Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're tuned to tap into the truth with Tim Tap.
Stay tuned right here, Tim tap into the truth right here,
right now.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
In command code verified, he would.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
Say, it's in a true stage.
Speaker 4 (00:27):
It's not because the bone walls you way.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
She's wanted to.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
Help us blue bread, she said, Boss to lunch governments
and tell me where the constitution went. Bill A Rights
is just hanging by the bread.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
So lady, people try.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
To cross the politicians able to do. Too many buds
up in station love.
Speaker 5 (00:59):
I've got.
Speaker 6 (01:02):
Either way.
Speaker 4 (01:04):
That rule by the damn.
Speaker 5 (01:12):
Check your right to self defense, sing your sign that
they don't make sense.
Speaker 4 (01:19):
Respond, will not damn guns, all the old.
Speaker 7 (01:26):
Asta, all the bids made out of the shorts with
the real health pain.
Speaker 6 (01:38):
Either way.
Speaker 4 (01:40):
That rule by the dam In a way God, I
(02:36):
will all be the tanu.
Speaker 8 (02:39):
When Hello, and welcome to today's broadcast of Tapping to
the Truth. Hope you're having a fantastic day wherever you
are and whatever you may be doing. With all the
usual caveats, of course, but he was always on. You
were ever so humble and mostly peaceful. Host Tim Tap
coming to you alive from historic Rome County, Tennessee. And
(03:00):
we are indeed broadcasting live worldwide thanks to great digital
platforms like the key Star Talk Radio Network, Liberty Talk FM,
and the Vera Networks, all of them broadcasting US loud
and proud around the world. So very glad to have
each and every one of you with us as we
(03:21):
do that. And also the chance you might be listening
live if you happen to be driving around in the Columbia,
South Carolina area, if you've tuned US in and wc
ET FM and beautiful, beautiful Columbia, South Carolina. I love
that place, by the way. I don't get over there
often enough, but I definitely enjoy it. Oh right, with
(03:45):
that being said, we're burreling quickly towards Independence Day. We've
just got a few days remaining in this month. It
is Friday, and we are well I was about to
say guaranteed, but maybe I'll hold off on that. We're
most likely going to have a really good Friday night
(04:08):
show here. We're scheduled to be joined by mister Rick Berman.
He is of course on the board of the R
A M Veterans Foundation, and we're going to be talking
about their efforts to try and make certain that you guys,
if you're looking during this patriotic time of year to
maybe sow some appreciation for our veterans. They've created a
(04:33):
site to help make your donations count better, I mean,
a little smarter in the giving. It's called Charities for
Vets and and we'll be talking about that. Then later
we're scheduled to be joined by doctor kim Metcalf and
she is of course a child and family psychiatrist, and
(04:55):
we're gonna be talking about the impact of the United
States versus scare METI should be interesting what her particular
thoughts are on it, given her field or trying to
help families cope with things. And then later in the
second hour, we are scheduled to be joined by the
purveyor of the Edwards Notebooks, the host of the Ron
(05:19):
Edwards American Experience. Yes, that's right, we will be joined,
as is the tradition on the final Friday of the month,
by American patriot and good friend mister Ron Edwards. So
definitely looking forward to all that. Before we get started, though,
and bring on our first guest, I do have to
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The number is eight four four ninety seven seven gold.
That's eight four four ninety seven seven four six five three.
But that being said, it is now time to welcome
onto the show a gentleman who has been working for
quite a while now to try to help make certain
(08:41):
that we honored promises to our veterans that the government
hasn't always lived up to. He's done this as being
an executive director for the RAM Foundation, and I'm very
proud and honored to have him here as we move
into one of the more patriotic weeks of the year,
(09:02):
as we look to celebrate our independence. Ladies and gentlemen,
please welcome to the show mister Rick Berman Rick. Thank
you so much for giving up some of your very
valuable time to come speak with us today. How are you.
Speaker 6 (09:15):
I'm great, Tim, and thanks for having me.
Speaker 8 (09:18):
Oh well, it's an honor to get to speak with you.
I certainly appreciate everything you guys have been doing for
a while now, but I really did want to when
I saw the opportunity to have you come on to
talk about charities for vets, I couldn't pass it up
because I think one of the more surprising things that
(09:40):
we've come to learn since the late eighties, those of
us have been paying attention, and sometimes we tend to
forget not all charities are created equal, and sometimes we
think we're doing a lot to help certain people, and really,
at the end of the day, some of these folks
are really paying a lot of expensive those overhead salaries,
(10:01):
and not a lot of the money's actually trickling down
to where we're trying to actually help. So what you
guys are doing is you're creating a great, great way
to empower the giver to get better information and know
better where their money's going.
Speaker 6 (10:15):
Right, Yeah, exactly, Tim, and I don't think people understand
just how much money is being donated to these various organizations.
When we started this, we decided that we were just
going to focus on the top one hundred veteran charities,
because there's forty five thousand veteran charities out there and
(10:36):
it's impossible to grade them all, and a lot of
them are very small. But we decided that we'd look
at the at the top one hundred, and they collect
three billion dollars a year and that's b billions a year,
and so there's a lot of money being spent and
(10:56):
not all of it's being spent wisely, and donors don't
necessarily know about that, and so we're trying to get
them to understand which are the good guys, which are
the ones that are poorly managed. And we're not trying
to stop people from giving to the ones that they
want to give to. We just want to direct them
to the better.
Speaker 8 (11:16):
Ones, right, Yeah, and that is important information to have. Nobody,
or at least I don't think anybody is going to
give a contribution with the expectation of all right, I'm
going to give one hundred dollars. I know two dollars
is actually going to get to the veterans I'm trying
to help, and I'm okay with that. I don't think
(11:37):
too many people really want to be doing that. So
it's very valuable. When you guys started ranking and looking
at these top one hundred, did it work out pretty
much the way you expected? Or was there a name
or two? And you don't actually have to name them
if you don't feel like it. You're welcome to if
(11:58):
you want to. But was there a name or two
that really kind of surprised you at how poor of
a job they do at actually helping veterans.
Speaker 6 (12:06):
Yeah, I'll take your invitation not to mention names, because
I want people to go to the website and look
for themselves. If they just go to Charities for Vets
charitiesfor Vets dot org, you can see all one hundred
of them, and they're listed in the categories of highly recommended, recommended,
and not recommended, and they're not recommended or about forty roughly,
(12:32):
And there are names on there that are very recognizable.
And it's not to suggest that the ones that we
don't recommend are stealing money, but I oftentimes think that
some of these people just don't know how to manage money.
I mean, there are people running these multimillion dollar charities
that shouldn't be running a seven eleven, and because of that,
(12:54):
they don't just waste a lot of money. So at
the end of the day, as you said, you don't
want to give away one hundred dollars and find out
that less than ten of it is being used properly,
and the other nineties somehow just you know, goes off
into overhead or sometimes what happens is that these charities
(13:15):
spend a lot of time investing the money, but they're
not giving it to the veterans or to veteran services
like the donor intended. You know. I talked to one
manager recently of a big charity, a multimillion dollar charity,
and he said, we had all this money in reserve
(13:36):
for a rainy day fund. And I said to me,
you know, for a disabled they were handicapped veteran, it's
raining every day, so what are you waiting for? And
you know, we were just on the phone, so I
couldn't really see whether or not he was scratching his
head when I said that, But but it seemed to
me that that that was a pretty obvious thing that
(13:58):
you should be spending the money people intended, instead of
investing it overseas or in hedge funds, which is what
a lot of these guys do, and then going out
and raising more money. So that's the kind of stuff
that I find objectionable, and that's that was somewhat of
the impetus for starting this in the first place.
