Day matters more than
ever before. The Founding Fellows didn't sign the Declaration of
Independence on a whim. They didn't pledge their lives, their fortunes,
their sacred honor to cause to a cost bigger than

(24:21):
themselves for nothing. Liberty was not guaranteed, Victory was not assured.
William Williams, as the story goes, and the war's not
going well, and he says to a crowd, I signed
that declaration, and things are not going well. If it
continues this way, I'm gonna be hung and somebody else

(24:42):
in the UH in the audience says, well, I didn't
sign that document, so I'm pretty much safe. I mean,
I'm paraphrasing, but that's basically what he said. William Williams
turns to him and says, you, sir, did not do
your duty as an American. You should be hung for
not signing that document, for not standing for liberty. Do
we as Americans still possess that kind of boldness, a

(25:05):
kind of moxy grit, courage, guts in the face of oppressed,
of tyranny. Do we still have that kind of boldness, tenacity, backbone, resolve,
and courage. Because if we don't, if we continue to
allow the left to keep chipping away at America's foundation,
mocking her ideals, rewriting her history, and demonizing her values

(25:28):
in the fireworks and the parades, are nothing more than
distractions from our slow motion surrender. But I don't believe that,
not for a second. I don't believe that Americans have
given up. I believe there are millions of Americans, maybe
maybe one hundred or two hundred millions of Americans. I
don't know. Maybe you're one of them who still carries
that spirit of seventeen seventy six in their bones. We

(25:50):
know that the Constitution is not the problem, it's the solution.
We are proud Americans who refuse to bow before the
altar of woke Documa and the communist infestation, the cultural Marxism,
and we refuse to apologize for loving for our country.
We're not perfect, no people are. But America the greatest

(26:10):
force for good the world has ever known. And that's
not just worth defending. That's worth celebrating loudly, with honor
and unapologetically. There's a there's a story about Winston Churchill
talking about America. America system says, hey, uh, the American
system is the worst system ever device except for all others.

(26:30):
In other words, this god its flaws, but it's still
the best. So light the fireworks, enjoy the shows. We
still have a weekend to go. Fly the flag. Teach
your children the truth. Teach your children about our founding,
about the Christian Foundation, about the liberty, about the war,

(26:56):
about the lives, fortune, fortunes, and sacred honor that were
put on the line because America is Alexis Daytokville essentially
said this in his book Democracy in America. America is
great because America is good and its goodness lies in
her godly foundation and liberty, and let those who despise

(27:17):
her keep shouting their leftist media garbage from their leftist
media green rooms and academic cubicles. Because when the dust settles,
and I believe this under the Trump era, I believe.
I believe next year, the twenty twenty six midterm is
going to go in the right direction. I believe that

(27:40):
the president after Trump is going to be someone like JD. Vance.
I believe that the battle for America's soul has been decided,
and that good will win. It won't be their cynicism
that endures. It'll be your courage. You're because you have
been loud, patriotic, and free, and other people will be

(28:02):
attracted to that. Let's take a break. When we come back,
Dennis Jackson is with me, and he'll do you want
a response, don't go anywhere.

Speaker 3 (28:24):
If you've been waiting to go solar, don't wait any longer.
Propose legislation ending the thirty percent federal tax credit could
pass this summer and go into effect by December thirty first.
With utility rates rising year after year and summer hikes
with no end in sight, now is the time. To
walk in fixed energy costs for years to come. As
Guard Energy is a local, family owned company that serves

(28:45):
southern California since two thousand and eight. With over four
thousand flawless installs and personalized service you can trust call
eight five to five seven six zero energy. That's eight
five five seven six zero three six three seven before
waiting costs you thirty percent more as Guard Energy local
trusted proven.

Speaker 4 (29:07):
You got a dent in your door, scratch and your fender,
or a gratch in your door and a dent in
your fender. If you need auto detailing, if you need
buyer shooting decals on the side of your car, if
you need a rally stripe right down the middle of
your hardtop, I don't care what it is. The Patriots
at All Star Collision are the place you want to go.
They're the only place to go. Buy twenty two Railroad
Street in Corona. Web address all Star ci dot com

(29:29):
to see all that they do and what they're all about.
Well number nine five one two seven nine nine one
sixty one All Star Collision. The Kings of Reck and
Roll help.

