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November 11, 2025 β€’ 19 mins
The Government Is Shut Down with Promises to Reopen, But Why Are Americans Still Going Hungry?

Are We Prepared to Survive Ourselves?

When the Government Shuts Down, So Does the Dinner Table

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#GoRight with Peter Boykin Commentary: The government is still shut down, and even when it reopens, millions of Americans will still be waiting. Waiting for SNAP benefits, waiting for paychecks, waiting for real leadership that puts the people first. The lights in Washington might come back on, but for many families, the fridge will still be empty. Once upon a time, survival meant skill, not paperwork. Families prepared for hard times with their hands, not handouts. Now, our livelihoods depend on the decisions of politicians who have never gone hungry. Democrats sell dependency disguised as compassion. Republicans argue about social issues while ignoring the economy. Both sides profit from fear while Americans struggle to feed their families.

This #GoRight with Peter Boykin podcast calls out the truth: when the government shuts down, the dinner table should not. And when it finally reopens, no American should still be waiting for their next meal. It is time to rebuild self-reliance, accountability, and faith in each other, not the system that keeps failing us. Because freedom isn’t measured by what you get from government, it’s measured by what you can survive without it.

#GoRight with Peter Boykin, where truth still matters, and freedom still means responsibility. #GoRight, #PeterBoykin, #GoRightNews, #WeThePeople, #GovernmentShutdown, #SNAPBenefits, #FoodAssistance, #EconomicCrisis, #AmericanFamilies, #FreedomAndResponsibility, #PoliticalAccountability, #SelfReliance, #FightForFreedom, #SaveTheRepublic, #TruthOverTribes, #ConservativeVoices, #GoRightWithPeterBoykin

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
When the government shuts down, so does the dinner cable.
As the government shut down collides with winter, millions on
food assistants face hunger while Democrats exploit the chaos and
Republicans loose focus. This hashtag go right commentary asks if

(00:23):
America can still stand on its own are if dependency
has already won? Remember we fight for what's right, because
it's time to go right. Hi, I'm Peter Boykin, and
this is hashtag go right with Peter Boykin. I'm asking
today are we prepared to survive ourselves? This is a

(00:46):
hashtag go right with Peter Boykin commentary. Before I continue
with the commentary, I we'll let you know that it
does seem like that the government will be reopening shortly.
That's the new news as I record this podcast. Hopefully
this time we can go a lot longer without being
shut down on the fear shut down in again. But

(01:08):
this is a note of how long it takes to
get people to decide with each other, and the people suffer.
So let's be honest. America has gotten solved. We have
traded grit for convenience, community for dependency, and resilience for comfort.

(01:29):
When the government stops. The nation freezes. When the supply
chain breaks, our shelves go empty, and we have become
a society that cannot last a week without a system
we can no longer control. We were once a people
who prepared for winter by working, story and helping each other.
Now we prepare by complaining and waiting for Washington to act.

(01:54):
This is not just a shutdown, It is a mirror,
a reflection of how fragile we have become. Both parties,
both political parties, are failing in their own way. The
Democrats exploit every crisis, using fear as currency. They promise
to feed and protect you, but only if you keep

(02:16):
them in power. The Republicans too often ignore real suffering
while chasing symbolic fights. While they argue about bathrooms and
drag shows, people are struggling to pay rent and buy groceries.
The result is a vacuum of leadership, and into that

(02:36):
vacuum steps dependency. When people lose faith in their ability
to provide for themselves, they turn to whoever promises the
easiest answer. That is how socialism grows, and that is
how freedom died. This is the lesson of every civilization
that forgot the value of work and self reliance. Rome

(03:00):
had bred in circuses. We have subsidies and streaming. If
the SNAP program stalls this winter, hopefully it won't, the
story will not just be about hunger. It will be
about the erosion of a culture that once took pride
in survival, culture that built barns before winter, not political

(03:22):
excuses after. Freedom is not about how much help you
can get. It is about how much you can endure
without it. And when the government shuts down. Do you
have enough to feed your family? Do you know your
neighbor well enough to share what you have? Do you
have skills that matter when systems fail? These are the

(03:46):
questions America must ask before another crisis arrives. Our republic
was not built by bureaucracts. It was built by farmers, workers,
and dreamers who understood that liberty means responsibility. If we
want to keep that liberty, we must restore that responsibility.

