Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:20):
Welcome everybody, and welcome fellow patriots, Welcome, fellow de ploraballs,
Welcome all if you Drace's Society, Rocked Weller's you, sick
offense and stikos. Of course, you know what we mean
by that. We mean our friends, our allies, and our patriots,
and you're always going to be welcome here. And this
place is the Conservative Commando's Radio show, and I'm Rick
(00:43):
Trader coming to you from the my Pillow studios, the
Mysture studios of the aun TV network and joining me
today as she does a couple of times a week,
is the Patriot from the Battleground State, the battle born State,
the Silver State of Nevada. And that is are an Angle.
And Sharon, welcome back, Welcome back to Conservative Commanders.
Speaker 2 (01:05):
Thanks Rick, it's great to be back with you. It's
just always nice to see the new headlines and to
understand that our world is crazy, but it works, and
it's great to be born in a time such as this.
I think Charlie Kirk felt that way too, he was
(01:25):
born for a time such as this.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
Well, you know, Sharon, I don't know how you feel
about karma. You know, they a lot of people say,
karma is the B word. And over the weekend we
had this No King's rally. And by the way, let's
start out by this, if we had a king, I
would want a king who loved America as much as
(01:50):
President Donald Trump does. I want to just start out
this show by saying that I want to talk a
little bit about karma, because two are these No King's
protest to demonstrations. Over this past weekend. There were some people,
in particular, one woman who was mimicking Charlie Kirk getting
(02:12):
shot in the neck. Well, you know, with social media today,
you can find out who people are pretty pretty readily,
pretty readily, and they found out that this woman was
a school teacher and an elementary school teacher in Chicago.
And you know, I always say, Sharon, if you love
(02:32):
your kids, get them out of the government schools, first
of all, get them out of government schools. But let's
talk about karma, and let's talk about these people like her.
And you know, we saw this one student at West
Texas State University. I think it was mimicking Charlie Kirk
getting shot in the neck. And other people have mimicked
(02:54):
Donald Trump getting shot in the ear. And you know,
we've seen some pretty ugly and you know, in my lifetime,
I've always not always been this sweet, kind pleasant guy
that I am today. You know. In fact, in my
younger years, when I was in school, I guess I
could be a bit of a bully. And I remember,
(03:18):
in particular, a girl who was in my class who
had a hand de formity. In fact, her hand was webbed.
She had two fingers that were webbed together, and I
used to make fun of her. Well, I wish I
knew where that girl is right now, because I would
like to apologize to her. And I'll tell you why.
(03:41):
When I was seventeen years old, I was in a
car accident and my hand got cut and one of
the things that was cut was the tendon in my
middle finger. And by the way, occasionally you'll see me
wearing a rubber bandle and this finger and that is
because I can't bend the finger. It sticks out straight. Now,
(04:05):
when your middle finger sticks out straight all the time,
guess what people think you're doing. So I don't like that.
So there have been times, like now, I use the
rubber band to pull the finger in. At times, I've
even glued my two fingers together. You know, my ring
finger and my middle finger I've glued together, so my
(04:28):
middle finger just keeps doesn't keep giving the bird out
there being out there, being out there. But I just
say this because karma is the B word. I don't
want to say that because I'm in the presence of
a lady. So these people that are mimicking Charlie Kirk
(04:50):
getting shot and President Trump getting shot, I hope karma
doesn't affect them the way karma has a Rick Trader.
You know, when I was nine and ten years old
and I was bullying this poor little girl, I didn't
know what Carmel was. I had no idea how I
(05:10):
would my hand would be affected. The way this poor
girl was hurting was glory. By the way, I won't
mention I remember her first and last name. I won't
mention it. But as I said, I've often thought about
Gloria and how she had a hand that was the
form her fingers were webbed together. And now I sometimes
(05:32):
have to glue my fingers together, or wear what's called
a ring to bend the finger, or wear a rubber
band around it to bend the finger, and I don't know,
it's not pleasant or fun to do. But again, I
wish I knew when I was nine or ten years old,
(05:52):
maybe I would have been a little kinder to Gloria.
And as I said, I hope that these people that
are mimicking Charlie Kirk being shot and killed, leaving a widow,
leaving two small babies, and I've heard another one on
the way. But one thing that Charlie left us with
(06:16):
is Charlie left us with a lot of wisdom. In fact,
I've been playing a lot of his old videos on
the aun TV network because for a young man, Charlie
was wise beyond his years. Now I found something today,
Actually it's my dear cousin, and she had something posted
(06:36):
on her web page that I wanted to refer to,
Thirty one ways to live Like Charlie Kirk. Thirty one
ways to live like Charlie Kirk, And I'd like to
read a few of these because I think these are simple,
simple things that each and every one of us could do,
for most of us could do that I think would
(06:59):
make our life. I was better number one, honor the Sabbath,
Number two journal every day, believe it or not, as
busy as Charlie Kirk. Was he kept a journal. Three
send scripture to friends. Four. Have conversations with people you
disagree with. Five, register to vote, six, get married, seven,
(07:25):
have kids, eight, go to church, nine, workout ten, get
sun eleven. Ask your spouse how can I better serve you? Twelve?
Read your Bible every day. Thirteen Stand up for your
beliefs fourteen eat hot sauce. Well, I don't know about that,
(07:47):
especially my stomach, but apparently Charlie Lake hot sauce. Fifteen.
Carry a pocket Constitution, and I say that each and
every day when we do the Conservative Commanders radio show.
I have two things by my side. One is the
American Bible that my dear friend Sharon Angle gave me,
and other is my pocket edition of the Constitution. Sixteen.
(08:13):
Support local businesses seventeen. Drink a mint a majesty tea
with two honeyes eighteen. Avoid drugs and alcohol nineteen. Don't
be afraid of what others think of you. Twenty Get
eight hours of sleep twenty one. Limit your social media
(08:35):
intake twenty two, Touch grass and get out in nature
twenty three. Learn something new every day twenty four. Be
a leader, not a follower. Twenty five never surrender twenty six,
Be Bold and Courageous twenty seven, outwork your enemies twenty
(09:03):
eight Read the College Read the College Scam. I guess
that's a book. Read the College Scam twenty eight, Work
to own Land twenty that was, twenty nine, thirty become ungovernable,
and thirty one pick up the mic. So those are
(09:27):
thirty one ways to live like Charlie Kirk. And I
just wanted to pass that piece of wisdom. And by
the way, we will post this on our website aun
dashtv dot com aun dashtv dot com. I encourage everyone
to go on our website so you can see thirty
(09:47):
one ways to live like Charlie Kirk. Now, Sharon, we
will be going to break in a minute or two.
I don't know if you wanted to comment on any
of these thirty one of the thirty one ways to
live like Charlie Kirk. If you want to wait, wait
till after the break. Should we take an ellen discuss
it after?
Speaker 3 (10:08):
Sure?
Speaker 1 (10:08):
Let's do yeah, all right, and we will do that.
And you are listening to and watching The Conservative Commandos
with Sharon Angle, I'm Rick Trader. Go nowhere, Sharon and
I we'll be back with more news and commentary right
after this break. Well, by the way, before we got
today's show. Like each and every one of our shows
is being brought to you by the First Amendment protected
(10:31):
by the Second, we'll be right back.
Speaker 4 (10:34):
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Speaker 1 (12:09):
And welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commanders Radio
Show with Sharon Angle. And you're Shulely Rick Treader coming
to you from the Mypila studios, the My Story studios
of the au n TV network. And you know Sharon.
In the first segment, we were talking about karma, we
were talking about Charlie Kirk. We're talking about thirty one
(12:30):
ways to Live Like Charlie Kirk except for the Hot Sauce.
Except for the Hot Sauce. Each and interview, one of
them made a whole lot of sense to me, and
I wanted to get your opinion of this list.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
I think that what the spouse a lot of the
false narrative that's out there, the fake news about Charlie.
I get irritated when I hear even some of my
friends saying, well, it was Charlie fault, really because he
and then they do YadA, YadA, YadA, whatever it is
(13:05):
that they've seen on their social media that day that
is trying to shift the blame onto Charlie for being killed,
which is really an amazing thing to me just on
the face of it. But some of the things, of course,
(13:27):
are his relationship to Israel, and I thought that number
one being honored the Sabbath. Now somebody could say, well
that isn't necessary, sarily Jewish, Well it is. If you
look down at number eight, go to church. See he
has a distinction there. He knows that the Sabbath is
(13:49):
a commandment in the Old Testament, and it's probably the
most endearing commandment for the Jews. Having spent six weeks
with them, we celebrated every Sabbath together and it is
a joyful, wonderful celebration of family and of resting and
(14:12):
reflecting on your blessings, counting your blessings knowing that God
is in control and that he has given you a
wonderful life. So seeing that at the top of his list,
just said, you go, Charlie. And of course then down
a ways twenty one limiture social media intake, that's where
(14:36):
all this is coming from. And I would just say
that here here, Charlie, that is exactly what's going on
in our nation. We can't seem to get away from it.
We turn on our Facebook, we look at it, and
we listen to our friends do whatever they're doing with
their social media intake, passing it along, making a gossip
(15:02):
chain that really has turned into fake news. We don't
have truth anymore, which you know gets me to some.
Speaker 6 (15:12):
Of his others.