Speaker 1 (29:39):
Me fight the good fight.

Speaker 5 (29:40):
This radio program is funded by advertising dollars, so If
you are a business, add Constitution Radio with Douglas V.
Gibbs to your business portfolio. If you are a listener,
become a patron of the businesses advertising on this program.
Without advertising, your weekend dose of truth ends with more advertising.
Constitution idea what Douglas Vhi Gibbs grows and we will

(30:02):
be on the way to win the battle to restore
the Republic.

Speaker 1 (30:05):
To learn more, email.

Speaker 5 (30:06):
Us at Constitution Speaker at yahoo dot com or visit
Douglas v.

Speaker 1 (30:10):
Gibbs dot com. Repeal Democracy by Douglas v. Gibbs is
finally available. Doug Lady's book examines the importance of being
a republic, How we can restore a republic, Why democracy
is so dangerous. Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercise
for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. C. S. Lewis.

(30:32):
And that is the very first page that you can see,
right before chapter one and Repeal Democracy. Repeal Democracy by
Douglas V. Gibbs on sale now.

Speaker 6 (30:47):
This is your last chance after this, there is no
turning back.

Speaker 2 (30:52):
If you take the bluepill.

Speaker 7 (30:54):
The story ends.

Speaker 2 (30:56):
You wake up in your bed and believe whatever you
want to believe the red pill.

Speaker 7 (31:01):
You stay in Wonderland, and I show you how deep
the rabbit hole goes. Our records indicate you've been lied to.

Speaker 3 (31:10):
Welcome to the Truth, Douglas V.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
Giggs. All I'm offering is the truth, nothing more.

Speaker 1 (31:35):
Welcome back Constitution Radio, KMT fourteen ninety AM great to
be here. Alan Myers is unable to make it today.
He's got a week ind of frivolities with his family.
I guess, and Dennis Jackson had a few things he
was trying to juggle, but he made sure he was here.
So let's give him the mic. So I talked about

(31:56):
in a pennance day. I talked about the knuckleheads that
want to stand against it. I talked about the fact
that we're growing, or at least I'm growing, mister. Constitution's
footprint has expanded into Zachi Radio and Matters Media. So
welcome Dennis. Glad to have you here. Brother. I appreciate
you in ways that you don't understand and know probably,

(32:18):
but I'm glad you're here. I don't mind doing shows
on my own that it's always nice to have someone
about stuff off the wall with and so I'm glad
you're here. Uh so, what do you think about the
opening and the announcement about Zachi Radio.

Speaker 7 (32:33):
Well, I read your announcement, you know, I'm on the
email link, and at first when I read it, there's
another guy who has something matters organization that.

Speaker 2 (32:46):
At first I thought, huh, let's he here with sorrows?

Speaker 1 (32:49):
Yeah, you think the media matters?

Speaker 7 (32:51):
Yeah? Yeah, so, Uh no, I think that's good by
you say it'd be nice to really get the count
between Salem and everything else. Does this mean you're on
twenty three or one hundred and nineteen?

Speaker 2 (33:06):
You know what might it mean? Yeah?

Speaker 7 (33:10):
So, I mean that would be a plus, especially you know,
if you wind up doing another road show, you know,
you want to go to the cities where it's being
broadcast because you know, you can maybe have a pretty
good turnout at the local hotel or you know, somebody's
home or you know.

Speaker 2 (33:28):
However, you try to put your tour together a bad idea.

Speaker 1 (33:31):
I hadn't thought of that. Get the list and set
up a tour up, visit all the stations. Wrong, that
would be fun.

Speaker 7 (33:37):
See see, I'm the marketing guy. You know, you and
I don't talk about this enough, but uh.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
Yeah, Virginia. I told my wife earlier today while we
were driving in and we talked about you a little bit.
I said, Man, I want to get to the point
where we got enough funds coming. I just hired Dennis.
Put put them into a place that is away from
all the drama and be my marketing guy, because you
do you have a business background, marketing background that that

(34:04):
I need. But I just can't afford it. I can't
afford you.

