Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Could music, rage and civic action save our constitutional republic?
What if a pop song and a protest sign hold
the same power. Imagine a teenage girl stands alone at
a street corner in a city simmering with political tension.
(00:25):
Her sign is hand painted, not printed, not slick, just
black letters on cardboard that reads quote fix the System.
Her stance isn't angry, but it's firm. She's not screaming,
she's not blocking traffic. She's standing steel like a stone
(00:45):
in the middle of a storm, watching the world pass
her by. Then a car rolls by, windows down, music
thumping Rihanna's Only Girl in the World spills onto the street, joyful, sensual, defiant.
The driver isn't looking at the girl on the street,
(01:07):
but they're both making a statement in their own way.
One is calling out the failures of a broken structure.
The other is refusing to let the weight of that
structure rob them of their spirit. To the casual observer,
this may seem like a contradiction, but in reality it's
(01:30):
a mirror. One reflects the exaltion of a generation raised
on broken promises and filter truths. The other reflects the
desire to escape, even at just for three minutes and
forty seconds into a world where the beat is stronger
than the bird. Both are expressions of the same thing,
(01:52):
emotional resistance to an unresponsive system. And that's the story
of America in twenty not a nation divided into left
or right, but a society frame at the edges of
from too much noise and not enough being. People are
(02:12):
just not just politically polarized, they are spiritually depleted. They
scroll past outrage, they laugh to avoid crying. They vote,
if at all, with more resignation than hope. But when
you peel back the cynicism, you find something raw and real.
(02:33):
You find people tired of being lied to, tired of
being told to pick a side, tired of being told
that feelings something makes them weak. This is the quiet revolution,
maybe kind of loud, carried not just in marches our campaigns,
but in playlists, in protest signs, and in our constitutional republic,
(02:58):
where the right to free speech and expresssion remains sacred.
The cultural pulse matters because when the system fails to
hear the spoken word, sometimes it's the rhythm of a song,
are the silence of the cardboard sign that breaks through.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
The world. Fun ignise for Congressmans in circles, Will politicians.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
Arguing lot all.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
Fight for our constitutional republic?
Speaker 2 (03:45):
Of it happened in the echo chambers.
Speaker 4 (03:49):
It happened some.
Speaker 5 (03:51):
It happens.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
Every movement, every live stream, everywhere else.
Speaker 6 (04:05):
Well, fighting back with God.
Speaker 7 (04:10):
Isn't just a food good.
Speaker 1 (04:11):
It's a movement.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
If you're tired the bread on the lines and the
cap go with Peter boy.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
King, Welcome back to go write news where liberty still lives.
Before we dive into the meat of what's happening in
America today, let me welcome you back to go write news.
And this is hashtag go right with Peter Boykin. If
you're here, then you're already asking the questions most people
(04:46):
are too afraid to consider. You're not just looking for headlines.
You're looking for answers, for clarity, for truth, and not
the kind handed down from a government script are filtered
through a social media algorithmic, but the kind grounded in
the principles of our constitutional republic, and go write news.
(05:07):
We don't just chase clint We don't chase clicks. We
chase accountability. We lean right, but we never lean away
from calling out corruption, even when it comes from our
own side. We believe in lawful liberty, free speech, and
the power of the people to reshape their nation from
(05:28):
the ground up. So buckle up because what you're about,
the reader here is not just reporting, it's a recording.
You can also read this on go ritnews dot com
as well. But thank you for tuning in to this podcast.
How digital warriors are replacing political machines. The energy on
(05:51):
our streets is no longer confined to chants and marches.
It's being channeled into systems, strategies, and screens. But many
ones dismissed as mere online noise has transformed to the
backbone of civic activism. Gone are the days when protests
means chaotic crowds or viral videos without structure. The modern
(06:14):
civil rights movement is a coordinated engine of civic engagement.