Speaker 2 (15:14):
Read your Bible every day. That's where the truth is,
and he knew it, and be bold and courageous about
that truth. And then pick up the mic. I thought
of you and I when you said that, when I thought, well,
that's exactly what Rick Trader and I have done, is
we picked up this mic and we've started to do
(15:34):
the thing that Charlie Kirk was doing as well. In fact,
that's how we met. Charlie Kirk was behind the mic.
We wanted to get to know this young man who
at the time was still in his teens, and we
were so amazed even then at his courage and boldness.
(15:55):
That's what struck me at least. He wasn't your average
college can In fact, I think at the time he
had dropped out of college because he knew exactly what
it is. The b college. College wasn't in the future
of what God had called him to do. So he
(16:16):
kind of just said, all right, well, I'm going to
do the thing that God wants me to do and
just struck out on his own and then gathered people
around him because he did number thirteen, which is stand
up for your beliefs. The other day, I was at
(16:37):
a meeting of Turning Point USA, and one of the
girls says, it's my last copy, but I want you
to have it, Sharon, And it was a copy of
the Turning Point US a Constitution, and it's not just
the Constitution, it's an explanation, point by point of the
(16:58):
things that are in the content Institution and how they
are applicable to our lives today. That this document is
a breathing document in that those truths that we hold
to be self evident are stale truths that are self evident,
and we can live by that book as well as
(17:21):
our Bible and be pretty sure that our freedoms are
secure and that our rights are secure. So it's just
really a neat list. I like the outwork here enemy one.
People often ask me where I get my energy to
(17:44):
go forward all the time, and it's that, you know,
we want to outwork the enemy that is among us
these days. You know, it's scary how much of our
society has been taken over by people who really don't
love America.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
Well, they really don't love America, Sharon, they say they do.
It's funny. I was listening to one of the programs
on AUN today, I think it was Ben se Ben Stearn,
and he was talking about a I believe it was
Bernie Sanders saying how much he loved. Bernie Sanders saying
(18:30):
how much he loved America. Well, really, really, then why
does he want to radically change it? Why does he
want to radically change America if he loves it? I
love the America that the Founding Fathers gave us. I
love what the Founding Fathers gave us when they said life, liberty,
(18:50):
and the pursuit of happiness, not guaranteed happiness. Pursuit of happiness, life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness. I think a lot of
people confuse that by thinking, oh, happiness is guaranteed. Everything
should be given to me, welfare, food stamps, a job, housing,
(19:11):
a cell phone, a car, rings, diamonds, vacations, parental. You know,
when people have a baby today, they takes six months
off from work, parental leaving a lot of other a
lot of other details. But I believe in our constitution.
(19:32):
I believe in what are the constitution that our founding
fathers set up. I believe in our declaration. And I
think if people like Bernie Sanders or AOC or any
of these other people would read the Constitution, would read
articular delaration, they would find something is missing in it.
(19:55):
And you know what that is the word democracy. The
word democracy is not used a single time, not one
single time, in the Declaration of the Constitution. We are
a republic. We are a republic. And as Ben Franklin
(20:16):
was quoted as saying, we are a republic if we
can keep it well. I think people like ASC and
Bernie Sanders and Rashida Talib and Omar and all those
other idiots, Jasmine Crockett. They need to read the Constitution,
they need to read our declaration. And if they love America,
(20:39):
accept it were the way the Founding fathers created. If not,
go go go away, go away. When you come to
Omar and Rashida Telip, go back to where you came from.
You know, Rashida Telib comes from Gaza, She's a Palestinian.
Omar comes from Somali. All right, they don't like it here,
(21:03):
go back, you know you want to change things, Go
back to where you came from and change things there. Right,
don't come here and try to change this country to
match what you left. You left it for a reason,
but to what this country to match what you left ridiculous.
Speaker 2 (21:21):
Well, we had that saying a while back, America love
it or leave it, and it's true again today we're
having this uptick again, just a common hatred or despising
of the things that we have. And as we see
(21:42):
polls coming out of young people thinking that socialism is okay.
They don't know what socialism is. How can they believe
it's okay? They haven't been taught in school? What the
differences are? You started out the show with if we
had a king, I would want our king to love
(22:04):
America the way President Trump does. It goes back to
this idea of loving America and how strongly we have
to stand for her these days. Charlie Kirk knew it,
We know it.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
It's it's interesting to me that as we move forward
day by day, our very being, our freedoms are being
threatened every day, to the point where the President has
had to take several things in hand through executive order
(22:40):
in order to palm this fervor of hatred for the
United States. It's it's unbelievable how people could get this
far gone. You know, I know we're close to a break,
so I won't get started and then next one, but
(23:00):
I will tease it a bit, and that is that
we have a court decision and a thing going on
in a state near you that I think there's some
discussion about this idea of where we're going as a
country and how we need to get back to these
(23:21):
values that Charlie Kirk had.
Speaker 1 (23:24):
All right, and with that, we'll take this break. And
you are listening Tom watching The Conservative Commanders with Sharon Engel.
I'm Rickchurador gonna where We'll be back right after this break.
Speaker 4 (23:36):
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Speaker 1 (25:12):
And welcome back, Welcome back to the Conservative Commandos with
Sharon Angle and your truly victorator. Come and see you
from the Mike Pill studios, the My Store studios of
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We are supported by our viewers and listeners. That's their
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Before we get to the next segment, I want to
remind her viewers and listeners if you want to see
(27:54):
that list thirty one ways to live like Charlie Kirk,
that'll be up on our website again. The website is
a u N dash tv dot com a u N
dashtv dot com. So, Sharon, apparently the president had a
win in the courts. Who did?
Speaker 2 (28:16):
A federal Court of Appeals delivered a significant win for
President Donald Trump on Monday, ruling that he possesses the
constitutional authority to deploy National Guard troops in Portland, Oregon.
The thing that is so amazing about this is that
this decision was made in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals,
which is where Nevada and California, Oregon and Washington are
(28:40):
and it used to be the liberal of the appeals
courts and for them to overturn a lower court decision,
and that's what they did. They were brought this decision
from the lower Court and they overturned it and said, yeah,
(29:07):
he can do that, which to me is just amazing
Rick that we have this idea that the Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals is moving now to the right. This
marks the second instance when the Ninth Circuit is sided
with the president on National Guard deployment, and they did
(29:29):
a similar ruling in a California case. So they're they're
on a roll. They're starting to turn this thing around
out here for us, and I couldn't be happier. Many
times we've mourned the fact that I lost the election
in twenty ten to Harry Reid. But here's one of
(29:49):
the reasons why it was a good thing, and that
was that Harry Reid went forward after he was re
elected to put in the nuclear The nuclear option allows
the president to confirm judges with a mere majority plus
(30:11):
one in the House rather than that sixty percent. That
was the nuclear option to cut away that sixty percent
that they were having to meet, and it was very
difficult for them to meet that criteria. But when Harry
reiddid that, he did it for Obama. Obama got to
(30:32):
use it once, I think, but Trump used it many times,
used it three times for the Supreme Court and then
for those lower courts. And one of the lower courts
where he replaced it judges was the Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals. And now we're seeing these rulings come out
of the Ninth Circuit Court because of judges that President
(30:58):
Trump was able to put in was a point it
was able to appoint. So it's it's a I guess,
it's a win for our side in a an a
vindication I guess of the things that we fought for.
You know, we talked about Charlie Kirk and he said,
(31:19):
you know, always engage your enemies, always fight hard against
your enemies. Well, this is one of those cases where
we see Trump fighting hard against the enemies and winning.
He's saying that our cities must be safe. And if
if the government that's ruling that city will not guarantee
(31:42):
safety to its city as citizens, then the federal government must.
And that's why he has been deploying the National Guard
into these besieged cities, saying, either you get it together
or I will. But we're not going to have lawlessness
reigning in our big cities and driving our citizens out.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
Well, cher, I mean you talk about the nuclear option.
Look what's going on today with the government shut down?
All right? And by the way, let's do the math.
And I've said this before, but I think it's important
to keep repeating this because you never know who's listening
to any particular show on any particular day. You know,
(32:25):
you hear the Democrats saying it's the Republicans that shut
the government down. All right, but let's do the math.
Every Republican, say for one, voted for this claim bill
to keep the government open. Every Democrat, say for three,
(32:45):
voted to shut it down. So that's why, because you
need sixty votes. And what Harry Reid did with the
nuclear option is it's as you said, all it's for
a president to get his judges through is a simple majority,
all right. The other thing is you say it's a
(33:09):
win for our sight. I don't think it's a win
for America. It's actually a win for the people in
these the seed cities like Portin, like Chicago, like Los Angeles,
like Memphis, Tennessee. Wherever President Trump sends National Guarden to
restore law and order. Who is winning, well, first of
(33:31):
all the people in those cities. Number two, America is
just think of all the criminals that Donald Trump has
got off the streets. You know, the love say all
the time, you got to get the guns off the street.
You know what, I think Donald Trump has gotten more guns,
in particular illegal guns off the street than any Democrat
(33:53):
of any kind anywhere. I mean, he's taken thousands of
criminals off the streets. He's taken thousands of illegal guns
off the street. Now, why does somebody have an illegal gun. Well,
they're going to do bad. They're going to do evil
things with that gun. And we don't have a gun
violence problem in America. We've got a criminal violence problem
(34:17):
in America. We've got a mental health problem in America.
And the way the courts are, the way the courts are,
the way the lenient courts are. I heard a situation.
