Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Welcome everybody, and welcome fellow patriots. Welcome fella de plorables,
Welcome all of you who are dregs to society, rock dwellers,
sick of fence, and stinkos. Megan Nazis, you know what
the left call you, you know what we call you.
That's friends, allies and patriots, and we always want you
to know you're always welcome here. And this is the
(00:41):
Conservative Commando's radio show, and I'm Rick Trader coming to
you from the My Pillow studios of the AUN TV
network and joining me today as my coast she does
a couple of times a week. Is the Patriot from
the Battleground State, the battle born State, the Silver State,
and that is Sharon Angle. And Sharon, welcome back, Welcome
(01:04):
back to Conservative Commando.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Thank you so much. Rank. It's always great to be here.
Of course, I love coming on with you and talking
about what's going on in the nation as well as
things California centric for our California listeners and watchers, and
Nevada centric and New Jersey centric. So you never know
(01:30):
what I'm going to come up with. But today I
want to talk about uh Ai. Of course, Ai Ranks,
Trump's first six months is the most successful since FDR.
So now they're letting AI go in and make these rankings. Yeah,
(01:51):
the ranking was generated with open ais chat GPT, which
compared the sixth wow six months of every US president.
It's the early nineteen hundreds, So that's what they're doing.
Trump's performance received a very high effectiveness score due to
the burst of early legislative wins and executive actions. So
(02:13):
that's how that was their criteria. They went in did
that and they listed among his achievements Lake and Riley,
the Lake and Riley Act, and also the One Big
Beautiful Bill. So those were the things that got him
right up there, equal to Franklin Delan Roosevelt. Now, I
(02:38):
was my family was not a fan of FDR. I
wasn't really around too much in his presidency.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
I don't think you're around at all. You know, I
knew your birthday, and I know what's coming up just
around the corner, and I know the year you were
born in you missed. You and I both miss ist
but we probably hit part of Harry Truman's That's that's right.
Speaker 2 (03:05):
I can't remember his presidency either. I did.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
I can't either.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
I do remember eisenhower slogan, I like Ike. That's all
I remember about that. Really, the first president that I
paid attention to was John F. Kennedy, and that was
because of the Bay of Pigs and the assassination. I mean,
(03:30):
that really hit home to me. If you want young
people to be engaged, just come into their classroom and
tell them they probably won't go home today because the
Adam Baum's going to be dropped. You're going to war.
Speaker 1 (03:48):
Sharon, I remember Eisenhower. I can actually remember his second inaugurral.
I was probably only about six years old at the time,
but I remember that. I remember that my father was
quite a fan of Eisenhower. He liked Ike a lot.
My father also liked Richard Nixon over Kennedy. I remember
(04:10):
that my aunt and uncle were big, big time Kennedy fans.
But near the end, I can remember my aunt and
uncle saying some pretty mean, nasty things about Kennedy. They
they they they were switching around. And what I think
a lot of people don't remember, I think because of
(04:31):
the assassination is in the in the midterm and in
the middle of the Kennedy presidency, he was not very
popular and there were a lot of people thinking that
he would not win re elections. He really soured people
like my aunt, my aunt Trudy and my uncle Frank,
(04:51):
who were big time Kennedy fans and really really really
soured on him. But I remember, I remember, I really
not really well, but I remember, I remember my dad
in particular, was a night fan. By the way you
talk about you talk about Trump, and ay, I rated
(05:14):
him the highest president. Just yesterday the stock market hit
it another all time high. And remember sharing it wasn't
that long ago the all these so called experts were
predicting gloom and doom and recession and depression and inflation
(05:36):
because of Trump's tariffs, and oh how terrible it was
going to be for business and the stock market. I
don't know, I'm really rethinking the idea of these experts
are expert at anything other than they don't know what
the hell they're talking about. But that's just my opinion,
(05:59):
and that.
Speaker 2 (06:00):
Be with AI as well. You know, I'm very artificial intelligence.
It lean's left, it does lean left, So I would
I would say, I would say that even with this
report that they've done comparing him to FDR, he must
(06:24):
be far and away doing a better job than FDR
ever did. If AI is ranking him at least a
comparable to FDR second only to FDR they say, or
maybe he's first even they're even saying that because they
say he received very high effectiveness score. And I'm thinking
(06:51):
about what FDR did that would have caused him to
be a fan president during that time.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
And well, they won. He won the Second World War
or Harry Truman actually, in my opinion, won the Second
World War. You know, Roosevelt was in office at the
time of the Great Depression. Roosevelt started all these social
giveaway programs that was supposed to and the Great Depression.
(07:26):
But really what ended the Great Depression was the Second
World War, Sharon, and of course Franklin Dolana Roosevelt did
not live to see the end of the Second World War.
He died. The Allies were winning. But it was really
(07:46):
Harry Truman that put the nail in the coffin of
the of the Japanese and of the Germans. It was
Harry Truman's toughness. It was Harry true human's decision to
drop the atom bombs on Japan. I believe that ended
that war. That work could have been a very disastrous
(08:11):
for America and Americans if we had invaded, which was
probably Roosevelt's plan, and it's projected, there would have been
literally millions of casualties, many many Japanese, many many Americans,
(08:31):
and Allied troops would have died if there was an
invasion of Japan. And I say that Harry Truman has
as much to do with winning that were as Roosevelt
could have ever have had.
Speaker 2 (08:50):
And I think that history has born that out. I
want to go back to this idea that AI is
liberal because so they put Fdr first, Trump second, and
your favorite president Biden.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
Oh, Sharon, Sharon, there you go, there you go. That
says it all. I mean, for what reason? For what?
What did any logical reason to put Obien Biden third?
You know?
Speaker 2 (09:26):
And Sharon, yes, let me tell you why, because well
let me just say all.
Speaker 1 (09:35):
Right, but before you do, let me just say this.
AI is only as intelligent as the people who write
the programs. Okay, you can obviously see when somebody puts
puts Obiden third, how bad how bad the programming is.
Speaker 2 (09:57):
I mean, well, they said it was because he put
past the one point nine trillion dollar American rescue plan, right,
American Plan. Let's compare that to the big beautiful bill. Uh.
He also uh passed the COVID nineteen Hate Crimes Act, Okay,
(10:22):
and the Federal Recognition of Juneteenth. Oh God, but you
know we got it. As you say, we have to
take CHAT, GPT and all other AI into into account
for that. That probably probably there's a lot of skewing
(10:51):
to the left.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
I mean that that American Rescue Plan. Where did that
money go? You know? That was that was a boondoggle
for the for the green energy scam that I think.
I believe one of the things that was in that bill, Sharon,
was billions of dollars for car chargers. I think there
(11:15):
were I don't know how many, like nine of them built,
Only nine of them built. They were going to put
up like five hundred thousand across the country. Only nine
of them. Ever, I think it was nine. I could
be wrong about that. Maybe there were more, but there
weren't very many of those charging stations built. A lot
(11:36):
of that money was at waste. I think some of
that money was supposed to go to that the train
out in California that recently Trump put a cabash to that.
I think they built a total of three miles of track.
I could be wrong on that, but I know it
wasn't very much. What much done the train to nowhere?
(12:00):
Wind and solar that doesn't work is inefficient, is being
proven to be a disaster. And so I don't think
that that bill is anything that Obiden or any Obama
or Democrat should be proud of. Now, go ahead, infuriate me.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
No, that was I just thought those three three achievements
would be the infuriating part. But this is the bottom line.
Some political commentators have noted that AI driven historical analysis
could change how presidential successes majored going forward. Here you go,
(12:51):
They're going to now depend on computers to decide who
does a good job and who doesn't do a good job.
I thought that was our job. Wait, the American people,
the American voter. I thought that was our job.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
That's where the intelligence is. That is where the intelligence is.
Oh my gosh, let me see speaking of now, we
got about two more minutes in this segment.
Speaker 2 (13:20):
Speaking of that hunt. So so let's go on to
then your favorite president Hunter. Biden now has revealed that
his father took Ambien between before the high stakes debate
Ambian's a sleep aid.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
And why would he do that?
Speaker 2 (13:40):
Why would he do that?
Speaker 1 (13:45):
So I think that I'll call a liar on that. Liar, Yeah,
put liar, liar pants on fire. No one would take
ambient for debate, unless unless they shot him up with
so much upper so much adrenaline before the thing that
(14:05):
hit is off the wall. So maybe bring him down
a little bit. They give him ambient, But that makes
no sense at all, Sharon, makes no sense at all.
Speaker 2 (14:16):
It doesn't. Uh So, it's it's it's interesting that Hunter
Biden would say this. He said he was just tired.
He said it in a little more expective than that,
that they give him ambien to be able to sleep,
and he gets up on stage and he looks like
(14:37):
a deer in the headlights. Of course he does. You
know he did that. I think you can you can
say he was drugged. But really, really, I think we've
had it right all along. And you know, the President
(14:58):
calling sleepy Joe, maybe that's what gave Hunter the idea
to say, well, yeah he was, he was on AMBI
and that's why why he was sleepy Joe. But uh really,
I think that the more we know about this, the more.
We understand that he wasn't fit and the auto pin
(15:20):
is just, you know, a perfect example of that, that
he wasn't fit to govern, and that the media lied,
that the Democrats lied, the White House lied, all saying
that he was sharp and at the top of his game.
He was not. We could all see that. It was
(15:42):
obvious to anybody who looked on it and making an excuse.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
Oh well, I hate to say this. We've got to
be sharp on our game too. We do need to
take a break. And by the way, on the other
side of the break, we do have a guest joining
us today, guests who is right at the side of
President Trump the other day when he signed the fentanyl bill,
So right on the other side of this break, I'm
(16:11):
going to ask Sharon to tell our audience about that
guest and the topics for our conversations. This is the
Conservative Commandos, My cost Sharon Angle, I'm Rick Trader, and
today's show, like each and every one of our shows,
being brought to you by the First Amendment, protected by
the second you go nowhere, we'll be right back.
Speaker 3 (16:44):
Are you having trouble hearing your TV or listening to
conversations and loud spaces, then it might be time to
consider nano hearing aids. The days of expensive hearing aids
are over. Nano's are FDA registered OTC hearing aids. They
are power er, lightweight, and simple to use, and their
tiny in ear design makes them nearly invisible. Plus they
(17:07):
are rechargeable, saving you hundreds of dollars on batteries. Don't
be fooled by overpriced hearing aids. Prescription hearing aids could
cost three thousand dollars or more. Nanohearing ads are only
three hundred and ninety seven dollars. But wait, we are
so confident you are going to love your nanos, we
are offering one hundred dollars off through this special TV offer.
Call now and get two see I See rechargeable hearing
(17:28):
aids for only two hundred and ninety seven dollars. You
get a free portable charging case, free twenty four seven
lifetime telephone support, free shipping, and a forty five day
money bag guarantee.
Speaker 4 (17:38):
Call eight five five six nine zero sixty four sixty four.
That's eight fivey five six nine zero sixty four sixty four.
Call eight five five six nine zero sixty four sixty four.
That's eight five y five six nine zero sixty four
sixty four. Call eight five five six nine zero sixty
four sixty four. That's eight fivey five six nine zero
sixty four sixty four.
