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December 4, 2024 • 35 mins
P.K. Steinmark-Stevinson, co-host of the Humanity Against Tyranny podcast along with Kelly Kucera, joins Ryan for the full hour to discuss Donald Trump's most important cabinet post nominees and the Tennessee transgender 'affirming care' for kids case currently before the Supreme Court of the United States.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
What you're seeing right now with me is the art
of the smear. It is the classic art of the smear.
Take whatever tiny kernels of truth and there are tiny
tiny ones in there, and blow them up into a
masquerade of a narrative about somebody that I am definitely not.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
And what they never quote, and we will get into
this too, are.

Speaker 1 (00:21):
The legions of people from who I served with in
combat multiple tours, from the multiple veterans organizations that I
very proudly ran, and I really want to get into
that and my time at Fox News. They never asked
the people closest to me. They never asked the people
who are involved directly, and when they do, and I've
got a list right here of people, and Will Kine

(00:45):
and my hosts at Fox News have come out, all
the folks on Fox Friends have all come out and said,
this is not Pete. And we've worked with Pete for
ten years, every single morning, every single day.

Speaker 2 (00:54):
They never ask.

Speaker 3 (00:55):
Those people, So who do they ask.

Speaker 4 (00:57):
That's Pete hag Seth appearing with Megan Kelly on her
podcast today and he turned it, I think accurately the
art of the smear, and this is exactly what's happening now.
Pete hag Seth not a perfect guy, not claiming to
be a perfect guy, but he is the nominee by
President elect Donald Trump for Secretary of Defense. In his
personal life, he's had some failures that he has admitted to,

(01:19):
two divorces, you know, some things on the personal front
that are not exactly flattering, and they become public fodder
in this process. That's what happens, especially when you're a
Republican or on the right side of the political spectrum,
and they're trying to smear him right out of existence
with this nomination. He is refusing to budge. I'm glad

(01:41):
to hear this, and he furthers this commentary on the
anonymous sources who are coming forward to say all these nasty,
disparaging things about him being drunk in the workplace, you know,
very difficult to work with. But those that know him best,
who work with him on a daily basis or a
week end by week end basis, like rach campost Duffy,

(02:01):
a woman or Will Kine who has vociferously come out
in defense of Hegseth, or Janis Dean, the meteorologist on
Fox News, who I adore and she's awesome.

Speaker 3 (02:12):
We follow each other on X.

Speaker 4 (02:14):
A lot of women, a lot of women coming out
in full support of Pete Hegseth, saying the consummate gentleman
and professional.

Speaker 3 (02:21):
He's never been inappropriate.

Speaker 4 (02:23):
They've never seen him intoxicated on the job, as is
being alleged in these hit pieces against him.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
This is what he continued to say.

Speaker 2 (02:31):
And that's what a smear looks like.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
It's a couple anonymous nuggets, usually from disgruntled people who
are fired for cause, who are jealous or want a
little bit of retribution, and so they pedal stuff to
reporters who are.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
Not interested in the truth.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
They're interested in smearing someone who supports Donald Trump's agenda.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
It's really clear.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
I'm in the middle of it, but you know, I'm
surrounded by a great team. I got a wonderful wife.
We love this country, we love Jesus Christ, our savior,
and we're.

Speaker 2 (03:01):
Gonna fight like hell. There's no reason to back down.
Why would we back down? Do you know how many
guys I'm hearing from right now?

Speaker 5 (03:06):
The guys I serve with, gals that I work with
at CBA and else, don't stop.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
The guys are like it's always sir.

Speaker 5 (03:11):
You know, don't stop, sir, please keep going. You you
are fighting for us like you are our voice. We've
never had a voice like this before they have there one.

Speaker 3 (03:23):
Don't back down, don't give an inch.

Speaker 4 (03:24):
If anything, you hammer down that We're not budging on this,
take it or leave it. If you're a Republican and
you're waffling like Lindsey Graham, Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski, especially
the latter of those two Collins, in my view, it's
apout as good as we're going to do in the
state of Maine, which leans fairly heavily blue. See, you
got to kind of take that one with a grain

(03:46):
of salt. But Murkowski no excuse for that. Kelly Shbaka.
Without that stupid, idiotic, moronic, dumb ranked choice voting, Kelly
Shubaka would have beaten Lisa Murkowski. But there was time
with a ranked choice voting and rearranging the deck to
have Mitch McConnell's sale in with all the Senate dollars
and back Murkowski. This is one part where I really

(04:07):
backed away from supporting Senator Tim Scott. I liked Tim Scott,
buddy came out and endorsed Murkowski. I'm like, why Lisa
Murkowski is the definition of a rhino, a Republican in
name only in a state where that shouldn't fly.