Speaker 7 (34:07):
You know, I understand, you know, we're all kind of
just marketing our time as we're trying to get there.
But you know, I read the thing. I smiled. I
did ask myself the question that you have not answered yet.
But hopefully you'll get the information. You know, it'd be
nice to be able to look at the map and
see what states and what locales that you're in, what

(34:30):
your footprint is, and uh, you know, I mean we
can go back to twenty five Questions of the Constitution.
You know that that book needs you know, it needs
to be sold, you know, I mean, that's a good
one and the other ones, you know, they aren't bad.

Speaker 1 (34:46):
But you know that thing, is it that that was
the book that that well, that's a book that got you.
I know you still carry that thing around you with you, right.

Speaker 2 (34:54):
I saw yesterday. It's in my briefcase. It never leaves
my briefcase.

Speaker 7 (34:59):
Wherever I go with my briefcase, I've got that and
I've got my enemies within.

Speaker 2 (35:03):
C D you know. So, But going back to you know, the.

Speaker 7 (35:09):
Matters at hand here using the word matters again, you know,
it made me reflect, you know, about what do I mean?
And I'll say this in defense of I think some
a lot of good people out there that are not
trying to be disrespectful, even though it's true, you know,
I know, we could talk about the Civil War and

(35:31):
war you know, between the States, and once technically is
correct and the other one.

Speaker 2 (35:36):
It's just used to saying.

Speaker 7 (35:38):
But I think a lot of people when they say
happy fourth to July, what they're saying is happy Independence Day,
you know, And but it doesn't come across that way
and to originalists, to purists. And I'm not trying to
say you're picky, because I know you're not contingent. You

(35:58):
don't try to pick a fight, but at the same time,
you kind of do. I don't know if you saw
the thing that Glenn Beck did you know where he
was talking about this is the conversation you need to
have about independence state. It basically was parallel to yours,
and he went through a lot of detail. I thought
it was great stuff that most people haven't heard, you know,

(36:19):
about things that really went on, you know, at that time.
And I do think that when people read about it,
you know, they would feel amount of a great amount
of pride. I know, when I was a kid growing up,
we had these books that were kind of a teal,
a light blue. There were maybe you know, five by

(36:43):
seven inches. They weren't a great big book. They might
have been fifty or eighty pages, but they were all
history books. And there'd be one on Jefferson, and there'd
be one on Washington, and there'd be one on a
subject matter. And they all went back, you know, to
the early days, to the founding days.

Speaker 2 (36:59):
And I love those books.

Speaker 7 (37:01):
But I got that out of public school, you know,
and we stood and we did the pledge of allegiance
every day, you know, And and all that stuff has
gone now and it needs to be brought back so
that people do have an appreciation.

Speaker 2 (37:21):
And it's funny.

Speaker 7 (37:21):
They'll give you the COVID vaccine that's untested, you know.
But they won't give you the Founding documents. They'll give
you American history as long as it starts with eighteen
sixty five, but they won't go back to seventeen seventy six.

Speaker 2 (37:36):
Because you and you know this. You and I've talked
about this. It's been a long time. A lot of.

Speaker 7 (37:41):
Water under that bridge, but you know that needs to
be brought back.

Speaker 2 (37:45):
You know. I'd like Musk, I'd like somebody with money
to say, we're going to bring back the Boy Scouts.
You know, We're going to bring back, you.

Speaker 7 (37:54):
Know, things that have been polluted and now have been
set aside. They've been so watered down they aren't worth
anything anymore.

Speaker 2 (38:03):
You know.

Speaker 7 (38:03):
I like my lemonade strong. I don't drink beer, so
I can't say much about.

Speaker 2 (38:08):
How I like my beer. But uh uh, you know,
if if if, if, if.

Speaker 7 (38:14):
The lemon doesn't make it kind of go whoop a
little bit, you know, then it's too weak, you know,
And and that's that's how I like my Founding Fathers.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
You know, you ought to.

Speaker 7 (38:25):
When you read it and ought to go ooh, you know,
and ought to really you know.

Speaker 2 (38:29):
Put that chill down your spine. You know.

Speaker 7 (38:31):
My dad was great at that and uh, you know
we celebrated, you know, uh respectfully, and you know we
could we could use fireworks back then, like you, you know,
because I'm older than you. And if you had fireworks
for you or a kid, I had them.

Speaker 2 (38:45):
Uh. And all that.

