Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:09):
The California Mama Bears have been forced out of hibernation.
Fierce guardians of our future. Mama Bear's fight or parents' rights,
defense of the family and God given freedoms. Everywhere you're
listening to Mama Bear's Radio with your host, The New Normal,
(00:30):
Kristin Hurley.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
The New Normal, who's out of breath, who had a
run back into the control room and hit a button
that I forgot? You get my shows started? Whoopsie Daisies,
my bad. Anyways, this is Mama Bear's Radio. Kristin Hurley here, seriously,
still panting from like a couple of laps out and
down the building. But I'm here. We're all good. We
(00:57):
are off to a fun wheat, super excited. This is
Mama Bear's Radio at its finest. By the seat of
one's pants. Do bears wear pants? They don't, by the
seat of my fur? All right, everybody, safe and effective
radio here, can't you see the gold standard broadcasting. I
have high standards for this show when it works. I
(01:21):
thought we would start with a little den cleaning at first,
and then I want to intro my second hour. I
have a guest with me second hour in studio. I'm
super looking forward to speaking with her. I'll get to
that in just a minute. But the usual den cleaning
Mama Bears Radio at gmail dot com is the email
m A m A Bears Radio at gmail dot com.
(01:46):
The website should be back up, according to my husband,
actually I should check that Mama Bearsradio dot com. Whoops
and yes, shows always land at podcast podcast platforms where
we get your podcasts. I do post them after the show,
usually the next day, so you can catch up. Very
(02:07):
exciting and then away we go without further ado. Okay,
next hour, so bear with me. Hahaha. This hour for
my usual ranting and raving and me and my fourteen
different people inside my head. Next hour, we have Ashley
Chesney joining me, and she's the executive director and co
(02:31):
founder set Free Monterey Bay in previous years. If you
have listened to Mama Bear's radio for any length of
time here going on four years, people, I might add, actually,
wait a minute, what's what was my start date? It
was like either on my birthday or right around my birthday,
four darn long years ago. An eternity, an eternity, people,
(02:55):
twenty twenty one was so long ago for beautiful, amazing years.
Look at me go with the positivity case in point.
My friend, a good friend, Felicia George, who also worked
with set Free Monterey Bay for many, many years. She
was on my show I want to say twice, maybe
three times, and she Set Free is an organization that
(03:16):
works against human trafficking. It works to take women who
have been trafficked, sold for sex or whatever and restore
and help recover them and set Free movement, which is
kind of a worldwide thing. They have a number of resources.
They have homes where safe homes have for safe houses,
(03:40):
places of restoration for these women, and Sefree Monterey Bay
is kind of their own organization doing really really great
work here on the Central Coast. So I really like
to highlight them as an organization for you to know
about and support. And then furthermore specifically what Felicia did.
What we're going to hear from Ashley about today is
(04:00):
the educational programs that they take into schools to educate
kids about modern day slavery. It happens, It happens big,
It happens around here, our beautiful little town, oh with
the quaint beaches in the mountains and oh look, it's
a redwood tree and the sun's out today, it's so beautiful. Yes,
(04:20):
there is human slavery, modern day slavery. There's sex trafficking
happening beneath our noses all over the places, insidious and insipid,
and we have to know about it, and our kids
have to know about it. They're easily easily lured into
trouble online. So Ashley's going to talk to us a
little bit about that to help you help your kids
(04:44):
have a conversation and they do the Lord's work. In fact,
I will read her bio in just a minute on
on their website set Free Monterey Bay dot org. So
that's second an hour, three o'clock. As for me, as
(05:05):
for another week in Paradise aka Earth twenty twenty five Earth,
I wanted to announce I'm transitioning everyone. Yes, I've gotten
with the program. Everyone's doing it, and so can I
Off with the old, out with the old, and on
with the new. I love it. I'm gonna speak power
(05:27):
to the trans I'm coming out to my new identity.
There's so many ways, there's so many of these words
that they love to. They love to comman Dieger the
English language, my new identity. Yes, and you will all
affirm me. The list goes on and on. I need
some affirmation. Okay, what is Kristen talking about? Oh my gosh,
(05:50):
is this Mama Bear's radio. She's transitioning? What? No, no, no, no, no, Okay,
I'm kidding, but I am. This is a big week.
