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March 25, 2025 • 41 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:13):
It's seven o six there fifty five kirc DE talk station,
not accounting for the four and a half minute delay
we've got here on the fifty five. We're sure with
tell me four Congress and brad winstrip not retired, but
show's got you labeled as civilian brad winstrip on the rundowns,
Gillian brad Winstrip. Good to have you back in the show,

(00:34):
my dear friend. Always a pleasure. I certainly appreciate you
taking the effort to sit across from in the studio
as opposed to converse on the telephone. It does make
it more interesting and more engaging. And yes we have
this sound bite Donald or Arnold Tcharzenegger. Nobody cares if
you smoke a joint, unless, of course, you're in charge
of daycare facilities where you are caring for infants. It's
a sad, sad story. I know you heard it when

(00:55):
you were coming in here.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
Yeah, and you know, Brian, what was amazing is the
traffic stop. Yes, you know where there's the gummy bears,
there's the roach clips or whatever. You could smell the marijuana,
but it's just a traffic stop. What are we doing?

Speaker 1 (01:10):
Well? Apparently she was engaging in some sort of you know,
speeding or weaving, or it was a traffic violation that
led to the discovery of the various marijuana products in
her possession, and presumably I don't know if the cop
let her go, or maybe I don't know if she
was displaying signs of impairment. But anyway, we'll let the

(01:33):
lawsuit play out. But I know you had mentioned that
coming in. It's like, man, you put so much faith in,
so much confidence in the daycare workers that are looking
after your children, and you're left with this giant, looming
question mark hanging in over you.

Speaker 3 (01:49):
Yeah you really are anyhow, Yeah, sad.

Speaker 1 (01:52):
Well, let's start with how you've been, how things going
in your life before we dive onto topics. I know
you wanted to talk about the late congresswoman you know,
I love, I know you had a lot of respect
for her. But just give us quick oversight of how
things are going in your world. They're going okay.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
You know, I got appointed to the President's Intelligence Advisory Board,
and as the President said, our role is to restore
the integrity of the intelligence community. Along with some of
the people I think he's appointed to lead the intelligence
agencies like Cash Hotel in John Radcliffe, who I you know,
am friends with and so grateful to see them in

(02:29):
these positions. So that we've had our first meeting, and
that's about all we can say about what we do.

Speaker 3 (02:37):
Security clearance.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
I did get my security back, so yeah, back from
the congressional security clearance, which is of course interesting. I
think I think even getting clearance through Congress there should
be some betting, as we learned with some people on
the Intelligence Committee over the years, such as Eric Wallwell
perhaps but that that isn't the case.

Speaker 3 (03:01):
But for this we go through the whole thing.

Speaker 2 (03:03):
Was what was helpful to me is a lot of
the information was still in there from when I get
my military clearance. So you know, they ask everything. You know,
who knew you when you lived at the house when
you were five years old. Fortunately some of those friends
are still alive.

Speaker 3 (03:18):
Right, and they do interview them.

Speaker 1 (03:19):
They yeah, they contact them, and you spend a lot
of time with wind Strip and what's he like and
you know, is he easy nour? Has he ever been
a member of the Communist Party?

Speaker 2 (03:28):
That kind of well that question isn't in there. It
should be, but it probably did used to be So
I'm doing that and some consulting, and I haven't really
even put anything out, but I've had some things come
my way, and you know, plan to be working and
things national security, bioscience, biotech, biothreats, things along that line,

(03:54):
and then obviously health supply chain and injury energy. Those
are the things I want to do, Brian, because of the
things I was working on in Congress, and I.

Speaker 3 (04:03):
Think it'll be fun to do it on the outside.

Speaker 1 (04:05):
Well, it'd be nice to make more money doing the
same thing and setting your own agenda in hours.

Speaker 3 (04:09):
And see exactly as schedule is. I'm with.

Speaker 1 (04:11):
The family is important. I know that's one of the
reasons why you didn't run for reelection. Just kids get
old quickly, don't they They do. And I love waking
up at home. I like that I can put my
suitcase away once in a while, which I didn't do
for twelve years, and I listen. I have no regrets
in serving in Congress. People say, was it the chaos.
It's like I've been to war. I can handle chaos,

(04:33):
you know, let it roll off of you. Just how
do you manage it.