Speaker 3 (17:57):
You're still looking God, I'm still feeling good.
Speaker 5 (18:00):
You know I've got all your MyPillow products, mattress, topper,
bed sheets, my pillows, towels, slippers, blanket.
Speaker 6 (18:06):
I'm interrupted this commercial to do something I've never done before.
Get two my pillows absolutely free on orders of one
hundred dollars or more. I can't do this forever, so
get on board with this great sale today. Our best
selling six piece bath towel sets, our kitchen towel sets
just twenty nine ninety eight, our famous standard my Pillows
(18:26):
only fourteen ninety eight, Queens eighteen ninety eight, King Size
only a dollar more Body Pillows twenty nine ninety eight.
Multi use my Pillow two point zeros with pillowcase nine
to ninety eight. Save forty dollars on our spring per
killing Gieze. A dream bedsheet says any size, any color,
So go to MyPillow dot com or call that number
(18:47):
on your screen. Use your promo code to save up
to eighty percent on all my Pillow products and when
you spend one hundred dollars or more, get two standard
my pillows absolutely free.
Speaker 7 (18:58):
To order, please call eight hundred seven nine seven seven
eight nine three and please use the promotion code a
u n TV. To order, Please call eight hundred seven
nine seven seven eight nine three and please use the
promotion code a u n TV. To order, Please call
eight hundred seven nine seven seven eight nine three and
(19:21):
please use the promotion code a u n TV. To order,
Please call eight hundred seven nine seven seven eight nine
three and please use the promotion code a u n TV.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
And we are the Conservative Commander's Radio show. I'm Rick Trader,
my cost Sharon Angle, coming to you front the My
Pilis Studios and My Store Studios of the au n
TV network. And Sharon, We're going to have a new
guest today on our show, a lady that was at
the side of President Donald Trump when he signed this
(19:55):
top Fentanyl Act the other day and give give her audiences.
Getting on our guest well.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
Anne Elizabeth Thunder is the America First Mom for from California.
She's also a Conservative Commando alumnus whose new mission is
to stop Fentanyl. And so that's what we're going to
be talking about with her today, was that signing of
that bill.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
All right, be great to have Anne and back with this.
And not not only was she at the side of
the President Trump the other day, she was one of
the great speakers at the Republican National Convention just about
a year ago that her story of her son Wesley
and the tragedy and their family really really shocked the
(20:49):
American people. And quite a she's quite a little quite
a little lady. She's she's one of our little warriors.
And Sharon, as you say in a when TV and
Conservative Commando alumnus. So it'll be great to have and
back with this. What else you got, kiddo.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
We I think it's becoming one of my favorite topics,
this idea that these legislators exposed themselves in speeches. As
we know, the Minnesota legislator came out and said, you
want to be careful about who you round up as
illegal aliens. You could hurt the country because she is
(21:31):
an illegal alien and they could round her.
Speaker 1 (21:34):
Up good out.
Speaker 2 (21:37):
So we've been kind of watching that story. But here's
another one and a Democrat Erie City council president admits
to killing a man as a teenager during a public meeting.
What is this? Why is this not aa right? This
is not where you go in and and confess and repent.
(21:58):
And so he's a city council president in Pennsylvania. This
is in your neck of the woods who openly confessed
during a public meeting this week to shooting a man
in the head as a teenager and never faced criminal charges.
His name is mel Witherspoon. He's eighty years old, and
(22:20):
he made his revelation in one of their bi monthly
city council meetings in Erie, Pennsylvania.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (22:32):
So he described these events from his youth in Newark,
New Jersey, where he said he was involved in a
gang and carried out a point blank shooting that resulted
in the death of another man. I quote, I'm seventeen.
I'm involved with a gang, the largest gang in Newark,
New Jersey. I organize. We went over to Jersey City
(22:56):
looking for a person and then well we got When
we got there, we didn't realize it was a family.
And when you talk in Jersey City and you talk family,
you're talking mafia. So he says, he says that he
had purchased a firearm, and he says he says, they laughed.
(23:31):
I don't know how this fits into the story. I
don't know who they are. They left. I had a
clip of my gun. Nick came into my room. I said,
you know, Nick, I can blow your head off. He said,
go ahead, and I did. I shot him in the
head point blank this close.
Speaker 1 (23:45):
Wow. Well, you know, Sharon, there's a statue limitations on murder.
And I don't care what the guy, how old the
guy it was then or now, or what he's done
since that time. But I, I really this needs to
be investigated. If he is admitted to a murder, he
(24:06):
needs to stand for that. He needs to he needs
to go to jail seriously.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
Well, so here's how he got out of it, he says.
I stayed in jail one night. I never went to
court and went back to playing basketball. How did that happen?
Because I had a family member, one of my uncles,
who was involved with one of the families referring to
the mafia. That family made a call to Newark from
(24:37):
New York to Omaha, Nebraska, where I was at and
I was out the next day.
Speaker 8 (24:44):
And.
Speaker 1 (24:47):
Unbelievable he asked to be held accountable for this shrew
is what these circumstances are, he needs to be held accountable.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
Well, it says neither Nebraska nor Pennsylvania has a statute
of limitations for murder, meaning legal action can be taken.
He's eighty years old. It's kind of doubtful that they'll
do anything at this time. But you know they didn't
do anything the last time either. You know that they
(25:23):
had him, and now it's a confession. It's just it's
incredible to me how these democrats just go off the
rails and you know, I guess, I guess it's time
to This is desperate stuff. I don't know if this
is about campaigning. You know, I'm one of you and
(25:44):
everybody should vote for me because I'm just like you.
I do the same things you do, is if that's
what they're thinking. But this is just incredible, because now
this is the second confession of illegal action of people
that should be going to jail, this guy from murder
and the other lady for fraud. I mean, it's just
(26:08):
I can't I guess I can't wait to hear the
next one. You know, it's just like you think this
is anomalous, but now it looks like a rash of
of incredible uh confessions, And you wonder, why why are
(26:28):
they doing that? I know that the party is on
you know, they're on the ropes. They know that they're
going to have a difficult time winning elections this cycle,
this time through. But is this the way to do it? Rick,
by just unburdening your your pass.
Speaker 1 (26:52):
I don't know, Sharon, just see it just I I
there's no explanation. First of all, the women we've been
talking about, the Minnesota Democrat who's been in the state legislature,
she needs to be deported, all right. The fact that
(27:13):
she's in the new in the legislature or has been
here for all these years. I don't think that should matter.
The guy that commits somebody, or the guy that kills somebody,
that shouldn't matter. What his age are is, how old
(27:33):
he was when he committed it, what he's been doing
since that time. He needs to be held accountable. Why
why they're having these come to Jesus moments now? I
don't understand that at all. I really don't know. I
really don't get it.
Speaker 2 (27:51):
I'm gonna switch gears. Speaking of come to Jesus moments,
because the Trump administration has been part of this whole
national come to Jesus moment for all of us. We
knew there were amazing things going on behind closed doors,
(28:15):
but now it seems like every one of his appointees
is bringing out something else. And Tulsa Gabbert is the latest.
She's declassified a Russia memo, so it's interesting. She has
announced Friday that she's referring a recently declassified memo to
(28:39):
the Department of Justice for possible criminal investigation. And they
also concluded that Russia did not significantly influence the twenty
sixteen presidential election. Well, we kind of knew there was
no Russia Gate, but that she has found criminals in
(29:00):
US President Barako Obama was informed that Russian and criminal
actors did not impact recent US election results by conducting
malicious cyber attacks against the infrastructure, But she's saying it
(29:21):
needs to be investigated. She's handed it over to the
Department of Justice to do just that.
Speaker 1 (29:29):
Well, I think that needs to be investigating. You know,
the whole Russia Gate, the whole the Hunter laptop thing
being all Russia, Russia, Russia. We've knew we Conservatives and
Simon is a bunch of bull crap. Since that time,
(29:51):
everybody else now realizes it's a bunch of bull crap.
I think that is election of interference. And you know
Obama has been involved in election interference in the past.
You remember, Sharon, when Obama was in office, he tried
to interfere in the Israeli election.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
Well, this is, I guess the part that surprised me
about Tulca Gabert because we know she came over from
the Democrat Party and these are the people and she says,
most these documents spell out exactly what happens when you
have some of the most powerful people in our country.
And then she names them President Obama, James Comey, John Brennan,
(30:33):
James Clapper, Susan Rice, making an intentional decision to create
a politicized intelligence narrative. So she's going after people that
she used to be on their team.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
That's incredible, It is absolutely incredible. Oh, Tulca Gabert. Tulca Gabert,
along with John Fetterman, may be the only two credible Democrats.
Of course, Calsey says she's not a Democrat anymore. She
left the party, but was She and John Fetterman were
(31:09):
the only reasonable people ever to come out of that party,
at least in the last eight years, eight to ten years.
I mean you, when John Fetterman is accent and sounds
reasonable compared to the rest of the Democrats, it ought
to be a real indication of how sick and twisted
(31:31):
the Democrat Party is. Right now, Sharon, we've got to
get a break in. Why because we do, we have
to get this break in. We also have a great
guess joining us on the other side. Aunt Elizabeth Funder
will be joining us. She's the America First Mom. She
and her family went through a tragic event when her
(31:53):
son Weston died of an accidental taking a fentanyl. She
was right before side President Trump the other day when
he stopped the when he signed the stop fentalac We're
going to have Aunt Elizabeth on with this here on
Conservative Commandos right after this break So do not go away.
Speaker 9 (32:26):
Are you tired of making trip after trip on doctor
visits only to get wrong medications that waste time, money
and cause you side effects. If you're on Medicare, call
for a free medical assessment and determine which medications are
right for you based on your genetic makeup with our
convenience swab test performed in your home and mailed to
(32:47):
our laboratory. No more trial and error. The results will
tell you and your doctor which medications work for you.
It's that easy. If you're on Medicare and take multiple medications,
call now and see if you qualify for our genetic
testing service covered by Medicare or your insurance. Improve your health,
avoid adverse side effects, and save money. Don't wait. Call
(33:09):
right now and find out if the medications you're taking
are helping or hurting you. Make this free call right now.
Call eight five five eight two zero three two nine one.
That's eight five five eight two zero thirty two ninety one.
Call eight five five eight two zero three two nine one.
That's eight five five eight two zero thirty two ninety one.
(33:32):
Call eight five five eight two zero three two nine one.
That's eight five five eight two zero thirty two ninety one.
Speaker 6 (33:40):
I hear every day about the product you all wish
my pillow carried well. Guess what we probably do. Slippers, bathros,
pet beds, blankets, mattresses, sleepwear, loungewear, duvets, comforters, potholders, aprons
of admits, and so much more, and they're all on sale.
For example, well get our best selling standard my pillows
(34:02):
for only fourteen ninety eight body pillows, twenty nine ninety eight,
six piece bath towels or kitchen towel sets just twenty
nine ninety eight. Multi use my Pillow two point zeros
with pillowcase nine ninety eight. Say forty dollars on our
spring per killing gize a dream bedset sets, any size,
any color, and so much more. So go to MyPillow
(34:25):
dot comer call the number on your screen, use your
promo code to save up to eighty percent on all
my Pillow products. And I've never done this before. When
you spend one hundred dollars or more, you're gonna get
two standard my pillows absolutely free.