It is built through nonprofit coalitions, legal aid centers, grassroots organizers,
local anthacy chapters, and digital platforms. These movements do not
just appear. They are built brick by brick, with strategic
(06:35):
planning and constitutional protections as their foundation. These digital lines
front lines of civic resistance, and now the new battlefield
is in your pocket. More Americans get their news from
a phone than a newspaper. Platforms like x True, Social, Facebook, Instagram, Rumble, TikTok,
(06:57):
and YouTube are no longer just for entertainment. They are
the new town Square. Just to recall a video I
saw and happened thirty years ago where Bill Gates and
a lot of people don't like Bill Gates, but Bill
Gates thirty years ago was talking to David Letterman talking
about the Internet and how fortunate it was, and people
(07:19):
were laughing at the Internet. They were laughing at why
don't we just use the radio, Why don't we use
a tape recorder. Well, the internet can bring you a
baseball game that you can watch it anytime, and people
are going to websites and shopping there. In thirty years time,
just how much things have changed. No one's laughing anymore.
(07:41):
So the Internet is where go write news lives. We
don't rely on corporate donors or party talking points. I mean,
you can donate to us if you want to at
a dollar sign, go write news on cash app. But
we are tech savvy, fiercely independent, and unapologetically costal. We
(08:01):
use phones, laptops, podcasts, live screams, memes, songs, and articles
to amplify truth where mainstream media silences us. Every tweet,
every stream, every post is a digital pamphlet for liberty,
just like the ink stained pans of patriots two hundred
years ago, two hundred and fifty, and only now coded
(08:25):
in HTML instead of quill and parchment. Elon Musk recently asked,
how many times have you walked into a room and
literally everyone was just staring at their phone. That's not
a criticism, that's an opportunity because if everyone is looking
(08:46):
at their phone, we have a direct channel to reach
their minds. I don't have to wait for them to
flip on their television or click on a certain channel.
They're probably gonna run against put I put out. The
device used to distract can be used to awaken. And
while the left flood speeds with curated narratives, we flood
(09:08):
them with facts and fearless constitutional commentary. We meet the
people where they are, and we bring the republic with us,
turning protests in the policy. What begins online does not
end there. Civil rights activists today are not content with
likes and shares. They are registering voters, crafting legislation, attending
(09:32):
city council meetings and endorsing candidates who reflect grassroots values
and election seasons. Right around the corner again, folks. In
states across the country, protests have directly led to police
reform proposals mandating transparency and accountability. Finally, focused education and
initiatives at school board levels, budget shifts towards local investment
(09:56):
and infrastructure. Elected officials facing we call our defeat due
to the pressure from organized civil groups. Can the constitution
still protect protesters who follow the law? I mean a
lot of people have this question about after January sixth.
This is a participarty constitutionalism in action. It proves that
(10:18):
when citizens act within the bounds of lawful liberty, they
can shape policy not through threats, but through persistence. And
that is precisely what our constitutional republic was designed to protect.
Is political discourse so toxic it's destroying the constitution? You
(10:40):
might ask. The streets may be organized, but the wholes
of power are more chaotic than ever. The tone of
political leadership has turned better, and the consequences are real.
A comprehensive study analyzing over eighteen million tweets from political
leap across the West revealed a sharp increase in toxic rhetoric.
(11:05):
Social issues, immigration, illegal or illegal, and the lgbt Q
are topics that topped the list of inflammatory content, especially
among radical right and fringe radical left opposition figures. The
authors found that this incivility spikes during off election periods
(11:27):
when politicians leave no one's watching, and drops only during
times of shared crisis. In the United States, research gate
confirms a twenty three percent rise in civility over ten
years among members of Congress. Political leaders are abandoning decorum
in favor of viraluml virility, choosing inflammatory language that fractures
(11:53):
debate instead of falstering, so as Washington had forgotten how
to have a civil debate. As a constitutionalist for liberty,
I find this trend dangerous. The more are political elites
shout past each other, the less room is left for
meaningful deliberation. And when we lose deliberation, we lose the
(12:18):
very character of our Republican and that puts civil rights
discord at risk. Meanwhile, identity based issues and social issues,
once debated through policy, are now battle grouts for clickbait
rather than solution oriented dalealogue. We see wedge issues weaponized
against entire demographics, and I've been saying it. I've been
(12:40):
saying it. I fight extremism on both sides, and I
fight against generalization. I know sometimes I might feel inclined
to do that as well, but I try to look
at people as individuals. Civil rights becomes collateral damage in
the war for Rea tweeks. Are we sacrificing individual rights
for political theater? This is just decisive? Divisive? It isn't.