Speaker 3 (04:22):
Alaska is a red state.

Speaker 4 (04:24):
There should be two Republican senators who are fairly reliable.

Speaker 3 (04:28):
She's not. And it's a disgrace what happened.

Speaker 4 (04:31):
Through And I'm thinking there was a really close vote
on repealing ranked choice voting in Alaska. I'm not sure
exactly how that turned out. If anybody out there can
update me on that, I would appreciate it. At five seven,
seven thirty nine, but we did vote it down here.
And when you get Senator Michael Bennett and yours truly
to agree on something and that was one of them, well,

(04:52):
I think you're on the right side of things, and
we voted that down. That was a good move by Colorado.
Joining me now in studio the co host of the
Humanity Gain Tyranny podcast, which I proudly produce. I invite
you to find it online your favorite podcast platform, subscribe
to it, download it, listen to it. Give these ladies
a five star rating. Kelly Kuchera is the new co

(05:13):
host of that as of just a couple of months ago.
It's rocking, it's rolling, it's ready to go, and they
record the night and PK joins me in studio. And
the reason I led with Pete Hegseth is because I
gave PK a homework assignment. I wanted her to put
together who she feels totally her opinion. The top five
Trump cabinet appointees nominees are for his upcoming presidential term.

(05:35):
And you said number five was Pete Hegseth for Secretary
of Defense, PK.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
Why yes, I did.

Speaker 6 (05:39):
And after listening to you converse over this vetting of him,
Let's vet those who are voting on him. How about
that trying to approve him? Let's vet them. We all
fall short of the glory of God. But does he
know the military? The military is our number one secure
national security thing. That's the first thing the government has
to do. Here's a guy that's been involved in it.

(06:01):
He knows it. He knows what's failed in the last decades,
and that is political correctness and wokeness. It failed the military.
He knows that, he sees it. They all know it. Now,
should women be in the military if they're qualified to
do something? Like fly a plane or do what they
can do. But physically there's a total difference. But if
they can pass all the tests, so be it. But

(06:22):
here's the point. I've liked him from the beginning. But
what do they go after Ryan? They went after the
gender thing because he was so strong on this gender
thing in the military. So what do they do They
get women to come against him. Typical maneuver of all
of these crazy leftists. And it's what they do all
the time. And you know this wokeness. Aren't you tired

(06:45):
of it? Aren't we ready to go move on?

Speaker 3 (06:47):
No?

Speaker 6 (06:48):
And if he picked him, fine, you know the underpinnings
of the military or the strength of our country, and
if that goes, so does our country. So everybody better
think about what does this guy know about the military?
If I was vetting him, I'd be asking him military questions,
not if he offended a girl or they had an
argument or he's divorced. I don't give a hoot.

Speaker 4 (07:09):
Excuse me, thanks for editing there on the Fly Live Radio.
One other comment here the just absolutely flabbergasting. Here's Senator
Richard Blumenthal, Democrat Connecticut on Pete Haig.

Speaker 3 (07:22):
Seth almost anyone would be better than peg Seth.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
And my prediction is we won't be talking about him
by Monday.

Speaker 7 (07:31):
And I think that he's going to be facing so
much pressure with roma from Republicans as we as democratics.

Speaker 2 (07:40):
He could end his nomination by the end of the day.

Speaker 4 (07:42):
Could end his nomination by the end of the day.
The nerve and audacity of this a whole. Richard Blumenthal,
he's the guy stolen valor who claimed he served in Vietnam.
He did not, And he has the audacity to call
Pete Hegseth, who faced actual flying bullets in combat, into question.

Speaker 3 (08:06):
I mean, that is just galling.

Speaker 6 (08:08):
And this is exactly what I'm telling you. He has
no military experience, yet he's vetting this guy a military
job exactly. The guy is ridiculous. He's ludicrous and I
never liked Blue him anyway. Did he ever say anything
that was lucid?

Speaker 4 (08:21):
Well, again, the stolen Valor thing, I don't think you
recover from that. Now you claim that you served in
Vietnam where so many young men died, and you have
just the nerve. I can't. I can't not with that guy. Okay,
So number five in terms of the top five according
to P. K Stein, Mark Stevens an important Trump nominees
for his cabinet, Pete Hegseeth's secretary of Defense. We go

(08:42):
to number four.