Speaker 7 (34:41):
To order, please call eight hundred seven nine seven seven
eight nine three and please use the promotion code a
U n TV. To order, Please call eight hundred seven
nine seven seven eight nine three and please use the
promotion code a U n TV. To order, Please call
eight hundred seven nine seven seven eight ninety three and
(35:04):
please use the promotion code a U n TV. To order,
Please call eight hundred seven ninety seven, seven eight ninety three,
and please use the promotion code a U n TV.
Speaker 1 (35:16):
Mende's already a show with Sharon Angele and you're Shredley
Rick Trader coming to you from the my Pyla Studios,
the my Store studios of the a U n TV network.
And Sharon, we have a longtime friend of the show
returning with his and we're so happy for that. And Sharon,
please make that introduction.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
It's my pleasure to introduce Analysm Funder, who is the
America first mom of four from California. An Elizabeth is
a Conservative Command of alumnus whose new mission after the
tragic loss of her son, is to stop fentanyl. She
holds a degree in communications with an emphasis on journalism
(35:56):
and a minor in broadcasting from Indiana State Universe and
after college, Analysm moved to New York City and did
a short stant with Bloomberg TV before becoming a successful
editorial print model as a sports and entertainment interviewer and
interviewed sports stars and newsmakers like Kobe Bryant, Paris Hilton,
(36:20):
Kim Kardashian, and Magic Johnson to name a few. An
Elizabeth Welcome back to the Conservative Commandos radio show.
Speaker 10 (36:28):
Thank you, it's so nice to be back. I always
enjoy coming on to your show. Thank you so much.
Speaker 2 (36:34):
Well, it's always a pleasure to have you on the show.
It was a pleasure to have you as a co host.
So we're delighted that you're here. We want to talk
a little bit about the beginning. Tell us how this
all began. How it didn't sound like fentanyl was always
your hot button or the hot issue in your life.
(36:56):
You had a life that didn't include fentanyl, you thought,
So could you tell us how that came about.
Speaker 10 (37:03):
Well, my son was a freshman in high school and he,
you know, was at a new school in a group
of kids, and he succumbed to hear pressure and someone
gave him something that looked like a percoset, but it
was a counterfeit pill. It wasn't real. And that's so
important for people to understand that had my sign taken
(37:23):
a corner of a percoset, he'd be alive today. But
he was deceived to death and he was given blueprest
powder sprinkled with the bent and off. He had no
idea that that's what he was taking. And these kids
are dying. If the first pill doesn't kill them, then
they're sucked into an addiction right from the start. Fifty
times more addictive things track and the drug dealers just
(37:46):
swoon and just beat them a little bit more to
get rid of those with draw symptoms and then suck
them into an addiction, so that no all was evil.
I've seen posts where you know, underneath the commons parents
you know people usually democrats that don't like anybody that's
republic and will say something you know about my parenting,
(38:08):
And I can tell you that I was a great parent.
We did everything right, from every sports to being involved
dinners together to vacations, spending time every night helping with homework, tutors, races.
We did everything right and had those conversations about drugs
all the time. It was peer pressure that I underestimated.
(38:31):
That's what got my son.
Speaker 1 (38:34):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (38:35):
You mentioned percoset, but that's not always the carrys. It's
something that they can lace any drug with. Is that correct.
Speaker 10 (38:45):
There is no purposet whatsoever in the pill that he took.
It was a fake pill. It was made to look
like a percoset. These drug dealers have pill presses that
are designed to make it's like printing counterfeit money. There's
no real dollars, encounterfeit money. It's the same thing these aren't.
It's not like they can break open the pill and
(39:05):
stick vent and all, and that's not how it works.
They just these are completely fabricated, the pills made to
look like something else. So if you went to a
bar and he said, oh, I want a glass of
the Cabernet sa savignon, and they come out with a
purple liquid that looks like cabernet, smells like cabernet, but
(39:26):
it's really sour grapes with cyanide, and you die, that
person would go to jail because they've poisoned you, intentionally
poisoned you. And that's exactly what is happening to these kids.
Every single one of these drug rumor pushers are serial murders.
(39:46):
Every single one of them knows that it kills. They
continue to do it because they want to make a
few bucks and until that person dies and they move
on to the next one. And they don't care if
they die because there's no shortage of getting people addicted.
All they have to do is get someone to try
it one time and it's an instant addiction. And I
can show you hundreds of thousands of dollars in every
(40:09):
drug bust, proving my point that they don't care if
you die, because there's plenty of people and a half
a million people are dead because of it.
Speaker 2 (40:18):
Now, if a cat or a person tells you, well,
I don't do hard drugs, I only do marijuana. Is
there a danger of ventanyl with marijuana.
Speaker 10 (40:29):
They're sprinkling it in marijuana. These kids and even some
adults have this ridiculous idea that if you smoke marijuana
you're safe. Absolutely not. They will do anything to get
anybody addicted. They think that if it burns off, and
a marijuana joint or and if they light it on fire,
(40:50):
it will burn off. That's exactly how you people get
high with ventanyls. They intentionally smoke it. So if it
gets over, if it's directly the claim, maybe it will
burn up, but there's a you know, a good quarter
of an inch before that that's not going to be
part of the direct plane that's going to get heated
and up enough so that it's going to get into
(41:10):
your lungs. The particles will get into your lungs and
I can show you hundreds and I'm telling you hundreds
of parents whose kids died from smoking marijuana. That is
a myth. And if your kids, or if you or
anybody listening thinks that you're safe with marijuana, I assure
you I'd be willing to put you in front of
(41:31):
many parents who will tell you it's fake and you
can absolutely die from smoking marijuana. Based the pantanlel. You
can't see it.
Speaker 2 (41:40):
So you know, they say, what, it's safe now because
it's legal, I'm going to go down to the store
and get it. Is that Is that a safety check?
Or are are they again just in denial about what's
going on here?
Speaker 10 (41:57):
Depends on the dispensary. Some dispensaries, you know, under I
don't think any of them are under any regulation whatsoever.
But there have been dispensaries that have been shut down
for weed pens that because they found trace amounts of
ventanyl in it. There have been dispensaries that have been
shut down because they've found on the marijuana they found
(42:18):
traces aventanyl. The dispensaries are businesses and they think, you know,
if I give them just enough to get addicted, they're
going to come back here. We're talking about something that
in the eighties, if you tried crack one time, you
were addicted, and it was a crisis. The eighties crisis
was crack. Crack is black, that was a big thing.
(42:39):
This is fifty times more addictive than crack. Fifty times
more addictive. And so if they think that they can
put it in something that you're going to be taking,
you're guaranteed return client. They can try to get marijuana
someplace else, but they're not it's not going to happen
with their with draw symptoms that happened to two to
(43:00):
three hours after the first time of trying. So yes,
you're seeing dispensaries go down, you're seeing bathe shops go down.
They're they're finding it in baps. Because the idea is
just to get people to come back to your store
and making something extremely addictive. They're hoping that they're not
going to put a fatal amount in it, but it happens.
(43:21):
So we're seeing bake shops get shut down, We're seeing
dispensaries get shut down. Weed pens oils evened in it.
So it's very dangerous and everybody and unless not even
like talk about like the generation of drugs behind it,
the nitazinesnitazines, the isoitzines, the part fentanyl one hundred times stronger,
thirty do one hundred times stronger than bentanyl. And we're
(43:43):
actually seeing bentanol getting lace with minittazines and then that
are taking that lace fentanyl. It's laced with nitazines and
lacing drugs with it. It is sick, and the people
who push it are sick. They all need to go
to jail, and some of them, I believe, need the
death penalty.
Speaker 2 (44:00):
So I had a little surgery done and when I
came out of it, I had some pain and she says, well,
we're going to give you something, and one of the
drugs was fentanyl, and I went, oh, you know, I
was in pain, but I thought, oh, no, do I
want to have that? What about is there a difference
or is it all the same stuff? And because it's
(44:22):
legal in one situation and not legal in another, is
that why we've got the crisis? Talk about the availability
and when you should use it and when you shouldn't
or should you never use it?
Speaker 10 (44:35):
So this is pentanyl is not even chemically comparable to
prescription fentanyl, but you get in the hospital, it's very
controlled but I think it's absolutely ridiculous that the medical
establishment is trying to use this for people that aren't
on their deathbed. That's what it was originally created for,
is people who were dying of cancer and needed major
pain management. They're not putting it in epidurals for pregnant women.
(44:58):
I absolutely, I think it's abhorrent that they're doing that.
But again, you cannot compare medical grade bentanyl, which is,
you know, under control of a doctor, safe in the
amounts that they give you, very controlled. You can't can
You can't compare that solicit ventanyl, which are the analogues,
(45:19):
the concentrated form of the pre the precursor chemicals that
aren't actually fentanyl yet. There are the chemicals that are
made that eventually will turn into ventanyl, but these are
the analogue, so there is no comparison at all. People
hear the word fentanyl, they think it's oh, my doctor,
no comparison whatsoever. So it's totally different. And if your
(45:43):
doctor says it's safe, I would trust my doctor. But
I do think it's absolutely ridiculously would be the fentanyl
when they have you know, other pain medicines like you know,
even morphine which all the hindred times stronger than morphine.
I mean, just see a little bit crazy to me.
But again I'm not a doctor, but I do know
(46:04):
that it's not the same.
Speaker 2 (46:07):
Okay, So where does this fentanyl, this illicit fentanyl come from,
because we know that hospitals can get it in. Is
it stolen from hospitals? You know, talk to us a
little bit about how does this coming in? And it's
not the way we kind of think, well, somebody went in,
he was a nurse, and he went in and got
(46:30):
some off the shelf in the hospital, and now he's
lacing these drugs. This isn't really how it goes, is it.
Speaker 10 (46:36):
No, Because that would mean it was the same as
pharmaceutical grade. And when I say, I can't stress enough
it is not pharmaceutical grade and it's not selling off
the shelves of hospitals. Are there people that will chew
the patches, the pain patches made of funnel, Yes, there
are people that will do that. Other people that will
take pentanyl fils from the hospital. Absolutely, but again not
(46:56):
even chemically comparable. They get it from China. It goes
over to the cartels. Cartels put it in blue press powder,
probably by some guy who's high himself. This is not
a chemist. He's just sprinkling from literally like a like
a can, not imagining it, sprinkling and mixing blue press
powder and pressing the pills. This is not medical grade
(47:21):
at all. People can peace at all the time. It's not.
It's from China to the cartels to your kids.
Speaker 2 (47:27):
And with that, we're going to have to go to
a commercial break. We are talking with our special guest, Elizabeth,
I mean Anne Elizabeth Fundner, who is America's first mom,
a foreign California and also a Conservative Commando's alumni. We've
been talking about her stop Fentanyl campaign that has been
(47:49):
going on since the loss of her son. We will
be right back after these messages. We are coming to
you from the Conservative Commando's Radio network studios and around
the world on the Internet with talk Stream Live, iHeartRadio,
tune in net Talk America and am FM twenty four
to seven. Don't go away, We'll be right back.
