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February 14, 2024 57 mins
Our next guest is Michael Lunsford, the Executive Director for Citizens for a New Louisiana

They are “Louisiana’s most influential voice,” thanks to their unique methods to accomplish change in his state.

We are going to talk about him winning against a false defamation claim by a local librarian and how they were one of only a few groups to effectively squash drag queen story hour from their local library.

I’ll give you an update to my last two articles detailing that female bathrooms in public schools are no longer “safe spaces” and how one local district here in Maine is trying to bully me into not bringing you the Truth.

@michaellunsford on Twitter
@newlouisana on Twitter and NewLousiana.org



Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/maine-source-of-truth-podcast--5501107/support.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Our next guest is Michael Lunsford,the executive director for Citizens for a New
Louisiana. There Louisiana's most influential voicethanks to their unique methods to accomplish change
in his state. We're going totalk about him winning against a false defamation
claim made by a local librarian asthey were trying to eliminate some of this
pornogra from the library, and howthey are one of only a few groups

(00:21):
to effectively squash Drag Queen's Story hourin their local library. I'll give you
an update on my last two articlesdetailing that female bathrooms and public schools are
no longer quote safe spaces unquote,and how one local district here in Maine
is trying to bully me into notbringing you the truth. This is the
main source of Truth podcast, andvery few parents have said anything but Sean

(00:41):
mcbriarty did. Sean mcbriarty is inthe faltest opus today. Sean, though,
how pervasive is that in our school? Sean mcbriarty joins us now he
just won this lawsuit and gets fortythousand dollars from the school board. Good
Morning, Shawn, through his mostDangerous Dad apparently, how are are you?
Are you being so a working bya local district for exposing the transgender

(01:07):
library display? Can you explain towhat's what happens? Okay? You all
so with everything that's going on towe just talked to this just like alcohol
mail. Yeah, about the oversptualization of books and libraries at the pool
and then look like you put thehandle on that. That's the way I
meant you to support that. Iasked you to support this podcast if you

(01:27):
wanted to continue, and if youwant to help me with my legal expenses
and god willing a legal offense fundto help others in need, please consider
chipping in at www dot gibson godot com slash Sean mcbriardy And now onto
the show. All right, folks, this is episode one oh one Valentine's

(01:47):
Day to fourteen, twenty four aswe record this, and I want to
wish my wife a happy Valentine's Day. This is about our thirtieth official Valentine's
Day and totally we've been married foralmost twenty four years and I'm very happy
that she has not yet murdered mein my sleep based on all of the
stuff that I'm doing to try toexpose this just chaotic, insane and evil

(02:08):
world of our public k through twelveschool systems. One of the things we
bring on this podcast we always tryto provide a Bible verse that has something
to do with the content that we'retalking about. This was a Bible verse,
Exodus eighteen twenty one that my seniorpastor actually read to us on Sunday.
Moreover, thou shalt provide out ofall the people, able men such

(02:30):
as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness, in place such over
them to be rulers of thousands,and rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties,
and rulers of tens. That reallytalks a lot about what Michael's going
to be speaking to is that peopleneed to get active. They need to
go and really engage themselves in theirlocal political scene. That could be getting

(02:52):
on a local pta, could begetting on a local board, it could
be volunteering, could be just simplygoing to school board meetings in town count
meetings and understanding the dynamics of thingslike Robert's rules of order and policy.
But we really need people God,fearing people, men of truth to be
willing to go and women of truthobviously and be able to go and then

(03:15):
not shrink when the light is shinedupon them. So a couple things I've
been concentrating on here lately, andthis is what's bringing up in various communities
around Maine. I wrote an articleon again. You can go to Sean
mcbridy dot substack dot com. Ireally would appreciate it if he became a
paid subscriber, but please subscribe,that'd be awesome. And the title was

(03:35):
trans bathroom and locker room policies putyour daughters at risk. And one of
the school members in Gardner, Maine, a small town, has allowed again,
like we've been seeing here, boysin the girls' bathroom and locker room.
And one of the quotes from theschool remember she stated, legally and
morally speaking, there is no boyin that room. I want you to
listen to this just again, inmy opinion, insane take on a boy

(04:03):
physically being in the room. Butthis school board member, who clearly has
no sense of reality saying that legallyand morally speaking, there's no boy in
that room. This lady, whois very concerned about the safety and well
being of her children. The policy, as I see it, seems to
only concentrate on the well being ofone type of child, but it neglects

(04:29):
the well being, safety and comfortof all the others. I'm thinking of
all the little girls in a restroomin the girl's room. They would be
uncomfortable to say, having a boyin that room. This is the concern
of this parent that her children don'tfeel safe, they feel threatened, and

(04:50):
the policy doesn't seem to have anyconcern for them whatsoever. Policy the policy
is specific to transgender that's the intense. This is the tail wagging the dog.
This is insanity. This is neededas an added value for these students
that are their own issues. Thatpolicy puts young women who are coming of

(05:15):
age, possibly in the presence ofa boy in the very private area of
the bathroom. It's incredible. I'mstunned by this. Jack, Jack,
You've got some really concerned parents aboutthis, and I got to feel that
there's going to be some drum beatgoing on about it. I know,
but people don't become aware of thingsuntil a trip wire is hit, and

(05:40):
I think we've hit one. SoI think if your community members' children are
feeling unsafe in the bathroom. Wehave to ask why is somebody threatening them?
It's just too meaning to say thatour bathrooms are, as well as

(06:03):
every other square inch of our schoolbuildings, are supposed to be a safe
place for all students. So ifthe students are experiencing something that is making
them feel unsafe, then they shouldbe going to their administration. As for
the young women of our district,legally speaking, there is no boy in

(06:27):
that room. That's too logical.Legally, legal worldly speaking, there's there
is no boy in that room.That's the insane. Take from a woman
who now thinks that she's a dude. So M. S. E.
D. Eleven represents small main townsGardner, Pittston, Randolph, West Gardner.
The school boards have been infiltrated bythese folks. Clear insanity across you

(06:48):
know, these school boards and acrossMaine and across the United States has reached
a crescendo. And what I wouldsay is six twists, sick, twisted,
mentally confused people are making decisions withyour school and your child's lives hanging
in the balance with your tax dollars. Rumors had been in the middle school
that a fifteen year old boy hadbeen blocking the girl's bathroom stalls, touching
girls hair, shoulders and hands insidethe bathroom, grabbing girls trying to leave.