Speaker 8 (14:17):
Yeah, well, I mean it is one of those things
where I get some of the models allow for the
direction of these funds to help generate more publicity so
that you know about them so you're inclined to get
more donations. The investment side of things is really something
(14:38):
that I hadn't really thought about. I can see where
somebody would make the argument that justice allows us to
create a fund that we can draw from and do more.
But if you're not actively managing a fund and you
know what you're doing, that can get to be a
very risky thing. If you hire the wrong people to
manage it for you, that can be pretty risky. But regardless,
(14:59):
that still not what anybody really had in mind when
they make that contribution. When it comes to the companies
that you have delved into the range of not recommended,
would you say a lot of it is a lack
of good management or is there just an effort to
(15:25):
put too much emphasis on the overhead? I mean, are
they redirecting funds to themselves in a way, And again,
there are perfectly legitimate ways to do that, and it
still doesn't insinuate something thethereous, but just either the misapplication
or just a lack of understanding of the best way
(15:48):
to approach the situation.
Speaker 6 (15:51):
Well, you know, just like in any business, there are
people who know how to run it, and then there
are people who do a poor job. There are companies
that can bankrupt because they were run poorly. And you know,
some of these guys, they employ fundraisers, and the fundraiser
is making more money than the charity off of a
particular campaign, So nobody's watching the store in that situation.
(16:14):
Or as I said earlier, they may collect a lot
of money, but they're not spending it on the veterans.
They're just investing it and they're just building up reserves
for some other future future time. But that's not what
donors wanted to have happened with their money. The donors
wanted to have you actively doing what you're advertising said
(16:36):
you were going to do. And then of course when
it comes to overhead, you know, there are big salaries,
there are big office expenses, and some of them might say, well,
we need to do that. You know, I can't attract
I can't attract staff unless I pay big salaries. And
quite frankly, in our particular operation I'm doing, it's on
(17:00):
a volunteer basis, and most of the people that are
working for me, are working for me on a discounted rate.
So you know, we're not doing this to make money.
We're doing this because we think that it's a calling
and it's something that's appropriate to do at some point
in your life. Other people look at it differently. I
can't say it's illegal, but it certainly isn't fulfilling the
(17:24):
promise that they made to the donor.
Speaker 8 (17:26):
Right when it comes to some of the smaller outfits,
are they more frugal, Does that smaller size help keep
them more focused or is it really about the same.
Speaker 6 (17:42):
You know, Jim, that's hard for me to say because
I don't really look at them. Now. From time to
time someone does call me and ask me if I
would put them on our website because we're doing a
lot of advertising. Millions of people are seeing our ads
and they're going to our websit site every year, and
so of course, if you're a small charity, you'd like
(18:03):
to be on that website and get the exposure. But
from what they tell me, they run a pretty tight ship.
On the other hand, a lot of people say that
and then you take a hard look at it and
it doesn't quite look the way that they promoted it,
So I'm not giving you much of an answer. I
think it's a mixed bag.
Speaker 8 (18:24):
Yeah, well, I mean again, that's one of those things.
But that's also part of what's so important about charitiesforvets
dot Org is doing. It's arming us with the information
that we need to make a more informed decision when
we look at certain times a year. I tend to
think that the more patriotic holidays and days of observance
(18:48):
probably helps to have a generalized spike. So going into
Independence Day week, like we're about to go into, granted,
we've got all of next week to pretty much get there,
but is there a big spike and an actual giving
(19:08):
or is it a case where we just see a
little more advertisement and pr efforts on the part of
some of these charities.
Speaker 6 (19:20):
Well, I think that the big the big giving week,
if you will, is Veterans Day in November, and one
of the reasons is that there's a lot more news
about veterans than you know, focused on that holiday. And
of course there's some more advertising by some of the
by some of the charities, and you know it's not
all on television, it's on the internet, it's direct mail
(19:41):
that shows up in your mailbox. So I would say
that the giving pattern is reflecting how much activity there
is in the media. But Memorial Day was a big
week for us, or actually a big month for us
just recently July fourth, As you said, tim is going
to be an area again where people are focused on
(20:03):
things like war and things like you know, claiming our independence,
and you know it flows from there to looking at
the armed services. But those three holidays definitely are where
there's going to be some spikes and awareness and in giving.
Speaker 8 (20:22):
All right, Well, yeah, I usually I usually think that
there's normally like a triggering event for the creation of
something like what you guys are doing here. Obviously, I
kind of at the very top mentioned the fact that
we started seeing that a lot of charities that we
(20:45):
knew and trusted weren't exactly being the most efficient at
distributing dollars. Was there a specific incident that kind of
led you in the rest of the foundation to decide
that not only this was a worthwhile project, but it
was something that you should be doing.
Speaker 6 (21:04):
Yeah, Actually there was. I was retiring from my company.
I retired about two and a half years ago, and
I had done a lot of advocacy over the years
for clients in the environmental area, financial are labor area,
and mostly representing corporate interests. And one of the things
(21:25):
I was very much aware of are organized groups that
were on the political left, and they would oftentimes tell
people to contribute to their cause. They would promise things
that they could do, and I was aware of the
fact that they were over promising and under delivering quite frankly,
and so pretty much being familiar with that world. One evening,
(21:50):
I was just watching television and I saw the advertisement
for one of the better in charities and I thought
to myself, just curious on my part, I said, I
wonder if those groups that are collecting a lot of
money are actually doing what they say they're going to do.
And I grabbed some tax returns from some of the
big ones to see what was going on, and sure enough,
(22:11):
my eyes opened wide, and I thought, this is terrible.
And so I went to a friend of mine, Rebecca Mercer,
from the Mercer Family Foundation, and I told her what
I had discovered, and I said, does that interest you
at all? And she told me about her great uncle
who had died in the Second World War in France
fighting the Nazis, and she said, well, there's a way
(22:33):
to honor him and somehow correct the problems that we
were talking about. She said she'd be in, and I
was in personally. And so we put a million dollars
together and started this thing with research and advertising, and
then invited other people to join us. And that's what
(22:54):
we do. We do the research, we put it on
the internet. It's all for free. You don't have to
pay a subscription or a fee for our research, which
is updated all throughout the year. And now other people
contribute to us and we use the money. Almost every
dollar that we get goes into advertising to other people
(23:16):
to tell them what's going on, because there's still so
many people who contribute to charities and they don't know
what they're doing. They're just responding to an ad and
we're trying to stop that because for every dollar that
goes to a poorly run charity, we could redirect it
to one that's doing a good job for the veterans
and that's highly leveraged activity.
Speaker 8 (23:40):
Well, I have to tell you, I love what you
guys are doing, because again, you're not telling anybody what
to do or what.
Speaker 6 (23:47):
Not to do.
Speaker 8 (23:48):
You're just offering up the type of information that charitable
givers really need to have available. Informed decision making is
vital for anything worth wild, and I can't think of
a better way to try to focus and redirect to
useful fundage than for our veterans. Like I said, if
(24:10):
we're going to keep promises to any group of people,
it's the men and women who wore the uniform, who
stood opposed to who did the things that so many
Americans just won't do any more in order for us
to set back and get to enjoy the holiday upcoming,
(24:31):
and to also do the silly things Americans like to
do during our disagreements, and some of them not so silly,
some of them a little more dangerous. But you know,
without us honoring and maintaining and trying to keep promises
to our veterans and the sacrifices their families make as well,
(24:52):
it just I can't think of very many more things
that are worthwhile. So I appreciate and thank you and
everyone associated with the Foundation that's helping to make this
a reality. So again, just thank you so much. I
want to give you an opportunity to share any final
thoughts you would like to remind everybody the website again,
(25:16):
and then if there's anything else you'd like to share
social media stuff, handles and platforms, anything at all like that,
feel free to share those as well.