Speaker 11 (48:13):
Who We're also grateful to be joined by California native
Anne Fundner, who lost her beautiful eldest son Weston defended
All when he was just fifteen years old, exactly one
year ago. Today and delivered a moving tribute to Western
at the Republican National Convention. People that saw it have
(48:35):
not forgotten it.
Speaker 1 (48:37):
And and I'd like you to.
Speaker 11 (48:39):
Please come up and say a few words about your
wonderful boy. Thank you, please, thank you.
Speaker 1 (48:48):
That's an honor.
Speaker 12 (48:52):
Good afternoon, mister President, and distinguished guests. My name is
Anne Fundner. I hope thank you, and I'm an angel parent.
One year ago today, on July sixteenth, I stood in
front of America and told the story of my son
weston the RNC and about how he was a beautiful,
(49:16):
laughing had a wonderful life. We did everything right, but
one pill, one mistake given by a friend under peer pressure,
took his life. In the last four years, spent and
all became the number one killer of Americans ages fifteen
to forty eight, and children under fourteen are the fastest
(49:39):
growing demographic. President Trump.
Speaker 10 (49:42):
For four years, we felt ignored.
Speaker 12 (49:46):
But you've changed that. We appreciate that so much. You've
closed the borders, sanctioned cartels, imposed tariffs, closed shipping loopholes.
Most people don't know about that. That was a big
one dealt with countries where it's coming from. You mobilize, Treasury,
Justice Apartment, Homeland Security, lawmakers, legislators, and today the signing
(50:12):
of the Fentanyl Act, bipartisan and overwhelmingly supported by everybody,
making fentanyl a schedule when drugged, to strengthen the criminalization
and prosecution of people who peddle this. It is a
life line for families across America and keeping our family safe.
(50:33):
And that's all you always want to keep America safe.
Thank you so much, Thank you for keeping America safe
and for our children. And this is what we voted for,
mister President. God bless you, God bless our angel families
who are all here with us today and all of
you sitting up here with us, and God bless America.
Speaker 10 (50:55):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 1 (51:01):
You can have and welcome back. Welcome back to the
Conservative Commando's Radio Show with Sharon Angle. I'm Rick Drader,
coming to you from the My Pila Studios, the My
Store studios of the a UN TV Network. Promises Made Promises.
(51:27):
Cat Joining us today is Aunt Elizabeth Thunder. She's an
America First mom who dealt with the tragic death of
our fifteen year old son Weston. She was made a
promise by President Donald Trump that he was going to
do something to stop ventanyl from coming into this country.
(51:48):
And Elizabeth, thank you for holding through that break. Thank
you for your courage. It's great to see you and
Elizabeth tell us about this Stop Ventanyl Act. Now, last year,
just about one year ago, you were at the Republican
National Convention. You've pleaded with President Trump and the rest
of the nation to stop ventyl. This was one of
(52:12):
the major planks in Donald Trump's platform. And again, as
I said, promises made promises, Kep, I wanted to get
your reaction to this Stop Fentanyl Act. What does it do?
Does it go far enough?
Speaker 10 (52:27):
The Halt Fentanyl Act, which stands for Halt All Lethal Trafficking,
is a very necessary bill. It will help with the criminalization.
Something that's probably been the most frustrating part of having
your child die is that then after that there is
no criminalization. People are slept on the wrist and they
let them go.
Speaker 1 (52:46):
Again.
Speaker 10 (52:47):
I made it very clear that these people know that
they're cuddling lethal drugs. So the Halt Fentanyl Act will
give a minimum tenure prison sentence and that should hopefully
deter people from ever considering selling it. And if you
can't buy it anywhere. That will definitely take down the
demand for it. So that's huge just as a big
(53:11):
bill to help with prosecution and criminalization. It will also help,
you know, obviously, reduce the cartel's ability to get it
over here. Still going to get it over here no
matter what. They have their ways, but it's will to
drastically reduce the amount of people willing to sell it
with those types of penalties.
Speaker 1 (53:30):
And Elizabeth, God bless you, God bless Donald Trump. But
I I you and I have talked about this before.
You've been on the Conservative command as with this before.
I believe that Donald Trump should have picked up the
phone and called Mexico, called the president of Mexico, and
he should have said to him or her her now
(53:51):
him at the time, stop the fentyl and until you
stop the fentanyl, and also stop the illegal crossings of
people coming here illegally. Nothing was coming across that border, nothing,
not even a leaf of let us, not a car
and not a truck. Nothing's going to come across that border.
And Elizabeth, when I hear that story about your son
(54:15):
Weston and other families that have lost loved ones, I
don't know that ten years is enough I think that anybody,
anybody that is involved in selling or giving this drug
to anyone that results in the death, those people should
be brought up on murder charges. Were you consulted in
(54:37):
writing this bill?
Speaker 10 (54:38):
Many people were. I was not, And by the way,
I didn't mention that Fentanyl Act makes sentanol a Schedule
one and that federalizes it. It also allows it to
go bypass a DEIC. You don't have to go through
all that. You could just federalize it and make it
a felony of ven years. But no, it is definitely murder,
(55:00):
will die. This makes everything easier to make it a
murder as opposed to a you know, overdose. So this
will definitely help with prosecuting people. You have states that
also have that. While it is federal, you also have
(55:20):
states that will prosecute like Sarah hockey Standers. Governor Sarah
Hockey Standers has a death penalty and her people who
had all these drugs to children that results in a death.
So each state has their own laws for corporal punishment,
can federalize corporal punishment. I do believe this is one
(55:41):
of those ways. Again, I've made it very clear this
is a serial murder so it would be nice to
see that. But these are great, big, huge strides people
in this menial community truck rastly work to us. So
many many people in the Senate and in Congress when
once it hit Congress, but in the Senate really worked
with a lot of people. Aproacock was one of them
(56:02):
who the lost places of men who I know very well.
Many people are consultants. It was definitely a bill that
felt that a lot of parents had involved in in
which is important.
Speaker 1 (56:14):
No, and Elizabeth, I can't see how anyone could be
against a bill like this. Was there was this a
bipartisan bill? I mean that were there people in Congress
whoes says, no, I'm not gonna I'm not going to
vote for this thing. How bipartisan was this bill?
Speaker 10 (56:33):
In Senate it was about eighty four percent voted yes,
and in Congress about seventy six percent voted yeah, So
it was extremely bipartisan.
Speaker 1 (56:44):
People like, why wasn't it one hundred percent? I mean that,
I gotta be honest with you, kiddo. You know, I
can't see why anyone anyone would vote no one this bill.
I mean, this is an epidemic. You know that fact.
You know the figures. You could tell an audience tens
of thousands of people have died from this thing. What
(57:06):
was it, four hundred thousand died during the o'biden administration
died from this thing. How can anyone vote know?
Speaker 10 (57:14):
We will never know the true number because it was
severely underreported the way COVID was severely overrecorded. But what
I will tell you is it makes you wonder what's
in it for them?
Speaker 9 (57:26):
Right?
Speaker 10 (57:27):
Always the Democrats. This bill had already hit during the
Biden administration, was overwhelmingly voted down by every Democrat. So
this is a return of the bill, you know, again
consulted with parents, made better. It finally did pass. The
important thing is at this point it did pass. I
don't know why Democrats are always on the side of
(57:50):
harm to Americans over immigration issues. You know, Corey Booker
mentioned that it was racist, which I think it is
just horrible to even think that, you know, not saving
lives is worth no pandering over. But that's Corey Booker.
He's always like that and racist.
Speaker 1 (58:11):
How dare he? How dear that idiot? How dare that
walking idiot calls this bill racist?
Speaker 2 (58:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (58:19):
I mean, look at yourself, Look at this. Look at
the picture of your son behind you. All right, what
do you see there? Do you see black? Do you
see white? I see human being, both black and white
are dying of this thing. How can that idiot call
this racist? That infuriates me. I swear to God, it
(58:41):
infuriates me.
Speaker 10 (58:43):
Well, you know, the Democrats have their agenda. I think
a lot of them are probably if you ask me,
a lot of them are probably getting their campaigns paid
for by the cartols. That's just me. But I also
think that if we, you know, if we did what
needed to be done with our immigration system, that they
would lose a whole heck of a lot of seats
(59:03):
as Democrats because we would have to draw, you know,
redraw the congressional lines, you know, after we have taken
all the illegal immigrants out of the population, and many
more Republicans would hold the majority. So I think that
a lot of it has to do with the voting
that's absolute. I mean, we already know the numbers on that.
(59:25):
We've already figured that one as a fact. There's a
reason why they're okay with people coming over here illegally.
And you know, I guess using all of our tax
dollars to live in hotels with private chefs. It's not
you know, while our while our veterans are on the street.
It's because they're going to lose their congressional seats when
we redraw the lines. We redistrict because there's not enough,
(59:48):
because we pull them all out of the population. That's
all this is that humanitarian. There's nothing humanitarian about any
of it. But Corey Booker and the other you know,
sixteen percent in the Senate and the other twenty four
percent in Congress.
Speaker 1 (01:00:05):
I will never understand.
Speaker 10 (01:00:06):
I think that is disgusting. I think we need to
really sit long and hard and talk to our Democrat
friends about who they're voting for.
Speaker 1 (01:00:16):
Next time, Souenna Elizabeth Thunder, Is this the end of
the fentanyl conversation as far as the administration goes, as
far as Congress goes, Will there be strengthening of this
bill where they will be where will there be alterations?
What's the future of of of Congress, you know, trying
(01:00:41):
to stop this.
Speaker 10 (01:00:42):
I'm not sure. I can't see the future. I know
we have a bill in New Jersey for Weston's Law,
which talks about the Grammars and people, you know, getting
kids to do drugs and grooming and the way sexual
predator grooms. There's a lot of bills all across America.
President Trump won't stop until read last reign of Venan
All or you know, uh table salt sized Crystal is
(01:01:07):
out of this country. So he's going to keep fighting
no matter what. I don't think this is going to
be the end. I think this is just going to
be another notch and the fight against Ventana, and it's
gonna He's gonna keep doing whatever it takes to get
rid of this crisis because that's our president.
Speaker 1 (01:01:20):
Finally, and Thunderike, I want to get back to your
son Weston. Was the person responsible for Weston's death ever
brought to justice? Can you foresee a time when that
person will be brought to justice?
Speaker 10 (01:01:40):
No, that's because the person who gave it to him
was underage. Even though he was in fact the dealer.
It wasn't just a kid giving his friend something. He
was underage that they don't prosecute under age in California.
But what really upset me is they didn't try to
figure out who was supplying that kid. Because somebody is
supplying minor drugs for the minor to be able to sell,
(01:02:02):
and that person should have gone down. They never found
They never even tried to find that person. And so
to me, that is important and that's something that my
bill will address as well.
Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
And Elizabeth Thunder, we want to thank you so much
for joining us here in the Conservative Command. As you know,
we love you. I know you know that you are
my little warrior. I so admire you how you took
this personal family tragedy and you're turning it around to
(01:02:36):
save other kids, other people so they don't go through
what you and Eric and your fa, your husband, Eric
and your family have gone through. I so admire you
for that.