(07:12):
You know, that's as salt,and the next step for him might
be sexual assault of one of yourdaughters. And so you know, the
parents are not being heard, samesituation. More than one hundred and fifty
students sign a petition here in thisschool system, and nobody seems to care
from the school board. So we'rejust going to keep bringing this awareness parents

(07:33):
again, as they say all thetime, pull your kids. Now.
These schools are irreparably broken. Theyare not fixable the way they are right
now. We're going to talk alittle bit with Michael. People have to
have a plan. If you wantto replace their school board, if you
want to get your school corrected,you replace the school remembers who are nuts,
and you move forward to firing thesuperintendent and firing Drummond Woods in the

(07:53):
legal team and starting fresh. Andfor that perspective, for this person to
say, you know, legally andmorally speaking, there's no boy in the
room, it's absolute insanity. Welive in one reality and I wish these
people would join us. So Thelast article I wrote about girls' bathrooms here
I think it was on Thursday,entitled girls' bathrooms are not safe spaces when

(08:15):
males are present. And there isno evidence based proof that a gender affirming
process is affirming to the health ofincongruent youth basically, you know, youth
that has kind of been cast aside. So this is in Brewer, Maine,
a small town of about fifteen thousandpeople, where eight pages of petitions
front and back was signed by studentsin Brewer High School and over seven hundred

(08:39):
parents and taxpayers and students signed anonline petition before that was taken down by
the woke change dot org or changedot com or forgetation and you know,
really, again, the mental healthissues of these folks are the root cause
of the problem, and they're broughton by mental, sexual, physical,
child abuse, family dysfunction, adversechildhood events in doctrination, and peer pressure.

(09:05):
And so what we've been able todo is say, you know,
parents don't fall for the trans kidswill commit suicide argument anymore. That's simply
not true. It's been debunked.There was no truth to it at all,
And the longest ever study done inSweden over thirty years followed people after
sex reassignment surgery after transition, andthe suicide rate of those who had undergone

(09:26):
sex reassignment surgery rose twenty times thatof comparable peers after the transition. They've
got a twenty times greater chance tokill themselves. And so you know,
instead, what the school does isthey've been attacking me. And I'll speak
to that in a moment, butthey basically tell these girls, no,
you need to welcome him into yourbathroom, and if you have any issue,

(09:48):
you can take a buddy along tothe bathroom. So it's kind of
confusing. Why would you have totake a buddy if this is a completely
safe situation, Why would you haveto take a buddy into the bathroom?
And so Michelle McDonald, who isa Brewer High School English teacher, and
I'm going to put quotations up underteacher, and I'm also going to play
this Glomo Luomo lumo aut She servedas the curriculum leader for the apartment chair

(10:15):
for seven years as the co advisorfor the school's Gender and Sexuality Alliance.
Now, GSAs are indeed a religion, it's more like a cult. And
these cults are full of useful idiots, but it's personal for McDonald. She
states that she is quote is wellknown for advocacy on behalf of LGBTQ plus
students, and then alleges that shewas receiving pushback and hostility and retaliation for

(10:37):
her advocacy because it's a religion tothese folks. They are you know.
In her advocacy includes shaming minor studentsfor the use of dead names and non
preferred pronouns. So when you lookat this, you're like, Okay,
leadership is paramount. Weak Men createhard times. Brewer Superintendent Greg Palmer is

(10:58):
the epitome of a weak man.He resigned as the principle of Daring High
School in Portland in twenty nineteen dueto quote an enrollment dip stoked conversation about
diversity unquote, and that the teacherswere quote vocally critical of the initiative,
saying that its implementation caused or contributedto the lack of discipline an unsafe environment
in the school. Sound familiar,That's exactly what's going on now. Greg

(11:22):
Palmer, superintendent of schools. Heuses he him his and his email bios,
so you know, he's a sexualnarcissist. He also participated in a
drag show inside during high school inPortland, Maine. Yeah, you heard
that correctly. Twenty eighteen, yourlocal Brewerman superintendent Greg Palmer quote made his
drag the debut on stage wearing ateal blue wig, and he danced across

(11:43):
the stage to David Bowie's under Pressure. Can you just picture Greg Palmer coming
out in his teal blue wig dancingacross the stage. Sure does a school

(12:07):
that's their goal? Yep, allright, enough of that garbage. So

(12:30):
that's the guy that's running the Brewerschool system. It's the absolute degradation of
morality. It's unfortunate. And sowhat's happening is parents, your local schools
are being run by trans stripper rumorclowns performing in female blackface. Does that
make any sense to you? Taxpayers? Are you starting to connect the dots?
This is a coordinated effort to eliminatethe morality and family values inside your

(12:52):
local schools. So instead of themfocusing on the problem, they put out
a letter on I think it wasSunday the eleventh, talking about as many
of you are aware, in thepast few days we've seen an online hate
directed at members of our school community. These attacks are detrimental to the very
sense of family and community we've createdtogether in are inconsistent with our policies,

(13:13):
as well as well settled law,which it isn't as articulated through the main
state statutes, which it isn't instate's highest court, which it really isn't.
Well, we may know that someof those involved in these attacks are
not connected to the Brewer School Department. Those who are must do better.
Lumo lumo abu. Now, noneof this helps the pathetic school district in

(13:39):
improving safety. They don't even mentionthe elephant in the room, or in
this case, the boy in thebathroom. In the last true academic assessment
of Brewer High School, only aboutforty percent of the students could read a
proficiency and only about twenty five percentof students could perform math at proficiency.
Some of the worst assessments I've seenin all of Maine. Absolutely pathetic.
So my article on Sean McBride substackdot com, I've had to make some

(14:01):
changes. So let me tell youa little bit why I've had to make
some changes. So yesterday at fourtwenty two pm, I received the attached
email that I've put on Twitter atSean mcbriardy, you can read the whole
thing. It's now a public documentfrom Drummond Woodson and Melissa Hughey, who
likes to call herself M, althoughthey've actually called me M in trainings because

(14:24):
they didn't want to say mcbriardy,so code name M. Although again I
think of myself more as a JamesBond character than M. But they basically
said I had to change some things. I had to take down my article,
and so, fearing for my family'sfinances and my freedom again because they've
now done this three times, includingsuing me from Herman which is ongoing,