Speaker 6 (25:27):
Well. I'll tell you again, the website where you can
find out most of what we're about is charitiesfor Vets
dot org and on there you'll see some great retired
senior military officers who are also endorsing what we're doing. There.
(25:47):
There are some people there who are very significant in
the military, and not just one and these are people
you know who have either either gone through combat and
the Navy and the Army and the Air Force, Marines,
they're all on our website and these are all people
(26:08):
who are endorsing what we're doing. So that's a fairly
strong statement. And if anybody out there feels that what
we're doing is good and that we're stopping the waste
of money and they want to help us, well there's
a way to contribute on that website too, And as
I said, it doesn't go to pay me or anybody else.
(26:29):
It just pays for our program services that help all
these veterans.
Speaker 8 (26:36):
All right, Well, again, Rick, thank you so much for
coming on with us. Tonight and talking about this and
hopefully we can help generate some more folks going over
checking out and help better prepare everyone for getting those
dollars where they ought to be. Keep up the great work, sir,
(26:57):
and would love to continue conversation down the road sometimes
so maybe we can get you back on and continue
talking about the great work that's going on in the meanwhile.
Thank you so much and God.
Speaker 6 (27:09):
Bless thank you so much, Jim, Bye, bye bye.
Speaker 8 (27:14):
All right, ladies and gentlemen. That was mister Rick Berman.
He is the executive director of the RM Foundation. And yeah,
they're doing a lot of great stuff. If you haven't
checked out the site again, it's charitiesfor vets dot org.
It's very lively, bright, lots of American flags. I love
(27:38):
to site myself. If you happen to be listening to
the podcast after the fact that there will be a
link in the show description as usual, and if you're
listening live, well, then two choices getting jopped this down
real quick. Charities for vets dot org or come find
the show in archives. It's easy enough to do and
(28:00):
just look at the show description. You don't even have
to listen to the show again. No you're welcome to,
but you don't have to. Meanwhile, we are about to
have to take the mid our break. But before we
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we'll be right back.
Speaker 9 (29:11):
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Speaker 8 (35:46):
Alrighty ladies and gentlemen, thank you so very much for
staying with us through that very brief break, a little
bit of patriotic action, and of course a word or
two from Michael Letz who was kind enough to join
me just last night over on the Rumble live stream.
So if you missed that one, you missed a pretty
good one. Please feel free to go back and check
(36:06):
that out in archives. If you did miss it, always
appreciate you guys cross streaming and becoming part of the
show both ways. Before we move on to our next guest,
I do want to remind you that National treasure Chuck
Norris eighty five years old, and he says that Morning
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(38:22):
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of that, but that is the case. All right. With
that having been said, ladies and gentlemen, at it's time
to get back to the show, right, that's what we're
gonna do. I want to welcome a new first time guest.
She as an educational psychologist that's been working with children
(38:44):
and families for a while. Now, ladies and gentlemen, please
welcome to the show, doctor Kim Metcalf. Doctor Kim, thank
you so much for joining us this evening, and how
are you.
Speaker 9 (38:56):
I am fine, and thank you for having me all right.
Speaker 8 (39:00):
Well, I'm looking forward to the conversation. I wanted to
kind of really get into this conversation with somebody who
works in the field, and when the opportunity presented itself
to have you come on, I was thinking, this is
perfect timing. If I get a little unruly, though, just
please offer me a little grace. I tend to get
(39:22):
upset when I think of children as being victimized, and
in this particular case, sometimes I think they are being
hurt unnecessarily. But that's where your scientific background and your
time and experience will help balance out my hot headedness.
I'm afraid or I'm hoping anyway. The United States versus
(39:48):
scare Mety, we saw here in this great state of
Tennessee where I'm at, a law put in place that
bans trans medical transgender activities on minors. The Supreme Court
just upheld that decision, and this has led to a
new round of I hardly even think it's fair to
(40:12):
call it conversation because a lot of people are really
just kind of yelling past each other as opposed to
actually talking about it. But there is some serious issues
we really do need to talk about and understand. So
from your experience in the field, what do you see
as being the most important thing that maybe we're not
(40:33):
talking about when it comes to this issue.
Speaker 9 (40:37):
Well, that's a loaded question. There so much, there is
so much going on in our schools, and I look
at research. I use research to determine my positions on
something because that's what I do as professional, I have
to look at what are the best practices for children,
(41:00):
And as an educational psychologist, obviously one of my primary
concerns is how do we educate our children? And right
now we use politics to drive our educational policies rather
than research. So let me just throw a question out
(41:21):
for you. Do you think that, in a sane world,
we should be chopping off totally healthy breath from young
girls who think they might be a boy. What do
(41:42):
you think?
Speaker 8 (41:43):
Well, I'm going to say no because I usually refer
to this practice as surgical mutilations and chemical castrations. For
children who have not yet had a fair opportunity to
work their way through puberty. And I think given that
the data suggests that if you actually do have true
(42:08):
gender dysphoria without interventions, normally that kind of works itself
out by the end of puberty. Only rare occasions does
it continue past that. So that's a lot of words
to just say, yeah, I don't think that's very sane
and rational.
Speaker 9 (42:26):
Right, because you're looking at the research and we know
that the front prefrontal cortex and the brain where we
make our executive decisions, that isn't even fully developed until
someone is twenty five years old. So if you're letting,
let's look at the case of Chloe Cole. She started
(42:47):
transitioning at eleven or twelve years old. Before she was seventeen,
she had a double mass document why why are our
children going to school? And while they're in school, instead
of learning their basics, they are basically learning of all
(43:08):
the different choices they can have in life, they are
actually being abused in the school system. And actually I'm
writing a series of books right now and it's called
government sanctioned child abuse because I really do believe after
looking at the practices, After reviewing hundreds of videos of
(43:29):
parents going to parent meetings with teachers, going to school
board meetings and voicing their concerns and reading some of
the books that their children are being exposed to, and
after I myself ordered some of these books and read them,
I'm shocked. I absolutely can't believe it because we know
(43:51):
the research is very weighted on not sexualizing children, and
yet that is exactly what's happening and why is it happening.
If you look at gender identity ideology, which one of
the books that I have coming out is called big
Lie Gender Identity Ideology. And the reason why I say
(44:14):
it's a big lie is because if you look at
every tenet that underlies or undergirds that particular ideology, not one,
not one is based on scientific research. It's all opinions.
And their opinions are coming from people from within the
(44:36):
lgbt QIA plus community and Gliffen g L E.
Speaker 14 (44:43):
S N.
Speaker 9 (44:44):
They are basically a group that is pro LGBTQ I
A plus and they actually began to work with the
Obama administration and started they want to normalize LGBTQ community. Now,
I'm not going to get into whether people that are
(45:04):
gay or normal or not normal, because you know that
would be insane. But I will get into the fact
that if you are saying that it is okay for
children to use different names, which their gender, have abortions,
have condoms, have you know, free access to birth control
and puberty blockers, then I'm going to say you are insane.
(45:26):
A child cannot possibly know that they are in the
wrong body. Okay, they can't know that. Maybe as an
adult you might be able to say that, but definitely
a child does not know. They do not have enough experience,
They have no idea of what transitioning or trying to
(45:47):
transition and change their biology that it can never their
biology can never be overridden. And what people keep forgetting
is that, yes, our chromosomes make us, you know, male
or female, and those chromosomes are on every single cell
(46:08):
in your body. Every single cell in your body has
a sex cell. And that means and that's why men
and women look different. Most of us. We look at
a man or a woman. We don't have to ask
them to excuse my language, pull their pants down or
lift their dress up to decide if they're a man
or a woman. If we are in a store and
we run into a stranger and we say excuse me, sir,
(46:30):
or excuse me, ma'am. We do it all the time.