Speaker 7 (38:46):
Stuff is being you know, it's being taken.

Speaker 2 (38:49):
Away, you know.

Speaker 7 (38:50):
And and and why you guys in Oregon with all
the trees and all that can blow that stuff up
and I'm living in a sinking concrete jungle. The next
door neighbor only had a swimming pool, so all he's
got is a great big bucket of water over there.
You know, there's a problem, no big deal, you know,
but you know there's gonna be phone calls and and uh.

(39:12):
But even in Rancho Cucamonga, where I spend a lot
of time and where I am now, uh, you know, I.

Speaker 2 (39:18):
Hear him at night.

Speaker 7 (39:19):
You know, there's the rebels that are out there saying,
screw you.

Speaker 2 (39:22):
I'm going to celebrate anyway, So you know that's good.

Speaker 7 (39:27):
But uh, I I love this country right and uh, yeah,
it's got its problems, but you know.

Speaker 1 (39:41):
Not perfect said, you know, still the best.

Speaker 7 (39:45):
I'll take my problems with this country and any other
place on the planet. And I do think even though
we have a First Amendment, you know that that doesn't
mean that we ought to let.

Speaker 2 (39:59):
Cloward and pivots live here. You know, if they don't
like the country.

Speaker 7 (40:03):
We ought to have some way of saying, this is
the land of the free and the home of the brave.
And if you don't like freedom and you're not willing
to stand up for it, if you're not really gonna
save the Pledge of Allegiance, then you're out of dodge. Well,
I was born here, my parents were born here, I'm
a citizen.

Speaker 2 (40:20):
Well, yeah, I know. And what am I trying to do?

Speaker 7 (40:22):
Trying to make it now with totalitarian only for conservatives? No,
you know that doesn't work either, But there's got to
be a way.

Speaker 1 (40:30):
And uh, well yeah, you know, Dennis. You know, sometimes
when I get to this, I do spend my time
sometimes talking to people that are much further left than
the people with I know you do, yeah, And I'll
ask them sometimes I'll talk about how horrible this is. Okay, Well,
where would you if you had your choice? You could
just you know, the genie could just sig you there

(40:51):
and you could live a peaceful life and you'd have
the money. Where would you rather be? And almost all
of them can't answer the question, yep, because as much
as they hate America, they have to admit when asked
that question, it's still the best place in the world.
So even at its worst and their minds, is still

(41:12):
better than every place else.

Speaker 7 (41:14):
Well, you know, if you right now could call direct
and talk to Rosie O'Donnell or.

Speaker 2 (41:21):
Talk to God. I just had her name in my head.

Speaker 7 (41:25):
Yeah, Allen DeGeneres who left the country. You know, they're
finding out that where they're at culturally and all the rest,
you know, there's some beautiful land over there. I mean
they're both kind of over in the UK. I guess
what ones in Ireland or ones in England and wherever
they're at, right But what's going on in Ireland right now?

(41:51):
Who's the guy who's running for president over there right now?

Speaker 1 (41:54):
And they've had there and they've voiced to some of
their concerns about where they live. And what's funny is
they hate America, but boy, they sure talk about it
all the time.

Speaker 2 (42:04):
Well I'm just saying Ireland.

Speaker 7 (42:06):
I mean, who's the UFC fighter who's running for president
over there?

Speaker 1 (42:10):
Oh yeah, oh yeah, but Gregor, Okay, he's talking, he's
talking like Trump.

Speaker 7 (42:20):
They're all ticked off because they're losing their sovereignty. They
don't have to love America.

Speaker 2 (42:25):
They aren't supposed to. They're supposed to love Ireland. They're
supposed to love Scotland.

Speaker 7 (42:29):
They're supposed to love Wales, they're supposed to love England.

Speaker 2 (42:32):
You know.

Speaker 7 (42:33):
I mean that my history is scotch, Irish, Welsh, and
English and there's some German that got across the channel.

Speaker 2 (42:40):
So that's my five of my nationality, you know.