(14:48):
I've been forced to make some changes, and I've been threatened with a lawsuit
or criminal sanctions to attempt to silencemy reporting. So I've deleted the original
Your News Media article and edited mysubstack article well as requested before the noon
deadline today. The Brewer School Departmenthas still yet to publicly acknowledge these students'
parents and taxpayer safety concerns, Sofeel free to share that as many people

(15:11):
as you can. She basically wroteit, so I just posted it,
and that's really the issue that's goingon. So you know, instead of
them dealing with the issue, they'drather try to attack me because I'm the
number one target here in Maine andone of the biggest targets in the country
to expose the horrors of the Kthrough twelve educational system. But don't make
this about me, because I couldn'tcare less what they try to do to

(15:31):
me. I'm not moving. I'mplanted like a tree and they can go
around me. So what we're goingto do is we're going to comply with
some of these things. And Ihope that this continues to get the message
out I believe. So far,this entire Brewer scenario has got about seventy
five thousand views on Twitter. Youcan also go to Rumble. I'm going
to play for you this next video, which is going to blow your mind

(15:54):
of a teacher who got up inmy face after I provided public comment on
this issue on Monday night. Sothis teacher's name is Kevin Napillo, Leno,
Napolino, Napolo, Lino Napolo.I don't know what his last name
is. I couldn't care less.He is a NU specialist and ILO coordinator.
Whatever that means he's quote unquote ateacher. So let's listen to a

(16:17):
little bit about what Kevin got inmy face about after the school board meeting.
You know, I'd love to havea conversation. You have no idea
about anything that I've done. Youdon't understand. Okay, right, well,
let's have a conversation anytime. Brother. I'm just let's let's debate it
right after. Let's debate it rightnow. Not get problem, let's debate
it. Let's go, let's doit. I'll debate it with you couldn't

(16:40):
hold yourself right now? Who wantsto? Who wants to hear a public
de baby to another seven? Youwant to? You can sern No,
I'm not playing your games. Sowhat this guy is saying is do I
that I'm opportunistic and bringing this tothe to the light of the taxed bears
and the school board. Yet hehas no idea. I've been doing this

(17:02):
out of pocket for free for twoand a half years and as a calling
And you're right. So he walksaway because he can't stand on the truth
exactly right now. You want answers. I think I'm entitled. You want
answer the truth? You can't handlethe truth. But then he comes back,
so anyway, there's still right,thanks, yeah, yeah, So

(17:26):
twenty minutes later he comes back,mister nap, have a good night,
you know, Sean. Here's thething, Kevin KNAPPLEO. Yeah, first
off, let's do this cibils.Oh yeah, while I was trying,
all right, all right, allright, all right, you got kind
of a history. Really, yeah, come on, let's not play,
don't let's just call this face?Yeah, what kind of history you go

(17:48):
around in your inflammatory? Please?Specific night, specifics? Just kind you
come here? Yes? Inflammatory?And what the kids see? These kids
than my kids. They're not yourkids. They're the parents' kids. That's
one of the problems when they're hearand local and local parent than my kids.
I've done most of these kids thanyou could have a hope to do

(18:10):
great. And I'm not saying thatto pump myself up rental like it to
somebody like you with would because youdon't understand them. You don't understand see
this one. We can't talk.And you have your ideas. I have
my ideas, and his ideas areinfluenced by again another personal situation that I
won't get into yet. But Imight get into we're gonna test the waters

(18:30):
probably in that deal too. Butthis guy, this absolute fruitcake, woke
teacher, gets in my face,thinks he can intimidate me in some way,
and there's like fifteen to twenty peopleon the floor basically telling him to
back off of me. That's diversity, equity and inclusion from the school's perspective,

(18:51):
right. They are full of hateand vitriol, and we are simply
full of truth and reason and conscience. You know these are This is a
great example of this situation. Youknow, these people can never defend their
position. Once I said, hey, let's debate, he ran away like
a little I'm not even going tosay it, he just ran away.

(19:11):
And so anyway, I appreciate thisnext guest. I'm excited for Michael to
come on board. So we're goingto lead right into that interview, and
please pay attention. So our nextguest is from bro Bridge, Louisiana,
happily married for almost thirty years andhas two wonderful boys. He made Eagle
Scout in nineteen eighty nine, thesame year I graduated from high school,
and his son followed in his footsteps, becoming an Eagle Scout in twenty seventeen.

(19:36):
His initial concern was the overcrowding ofpublic schools. Then he discovered that
that was fault and what I assumehe found what I found, which is
it's not over crowding, it's notfunding or staffing issues. It's lack of
education and full on in doctrination that'sgoing on in these school systems. Our
next guest is the executive director forCitizens for a New Louisiana and you can

(19:56):
find them on Twitter at New Louisianaand New Louisian dot org and they are
Louisiana's most influential voice thanks to theirunique methods to accomplish change in their state.
Now he's got a couple of discreteinvestigators at his disposal, which I'm
super jealous of. And instead ofechoing overused platitudes or being another tattletale when

(20:18):
bad government continues to do bad things, they actively engage in the process.
So watching and sharing gets attention,and I know I do that myself,
but most of the real work happensbehind the scenes. So he's Michael Lunsford
on Twitter and where he calls himselfa budget reader and attacks Slayer and I
welcome Michael Lunsford to the Main Sourceof Truth podcast. So, Michael,

(20:47):
thank you for coming on today.I really appreciate it. Thank Sean,
appreciate you having me man. Yeah, So first let's talk about the political
landscape of louis Zanna, because you'reprobably just about as far away from Maine
as we could possibly be. AndI guess the first question is kind of
what's what's wrong with the current Louisianato need a new one. Well,
so it's the old Huey Long Louisiana. If you remember, he's a politician

(21:12):
from the nineteen twenties and nineteen thirties. He was in the Senate, the
United States Senate, and he wasactually supposed to challenge FDR for the presidency
in the thirties and something happened.He he got shot dead, So yeah,
he didn't get to do it.But anyways, he changed Louisiana back

(21:33):
then to be a socialist state wherethe government would hand out all the goodies
and everyone you know, would handtheir money to the government. The government
would choose who got it back,right, so they did their own priorities.
Government guy, big government, biggovernment. Yeah. Back in the
thirties and when that was all therage, right, when we had a
new deal and all of that stuff. But that's where it started. And

(21:56):
nothing has changed in Louisiana really sincewe had Edwin Edward come along in the
eighties. They rewrote the constitution actuallyin the early seventies, but all it
did was give the governor more power. So it's still single point of control
for the most part. And thelegislature has to approve a budget and they
do some other things, but thegovernor has a line out of veto.