We've been doing it for years and years and years
and years and years, and now suddenly we are not
supposed to even guess at someone's gender because we should
ask them first because it's how they feel. No, it's biology,
that's it. It's just biology. So what's happened is a
(46:54):
lot of activists gotten into the schools, and it's really
started under Obama with the National Sex Standards and a
lot of pressure came in about trying to make sure
that kids in school feel welcome and they're okay even
if they're a little bit odd y're a little bit queer. Well,
(47:16):
we can do that without telling the kids that they
have to literally change their sex. So it's a huge problem.
And one of the ways I like to link that
to for people to really think about this is how
do you vote?
Speaker 6 (47:33):
Who are you voting for?
Speaker 9 (47:35):
When you vote for all this? You know progressive. I
don't know why it's progressive. It sounds to me to
be regressive where you're basically saying that you know, God
made a mistake you're in the wrong body, and now
this doctor is better than God and he's going to
fix you right up. That's abuse. Saying that we're not
(47:56):
going to let parents know. That's abuse. Kids are going
on hormone blockers and binding their breath and going on
you know, puberty blockers, hormones, all of these other things,
and their parents are not supposed to know. So these
things have side effects. I mean, as a grown woman,
(48:18):
I can't just go out and get a bunch of hormones.
I have to have all kinds of tests for that.
And yet we're giving them to children, and we don't
have any long term studies on what this does year
after year after year after year. We know the surgeries
are disastrous and they cause a lot of problems, and
we have not even looked at long term studies and
(48:42):
what's going to happen to these kids years from now.
I know that there's a group of kids that have
been they're young adults now, but they've been really speaking
up because they were transitioned while they were in school,
because there was so much pressure and talking about it.
I mean, these ideas are being implanted into the minds
of our children. These aren't just you know, you kids
(49:03):
don't wake up one day and go, oh, I think
I'm a boy. Oh I think I'm a girl. Where
did they get that from? They got it from their chachers,
they got it from school.
Speaker 6 (49:14):
And all of this.
Speaker 9 (49:15):
Oh, you're so brave and we're going to celebrate you.
Who ever heard of celebrating someone's sexuality. I don't know.
Do we have heterosexual months? And I'm so proud of
you for coming out and telling us that you're a heterosexual.
Speaker 6 (49:34):
Yay.
Speaker 9 (49:35):
I mean, it's insane if you just stop and think
about it. So what I want to say to moms
and dads and new teachers is who are you voting for?
Who are you sending to office? And some parents tell me, oh,
I'm not political. I don't get involved in politics, And
I tell them, well, it's too bad, because politics is
involved in every aspect of your life, particularly the schools.
(50:00):
If you have a strong governor, they're not going to
let all this crazy stuff go into the schools. They're
going to stop it. We have to have governors and
local officials, mayors, the school board members, everybody that we
put in office to oversee any of the policies that
(50:20):
have anything to do with education or your children. You
need to be involved and you need to understand because
there is no reason that almost fifty percent of the
kids in this country cannot read or write or do
basic maths when they graduate. But guess what they can
tell you what fisthgender is, transgender is. They can tell
(50:41):
you about all kinds of sex toys. They can tell
you their right to have an abortion, and the right
to have condom, and their right to not tell their
parents what they're doing sexually. They can do that, but
they can't read, and they can't write, and they can't
comprehend what they're reading. And those studies are coming out
pretty clear. So we're seeing the damage of all this nonsense.
(51:06):
We're seeing it now. It's coming out. You know, have
you ever listened to kids on a college campus when
somebody when a conservative tries to go visit a college campus.
Have you ever listened and they're screening. They don't want
to hear another opinion, They don't want to hear anything else.
They have been completely brainwashed. And if parents aren't really
(51:31):
watching it, they just want to be Oh, I want
to be you know, I want to be inclusive. I
want to be loving. Well, that's fine. I mean, of
course we want to be inclusive and loving, but are
there any boundaries at all? I mean, how about we
have a few murderers come to the school and talk
to our children, because that's inclusive. How about we have
(51:51):
to keep pedophiles. I mean, that's how insane it is.
Speaker 6 (51:56):
Now.
Speaker 8 (51:56):
The sad part there is I think some of these
same people please wishing this at the school level, would
like to have pedophiles come in, and probably are having
them come in. It's just another sexual preference.
Speaker 6 (52:10):
Doc.
Speaker 8 (52:11):
Yeah, I can't quite make up my mind though, which
aspect is worse, because again, these kids are the victims
in the scenario. They're being attacked before they have the
cognitive ability to really focus in and apply critical thinking.
In fact, I think critical thinking has been banned from
(52:31):
most public schools at this point. But you've got some
parents who are literally bullied into it in believing this idea.
And I know you've probably heard this several times. Would
you rather have a dead son or a living daughter?
And then the other side I think might be worse.
(52:53):
But I can't quite make up my mind. And that's
the ones where the parents are so busy wanting to
be inclusive, and they see it almost as a status
symbol to have a child that is clear by non
binary or trans. So they're almost pushing their children into it,
(53:17):
and they pray fall victim that way. But either way,
there are trusted authority figures that aren't doing their due
diligence to protect the children in these situations.
Speaker 9 (53:30):
Yes, and you're right, a lot of parents have been bullied.
They've been teased, they've been put down, they've been told,
just like you said, I've heard it over and over again,
would you rather have a dead son or a live daughter,
or a live daughter and a dead son. And that
is bullying. That's horrible. And this is coming from school
counselors and administrators and teachers. And they're not psychologists, they're
(53:54):
not psychiatrists, they're certainly not pediatricians. They're teachers and they
should stay in our own lane. And I do want
to say this, there are a lot of teachers that
are against all of this, but they're also bullied. You know,
if they speak up, they're called transphobes or homophobes and
different things like that. And I have gay friends. I
(54:17):
have nothing against the gay community. They my brothers and
my sisters and I, you know, we but we don't
have to teach that we can mutilate our children in
order to show that we're accepting. The better thing would
be to teach our kids to love themselves for who
(54:38):
they are, right. I mean, if you're think about I
don't know, and I don't know what your age is,
but when I was growing up, I didn't like certain
things on my body, right. I can't imagine my parents going, yeah,
let's cut off your feet and give you a smaller size.
Had a really big feet, So you know, we wouldn't
do something like that. When kids have big nose and
(55:00):
they tell their parents, I want to have a nose job,
you know your parents are not going to take you
at seven years old and change your nose, let's hope
not right. But now suddenly to change your sex is okay.
Can't go get a tattoo without a parent's permission, you
(55:22):
can't go you know, can't join the service. There's certain
things you cannot do. But yet, as a child, you
can absolutely decide that you're in the long body, and
there's no way they can decide that. There's no way
they would know that it's impossible.
Speaker 8 (55:42):
Yeah, it absolutely drives me that some of these people
talk about these children at age five that they already
know these important things, when at age fifteen they're only
halfway through puberty. If that are, a child does not
(56:02):
have a sexual identity of any kind, at least until
puberty starts, and just because we keep trying to as
a society push that on them, that only causes harm
and confusion. But it still doesn't create that identity for them.
It's almost as if the psychological arts here are being
(56:25):
completely ignored. And I think one of the most disheartening
things and is the fact that so many physicians are
signing on to do these surgeries knowing that they're telling
them that, okay, well this will be reversible if you want,
but they know better. They're going out of their way
to not give informed consent because they know that the
(56:48):
kids can't actually consent to this anyway, because there's no
way that they'd understand. It is caused me to seriously
question almost the entirety of the medical profession just to
see so few people do it. Now we're quickly running
out of time, but I want to give you a
chance to have any closing thoughts you want to throw
out there, and then please let everybody know where they
(57:10):
can find you the website and anyone else anything else
you'd like to share, like social media handles and platforms,
anything like that.