(13:07):
I mean, this is not just divisive, folks, it is destructive.
The Constitution recognizes individual rights and we lose on that
and we lose that focus. When we lose that focus,
we lose our compts. So is anyone listening to the
(13:28):
voters who could decide it all? Been saying this for years.
Amid this noise, there is a silent majority getting louder,
folks being overlooked by both parties. I mean, look at
out el Buss talking about trying to open up his
own third party. Now he's upset at both sides. They
don't chant at rallies or screen on cable news. Well
(13:52):
some do now they just walk away from the system
entirely while the media obsesses over red versus Blue. Millions
of Americans have walked away from both parties. Unaffiliated voters
now make up one of the largest and most unpredictable
voter blocks in the country, especially here in North Carolina.
(14:13):
I think they're the largest group, and yet both major
parties continue to ignore them. That's because the people who
show up the local meetings here are every GOP or Democrat.
They're in their own world. They don't even understand the voters.
These voters aren't apathetic, they're exhausted. They're sick of being
told they must choose between a corrupt establishment on the
(14:35):
left or a spineless echo chamber on the right, or
vice versa. They want solutions, they want integrity, they want action,
and most importantly, they want someone who sees them. I
see you will ever party wake up before it's too late.
(14:56):
As someone who speaks with constitutionalist conservatives and moderates daily,
there's a few liberals. I can say this clearly. If
neither party begins to engage the unaffiliated with transparency and
real reform, they will lose not just elections, they will
lose the country. Now shifting a little bit different, folks,
(15:19):
and this is something you we've been doing here at
GO Write News. Are pop anthems the soundtrack to American anxiety.
Cultural culture doesn't just react to crisis, it often predicts it,
and right now the music charts say more about American
discontent than most pundits ever will. The genre, once defined
(15:43):
by Lady Gaga, Kesha Rihanna, and Bruno Mars, is booming again,
not because the economy is collapsing, but because the people
feel like it is. I mean, it's really not. There's
a lot of reports of Blue Maga being Democrats who
are now admitting that Donald Trump was right and the
(16:05):
economy is not that bad. Things aren't going hell, but
the music is different and a lot of people still
feel it. Streaming data from Lumnite shows a six point
four percent spike in recession era pop music this summer.
(16:26):
Social media reflects the mood with trends like party like,
you can't afford rent, and escape through the beat. This
is more than a vibe, that is a collective excel
from a generation weighed down by inflation, housing insecurity, student debt,
and digital burner. The United States may not be in
(16:46):
a formal recession. It's not We're always complaining about the economy,
but millions fill the crunch of stagnation. Some people are
trying to bring bringing breaking our economy back. Some people
are trying to bring it back and help us out.
So can dancing through the chaos be a form of
resistance recession? Pomp is not a warning siren, It is
(17:11):
a release vouve. Americans are dancing their way through the discomfort,
refusing to let stress to find there that too is patriotic,
that too is protest And folks go write news uses
music to power the resistance. We play it in the background,
(17:32):
and we play it in our we play it in
our podcast. The fact I had one podcast they tried
to remove saying it was too much music in it.
I had to fight them on it because I said,
that is the way that I tell the news. It's new.
A lot of people laugh at some of the methods
that I use, but it's new, and I'm a pioneer.