Speaker 3 (04:37):
And move on?

Speaker 2 (04:39):
You engage in it sometimes, but don't let it bring
you down every second of every day.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
Well, real quick, you don't have to elaborator, because I
know again you wanted to talk about me a lot.
But having that security clearance revoked, Donald Trump's revoked a
lot of security clearances, what does that mean for the
like Hillary Clinton's had her security clearance revoked? She had
it up until yesterday or whatever. What does it mean
for her to have it and what is she now
deprived of that she otherwise would have had access to?

Speaker 2 (05:05):
Yeah, you know, that's that's interesting. I guess that you
don't just get cut off or because maybe it's another
thing that reminds people that they are to adhere to
the rules of having a clearance about things that you know,
et cetera. But in the privilege, there's no doubt about it.
And so a lot of people that have been in
high levels I think formally, what you what you wanted

(05:26):
to have happen is someone who was the head of
the CIA and you get a new administration, a new
head of the CIA in a happier time. Couldn't the
former CIA director want to engage with the current CIA
director on issues that would only make sense?

Speaker 3 (05:46):
Right? Yeah? And I noticed that. I don't.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
I don't think the Director Burns of the CIA was
on that list. And if you remember you saw him
in the transition with John Ratcliffe, say, for example, with COVID,
he said, actually, John Ratcliffe, we have more information and
we are leaning towards the lab link theory. That is

(06:10):
good to have that kind of a baton a handoff
in that regard. My personal feeling is that Director Burns
wanted to do it sooner, but I think it would
have been frowned upon by his boss.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
How about that. I never have understood the desire to
hide that information from amer the American public. It just
sort of suggests something nefarious, the relationship between the powers
that be and the Chinese Communist Party officials who unleash
this horror upon the world. Why would you want to
protect them if all the evidence points to the lab.
What possible gain can you get from giving the public

(06:44):
the truth? I mean, more scrutiny should be brought to
bear on these types of labs. More scrutiny should be
brought to bear on the type of research that was
being done. More questions need to be asked about why
are we doing this in the first place when certainly
it is conceivable and oh look could happened that these
things might be unleashed on the world, and something even
far more deadly could be unleashed.

Speaker 2 (07:05):
Well, I think the Biden administration, for a variety of reasons,
felt that it would be bad diplomacy to be going
after China and blaming them for bad diplomacy. Yeah, yeah,
great or hard on diplomacy, I don't know. And I
did read an article recently where it's a precedent that

(07:27):
had been set maybe about one hundred years ago, but
it had been set well maybe fifty years ago, where
that was the attitude. It's like, well, don't go after
him on this because we got to talk to him
about that.

Speaker 1 (07:39):
Okay, well, that's all fine, But it also leads to
wild speculation that, you know, maybe China's got the goods
on people and that they are being threatened, like we're
going to release this information of the world, like, for example,
hunter Biden's ties to the Chinese Communist Party and some
of those other shenanigans. We the Chinese intelligence operations know
exactly what he was doing here as well as in Ukraine.

(07:59):
And I'm to hold this out over a threat to
you if you tell anybody that we invented this virus
in the Muhan Institute of Virology, then we're going to
let the world know about what's been going on behind
the scenes with your family, your family members, all the
LLCs and the layers of corruption and all those suspicious
activity reports that the IRS didn't bother investigating, even though
the average American would have been investigated. How's that for
a threat. Well, I think that's a reasonable thing to make.

(08:21):
That's called being compromised. Yeah, and look, we certainly saw
many things with Hunter, for sure. Clearly, you know when
the President made his final speech, he said Donald Trump
is going to be strapped and the country's going to
be run by oligarchs. Well, that may be that he's
engaging with oligarchs, if you will, but they're American oligarchs,

(08:44):
as opposed to some of the oligarchs that the Biden
family seemed to have relationships with. Yeah, we pick and
choose the oligarchs that we're willing to work with and
the ones that we condemn. Russia oligarch's bad, Chinese oligarchs good, apparently,
and we can go around the world. Nobody has a
regime or the them in liberty as the way the
United States has, so you're always having to compromise with