Speaker 6 (08:43):
RFK Junior Health and Human Services.

Speaker 3 (08:45):
I knew you liked him, I just didn't know how much.

Speaker 6 (08:48):
So why is he I like, speaking about our health,
about the country, where it's going, where the environmental issues
are with the toxins, what they've done with big pharma
and American Medical Association. You know, he wants to clean
our water, air and land. And if he's really into that,
if you know, if sands or butts, then I'm all

(09:09):
for him. And you know, I'm sick of people capitalizing
on our sufferings, you know, and feeding the cash cow
through the big farm. And I think he realizes that,
and you know he has this, you know, he just
he seems to have us as snare focus on reading
our environment, of all these toxins, why they're killing us,

(09:31):
and then capitalizing on our sufferings.

Speaker 4 (09:33):
The theme so far with the two nominees, and I'm
in agreement with you, They're very important and for different reasons.

Speaker 3 (09:38):
Authenticity. Pete Hegseeth is the guy.

Speaker 4 (09:41):
That you see, he's the guy who the people work
with that work with him know who he is.

Speaker 8 (09:47):
R F. K.

Speaker 3 (09:47):
Junior.

Speaker 4 (09:47):
I've always said this, even when he was running as
an independent. I believe he's authentic, he's his own person.
I respect that. I think he's a good person. I
believe he has his heart in the right place and
his mind the right place of wanting America to be healthier,
and he loves this country. So for all those reasons,
I like having him on our team.

Speaker 6 (10:07):
Well, the thing is is, that's the issue where a
very liberal person from a very liberal family can come
together in the middle with the Republicans the Conservatives, and
we come together and agree on one thing, and that's
if we don't have clean water, air and land, we
don't have proper nourishment.

Speaker 3 (10:24):
We die.

Speaker 4 (10:25):
Yeah, all these additives to our foods and drinks, and
that they don't have them overseas or even just to
our north in Canada. I'm hearing that he wants to
replace high corn syrup and coca cola, for instance, with
cain sugar like it used to be. That's a good
step in the right direction. Not that you should drink coke,
but it's a lot less bad for you.

Speaker 6 (10:42):
Well, originally cocaine in it.

Speaker 3 (10:44):
Well let's talk go back that far years. Don't go that.

Speaker 6 (10:47):
But the whole point is is he's aware of all
of this, and the one thing I really liked is
the vaccination. He came down on these vaccinations. And the
reason I'm witch vaccination, well he had a lot of them.
He knew that they were causing auto the heavy metals.
But I've been against vaccination since I was fifteen when
my brother got cancer and I went clear. Back in

(11:07):
nineteen seventy sixty nine, I studied that the polio vaccine
had SV forty, the Simian virus, and it's linked to
many cancers that are real ostrogenny sarcoma, as athelium.

Speaker 4 (11:21):
Anything, maybe your brothers latter. Yeah, just a brief aside.
I know you're not want to talk about it, but
there was a documentary made about your brother, right, yes,
And what was that titled?

Speaker 6 (11:32):
Well, it was a movie and it was called My
All American.

Speaker 4 (11:35):
My All American, And that's your brother, that's that's featured
in it. But you you're not one hundred percent supportive
of it, like the narrative that's advanced in it or
do you think it's a let's just.

Speaker 6 (11:46):
Say they missed the complete essence of who he was
and what his life was about and what it stood for.
They took it away that we don't when I sat,
and why should I didn't even know who they were
talking about. And the things that happened. What they put
in that movie, they weren't. That's not how they happened.

Speaker 3 (12:00):
So they know how they happened.

Speaker 6 (12:03):
It's very disappointing to see what people did.

Speaker 3 (12:05):
They missed the mark by quite a bit.

Speaker 6 (12:07):
You're so they missed the mark because the writer Freddy
wasn't rudish COMMODI. Let's get this record street. He was
not Rudishkamody. He was. He won every single athletic award
and then e'sn't has an award for him now, yeah, and
then he won all academics. He was not RUDISHKAMOUDI this
kid who couldn't hardly have any talent, but really worked hard.

(12:29):
That's not what it was. Freddy had the talent and
the brains, but he was just smaller than the average Joe.
But he had the big heart and that's what Royal
and all of them loved. And he was a ten
seconder to Akers and Royal when they saw it.