Speaker 7 (42:44):
And they ought to be throwing out all the people,
you know, that are getting in the way of the
the sovereignty, the history that they're just letting go down
the river, you know. And uh and Trump says that,
so he Trump tells all the other countries, your country

(43:08):
ought to be number one to you. You run your
country the best way possible for the best of your country,
and that's what you want to do, and I will
support you in that. But I'll support you running my
country the best way for my country, just like I
raised my family the best I can, and you raise
your family the best you can. We might have different

(43:28):
rules and all that, but we understand our priority.

Speaker 2 (43:32):
I don't raise my children.

Speaker 7 (43:33):
I'm telling them they how to hate their neighbor, you know,
I do tell them what they have to stand up to.

Speaker 2 (43:39):
Their neighbor and fight their neighbor. They need to do it.
But you know, you.

Speaker 7 (43:42):
Ought to try to be a good neighbor, you know
the Christian ethic, you know, do unto others, you know,
treat like you know, you know, respect well. And that's
what the founders were talking about.

Speaker 1 (43:55):
You know, I looked up what's going on with Connor
while you were talking. So for those who are curious,
Conor McGregor, former UFC champion, announced his candidacy for the
Irish presidency on an anti immigration platform of course n N,
along with other issues other economic positions that mirror Trump's. Uh.

(44:18):
His announcement comes after he has become increasingly popular as
a figurehead for the conservative side of politics in Ireland. Uh.
And so there you go.

Speaker 2 (44:29):
It could happen. It could happen.

Speaker 1 (44:31):
They need that Ireland becomes one of our allies in
that area.

Speaker 2 (44:37):
Well now what what what about England?

Speaker 1 (44:40):
Yeah, what about the same thing? And now we're looking at.

Speaker 7 (44:48):
You know, they're talking about Farage is going up in
the polls right now, you know, mister mister Brexit himself.

Speaker 2 (44:55):
Right.

Speaker 7 (44:57):
And then in Germany, have I read it right, the
a f D is going to be able to have
a candidate.

Speaker 1 (45:05):
Yeah. And and and by the way, they passed a
law not allowing a f D members to even have guns. Uh,
Italy because you know they're dangerous and violment because they're
far right. And then Italy now has a conservative leader.

Speaker 2 (45:18):
Yeah, maloney, yeah, the lady.

Speaker 1 (45:20):
I mean, you you know, France has gotta be moving
in that direction. I mean, I'm I'm you know, I'm ready, well,
I'm trying to. I'm getting ready to call France Francis
Dan because it's gone, you know.

Speaker 2 (45:33):
Yeah, the Bulkans. Yeah.

Speaker 7 (45:36):
And then you get you know, Trump goes to NATO
last week and you know they call him daddy.

Speaker 2 (45:41):
Yeah you know, I mean so yeah, you.

Speaker 7 (45:45):
Know, whereas a year ago, you know, Biden was there
doing nothing, and Macron and all these guys, you know,
they're basically laughing because you know Trump's out there and
you know he's running, but they don't care. And and
now you know, the guy from Canada. You know, he's
been given his notice that he better fix things or

(46:08):
else you know, they're gonna turn on him.

Speaker 1 (46:11):
And you know, I got a little cozy with Trump lately.

Speaker 2 (46:15):
Yeah, so it's uh.

Speaker 7 (46:18):
I say all this in the spirit of when people
say happy forth, I think what most of them mean.

Speaker 2 (46:29):
That's right.

Speaker 7 (46:31):
It's like the one time when somebody. I walked out
of a store and a guy walked by me and
you know that hat I have, that don't tread on
me hat, and you know I'm wearing that hat, you know,
and I'm older, and he just walks by. I was
walking out of a Walmart and he we almost bumped
into each other. He was walking past the front doors

(46:53):
as I was coming out the front doors, and uh,
as a sidestep me. He just real quick just said, oh,
I thank you for your service. And I heard that,
And by the time it dawned on me why he
said that, he was already fifteen twenty feet away. And
I didn't run up to him to say, oh, you know,
you know, and I wasn't trying to get you know,

(47:13):
any false valor or anything like that, but you know,
it hit me and I and I think when people
say the fourth you know, we shouldn't react overly negatively
because they're on people.

Speaker 1 (47:32):
But I'm like you, I'd rather them say happy to pendicity.
That's really what it is, what you were saying earlier
about Europe and the leaders and stuff. And because I
do watch my sheriff's CNN and MSNBC and the Alphabet
News every once in a while, because I gotta know
what the other side of saying. It's hard to argue
against their arguments if I don't know what their arguments are.