This is a week of transition from mom of school
age children now now, and when they're school age children,
you know, twelfth grade and under, you still have some
(06:10):
day to day's responsibility over the like dur some jurisdiction
over them. However, we're transitioning out of that. It's graduation
week and so my last little baby's graduating high school.
And as of about seven pm on Friday, I will
have all college children and young adult roommates in my house.
(06:33):
And oh well, so we're all moving on. It's a
brave new world for all of us. And I just
think it's super fun. It's been a super fun season
and we're all on the march towards some sort of
amazing future. Again. I say this all the time. We
can dream up the future we want for ourselves and
(06:54):
our nation, and we're given. It's like the house has
been shaken down. There's so many ways to slice it.
Break the system. What is it? What you know? Break
down the system, whatever it is. The call, the progressive call,
the Marxist call, tear it down. It's down. It's down, baby.
(07:15):
We brought it down. Everybody, they've brought themselves down. Excuse me.
We may have had a hand, but the house of
cards is gone, and let's build back up. And in fact,
I was about to say, from the ashes, I think
that's on my mind. Back to the bio of Ashley Chesney,
(07:36):
who's the executive director of SAFRE Monterey Bay, joining me
in the second hour. How she has a memoir, a
book she's written called from the Ashes. So maybe that's
the spirit of the day here. But case in point,
we have a wide open future in front of us,
and I, for one, and just invest it. I am
invested in making it the best we can be. Let's
(08:00):
be our best selves, as my teenage kids would say,
living my best life, Let's live our best darn life.
Let's live our best in darn country and get it together.
So we're all here to sort of cross the divide
together and away we goo. I was listening to talker
Carlson the other day, A couple days ago an interview
(08:23):
with Orn Cass, and this just had I encourage you
to listen to this one. If you listen to Talker's podcasts,
YadA YadA, maybe you catch some of them, or maybe don't.
Orn Cass some level of economist kind of guy. I
actually never heard of them before. But they were ostensibly
there to discuss tariffs, but the subject of like having
babies came up and families. How to incentivize modern families.
(08:50):
There's always like, let's pay for childcare or more time
off from paid time off for the moms or whatever.
Always kind of comes up and goes, and I always think, well,
that's not that helpful. Maybe that's helpful. I don't know,
do you pay people. Some countries are paying families incentivized
(09:11):
with thousands of dollars a year and some sort of
gifts and door prizes for having babies. The birth rates
are shockingly low, the testoster levels are shockingly low, sperm counts,
and the tank it is just a super super biological
crisis that you know, on the total poll of crisises,
(09:36):
I suppose should be right up at the top, you'd think,
but there's so many other things to talk about this
one tends to get a little bit buried. But those
of us, the natalists among us, and I don't even
really consider myself that, But if I had to pick
those of us that have lived the raise a house
(10:00):
full of kids' life and have that lends on looking
at our nation, looking at the planet, looking at our future,
looking at society, even our little neighborhoods, We're we're at
a severe deficit. And how do you incentive is what
(10:21):
role does the government have in incentivizing? Right from miss
libertarian Kristin Hurley, hands off my everything, person here, what
business have I to be talking about the role of
government in paying people have babies or incentivizing And Orange
Cass's kind of perspective was, well, let you know, fine,
(10:42):
you don't. It's not in your world or your cards
or your future to have your own kids. Okay, fine,
But how do these other people, in the scope of
the greater benefit to our community, greater benefit to the
culture and the nation and the prosperity of every one,
how do people maybe that don't have children in their
(11:04):
immediate families or households or whatever, how do you say, okay,
well x percent of my whatever I produce or my
energy or my effort here on the planet goes to
supporting people that do have kids and families and all
that interesting question, super interesting question. Does the government have
any business in that paying people tax incentives or write offs,
(11:27):
child credits, extra time off of work if you have
a baby. I just I don't even know. But as
a conbo we all need to be having Anyways, it
was a really great interview. I highly recommend it. Okay, folks,
Kristen has munched her way through her first segment here,
(11:48):
so we will go take a break. When I come back.
My usual just slew of great stuff to talk about,
and pharmaceuticals might be at the time. Up the list
for today. A few things I want to discuss with
respect to pill popping or lack thereof. Okay, everybody, Mama
(12:09):
Bear's Radio. Kristen Hurley here, save an effective radio. When
I have the correct buttons pushed on the soundboards, I
will take my break and be right back.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
Mama Bear's Radio. We'll be right back.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
Welcome back to Mama Bear's Radio. Kristen Hurley here, doing
good today. I actually plead the plead the grad family
excuse my brain's off in a way. I am already
like I could kind of care less about anything else.