There is a situation in Philadelphia. Sharon, a beautiful young
woman twenty three years old, came up missing and they
(34:42):
found her buried in a shallow grave. Well, they found
out who kidnapped and murdered this young girl, and this perpetrator,
this man was just recently released, just re recently released
by the DA by name and Larry Krasner, who is
(35:05):
one of George Soros's DA's district attorney in Philadelphia. If
Larry Krasner didn't release this guy, this young lady would
be living today. That's why it's important. That's why it's
important for Donald Trump to stand up to George Sorows
(35:28):
and all the Sous money and all the Sorous's organizations,
stand up to the ACLU, stand up to Antifa, stand
up to Black Lives Matter. This young lady would be alive.
She was twenty three years old, Sharon, twenty three, She
(35:50):
had her entire life ahead of her. Really good person.
From what I understand, she should be living today, safe
for Larry Krasner releasing a lifelong criminal back onto the streets.
And by the way, this guy, Sharon, you know what
he did when he got in front of Larry krass
(36:12):
in the first time, he tried to strangle and sexually
assault another woman. Larry Krasner let this guy back out
on the streets. And because of that, this young lady
is dead today. That's why it's important. You know, you
(36:34):
talk about the nuclear option, you talk about a win
for us. It's a win for America. It's win for Americans,
it's win for the cities. Even if the people in
the cities don't realize it. It's a win for them too.
It's a good decision. Well, Sharon, let's get a breaking.
(36:55):
I know time flies when we get when you and
I get together, kidd, but this is the Conservative Commandos.
I'm trader, myca's Sharon angle in. Don't go away. We'll
be back right after this break.
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Speaker 1 (38:44):
And welcome back, Welcome back to the Conservative Command as
with Sharon Angle and yours truly, Rick Trader, coming to
you from the My Pillar studios, the My Store studios
of the AU n TV network. You know, Sharon, I
have never smoked hot in my life, but I've been
around it. I was at the original Woodstock. I used
(39:06):
to go one ski truck ski bus trips every weekend,
and at that time they allowed people I think it's
ridiculous to smoke smoke on these buses, and to smoke
pots on the buses. I hate the smell of it.
I hate the smell of cigarettes smoke. If I'm sensitive
to one thing, it is smells, and I can pick
(39:31):
it up. I can pick it up, even the faintest
scent of it. I can pick it up. Which brings
me to a couple of things. Number One, Mary and
I were out for a Sunday drive the other day
and we were on an Interstate highway and as we
come off the Interstate, I get hit by a whiff
(39:51):
of this. Now, apparently it was coming from the car
that was ahead of us. Okay, the people, the driver,
the passenger in the car, whoever it was, was smoking.
Because we're coming off the Interstate on a ramp. We
were right behind them. The smoke was coming out of
(40:14):
their car and into ours. And I you know, we've
heard so much lately, or we've heard over our lifetimes.
We've heard the campaign about do not drink and drive,
how dangerous it is. But now let's let me give
you an example. In the state of Ohio, forty one
(40:36):
percent of the automobile fatalities have marijuana in their system.
It is a real danger. Sharing People think, oh, they're
making it legal, so I can smoke pot the way
to smoke a cigarette or whatever. I can smoke it everywhere.
(40:58):
But it's becoming very very hazardous and very very dangerous,
especially when you put somebody who's smoking marijuana in a
car and heading down the Interstate Highway sixty five miles
an hour. This is really really dangerous stuff, and I
(41:19):
think these states need to re examine these laws that
they're passing permitting marijuana to be smoked anytime in any place.
Speaker 2 (41:31):
Well, Maryland Police Department is making a step forward. I
think it's kind of an interesting thing. They put out
on Facebook that they need twelve to fourteen volunteers to
come in and smoke in what they're calling the Green
Lab and allow officers to observe what happens when they
(41:55):
smoke so that they get a better idea of how
that looks. Green Lab helps officers and participants better understand
the effects and levels of impairment caused by cannabis, all
in a safe, controlled setting. Well, they ask for these
twelve to fourteen volunteers and they were just overwhelmed. Everybody
(42:16):
wants to come in and smoke pot, so oh god,
So they have to bring their their own canvas. They're
not providing the pot for them to smoke, they have
to bring their own, but they're providing the transportation to
(42:36):
and from that lab and lunch for them while they're there.
So that's the that's the perk, and the volunteers then
are to help the officers figure out these student officers
figure out what's what what they're seeing when they see
(42:56):
this impairment. He said, We've received an overwhelming number of
participant sign ups and are no longer accepting additional volunteers
at this time. So that's that's where that's at. But
it's interesting that the police now are wanting to get
(43:17):
a handle on what this looks like. And I, you know,
I think we kind of know what it looks like.
I'm not sure why we need to have a green lab,
but maybe maybe maybe we do. Maybe this is just
the first step that Marilyn's taking in awareness that marijuana
(43:38):
spokers are impaired, and like you say, they're causing accidents
and it's so common. I've had that same experience. I
get over here just about a mile and a half
to go up on the freeway get behind somebody that's
smoking and is coming right in my sun roof, for
(44:00):
right in my window. Offs I have it down, and
now I'm thinking, oh no, I'm going to get up
on that freeway at high speech with some guy that
is that's you know, impaired, that that is driving under
the influence. Basically, we went over to San Francisco. I
(44:22):
had to get my passport renewed. And I stepped out
at the passport office, out of the car onto the
area just just in front of the passport office, and
it was overwhelming rick the marijuana that was being smoked there.
And and we went down on the Fisherman's Wharf to
(44:45):
wait for my passport to be printed, and again overwhelming.
Speaker 1 (44:52):
That you can outside that you can't. I've had the
same situation. Mary and I were over and Philadelphia a
couple of weeks ago. Mary had to see a doctor
over there. She's been having a knee problem, and you know,
you're walking down the street and that's all you smell
is the is the marijuana, and you know Sharon's smoking.
(45:15):
Marijuana carries a lot of dangers, including mental health issues
like anxiety, psychosis, physcal health problems like lug lung and
heart disease, cognitive impairment affecting coordination and memory. The risk
during pregnancy and driving can also lead to cannabis use
(45:39):
disorder or addiction, arrange, the side effects such as disneyness, confusion, gas,
true intestinal problems, and it goes on and on and on.
You know, Sharon, I don't want to be on the
road with somebody who's drinking and driving. I don't want
to be on the road with somebody who's smoking and driving.
(45:59):
And as you say, and you know, I mentioned this
one situation the other day that was just the latest.
Seems like almost every time we go out anywhere in
a car, we'll pass a car or a car will
pass us, and we smell it. We smell it churn.
(46:19):
I'll tell you another really bad place is a Walmart
parking lot. You walk through the Walmart parking lot, it's
all over the place. Now these people have driven to Walmart,
they're driving home from Walmart, or in the car, or
they have a passenger in with them that is smoking it.
And you know, the second hand smoke can be just
(46:43):
as dangerous as the first hand smoke, you know, And
I know there are going to be people out there
that are going to justify and say you're being irrational
and things like that. But you know, if they want
to smoke it, could let them smoke it in their
own homes where they're not on the road, where they're
(47:05):
not affecting other drivers, where they're not making other people sick,
where they're not killing other people. All Right, I say
they want to smoke and smoke it, but I not
if they're an intelligent person. Seriously, not if they're an
(47:26):
intelligent person.
Speaker 2 (47:27):
Well, we used to joke when I was in college.
We used to joke that you could you knew a
pothead because they could spell wow backwards. And the man
was that they had that one word, wow wow. You know,
that was just their word and and it was all
(47:50):
you could get out of a potheads. They really had
completely fried their brains with the stuff, and we all
knew it, and we joke about it because we knew
those that were having difficulty with the stuff because they
they didn't make it to class. There was just all
kinds of of things going on when we were growing up,
(48:14):
and as teenagers, we knew it. At college and most
of us said not for me. But now there's this
resurgence of it, and you know, you pointed out that
that there are some real risks, and uh, I thought
this was interesting that the Jama Cardiology study revealed the
(48:38):
consuming marijuana regularly, whether smoking it or eating it. So
some people say, well, I don't smoke it, you know,
I take the candies or the jellies or you know, yeah.
Speaker 1 (48:54):
With it in it.
Speaker 2 (48:54):
You know, so resulted in reduced blood vessel function, which
is a higher risk for heart attacks, hypertension, and other
cardiovascular conditions. So this is is not good. They're significant
party of vascular risks according to the University of California,
(49:17):
San Francisco. So even in the land where you know
pot is you know, just accepted San Francisco, their universities
are saying significant cardiovascular risks. So you know, it's not
just it's not just you're endangering others, you're endangering yourself.
(49:39):
This is just an amazing problem that we have in
this country. And I guess I'm that's off to Maryland
Police Department for at least bringing it to our attention.
You know, we're saying, one more time, we need to
know if you're if you're driving under the influence like this.
(50:02):
We need to know.
Speaker 1 (50:06):
Yes we do Yes, we do well. Sharon, let's get
a break in. On the other side of this break,
we will be playing some of the best of interviews
here on the Conservative Commandos. I'm Rituria to my coast,
Sharon Angele, don't go nowhere. We'll be back with those
interviews right after this break.
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Speaker 1 (53:35):
And Welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commanders radio show.
We share an angle and your Shirley Rick Trader coming
to you from the My Pillar Studios, the My Store
Studios of the a U N TV network, and Sharon,
a great friend of the show, is with listen. Please
make that introduction.