Speaker 9 (57:22):
You can reach me at extraordinary use dot org, dot org,
dot com. And I think my closing thoughts would just
be a plea And actually I'd pray for this. I pray, well,
thank god we're in Tennessee. That's number one. But if
you are wondering what you should do, if you have
(57:45):
a child that's questioning, It's fine to just say if
you want to dress, if you're a boy and you
want to wear pink, or you want to use fingernail polish,
or you want to do this, or you want to
do that, you can do certain things, but we're not
going to do anything where we change your body. That
is so cruel. And I'm talking to parents now. It
(58:08):
is so cool and how sad when your child grows
up and says, why did you let me do this?
And you have to look at them and say, because
I was told that if I didn't do it, you
would take your own life. And let me tell you,
there is not enough data to support that claim, it's ridiculous.
In fact, there's just as many suicides after transitioning as before.
(58:35):
In fact, some statistics say more. So just don't fall
for that lie. Do not fall for their life. Under
no circumstances should a child be mutilated in any way.
They should not be binding their breast or anything like that.
Do not allow someone to talk you into something that
your child can never reverse, and it cannot be reversed.
(58:58):
I don't care what they tell you. When you start
messing around with the hormones and puberty blockers, you change
the entire trajectory of a normal developing body. And that's
what I would say.
Speaker 8 (59:13):
All right, well, doctor Kim, I hate to cut it
off there because there's still a lot more to talk about.
Hopefully we can get together again sometime in the near
future and continue this conversation. But in the meanwhile, thank
you so much for your time this evening, and thank
you for what you do. Keep up the great work,
and I'm glad to hear a voice of reason out
there trying to help protect children from the most insidious
(59:35):
aspects of what we have going on. God bless and
thank you so much.
Speaker 9 (59:40):
God bless you too. Thank you. Bye bye.
Speaker 8 (59:43):
All right, ladies and gentlemen, that was doctor Kim Metcalf.
We're going to reset the hour right now. Don't go anywhere.
We'll be right back, and if all goes as planned,
we'll have Ron Edwards joining us. Stay war of you.
You're listening to Tap into the Truth.
Speaker 13 (01:00:00):
Somewhere, somewhere, somehow and some again.
Speaker 8 (01:00:34):
This is Tim Tap, host of Tapping to the Truth
that you can hear every Friday night from seven to
nine pm Eastern on the k Star Talk Radio Network,
Liberty Talk FM, and the VERA Network.
Speaker 6 (01:00:50):
Thank you.
Speaker 8 (01:01:36):
This is Tim Tap, host of Tapping to the Truth.
Speaker 10 (01:01:41):
Sad but I guess that doesn't cut in.
Speaker 3 (01:01:50):
I almost miss you one of those name to.
Speaker 8 (01:01:57):
Alright, ladies and gentlemen, welcome back as we now dive
headlong into our number two of the Friday Night Live Show.
Thank you so much for being here. I do want
to make a point of con dec right now. I've
just in the last few minutes had some storms rolling in,
so there's always the risk of internet interruption when that happens.
(01:02:20):
So if that does happen, I'm pretty sure Ron can
handle business, so I can get re established, so we
will continue going strong. It will not be a problem.
You'll just have to carry on without me for a
short little while. Some of you might actually like that better.
I don't know. I'd like to think you're tuning in
(01:02:41):
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And enough of that business I have waiting to begin
our conversation. The purveyor of the Edwards Notebook, of the
host of the Ron Edwards American Experience, a great patriot,
(01:05:23):
a phenomenal radio host for one of the fastest hours
in media. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome back once again
the most important title as far as I'm concerned, my
friend Ron Edwards. Ron, thank you so much for coming
back on with us again. How are you today, sir?
Speaker 10 (01:05:41):
Excellent? Excellent, You're perfect. Thanks so much for having me.
And it's a treat to be on with you every
time I am and I'm always surprised that you have
me back.
Speaker 8 (01:05:52):
Well, don't be my friend. You get some of the
best reviews when I get the feedback. People love you, sir,
so do not be surprised at all. My only concerned
is one day I'm just going to be expecting for
Doug to connect me. But I never get that connection
because they will have convinced you to take over my
(01:06:12):
slaughter as well.
Speaker 10 (01:06:14):
I don't think that'll ever happen, sir, But.
Speaker 8 (01:06:18):
Well, it's not exactly a slow news day. I would
like to talk a little bit at the front end
about the Democratic primary in New York City, but after
we discussed that, I think we should dedicate the majority
of the rest of the evening to some of these
(01:06:39):
rulings from the Supreme Court that were revealed over the
course of the last couple of days. Because we've had
some big ones, a couple of them major wins, one
very disappointing punt where they didn't really do what they
wanted to do. But I think a lot of good
stuff from a Supreme Court that seems to, at least
for the time being, they're acknowledging that the Constitution is
(01:07:03):
actually a real thing and should be their guiding principle.
I'm kind of digging it, Ron, how about you.
Speaker 10 (01:07:08):
Absolutely, I mean, it is the law of the land,
and so thus it should be followed, it should be taught,
recognized in all circles. I fully agree with you.
Speaker 8 (01:07:21):
All Right, Well, let's start with the subject. I think
we can wrap up pretty quickly, and that is the
fact that evidently New Yorkers who vote as Democrats have
given up on America as a whole and seem to
think that full blown privileged communism is the route to go.
(01:07:42):
Because I say privileged because all these people that are
leading this movement are very much so, and they're trying
to bamboozle folks who who are not privileged into thinking
somehow this is the route to go. Clearly a failure
of critical thinking and your education and a failure to
know your history. But these are all things we've talked
(01:08:04):
about before. This guy doesn't even consider himself to be
an American. He thinks of as half as you've gand
in first. But I'm going to step back and we're
all going to bask as you ree yellow with your
feelings on this matter, sir.
Speaker 10 (01:08:22):
Well, for me personally, it's heartbreaking because I used to
live in New York. I was there during the Giuliana
years when it was the safest city in America, large
or small. I saw his revitalization, I saw the beauty
of Manhattan and lived in Manhattan, by the way, And
(01:08:43):
it's it's heartbreaking, it really is. And for you know
what's more disturbing to me, Tim, Yeah, it's bad enough
that you have this Muslim communist running for mayor of
New York City. You know, there's always been communists running
from New York City since the days of Laguoria. However,
(01:09:06):
my problem is that the people have become so wicked
in their own hearts that this is something that they
would choose and something else. Is kind of funny, And
then again, not so funny is the fact there is
every publican candidate. His name is Curtis Sleewap. He's very
well known in the New York market. He's a great guy.
(01:09:28):
He has wonderful ideas. But for some reason I understand CNN,
Fox and the other leftist organizations ignoring him and not
mentioning him. But One America News, Newsmax and others, as
far as I know, I was the only guy today
to mention him and his candidacy in broadcasting throughout America today.
(01:09:52):
And that is the problem I have. It's the problem
with the people. My dad used to tell me that
you know what we the government, you see, and you
have a problem with because of the unique way in
which America is set up with it's the government that
people deserve, because that's what they choose. You know they
want this bastion of destruction to finish off the greatest
(01:10:17):
city in the world. And by God's grace, because he's
very merciful, he allows people to choose what they want,
and if that's what they choose this coming November, that's
what you're gonna witness. It breaks my heart, it really does,
because there's so much greatness in that city, both small
(01:10:39):
and great when you think about the fact that it
was America's first capital. I used to sit on the
Federal steps there, the original Federal building right there lunchtime
because I used to work there at Wall Street and
Water right there, very historic district right and there used
to be discussions of all kinds on those steps. One
(01:11:02):
day there would be a minister, another day there would
be a politician, another day it would be a business owner,
and it would It reminded me of ancient Greece. This
this is the stories we read about in ancient Greece
when you would have these discussions or they would have
discussions with people like Aristotle and others, and and then
(01:11:25):
the other great things about New York City. She was
very welcoming and if you had skills and whatever, you
didn't need affirmative action or anything like that. You got
opportunities up the whang Wang off Broadway plays. I worked
in made good money doing that commercials. It just the
(01:11:51):
the the the the opportunities were endless.