(22:17):
If you doesn't like it, youcan just cancel any project in your district
and all the you know, thestuff that you have to deal with.
So Louisiana continues to be more ofa top down type economy. They like
to punish, or have traditionally liketo punish success and reward failure. And
so you know, it's standard socialism, right, And there's always a tax

(22:37):
on the ballot. They want moreand more of our revenue. In some
parts of Louisiana, I think thetax, the sales tax is over fourteen
percent, fourteen cents on the dollar. We have the highest sales tax,
by the way, in the entireUnited States right now. I know we
go back and forth with Tennessee,but right now we are as far as
I The last thing I saw theother day was we are number one in
sales tax and entier. I thinkI think main is the third most tax

(23:00):
state in the nation when you addup everything. So we're not we're not
probably neck and neck with really whatyou're dealing with there, tell tell me
a little bit about the So inMaine, we have a radical, far
left progressive governor who wants to killbabies right up to the moment of birth,
and she passed that law. Wehave a radical House and Senate controlled

(23:22):
by Democrats, and the district Attorney'soffice, which is controlled by Democrats.
How does the how does that politicallandscape matchup with Louisiana. So Louisiana had
begun a gradual shift after after EdwinEdwards. In fact that it started during
Edwin Edwards. Of course, hewas the governor of the state of Louisiana
for like thirty years or something,but he got out for a little while.

(23:45):
We had a Republican he got backin and anyway, the it's been
changing gradually. My grandparents moved herewhen the entire Republican party could have met
in a phone book booth back inthe you know, in the fifties and
sixties, there were no Republicans anywherein Louisiana. Today, we have two
thirds majority in our legislature in theHouse and the Senate, so we have
super majority in both. That justhappened in October November, so we just

(24:08):
got that. We also now finallyhave a good conservative Republican governor in Jeff
Landry. And it's the name soundsfor Maria's because he's been fighting against John
bo Edwards and all the COVID junkand shutting down the economy, really destroying
our state's economy during COVID for theyou know, just to keep us all

(24:29):
safe from each other. So welost a lot of old family businesses like
Don's Seafood downtown Lafayette has closed,never to return again. It's been here
for like thirty forty years, nevercoming back. The restaurant where my wife
and I had dinner after I proposedtour Landry's Restaurant and Henderson closed, gone
forever, never to return. Nowyou're probably familiar with these because Don's has

(24:52):
chained a lot of restaurants all overthe United States, as has Landry Seafood
House, but their original lowtions nolonger exist. Yeah, it's it's same
because Louisa. Yeah, the samesituation here, the the pizza place that
my wife and I used to goto all the time and one of our
very first dates, that whole thatwhole situation in restaurant closed. Same thing.

(25:15):
I mean, Maine, you readabout it every day. Local business
goes out of business. Local businessgoes out of business, and and it's
just it's really it's difficult because there'stwo components to that. One. There
may not be another generation of peoplewilling to keep that business standing, which
we're finding because this generation we haveis the least educated generation of our entire
country's history. But the expense aspectof it, you just can't. You

(25:41):
can't do it anymore. Like wemy wife and I are going to go
out tonight for Valentine's Day. Andthe last time we went out, it
was one hundred and seventy five bucksfor two of us. Right, I
think I had one, one beer, one appetizer, and an entree.
She had an entree and with youknow, tax and tip, one hundred
and seventy five bucks, and I'mjust like, holy ye, but I
can't believe just the way inflation haskilled these businesses. And you know a

(26:06):
lot of us can't can't do itlike we used to. You can't go
out every Friday night like you usedto. I mean it's impossible. Yeah.
Well, yeah, the Biden inflationhas been a problem. But it
really this all happened during the COVIDshutdown. All these restaurants were forced to
close by this Democrat governor. Andwhen he finally relented after being a year
or so that everything was closed.After finally relenting and say okay, you

(26:30):
can reopen now, they just didn'treopen right right because they're I mean they're
you know, they're they're basically havingto investigate customers to come back, and
customers, you know, are slowto to work through that. And obviously
there was a lot of components tothat. So, uh, I know,
Citizens for New Louisiana, based onwhat I'm reading, you do a
lot more than educational work. You'refocused on several areas rise and violent crime.

(26:52):
Uh, no doubt fueled by Biden'sopen border policies, political cover ups,
things like insurance fraud. But Iwant to ask you about your fight
to remove taxpayer funded pornography, erotica, and gender just for your propaganda from
the children's section of library systems acrossthe state of Louisiana. Yeah, so
that's been a lot of fun,that tongue in cheek of course, because

(27:17):
you never expect this. You know, no rational person wants this junk in
the library, none of them.And we have people in that are in
the LBGT community who grab me onthe street, take me aside and say,
dude, keep doing what you're doing. We support you, We appreciate
the work you're doing. Kids don'tneed to see that, John, you
know, the kids just don't needit. So we're out there and then

(27:38):
you have this these organizations like pFLAG that come up and they come and
yell and scream in your face andthey're saying this is important, children need
to have access to this. You'rejust a Nazi book burner. And what
it does is it stirs up thecommunity, and not in a good way
because generally speaking, the average persondoesn't like drama, so their first inclination

(28:00):
is to give in and let themhave the other side, have whatever they
want. Just to make them shutup, but that you know, the
problem is they're not going to shutup. They're just going to move the
goalposts, right, So I say, do say often Michael that people.
First off, confrontation is just partof life at this point, like life
is hard, you know, geta helmet, I think, is you

(28:21):
know whatever, But but I agreewith you, it's it's difficult. I
mean, I sat down to nextto a guy in the local town council
meeting last night, and I wastalking about the issues here that we have
in the bathrooms with boys being invitedinto the bathrooms by the schools, and
he said, hey, you know, why are you always so confrontational?
And I said, well, firstoff, it's passion and its intensity,

(28:42):
So don't confuse the two. Isaid, But when like I don't seek
out confrontation, but when it showsup, I have no problem dealing with
it. And and that's one ofthe things I think that we've lost and
I think COVID had an effect onthat. So people that were kind of
sheeple before COVID got completely you know, part of the you know, multiplicit

(29:02):
sheep you know, pen or whateverit is, they just they keep their
heads down they don't want to doanything. And then you say something like,
hey, by the way, didyou know this porn in the local
school library? And they're like,well, I don't believe it, right,
So you you were working on andyou guys have parishes there in your
educational system, but you're working ontrying to get that expanded to sixty four