(04:08):
We must once again become a nation that knows how
to survive without waiting for orders are handouts. Freedom is
not fragile, but people can be, and the only way
to protect it is to grow strong again. When the
government shuts down, it should not take your willpower with it,

(04:33):
because the people who depend on Washington for their next
meal are not free, They are subjects. Let us not
become subjects of a failing system. Let us become citizens
of republic worth defending. And that is the real American
comeback story.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
She's standing in the check out line, empty shelters, closing time.
The lights are on, but hope feels dim. No one's
answering from Washington. They say the budge is just today,
but her baby still needs milk today, and flags still away.
Pride feels tone when leaders forget what freedoms for you
talk about eight percent it away. The strangers are crossing notions.

Speaker 3 (05:41):
Gray, what family is here?

Speaker 4 (05:42):
Just fade to boo, Tell me who's protecting who? I
can see through the shutdown, through the noise in the blade.
They threw her around forty million arts, left out in
the core. Mother, it's still dying and the truth grows on.
You can't out of pay you. It's again, boys still leading,
Fly's broke again, joint.

Speaker 3 (06:00):
I can see it through.

Speaker 5 (06:04):
Yeah, I can see you through the shutdown.

Speaker 3 (06:07):
Project project checking project project.

Speaker 2 (06:14):
Politicians play their games straight and life of party fame.

Speaker 3 (06:19):
They call it progress.

Speaker 4 (06:20):
I call it sin, I shouldren start our speech. Displained,
you will no loss forgets your mon send food abroad,
while hung the scroll, whether or it's just land, this
world's don't know.

Speaker 5 (06:30):
We have some lower people stand alone.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
He posts the promises for the feet, but none of
them buy what citizens need.

Speaker 4 (06:37):
All the filters can't disguise the true reflected in ours.

Speaker 5 (06:43):
I can see it through the shutdown, through the noise
and the flame they brown. Forty million left down in
the coal, while there is still done, and the truth grows.
All you cannot pay you. It's all you can the
boys to plead him fully produce joy. I can see through, yeah,
through the shut down.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
We don need handouts. We need a hand to build
this promise to heal this land.

Speaker 4 (07:12):
It's not red a pool, it's red, white and true.

Speaker 3 (07:14):
And the ones who work still need you. If we
can find the world, we can feed alone. If we
can send rockets, we can send a palm.

Speaker 5 (07:21):
The greatest nation shouldn't fall apart from a shutdown bill.

Speaker 6 (07:24):
We're broken.

Speaker 5 (07:29):
I can see it through the shutdown, through the light
that holding nation down. Every boy stag crimes, every dream
that brace and still believes in what it says, you
can let the truth from me. You we can spread
a little steel shine through it. I can see it through.

Speaker 7 (07:48):
I can see you through the shutdown down.

Speaker 4 (07:58):
No, no, if you okay, we're still standing and we're still.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
For every citizen.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
You fuck God, We'll.

Speaker 4 (08:11):
Go right on your mind.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
You it's your.

Speaker 4 (08:18):
I can see you through the sun.

Speaker 7 (08:20):
Chop, doub the choppum, chuck down up, dum to chuck,
tell me to chuck, chop chopping up, chop up.

Speaker 3 (09:01):
Once upon a time, survival men's skill, not paperwork. When
the first chill of November swept across early America, families
didn't panic. They prepared, They chop, would preserve food, and
relied on their hands, not Washington. Fast forward to today,

(09:22):
and the story has changed. As another government shut down
drags into the cold months of November and December, millions
of Americans on food assistants face uncertainty about their next meal.
This is not just a bureaucratic snag. It is a
sign a warning of how fragile we have become from

(09:45):
self reliance to system reliance. The modern American supply chain
feeds us, clothes us, and heats our homes. But the
more efficient it became the more dependent we grew. When
that system stalls, there is no fallback, no SMA, no guard,
and no community barn, just shells waiting for trucks that
may not come, and families waiting for payments that may

(10:07):
never arrive. Our nation's progress brought comfort, but it also
brought weakness. We built a culture where survival depends not
on grid but on gridlock. And when politicians can't get along,
ordinary people pay the price. It's easy to say get
a job, but tell that to a mother who can't
afford the bus to want. Tell that to a man

(10:29):
who works full time and still can't feed his family.
For many, it's not laziness, it's logistics. It's economics, a
system that rewards dependency and punishes ambition. We need compassion
without captivity, help without handcuffs, a bridge not a destination,

(10:50):
and the power vacuum. Now look at the politics. Fresh
elections just reshape the landscape, and not in the direction
Republicans hope. Democrats are explored the chaos. They paint themselves
as the saviors of the poor, the defenders of stability,
the champions of compassion. But history tells a different story.