Speaker 11 (01:11:55):
And so.
Speaker 10 (01:11:57):
When what you're witnessing here is an attempt to kill America,
you kill New York City. That's like killing America. Yeah,
because this is a city of the ages. It's not
just a great city of a nation. It is a
city of the ages on par with London, Rome, you know,
(01:12:18):
cities like that and so, and it's kind of funny
there's a connection between London, Rome and New York. It's
a it's a Masonic connection and all of that. And
you don't want to get into that. But keeping it
on topic, Tim, it's it's it's heartbreaking. How do we
reach the people of New York to make them give
(01:12:41):
a darn about what they're doing? And it's guess who's
the biggest group of people that are in support of this,
the white liberal females.
Speaker 8 (01:12:54):
Yep, of course upper class. Yeah, in your absolutely right.
When you talk about the greatness of the city. I
don't mean to cut you off, but one of my
favorite places to visit had always been. I liked going
to Chicago. I didn't mind San Francisco too awful bad,
(01:13:15):
but it had already started going down the terrible path.
But I loved going to New York in small doses.
I loved being able to go out. And we'd spend
most of our time in and around Manhattan and then
go out of the boroughs because you know, I was
working trade shows. But you legitimately, you could stand out
on a corner and you would legitimately hear people speaking
(01:13:39):
every language on the planet. You'd hear almost every accent
except for a Southern accent that was extremely rare. And
to give you an idea how rare it was, we
were setting in a restaurant one time from a trade show.
We had somebody else from the state that we happened
to meet there, and we were just talking and it's
so rare to hear that Southern accent that we literally
(01:14:01):
had a waitress take a beeline and she changed tables
so she could wait on us because she had moved
up there from Crosswell, Tennessee. She's like, I don't ever
hear anybody talking like this. Thank god you're here. I'm
glad that this is a little piece of home, but
it is a unique energy and something that it really
(01:14:23):
personifies the melting pot that the nation was intended to
be through legal immigration and through the bringing of the
world's best to create something yet better. And I honestly,
I'm fully on board with everything you were saying, and
as I was saying last night, New York deserves better.
(01:14:45):
And I'm afraid, though, Ron, that's something we've seen a
lot here recently. The people who are just there all
the time have come to take so much of that
for granted. I don't think they even realize what they have.
Speaker 10 (01:15:00):
I could get it, but I mean, they had one
communist the blah blah, then they had mister Adam and
now this. You got to be kidding me. And to
ignore the media there, to ignore Curtis Leewa, it's as
if people don't even know that there's a choice, there's
(01:15:22):
a difference, and it's as if they've gone retarded, that
they've totally forgot how great things were when Giuliani was
in office. But here's a hard thing I have to say.
I've mentioned this on your show before and in private conversations.
I used to say all the way back to high school.
(01:15:42):
How evil the people of the left are, and they
desire destruction, that's what they live and breathe for. And
people would attack me and say, oh, you're extreme. That's
what they used to say, you're extreme. How can you
say that, you know? And I fire back, you know, well,
I'm because I'm not stupid. Maybe you are.
Speaker 6 (01:16:02):
You know.
Speaker 10 (01:16:03):
Sometimes as a teenager, I was kind of snappy, but
and got me in trouble sometimes, but I was. I
was right though, on the issues, and I was just
appalled at how stupid even the adults were. And I said,
you don't. You're supposed to be teaching us, and you're
sending this nation up for utter failure, and here we are.
(01:16:24):
And I used to say, then the people on the left,
the voters, the people they vote for, because you can't
live through hell and then not want to go in
another direction and tell me you want better. You can't
tell me that it's illogical. So I'm convinced that there's
a lot of people that agree with the evil to
(01:16:46):
the point that they're willing to sacrifice their own first
nation existence because they'd rather for everyone to be down,
trotten and poor, including themselves. Rather than America to be great,
prosperous and that shining city on a hill nation. And
(01:17:08):
they hate people that want that restored in our republic.
That is why when Donald Trump first came down the escalator,
they still loved him when he first came down the escalator,
but once he revealed himself as a patriot that he
you know what, but despite everything, I love this country.
(01:17:31):
Blah blah blah. Instantly, just like a snap of a finger,
they turned on him, which confirmed that was one of
the confirmations, one of the great confirmations of my life
from what things that I used to say even as
a teenager. There are people by the millions that want
utter destruction. I see evidences of it every day even
(01:17:56):
where I live. They move certain people len because it's
about destruction. Yeah. Yeah, And you know, I've been called
everything from a bigot, being judgmental, and then I say, well,
thank you, Yes, I am bigoted against evil. I am
judgmental against evil. We are supposed to use our judgment
(01:18:19):
between good and evil. And if you're too stupid to
understand that, then I understand why you don't even need
to vote, Just stay home and go starve yourself to death,
because obviously you want the country to starve to.
Speaker 8 (01:18:31):
Death, which actually is kind of a thing that will
happen if this plays out and they get their way,
because if you want to recreate the breadlines of the
old Soviet Union, go ahead and let New York City
run your grocery stores. You're going to be there faster
than you can imagine. But you're right the idea that
(01:18:55):
there's even a Republican running now. I didn't mention him
by name last night, but I was talking on the
subject over on the Rumble livestream last night, and you
know what aggravated me is everybody's talking about how they
need to get the Republican to drop out, and they
hope that Cuomo decides to stay out and they'll kind
of coalesce behind the current mayor, and that might be
(01:19:20):
their best chance because they feel like they can get
the black and Hispanic voters to come along because they
didn't vote for this individual. And yeah, it was all
the upper class, college educated white liberals, especially female, They
seem to be the strongest because they still have that
(01:19:43):
savior complex and they think it's really cool and exotic.
Speaker 6 (01:19:46):
But again, I.
Speaker 8 (01:19:48):
Keep circling back around to the fact that this guy's
job resume before going into politics, it only includes two jobs,
more than Bernie Sanders. Considering that there's only two jobs
on it. He worked for his mom on set because
his mom's some big time director, right, and then he
(01:20:12):
spent some time attempting to be a rapper. Okay, now
that's a hell of a resume.
Speaker 6 (01:20:19):
Ron.
Speaker 8 (01:20:19):
If I had a resume like that, I think I
would be using that little staur foam coffee cup begging
on the street to try to get some change, because
that's where I would be at with that resume. How
does this super privileged guy who knows nothing about socialism
get to become a leader to try and go full
(01:20:40):
blown communism there. It's so much of this it angers me.
And again, I'm right there with you. Why are we
talking like the Republican doesn't have a real chance? Why
are we hearing the legacy media even conservative outlets talk
about how maybe he should drop out to give me
to give the current mayor a shot running as an independent.
(01:21:05):
So much of this ignores the real opportunity, and the
question becomes is it bad enough for New York to
go the right way? Because it's going to take more
than just the white liberal Democratic voters that put this
guy in office. But if they convince everybody that a
Republican just can't win anymore, then why even bother trying.
(01:21:30):
Just let them fall off into the ocean. And it's
tragic anyway. Sorry, you've cutting you off.