Speaker 13 (01:02:49):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:02:50):
I so admire you for that.
Speaker 10 (01:02:53):
And I had about me. I call you sometimes and
you tuk me off a led, so I appreciate that too.
Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
Well. Elizabeth, before you go, please tell anyone out there
who has questions, who is dealing with this, who has
concerned what resources out are out there for them. As
you said, you're trying to get a bill passed into
New Jersey state legislature. Good luck with that. And those
(01:03:22):
bunch of idiots and Trenton, which two thirds of them
happened to be Democrats. How can people help you with
that effort. How can people get resources and tools to
help you fight and maybe fight a personal family situation
like you had.
Speaker 10 (01:03:42):
Well, I do think that it's going to be bipartisan.
I think we're going to have both sides supporting. The
bill is just introduced with bipartisan support, which is good.
But as far as resources, there's so many resources online.
I would stay away from anything has to do with
farm reduction in terms of you know, if you find
(01:04:04):
out if you need help support getting somebody off of ventanyl.
But the biggest thing is you have to get them
in that day because so many people die waiting for
a bed. It's legal if it goes wrong one time,
two soft grains that all takes to kill you. So
get people and I always say he's a seventy two
hour hold because they're going to kill themselves trying to
(01:04:25):
self medicaid and then wait until you can get them
in a bed into a recovery center. But there's Lost
Voices of Ventanyl which is for brief support but also advocacy,
and we teach people like what about ventanyl and everything
that you need to know to to just be armed.
And it's also important to you know, have you know
(01:04:51):
narcan in your house? Should you know someone that is
have six of them at least because you can administer
it as many times until they wake up. But also
there's Greg Swan who has spent in All Fathers. He
he has a wonderful organization that goes into schools with
Victoria's Voice. Victoria's Voice has tons of resources on their website.
(01:05:14):
I'm with Lost Boys of the Fentanyl and I'll be
launching Forever Western, which will actually be targeting education for
pure pressure specific and not all.
Speaker 1 (01:05:25):
And Elizabeth, I think, and I'm serious, I mean this.
I think you should be Donald Trump's fentanylsar. But let's
end with one thing. What's it like to hug the
President of the United States or national and worldwide television.
Speaker 10 (01:05:41):
He's a wonderful man and he wouldn't have had any
other way. He's just he loves us. He's extremely caring.
I'm so just blessed be and believed to have been
able to, you know, grace the stage with him a
few times. And you know, he's just he's he's a loving,
caring father and he loves America. He loves Americans. He
(01:06:06):
wants to see so it's surreal, but he's a real
guy who just really cares about us.
Speaker 1 (01:06:13):
And Elizabeth Thunder. It's great to see again. Thank you
so much for joining us here in the Conservative Commandos.
God bless you, God bless your family, God bless the
memory of Weston. Take care and you're are listening to
and watching the Conservative Commandos with Sharon Angle, I'm Rick Drador.
Go nowhere, Sharon, and I'll be back with more news
(01:06:35):
and comment.
Speaker 14 (01:06:48):
Are you tired of seeing money all around the house,
then start saving money with First American Home Warranty. First
American covers the systems and appliances you depend on every day.
If we can't repair your covered item, we'll replace.
Speaker 15 (01:07:02):
It five save thousands and that makes me happy.
Speaker 14 (01:07:05):
All plans including no questions, ask, money back, guarantee, and
flexible payment options so you can never pay for covered
repairs again.
Speaker 15 (01:07:11):
Call one eight hundred four zero two seven zero nine four.
That's one eight hundred four zero two seven zero nine four.
Call one eight hundred four zero two seven zero nine four.
That's one eight hundred four zero two seven zero nine four.
Speaker 16 (01:07:26):
What if you could whiten your teeth by simply brushing
your teeth? Now you can with Smile Actives, the teeth
whitening breakthrough that safely gets your teeth white and keeps
them white every day, just by brushing your teeth.
Speaker 17 (01:07:38):
I never thought that whitening my teeth could be so easy.
I just put the chell on the brush, the toothpaste
on it brush, and I can see my white teeth.
Speaker 16 (01:07:46):
Simply adds Smile Actives to any toothpaste and our patented
polyclean technology activates into a powerful microfoam that penetrates into
the enamel surface to safely lift and remove stains.
Speaker 18 (01:07:57):
You need a simple way to whiten your teeth without strips,
without trays, without going to the dentists, and it was
about time that a product was developed that you would
be able to.
Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
Do that with just brushing.
Speaker 16 (01:08:08):
And now Smile Actives is even better with new pro
whitening gel with thirty three percent greater whitening power clinically
shown to white and teeth faster up to eight shades.
One hundred percent of users saw wider teeth on food stains,
coffee and wine stains, even on veneers, crowns and dentures.
Speaker 19 (01:08:28):
I eat the blueberries, I drink the coffee and I
know that Smile Actives will keep my teeth white every day.
Speaker 20 (01:08:33):
If you could use something so easy like Smile Actives
to take yellow teeth to white teeth, why wouldn't you?
Speaker 16 (01:08:38):
Why spend hundreds of dollars for whitening treatments of the
dentist when now you can whiten your teeth with new
Smial Actives Pro Whitening Gel every time you brush your teeth.
Call or go to Smile Actives dot com and for
a limited time get new pro whitening gel for just
twenty four ninety five. Order in the next five minutes
and buy one, get one absolutely free for just five
(01:09:01):
that's two for one and save fifty eight percent. Will
even include free shipping. Get your teeth wider guaranteed or
return it within sixty days for your money back.
Speaker 1 (01:09:10):
I smile every day now.
Speaker 2 (01:09:13):
The difference is literally night and day.
Speaker 1 (01:09:15):
So now I'm always mallan oh is she think?
Speaker 19 (01:09:17):
Is now my tea very much wider?
Speaker 16 (01:09:18):
This offer is not available in stores, so call her
click now before the special buy one get one free
offer goes away.
Speaker 21 (01:09:25):
To order call eight hundred eight ninety four zero four
nine three eight hundred eight ninety four zero four nine
three eight hundred eight nine four zero four ninety three.
Speaker 2 (01:09:43):
This right here is confidence and a bottle.
Speaker 1 (01:09:45):
It makes me feel so much more confident than I've
ever felt.
Speaker 22 (01:09:48):
They are some of the hottest videos on social media,
those videos claiming to instantly get rid of bags under
your eyes. And net figure ro is here to tell
us why. She says this.
Speaker 8 (01:09:58):
One is for real, This one is and I'm so excited.
Speaker 1 (01:10:02):
We even have a video.
Speaker 8 (01:10:03):
And all he uses is a small amount on a clean,
dry face. And what it does is it tightens and
lists the appearance of bags underneath your eyes. And I
did this to my father. We were at home, so
we applied it to his under eye bags and let
me tell you, we were so excited and under ten
minutes they visibly disappeared from view. And now it is
literally part of both of our daily routines. And not
(01:10:25):
only does it work on the bags, it works on
the appearance of hose feet, fine lines and wrinkles.
Speaker 23 (01:10:30):
And our fourteen dollars and ninety five cent price. It's
the best way to try plexiderm and see it work
after your first application. Your solution is at plexidermtrial dot
com or call the number on your screen.
Speaker 21 (01:10:43):
To order call it eight hundred six eight four zero
one four four eight hundred six eight four zero one
four four eight hundred six eight four zero one four four.
Speaker 1 (01:11:14):
And welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commandos with
Sharon Engele Imrick Trader, coming to you from the My
Pillar Studios and My Story Studios of the a u
n TV Network program Note, if you would like to
see this show, maybe you're listening to us on one
of our eighteen radio stations or many internet podcast outlets.
(01:11:37):
You can see this show and all the great shows
that are part of the au n TV network by
going to our website au n dashtv dot com a
u n dashtv dot com. Right below the banner, it's
a little red strip that says watch a u n
TV live. Click on it. I'll take you to our
(01:11:57):
rumble feed, and as I said, you can see this
show and tonessas Susie Rogers shown out when i'sa all
the great shows that are part of the au N
TV network. All right, get on, what else you got
for us?
Speaker 2 (01:12:11):
Well? I thought, after listening to an Elizabeth Fundner, we
should talk a little bit about marijuana. I kind of
let her into that discussion during my questioning, because this
idea that illegalized marijuana makes it a drug that no
(01:12:34):
longer has any harmful effects. Right, Yeah, it's legal, something
must be good for you. You can consume it without
any thought. Well, they're starting to do more studies on it.
We've had people on from time to time talking about
(01:12:54):
what can happen to you, And some of the interesting
things that are coming out now is that marijuana could
be responsible for Alzheimer's. To me, that was a very
interesting link. And the reason I say it's an interesting
(01:13:16):
link is because you know, we were the marijuana generation,
I suppose in the sixties, and now we're getting to
that point where there is the thought that people are
losing their minds. You kind of got to wonder about
good old Joel, sleepy Joe. What was going on there?
(01:13:38):
Too much dope in his younger years. Perhaps it's just
one of those things that you say, wait a second,
but it is. A Canadian study found that dementia risk
is connected to cannabis relation limited hospital visits in older individuals,
(01:13:59):
and the interview with Fox News doctor Daniel Ahmann, a
psychiatrist and a brain imaging specialist, and founder of Ammen
Clinics in California, confirm that it's clear people who use
marijuana have low blood flow into their brains according to
(01:14:22):
decades of brain imaging performed in his clinics, and it's
this low blood flow that is causing that is linked
to Alzheimer's. He says we've been lied to that marijuana
is innocuous, that marijuana is good medicine. And he also says,
and I think some people it can be helpful, but
(01:14:44):
teenagers who use it are people in their twenties, have
a higher incidence of anxiety, depression, suicide, and psychosis. So
it's not just like smoking a cigarette. It's not just
and cancer. Now we're talking about your brain, and we're
talking about horrible, horrible way to exit this world. Anyone
(01:15:12):
who's been around someone with Alzheimer's knows that it's just
it's difficult, difficult disease to work with. In a new
study that compared people who smoked cigarettes with those who
smoked marijuana, the marijuana users sustained more lun damage. He
mentioned this.
Speaker 1 (01:15:33):
Is not.
Speaker 2 (01:15:35):
Great for us. He noted that the horrifying trends that
he's seen as parents who smoked cop with their teens
and young adults. So all of this to say that
marijuana is worse than cigarettes, and he says that marijuana
(01:16:03):
is also worse than alcohol on the body, even though
neither one of them is good for you. So it's
he says, it just makes your brain older.
Speaker 1 (01:16:17):
Well, Sharon, I don't know why any fun smokes. To me,
it smells bad. I hate the smell of it, and
I've never tried it. I've never smoked a cigarette, I've
never smoked a joint, but I've been around it, and
I just don't understand why people would want to take
(01:16:39):
smoke into their lungs anymore than that they would put
their head in a fireplace to smell the smell the
aroma of wood burning fire. These are carcinogenics, cigarette smoke,
marijuana smoke, or carcinogenics. I don't know why people or
(01:17:00):
what people get out of it that they have to partake.