We have some family coming into town. As I was
(13:22):
saying earlier, my little baby is graduating, super exciting. The
other two didn't get graduations, I might add, why care
about the third? You ask, well, the first two got boy,
there's so many words that I just shouldn't say on
air when describing they didn't get their graduations. Okay, anyways,
(13:46):
off we go, so back to gold standard broadcasting here,
because we love our friends in Sacramento and they do
their best every year to come up with thousands and
thousands of laws that they think that you should obey
because they're in power and they're getting paid just dandily
(14:07):
from lord knows whatever organizations that want to have a
hand in their pocket and reap some sort of level
of power or financial reward. And therefore we get the
California Legislative session and the latest on the docket ABE
(14:28):
one zero eight four. Now, one really can't keep track
of all of these darn numbers, but if you want to,
you can look it up. This one, here we go,
the California legislature disregarding the rights of parents ignoring at
the very least. I love when it's like, Okay, well
you kind of can hide behind the religious exemptions. You
(14:53):
can say, well, as a religious belief, in my extreme
religious faith about something XYZ exempt me from being coerced
into some sort of behavior or some sort of rule
of regulation that other people are trying to put down
on us. So while I'm really glad for First Amendment
(15:13):
on lots of levels and Second Amendment there to protect
the first, I think that it's like you kind of
can't just continually have to say, I plead the religious
I plead faith in order to get yourself out of
some bull crap that the government and the government excuse me,
(15:33):
one guy that represents a million Californians decides to write
up a bill, and then the other forty of them
who think they're important versus forty million of us, they
just vote in, and then the most important one guy
got Newsom signs it. I just don't think that that's
(15:54):
like something we all have to do is shrink and
hide behind religious faith in order to have some of
this like be a reason why it's not good or
why it shouldn't apply to me. Whatever. This is from
the California Family Council. They are a faith based organization.
They do look out for legislation and crap that goes
on in Sacramento that affects families and children and whatnot.
(16:18):
But again, I'm not sure you know they're saying in
this in This is from their blog. This is from
a few days ago. The California Legislature continues to disregard
the rights of parents and ignore their religious beliefs regarding
their children with the introduction of AB one zero eight four. Okay, fine,
how about everybody's every stink and body religious faith or not? Okay.
(16:42):
This bill expedites the process for changing a person's name
and sex on official documents i e. Birth certificates, marriage licenses,
you name it, based on gender identity rather than biological reality. Okay, well,
what are the guts of the bill? Ah, Assemblyman Rick
(17:02):
zibr from Beverly Hill, as a Democrat, the Republicans put
forth this kind of BS two. So I should stop saying,
I should stop saying. The party. We're just going to
say the government party says the bill is necessary. It
responds to efforts making it harder for true, it's a
response to efforts that make it harder for transgender people
(17:25):
to live safely and openly as their authentic selves. Well,
speaking as a transitioner myself, I guess oh, okay, I'm kidding, okay,
And it really is just assault on everyone. So aby
ten eighty four is not just another procedural update. It's
(17:46):
designed to sideline the very people me truly in the
all of you, that God has charged with the care
and guidance of their children and their parents. So here's
the deal. Besides the fact that you cannot change your sex,
given that's a fact, and cold hard planet Earth here
biological reality, given all that ten eighty four expedites, the
(18:12):
legal fiction compels courts to issue approval for name and
sex changes to reflect not biological sex, but subjective gender
identity within two weeks. So this is everybody, kids included.
It's an offense to parents, right. I suppose if you're
an a grown adult, you can throw on an outfit
and call yourself superman and change your legal documents. We've
(18:37):
always been able to do that, I suppose. But the
ten eighty four claims to honor parental rights by requiring
both living parents to approve a miner's request to change
their name and sex on their legal documents. But it's
a bait and switch, as they usually are, Thank you, Sacramento.
If one parent objects, the court will only consider the
(18:59):
object valid if it demonstrates good cause. That very very
hard and fast legal term quote good cause. And what
is not good cause op's belief in biological sex. So
you read that right. So under eighty ten eighty four,
court must disregard a parent's objection if it is based
(19:21):
on the belief that their child's proposed gender identity does
not align with their biological sex. So if one parents
a Munchausen by proxy, parent was like, my little son,
my five year old really thinks he's a girl, and
we want to change his birth certificate, and the other
parents like, oh, come on, that doesn't happen, he's a boy.