Speaker 4 (12:44):
Freddy Joe Steinmarck yep. And you can find his story.
My all American, you said, is what it's called. But
what I would like to do at some point, I mean,
this is watch that with you, but have like you
with the editor's commentary, like pause it, this is what
really happened, that's fake news, et cetera.

Speaker 3 (12:59):
Would really interested in doing that with you.

Speaker 4 (13:01):
But your brother was a hero and of course gone
far too soon at the age of twenty two. Number
three on the list of Trump's nominees for his cabinet
that you feel is most.

Speaker 6 (13:11):
Important, Cash Patel.

Speaker 3 (13:13):
Oh, I thought he might be number one for you.
Director of the.

Speaker 6 (13:17):
FBI, Cash Pattel. This is our laws. There's so much corruption,
and you know he needs to clean it up, period.
And these three letter agencies, they either have to go
be taken down or they have to be cleaned out
because they aren't doing their job for the country. They're
supposed to support our laws and they aren't doing it.

(13:38):
What they're supporting is those that are breaking the law. Okay.
And so you know he's a federal prosecutor, and I
like the fact that he served with devon newness because
I like Devin Dunas, and you know, why are all
these people who have broken our laws they don't get

(13:58):
tried and convict did Instead they go to club feeder,
they're dismissed because of the correct judicial system. The whole
thing needs to be cleaned out.

Speaker 3 (14:07):
Unelected bureaucrats who are unaccountable exactly. That's how I would
sum it up.

Speaker 4 (14:10):
And Harry Enton for CNN, I'll try to get this
sound for Dan a little bit later on between four
and six pm. He just reported a recent polling showing
that trust in the FBI is at an all time
low for this century. So since two thousand, just forty
one percent have trust and faith in the FBI and
the job that it does.

Speaker 3 (14:29):
That is disgrace.

Speaker 6 (14:30):
Under these other administrations, they did really hard and worked
hard to get that low ratings.

Speaker 4 (14:34):
Oh yeah, they earned it. They earned it the old
Hutton or whatever. So here we go the recap so far.
In the top five important appointees nominees for the Trump
Cabinet number five Pete Hexcept for Secretary of Defense, Number
four RFK Junior for Health and Human Services, Number three,
Cash Betel for the director of the FBI.

Speaker 6 (14:54):
Number two, number two, John Radcliff for CIA, Yes, for
the CIO.

Speaker 4 (14:58):
Okay, so you kind of back to FBI CIA similar
reasons then.

Speaker 6 (15:02):
Right now, as a country that is lives by the
law of rules of law and order, well, he's the
one who's got to look at the foreigners and what's
going on in the foreign countries and the places, find
out what's coming against our country instead of joining in
with the foreigners coming against our country like all these
other yea whos have done that have been in office.

Speaker 4 (15:22):
And CIA, I don't know if I'm being fair or
not here should have had a better inkling understanding working
with Israel in anticipating the attacks of October seventh. You
would think if we had well placed human resources like
foreign agents and so forth, Well, you really need to go.

Speaker 6 (15:36):
Back into the history of the CIA and understand where
they came from. And when you go back and you
realize that there were a lot of Nazis that entered
into our CIA, and this is about they've been wanting
to take this country down.

Speaker 3 (15:48):
So were they informants or allegedly.

Speaker 6 (15:51):
They were supposed to be the scientists.

Speaker 4 (15:53):
But I mean like finding Nazis and Argentina that sort
of thing. Well were their turncoats, yes, that were allegedly
on our side or whatnot, And well.

Speaker 6 (16:01):
They tried some of them. It's just like everything, you know,
when you have good and bad, each one has their infiltrators.

Speaker 4 (16:06):
Oh yeah, who are these? Well that's the that's the
challenge of intelligence. That's right there in the name exactly CIA.

Speaker 6 (16:13):
And they're supposed to inform us and keep us safe.

Speaker 3 (16:15):
And we'll see about that.

Speaker 4 (16:16):
But maybe I have faith John Ratcliffe, very solid individual.

Speaker 3 (16:19):
He's going to be heading up the CIA. So that
takes us to number one.

Speaker 6 (16:22):
Number one.

Speaker 4 (16:22):
Tom Homan, Homan Home Oman, Yeah, Tom Homan. The Borders are,
the Borders are. It's an unofficial title, but it's a
very important role.