I mean, teach the rown, all right, somebody wants to
do it. I'm not going to stop them. But the
fact what aggravates me is you can't walk through a
Walmart parking lot anymore without passing at least one car
(01:17:24):
with the windows open, or that reeks of smoke. And
what's really scary, Sharon, is then that car is out
on the road. You know, the erson who is high
is that on.
Speaker 2 (01:17:39):
The road exactly in the summertime. In the summertime, you know,
I like to drive with my son roof open in
the windows down. I prefer that to air conditioning. And
we live in a climate where it doesn't get so
hot that you really do need your air conditioner. But uh,
I'll be driving and then I'll catch you that skunky smell.
(01:18:04):
You know. I used to naively think somebody run over
a skunk right in front of me on the freeway,
but it's not true.
Speaker 1 (01:18:13):
Ahead, yeah, and these people are on the road, and
you know.
Speaker 2 (01:18:21):
And and you start praying immediately. I hope he gets
off the freeway soon, or let me get out ahead
of him so he doesn't cause me to be in
his accident with him. It's just incredibly dangerous to be
impaired driving. And yet you know, I smell it all
the time, Rick, and there's hardly any way to get
(01:18:44):
away with away from it. When you're on the freeway,
you're just kind of stuck until you can get to
the next exit, or like I get past them.
Speaker 1 (01:18:52):
So, Sharon, you say that the smoke is a carcinogenic.
You say that the smoke can affect the brain. Yes,
what about people like you and I who don't partake
in it but are affected by it and you smell it.
Aren't we taking these things into our body, well, into
(01:19:15):
our lungs. Is it getting into our bloodstream and affecting
our brain?
Speaker 2 (01:19:21):
It would be we have right.
Speaker 1 (01:19:23):
You know. The other side will say, well, we should
have the right to smoke it. Well, I should have
a right not to smoke it.
Speaker 2 (01:19:31):
That's that's why in most cases, in restaurants, in public buildings,
in any business establishment, you're not the airplane not allowed
to smoke because secondhand smoke has repercussions. And it's not
just the second hand smoke of a cigarette. If if
(01:19:54):
what they're saying is true, and I believe it is,
they've done the studies that the marijuana is more apt
to cause lung cancer than cigarettes. So it's all affected
and this is a brain affection. You know, he says,
(01:20:16):
this doctor said, when you start using marijuana, alcohol or
other drugs, your development gets arrested. Many people don't really
appreciate how important their brain is when they're seventeen or eighteen,
or twenty one or even twenty three, because it really
doesn't finish developing until you're twenty five or twenty six,
(01:20:37):
and if you heard it early, it might never ever
catch up. And we've met those kinds of folks that
seem to be permanently adolescent. Well, in some cases the
reason is because they started smoking pot when they were ten, eleven, thirteen,
(01:20:59):
and they've arrested their development and they just do not
grow up. They make unwise decisions. They it just affects
a lot of what they do. And now we're finding
out that they will also become a burden to their
families and to society if they come down with Alzheimer's,
(01:21:25):
and that has become more and more a trend. We
didn't used to hear about Alzheimer's so much. I didn't
know what it was, you know, and now that they've
discovered it, it is becoming more and more common, and
I think it's a it's really it does have to
(01:21:48):
do with the rest of us, you know. You you
may say, well, it doesn't hurt anybody else, will it
does hurt other people, and Maybe it's not through secondhand smoke.
Maybe it's just through having to care for or pay
for the care of someone who has abused themselves this way, well,
that's the other we're paying for it.
Speaker 1 (01:22:09):
That's the other thing. We are paying for it. And
with more and more states legalizing this stuff, I believe
it's it's causing us to pay more higher insurance rates,
our car insurance rates, we pay more for our own
medical care. So I I just don't get it. I
(01:22:32):
really just don't get it. With that sharing, we need
to we need to take one last break here in
the Conservative Commandos with shar An Angle. I'm Rick Traador.
Go nowhere. We'll be right back right after this break.
Speaker 3 (01:22:57):
Are you having trouble hearing your TV or listening to
conversations and loud spaces, then it might be time to
consider nano hearing aids. The days of expensive hearing aids
are over. Nanos are FDA registered OTC hearing aids. They
are powerful, lightweight, and simple to use, and their tiny
in ear design makes them nearly invisible. Plus they are rechargeable,
(01:23:21):
saving you hundreds of dollars on batteries. Don't be fooled
by overpriced hearing aids. Prescription hearing aids could cost three
thousand dollars or more. Nano hearing aids are only three
hundred and ninety seven dollars. But wait, we are so
confident you are going to love your nanos, we are
offering one hundred dollars off through this special TV offer.
Call now and get two CIC rechargeable hearing aids for
(01:23:42):
only two hundred and ninety seven dollars. You get a
free portable charging case, free twenty four seven lifetime telephone support,
free shipping, and a forty five day money back guarantee.
Speaker 4 (01:23:51):
Call eight five five six nine zero sixty four sixty four.
That's eight fifty five six nine zero sixty four sixty four.
Call eight five five six nine zero six four or
sixty four. That's eight five y five six nine zero
sixty four sixty four. Call eight five five six nine
zero sixty four sixty four. That's eight fifty five six
nine zero sixty four sixty four.
Speaker 6 (01:24:11):
You're still looking good.
Speaker 1 (01:24:12):
I'm still feeling good.
Speaker 5 (01:24:14):
You know I've got all your MyPillow products, mattress topper,
bed sheets, my pillows, towels, slippers, blanket.
Speaker 6 (01:24:19):
I'm interrupted this commercial to do something I've never done before.
Can't do my pillows absolutely free on orders of one
hundred dollars or more. I can't do this forever, so
get on board with this great sale today. Our best
selling six piece bath towel sets are kitchen towel sets
just twenty nine ninety eight, our famous standard my Pillows
(01:24:40):
only fourteen ninety eight, Queens eighteen ninety eight, King Size
only a dollar more Body Pillows twenty nine ninety eight.
Multi use my Pillow two point zeros with pillowcase nine
ninety eight. Save forty dollars on our spring per killing
giezer Dream bedsheet says any size, any color, So go
to MyPillow dot com or call that I'm on your screen.
(01:25:01):
Use your promo code to save up to eighty percent
on all my Pillow products, and when you spend one
hundred dollars or more, get two standard my pillows absolutely free.
Speaker 7 (01:25:11):
To order, please call eight hundred seven nine seven seven
eight nine three and please use the promotion code a
U n TV. To order, Please call eight hundred seven
nine seven seven eight nine three and please use the
promotion code a U n TV. To order, Please call
eight hundred seven nine seven seven eight nine three and
(01:25:34):
please use the promotion code a U n TV. To order,
please call eight hundred seven nine seven seven eight nine
three and please use the promotion code a U n TV.
Speaker 1 (01:25:46):
Hey, welcome back, Welcome back to the Conservative Command This
radio show with Sharon Angel and yours truly, Rick Trader,
coming to you from the My Pillow Studios, the My
Store studios of the a u n TV network. Sharon,
guess what we got with us? A new guest? And
you know, I love our recurring guests, but I also
(01:26:07):
love our new guests. And I kint a feeling we're
going to have this lady on quite a bit from
here on in, I hope, and Sharon please make that introduction.
Speaker 2 (01:26:16):
What's my pleasure to introduce Linda Hanson, who's a founder
and president of Prosperity one oh one and the author
of Prosperity one oh one, Job Security through Business Prosperity,
the Essential Guide to understanding how policy affects your paycheck,
and the creator of Breakdown Economics, an online course. She
(01:26:40):
is also creator and host of the popular Prosperity one
oh one podcast, where she regularly interviews a variety of guests.
Regarding public policy, economics, politics, faith, and business. Her books
and resource materials have been widely used across the country.
Linda was also executive vice president deputy chief of staff
(01:27:03):
for Herman Keynes United States presidential campaign in the twenty
twelve election cycle. Linda, Welcome to the Conservative Commando's radio show.
Speaker 24 (01:27:14):
Well, it's a pleasure to be here. Thank you so much,
and thank you for your patients. As we got our
connection goings.
Speaker 1 (01:27:21):
We make it work. We make it work.
Speaker 2 (01:27:23):
We're so glad to have you, and I want to
talk to you about a new generation chasing freedom. I
had a conversation with my grandsons. I have grandsons ranging
from thirty one all the way down to eight, and
(01:27:45):
the ones in the in between are there. We're talking
about who they voted for. I was really amazed at they,
you know, not just because they're my grandchildren, but because
they're in that age group where we think do they
get it? Do they get it? And they did. They
(01:28:06):
all voted for Trump, and they all had good reasons
for voting for Trump, and one of their main reasons
was freedom.
Speaker 13 (01:28:13):
Freedom.
Speaker 2 (01:28:14):
So let's talk about that. This new generation.
Speaker 24 (01:28:18):
Yes it is, and actually a new generation Chasing Freedom.
A new Generation Chasing Freedom is the title of a
podcast episode that I recently with Brett Galachevsky, who is
the national Field Enterprise director for Turning Point Action. And
Brett is just a wonderful young man who is really
(01:28:40):
rising in his career, but more importantly than his career,
he's rising as a patriot activist, and I love his
perspective when it comes to talking about this new generation.
I do think that like Turning Point and other organizations
like that that are reaching out to young people, they
(01:29:01):
are really uniting them in just asking questions. And that's
one of the things I try to do with all
my materials as well, is share the information with people
in such a way that they have to ask themselves.
If this makes sense, And I don't know if people
have seen, you know, Charlie Kirk on campus when he's
(01:29:21):
asking all these young people questions and they're debating, he
really gets them to ask the questions of themselves, and
I think that that is so important. So we have
a new generation chasing freedom, but it's because you know,
we haven't delivered to them something that satisfies.
Speaker 2 (01:29:40):
So let's talk about this generation. What is the ah
spand that we're talking about here.
Speaker 24 (01:29:49):
Well, I don't really know exactly, and I'm not good
at really segmenting them out, but I have seen twelve
and thirteen fourteen year olds starting to wake up. And
I have also, you know, seen it all the way
up into the early thirties and things. So it's very,
very exciting, and I feel like we have just an
(01:30:12):
incredible opportunity to reach these young people, and they're looking
for something that our culture has not provided them. Not
only are they looking for freedom, like you mentioned, but
they're looking for truth and if anybody you know, that's
sorely been missing in our culture lately, and they're looking
(01:30:34):
for truth because nothing makes sense.
Speaker 13 (01:30:36):
So this generation, it's very exciting.
Speaker 24 (01:30:39):
I also feel that there's a spiritual revival happening, and
the spiritual revival fuels the desire for common sense and
truth and freedom.
Speaker 2 (01:30:53):
One of the things that was kind of interesting to
me is that they want meaningful non judgment will comes
educating them on the issues and empowering them. We talk
about those conversations a little bit. What kinds of things
do they want to hear from us?
Speaker 24 (01:31:11):
Oh?
Speaker 13 (01:31:11):
I think they want to hear what their rights are.
Speaker 24 (01:31:15):
You know, in my work with employers and employees, that's
the same thing employers to employees. They want those meaningful,
non judgmental conversations.
Speaker 13 (01:31:25):
People don't want to be told what to think.