(09:04):
your the American core values. When you are engaging in
trade and relationships with other countries, we just pick and
choose the winners and losers. I've been mentioning this a
lot of late. How is it if the full of
the fall of the Soviet Union, we didn't just engage
Russia and try to establish, you know, trade relations with them.
They got stuff we want. I'm sure we had stuff

(09:24):
that they want, like blue jeans for example. You know,
we could have had a good relationship with them which
was stabilized and the concerns for the European Union that
Russia was trying to would overrun them down the road.
Instead we turned it into another Cold War. Now, look
what's going on. Why when we embrace since the Nixon
you know, engaged in in normalization of trade with China.
We embraced the ultimate enemy of the United States of America,

(09:47):
the Chinese Communist Party, And we continue to embrace them
and prop up their business and their industry.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
And they have grown.

Speaker 2 (09:53):
I mean that they're certainly because even where they change
their rules kind of like Russia did, where you can
stay in charge for longer, and President Chi gets yet
another term and probably another term, and so it becomes
an entirely different situation than what it was in what
nineteen seventy two with Nixon. Maybe that was a mistake.

(10:14):
I think people can look back on that and say,
maybe we went a little too far. I think we
have and we have gone too far. We certainly have
gone too far from the standpoint of turning so much
manufacturing over to China, because we used to complain that, well,
they're doing slave labor, we can't do business with them.

Speaker 3 (10:32):
Exactly.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Now we just opened it up and that's okay. Why
because of the almighty dollar and they're still doing slave labor.
But the reason is multinational corporations can get cheap labor
and not have to worry about OSHA pollution, environmental studies,
and pay people ten cents an hour to get products
manufactured when we have to, okay, pay union wages, deal
with collective bargaining agreements, deal with OSHA, deal with environmental regulations.

(10:53):
It just makes it too expensive to do business here,
so go to China. And the threat is great on America.
The fact that we rely on China for our pharmaceuticals,
even our battlefield medicines. How did we get here? And
I think that this administration is obviously looking at all
of that. So we got to turn this around because
we got to be the United States of America. We

(11:15):
got to have manufacturing here. The Biden administration was talking
about increase in corporate Texas. That is what sends people
over to.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
You very much.

Speaker 1 (11:24):
We'll just use that as an exclamation point as we
end this segment and move on. We will get his
thoughts and comments about the late Utah Representative Meal Love,
apparently an outstanding woman in our own right. Congressman Weinster
was able to work with her. But we'll also talk
about tariffs. Hey, Johnson and Johnson look like they're going
to be moving some manufacturing facilities here in the United States,
one of the victories of the Trump administration so far.
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Speaker 2 (12:45):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 3 (12:48):
Pickleball is on the Genline weather forecast.

Speaker 1 (12:51):
Just going to be a cloudy day to day hit
or miss light showers fifty one, the high over nadle
of thirty five Tomorrow partley cloudy, dry fifty four Or
got a little rain late late in the day Wednesday
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looking great, dry conditions, mostly clouds with the highest sixty
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Not all that bad either.

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John's beginning to get a little bit heavier right side
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the talk station.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
Seven twenty one fifty five KRCD talk Station Brent Thomas
with brad winstrip Civilian brad winstrip Buck, given his years
in Congress, has accessed all kinds of fun information that
he can't even say out loud. Let's pivot over to
Congressman Mia Love who recently passed away. Geoblastoma and just

(14:02):
a horrific form of cancer, very very aggressive, and that's
one of the reasons that I helped the cure starts
now because they focus on pediatric brain cancer and they've
been working on that for years, and it's just a
fantastic organization. And you know, people are getting they're living
a lot longer based upon some of the advancements in
cancer treatments. Just really exciting cancer treatments out there. And

(14:25):
sadly she succumbed to geoblastoma the other day. But you
worked with her.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
I did work with her in Congress, and she was
an amazing lady in many many ways. Her life story
is amazing and should be recognized for what it is
and what she felt about America. So her family their
Haitian immigrants. She grew up in New York and then
moved to Utah, and there she became part of the

(14:49):
Mormon Church. But in two thousand and three in Saratoga,
Saratoga Springs, I believe it is, she became a councilwoman,
then became mayor in twenty ten. But in twenty twelve
is when she became noticed nationally because she spoke at
the Republican Convention and her speech. I remember sitting at
home watching this thing, and I thought, who is this lady?