Speaker 6 (16:31):
I love him and I'll tell you why. He says
what he means, and he means what he says, and
he's he's been there before. He says, no border, no country.
He knows the severity of the criminals that are crossing
over and the result in felony crimes that are coming
out through our country. He's got to make America safe again.
I mean that sounds all these little things sound kind

(16:53):
of hokey. Make America great again, make America safe again.
But honestly, if you don't, we don't have a country.

Speaker 4 (17:00):
Well, these phrases worked for a reason exactly because they
were over the target. And here is a contrast between
Mayor Mike Johnson, Mike Johnston rather of Denver and Tom
Holman from just the other day.

Speaker 8 (17:12):
I think we will see Denver rights and folks around
the country who will not violently resist.

Speaker 3 (17:17):
On me and the Denver mayor. We agree on one thing.
He's willing to go to jail. I'm willing to put
him in jail.

Speaker 6 (17:25):
That was Casey Hunt because you know, the Americans have
no idea who has leached into our country through the border,
but he does. And you know what, he also knows
how to deal with them. Okay, so he's familiar, he
knows what he's looking for, he knows how to get
rid of him. And if these mayors and governors want
to interfere, this is a federal issue, our border, he

(17:48):
has the right to do what he wants to him,
which is throw him in jail if they're getting in
the way.

Speaker 4 (17:54):
And this is Mayor Eric Adams Democrats saying, hey, I'm
going to help Tom Holman if he comes in here.

Speaker 3 (18:00):
We're going to do what we need to do, open to.

Speaker 7 (18:03):
To hearing what their plan is to deport some of
these folks.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
And you think the city in some circumstances should cooperate.

Speaker 9 (18:11):
With us, let me let me you know what's interesting.
And I was talking to the team the other day.
I want you to all go back and google Hillary
Clinton and Barack Obama. Google what they said about those
who commit crimes in our city and what they said
in our country. They said, those who commit crimes need

(18:34):
to get out right away.

Speaker 3 (18:35):
That was their position.

Speaker 9 (18:37):
So this is not a new position, you know, because
in the state of the in the era of cancel culture,
no one's afraid to be honest about the truth. Well,
cancel me, because I'm going to protect the people.

Speaker 3 (18:52):
Of the city here here.

Speaker 4 (18:53):
Eric Adams, New York City mayor not sounded much like
a Democrat, at least not since November fifth.

Speaker 3 (18:58):
The tide is turned.

Speaker 4 (18:59):
Things are going going our way and Tom Holman at
number one on PK's list as the borders are most
important appoint nominee for the upcoming Trump administration, which thank god,
starts on January twenty at twenty twenty five, a time
out more with PK and you at five seven seventy
thirty nine after this.

Speaker 8 (19:21):
Cannot eliminate the risk of detransitioners. So it becomes a
pure exercise of weighing benefits versus risk, and the question
of how many miners have to have their bodies irreparably
harmed for unproven benefits is one that is best left.

Speaker 6 (19:37):
I'm sorry, counselor.

Speaker 7 (19:39):
Every medical treatment has a risk, even taking aspron there
is always going to be a percentage of the population
under any medical treatment that's going to suffer a harm.

Speaker 6 (19:55):
So the question, in my mind is not.

Speaker 7 (19:59):
To policy makers decide whether one person's life is more
valuable than the millions of others who get relief from
this treatment. The question is can you stop one sex
from the other?

Speaker 4 (20:15):
Seriously, one of the stupidest things ever uttered by a
Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States right there,
Sonya sodam my god. She tried to equivocate the risks,
the side effects, the long term irreparable damage potentially caused

(20:35):
by gender reassignment surgery for minors, to hey, there's potential
side effects for aspirin. She said that with a straight face,
and if I was a counselor presenting my case in
the Supreme Court before her, I don't know that I
could have kept a straight face. That is idiotic. There
is no defense for that, there's no explanation for that. Yeah,

(20:58):
the rare person might have an adverse reaction to aspirin,
but if you put that in statistical percentages, we don't
know the long term damage done to the bone density,
to the heart structure, to the hormone levels, to the muscle,
all of it, especially when it's done to a young

(21:20):
child an adolescent in their formative years where they're still
growing and building, to blunt that process. Just in a theory,
if you have a base level knowledge or grasp of biology,
and you did that to an animal, I do this
every time because the lips have no answer for it.
If you did that to a puppy, would that be

(21:41):
animal abuse? And almost everyone would have to agree, of
course it would be. If you try to do gender
reassignment surgery to a cat or a dog, would that
be animal abuse? Of course it would be. This is
all psychological. There is nothing to suggest that biologically, through

(22:01):
our development that This is a natural occurrence. It comes
from something called gender dysphoria. There's something in our brains.
And I spoke with my trans friend Sarah Higgen earlier,
who acknowledges this. There's a disconnect. It's psychological, so you're
trying to conform a body to a mindset. Those are

(22:23):
two different things. There is no biological necessity to reassign
somebody's gender. Of course, it comes with inherent risk. Watch
What Is a Woman? By Matt Walsh if you haven't already.
There's a tragic tale in there of a transgender male,
So a biologically born female who transitions to male and

(22:47):
the Frankenstein process of trying to develop a prosthetic penis recreation.