Speaker 24 (01:31:29):
It's most helpful if we can teach them how to
think about things, maybe help them look at it from
a different angle. And our culture is crying out for leadership.
Families are crying for leadership, Businesses are crying for leadership.
Our nation, in our government is crying for strong leadership.
(01:31:49):
And so I think that when we can show that
to the young people, they thirst for that, they're drawn
to it. But then also we ask them, like what
matters to you? You know, they want like you mentioned,
they want freedom. They don't always know what that looks like.
To some young people, they think freedom is you know,
(01:32:11):
making sure they can have abortion at the ninth month
or something right, But it may be other things that
conflict with life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness for others.
So helping them understand what true freedom is, how we
protect it by protecting life. You can tell I'm pro
(01:32:31):
life right, but how by protecting life? But you know,
we want them to understand what true freedom is, and
not only in terms of with our government and what
our constitution protects, but I would say also for me personally,
I always want to help people understand what true freedom is.
Speaker 13 (01:32:51):
In Jesus Christ too.
Speaker 2 (01:32:54):
Amen. I want to know, though, how much of this
is counter call tu pushback against this wokeness? Is that
even in play here, I.
Speaker 24 (01:33:06):
Think it is to some degree, and from what I've heard,
because uh, you know, girls are tired of having guys
in their restrooms. Uh that you know, they don't. We
fought a long time to have girls' sports, right, you know,
and all of a sudden some guy can say, oh,
I'm a woman, and you know, just go be on
their team and beat them.
Speaker 13 (01:33:27):
I mean, this is just ridiculous, you know.
Speaker 24 (01:33:29):
I think when it first came out, people, you know,
it's just started permeating this society. People were, you know, thinking, well,
you know, it's just one or two or you have
to be nice or whatever.
Speaker 13 (01:33:40):
You know, Well nice is past.
Speaker 24 (01:33:42):
You know, we need to stand and it is ridiculous
to think that these woke policies are good for America.
And so I think there is a shift happening, and
it's just like anything, you know, Courage is contagious.
Speaker 13 (01:33:55):
Courage is always contagious.
Speaker 24 (01:33:56):
So you get one person who stands up, and there'll
be another person who stands up. You get, you know,
two people who stand up, there's going to be four
people who stand up.
Speaker 13 (01:34:04):
I mean, it is very contagious.
Speaker 24 (01:34:06):
And these young people, you know, young people always want
something to believe in, okay, and and they you know,
are idealistic and things.
Speaker 13 (01:34:16):
But our culture has taught them you can't be idealistic
about this stuff because it doesn't even make sense. It's
not even safe.
Speaker 24 (01:34:25):
And so I think, you know, I have to give
them a lot of credit. I don't think that they've
been taught critical thinking in most of their schools, but
they hopefully in their parents from their parents.
Speaker 13 (01:34:38):
They have.
Speaker 24 (01:34:38):
And but I have to give them a lot of
credit for starting to wake up and saying, oh, maybe
what I thought isn't helpful. And they're willing to change
their minds, which is easier to see at young ages
than it is, you know, at older ages.
Speaker 2 (01:34:53):
So how much do you think social media is playing
a role in this? I know it was angering when
they can are are censured us is that is that
playing out with the young people as well, because they're
always on their their tools, their iPhone, their iPad, their computers,
(01:35:14):
they're always there and they they really are touched in
with all the social media.
Speaker 13 (01:35:20):
Absolutely.
Speaker 24 (01:35:20):
I think social media is absolutely essential, you know, and
is Elon Musk opening up Twitter, you know, which isn't perfect,
but it's it's been a great source of information.
Speaker 13 (01:35:31):
For people, and young people really like to use the
social media aspects in terms.
Speaker 24 (01:35:36):
Of, you know, creating the memes and doing the quick
little videos. You know, there's so much better at it
than we are, right, but I do think it has
had a huge impact. And the beauty of it is
while the government and the powers that be tried to
shut messaging down, right, they canceled people, they shut people down.
(01:35:57):
Your standing, you know, you're sitting in front of a
my pillow background.
Speaker 13 (01:36:02):
While Mike Lindell I speak about him a lot.
Speaker 24 (01:36:05):
I mean, he was canceled, debanked, you know everything, and
because his views didn't match what the elitist narrative needed
to match.
Speaker 13 (01:36:16):
And so we can.
Speaker 24 (01:36:18):
See that as we've had new apps that come out,
you know X, Twitter X opened up to more content.
We have Rumble instead of YouTube, which censored everything, you know,
we have Frank Speech, we have you know, we have
so many different outlets that people can get information. I recently,
(01:36:39):
just my most recent podcast episode was with Mark Mitchell
from Rasmussen Reports, and that was one of the things
we talked about was that the new generation of news,
you no longer have to go, you know, to your
TV at five pm, you know to watch Walter Cronkid
(01:36:59):
or Been you know, at seven pm to catch Talker. Right,
you know, news is twenty four to seven. It is
readily accessible and I think that's great. So the social media,
the streaming services, it is revolutionized the way people get information.
And for young people who grew up with their phones
(01:37:20):
coming out of their fingers, you know, it's really easy
for them to access it now.
Speaker 2 (01:37:26):
You know, since we're here, this whole idea of cutting
the cable, and we're part of that. We are encouraged
people to cut their cable. We broadcast on eleven stations
now on just TV, right, you just put a put
a antenna up in a pine tree and you're off
(01:37:49):
to the races. You can you can down download our
shows on au n TV that way. So are they
the leading force behind this cutting the cable? Because we
know it's now getting up close to fifty percent or over.
People are just not paying for cable anymore. They don't
(01:38:10):
want it anymore, and there's a lot of reasons for that.
Maybe you can kind of enlighten this a little on that.
Speaker 24 (01:38:18):
Well, I think cable in so many ways has become
very very expensive then, so you know, who wants to
pay for it unless it really creates a lot of value.
And you know, everything is so much more accessible through uh,
you know, through streaming services. It's just so much more accessible,
and so why should people pay for that? And especially
(01:38:40):
if people are really seeking truth? You know, the mainstream
media and cable news, you know, are are not necessarily
always truthful. And one thing I always tell people, and
I encourage employers to tell employees, is you have to
dig for that information. You know, don't expect to just
come because you know, they want you to fill a
(01:39:01):
role as a citizen, you know, a quiet subservient role,
and we need to be active, engage citizens and be
able to go seek information. So, you know, you talked
about these young people, you know they're getting information all
the time. Part of our job as leaders, as the
generation before them, as leaders in politics or business or communications.
(01:39:26):
Is to help them understand how to discern. You know,
how can they have the wisdom to discern because there's
so much out there, you know, it's like shift, like
sifting through the garbage to get to the gold, right,
And so we have to teach them what that is.
And part of the way we do that is by
(01:39:46):
providing truth. It's like, you know, if a counterfeit expert
doesn't study the counterfeit bills, they study the bills that
are the genuine bills, and then they'll recognize the ones
that are counterfeit. So when we provide truth, we help
them recognize what is not truth.
Speaker 2 (01:40:07):
And you just keep coming back to this bottom line.
They want truth, they want truth, they want the truth.
And I think that that is probably the most encouraging
thing that we've talked about in our little interview here,
is that we need to respect that and give them
(01:40:30):
what they're asking for, which is just tell me the truth.
Just give it to me straight. And with that, we're
going to go to my pillow, a man who has
given it to us straight. And we are coming to
you from our Conservative Commandos Radio Network studios and around
the world on the Internet. With Talk stream Lives I
(01:40:51):
Heart Radio. Tune in Talk America an AM FM twenty
four to seven. I'm sharing angle here with my co
host Trader and talking with our special guest, Linda Hansen,
who you all know as the founder and president of
Prosperity one oh one, and perhaps you also know her
(01:41:11):
as the deputy chief of staff of the Herman Kane
presidential campaign in twenty twelve. That's the way I know Linda.
And we've been talking about this new generation that's chasing freedom,
but maybe more importantly, they're chasing the truth. Don't go away,
We'll be right back.
Speaker 14 (01:41:45):
Are you tired of seeing money all around the house,
then start saving money with First American Home Warranty. First
American covers the systems and appliances you depend on every day,
and if we can't repair your covered item, we'll replace it.
Speaker 15 (01:42:00):
Save thousands and that makes me happy.
Speaker 14 (01:42:02):
All plans included no questions, ask money back, guarantee, and
flexible payment options so you can never pay for covered
repairs again.
Speaker 15 (01:42:08):
Call one eight hundred four zero two seven zero nine four.
That's one eight hundred four zero two seven zero nine four.
Call one eight hundred four zero two seven zero nine four.
That's one eight hundred four zero two seven zero nine four.
Speaker 16 (01:42:22):
What if you could whiten your teeth by simply brushing
your teeth? Now you can with Smile Actives, the teeth
whitening breakthrough that safely gets your teeth white and keeps
them white every day, just by brushing your teeth.
Speaker 17 (01:42:35):
I never thought that whitening my teeth could be so easy.
I just put the chell on the brush, the toothpaste
on it brush, and I can see my white teeth.
Speaker 16 (01:42:42):
Simply adds Smile Actives to any toothpaste, and our patented
polyclean technology activates into a powerful microfoam that penetrates into
the enamel surface to safely lift and remove stains.
Speaker 18 (01:42:54):
You need a simple way to whiten your teeth without strips,
without trays, without going to the dentist, and it was
about time that a product was developed that you would
be able to do that with just brushing.
Speaker 16 (01:43:05):
And now Smile Actives is even better with new pro
whitening gel with thirty three percent greater whitening power clinically
shown to white and teeth faster up to eight shades.
One hundred percent of users saw wider teeth on food stains,
coffee and wine stains, even on veneers, crowns and dentures.
Speaker 19 (01:43:24):
I eat the blueberries, I drink the coffee, and I
know that Smile Actives will keep my teeth white every day.
Speaker 20 (01:43:29):
If you could use something so easy like Smile Actives
to take yellow teeth to white teeth, why wouldn't you?
Speaker 16 (01:43:35):
Why spend hundreds of dollars for whitening treatments at the
dentist when now you can whiten your teeth with new
Smialactives Pro Whitening Gel every time you brush your teeth.
Call or go to Smile Actives dot com and for
a limited time get new pro whitening gel for just
twenty four ninety five. Order in the next five minutes
and buy one. Get one absolutely great for just twenty
(01:43:56):
four ninety five. That's two for one and say fifty
eight percent. We'll even include free shipping. Get your teeth
wider guaranteed, or return it within sixty days for your
money back.
Speaker 21 (01:44:07):
I smile every day.
Speaker 2 (01:44:09):
The difference is literally night and day.
Speaker 15 (01:44:12):
So now I'm always mallan oh is she think? Is
now my tea very much wider?
Speaker 16 (01:44:15):
This offer is not available in stores, so caller click
now before the special buy one get one free offer
goes away to order.
Speaker 21 (01:44:23):
Call eight hundred eight nine four zero four nine three
eight hundred eight ninety four zero four nine three eight
hundred eight nine four zero four ninety three.
Speaker 2 (01:44:39):
This right here is confidence and a bottle.
Speaker 12 (01:44:42):
It makes me feel so much more confident than I've
ever felt.