Speaker 10 (01:21:37):
No, no, no, I was cutting you off. Actually, But
here's the thing. When Giuliani won, he only won with
thirty percent of the vote and the others and he
was the largest goat vote to getter out of all
the candidates. Now, if Sleiwa can get some decent amount
(01:21:58):
of donations and really get the word out and really
pump the great ideas and even some good inspirational stuff
because people have to be inspired, he can win. If
he can remind them of what it means to have
(01:22:19):
a safe city for their children in Central Park and
you know, you know there's a way, creative way you
can do this, and rather than just give up and
give in to the evil, remind people about how often
and how long Democrats have made good promises and the
(01:22:40):
only thing they delivered was hell on Earth. I mean
it's like they retarded, they forgot about the blah blah
the first years of Adams and what he did Cuomo
and his and what he did in office. I mean,
he's got to fight back. He's a fighter, he's a
(01:23:02):
martial art expert. So he's got to take that fighting
spirit into the campaign and push hard. And he's a
good speaker. I've heard him in the past, and so
there's a way to win. All he has to do
is win thirty percent of the vote and hopefully the
others will run. And he has to be strong, he
(01:23:25):
has to be bold and remind people. He should rip
a page out of the Koran and read directly from
Sarah five or Sierra nine, where it talks about how
you deceive the Infidel. And so he's got a lot
of the gals too, the Muslim guy, because he's a
good looking guy. And it's already been proven that you
(01:23:49):
could be a murderer, blow away a guy, a corporate
official in the back, and if you're good looking enough,
millions of American females will love you. They'll want to
snap on you, if you know what I mean. So, uh,
people are stupid. Okay, I hate to put it, put
it to you like this. People are stupid. And someone
(01:24:13):
like Curtis Lee. What has to be crazy like Trump
and just push push, push, push push, fight back. Will
it be willing to get into it with them, cause
an upheaval and reach the black community, especially the black men,
because the females, they are all running after the good
(01:24:34):
looking Muslim they'd screw them to death, that they could
wear them out, and uh they would. I mean, it's
it's the truth.
Speaker 3 (01:24:43):
I'm not doubted you.
Speaker 8 (01:24:44):
I just love the bluntness. Not a lot of people
willing to call it exactly the way they see it, Ron,
And I'm digging it. Yeah, it is a terrible, terrible
thing when the media wants to convince you that the
best hope New York City has avoiding and Islamic socialist
slash communist takeover is Eric Adams, that that is not
(01:25:10):
the Yeah, if that has become your best option, it
may already be too late, Ron, stay right where you're at.
We're gonna go ahead and slide into the mid hour
break just a bit early so we can focus and
get a little extra time in on some of these
Supreme Court situations. Uh, and we'll we'll be back right
(01:25:31):
after these messages. But before we take that little break,
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Speaker 10 (01:27:15):
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What are you gonna do? I don't know.
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Yep, I hear you.
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Is using both.
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In a way God man, and I will be rolled
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Speaker 8 (01:32:20):
You're listening to Tap into the Troy.
Speaker 3 (01:32:23):
This is Matt Pits Gibbons.
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This is easy sharing.
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Good night, sha the night together.
Speaker 8 (01:32:41):
All right, ladies and gentlemen, thank you so very much
for sharing your Friday night here with us. If you're
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(01:36:03):
glad to have you here on this Friday night. Before
we get back to the conversation, please, ever, let everybody
know where they can find you and your work.
Speaker 10 (01:36:14):
Well, you can find me Monday through Friday three pm
Eastern twelve Pacific.
Speaker 6 (01:36:18):
You can go to.
Speaker 10 (01:36:19):
Theirun Edwards dot com to find out exactly where you
can tune in and also follow me on social media
at run Edwards Underscore Show, via x at run Edwards
Underscore Show and on get Her. It's at r N
(01:36:44):
e American e XP at ron e American exp on
get Her and you can check me out there there.
Speaker 6 (01:36:56):
I be.
Speaker 8 (01:36:58):
Very cool, he'd be therefore he is, and that's the
place to engage and a lot of great content always.
I really really enjoy the things that Ron writes. I
highly recommend you check out his website anytime you get
the chance. And I call it one of the fastest
(01:37:19):
hours in media for a reason because you feel like
you're barely even getting started and it's like it's over.
What happened now? I have to wait till tomorrow to
get more Ron Edwards. And don't get me started on
the Friday because typically most Fridays, that means you gotta
wait till Monday. Fortunately for those of you that listen
(01:37:39):
to both these shows, you get a little extra Ron
on this last Friday of the month and you get
that little bit of extra chance to tide you over.
But most weeks it's not there. It's a sad, desolate
weekend without Ron Edwards. At least that's how I feel
about it.
Speaker 10 (01:37:57):
Well, actually, Tim find me on the weekends too. All
you have to do is go to Speaker or Spotify
and check out my podcast. iHeartRadio and Weever Podcaster are available.
Speaker 8 (01:38:12):
Ah see what I did there. Oh, let's jump back
into this conversation. There's a lot over the course of
the last two days that have come out from the
Supreme Court. That's part of what I think I enjoy
most is these June reveals. We start getting these opinions
(01:38:34):
released from the Supreme Court. We've had over the last
couple of days. Though some really big ones, almost all
of them have been six'. Three no surprise. There the
liberal leftist ladies of The court have a hard time
grasping what The constitution actually. Means but outside of, that
there's been a lot of RE i guess rerecordognizing as
(01:39:00):
kind of a bad, phrasing but it's kind of the
deal where these justices have once again decided that the
constitutions the founding principle and that that's the basis of
what we should be looking. At so looking over the
course of the last few, days and you can go
back a little further if you like to answer this,
(01:39:22):
One but what so far do you feel like is
the most important decision we've gotten from This Supreme court this?
Speaker 10 (01:39:30):
Year the, Way oh and by the, way re recognizing
that is a yoga.
Speaker 8 (01:39:41):
BEARISM i thought it sounded familiar for some.
Speaker 10 (01:39:47):
Reason let's see what is the most? Important, Uh let's.
SEE i think when it comes to anything dealing with
the border, SITUATION i you, know there there's a there's
(01:40:09):
several of them that are, very very. Important BUT i
think that's most important because the president does have the
right to kick people out of the country that are excuse,
me that are illegally in our in our. Republic and
these federal judges who have taken it upon their shoulders to, say,
(01:40:31):
no you can't do. That AND i love the fact
they did not say that federal judges cannot you, know utilize,
injunctions but they can no longer from one location use
their injunctions to cover the, nation, right and so at
least it and then and also they have to explain
(01:40:54):
the premise behind their. Decisions they can no longer just you,
know you, know just blanketly just go and and make this,
decision decision to block the. President but WHAT i don't, Understand,
Tim and maybe you can help me out. Here it's,
okay let me give an. Analogy you get in your
car and drive and you're motoring drop. Backwards, okay you're
(01:41:23):
driving backwards the wrong way on a one way street
and you just keep. Going you go through a stop
sign and, bamo you hit. Something, now wouldn't you get
in trouble for?
Speaker 11 (01:41:40):
That?
Speaker 6 (01:41:40):
Yes or?
Speaker 8 (01:41:41):
No generally? Speaking?
Speaker 6 (01:41:44):
Yes.
Speaker 10 (01:41:46):
Okay, now let's say you get in the, car you're motoring,
about you drive the right way and you have no,
problems so you get no tickets and you're a allowed
to drive legally in a decent. Manner AM i?
Speaker 8 (01:42:03):
Correct every Place i've ever been in the, country, yes.