Speaker 2 (47:54):
Oh, you got Scott. Scott Jennings is taking care of
that for you.

Speaker 1 (47:59):
And I talk to you know, a little you know,
lefties of my life, and turns out one of my
neighbors is why. He's a good guy, and he's very
good for the neighborhood. He and I don't very politically,
but he's willing to talk about it. He's, you know,
not one of those crazy ones. He's at least willing
to have the civil discourse. And so so I get that.
But if you listen to CNN and MSNBC about how

(48:21):
Europe is kind of falling in language, Trump call him daddy,
so on and so forth, their response is just because
they're afraid of him, because they're afraid of his authoritarian nature.

Speaker 7 (48:34):
Well, you know it's interesting, now take that and apply it,
because this is part of the.

Speaker 2 (48:38):
Show today about no kings.

Speaker 7 (48:42):
You know, about the threat to democracy and who wasn't
and what did you say in nineteen thirty five with
Roosevelt and this parliamentarian. You got a person who has
been appointed no vote at all, that is affecting the
legislature through deep shape tactic.

Speaker 1 (49:03):
Boss's voice in there because of the and for those
of you that are listening right now, what he's talking
about is is my article about the quiet saboteur basically
in the Senate the Senate parliamentarian and uh not that
I'll go through the whole thing, but basically, you know,
we have this this parliamentary and I know what a
parliamentarian as I served as a parliamentarian for the PTA

(49:26):
for four years. Parliamentarian is their job is to make
sure that the rules for Roberts are being followed, Robert's
rules for order are being followed, that that that they're
not deviating from the rules of the meetings.

Speaker 2 (49:41):
You know.

Speaker 7 (49:42):
But but but if you bring something up, they may
say out of order. This is not the time for it.
It's supposed to come under new Business, you know. But
they don't they don't cancel you. They just make sure
everything is done in the right order, exactly the parliamentarian
in the Senate but canceling saying, you can't do this

(50:02):
because it didn't go through the right steps, you know,
so you need to take it out of the bill,
even though it's all been voted on, and they shouldn't have.

Speaker 2 (50:13):
It's kind of like the Supreme Court.

Speaker 7 (50:14):
They always say, well, it is the opinion, but that's
it's that it's their opinion. But then their opinion turns
into reality, you know. And her opinion should not be
like the Supreme Court, and and and and and be
a writer on legislation. She ought to be there for
points of order. And that's it, right.

Speaker 1 (50:33):
And the interesting thing audience for about the Senate parliamentarian is,
this is not a position. I was created by the
founding fathers. This is a position. She's the fifth one
in history. It was created in nineteen thirty five. And
I did a little research on this Franklin Dell and Roosevelt,
and I'm like, well, you had a super majority in
the uh because I'm because I was looking at it

(50:55):
kind of from a conspiratorial viewpoint. Okay, this person's got
to been put in there for nefarious reasons. Then I
then I go start looking through the my notes and
books I have and look at things up online, and
I'm like, well, wait a second. FDR, when this position
was created nineteen thirty five, had a massive Senate super majority,
had the power to basically pass whatever he wanted, except

(51:17):
for he didn't because the party itself was in splinter.
It was splinter between three factions, the far left progressives,
the southern Democrats, and the conservative Democrats who who didn't
like the big government, uh centralization of power that FDR
was pushing. And so suddenly, now you've got this the
voice of the boss, the Senate Parlementarians suddenly in there.

(51:41):
And suddenly and then if you look at the bills,
and they were having trouble getting bills passed, the suddenly
things started falling in line. What a coincidence? And so
and so I I believe that my uh, my conspiratorial
point of view of looking at it was a smart
way of looking at it. And then I and then
I basically said this why are they even putting up
with that crap because the Senate really they have historical

(52:05):
and legal precedent of what they can do. If they
had the courage, they could ignore the parliamentary and you know, okay,
thank you, but this is what we're doing, replacerr. The
Republicans did that in two thousand and one when Robert
Dove got in the way of tax cuts or eliminate
the position altogether. We didn't have it for one hundred

(52:28):
and fifty years.