Speaker 3 (22:56):
Now, to me, that's God's work either way.

Speaker 4 (23:01):
God has created this human body that is very unique,
that has evolved over thousands of years, and we have
an understanding of it. Leonardo da Vinci drew pictures about
it and tried to develop through the analysis of corpses,
ways to treat diseases and cure of them, and fix

(23:22):
broken bones, all of these things, torn ligaments. We've come
miles ahead in medicine and all of these fronts, but
the notion of reassigning somebody's gender and having a working,
functioning penis if you transition from biological female to male.
I don't know that that is possible. Maybe cosmetically, I

(23:44):
don't know. But the other way, I'm gonna break this
down very graphically, the innerds of a woman, of a
biological woman. I'm talking uterus, ovaries, all that goes on,
and they're the mechanics of it. And I was just
talking about this with Kelsey, my girlfriend, about you cannot

(24:06):
replicate the shedding of the uterine lining, which is a period,
and yet we see so many trans females complaining about
having their first period. I think that's an affront, an insult,
a slap in the face to actual women. I'm sorry,
it just is. You can pretend you could put on
a show, you can present. It doesn't make it so.

(24:28):
It just doesn't make it so. Trans women are trans women.
The whole shouting of the phrase trans women are women,
they just aren't. And I'm not trying to discriminate, I'm
just differentiating. They happen to be extremely different for very
specific reasons that we all know. But to Mayor Eric

(24:51):
Adams's point, he might be breaking through some ice here.
That woke canceled culture crap is over. It's over to
common sense time, and we can't deny common sense any longer.

Speaker 3 (25:04):
I bring in PK.

Speaker 4 (25:05):
Stein, Mark Stevenson, herself a biological female.

Speaker 6 (25:09):
And guess what. I guess they're really leaving out the
whole concept of the soul.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
What is going on in the soul?

Speaker 6 (25:17):
What kind of soul are you letting them? And to
begin with, these children don't know. They could be yelled
at or told they were ugly, and all of a
sudden they want.

Speaker 4 (25:27):
To change, get cosmetic surgery. I want my nose done, Yeah,
my lips done, like Lisa Rinna.

Speaker 6 (25:34):
This justice, oh sonya. I can't call these people by
these names if they think they've earned that kind of
aspirin comparison to multiple surgeries, multiple hormonal changes and drugs,
and a duration of pain and suffering and physical ailments

(25:57):
that you can't even imagine when they tried to change
that body and give it a penis or give it
a vagina. What goes on down there and what they
have to do, It's sickening read about it. People go see.

Speaker 3 (26:09):
It, read some Reddit threads.

Speaker 6 (26:11):
Yes, and it's like the how stupid is she?

Speaker 4 (26:15):
Well, it's ignorance, it's totally I think it's point blank fat.

Speaker 6 (26:19):
But I want to put some humor on this. With
James Woods. My cousin sent me genius that he is.

Speaker 3 (26:25):
He is a literal genius. James Woods.

Speaker 6 (26:27):
I know he's got like one hundred and eighty I
hear something. But anyway, he mentioned something about, well, let's
just see how he feels when he tries to stick
a tampon up his anaconda, up the old anaconda.

Speaker 4 (26:39):
I am now physically uncomfortable just from that description.

Speaker 2 (26:42):
That's what he said.

Speaker 3 (26:43):
You gotta go find it. It was like, boy, it
was hysterical. My cousin send it to.

Speaker 4 (26:49):
Let me go to Sarah here. Just an opinion. Does
gender dysfory exist? Yes, of course it doesn't. I acknowledge that,
and I think we should make all accommodations for individuals
to coexist, to have individual rights, to have access to
third spaces, to have dignity and respect. It just a person,

(27:10):
any person. Any person's individual rights stop at where they
infringe upon the individual rights of others.

Speaker 3 (27:16):
It could be anything.