(15:11):
She was dynamic. She's got all the right ideas about
America and what America can be and is. Then she
runs for Congress and she won two terms in a
very tough, tough district. She was the first black Republican
woman in Congress.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
And you know what, there would have been a black
Republican woman elected in Congress a long long time ago. Sadly,
there just aren't enough black Republican women. I believe that's changed.
There had been black women elected to Congress on the
Democrats side for a long time, had black senators, We've
had black mayors, and it's just maybe down the road

(15:48):
this would be a more common occurrence. We need more
black people in the Republican Party because it's going to
better serve the black community.

Speaker 3 (15:53):
I'm convinced. Yeah, and there's no doubt about it. I
like her.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
I think it's happening. I mean I see it locally
here in Hamilton County. I definitely do, and I think
throughout there's a lot of more people that are just
like enough already quit telling me I'm a victim of something.
And that was her approach, that America is the place
for opportunity, and she talks about this, she wrote a

(16:19):
wonderful piece in her dying days, and she said, it's
not to say goodbye, but to say thank you. To
say thank you to America. She said her parents came
here with ten dollars in their pocket, and they learned
on They learned to be self reliant. That was the
way to go, and not sit back and say I'm
deserving of something just because I am or because of

(16:41):
how I look. And she was taught early early age
to love this country. And she says it, I loved
it warts and all, and that she had a role
to play in the nature's nation's future. And you know
what she did that, Brian, She did it.

Speaker 3 (16:56):
She said.

Speaker 2 (16:56):
You know, when tough times came, her family didn't look
to way Washington. They looked within and drove on self
alliance and just she said, the America that she knows
deserves trusted leaders. And that is where we are today,
and we need more of that. And I believe we
have many. We really do have many, that's my personal

(17:17):
experience in Congress, but not enough. And that's the problem.
And not only elected trusted leaders, that's the problem too.
We can get into what's going on in the agencies,
and I am so glad with what's happening with dose
because there are just so many people doing the farious
things all the time, and they probably have gotten away
with it for decades. And we saw a lot of

(17:39):
that when we did our COVID report. You just look
at what was going on in the agencies where hey,
well we're going to take things off our official email
and put them over here so that the public can't
know about it. But guess what we found it anyway,
But this stuff has probably been going on for a
long time. So when we get into what she talks
about having trusted leadership, and it's beyond the elected officials,

(18:03):
it's all of those that are serving in government. And
I think that mea love would agree that our agencies
need to be constructed like the military. And in the military,
you either get promoted or you're out. And guess who's
term limited the people in the military. You know, you
reach a point where there's a mandatory retirement, that's it.

(18:24):
You don't get to be there forever and ever and ever.

Speaker 1 (18:26):
Yeah, well, and you also have to reenlist if you
plan on sticking around more with Congressman Winster, we'll dive
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Speaker 1 (19:54):
They describe it as hit or miss, light, showers, clouds,
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Speaker 1 (20:46):
Seven thirty one pick about KRCD talk station in studio.
Brad Winster, someone who is eminated familiar with the of
course the COVID. You were on that COVID committee released
that amazing paper which revealed the truth about it. But
also you're eminently familiar with the World Health Organization, and
I know you knew quite a few things about it,
which my understanding is it they support terrorist organizations like

(21:10):
a mass Yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:12):
You know, here's an organization that ideally, and I've said
this now for the last several years, especially since COVID,
it's an organization that should be there for the benefit
all of humankind, you know, apolitical, just there to benefit
people everywhere. Well, you know what we're seeing recently is
they're now coming out with statements really condemning Israel for

(21:35):
their attacks on so called hospitals. And I'm putting my
quotes up because what's happened with these hospitals, which.

Speaker 3 (21:42):
You mean the terrorists headquarters. Yeah, in Gaza, Yeah, exactly
calling it a hospital.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
You know, if it walks like a duck and it
talks like a duck, and it quacks like a duck,
it's a duck.