(19:47):
The court then, of course, must disregard that parent's objection.
In other words, if you believe scientifically, morally, or religiously
that sex is binary and unchangeable, your view are disqualified
from legal consideration. So this, as usual is kind of Disgusto. Again,
(20:08):
the government of California, instructing the courts, decide firmly on
the side of fantasy and promote this fantasy land idea.
You can change your sex and therefore, like change your
birth certificate. A kid who's you know, twelve, fourteen, fifteen, whatever,
(20:31):
a minor child decides they're they, and you can go
in and change your legal documents within two weeks, even
if you've got a parental objection to it. Now, it
doesn't really specify both parents subject, but you must disregard
the parents objection if it's based on the belief that
your child's proposed gender identity just not aligned. So I
(20:54):
suppose that means both if both parents are like no, no, no, no, no,
he's a boy, you can't change upper certificate. The courts
are instructed to ignore that. And therefore I suppose and
you get your Firth certificate in your passport, in your whatever,
and your unicorn says you're a unicorn. I don't know.
(21:16):
From the drop down menu of seventy two different genres,
you pick one, and that's what your official documents say.
So this article, thank you California Family Council, goes into
a little bit of constitutional crisis.
Speaker 3 (21:32):
You bet.
Speaker 2 (21:35):
It's an ideological test for parental rights. It must be resisted.
I agree completely. Once the state decides that it's going
to give itself the power to nullify parental objections rooted
and deeply held religious or biological convictions. Again, this is
what I'm talking about, Like, why do we have to
(21:56):
hide behind Not that I don't appreciate it, thank you
find it owning fathers, but why do we have to
hide behind that? Why is it like you've got to
have a religious objection for someone to say, Okay, you
can't be coerced. Same kind of a thing here, nullifying
parental objections. Parental objections should be parental objections, whether or
not you go to church or not. Will it override
(22:19):
a parent's objection to irreversible medical procedures? We already check
that box. Compel schools to keep secrets from parents about
their children's gender identity, check that box. Will it use
denial of affirmation as grounds to remove children from their homes?
Checking that box. California is already way down the path
(22:40):
on all of those, And so this is just sort
of the next Well, what else can we pull out
of our sleeves To lie to children, to falsify fact,
to paint a fantasy world, to shatter reality, and to
(23:02):
lie in the face of kids. Well, that's what it
boils down to me. So anyways, keep your eye on that.
Oh yeah, keep your eye on this. This bill has
already passed the Assembly Judiciary and Health committees. The people
on those committees already were like, oh, well we're going
to Robert stamp this. Yes, and they have passed through committee.
(23:24):
Oh this bill is safe insane. Now it sits in
the Assembly Appropriations Committee with a hearing planned. Whoop. That
was last week. So I actually didn't hear what happened
with that. But if one were, if one were to
want to care about these things and take notice and
(23:46):
participate in California lawmaking, you might want to call up
your Assembly member, whoever that might be. Oh do they
know your name? No, They've represent five hundred thousand people.
How's that for reppers presentative government? Okay, people, it's democracy.
Oh Kristen, Okay, when we come back, we s Sriyes,
(24:09):
how about we how about we hit the ss R
eyes once we're done transitioning from the segment to the next.
All right, everybody, Kristen will knock it off. Kristen Mama
Bears Radio. Kristin Hurley, Well, I'll be right back after
this break, stay tuned.
Speaker 3 (24:28):
Mama Bears Radio. We'll be right back.
Speaker 2 (24:53):
Music.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
There's a world than itself with the language on a day.
Speaker 2 (25:06):
To say. Welcome back to Mamma Bear's Radio. Christen Hurley
here the new Normal. So Mama Bear's in transition. How's
that for a new little show quote? Okay, SSRIs rewiring
(25:28):
baby's brains, what you ask and killing their moms is
the title here of the little quote from this podcast. Relatable.
I don't know if anybody listens to Ali Beth Stuckey,
I believe is how you say her last name, maybe stookie.
I'm terrible, terrible at pronunciation people's names. But relatable is
(25:52):
the name of the podcast. I catch her work occasionally.