Speaker 2 (53:52):
Well, I'm pleased to introduce Hans von Sbakowski, who has
an authority on wine range of issues including civil rights,
civil justice, amendment, immigration, the rule of law, and government reform.
As a Senior Legal Fellow in the Heritage Foundation's edwin
Nie the Third Center for Legal and Judicial Studies. His
analysis and commentary have appeared in The Wall Street Journal,
(54:15):
The Washington Times, Political Human Events, National Review Online, and
town Hall. Along with John Fund, he is the co
author of Who's Counting, How Fraudsters and bureaucrats put Your
Vote at Risk and Obama's Enforcer, Eric Holder's Justice Department.
His note book is Our Broken Elections, How the Left
(54:37):
changed the way you vote Once. Welcome back to the
Concervative Commandos radio show.
Speaker 3 (54:42):
Well, you all are gluttons for punishment. You keep inviting
me back.
Speaker 2 (54:47):
It's not punishment, it's great news. And in fact you've
written another great article, the swamp can String Screen. But
Doge is on a lawful path to success. To hear
that haunts every day's a new day over there. Those
it seems like now they've got eight more agencies. They're
saying you don't need to be in the existence, and
(55:09):
you're saying, you go for it. It's good, it's good.
Speaker 3 (55:13):
Yeah. There's been almost two dozen lawsuits filed against Doge,
against Elon Musk, and almost all of them so far
have been unsuccessful. The only success they've really had have
been some orders from judges saying that while Doge and
Elon Musk are looking at and investigating particular federal agencies,
(55:35):
they're not entitled to get personalized information. Well, they're not
looking for personalized information. They don't want the name of
an individual Social Security number, for example. What they're asking
for is things like, well, how many individuals are there
who are getting Social Security benefits in total? But who
(55:56):
are over you know, one hundred and fifty years old.
I mean, that's the kind of questions they're asking and
there's no personal information there. So from the standpoint of Trump,
but Donald Trump and the President, they're really being successful
in defeating these lawsuits that are trying to stop them
from being able to.
Speaker 2 (56:14):
Do anything, and that's good news for all of us.
It seems like there's huge savings here if we can
just get a handle on it. The exposure itself is shocking,
but how do we get to the place where all
of this money comes back into the general fund or
even to pay off the debt?
Speaker 3 (56:35):
Well, so far from what we've been able to gather
in our article when we were researching at over one
hundred billion dollars has already been saved by canceling contracts,
canceling grants and other payouts of the money.
Speaker 2 (56:53):
You know.
Speaker 3 (56:54):
The other big thing that DOJE has been pushing, which
again is such common sense, is that they discovered that
the Treasury Department, and of course that's where all the
money payouts go, no matter what agency it is, wasn't
really keeping track of these payments. They were making payments
without any notations on well, what appropriation from Congress authorize
(57:21):
this payment? You know, there wasn't anything like that, which
is just would be standard accounting practices. And you know,
critics were criticizing even that the idea that the government
would actually closely monitor who it's actually paying money out to. Sharon,
I think that's an indication of why we are seeing
(57:42):
such protests from the liberal world, from so called NGOs,
is because they don't want the public to know that
they are getting these kind of funds and how much
they're getting and what they're doing with it.
Speaker 2 (58:00):
Great when you say savings, but this sounds like it's
almost something that was got all gotten gain fraudulent, something
kind of criminal went on with some of these things.
I mean, obviously, all this person living is not one
hundred and fifty years old, So anybody getting Social Security
(58:21):
checks that's over that age of even one hundred and twenty,
there's something going on that's criminal. There isn't there. I mean,
aren't we entitled as a citizenry to have this come back,
even have these payments reimburst if we can.
Speaker 3 (58:38):
Well, look that that's true, but look that that kind
of thing is stuff that they ought to have. And
Elon Musk and Ozers has spoken about this. Look. One
of the advantages of AI artificial intelligence is why does
the Social Security Administration not have automatic programs inside its
databases that do things like if an individual is getting
(59:02):
Social Security payments above a certain age, they check other
databases to ensure that the person is still alive. You know,
the Social Security Administration has what they call a Master
Death Index, right, this is supposed to contain death records
from all over the country, and you know, I wonder, well,
how closely are they using that database to actually check
(59:26):
Social Security payments. I mean, that's the kind of thing
that DOGE is looking at. And anyone who opposes that,
I mean, it's like they want taxpayer funds to be wasted.
Speaker 2 (59:37):
So we're really not looking for criminals at this point.
We're looking for why are we bleeding and why isn't
something being done? And there is a mechanism already in
place to do that.
Speaker 3 (59:49):
Yeah, that's true. Look, the other big, big objection to
DOGE and Elon Musk is we've had people saying, well,
one of the judges, for example, said, speculate, well that
Elon Musk ought to have to be confirmed by the Senate. Well, no,
he doesn't. He's not an official government employee. He's simply
(01:00:09):
someone who's giving advice and recommendations to the president, and
the President can ask for advice and recommendations from anyone
he wants to, including the three of us. If the
President asked us to take a look at various federal
agencies and give him his recommendations. He could do that.
The actual directives of action that then are taken are
(01:00:33):
being ordered by Donald Trump, the President, and he obviously
has the authority to order particular agencies to take those
actions relying on the advice that Elon Muska Doge is
giving him.
Speaker 2 (01:00:47):
Okay, so there's twenty three lawsuits out there, is there
one that says you can't fire government employees after they've
worked so long and so hard. You just can't do it.
You know what, I'm hearing a lot of sympathy for
these poor government employees that are working from home. We
don't know if they've been doing work, We don't know
how long they've been doing that work. You know, they
(01:01:09):
just ask for a little accountability, and the thing just
kind of blew up. And now I'm hearing all this sympathy.
Is there really a place for sympathy there? And if
there is, what does that amount to? And do they
have something going on to think?
Speaker 3 (01:01:24):
Well, look, yeah, I may have sympathy individually for someone
who had a federal job and lost it, but we
have to look at the overall picture. And the overall
picture is that the country is deeply in debt. We
have a huge deficit, and the major reason for that
is too much spending by the federal government, and that
(01:01:45):
includes having too many federal employees. You know, when you
have over two million, over two million federal employees, I
think there's over sixteen million federal contractors. Those numbers are
larger than the populations of many states. And the idea
that somehow it's going to cause a huge problem in
(01:02:06):
the United States. If fifty thousand federal employees lose their
jobs off one hundred thousand federal employees, that's a tiny
percentage of the entire federal workforce, but it's a start
on trying to bring government spending, particularly by the federal government,
under control. And yeah, well that may hurt some individual employees,
(01:02:29):
the country overall is going to be better off for it.
Speaker 2 (01:02:34):
And they're really not asking them for their job. They're
saying come back to work. That's kind of what I
was getting from at the law These people are just saying,
come back to work. We want to see your face
and we want to know what you did this week.
Speaker 3 (01:02:47):
Right. Well, there haven't been any lawsuits about that, you know,
you know, there's been there was a report out that
ninety six percent of government offices were empty because so
many people were working remote, and no one has tried
to sue saying there's something wrong with the president ordering
people to come to work. Making a claim like that.
(01:03:08):
Even that was apparently too embarrassing for the unions that
represent these public employees. So they're just complaining about the
lawsuits have been about the actual firings, and we just
got I think a bad order from a judge saying
that all the probationary employees who have been let go
have to be rehired. I think that is a violation
(01:03:32):
of the president's constitutional authority over the executive branch, and
I have no doubt the Justice Department will appeal it,
and hopefully that district court judge's opinion will be overturned.
Speaker 2 (01:03:44):
Well, I hope so too. I guess I'm going now
to the Department of Education. She seems to be really
going through it and doing exactly what the president tasked
her to do. But there's a lot of squealing out
here about that. How's the union, the NEA, the AFT.
(01:04:05):
Have they filed a lawsuit saying no, no, no, she
can't do that. Because these teachers have tenure or these
employees that she's going after there in the Department of
Education have some kind of right to be there.
Speaker 3 (01:04:20):
Yeah. But see that brings up the issue that is
going to end up before the US Supreme Court, which
is that you know, Congress has put in all kinds
of protections for civil servants, all kinds of restrictions on
the ability to fire people working for the federal government.
The Trump administration is pushing back on that and saying
(01:04:41):
that violates the Constitution. The president is the chief executive
under the Constitution. Therefore he has control of the executive branch,
and any restrictions put in by Congress on his ability
to hire and fire individuals is a violation of the Constitution.
That is the theory that is going forward in many
(01:05:01):
of these cases, and it's eventually going to get to
the US Supreme Court, and they're going to make a
decision on this, which is one of the most important
issues when it comes to controlling the size of the
federal government.
Speaker 2 (01:05:15):
I agree, and and it seems like we have that
in place with that will employees. But when we're when
we're going down into the internal workings of a department,
it seems like there's there's this pushback there not so fast.
Speaker 3 (01:05:30):
No, that's very true, Sharon. And that's one of the
problems in this in this.
Speaker 2 (01:05:36):
City, in the city, uh you know, Rick has this
theory that they all shouldn't be working in that city.
They should be working in cities closer to their constituency,
possibly No Malaska.
Speaker 1 (01:05:52):
Well, I think I think that all these departments should
be moving very close to the Arctic Circle and all
these all these uh for being schnerry employees that they
have to hire back say yeah, your job's here. Yes.