Speaker 3 (21:54):
It's not a hospital. It's a headquarters for terrorists. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:57):
They may be saying, you know, you can take care
of some patients on the upper floor, but we've got
everything else. You know, we've got everything else, and we're
in charge. And they're using it for their command and control.
And it's pretty well documented that's taking place. And for
the World Health Organization to come out and and really
give condemnation to this, you know, I understand we don't
bomb hospitals. We should not be bombing hospitals. Russia has

(22:20):
in Ukraine and you know, uh, and that's a problem.
But here the Israel's using it. The Hamas people are
using this in Gaza for their command and control and
to launch their attacks and to house soldiers and ammunition
and everything else. What do you do in war? You
go after their ammunition, the enemy's ammunition. That's where they're

(22:41):
putting it. So what's to be expected. That's what the
who should say, they should be condemning hamas using, we're
using hospitals in this way. But see that this is
the whole problem, you know, with the WHO. We revealed
it during during COVID. As long as they're under control
of the UN, and the UN has people countries like

(23:05):
China having great control over the narrative, we have a
problem here. And if the WHO were to separate themselves
from the UN, they might have a chance. And so,
of course Trump wins the election. And you know, as
I was telling you off air, I went over and
met with Ted Rose to discuss the role of the
WHO during COVID and what actually happened. And you know,

(23:28):
I told him the Chinese are saying the WHO reports
said this came from nature, and he said.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
No, we did not.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
They put our name to it because they let us
in finally at the end. But that's not our report,
that's their reporter said, you need to be saying that
more publicly. But they don't do it because China is
controlling the narrative. They contribute a lot of money so
that they can control the narrative. And that's that's the problem.
And I agree with Donald Trump, if that's going to

(23:55):
be the way it operates, we're out of here. And
he did it before. But if Joe Biden put it
right back, put us right back in the game. And honestly,
if the WHO can contribute to what we do, what
we do as a country as far as data and
surveillance and things like that around the world, then fantastic.

(24:17):
But what I told doctor Ted Rose, because he came
to me right before Trump went back in and he's like,
what's going to happen. I said, well, he's probably going
to cut the funding to WHO again and we're going
to get out. And I said, look, my responsibility is
to the American people. What we were doing with our
pandemic was not just to look for bad things that

(24:38):
were done, but what was done right and what can
be done better in the future. And aligning ourselves and
relying or depending on the WHO is not the way
to go. We have to do things ourselves. We have
to be able to manage things ourselves. My responsibilities protect
the American people from the next pandemic. And if China
is controlling what we're counting on, then that's not good

(25:01):
for us.

Speaker 1 (25:02):
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Speaker 2 (26:17):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio Station.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
Jenna. I first one to weather forecasts.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
What they're calling well hitter miss rain today, mostly cloudy
day fifty one, overnight low of thirty five, clouds dotty
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opening day, It's going to be a dry day, mostly
clouding with the highest sixty two forty five right now.

Speaker 3 (26:39):
Traffic time from the u S.

Speaker 4 (26:41):
Health Traffic Center friend NASOP Doctors Day Sunday, we honor
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Tomorrow's learn more at u S Health dot com. Northbound
seventy five break byes just before button up towards Dixie.
I'm looking for a problem in between that fload traffic
usually go those to kyles southbound seventy five.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
That's doing fine.

Speaker 4 (27:03):
Three Lachlan saying for southbound seventy one had Feiffer Chuck
Ingram Hunt fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 3 (27:15):
Iffy About PERCD talk station.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
Brian Thomas was former congressman Prefensor Penstudio.

Speaker 3 (27:19):
Keep wanting to call you Congressman.

Speaker 2 (27:21):
I think people still do, Brian. It's like when you
were a secretary. People still refer you to it, well, secretary,
judge the president. Yeah, he's on the program every Wednesday.
He hasn't been a judge for decades. I think you
still call him judge. You still call former president's president.
So congressman, anyhow, moved on to other things in life.
You have, I real quick your observations of the current
state of politics. I regularly refer to the Democrats running

(27:44):
around defending the indefensible. They're burning up tessels because Elon
Musk is cutting fraud, waste and abuse out of government.
I'm sorry, my mind cannot undergrasp and understand that, you know,
the destruction of something that they used to embrace, this
whole thing that's going to save the GLO.