She's fantastic. She always talking about something, mom's and bees
and families and you name it. So this came out
a few days ago on the fourteenth, and she talks
with doctor Adam Erato, a fetal and maternal medicine specialist,
(26:14):
to talk about the lack of informed consent given to
pregnant women concerning certain medications they're taking, namely ssri antidepressants,
and in the podcast super Fascinating, doctor Eroto tells us
about the crucial roles serotonin plays and feel development and
the negative effects that SSRII use some pregnancy can have
(26:36):
on the unborn baby. Now, big surprise, there was a
big report out on this the other day. If you
follow health news and follow the MAHA stuff even beyond that,
if you're like, well that's political, okay, fine, If you're
interested in moving ourselves towards a healthier we're functioning. Sure
(27:01):
you're concerned with what we're doing. What are we putting
in our mouths? What are we putting in our bodies?
Big question highlighted just so graciously by this whole negation
of my body my choice concept during the COVID years.
Oh excuse me, by the way, the COVID jobs may
(27:22):
the HHS will stop recommending COVID jobs for kids, teens
and pregnant women. That's coming soon. More details on that.
In fact, I wanted to cover that today. I have
an article on that. You may have heard that, Marty Mcarey.
They've been talking about it. The data has been in
for quite a while people, but at the pace of
(27:49):
the transitioning administration, they see we're all in transition. The
HHS is finally dipping their toes into this after getting
everybody appointed and getting everybody into their particular agencies. Okay,
but back to the SSRIs. If you might recall Mama
(28:12):
Bear's radio a few weeks ago, I spent basically the
entire hour quoting from the article excuse me printed in
the New York Times that wondered, belatedly decades later, if
we over prescribe stimulants and over diagnose kids with ADHD.
(28:36):
We're just scratching our little heads about that. And the science.
Trust the science, they said all these years, despite the
fact that boots on the ground, yes, there are behavioral
problems and kids, Yes, we have abnormal levels of anxiety
(28:59):
and fidgetiness and irritability and behavioral issues in young kids
and increasingly across the spectrum into young adults and college
age kids. And kids are eating Riddlin and other drugs
like that, like candy. The college kids take it for
this year fun of it, but kids as young as
(29:22):
three or five or whatever. And I chronicled the number
of prescriptions and diagnosises that happened from say, thirty years
ago up until modern day. And there are finally some
thinking people out there that wonder was this the right
path to be on or did this actually really help?
(29:46):
And where are we today? And what do the numbers show?
What are the data? What's the data say? So it
behooves us to question this about just about everything we're
putting into our bodies and our diets and the pills
(30:08):
we pop, the diets, the donuts we wolf, and the
pills we pop. Nothing should go on questioned, I swear,
I am gosh, I am such a like a counter
culture question everything, tear it all down radical these days,
it's so crazy, but it's like it's also true, like
(30:29):
question authority, Okay, good, yeah, actually, yeah, who do you
think you are? My favorite phrase ever, anyone who's in authority.
Tell the experts and authorities say to X y Z
and trust them and trust the science. Don't question, just
do it. Weps. I sound like Tucker doing that. He's
(30:52):
got that kind of shtick. But what you're kidding me?
And I'm just I guess I'm a contrarian and kind
of always have been. But seriously, now, I do have
a special interest in this subject of the over prescription
of pharmaceuticals. It's near and dear to my heart and
it has not been in my purview, oh, since just
(31:14):
the last four years or so, since we saw the
maniacs and the inmates running the asylum over there at
AHHS and I AID and whoever the doctor Fauci is
the world. My interest in this has been for a
long long time, and I love that we're finally having
(31:35):
a national conversation. And yeah, there's data to say, you're
you're popping pills in pregnancy. You're being prescribed pharmaceuticals that
alter your body chemistry and your brain chemistry and your
whole system, and like heck, it doesn't make its way
(31:55):
into your baby, and like heck, there aren't consequent And
I think what really boils down to is if you
look into the deep bowels and or as we say,
appealing back the layers of the onion, as a stinky
onion gets unpeeled, there's not good science supporting any of this.