(29:25):
parishes. You've concentrated in Lafayette andLivingstone, And I agree with you,
like, why why would any rational, you know, critical thinker think that
this is a good thing to havepornography in the library when at least in
Maine, only about one in threekids can read anyway, right, so

(29:45):
they can't even read this stuff,but they want to make sure everybody knows
their gender. And meanwhile they can'teven spell blue. You know. It's
just it's such a sad situation.So similar to your deal in Louisiana.
Well, there's a little nuance tothis. It's not just gnography in the
library. It's pornography in the children'ssection of the library. So we can't
forget that component. And you haveto remember this is taxpayer funded, so

(30:12):
a lot of this stuff coming in. It's like, how did it even
get here. How is there anapproval process that anybody look at this stuff?
And we find out that the processis the American Library Association stamps some
gold medal on a book and theyautomatically just assume it's great and they stick
it on the shelf without looking atit. Yeah. The American Association,
just for everybody's knowledge, run bya Marxist lesbian her words, Emily Drabinski,

(30:34):
who believes that library should be sitesof socialist organizing. Which the yeah,
yeah, oh yeah, yeah,she's I thought she I thought they
kicked her out some other nuance.We Yes, we were in Livingston.
Yes, we're in in Lafayette.But we also have friends that are part

(30:55):
of our organization in St. Tammany. That's been a big fight over there.
We have folks up in Rappee,which is near Alexandria, Louisiana.
We have friends in Watchall Parish andMonroe, which is in the north eastern
top part of the boot up there. We have folks, I mean really
everywhere all over the state. Andwhat's fun about our organization And I say,

(31:15):
we do things different than most others. You know, a lot of
these grassroots groups will get together oncea month, once a week. They'll
do calls. They'll do you know, they have groups on social media places
and they'll you know, a keyboardwarrior back and forth with each other.
And we have some of those peoplein our organization. But we also have
people that are in school systems.They're teachers, they're educators. We have

(31:37):
people in library systems. We havepeople in the local government and the police
and the fire department. In theninjas right park, well, I don't
know if I can call them ninjas. We call them eyes and ears.
And when they see things that arekind of I don't know about this,
we get a call, text emailssaying, hey, y'all might want to
look into this, and you know, we very limited resources, but where

(31:59):
we can can we look into things, and most of the time they're pretty
bad. So in Lafayette where thisall began, some six years ago,
six seven years ago, I guessthey tried to bring drag Queen story Time
to the lack of public library.And of course it's a long story for
me to tell you how we beatit and how we prevented it from happening.

(32:21):
As far as I know, we'rethe only organization in the entire United
States. That's actually stopped the DragQueen Storytime, a taxpayer funded drag Queen
story Congratulations, that's amazing. Thathold on, so that deserves it more
applause, Right, I mean,but the thing you have to remember is
this didn't just show up today andhas gone tomorrow. That there was a

(32:44):
process that that happened to get tothe point where someone thought Drag Queen Storytime
was a good idea. And bythe way, we call it a drag
show for three year olds, andthat really resonates what I saw, that
kind of language outstanding. Yeah,Now I say I kind of go a
little further. I usually say it'sit's trans strippers and you know men in

(33:07):
female blackface groomer clowns essentially what theyare, so I would not, right,
I get it, but it's itis. It's horrible, like who
who would ever have thought that intoday's America? That, you know,
introducing a guy who gets sexually arousedby putting on women's clothing and then having
him read to three year olds isanything that we want to sponsor from our

(33:29):
tax pair dollars, like complete insanity. Well, if you look at the
books, they're reading that might alsoinspire you to wonder why we're spending tax
Paara dollars on that. But sowhat happened after Drag Queen story Time?
After we stopped that, we tooka pause for a moment, said,
okay, so they'll be back.They'll be back tomorrow or next week or
next month, and they'll be youknow, they're going to retool and they're

(33:51):
going to refigure a better way tocome at us. So we have to
figure out how they got here.We figured they managed to get through the
board because the board was one youknow, the old ladies with the glasses.
They don't want to be controversial.They just sat down and kept their
mouths say anything. So, allright, we're going to fix this.
So as of April of twenty twentythree last year, we replaced every single

(34:12):
member of the library board, twomembers per year. It took us six
years to do it, but wedid it. I say six It probably
took a little less than that.But there were eight members of the board.
I think we're down to seven now. They changed the rules because anyway,
we'll get into that, but theychanged the number on the board.
But the last one was April oftwenty twenty three. That were people that

(34:34):
were on that library board that prettymuch acquiesced to drag Queen story time.
We made it our mission, andevery single time one of them came up
for anwal we presented four or fivealternatives to the Paris Council. The Paris
Council said, yeah, I'm goingto pick this other one because yell a
nuts. And that's what happened.And now they still show up at the
meetings. Some of them now havecolored hair, and they yell and screaming

(34:57):
for us and say the library isthe worst library in the entire world,
of course, and that they needthese erotic books or you're all a bunch
of book burning Nazis and all thethings that you expect. And they came
from the first library board. Isn'tthat crazy? It is crazy? It
is crazy now one of the things. And I'm going to play something before
I say this, So hold onjust a second plug, yours a second
rumor a lum a youth? Allright? So you had a fight in

(35:22):
Livingston that was escalated by a locallibrarian, Amanda Jones, who sued you
in court and she claimed claimed thatmerely pointing out her advocacy for erotic materials
you found in the library children's sectionwas defamation. So of course it's all
about victimhood with the left. Theynever want to take responsibility for their evil.
But she alleges that you accuse herof fighting to keep sexually erotic material

(35:45):
and pornographic materials in the kids section, and then also alleged that Jones was
advocating teaching anal sex to eleven yearolds. So can you tell us tell
us a little bit about that situationand sort of the ongoing struggles, and
then we'll talk a little bit moreabout some of her comments. Again,

(36:05):
there's nuance to this, but thefighting sporotic books in the library, and
look, the judge wouldn't take thatpiece. The judge said, look,
there's there is pornography. I'm notgoing to make a ruling on what is
Pornohungrey and whether these books are pornographicor not. However, I can appreciate
that you have an opinion, andyou have an opinion. You think it's
pornographic. She doesn't think it's pornographic, So that's not a reason to bring