Speaker 3 (28:00):
There's no emissions.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
You need to buy a Tesla, thank God for Elon
Musk immediately turns into this is an object of disdain.
It's a nazimobile and you're destroying private property because you
don't like what Elon Musk is doing when he's only
trying to save so many programs from themselves. That if
you work for a living and your taxpayer dollars are
being used to fund outlandish and outrageous programs through USAID

(28:25):
or maybe even democratic causes, funding non governmental organizations that
are operating and working against you. That's not why I'm working.
That's not something that's good for the entire American people.
So he's exposing it. He's revealing the incompetence of the
people at Social Security, for example, for not getting rid
of all of these but will be dead people from
the ranks. That seems like an easy job. Listen, if

(28:47):
you're over one hundred and twenty years old and you're
on the rolls, No, you're not on the rolls anymore.
Come up a switch. It's done and over with. Well,
and yet AOC and Bernie Sanders seem to be the
voice of the party.

Speaker 3 (28:58):
Now.

Speaker 2 (28:59):
Yeah, they're out there out caravanning and I guess getting
large crowds. I don't know you mentioned social Security. I
love the President Trump and the I R S just
promoted the two gentlemen that were the whistleblowers on Hunter
Biden's irs tax problems and who stood by it but
were dragged through the mud by the Democrat Party and

(29:21):
the media. And now they've been promoted appropriately because you
know why, they know how to do their job. They
did the right thing. They did the right thing. That's
how you should get promoted, not by carrying the weight
of a political party so that you can drown illegal
behavior by someone in that party. But you know, you

(29:44):
talk about AOC and Bernie Sanders out there, you are
we dreaming this?

Speaker 3 (29:49):
Brian?

Speaker 2 (29:50):
I mean, I know, you know, people our age are like,
what in the world that this is. These are leading
voices in America in any of our political parties except
for the Communist Party or a socialist party. But now
they really represent the Democrat Party. They're not flag waivers.
And I will tell you this. I have a neighbor,

(30:10):
very friendly lady, and I know she's a Democrat, and
she's always kind to me. She said, she told me
one day, thank you for being normal. But you know
she's got the Harris sign in her yard and still
had her American flag flying. And I told her, you know,
I said, you know what, I have a flag that
I got from Pelosi during the inauguration.

Speaker 3 (30:29):
I'm going to give that.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
To you because you still fly the American flag, but
most of the party doesn't anymore. That was the only
home that I can recall seeing, and I was looking
for anyone who had a Haris sign and the American flag.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
Well, the left so thoroughly demonized the American flag as
some symbol of right wing conservatism. No, it stands for
the freedoms and liberties that this country, you know, was
founded upon. It stands for the Bill of Rights in
the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. It stands for
your ability to be a democrat, your right you can
be a communist if you want. In a free country,

(31:06):
you can exercise those rights, you can speak out loud
about them. It's a unifying symbol of freedom, freedoms for
all people, of all stripes and characters and sexualities.

Speaker 2 (31:16):
It's never stood for one political party. It has stood
for our constitution and the values and virtues that come
within that constitution.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
Well, something really sinister going on in the world of
social media, and that made this observation many times even
commonanty off air. You know, it's easy for outside forces
that want to undermine the unifying reality that a flag
should be, that that we all used to be able
to proudly stand beneath the flag and salute it regardless

(31:46):
of our political strife, because we were allowed to be
who we want to be and exercise our political rights.
That's been eradicated to a large degree. And I think
it's easy for outside influencers like TikTok, Chinese Communis Party,
North Korea, any of our other enemies to stir that
potted division and create in the hearts and minds of

(32:07):
at least in this particular case, the Left, that the
American flag is somehow in some way evil.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
And within our educational system, oh god, you know, it
was standard protocol, understood, no problem. Everyone in America would
agree that it's a good thing for the kids in
school to stand up and recite the pledge of allegiance
as you begin each day in the classroom. Things things
have gone in the wrong direction. I hope we can
start bringing it back because people need to understand more

(32:35):
and more the benefits of America that we were talking
about with MEA Love talked about the great place that
America is based on what that flag stands for.