(32:18):
They pay, they being pharmaceutical companies, pay for their own
clinical trials. You want to bet that they make sure
things look good in their favor. You want to bet
that this revolving door between industry and regulatory agencies, we
(32:40):
all know what is going on. And thank you Bobby
Kennedy for really amplifying that message. The revolving door doesn't
have anything to do with this major, major industry, and
everyone's on pills, everyone's on everything, and there's no informed consent,
there's no data. There's no informed consent because there's no
(33:03):
good data, and the process to get it approved and
on the market is compromised. And again you peel back
the stinky layers of the stinky onion and you get crap,
you get malpractice and malintention and so again they're giving it,
(33:27):
excuse me everything to pregnant women these days. And we've
we've seen that over the years of oh the now
they're taking this for nausea, and now they're not because
there's Bertha Pegs And yeah, your case study, your data
came from real people and causing injury to innocent people
(33:49):
that were not given informed consent because you you crapped
out on doing actual science. So by extension and here
I go again, you know, maybe I need a seven
hour show case in point. If you're interested at all
in this recent study that came out examining the SSRIs
being taken by pregnant women and effect on babies, look
(34:12):
it up or listen to this particular episode of relatable.
I also really want to touch on this, and I'm
not going to be able to do it justice, but
I did order the book in the same umbrella of
what are we all doing to ourselves? And trust the experts.
(34:34):
The new book out called Unshrunk by Laura Delano, and
I ordered it and I have it here with me
in my hot little hand. Here the story of psychiatric
treatment resistance. I think I talked about her a little
bit the other week. I ordered the book. I am
part way through it. I'm very excited to read it.
(34:55):
But in the same vein of prescribing Riddlin and it's
and other stimulants to very young kids, thinking you're thinking
you're doing right right, the best case scenario is these
people and these doctors think they're doing it right. They
(35:16):
think they think they're helping, but they're misinformed as well.
And it's like a pyramid of a pyramid. I don't
want to say scam, but a pyramid of misinformation. There
we go, or malintention. And Laura Delano has an organization
(35:40):
now where she's through her journey. If you read her book,
in short, she at a very early age. I want
to say it was thirteen eighth grade, was told she
was bipolar and given a cocktail of medications early on
that she sometimes didn't sometimes didn't take, and through kind
(36:02):
of just cascading events in her life, some emotional issues
manifesting themselves, and her going to little nuts as like
every teenager does. And I'm not saying she didn't have
that in a more, you know, a critical way, but
(36:23):
she was prescribed more and more and more medications over
the years, told she has mental diseases, went through years
and years and years of hospitalization and psychosis that and
problems that, and more and more and more drugs. Then
she finally said, well, wait a minute, I've never tried
(36:45):
life without all of this burden on top of me.
And so she did and in her and I'm gonna
have to take my break here. Maybe I'll get back
to this after the break. But in chapter four she
starts talking about the first two pills that she was prescribed,
prozac and depacot. I think, is how you pronounce that?
(37:05):
And she said there's some a number of important facts
about depacot and prozac that she didn't know when she
was prescribed them. She said, this was nineteen ninety seven,
and at that point neither drug had been approved by
the US Food and Drug Administration for psychiatric use, and
children Prozac didn't approve this gain this improval until the
(37:26):
early aughts, and as of twenty twenty four, Depacot still
doesn't have it, And she says, in fact, if you
look at the official drug label, not the patient pamphlet
that you're handed to the pharmacy, but the complete fifty
seven page label on the FDA website, it states that
only one trial was conducted on one hundred and fifty
children to determine the psychiatric efficacy of depacot, and that
(37:52):
such efficacy was not established. She goes on to cite
more and more and more data like that that whoops
wasn't even improved for off label use in that way
in the first place, and how many times has this happened?
Now clearly we see this like the puberty blockers, that
(38:15):
that's real time for us right now in twenty twenty five.
But before our eyes were opened in this bizarre world
we live in, how many of us were told, well,
you have a disease, and the only way to fix
it is to pop this pill. For the entire rest
of your life. Oh, trust the science, but whoops, there
isn't any and there's been a rapparable harm. It's a
(38:41):
super interesting book. I can't wait to finish it. Mama
Bear's book club. I have a book club, but probably
never finish half the books anyways. Let me take my
break here, But my point is is can we all
just start questioning authority and asking the darn questions and
(39:01):
taking responsibility for ourselves and that you are your own
sovereign creature. You can put in your body what you want,
but don't be blind about it. And we cannot move
forward in life like just accepting what the authorities tell
us and trust them they know better. No, they don't.
(39:23):
And if it's if it's incompetence, that's bad. If it's malintention,
that's way worse, and anywhere in between is just the pits.