(17:53):
And have you heard this before. Music has always been
a tool of protest unity and spirit, and that go
right use and hashtag go right for Peter boy. Can
we've embraced this power for every article like this when
we're creating songs, real songs, not jingles, not background noise,
some background instrumentals to keep you pumping. But these are
(18:15):
politically charged anthems that carry the same message as you
read here, translated into sound. So if you don't hear
the sounds that are coming out of my mouth, maybe
you can hear the sounds that are singing. Our tracks
combine rock, hounce, house music, rap, and americanum all sorts
of other genres to amplify our commentary. They are protest ballads,
(18:40):
rallying cries, and sonic reminders that liberty is not just
a concept, it is a movement. We released them alongside
our articles to drive the message deeper, to reach people
who might not read but will listen. This is cultural
commentary turned into rhythm. This is protest turned into melody.
(19:03):
This is hashtag go right with Peter Boykin, fighting for
liberty with every beat. We'll be right back and you
can listen to this protest song.
Speaker 4 (19:14):
Oh walking down the streets with the world on fire,
(19:39):
our screen in silence, a new kind desire.
Speaker 7 (19:42):
I've gotten a sign handpainted, It's all real.
Speaker 8 (19:45):
It's the system that's time to see music splarance on
the passing car Rihanna's Got Me Dreaming?
Speaker 9 (19:52):
Can we juve that far?
Speaker 1 (19:54):
We're both making stakements, no words to say, protesting in
a hallway, in a lot of the Can a.
Speaker 7 (20:01):
Song beat protest?
Speaker 5 (20:03):
You bet everything?
Speaker 9 (20:05):
Make you can tell them We're tending through the ko
Joy went to space.
Speaker 7 (20:10):
It's up a latship, it's connedy.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
Rising out from the screen. Nor we're playing games.
Speaker 5 (20:26):
We're speaking louder than their billion dollar names. Stabilities gone,
but we walked back down. We're building this republic starting from.
Speaker 4 (20:34):
The ground, so that's the right by while we're building
bridges stronger than their narratives, tearing down the ridges were unaffiliated.
We're not giving in our voices out of.
Speaker 9 (20:44):
Sound of freeze, song beats protest, you bet every you
can tell them, We're tending through the check of joy.
Speaker 6 (20:57):
The space collusion, recessions, our anthem, screaming truth beats.
Speaker 5 (21:15):
Remind us where the generation shut.
Speaker 4 (21:17):
Up, pushing forward, never looking back.
Speaker 6 (21:20):
We're not a lower one attack.
Speaker 8 (21:24):
So turn pick up the sign. It's our time to rise,
It's our time to shine music memes and move do
night go right.
Speaker 6 (21:33):
We'll fight through.
Speaker 7 (21:38):
Can a song be protest?
Speaker 9 (21:40):
You beat it?
Speaker 7 (21:41):
Can it beats a metal thing to the man, or
doesn't through the Kott.
Speaker 5 (21:56):
We're tending through the k Star.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
Welcome back, folks, and thank you for listening to that
protest song. So is your summer playlist louder than Congress?
This is the hashtag go right? Peter boy Can commentary.
Let's be honest. If you walk down the street in
America right now, you're more likely to hear Rihanna than
reason coming out of Washington, DC. You hear music, you
(22:40):
hear movement, but from Congress, static gridlock, noise. And yet
in twenty twenty five, that summer playlist blaring from a
car window might be saying more about the state of
our constitutional republic than any televised hearing ever cook While
(23:00):
politicians bicker in marble halls, that teenage girl is standing
on a sidewalk with a hand painted sign that says
fix the system. While lawmakers posture on cable news everyday,
Americans are live streaming school board meetings, registering voters, and
holding up their phones like lanterns in the dark. And
(23:24):
here's the truth. They don't want you to hear. You
and I are making more impact with memes and microphones
than they are with their million dollar donors. It seems
like every day, they're just asking you for money where
they're delivering. We are a nation that scrolls, swipes, and streams.
(23:47):
And while the left floods the Internet with identity driven
narratives and the right often retreats in the silence are chaos.
We at go write news are meeting the people where
they are, in the palm of their hand. We use
every tool they gave us, phones, laptops, podcasts, AI hosts, livestreams, memes, music, truth.