Speaker 1 (32:44):
Liberty for all, operative word liberty, operative words, liberty and all,
not just me, not just that person over there, Liberty
for all. That was a point of salute in the
American flag and saying the pledge. We've got one more
with Congressman Windster. Then we'll get the inside scoop with
Bright Partners. Today Tech editor column made on your ferns
to talk about musk derangement syndrome. He's living rent free

(33:08):
and everybody's head now too, and the Daniel Davis deep
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No you don't.

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Thousand, fifty five KRC are you the breadwinner?

Speaker 1 (34:15):
Five John nine says we're gonna have some hitting this
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cloudy overnight as well, just a little chance of rain
thirty five for the low, partly cloudy, dry, and fifty
four Tomorrow. It's light chance of overnight rain Wednesday for
thirty three. In their for opening day, beautiful day highest
sixty two, cloudy sky and dry conditions forty five right now.

Speaker 4 (34:35):
Traffic tips from the UCL Tramping Center for National Doctor's
Day Sunday, we all earned the UC Health physicians who
are leading breakthroughs for better Tomorrow's learn more at you
See how dot com. Quite a few slow spots on
the highways now north Pound fourth seventy one packing up
past Grand sathbound seventy one, break wids above two seventy
five towards Fiffer soathbound seventy five. So nextra three to

(34:58):
four minutes through walk on a northbound seventy five the
heaviest with break bikes from turf Fight to town Chuck
ingraman fifty five kari seed the talk station.

Speaker 1 (35:08):
Seven fifty fifty five perc D talk station. One more
segment here with Brad Leinster enjoying it. Kind of all
over the field today. Where you want to go? You
want to go, DoD you want to go? Immigration. I
got Maduro caving on taking some of the trade d
Baragua gang members back. How do they get here in
the first place? Good question. I mean, the Biden administration
just facilitated this.

Speaker 3 (35:29):
They did.

Speaker 1 (35:30):
And you know, have you ever come up with a
conclusion as to why they would welcome and encourage gang
members to come into the United States of America.

Speaker 3 (35:38):
Well, they haven't had a problem with it at the
border for a long time. Well, I know, because the
new administration.

Speaker 2 (35:43):
When Maduro when he when he didn't win but then
won his election, you know what I'm talking about, stole it.

Speaker 3 (35:50):
He stole it.

Speaker 2 (35:52):
Then obviously that upset the Venezuelan voters. And I don't
blame him when you have an election stolen from you.
But anyway, what Biden did was as a reaction, gave
them temporary protected status so they could come to the
United States. By the thousands and so some of those
were gang members and it's the gang they call it
td Tda Trend de Ragua. And so they're here, and

(36:17):
you know, they've had an effect in this city too,
you know, breaking the homes. They're pretty organized, but a
lot of it is a drug traffic too, is one
of the bigger parts of it.

Speaker 3 (36:28):
Sure.

Speaker 2 (36:28):
And so now now Donald Trump is trying to get
them out, and he's using the Alien Enemy Act of
seventeen ninety eight. We got dig for that one, don't you.
But anyway, you know, good for him, But that only
refers to wartime conditions. So are we at war in
some way, shape or form.

Speaker 1 (36:45):
I mean, we have been at war since World War Two, Brad,
I mean, we've been in wars since World War Two,
but we have not been in a declared war since
we So if this was in Vietnam and we were
having Vietnam gang members come in, would they argue that
we're not at war? This was the war between North
and South Korea, and North Korean gang members are coming
in with they argue that we're not at war. Well, Afghanistan, Iran,

(37:08):
I mean, how long do we have to go along
with this nonsense that we're you know, we're either at
war we're not at war. But there's never been a
declaration of war since World War Two. No argument here,
opinion will be off.

Speaker 2 (37:17):
You can tell, I can't tell, but we can't agree
that there's no declared war against Venezuela and Marxist regime. Right,
So are there things that Congress can do to up
the ante if you will, because you know, they could
pass some types of resolution, They could enaccess a statute

(37:38):
about the hostility.

Speaker 3 (37:40):
Of the Maduro regime towards the United States.

Speaker 2 (37:43):
But the good news is is what you just touted
at the beginning of this conversation is that Maduro is
starting to take some of them back. But still in all,
we're still in the courts here in the United States
about whether this can even be done.