Speaker 2 (27:17):
That's exactly.

Speaker 4 (27:17):
I have a right to have a gun, I don't
have the right to shoot you with it unless you attack. Mean,
there's certain kind of modes of operande here that we
have to discuss. Sarah goes on. Do children question their
identity at a young age?

Speaker 3 (27:31):
Yes?

Speaker 4 (27:32):
Should puberty blockers, hormones and surgery be available to somebody
under the age of consent? No, Instead understanding parents, open communication,
and of necessary therapy until the person is old enough
to understand all the ramifications that they decide to transition.
Sarah are so right, it cannot be undone. Some of
the advocates for this suggest that it can.

Speaker 3 (27:50):
It cannot be. You chop off a young woman's breasts.

Speaker 4 (27:54):
You can put fake ones back in there, but not
the original real ones.

Speaker 3 (27:58):
Same thing with a little dude. I don't even want
to think about this.

Speaker 4 (28:02):
You cut off his member that which makes him male,
and then you all just just do a surgical reassignment
and reattachment.

Speaker 3 (28:10):
No, that's not apples to apples pun intended.

Speaker 4 (28:15):
No, stop being intentionally obtuse and stupid on this. You
have to face reality. And there's this tragic case PK.
You may have heard about it just recently in California.
Why is it it's always Munchausen by proxy with the
women with the mothers who abuse their children.

Speaker 3 (28:34):
Mentally and otherwise.

Speaker 4 (28:35):
A lot of them are in Hollywood, Charlie Stern and
others who are just working feverishly to transition their kids
because they want to be the mom of a trans kid.
They want that sympathy, they want that Oh you go
get them, you're a hero. And the dads are fighting
against this, and this is exactly what just happened. And
a California liberal wacko judge just sided with a mother

(28:56):
to transition a kid against the father's wishes.

Speaker 3 (28:59):
That is evil, Yes, it is evil.

Speaker 6 (29:03):
This whole thing goes back to what all these people
are talking about with this, their faith. What are they
believe in? They're gods, they don't care. Their gods have
multi sexual organs like Moloch and Mail and all of them.
And it's all about the kid. I hate to say this,
but all this starts back, This pedophilia, this transgender, all

(29:24):
of this stuff goes back to It begins with abortion.
When you see first that God made a male and
a female. And I keep telling people, if he would
wanted us to be able to do all this, he'd
have given us both sex organs in our creation. But
he wanted it for a reason to create life, and
you create it out of love, and so here you have.

(29:45):
And when it's not out of love, you just get
rid of it because it's only tissue. And I used
to tell my girlfriends, well, isn't it funny when you're
sleeping around and you get pregnant, it's tissue. But when
you're sleeping with somebody you love you're having a baby,
tell me what.

Speaker 3 (29:57):
The difference is? I mean, simply put.

Speaker 6 (30:00):
That's simply put. I used to ask him, what's the difference?

Speaker 9 (30:03):
You know?

Speaker 6 (30:04):
And people don't understand that God man is a certain way,
but they don't believe in God when.

Speaker 3 (30:08):
You have a child. And believe me, I've been there.

Speaker 4 (30:11):
I remember being a kid and being confused about a
lot of things that were happening in my body. All
of us went through that. But when the kid comes
to you and goes, I think I'm the other gender.
You don't start with surgery. You don't start with hormones.
That's like going zero to one hundred in a split sect. No, WHOA,
how about therapy? How you go talk to somebody about this? Okay,

(30:32):
before we have irreparable, irreversible surgery to address this issue,
Why don't we slow down and err on the side
of caution and err on the side of not doing that.

Speaker 6 (30:43):
Well, that's exactly like my mother had that. When I
was between eighth and ninth grade, I grew from a
beacup to a double D. All the girls and their mothers.
It was horrible. Oh he had silicone. Oh what's wrong.
I went home and told my mom, what's with these people?
You know, because I come from an Italian family, they

(31:04):
look like the grand Titans all my aunts.

Speaker 3 (31:08):
Wow, you know, Okay.

Speaker 6 (31:10):
When I told my mother, she goes, listen, honey, it's
just that, you know, one day they're gonna all wish
they had what you had, But God gave you a
little arn And it was true. They all went and
got boom.

Speaker 3 (31:23):
Jobs and you didn't have to.

Speaker 2 (31:25):
I didn't have to.

Speaker 3 (31:26):
It was the Lord's work.