(11:10):
Look at California drowning in taxes, homelessness, and failed programs.
Promises of compassion turned into factories of dependency. Meanwhile, the
Republican Party keeps losing sight of the mission, distracted by
social crusades instead of economic ones. While the left promises paychecks,
the right argues about pronouns and people hungry, tired, and broke,

(11:33):
or voting for whoever feeds them first. This is not
a political strategy, it's political suicide. In recent elections, both
parties proved one thing when the system fails, desperation wins.
Democrats promise comfort through control. Republicans preach freedom but forget responsibility.

(11:57):
California keeps expanding welfare, and yet poverty remains sky high.
In New York, socialist candidates win on the promise of
free transit in housing. Voters are not stupid, they are starving.
They will follow whoever feeds them, even if that path
leads to dependency. The same city that once vowed never
forget after nine to eleven has now forgotten what made

(12:20):
it strong. New York has traded resilience for rhetoric, unity
for ideology. Freedom is not inherited, it is maintained and
When a nation forgets what made it strong, it begins
to decay from within. Why Trump won't save New York.
Donald Trump made it clear he will not rescue cities

(12:43):
that refuse to help themselves, And honestly, that makes sense.
Why should taxpayers and free states fund the failure of
those that mock their values? Why feed the hands that
vote to destroy the very prosperity they depend on. Trump's
message is not cruelty sequence. If you reward failure, you
guarantee it. If you keep bailing out broken systems, they

(13:05):
will never stand. Aid must come with accountability. Compassion must
come with common sense. The social contract must return to balance,
or there will be nothing left to safe When the
government shuts.

Speaker 6 (13:43):
You never believe.

Speaker 3 (13:46):
You try to breathe me, But look where I am now,
still stand strong.

Speaker 5 (13:54):
Through yours.

Speaker 3 (13:56):
Though they shave me, silence, taw me.

Speaker 7 (14:01):
Where I.

Speaker 6 (14:04):
There were nights I couldn't breathe, dreams fading quietly beneath me.
But I kept walking through the paint, found the sun
inside the ring. Every cheer became a prayer, every scar.

Speaker 3 (14:18):
Brood hours there you can undo what I've become.

Speaker 4 (14:23):
I'm still rising with the morning sun.

Speaker 6 (14:27):
I'm still standing, shining, and I'm broken.

Speaker 7 (14:33):
Everyone every word left us smoking.

Speaker 3 (14:38):
He tried to pull me, try to drag me.

Speaker 6 (14:43):
I'm still stand strong. Shadows tried to steal my life,
but I learned to dance with the Nighty it goes
a down, they fade away when I.

Speaker 4 (15:05):
Hear my heart say, I'm okay.

Speaker 6 (15:09):
You can't steal my song, you can't change you up,
be calm. I found peace in the phone, and I'm strong.
I do it, still stand in and I'm shaking. I'm broken.
Every dream I lost has been walking. You try to

(15:32):
break me, but somehow I'm still standing strong, still stand strong,

(16:07):
Still standing strong, still standing strong, still standing, and I'll.

Speaker 7 (16:21):
Go pop at Fun Fun, Pop's on.

Speaker 2 (16:43):
That's on.

Speaker 8 (16:46):
That bo.

Speaker 3 (17:11):
Welcome to Go Right with Peter boy King.

Speaker 6 (17:18):
We meant the truth.

Speaker 5 (17:23):
Now is the time.

Speaker 3 (17:28):
Go right? News come transparency.

Speaker 7 (17:38):
The car.

Speaker 8 (17:40):
A constitution, no apublic standing so insergrees ride in the truebly,
but more together we ride didn't what we stand for.

(18:03):
Questions will rise, we will back down for transparency.

Speaker 5 (18:12):
Let's bring it to tax
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