But and Sharon has heard this before and she's going
to throw something at me, But all these departments and
agency should be moved to nom Malaska. That's but that's
(01:06:13):
just me.
Speaker 3 (01:06:14):
Well how about you. Actually Greenland is further north off
the Breenland Greenland, that might be the place, Patama.
Speaker 2 (01:06:23):
Yeah, well Greenland has a lot of open spaces for people,
doesn't it. And so we're on that edge again. We
need to go to a commercial break. We are coming
to here from the Conservative Commando's Radio network studios and
around the world on the internet with talkstream Live, iHeartRadio,
tune in net Talk America and AM FM twenty four
(01:06:44):
to seven. I'm Sharon Engele here with my co host
Rick Trader, and we've been talking with our special guest,
Hans von Spakowski, who's an authority on a wide range
of issues. He's also the senior Legal Fellow in the
Heritage Foundations Edwin meets the Third Center for Legal and
Judicial Studies. And we've been talking about the swamp. The
swamp can scream, but Dose is on a lawful path
(01:07:06):
to success. Don't go away, We'll be right back.
Speaker 4 (01:07:10):
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(01:07:34):
eight only twenty nine eighty eight. Once they're gone, they're
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only thirty nine ninety eight and for the first time
and the only time ever, get our limited edition Premium
My Pillows. They're made with Giza cotton and designer cuss
(01:07:56):
It Queen seventeen ninety eight, King's Only nineteen. So go
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Clients are extremely limited, so order now.
Speaker 5 (01:08:10):
To order, please call eight hundred seven ninety seven seven
eight nine three and please use the promotion code a
u n TV. To order, please call eight hundred seven
ninety seven seven eight nine three and please use the
promotion code a U n TV. To order, please call
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please use the promotion code a U n TV. To order,
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Speaker 1 (01:08:45):
And welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commander's Radio
Show with Cheron Angele and you're Shirley Rick Trader. Come
a to you from the Mypillar Studios, the My Store
studios of the a U n TV network. Our guest
is segment is Hans von Spakowski. Is in the authority
on a wide range of issues, including civil rights, civil justice,
the First Amendment, immigration, rule of law. And he's a
(01:09:08):
senior fellow at the Heritage Foundations Edwin meets the Third
Center for Legal and Judicial Studies, And we're discussing an
article that Hans wrote with Seth Lucas The swamp can scream,
but Doge is on a lawful path to success, and
that's great news for everybody. Hans, thank you for holding
(01:09:28):
through that break. We really do appreciate your time. You know, Hans,
the question that I think everybody should be asking, what
has taken a president, a leader so long to comprehend
something like Doge.
Speaker 2 (01:09:45):
I know.
Speaker 1 (01:09:47):
Bill Clinton talked about it, he really didn't do anything
about it. Clinton didn't do anything about it. None of
the Bushes did anything about it.
Speaker 3 (01:09:55):
What took so long, Well, you just haven't had a
president who was willing to confront the swamp, the huge
bureaucracy that has built up, the huge numbers of so
called independent agencies which have been acting as if they
are not accountable to the president. I mean, prior presidents
(01:10:16):
just weren't willing to take the steps that Trump has taken,
and you know, I think part of this is, Look,
he didn't take major steps like this. He did take
some baby steps in his first term. But that first
term he found out just how bad the resistance is
(01:10:37):
inside the federal bureaucracy. The four years out of office,
the four years in which that bureaucracy was doing everything
it could to attack him, it not only taught him
important lessons, but it gave him the fortitude and the
energy and the willingness to go after that bureaucracy, which
(01:10:57):
is a good thing for the American people.
Speaker 1 (01:11:00):
Huh huh. This may surprise some of our listeners and viewers,
especially of those who know me as the head of
the AUN TV network. I do watch other channels, and
last night, I think it was I was watching Fox
and they had a reporter go through Hut Housing and
Urban Development with the new Secretary of HUD and he
(01:11:23):
was showing how bare the place was, and out of
twenty two hundred employees that work a hut, there were
forty seven there that day. Forty seven, right. I mean,
so when you talk about you know, they talk about
government shutdowns and non essential employees, it seems to me
you can make an argument that the entire Department of
(01:11:45):
HUT can be eliminated because they don't show up. I
don't know what who even accounts for the work that
they do? You know, apparently there's no one there, nobody, supervisors, nobody,
So who's to know what work there's doing? Shut the
whole department down? I mean, isn't this a great argument
(01:12:06):
for what Donald Trump and Elon Musk is saying that
we got to get rid of some of these departments?
Speaker 3 (01:12:13):
Oh no, I agree, And I mean to take another one,
as you know, they're really working on doing that with
the Department Education. And for anyone who says, oh my gosh,
education will suffer, well, there was no Department of Education
until the Jimmy Carter administration, and even today there is
not a single K through twelve school and they're not
(01:12:34):
a single college anywhere in the nation that is run
by the federal government. All you have is now a
federal agency trying to regulate all those schools, all those colleges,
putting in all kinds of layers of red tape, when
what ought to happen very simply is that the federal
(01:12:55):
funds that Congress appropriates, rather than a huge percent of
it being wasted at the Department of Education. It ought
to just be block granted to the states so that
state governments and local boards of education can decide how
best to use that federal funding for the education of
their children. Why put in this middle man in between?
Speaker 1 (01:13:20):
Way, dim hunts. I wish that Joe o'biden would come
back to Washington and give a little advice to all
these rift government employees, the same advice that he gave
to the oil workers, and that was learned, code learn
could But seriously, why can't the same thing be done
(01:13:41):
Doja's aims through attrition? How long would it take through
attrition to achieve a lot of the goals and aims
that Doses going after?
Speaker 3 (01:13:55):
Hey, it would take a long time. I mean, people
hang on to these federal jobs for the reason that. Look,
I don't doubt there are some federal employees who work
hard and do a lot of work, But there are
many federal jobs that they're very easy. They don't have
a lot of duties, and yet the benefits are tremendous.
(01:14:15):
You know, the average federal employee makes more in money, salary,
and benefits than the average American and private industry. So
people hang on to these jobs, and they're not going
to retire because again, federal retirement federal pensions are also
extremely rich. So attrition, Yeah, it does happen, people retire
(01:14:40):
and leave, but that would be way too slow to
make the kind of significant changes that we need to make.
Speaker 1 (01:14:47):
You know, Huts, you've been down in the swamp for
quite a while, working at Heritage Foundation, working at the
Justice Department. But you have you ever seen the courts
so busy? It seems like there's lawsuits flying everywhere to
stop the flights, to turn the flights around too, to
release these terrorists Donald Trump court, to rehire people, to
(01:15:11):
pay out money. Have you, seriously, Hants, have you ever
seen lawsuits fly like this?
Speaker 3 (01:15:17):
No? I mean there have been more injunctions issued by
these federal judges in just two and a half months
than I think during the entire or four years of
the Biden administration. And almost all of these orders should
not have been issued nationwide injunctions by federal district court judges.
People need to realize they're over ninety federal districts in
(01:15:41):
the country, so federal judges in one of those districts,
they are jurisdictions very limited. You know, you get a
judge in Manhattan, a federal judge in Manhattan, and he's
issuing orders to the federal government down in Washington, d c.
And the nationwide injunctions. The Supreme Court has set out
very strict rules on those they are only deserved under
(01:16:05):
very limited and restricted circumstances, and yet these judges are
just willingly granting them. So you have a lot of
out of control judges. In fact, the same way we
have a problem with a bureaucratic swamp in the executive branch,
we now have a problem with an imperial judiciary and
judges who think they have more power than the elected
(01:16:28):
president of the United States and can overrule the elected
president of the United States.
Speaker 1 (01:16:33):
It's incredible.
Speaker 3 (01:16:34):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:16:34):
It's always frustrated me about Republican scants is they're not
more litigious, They're not more like the Democrats. Like where
were all the lawsuits to stop Joe Biden from opening
our borders? Where were all the lawsuits stopping governments from
spending and wasting money? But it seems like when we
finally get somebody who's trying to clean up the swamp,
(01:16:57):
who's trying to cut federal spending. Who's trying to secure
borders and make our city state safe. There's a real
problem now, and all the Democrat Party can do is
fund lawyers to go judge shopping. I mean, seriously, Hans,
what's good for the seemingly is good for the good
(01:17:17):
should be good for the gander. And the lack of
Republican lawsuits that drives me crazy too.
Speaker 3 (01:17:25):
Well. The one thing I would say about that, Rick,
is that actually we had a lot of very good
conservative attorney generals, state attorney generals in red states during
the Bide administration who were suing over this. I mean
the best example was, remember we had a number of
states suing the president over the fact that he came
(01:17:48):
out and said, oh, I'm forgiving all student loans, you
don't have to pay him back, and the Supreme that
went all the way to the Supreme Court. The Supreme
Court actually said Joe Biden, you don't have the to
do that. Of course, you remember what the reaction was
that Joe Biden Essen said, well, I'm not going to
abide by that Supreme Court decision.
Speaker 6 (01:18:08):
I don't.
Speaker 3 (01:18:08):
I don't recall liberals saying that that was causing a
constitutional crisis. Do you now.
Speaker 1 (01:18:14):
Nor when Barack Obama refused to defend the right of marriage,
you know that that didn't go anywhere either, hunts when
are these when are these suits going to be settled?
When is when is the Supreme Court going to step in?