(36:28):
a lawsuit. Though now she didfight to keep it in the library.
And we brought a book to thecourt, and she actually said in court,
why didn't know that book was inthere? And the judge pulled her
speech out and read it to herfrom the stand that said, if you
move any books out of the library, it's tantamount to censorship, and censorship
has never been whatever. You've neverbeen on the right side of history,

(36:50):
right, right, Those who havedone censoring books have never been on the
right side of sys history. Sothe judge reads her that and says,
was that book in in the children'ssection library? Yes, you said all
books. I mean, this isthis is clear. You know what are
you talking about. You didn't meanthat book, you said all of them.
And so I mean she's just she'slooking for attention. And look she

(37:13):
got a book deal. No,she raised one hundred and thirty Yeah,
yeah, I saw. Well,I mean it might be self. I
saw the article about one hundred andthirty thousand raised, which is complete insanity.
Well she might yeah, one hundredand thirty thousand raised on gofund me.
And I don't know who's doing thisbook. She's probably self publishing,
funding it herself because she's got onehundred thirty thousand bucks. Now as of
the district court victory, this wastwo victories ago, three victories ago.

(37:38):
She owes us about T twenty fivethousand, five hundred dollars in attorneys and
court costs. Attorneys fees and courtcosts that she owes us to reimburse.
Now we've gone back to court sincethen for a motion for a new trial,
and we've gone to the First CircuitCourt of Appeals which threw it out
on its ear too, And nowshe's asked for the First Circuit Court of

(37:59):
Appeals for yet another rehearing. Iexpect the court is going to say,
yeah, no, hope. Well, and it sounds like at least your
first judge was uh, at leasta constitutionalist or maybe you know, at
least a middle of the road judge. The problem is, as you know,
if you've got a far left crazyjudge, some of the stuff could
go sideways. But in the oneof the things that she alleges in the

(38:22):
harassment aspect of her case was shesaid that you filed five public record requests
seeking her school system personnel file andcopies of her emails. Like big deal,
right, and then you know,and we would never want anybody to
have this cast upon them. Butshe says, because of social media posts,

(38:43):
Jones alleges she has faced threats ofviolence and death. Now again,
nobody, nobody should be doing that. But obviously if this librarian was facing
threats of death, she should filea police report. And you would think
that she would have made that publicand let people know who that person or
people were. So you know,she's just an attention. Uh right,

(39:07):
you know, well, don't don'tuse the word. It's okay, don't
use We know what you mean,right, yeah, so you might get
sue for defamation if you use thatword. So no, I believe I'm
right wrapped in stuff with like thatanyway, but I get it, thank
you. So her attorney brought thatup in court, that she's received death
threats, and I turned to myturn and it's like, have you seen
the death threats I've gotten? AndI showed them some and they said,

(39:28):
no, no, no, that'snot the time or place. We're not
doing that right now. But theyresponded, or actually the judge responded,
I want to say on her own. The judge said, well that either
of these two guys, were theythe ones that threatened you? She said,
no, and she's like, right, why is this even here?
Why is this in my courtroom?You know, it's not these guys that
threaten you, no, but theycaused the threats to come because without their

(39:49):
posting about me on social it's thelibs of TikTok libs of TikTok argument that
because they're exposing teachers in their ownwords and their own videos, that you
know somehow you know that's an issue. Now. Amanda Jones ab MAC thirty
three on Twitter does have a lockeddown Twitter account like they're protected, and

(40:12):
uh, yes, that's actually it'sfunny. Dan Cleman, who I work
with the World Library Association. Dansaid that, you know, she kind
of goes back and forth depending onwhat's going on. Yeah, so when
she loses in court, she locksit down and then a couple of months
go by and she opens it upagain. It's so crazy. She's got
she's got her own website. Librarian. Uh what is this here? Hold

(40:36):
on, I gotta go back.Defender of Wonder is what she calls herself.
And it's a librarian Jones dot comAnd uh yeah, like and and
I you know I texted you earlier, like all of these librarians have the
same look. It's just woke whitewoman. Uh usually with glasses you generally
overweight, you know, just likeoh my gosh, you know, just

(40:58):
crazy. So one of the thingsthat you know, we realize is nobody's
banning books, right except for ofcourse Biden's White House and librarians. But
the removal of a book that's youknow, proven by the Supreme Court Board
of Education versus Pico, if it'spervasively vulgar and educationally unsuitable, any school
board member can immediately remove that withoutfear of reprisal. But oftentimes the school

(41:21):
lawyers don't want those school board membersto know that they actually have power,
and instead they create a process forbook challenges, which is complete nonsense.
But butt plug books are being pushedby librarians, Like that's totally fine,
right, I mean, it's justinsane. So you know, we're focused
to your mainulyan on educational issues,like I said, but I do really
appreciate everything that that you guys aredoing and your team. It's really cool,

(41:45):
Like I said, the forensic investigatoraspect that on it was on your
website. I thought that was reallycool. I'm like, oh my gosh,
I would I would love to havesomebody be able to dig like I
dig here in MA. And socan you tell folks a little bit more
about how to follow your work.Well, you know on Twitter, we
are New Louisiana is to handle.We're all over, We're on Instagram,

(42:06):
we're on truth Social, it's undermy name, Michael Lunsfre and I'm on
LinkedIn too. If you go toour website, Newlouisiana dot org, we
have probably five or six socials rightthere on the homepage. You can follow,
You can sign up for our newsletter, you can become a member or
a donor to help us, becauselook, man, I know this is
free. This is our full timegig. We don't have time for anything
else. In fact, we getso much in here that we have to

(42:30):
set aside a lot of the tipswe get just because we don't have the
resources to handle them all right,So what we really need more than anything
is we need resources to be ableto bring on more staff to handle this.
And look, we're always digging,man, at this library. Stuff
is crazy because you never know tomorrowa new book will show up that we've
never heard of before, and thenwe have to go, Okay, is

(42:51):
it in the library. We haveto go look, we have to see.
Okay, I'm not going to taketheir word for it. I'm going
to open the book and flip throughit myself and so and then generally turn
red and bright red, closed thebook quickly and hope no one saw you
looking at it right right? Howit works? Well? Yeah, And
I had Emily mcash I think Michalisbook looks dot org. Book looks dot

(43:12):
org is one of the greatest,you know sites to just kind of go
and they've done a lot of thehomework for you. But she mentioned the
same thing that was way back onepisode sixty seven on the podcast. But
she mentioned the same thing. They'relike overwhelmed because you know, they've done
hundreds of these book reports for parents, and they have hundreds more stacked up
that they haven't had a chance toget to because it's it's NonStop, you

(43:34):
know, I mean, it's absolutelynon stop. We had doctor Trent Talbot
on for Brave Books episode seventy sevenand he talks about, you know,
Scholastic and the whole mess that's goingon there. So www. The www
dot New Louisiana dot org slash membershipfor areas where you can donate and serve.