Speaker 22 (01:44:45):
They are some of the hottest videos on social media,
those videos claiming to instantly get rid of bags under
your eyes, and net FIGUREO is here to tell us why.
She says, this one is for real.
Speaker 8 (01:44:56):
This one is for real, and I'm so excited. We
even have a video. And all he uses is a
small amount on a clean, dry face. And what it
does is it tightens and lists the appearance of bags
underneath your eyes. And I did this to my father.
We were at home, so we applied it to his
under eye bags and let me tell you, we were
so excited and under ten minutes they visibly disappeared from view.
(01:45:18):
And now it is literally part of both of our
daily routines. And not only does it work on the bags,
that works on the appearance of rose feet, fine lines
and wrinkles, and.
Speaker 23 (01:45:27):
Our fourteen dollars and ninety five cent price. It's the
best way to try plexiderm and see it work after
your first application. Your solution is at plexidermtrial dot com
or call the number on your screen to order.
Speaker 21 (01:45:41):
Call eight hundred six eight four zero one four four
eight hundred six eight four zero one four four eight
hundred six eight four zero one four four.
Speaker 1 (01:46:11):
And welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commandos with
Sharon Angel. I'm Rick Trader, coming to you from the
My Pillow studios, the My Store studios of the au
N Television Network, sharing back to you.
Speaker 2 (01:46:25):
Well, you know, we used to do a two minute thing,
so here's here's the.
Speaker 1 (01:46:29):
Two We'll do that two minute thingy at the end
of this segment. All right, all right.
Speaker 2 (01:46:36):
I was wanting to talk about something a little more
lighthearted when we had Ann Elizabeth thunder on and she
talked so much to us about fentanyl and how even
marijuana can be laced with fentanyl and even those legal
(01:46:57):
places where you buy fentanyl have been caught lacing I
mean by marijuana, They have been caught lacing their marijuana
with fentanyl because it's so addictive. She was very thorough
in her conversation about what Flatin hall is and how
(01:47:18):
it should be used, and how we should cautiously use
it even for those legal reasons where it comes from.
So I wanted to go a little more lighthearted. President
Trump now has announced that he may withhold support for
the Washington commanders proposed stadium deal in the district to
(01:47:41):
Columbia unless they revert back to their former name, the
Washington Redskins. So there you go. He's now gone to Medland. Right.
We always think that we should be able to name
some things the names that we want them to be.
(01:48:03):
And of course we always thought it was ridiculous when
they succumbed to the politically correct name of the Washington Commanders.
And they are, you know, the Cleveland Indians, the Atlanta Braves,
(01:48:27):
these these names were have been on their teams for
years and nobody was complaining except for the low woke left.
Speaker 1 (01:48:36):
But the woe white, the white woke left. Yes, you know, Sharon,
I was in I was in Window Rock, Arizona. It
was quite a while ago now, and the wind of Rock,
Arizona is on the Navajo Nation reservation. So when I
met the people there, I asked them, I sis are
(01:48:59):
you offended by being called Indians. They go, no, that's
what we call ourselves, right, So then you then you've
got all these righteous do gooders who say, oh, now
we've got to change names and traditions of our sports teams.
(01:49:20):
Stanford University their teams used to be the Indians, and
now there's something else. Many, many college and high school
teams have changed their names. And it's ridiculous. Now you
mentioned Cleveland Indians, the Cleveland Indians. That name was around
for one hundred years. And why the Cleveland baseball team
(01:49:43):
was called the Indians was when that team was great,
a guess what Several members of the team were. Guess
what Indian, So they called the Cleveland Indians. Now, for
a hundred years or so, the people of Cleveland supported
that team. We're fans of that team. That team was
(01:50:06):
part of the tradition of the community. It was embedded
with it with families out there. And you've got these
right whiteous, righteous do gooders to say, oh, well, now
we've got a that's racist. That's racist. They say, excuse me,
because you say something is racist, that makes it racist.
(01:50:29):
I mean, if they've done surveys about the Washington Redskins.
They've asked people who are American Indians, were you offended
by it? You know what their answer is, No, we
were proud. We're proud of the of the Atlanta Braves.
We're proud of our tradition, our strong warrior type traditions.
(01:50:55):
They had no problem with it. White liberals had the problem. Now,
as far as the commanders go, the owner changed the name.
Now the owner owns the team, he can call it
whatever they want to. But I think it's disrespectful for
the fans of that team who have been loyal to
(01:51:16):
that team longer than the owner has been alive, and
for the owner of that team now to take that
tradition away from the fans. If I was a fan
of the Washington Redskins, I say, look, Josh Harris, go
sell your tickets to somebody else, because I'm not buying it.
(01:51:37):
This was my team. The Washington Redskins were my father's team,
my brother's teams, my uncle's teams, my grandfather's team. And
you're trying to take it away from us now, Josh Harris,
where you can keep keep those damn tickets. Now, as
far as Donald Trump's saying too, you know, they want
(01:51:59):
to build an stadium for the Commanders, and part of
that is going to be probably federal money, now, which
I don't understand why taxpayer money should go into these
teams or their stadiums. All right, but now Donald Trump
is saying to the Washington football team, change the name
(01:52:21):
back or you're not going to get my cooperation. I
don't know. I think it should be up to the
fans of that team to speak out. Well, you know,
just like the Eagles. The Philadelphi Eagles have been the
Eagles since the nineteen thirties. They got a ninety year
tradition of being called the Washington or the Philadelphi Eagles,
(01:52:46):
except for two years in the middle of the Second
World War, when they combined the Eagles and the Steelers.
They call them the Steegles for two years, you know,
because a lot of the players were all fighting to
are These are traditions, these are family traditions, these are
fan traditions. And I think it's a mistake for owners
(01:53:10):
to knuckle under to this political correctness from a bunch
of white liberals. Other than that opinion, your kid, well.
Speaker 2 (01:53:22):
Trump has his opinion. He's calling it the Mega movement.
Make Indians great again. And he says that the Indians
have been treated unfairly. And he uh, he says, you
know these teams that have changed their name. The Cleveland Indians,
by the way, changed their name to the Cleveland Guardians.
(01:53:44):
And the owner of that baseball team, Matt Dolan, who's
very political now, has lost three elections in a row.
And Trump says is because he changed the name to
the Guardians. Uh. The Guardian's president, a fellow named Chris Antonetti,
said that they're not going to change back, and the
(01:54:06):
reason is that they've spent a lot of money in
the last four years to rebrand as the Guardians. And
so he's excited for the future as the Guardians.
Speaker 1 (01:54:20):
Right now, the resisting to this, well, i'll tell you what.
We'll get it to change when ticket sales drop off.
That's that's when there'll be more accepted to change it
back when ticket sales died. And again, tradition one hundred
years a tradition is the Cleveland Indians. And I don't.
Speaker 2 (01:54:43):
Know well, and Trump is right. Remember, he's the guy
that's made millions billions in business. He knows about branding.
And he says that if they rebrand again. That will
actually boost their sales, and that publicity will actually make
(01:55:04):
them sell more tickets and have more fan support. So
so you know, sometimes you got to listen to the
guy that then knows how to make money. Maybe he's
giving you a inside track to a really lucrative way
to promote your team, rather than you know, just being
(01:55:26):
political like those that changed those names in the first place.
That was a politically correct thing to do, and he's
saying change it back, change it back. It was ridiculous
to change it in the first place, which is pretty
much what Rick Trader said too. So I agree that
right on the cutting edge, right, Sharon.
Speaker 1 (01:55:47):
Let's get a little break in here and pick a
couple of our own bills, and you are listening to
and marching the conservative commandos with Sharon Angle, I'm Rick
Trader going nowhere. We'll be right back right after this break. Okay,
So let's do a quick wrap up. I'll bring you
back in thank and Elizabeth if you want to talk.
(01:56:10):
You know, we haven't said anything about your campaign in
a while because you've been running to be run, so
if you want to say something about it, all right,
all right, all right, okay, you are, and welcome back.
Welcome back to your Conservative Commandos with Sharon Angle. I'm
Rick Trader and Sharon, if you will, we had a
(01:56:33):
great guest today. Would you please thank her for us.
Speaker 2 (01:56:36):
I'm so glad that Anne Elizabeth Thunder was on our
show today to talk to us about the fentanyl legislation
that President Trump signed and about her own quest to
stop fentanyl. She's the America First mom of four from
(01:56:59):
cal She's also a Conservative Commando alumnus, and her new
mission is to stop fentanyl because she lost her son
to illegal fentanyl and she doesn't want that to happen
to anyone else. That's why she's been pushing for legislation
that increases the penalties for trafficking in fentanyl.
Speaker 1 (01:57:27):
Sharon, I'm so I'm so proud of Aunt Elizabeth. You know,
whenever you have a tragedy, and her tragedy is probably
one of the worst, that children, parents should not bury
their children, children should bury their parents. That the terrible
tragedy that she and her family have gone through, and
(01:57:48):
I'm so proud of her what she's doing. You know,
a tragedy can destroy you, or tragedy can make you
grow stronger, and I've seen such growth in Anna was
with the last over the last couple of years in
her battle against Ventel. I am so absolutely proud of her.
(01:58:08):
Great to have her back. Sharon, we haven't talked about
your run for Secretary of State in a while. What's
going on.
Speaker 2 (01:58:16):
Well, I've been traveling the state. I am now making
my second round of all the counties. We have seventeen
counties here in Nevada. That doesn't sound like much, but
when you're a huge state like Nevada, the town.
Speaker 1 (01:58:33):
You need a helicopter, you know, well it is.
Speaker 2 (01:58:37):
It is a drive. So I've been going driving. The
least amount is about forty five minutes from here and
then of course it goes out from there. Most people
didn't realize that Las Vegas is not my home or
you know, it's my home, and Las Vegas is seven
(01:58:59):
and a half hour drive, four hundred and fifty miles
from Reno to Las Vegas.
Speaker 25 (01:59:04):
So estate at ward speed shared the legal speed, but
understand that the legal speed in Nevada is now eighty
miles an hour.
Speaker 2 (01:59:16):
So we have we have that we are almost flying
if you want to, if you want to call it that,
but We have nice straight freeways here in Nevada, and
so it's not the traffic is not like it is
on the East Coast either. But that's what I've been doing,
is just going to these different towns, meeting with people,
(01:59:44):
having dinners, going to the senior centers, just the regular
grassroots campaign. Of course, you can find out all about
what I'm doing. I'm writing position papers and the Angle
Examiner is available free at vote Sharanangle dot com. Vote
Sharonangle dot com. Raising money all the time. Go there.
(02:00:08):
For two hundred dollars from twenty five thousand people, we
will reach our goal, which is five million for this campaign.
That's also twenty dollars over the next ten months. So
an easy, easyhill to climb. If you're interested in helping
me climb that hill, right, vote.
Speaker 1 (02:00:28):
Share angle dot com, vo sharonangle dot com and also
Sharon Angle dot us another website of yours.
Speaker 2 (02:00:37):
That's my personal website.
Speaker 1 (02:00:39):
All right, but for right now, we are out of time.
That means that we got to run. We gotta go.
Take care gobless. We'll see you tomorrow. That'll be on
TV and on radio.