Or do you expect the Supreme Court to step in? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:18:32):
I think a lot of these cases. Look, many of
these cases, while they're on different issues, all have the
same legal issue, which is how far does the power
of the president extend over the executive branch? So yeah,
I think that issue is going to get to the
US Supreme Court. When is that going to happen? It
(01:18:53):
maybe months before that happens. But the thing is, the
Justice Department under Pam Bondi is fierce fighting and defending
these cases, and they are appealing these decisions by these
federal district court judges. And once they get decisions from
courts of appeal, if it's adverse, they will go to
(01:19:14):
the US Supreme Court. So I suspect some of these decisions.
I mean we're already in March. The Supreme Court's term
ends in June. I guess it's possible that one case
could move fast enough through the process to get to
the court before then, but I suspect many of them
it'll be this fall before we get final decisions.
Speaker 1 (01:19:36):
You know, Hans, we see these lawsuits trying to stop
Donald Trump from from locking up and sending out these criminals,
these violent criminals, these murderers and rapists. I expect that
it's going to get worse, especially if Donald Trump tries
to deport anybody who came here illegally but not is
(01:19:57):
not a felon. You see where I'm going that when
that starts to happen, what we've seen up now is
probably nothing compared to the lawsuits that will take place.
Speaker 3 (01:20:10):
In that is true, I think we'll see even more
lawsuits on the illegal alien issue. But I have to
tell you, when it comes to that, the law is
on Trump's side. I mean, the law gives immigration law
gives the president enormous power. And so even if we
get district court judges issuing injunctions and saying you can't
(01:20:32):
do that again, I think when it gets to Supreme Court,
they have in the past been very much on the
side of the president when he's exercising his powers under
federal immigration law.
Speaker 1 (01:20:46):
Well, Hans, I hear you, but two names concern me,
John Roberts and Amey Coney Barrett. We never know what
Turkoni do. If they're going to follow the Constitution or
follow their heart. I don't know. I'm very concerned. Hasa.
We want to thank you for joining us here in
the Conservative Commanders. But before you go, give us the
four one one. How people can read the articles that
(01:21:09):
you write, how they can get your books, how they
can find out more about about the Heritage Foundation.
Speaker 3 (01:21:15):
Sure well, they can read my articles at Heritage dot
org or often at the Daily Signal, which is electronic newspaper,
and my books are all available at Amazon and Barnes
and Noble Haunts.
Speaker 1 (01:21:27):
Again, thank you so much for joining us. Take Karen Godless,
thanks for having me. And you're listening to and watching
The Conservative Commanders with Sharon Angle. I'm Rick Drader, Mark
Lamb from the College Fix is going to join us.
We're going to find out what's the latest happenings on
the college campuses across America. Go nowhere, we'll be right back.
Speaker 4 (01:21:47):
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Speaker 1 (01:23:22):
And Welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commandos with
Sharon Angle in our Meric Trader coming to you from
the my Pillar Studios, the Mysore Studios of our own
a u n TV network. And Sharon, there's always so
much in the news going on on the college campuses
at the universities. I'm so glad that we've connected with
(01:23:43):
our next guest that can give us the straight scoop.
So Sharon, please make that introduction.
Speaker 2 (01:23:50):
Well, I'm pleased to introduce Matt Lamb, who's the associate
editor editor for The College Fix. He also writes for
Life Site, News, AMAC Newsline, and Human Life for View.
He's written for The Washington Examiner and Headline USA, and
he previously worked for Students for Life of America, Students
for Life Action, and Turning Point USSAY. Along with Open
(01:24:12):
the Books, The College Fixed regularly trained students and helps
them find jobs in media with alumni at Fox News,
The Daily Wire, Washington Examiner, National Review, and a host
of other publications. Matt, welcome back to the Conservative Commandos
radio show.
Speaker 6 (01:24:28):
Yeah, thanks for having me back on.
Speaker 2 (01:24:30):
Well, it's always our pleasure to have you here, and
it's especially a pleasure for me because I love hearing
about these college campuses getting excited about freedom again. You know,
just the things that are happening there. Say it's not
the same old, same old anymore. Let's let's start out
(01:24:52):
with some of the stories that your reporters on these
campuses have been bringing to us. Fire professors who opposed
gender affirming care. Harvard faculty chairses talk about that.
Speaker 6 (01:25:08):
Absolutely, so Professor Timothy McCarthy, which I can't get over
how his last name is actually McCarthy. He wants people
fired that don't agree with him. But he said that
people who oppose what is called gender firming care, which
means transgender drugs and surgeries that make someone look like
the opposite sex, he said they should be fired and
(01:25:30):
lose their academic titles, and that there's a particular place
in hell.
Speaker 1 (01:25:35):
For people who, oh gosh, support that.
Speaker 6 (01:25:37):
So the background is, excuse me. There are several professors
at New York University who are involved with groups that
take a more psychological counseling approach to gender dysphoria, which
for a long time was the approach much like you know,
I think great analogies, much like Anarexi and Bolimia. We
don't tell those people, no, you actually are overweight, You actually,
(01:25:59):
you know, are eating too much. We try to get
to those core issues anxiety, depression, perhaps abuse. So these
professors are they teach social work and counseling, and they're
involved in counseling and social work to help people with
these mental illnesses. And Professor McCarthy was interviewed and he,
you know, he basically says they should be gone. If
(01:26:21):
you're involved with groups that don't you know, support I
guess cutting off healthy organs, injecting kids with hormones, you know,
taking girls and injecting them with own so they grow
facial hair at sixteen, then you should be fired. And unfortunately,
this is sort of actually a common mindset at Harvard.
(01:26:43):
The college fixes covered among not just the faculty, but
also the students' efforts to cancel people. There are actually
so few declared conservatives at Harvard that the student newspaper
had to go get Harvey Mansfield, who's ninety two years old,
and bring him back out of retirement to have a
conservative writer on the student newspaper. Now, look, I liked
(01:27:06):
his you know, I read his translation of The Prince
when I was at Loyola. But it's pretty sad, you know,
the bench is pretty empty for outspoken conservatives that they
have to find someone who in his nineties and retired
to have someone who's willing to share his views at Harvard.
And this is there should be no surprise. Just to
give a few examples. Several years ago, as the College
(01:27:28):
fix covered, Harvard canceled a course on innovative policing that
was helping Springfield, Massachusetts. This was led by a professor
who was an engineer. He was an army I believe
he was a colonel. He had a commentation. I think
he won the bronze Star. And they were working with
this Springfield to clean it up and to use these
(01:27:50):
techniques to bring the community together, to work with law
enforcement who everyone could live safely and businesses could thrive.
And basically far left activists got the course canceled. I
believe the dean who oversaw that cancelation, I think he's
now at University of Pennsylvania. I actually a positive, but
you know this happens. There is a law professor who
faced cancelation because he wrote a paper questioning forced prostitution
(01:28:16):
during World War two in Japan. The Harvard student newspaper
there was a survey that found I think it's only
like one percent of the professors there are conservative. And
the student newspaper said that's not a problem because maybe
among the eighty two percent liberal faculty there's a diversity
of views. The Institute of Politics dumped Representative Elie Stephonic
(01:28:38):
for raising objections to the integrity of the twenty twenty election.
I gouta go on for hours with just examples of
Harvard's echo chamber. But it's no surprise this person who's
a faculty chair. This isn't some random adjunct or the janitor.
This is a faculty chair who has a position of authority.
And it's just one of countless examples of professors who
(01:28:58):
oppose academic freedom. And that's why the Great William F.
Buckley said that academic freedom is a myth because professors
actually don't support academic freedom. It's something they cry when
they say something crazy on Twitter, but in reality, most
professors I don't believe actually support for an open debate.
Speaker 2 (01:29:17):
Well. I have a good friend who's a Harvard alum
and his son is going to Auburn, even though he
has a legacy to Harvard. He said, I can't I
can't send my son there, and I can't donate to
their alumni group anymore. I wonder how that is settling
in along with I wonder how the Trump executive ordered
(01:29:38):
It says, no more federal funding for you if you
don't back off of these DEI. So how was that
going to affect that faculty chair. He's going to have
an issue, isn't.
Speaker 6 (01:29:51):
He Well, you know, it won't necessarily affect him unless
he's involved in those programs. I do think that one
of the benefits of President Trump's orders on DEI is
that it will help universities have a cover for cutting
some of the more woke programming. So it may not
particularly affect this professor, but I do think it could
(01:30:13):
help change the atmosphere if these universities actually do roll
back DEI and things like white privileged training, and at
a minimum, I think President Trump has brought this issue
to the forefront about how a lot of these programs
are useless and they teach a lot of bad ideas,
So that that could be a positive benefit from Trump's orders.
Speaker 2 (01:30:34):
And I think that it's really important to the university
and college system in America that he did make that,
that he did raise that because almost all of your
articles have something to do DEI this next one black
employee reports black peer for saying tone it down. You know,
(01:30:55):
that's a freedom of speech issue right there. But it's
this idea that everybody has a right to say something
until you say something I don't agree with.
Speaker 6 (01:31:06):
Yeah, And this is actually a great example of why
transparency in government is needed, because what we did is
we filed a public records request colloquially called colloquially called
a foil right for these biased reporting complaints for the
University of Maryland. And originally the school told us they
just gave us a very brief summary employee reported employee
(01:31:28):
for racist comment. But then I said, well, you have
to kind of give you actually give me more details.