Speaker 2 (52:31):
One hundred and sixty. But who's kind of sixty?

Speaker 1 (52:33):
Okay, well, yeah, you're quicker with numbers than I am,
I guess, but but you know what they suddenly it's needed.
So and I think it comes down to the backbone,
I think from the Republican's point of view on how
to handle this.

Speaker 7 (52:47):
Well, and I say, soon to me, just kind of
weaseled out. You know, he should have stood up to it,
and he didn't, you know, because it's it's see, we're
now we're going in depressive it. Well, the president is
you know, we listen to the parliamentarian like you know,
they're the the rules chief. And they got their hand

(53:08):
on the legislative rudder and they don't.

Speaker 1 (53:12):
And my feeling is the left is lost with the
inferior courts because because the Supreme Court slapped that down,
so now you got to find another way. And that's
why I'm looking at it. And then and then when
it finally gets slapped down with the parliamentarians, they'll find
another way to try to squeeze it, because well.

Speaker 7 (53:28):
They probably already have another four that we don't even
know about yet, right, we just need Yeah.

Speaker 2 (53:35):
It's just a matter of uh.

Speaker 7 (53:38):
In the spirited doge just go through everything and keep
looking and pull all the weeds out by the roots.

Speaker 1 (53:46):
And thought, we only have a few minutes, a couple
of minutes left. I do want to bring up the
big beautiful bill. It is not perfect, and I'm not
happy with all of the Senate amendments or some of
a couple of things they removed, which we can probably
get laid. But generally it's an awesome bill. Generally it
is going to be good for America. It is going

(54:07):
to it's going to codify the Trump tax. Cutch is
going to codify a lot of his campaign promises into law.
And whenever you unleash the free market, the economy always approves.
It always gets better. Any any real quick thoughts about
thirty seconds on that No, I, you and.

Speaker 7 (54:27):
I have talked before that i'd like to see the
budget go through in the various pieces.

Speaker 1 (54:33):
But right, he doesn't keep his own merit instead of
a big giant bill.

Speaker 7 (54:37):
But the deal is, he doesn't know for sure what's
going to happen in twenty twenty six, and this big
beautiful bill now goes out years.

Speaker 2 (54:45):
It's fun.

Speaker 7 (54:45):
It's got things locked in that he knows he's got now,
and he's minimized the.

Speaker 2 (54:52):
Risk of what happens in twenty twenty six, right, And.

Speaker 1 (54:55):
That's really what it was all about. All right, Well,
we're about out time. We got about forty seconds left.
Anything you want to say to the audience before we go.

Speaker 7 (55:04):
Well, I just would invite them to if we could
get one hundred people, you know, to sign up for
the nine dollars a month deal, I think we'd be
back to our second hour on the show.

Speaker 1 (55:18):
If so, if not better than that, okay, yea, and
even fifty would probably get us there. So nine dollars
a month. Just hit the join link on the flank
bar there. Douglas Vegibs dot com. And now I'm gonna
do my final Thank you Dennis for joining me, Thank
you for being here. Appreciate you. You know we stand combined,
we kicked. But God bless Themerica, my friends, God bless you.
This has been Constitution Radio here on km T fourteen

(55:40):
ninety am. Don't forget Douglasvegibbs dot com. You can also
find out listen to all the other stuff on the
podcast platform. Mister Constution now by wav Gibs.

Speaker 8 (55:51):
We'll see you next week.

Speaker 6 (56:23):
The proceeding was a paid program. Views and claims expressed
are those of the program producer and are not endorsed
by this station. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of
radio station KMMT, its management, employees, or affiliates.

Speaker 7 (56:37):
Fourteen ninety am Smart Talk Radio kmm T Banning, Beaumont
and Redlands.

Speaker 6 (56:45):
From ABC News, I'm Chuck Sievererson.

Speaker 2 (56:48):
Update on the
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

NFL Daily with Gregg Rosenthal

NFL Daily with Gregg Rosenthal

Gregg Rosenthal and a rotating crew of elite NFL Media co-hosts, including Patrick Claybon, Colleen Wolfe, Steve Wyche, Nick Shook and Jourdan Rodrigue of The Athletic get you caught up daily on all the NFL news and analysis you need to be smarter and funnier than your friends.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.