Speaker 6 (31:27):
Yes, it was the Lord's work. So I'm on a
golf course one day and Billy Gartz was at this
golf tournament and he yells at me, p K, where'd
you get those?

Speaker 3 (31:36):
I said?

Speaker 6 (31:36):
They were God given, not man made. Of course, started laughing.

Speaker 4 (31:43):
Oh, boy, didn't think we'd go there today, but here
we are p K Stein Mark Stevenson. She is the
co host of the Humanity Against Tyranny podcast along with
our own Kelly Cochera, and they'll be talking tonight with
Chadwick Moore. He is the one that wrote the book
The Definitive Biography about Tucker Carlson's that and much more coming.

Speaker 3 (32:00):
Up this evening.

Speaker 4 (32:01):
You can subscribe, download and listen to their podcast, Humanity
Against Tyranny on your favorite podcast platform a timeout. We're
back to wrap it all up after this on Ryan
Schuling Live Now the Stretch two minute morning closing things
out with PK. Stearin Mark Stevenson in studio for her
monthly visit and her podcast coming up tonight, Humanity Against Tyranny,

(32:22):
co hosted with Kelly Cacierra.

Speaker 3 (32:24):
You don't want to miss it.

Speaker 4 (32:25):
Kelly usually swears a lot on those, and for that
reason alone, it's worth to listen. It's real spicy in here,
a lot spicier than when I'm on the air live.

Speaker 3 (32:34):
PK.

Speaker 4 (32:35):
This coming to us from Gina. She's still listening from
the state of Missouri as they stay there, and we
appreciate her listening. Oh my gosh, my mom died from
osteogenic sarcoma at thirty four when I.

Speaker 3 (32:46):
Was just ten. PK just mentioned it.

Speaker 4 (32:48):
They never understood why she got it. It mostly affected
small children. A few years back, I read a piece
about a link to some vaccines, many of which were
only introduced when my mom was a young adult. But
now all the youngsters are getting have the vaccines evolved
or changed since they originally came out. Let's say polio, measles.

Speaker 6 (33:06):
Let's say they were single, right, it was a polio,
it was a smallpox. Those were the two. Then they
started coming out with the measles, mumps, and rebella, which
is German musics MMR. But the problem with all of
this is then all of a sudden they decided, oh,
we can vaccinate against everything, and let's just put it
all in there. And when the man with heavy metals, yeah,

(33:27):
and you give it to somebody who hasn't grown, their
body's being attacked by all these viruses, you don't think
there's going to be problems in the well, let.

Speaker 4 (33:35):
Me just counter for a second. I only got a
minute left here, But what is the risk reward analysis
of vaccinating a child with all this scheduled vaccine or
not doing it and then them risking getting.

Speaker 6 (33:46):
Those Okay, well I got beasles and chicken pox. We
got exposed to it, we got it, got over it. Okay,
people got the mumps.

Speaker 3 (33:55):
Yeah, I got chicken pox before there was a vaccine
for this.

Speaker 6 (33:57):
Okay. I got walking pneumonia when I was a child.

Speaker 9 (33:59):
I got it.

Speaker 3 (34:03):
I mean that's pretty serious.

Speaker 6 (34:04):
Well, polio, here's the thing. What I listened to a
doctor talk about polio, and he said, what really stopped
the polio was when they shut down the swimming holes
because it was trans for matter.

Speaker 4 (34:15):
Yeah, would you for somebody that's going to have a
newborn child, would you recommend that they get a polio vaccine?

Speaker 1 (34:22):
No?

Speaker 3 (34:23):
Why not?

Speaker 6 (34:24):
Just because if they take it off these animals, for
an example, it's a simeon they have that sp forty
is still in the polio vaccine.

Speaker 3 (34:31):
The metal all agreed.

Speaker 6 (34:32):
That's Simeon monkey, that rhesus monkey. As it's all connected.
Think about Judy Mikovitz who said that A's was in
the laboratories.

Speaker 3 (34:42):
Right, Well, Fuchi knew about it. Lab leaks are kind
of his thing. It seems like.

Speaker 6 (34:46):
What this girl needs to know, is they broke down
the tea cells and that's what fights your cancer.

Speaker 3 (34:51):
Maybe she'll expand on that tonight, PK.

Speaker 4 (34:53):
Thank you for being a studio with me as always,
PK Stein, Mark Stevenson, Ryan Schuling signing off the Dan
Kaplis show coming up next. I'll talk to you tomorrow
right here on stick thirty km
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