And it turns out it was a black employee reporting
another black employee for saying tone it down. And the
sort of reporting on one another and snitching on one
another happens on a lot of college campuses. Unfortunately, the
Supreme Court recently declined to take up a challenge to
these biased response teams, as was brought against Indiana University's
(01:31:52):
biased response team, which, funny enough, the president, Pamela Whitten,
has actually been reported twice to her own team, once
for not sufficiently acknowledging Hispanic Heritage month and then another
time for using police to clear this pro palest Indian encampment.
Now it's not clear if this happens at the University
(01:32:13):
of Maryland, but we do know, for example that sometimes,
for example at Indiana University, students can be reported to
these systems. It's placed on their record and they have
no they're not they're not told what the charges are,
and they have no way to defend themselves. So this student,
all that was in his file was it said something
like student made an offensive comment in class. When was
(01:32:34):
the class? He wasn't told who accused him, what was
the comment? He wasn't told. But it seems that he
actually lost out on a campus job because of this
anonymous complaint that he had no I mean, it's like
the classic when did you stop beating your wife. He
had no he had no way to defend himself. You know,
it's just did you make a biased complaint? And so
(01:32:55):
this continues to be an issue. But it's funny to
tie together. Our last story in your question at DII
is that these are put together by universities. Many of
these faculties support DEI, but then a lot of times
they're reported. There was a pro DII professor at the
University of Minnesota who bragged about how the philosophy department
wasn't just hiring white males, and then she was reported
(01:33:17):
to the bias team for a p for a comment
she wrote in a Washington Post essay where she used
the phrase pinnata of shame, and the idea was that
her her dad had made a New Year's resolution to
learn Spanish, and I guess the idea was there was
something he was always swinging at and was missing, and
it was his pinata of shame, and then he he
(01:33:38):
just gave up on it. He moved on to other goals.
So these pro DI professors support these woke initiatives and
then the end up getting reported to them. So there
is a bit of poetic justice in it.
Speaker 2 (01:33:49):
Well, it sounds like they may also get lawsuits. So
there's a student suing Colorado University at Boulder after an
investigation for identity politics criticism. What's that one about.
Speaker 6 (01:34:01):
Yeah, so Zoe Johnson is involved in Young Americans for Freedom,
which is a great conservative student group but sort of
separate from that. But but they're helping her. She was
investigated by the school's Office of Institutional Equity and Compliance,
which is just its di I office for several several
comments and one one comment was they were in choire class,
(01:34:22):
which I don't know why they're doing this anyways, they
were learning about LGBT history, and she said, I thought
we just did this back in June, because what your
listeners may or mount know is there's a LGBT Pride
Month and then there's also an LGBT History Month. She
had also made a comment several years prior basically saying
that she doesn't like the idea of white privilege because
(01:34:43):
she thinks we should just treat people based on who
they are, right, not on their class characteristics. And then
she also was hauled into the di I office because
someone was wearing a do rag and she she just
didn't know what it was, and she just asked someone,
what is that, not in any rude way, just sort
of like out of curiosity. So ultimately she was let
off without a punishment, but she's suing because she's saying, like,
(01:35:06):
I could be punished in the future, my friends can
be punished in the future, just for challenge, you know,
just for saying I don't agree with white privilege. And
that's completely her free speech right, especially just in a
private conversation to say this was a quote. I don't
care about your identity. I care more about what you
have to say as a person more than how you look,
which I think is a great standard for treating people,
like what are your views, how do you act, not
(01:35:27):
how do you look. I think that's actually a great
way to treat people. It's actually the least racist, least
sexist way to treat one another.
Speaker 2 (01:35:37):
That's exactly right. And we're going to treat our Conservative
command Those Radios show a sponsor with that same We
love his character qualities, so we're going to go and
give him an opportunity to express himself here on our show.
We are coming to you from the Conservative Commandos Network
(01:35:58):
studios around the world on the Internet. With Talk Stream Live, iHeartRadio,
tune in Mettalk America and AMFM twenty four seven. I'm
share an Angle and I'm here with my co host Trader.
We've been talking with our special guest, Matt Lamb, who's
the associate editor for The College Fix. He's been talking
to us about several articles that students write about college
(01:36:22):
life and what's going on there. You won't want to
miss the next segment.
Speaker 4 (01:36:27):
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Speaker 1 (01:38:03):
And welcome back. Welcome back to the Conservative Commander's Radio
Show with Sharon Angle and your truly Rick Trader, coming
to you from the My Pillar Studios to My Store
Studios of the au n TV network. So what's coming
up on the au n TV network tonight? Well, how
about the Stonees on with Rogers Stone. We're Dinestisus's podcast,
The Joe Massina Show, More Money, Receiven More Shames of
(01:38:25):
Keith Media, Washington, Mutch with Tony Perkins, Colonel Allen West,
Steadfast and Loyal. Hey, all those great shows are part
of the au N TV network, so as they say,
don't change that channel. And I want to thank our
guests for sticking with us. And he has Matt Lamb.
He's the associate editor for The College Fix. And we're
discussing some of the articles and issues that the College
(01:38:49):
Fixed highlights. And hey, Matt, thank you for holding through
that break. We appreciate your time. I know in the
start of the interview today Sharon went through some of
the things is that you know, you've written for quite
a few different publications, but I wanted you to if
you could take a minute or two and tell our
(01:39:09):
audience a little bit more about the College Fix and
your aims and goals and things like that.
Speaker 6 (01:39:15):
Absolutely, so the College Fix has two goals that go together.
So our main goal is to train the next generation
of center right conservative libertarian journalists. And so we've placed
a lot of students or a lot of students alumni
have gotten hired at Reason Magazine, National Review, Daily Wire, Fox,
(01:39:37):
news watching Examiner, and I know shared's read. We read
those from those games at the beginning. And then the
other part of it that is related is we train
students to write about higher education news. So all the
basics of good journalism that I think, unfortunately are lost
a lot today. So asking questions, trying to advance the story,
(01:39:58):
filing the public recor is requests, you know, looking up courses,
seeking commentary, editing, and so that's what a lot of
what I do every day is I work with about
twenty five to thirty students at any one time. We
have three other full time editors that are also working
with students, so we work with probably one hundred and
twenty five or more students. Yeah, we also offer so
(01:40:20):
it's really niss. We pay students to write for us,
and we also offer for some of our best students
or just other college students even they don't write for US,
paid fellowships. So those are basically full time internships for
three months or so, basically lining up with a semester
at a lot of those places we've mentioned, generally places
(01:40:41):
in DC, but sometimes locally. So the main goal of
the College Fix is to train the next generation. So
our slogan, I should say, is breaking campus news, launching
media careers. One kind of cool initiation that I think
I mentioned last time is our Westore the media video series.
And if you go to the College Fix YouTube channel
(01:41:02):
or actually ru on Rumble as well, every week we
post we post new episodes. So we have five ups
so far, and then we'll have more content later throughout
the next couple months. And this is with some big
names Tucker Carlson, John Stossel, Britt Hume, Mary Maury, Olhaan,
Charlie Gasperno, many others, and it's basically going through you know,
(01:41:24):
his journalism, good career, Why are journal Why are so
many journalists liberal? And we are really goals to find
new student journalists, but also just bring attention to these issues.
And so you can find that if you go to
YouTube rumble, or if you go to the Collegefix dot
com in the top right hand corner, you can see it.
You can subscribe, you can watch the recent episodes, and
(01:41:46):
so yeah, that's what we do every day. We put
out something like one hundred and fifty articles a month,
and we have a relatively small team, so some of
that's a our original reporting. Other reporting is reading other
news sites, finding tracks, finding stories, using different sources, press releases,
student newspapers to cover everything in higher education. So, I
(01:42:07):
know we talk about a lot on this show, but
anything to do with di I, Israel hamas you know,
related to campus do this for justice and Palestine, free speech,
pro life issues, climate change, university spending, you know, feminism,
wacky courses, trends, and higher education. And we really try
(01:42:31):
to serve essentially as the wire service for other news sites.
So uh, you know, I like to think that I
just want these stories out there. So if we if
we cover a story and then a big platform picks
it up and gets more coverage, that's great for me.
It's more about just the cause of getting the stories
out there than necessarily the you know, personal fame for
(01:42:52):
myself or one of our other editors.
Speaker 1 (01:42:54):
You know, Matt, with all your success, a place in
your alumni like you know, Fox News, Daily Wire, Washington Examiner,
National Review. How come there's no nothing there like Politico, Reason,
The Atlantic, CNN, MSNBC. Have you ever gotten any of
your students placed in the liberal outlets?
Speaker 6 (01:43:17):
Yeah, so we do have. We have alumni. If you
go to the college fix website. There's an alumni section,
and so we have had students at at Politico. Actually
one of my former students days is now a regular
columnist for USA Today, and so that's that's great. We
also have students at alumni that are at think tanks,
(01:43:39):
publishing firms, mainstream news. But I know, like, for example,
someone who writes for like a Saint Louis business it's
called the Saint Louis Business Journal. Yahoo News. We also
have obviously it's a conservative but center right, but we
have an editorial board member of the Wall Street Journal.
And we continue to place people. You know, it's wouldn't
(01:44:02):
be uncommon for someone to do an internship with us
one summer, as let's say, going into their senior year,
and then the next year they get hire back full time.
One of my most highest profile I think alumni would
be Charlotte Waldron, who now is the director of Digital
Media for Vice President jd. Vance. So we like our
students journalism, but I'm not going to complain if we've
(01:44:24):
got some people working in media relations for the Vice president.