(43:55):
And one of the things that Ipulled off from your bio, you
said, accountability and transparency the onlypossible so long as someone is willing to
shine a light of day into thedark corners of local government. That is
our calling, and we are determinedto see it through. I couldn't agree
more. I mean, I thinkthat that quote is amazing and that's what
we all need to be doing.It is and it's not difficult. What

(44:20):
is difficult is knowing where to look. And organizations like mine exist. I
say that. You know, whenwe launched back in Man, it'll be
seven years in April. When welaunched a year before that, the folks
who wanted to create this vision said, look all over the country and find
an organization that does what you thinkyou want to do, and we'll just
take what they do and we'll copyand paste it here. I took a

(44:42):
year. I couldn't find anything.And look, let me tell you something.
My wife helped me. Look.The only place she was interested in
was Hawaii because she wanted to goto Hawaii for a couple of weeks and
figure out what they did. Right, But we couldn't find anything, so
we started something up here. Andnow we've got a couple of copycats that
have popped up that are trying tolook like us, but they don't do
any research. It's just you know, shock Shock podcast kind of stuff and

(45:06):
nothing really of substance, like what'sgoing on in your local library? Does
this book? Is it in yourlibrary? Have you gone and pulled it
off the shelf and conturned it's there. They don't do any of that stuff.
It's all keyboard warrior stuff, whichis fine. There's a place for
that, but there's also a placefor guys like you and me that are
actually looking where this stuff is andthey're finding the books and they're they're letting

(45:28):
folks know, hey, I knowyou think this is a conservative community and
this book would never be here.It's here, and that's what the shock
was here. The hardest thing forme to do was convince people these books
were actually in the library. Itwas tough. And even then, the
of course, the hard left mobwould say, well, there is no
pornography in the library. That's justa bunch of who that doesn't exist,
and people would believe them, andmy guy Matt Here likes to say confirmation

(45:52):
bias. They believe them because theywant it to be true, right,
you know, and it's very difficultto overcome that. I often say that,
you know, conversations with parents orfight flight or freeze reactions. Some
want to fight me immediately, youknow, call me a misogynist or racist,
a homophobe. None of those thingsare true. Some want to run
away because they just can't believe thisis really happening. Like even when you

(46:13):
show them the proof, they're like, I can't believe it, and they
just freak out. And it's thosewho cock their head like a dog and
say, did you just say pornin the library? Well maybe that person,
after two or three iterations of tryingto prove it to them, might
go, holy cow, I'm pissed, Like what do I do? And
that person, you know, becomesan advocate or an activist and can try
to expose them of this stuff.And some of those people here in Maine

(46:36):
have ultimately, you know, ranfor school board or town council or legislature,
and some have won. And soyeah, that's the piece where I
think we need boots on the street. And there is a piece to I
don't I wouldn't say shock jock.But you know, there is this this
sort of aspect of trying to exposeit in any way you can. And

(46:59):
sometimes when you play nice it doesn'twork real well because nobody listens. Yeah,
and only when you throw a buckyour aid, you know, it's
like, oh, well, nownow they get it. And then I
hope people can come up and kindof clean up, you know, for
me or whoever. Well we do. We do have a little rule here
we you know, our number onerule, thanks to one of our new
board members, is just don't benuts. Don't be perceived as being nuts.

(47:20):
Right, So we come across thebest we can to be as normal
and rational people as we are,because you know what happens is the other
side is nuts, yes, andwhen they see them last shout, it
turns everybody off. Though. Idon't want to be around those people.
They're crazy. I like you guys, I want yelling and streaming and really
interesting conversation about that is. Iwent to a school board meeting here in
Burermain and talked about the bathroom issuesand the students uncomfortable, the female students

(47:44):
uncomfortable with a boy in the bathroomand Michael, I had this teacher come
up to me after and get rightin my face, like like six inches
away from my nose, in mypersonal space, and he said, go
home, you're not wanted here.And I say, you know, in
my head, I'm thinking, theseare the same people preaching diversity and equity
and inclusion, but they never wantto hear an alternate form or maybe a

(48:06):
realistic form of a conservative view.And so I challenged him to a debate
there on the floor of the schoolboard meeting. After it ended, there's
about twenty five people hanging around,and one lady told him to back off,
and she was kind of yelling athim. And I'm just kind of
laughing at this guy, and Isaid, hey, let's let's have a
debate, let's have a conversation.Let's go and he said, no,

(48:28):
I'm not playing your games. Andhe walked off. And he walked off
because Michael, they can't defend theirposition. It's all emotion and vitriol.
Right when you stand up for yourself, Yeah, let's let's talk through it,
like, let's have a conversation,let's have let people decide. And
he bailed, you know, soI put that put that video up on
my Rumble channel and I played itbefore the before you came on in the

(48:49):
intro, and it's just it isso crazy. But I really want to
thank you for your time today.I'm really glad to be able to make
a connection with you. I wantto support your work in any way,
and obviously I hope you can helpsupport our here and me. And it
just takes a lot of people tocome together, a spider web of relationships
to try to keep moving this forwardso people are aware of what's going on
because you're never going to see itin the local news. You're never going

(49:12):
to see it in the fake newsmedia. So it's like we're trying to
figure out a way to work itout. But yeah, no, I
really need it. Let me letme leave your listeners with one little nugget
that I think is going to beinvaluable. You mentioned a moment ago that
folks that you know are running forlegislature and school board and these different positions.
But I want to remind folks thatyou don't have to wait to run
for office once every four years.You can get appointed to your library board.