Speaker 1 (37:56):
Well, okay, let's assume you get around the whole idea
that you can eject members of the TDA whatever gang,
the trade in to Agua gang. Then you're gonna have
to have a due process finding that they're members in
this country. That's what a court's already already ruled. And
I get that on a due process level, that just

(38:17):
because you say somebody is a member of a gang.
If someone accused me of being a gang member and
then trying to throw me out of the country, I'd
be screaming all day long about my due process. Right,
what do you mean I'm a gang member? Look at me.
I don't even have a tattoo. I mean right, Well,
you know, but I got a job.

Speaker 2 (38:31):
We I think we need to Congress needs to step
up in some way, shape or form and talk about
how this poses They pose a security risk. But the
problem is they came here legally because of what Joe
Biden did.

Speaker 1 (38:43):
I know.

Speaker 3 (38:44):
I know.

Speaker 2 (38:45):
That's the problem is they came here legally and now
we're stuck with this and due process. I never felt
that people that are here illegally deserve the same due process.
You know, we have this argument about the Chinese companies
that are setting up that are harboring our our DNA
and all this, and one of the Democrats said, well,
they deserve due process before you put this Biosecure Act

(39:07):
in place and tell them, you know that they can't
do this.

Speaker 3 (39:10):
They they slap.

Speaker 1 (39:11):
Rules and rags on us all day long, key business
and industry, all day long. We don't get any due process.
It goes through some sort of legislative procedure and they
hand it off to some administrative agency who churns out
rules and regulations that we have no control over.

Speaker 3 (39:25):
Where's our due process?

Speaker 2 (39:26):
So the CCP does not deserve due process in the
United States of America. I agree, And that's really what
we're talking about, because it's law in China that every
company must turn over any or all of their information
upon request to the CCP.

Speaker 3 (39:40):
Yeah, so there you have it. There you have it.

Speaker 1 (39:42):
It's all a tool. How about a reciprocal rule. We've
got reciprocal tariffs going on. They see to be bearing fruit.
Have you seen the trillions of dollars so far the
companies have promised to invest United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabians
to the tune of almost two trillion dollars in promised investments,
Johnson and Johnson planning on building making pharmaceuticals.

Speaker 2 (40:03):
Here.

Speaker 1 (40:03):
Again, you got multiple automobile companies, Honda and Hyundai and
Stillanis all promised to build factories here. One's going to
build a steel plant here. I mean this is literally
billions and billions and come at least in the case
of the United Arab Emirates and Saudi's trillions of dollars
promised investment.

Speaker 2 (40:21):
And they'll use American workers, which is yes, they will
know where's where's the Chinese. They go into other countries
to start mining and doing all this stuff. They don't
let the locals, they don't train the locals how to
do this work. They got one point six billion people
that got to deal with. They just pack them up
in a in a shipping crate and send them over there.
You know, Italy was having, you know, problem with workers,

(40:43):
and that's why so many workers in Italy were Chinese.
And that's why Italy got hit so hard by COVID
early on, because they had so many people going back
and forth to work in Italy.

Speaker 1 (40:56):
He still out for some of that kind of stuff
back in the old days. Yeap, brad winzter. But it's
been a thing pleasure having you in the studio. I
help my listeners enjoyed it as much as I did.
You know, you always got a welcome spot here in
the morning show. And good luck with your endeavors. Enjoy
your family time how you can, I know you do.
And best of luck in your future business enterprise.

Speaker 2 (41:16):
Yeah, we're we're still going to try and do good
things for the country.

Speaker 3 (41:19):
Let's put that way. I'm glad to hear that.

Speaker 1 (41:21):
Yeah, folks, stick around after the news, we're gonna get
the inside scoop with Bright Barton News tech editor Colin Maynine,
who will break down it's now musk derangement syndrome, plus
the Daniel Davis deep dive latest on Russia and Ukraine
at eight thirty, and then the incomparable doctor Megan Frew
at eight fifty. Best dentis around well. Props to doctor
Fred Peck as well should be out at eight fifty.

(41:42):
Right back covering Trump's first one hundred days.

Speaker 4 (41:45):
Every day, I'm America's deadline is over fifty five PRC
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