Speaker 1 (01:44:28):
And not too shabby, not too shabby, absolutely not too shabby. Well,
let's get back to some of these stories that are
being highlighted on The College Fix, and this one. I'm
glad Sheridan didn't talk about it because I wanted to
because this sounds dangerous to me medical malpractice. The University
of Washington Health Center offers abortion pills without ultrasoult. Now, Matt,
(01:44:52):
I'm not a doctor. I don't even play one on TV.
But to me, I think that would be dangerous if
a woman is pregnant and started taking abortion pills that
if this child is more developed. I mean that obviously
can kill the child, but it can also put her
(01:45:13):
in medical danger too. So give us a skinny on
this story.
Speaker 6 (01:45:17):
Absolutely, so to start, obviously, abortion drugs can ever really
be safe because they're intending to kill a pre born baby.
But what's even more dangerous is that at the University
of Washington you no longer have to get an ultrasound
or you know, sorry, you do not have to get
an ultrasound at the University of Washington to get abortion drugs.
(01:45:38):
And as you mentioned, you are supposed to get an
ultrasound before taking the abortion drugs to one because you
can't take it if the baby is older than ten
weeks and if the pregnancy is a topic to be
very dangerous. And now let's think about this. So these
are college students, so it's not a married couple where
they're probably tracking fertility and ovulation and they have a
(01:45:58):
good sense of their psycho These are these are college students,
so they don't probably have a very good sense of
when they got pregnanty and don't want to. I don't
know the details, but so they don't They may not
have the knowledge. Regardless, these drugs can be dangerous for
the women. And so they're going into a health center
(01:46:19):
which I don't know, might be staffed by a nurse,
a nurse practitioner. They're probably not an ob G I
N at the health center, and so there aren't there
gonna be a lot of problems with this. Uh, there's
no counseling required in terms of like a lot of
informed consent, and that's really dangerous as well. Because so
let's just think this through. So a college student takes
the drugs, doesn't tell anyone, She goes home to her
(01:46:41):
dorm room or apartment, and essentially it's like waiting out
a miscarriage. So you have to wait. You don't have
you might not have good sense of what an abnormal
amount of blood is. So you're bleeding out, your roommates
don't know what's going on, and then you pass out
on your your dorm room floor or your apartment floor.
No one's there to call nine one one, Like, there's
(01:47:01):
all these problems that can happen. But of course with
these universities, they want to be the most pro abortion possible.
And so for them, what's what's a dead student?
Speaker 3 (01:47:10):
Right?
Speaker 6 (01:47:10):
What's what's someone laying on their floor? Because they want
to they want to support abortion right, because they don't
want to be protested by the pro abortion activists. And
so this is a this is a serious this is
a serious issue, you know. This is why various groups
told us this is essentially medical malpractice. And look, you said,
you're not a doctor, I'm not an attorney. But if
(01:47:31):
I was a personal injury turning in Washington, the university
is practically begging to be sued. When a student takes
these drugs from a university employee, goes back to a
university dorm, the resident advisors are not trained on how
to handle these emergencies, and she dies or has a
serious injury, blood clotting, bleeds out on the floor and
(01:47:51):
is left seriously injured, if not dead. So I think
the university is begging to be sued here.
Speaker 1 (01:47:56):
I think, or worse because some as you said, somebody
may die here. And I think then it's uh, you're
bringing the law into it. You know, something like that
would need to be investigated. And I would think if
they found out that these drugs are prescription, right the
(01:48:17):
supportion drugs there prescription, I would think they.
Speaker 6 (01:48:21):
They're essentially over the counter. But yes, I mean you
have got a prescription for it, but it's pretty bright
to get it right.
Speaker 1 (01:48:26):
Well, I think whoever wrote the prescriptions, just like Michael
Jackson's doctor. You know, Michael Jackson took took a drug.
Give it to Michael. It's a drug. Heck, I've used
I've had that drug administer to me, but I've had
it administer properly. Well, this drug was given to Michael improperly.
(01:48:47):
Michael died and that doctor faced charges. I think the
same thing that can happen, same thing can happen here.
These people that are giving these drugs a way to
these kids, the's abortion drugs. They're they're something bad is
going to happen, and then something bad's going to happen
to them. They're going to end up in prison.
Speaker 6 (01:49:08):
In addressed world. Yeah, absolutely, and it's.
Speaker 1 (01:49:09):
Just worth well, let's just say we're running a little
short on time, but if you've got time for one
more article, I would really like to talk about this
University of Maryland canceled in Israeli doctors. Event Uh, some
debate might occur. Well, talk with me about this, give
us the scoop, give us the information on this story.
Speaker 6 (01:49:31):
So in January, doctor Elon Glasberg was supposed to speak
to the University of Maryland School of Medicine. Apparently he's
spoken there before, so he's actually a surgeon. He you knows,
combat experience, but he's an officer in these raely defense Forces,
which of course that's that's not good. You can't you
can't be involved with the IDF today on college campuses.
And so the Council on Islamic Relations took credit for
(01:49:53):
getting the event canceled. They said their members sent six
thousand emails in opposition. The college picks filed a public
record's request that didn't include those six thousand emails, that
actually included the emails from the university leadership and the
university said there were safety concerns, but it's fairly vague
and the university never actually said what those concerns were.
(01:50:14):
There were several emails from university leadership, some saying there
might be debate, some saying there might be disruption. You
can go read this at the College Fix It's it's
a fairly long article with a lot of the emails
we obtained, but this is essentially what happens on college campuses.
And you guys probably know this, but this is called
the Heckler's veto, where you essentially cause a threat of safety,
(01:50:35):
which I don't know if Care really wants to be
bragging that people are scared of scared of them, You
think they'd be more concerned about their their image. Essentially,
you you cause the idea there might be a disruption.
Someone's gonna yell. And instead of the university saying, well,
we'll add a few more security guards. We're gonna warn everyone.
If you start yelling, you're out of here, you're trespassing,
(01:50:57):
they decided to cancel it.
Speaker 1 (01:50:59):
Now.
Speaker 6 (01:50:59):
They said, well we're going to reschedule it. Well, we've
been working with him and I'll take there where they
are that they are doing that. But he's a professor
in Israel, so he's not always in the United States.
And what the what the college ficks found out from
these public records request is there was a lot of pushback,
as there should have been, from the local Jewish community,
the Israeli ambassador. So when all these universities are talking
(01:51:22):
about well norms and Trump's going to make us look bad,
the Israeli Ambassador United States wrote a letter to the
University of Maryland, which we obtained and might already be
out there, I'm not sure, essentially criticizing them. It doesn't
look good. He was basically canceled because he was a
doctor with the Israeli Defense Courses, and some people complained,
and so this, you know, this is this is the
(01:51:43):
heck wers veto and it's only going to encourage them
to do it again. If you tell left wing activists
send enough emails or threaten enough disruptions when you don't
like a speaker, the next time they don't like a speaker,
they know, you know, they're like kids throwing tantrum. If
the kid knows if I throw tantrum loud, and I'm
gonna get what I want he's going to keep throwing
the tantrum.
Speaker 1 (01:52:03):
Well, you know, Matt, I know that you work for
a turning Point. You know Charlie Kirk, and you know
Charlie is has had several events canceled because of what
has college students protesting, demonstrating, and I was hoping that
(01:52:23):
this was finally going to go away. I guess it isn't.
But Matt Lamp Associate editor for The College Fix. Matt,
we want to thank you for coming on the Conservative Commandos.
Please tell eurrodience how they could find out more about
the College Fix.
Speaker 6 (01:52:37):
The best way is the Collegefix dot com. Subscribe to
our newsletter. You can follow us on Twitter and Facebook,
and like I said, definitely check out that Rumble and
Rumble or YouTube for the video series that we have
out as well as other videos. And if you know
any college students that might want to give journalism a
tribe make a little extra money, just have them reach
(01:52:57):
out on our website on the contact us page. It
could just so out a form or send an email
to one of the editors and we'd be happy to
get back to them.
Speaker 1 (01:53:05):
Matt as Zoeys, we really appreciate you joining us. Take
care and God bless Thank great, Thanks Aaron and you
are listening to and watching The Conservative Commandos with Sharon
Angle and I'm Rick Trader. Don't go away, Sharon and
I'll be back with more news and commentary right after
this break.
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And Welcome back, Welcome back to the Conservative Command to
this radio show with Sharon Angle in your shrewdly Rick Trader,
coming to you from the my Pillar studios, the my
Store studios of the aun TV networking. Hey, Sharon, we
had a couple of great guests today. Would you thank
them for us?
Speaker 2 (01:55:15):
We certainly do. I want to thank Hans von Spakowski,
who is an authority on a wide range of issues
and a senior legal Fellow at the Heritage Foundation's Edmund
Nice the Third Center for Legal and Judicial Studies. He's
also the author of a new book, Are Broken Elections,
How the Left change the way you vote, and we
(01:55:35):
discussed his article the Swamp can Scream, but Doge is
on the lawful path success. I'd also like to thank
Matt Lamb, who was our guest. He's the associate editor
for the College Fixed and he helps intern media students
(01:55:58):
to get regularly trained and they write some incredible articles,
and we discuss quite a few of those with him.
So thank you Matt for bringing all that talent.
Speaker 1 (01:56:10):
But for now, we're out of time. That means that
we get a run and we got to go take
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to be on TV and on radio.
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