And it's not the way that I wish for ourselves
to conduct our country, or raise our kids or have
a happy and healthy life that we're meant to do. Okay, well,
(39:44):
let me take my break. When I come back, we'll
have another little segment and then our hour two. I
guess Ashley Tesney's gonna join me here from Set Free
Monterey Bay. And we're super stoked on that. All right, everybody,
Mama Bear's Radio here, Kristin Hurley, and we will take
very Just be right back.
Speaker 3 (40:05):
Mama Bear's Radio. We'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (40:11):
Niggative missions to get with your don't guy, just like
you don't stop until we drove crazy Bonney Nice.
Speaker 3 (40:19):
The best thing in life is life.
Speaker 2 (40:24):
Get your mind right. You get your prime right. You
gotta keep all you gotta keep.
Speaker 1 (40:30):
Get your mind right, get your prime, get your mind right,
get your prime right.
Speaker 2 (40:37):
Welcome back to Mama Bear's Radio. Kristin Hurley here for
a precious few minutes until the top of the hour.
When I come back. We have Ashley Chesney with us
from Set Free Monterey Bay. I'm super excited to talk
to her, so they said earlier in the hour. My
friend Felicia George has been on this program a couple
of times with me over the years, talking about modern
(40:59):
day slavery, rehuman trafficking, and specifically how you can help
your kids to be aware of what goes on in
our backyards and beneath our little noses. All right, everybody,
I really think maybe I will just quote a little
bit more from this article about Laura Delano and her book.
As I said, I'm super passionate specifically about the you know,
(41:24):
big pharma influence on mental health treatment and the creation
of an industry because they have they have just the
pill for you, and how that has worked over the
years of inventing a reason to prescribe you their product
and sell you their product. And again, like I said,
(41:45):
I've become like this crazy maniac radical where I'm like,
I don't trust anyone in the world. I don't trust
them at face value. I think we all should ask
for proof before we just take anyone at their word anymore.
And again, if we want to create the future that
we deserve, and our kids deserve a safe and prosperous nation,
(42:09):
if we're to bequeath that to them, which is what
our calling is, we cannot continue to poison them, knowingly
or unknowingly with what goes in their bodies. I am
not going to get to this article, but I have
an article about pre diabetes and teens and premature heart
damage because of blood sugars out of control and insulin
(42:32):
resistance and young people more and more, and we all
know that as Bobby Kennedy talks about we're really facing
a major shift in in the adults that people, these
kids are going to be growing up with physical disease
and problems that have been were acquired in childhood that
(42:54):
has never been before seen in society. Okay, well, with
my one minute left, let me see if I can
pick out just a little nugget. And this is from
Jeffrey Tucker, one of my favorite writers and commentators. He's
published everywhere, and he says this book could change everything.
He says, if it were not in autobiography, it would
(43:17):
make great fiction of the gothic sort popular in Victorian period.
If it's stripped out all commentary of the dubious merit
of all of these supposed sicknesses and cures, it would
still be fantastic drama from first to last. He says,
nothing I can say can possibly prepare you for the
adventure this book brings. It is perfectly crafted, almost in
(43:39):
a poetic way, to bring the reader the actual feeling
of going through each stage over a decade and a
half of drug cocktails, mental institutions, hospitals, and much more. Finally,
to our self, motive made it sorry, Motivated emancipation from
the whole industry. He says, I worry that the topic
alone will deter readers. It should not read it the
(44:00):
way you might read a work of fiction. Makes all
the more riveting to realize that it's the real thing,
an actual person, with all the attendant pain required for
any author to pour out his or her soul this way.
It's a rare experience and one of a kind in
our time. So I will let you know as I
go along over the weeks and finish the book. All right,
(44:22):
we have reached the top of the hour here. When
I come back, Ashley Chesney from Set Free Monterey Bay
will be joining me, and I super encourage everyone to
stay tuned. It's going to be a fascinating hour. This
has been Mama Bear's Radio. Kristin Hurley here the new Normal,
and I'll be back in just a little bit.
Speaker 1 (44:41):
The Boy in the Bubble and the Baby with the
Battle in Hot ninety.
Speaker 2 (44:46):
These are days things is a jungle basis and a
jungle
Speaker 1 (44:55):
You're listening to kom Why let's sell have a beach
home of Schoolhouse Radio.