(49:36):
There's generally in our area two openingsper year. On the library board,
you can get appointed to the schoolsystem sometimes has little committee's parent committee.
You can get on the PTA.You can do something today. You
can get involved today. You don'thave to wait to run for office.
So if I can leave that thatis invaluable. That's what we did to
stop drag Queen Storytime from ever comingback by taking over our local library board

(49:59):
with good parents that just don't wantthis junk in front of the kids.
You know, well, you madea plan, so you said it took
several years. Right, People don'tquite can't quite grasp that process. Like
you have to have a strategy andtactics and a plan, a business plan
like running your business. If youhad a three year plan to try to
improve your business, Well, howdo you do that? Well, you
take out all the goofballs and youstart fresh, and you put some people

(50:20):
who can critically think and maybe they'renot experts, but they can become experts
and just rational human beings who lovetheir kids and love their community. And
you know, we are seeing kindof a blowback for that here in Maine.
Maine is a cheap date, welike to say, so it doesn't
take much dark money from George Sorosor somewhere to really influence things here.

(50:42):
So we're starting to see some ofthe inroads that we've made with conservative members
getting on some of these local boards. Now there's some money being put into
local school board and town council meetingsand you know, full time staffers on
board to make sure the liberal candidatewins. So it's people will have to
understand that that, yes, Ithink getting on a local board, a

(51:02):
committee PTO, I think that isawesome. And if you're going to go
for that next position, you knowin here in May, it's June or
November usually the elections, you reallyhave to start planning like six months or
year ahead and make a plan andthen work your plan, you know.
And just like we say all thetime, it's just like, hey,
if you're not if you think you'regoing to get elected a month before the

(51:25):
election, it just it's not gonnahappen anymore like that, you know.
Right. So now, well,the boards and commissions are also a great
farm team. It's a place tofind folks that are well versed in the
process. Absolutely, they've gotten accustomedto Roberts rules of boarder. They know
that generally, yeah, yeah,and they and when they run for higher

(51:45):
office, they're not deer in theheadlights on day one. They kind of
have a feel for how things asupposed to work. It's a great place
to put our folks because honestly,none of our conservative friends have been volunteering
for these boards. They're all abunch of liberals because they're the only people
applying well, and so a looftentimes, I say, conservative members of
the community generally own their own business, or they're a great employee, or

(52:08):
they're a great parent, or they'rea deacon at their church, or they're
a coaching soccer volunteer, or they'redoing whatever. And the liberals sit around
all day long and try to figureout how they can mess with our country
and they're they're winning right now.But it's really positive to hear, you
know, citizens for newly Louisiana,who is you know again, you're creating
this process and a culture shift,and you've made some inroads, and I

(52:30):
just I think I want to,you know, I really want to celebrate
that, because not often can wecelebrate a bunch of wins, Because what
I say is like some people willbe satisfied with. Let's say they take
books out of the library and theyput them on a special cart that parents
have to approve of, and they'llget all excited about that, and I'll
say, well, listen, you'vebeen miles behind the eight ball. Now

(52:52):
you take two steps forward and youthink that's progress. It's still progress,
but you have to understand your positionrelative to where you We're a decade ago,
you know, I mean, soit's got to be realistic, right,
So, Michael, I appreciate youbeing on main source of truth.
And again I really appreciate the information. And I hope everybody goes to your
website and supports what you guys aredoing down there. I appreciate it,

(53:15):
Sean. And we've got some greatinformation. Some of our articles talk about
some of the backstory things that wedo. They can give other folks ideas
in other communities as well. Soand if I can ever be of service
or help to anyone, they canalways email us for policy process questions and
we'll do our best to help.Awesome man, Thank you very much.
I appreciate it. All right,Sean, thank you, sir. All
right, hold on a second,all right, some final truth one of

(53:38):
the things that Michael had mentioned.He had thought that maybe Emily Jaminsky got
booted from the American Library Association again. Emily Jaminski, the Marxist lesbian her
words, who believes that library shouldbe the sites of socialist organizing her words.
So you've got a Marxist, socialistlesbian running the American Library Association,
which for us here in Maine isthe parent parents company or the Ponzi scheme

(54:01):
head of the Main Library Association.But it says here Emily Dubinski to speak
on campus. ALA president's campus addresswill be called quote making trouble that matters,
unquote. It's not about reading,it's not about education, it's about
pro censorship attacks on libraries. Andher quote here is we need to make

(54:25):
trouble, good trouble, the kindof trouble that matters, she wrote in
July. This is when she tookoffice, I guess last year, and
they've taken some abuse like which isgreat because they deserve it. No library
association should be, you know,even associated with the Main Library Association.
And you know, no school libraryshould be associated with the MLA or the

(54:49):
ALA or any of these crazy folks. And people know you know full transparency.
I'm a member of the World LibraryAssociation and on the board. It's
an unpaid position, but we're tryingto do is offer it common sense alternative
so that people understand you don't haveto be part of these organizations, you
don't have to pay them, youknow, this sort of crazy, crazy

(55:09):
tax payer funded deal. And aswe know, nobody is actually banning books.
So one of the things I wantto mention is in today's environment,
some people are not willing to pushthe envelope on confrontational politics. They kind
of want to sit back and justlet it come to them, And it's
really disappointing to see that. Insome cases. Here in my home state,

(55:30):
I obviously push the envelope. It'ssomething that I've been, you know,
just sort of well known for.But people need to understand it's not
about how you do it, it'sabout that you're doing it, that you're
doing something to expose parents and taxpayers, students, teachers, whomever to the
evils that are happening in the system. So one of the things that I

(55:51):
just you know, read on anotherTwitter follower that was part of this lawsuit
was and this is by you,State of mind at Thames Ryan Thames Ryan,
and we both follow each other.He was part of this lawsuit with
Michael Lunsford, our guest, buthis background on his Twitter says, resistance

(56:14):
is contagious. Resistance is contagious,and I agree with that one hundred percent.
We need more people to look andsay, wow, if that guy
or that woman is doing this,then I can do something too. And
you need to take one step forwardbefore we lose our town, before we
lose our state, and before welose our country, because we're pretty damn

(56:34):
close to be honest with this.So anyway, thanks for listening. I
hadn't done a podcast for a littlebit. A lot of stuff going on
that I mentioned in the open,but please share this with as many people
as you can. Like it.You can find it anywhere, send it
to your friends, and subscribe.You hit that alert button so that anytime
we have one of these great guestson who's bringing content and information, that

(56:54):
you can be there to listen.So I thank you very much. Round
them Round them up, best,round them up, blessed. Stay of

(57:21):
my stay to mine, Stay tomine. All right, That was shinedown.
This was the main source of Truthpodcast. Search for the show on
Facebook and give us a like.I've been your host, Sean mcbriardy.

(57:43):
Follow me on Twitter, Truth Socialand YouTube. We're working hard to keep
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