(24:18):
We don't just comment, we confront. You want to talk
about noise the political elite. The elite political class has
created a circus, spread and circus of toxic rhetoric. A
study of over eighteen million tweets from Western leaders shows
an explosion in political incibility, especially around social issues, immigration,
(24:44):
legal and illegal, and the LGBTQ. These aren't discussions, they're
digital weapons. So if Congress can't speak with civility, what
hope do we have for policy? And while that's happened,
the largest and most powerful political force in America continues
(25:05):
to be ignored, the unaffiliated voter. Especially here in North Carolina,
we definitely feel the unaffiliated voter. These are the people
who walked away from the party machines, not because they
stopped carry because they care too much. They're tired of
(25:25):
being told to pick between a corrupted left and a
collapsing right, or vice versa. They're not radicals, they're not bots.
They are the future. And both parties are too busy
playing games to notice, and a lot of times they're
not even playing the same game. And they totally threw
out sportsmanship a long time ago. So ask yourself, are
(25:49):
the parties listening or are they just screaming into a
void while the rest of us build something better without them?
Now add this in recession pop, you just listen to
them one a genre that screams joy while whispering despair.
It's back why because people don't need a news anchor
(26:09):
to tell them something's wrong. They fill it and their
rent and their gas tank, and their grocery bill and
their utility bill. They fill it in their bones, and
they have to dance right through it. They dance through
it because sometimes the only way to survive the weight
(26:30):
is to move with it. Can a pop song really
be a protest? You bet it can. Every beat is
a middle finger to the system that told them to
shut up and get it on every verse is a
declaration that we're here. We're still here, still standing, still free,
(26:51):
and I know you're here in the Alton John still
standing better than I have a bin, all right. And
while the bureaucrats monck this is noise, I'll say it
loud and clear. It's not noise. It's a warning shot.
When Congress ignores the people, the people sing louder. When
(27:13):
politicians bury the truth, we live stream. When they ignore
the unaffiliated, we organize them, and when they try to
divide us, we remix unity with rhythm and resolve. This
is not the silence of apathy. It is the sound
of awakening. And if your summer playlist is louder than Congress, maybe,
(27:35):
just maybe, it's because the people are finally starting to leave.
So turn up the volume, pick up the sign long in,
speak out, and most of all, you guessed it, go right.
God bless everybody. Thanks for listening to this podcast and
check us out on go rightnews dot com. You can
(27:57):
donate at dollar sign go right News on cash app,
and you can check out this podcast on rumble dot
com and Spotify and everywhere else that you can find
a podcast. God Bless everybody.
Speaker 3 (28:11):
Welcome them too, right with Peter Boyca.
Speaker 5 (28:34):
Let's face it, if you work down the street in
America today, you're more likely to here. He know the
reason coming out of Washington, it's a movement. Well, Congress,
just static, gridlock, noise.
Speaker 9 (28:45):
But here's the truth.
Speaker 3 (28:46):
They won't tell yell your summer playlist, that's all blaring
from the car might just say more about the state
of our constitution or republic than any hearing ever.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
Well, the baker in marble halls. We're out here.
Speaker 3 (29:00):
Hand painted signs, live streaming.
Speaker 7 (29:03):
And speaking truth.
Speaker 5 (29:04):
The politicians can hear us, we're hearing. We're taking back
the navity. We're building a movement on phones, memes and truth.
Speaker 1 (29:13):
And here's the Cancker.
Speaker 6 (29:14):
They don't want you to know this, but we're making more.
Speaker 2 (29:17):
Impact with memes and microphones than they are with million.
Speaker 4 (29:21):
Dollars to.
Speaker 1 (29:24):
Can a pop song be protest?
Speaker 2 (29:26):
You bet it can't.
Speaker 5 (29:37):
When they ignore us, we sing louder.
Speaker 9 (29:40):
When they bury the truth, we live stream, and when.
Speaker 3 (29:43):
They do find us, we come together with a rhythm.
Speaker 6 (29:46):
Everson shurt it up all right, doug Hie, Dougie, do
(30:11):
hide Hi