Speaker 10 (01:42:08):
Sir, OKAY i had to use something so pedestrian BECAUSE
i don't understand. Why in Sam hill and there is a,
Real Sam, Hill why is it that the president of
The United, states which is governing according to The Constitution
article TWO i, believe or is It article? Four but,
(01:42:31):
anyway he's doing his. Job he's doing the right, thing
and for these black robes gone wild to unconstitutionally block
him from protecting our nation from these enemies that came
that were, foreigned that are in our nation in a domestic,
manner that's all he's. Doing he is doing one of
(01:42:55):
his most important jobs of, all and yet these unconstitutional
rulings have been allowed to. Stand i've always been of
the opinion that if you rule, unconstitutional you can be
told to go to hell and ignore. It how many
(01:43:17):
times during The Uncle Joe biden administration when there were
a few rulings that were correct based on the, law
and you know what they, Did they didn't say. Anything
they just went on ahead and did what the hell
they wanted to. Do SO i think That President, trump
doing the right, things should just go ahead and do
(01:43:38):
what he needs to. Do Tom holman and the, gang
they just need to do what they got to do
because we voted for. It not only is it constitutionally,
mandated is it, lawful but we voted for. It even
in the Swing, States Donald trump's agenda was voted for
(01:44:00):
For These democrats and socialist black robes gone wild to
obstruct it because they want to destroy this nation right
out from under. Us in my, opinion they can be
ignored and we just for the good of the. Republic.
Speaker 8 (01:44:17):
YEAH i do have to give a hat tip To
Donald trump to make the effort to bend over backwards
to not give the left any further fuel to make
their accusations of lawlessness and disrespect for the. CAT i
give him a hat tip for making the, Effort BUT
(01:44:39):
i am with. YOU i agree with. You at this,
point it's time to tell them to go pound Sand
it's time to go The Andrew jackson route and, say, okay,
lovely you've made your, decision good luck and forcing. IT
i think that we're literally at that point where it
has to, be because we've got what at least two
judges now that are in open defiance of The Supreme court,
(01:45:04):
too and last TIME i, checked they don't have the
right to do. That they're they've given up any legal
authority once they've. Dot these are judicial, insurrectionists AND i
think not only are they open to impeachment, now but
they're actually open to excuse me to criminal action beyond
our justices and judges that we've had actively trying to
(01:45:27):
help illegals escape ice. Custody these people need to understand
that no one is above the law is not just
a fun thing to say when you're trying to Attack.
Republicans it's actually a true, statement and that it applies
to them. Too you're absolutely right in soo much as
(01:45:52):
there has been no grounds other than the. Adage and
here's your explanation you were looking for On it's different
For trump because he Is orange man who's, bad the
kicker of, puppies the eater of, babies the climate, arsenals
and the same rules don't apply To Donald. Trump remember
(01:46:12):
the ends justified the means for the people we're dealing,
with and they just don't like him because he doesn't
play by their. Rules and that's really all it comes down.
To trump arrangement, SYNDROME i think is a diagnosable medical
ailment in this day.
Speaker 10 (01:46:33):
AGE i agree with, you BUT i think it's expanded beyond. That,
yeah the same people are Anti. God if you Mentioned,
god they go to. Nutsville these same people are against the.
Principles they go Beyond President. TRUMP i Mean President trump
(01:46:57):
is exercising the. Principles these people are what The bible
would call those who call good evil and evil. Good,
yeah so it's even beyond that is why they're going After,
trump even, though like he, said they're really after us
because they, Remember let's remember a lot of these people
(01:47:20):
were in office many years ago when they chased manufacturing
out of this country in order to get there has
been an ongoing war against the middle class And trump
what he's. Doing like, TODAY i mentioned on my show
That General motors has announced a multi billion dollar deal
(01:47:40):
in which five billion dollars worth of construction In detroit
bringing all the manufacturing back From mexico because to avoid
no it's four billion dollars in The United. States they're
going to invest to avoid five billion worth of tariffs
(01:48:02):
trying to bring in cars From. Mexico and the people
on the left are going to nutsville Because, trump how
dare you do? This that will bring back the middle.
Class Texas INSTRUMENTS i mentioned in my commentary they are
doing something. Similar they're constructing seven, plants promising sixty thousand new.
(01:48:27):
Jobs that's just two companies that represents a bolstering of
The american middle. Class and there are other companies that
are doing the same. Thing and What i'm happy about
it's not just foreign. Companies now you're Having american companies lining.
Up this is why they really want to bump this guy,
(01:48:48):
off because he wants he's really working to get The
american middle class back on its. Feet and there's no
one that left hates more other Than, god and that's,
we the people they hate. Us the proof of that
is when the black, community well mostly men and great, numbers,
(01:49:12):
said you know, what screw the. Donkey, Yeah i'm you,
know we're off of The we're getting off of the
back of The Golden we're no longer going to bow
before The Golden. Donkey And Uncle joe and other white liberals,
said you know, what we never liked you. Negroes, anyway
we're going to replace. You we've convinced you dummies to
abort your, babies and increasingly whites are doing it now.
(01:49:36):
Too so we'll replace you with millions and millions and
millions of illegals who don't like this, country who will Vote,
democrat even though foreigners are not supposed to be voting
in our. Elections is that that's another thing that needs
to be dealt with. Harshly and it goes.
Speaker 6 (01:49:55):
On and on and.
Speaker 10 (01:49:55):
On this is a real battle between good and evil
and the these. People you, know pg time is. Over
these people are playing for, keeps and we have to
govern ourselves accordingly and plan. On we've got to meet
him head, on because and the longer we wait to
(01:50:16):
meet them head, on the more difficult it will be
to win the. Battle the beauty of The trump administration
is that he has irritated them so. Voraciously they are
just like rabbit, dogs or As Ronald reagan once, said
they're nothing more than howling dogs sitting on sharp. Rocks,
(01:50:38):
okay they're going to. Nutsville but he revealed the level
of evil that was percolating just under the surface in past.
Years and so they, see, well he's for. Real he's
not Like GEORGE. W, bush just improve the, economy but
(01:51:00):
allow the globalism, to you, know just further its tentacles
all over The. Republic they're, like, well wait a. Minute
trump is, like wait a, minute he's, serious Like kennedy
was When kennedy, said we've got to get rid of
The Federal, reserve and that's why they you, Know kennedy's.
Limousine it was supposed to have like a glass dome over,
(01:51:21):
it and that's why at the last, minute the glass
dome was ordered to be taken, off and they told
The Secret service take it. Off boyle was the guy's last.
NAME i think that's his last. Name he was an.
Assistant he was in The Lynn Bangs johnson. Administration and
(01:51:42):
they're going to try to set Up trump like, that
do something crazy like, that because this guy is. Serious.
Speaker 8 (01:51:49):
Yeah, WELL i mean nobody has been more dedicated to
the proposition of busting the bubble of the lives they've been.
Telling he doesn't play. Either he wasn't created by, them
so they can't destroy. Him he's self. Made but you
really hit upon something even more important in the effort
(01:52:11):
to bring back the middle class in order to re
establish this idea of upward economic, mobility for anybody willing
to put in the, time, effort and, energy if you're
willing to work, hard you can legitimately move. Up you
might not ever get, rich but you're sure as hell
going to be a lot better off than the starting.
(01:52:31):
Point if you're down in those lower. Levels but the
choice is. Yours if you can re establish that as
being the reality here in The, states then the lie
that these, socialists these, communists these globalists have pushed upon
The american people in order to get them to the
point Where New yorkers are ready to vote for a Communist,
(01:52:55):
muslim you literally completely undo their. Narrative you re establish
and reawaken at that point the idea Of american, exceptionalism
The AMERICAN dna that exists within the, people will be
revitalized and they will be. Revealed because you are also.
Right you hit upon it as well when you said
(01:53:18):
that he's revealed them for who they. Are nobody has
been better at getting these, beast these creatures of, darkness
to reveal exactly who they are Than Donald John trump has.
Been and, man it has been a show to. Watch
and he has put himself in harm's way and they've
nearly gotten him twice for crying out. Loud they nicked
(01:53:41):
his ear one. Time but by the grace Of, god
Does Donald John trump draw breath? Today and you're, right
they're not done trying to end, that because this guy
is more dangerous to them than anyone who's come along
since OUR.
Speaker 10 (01:53:58):
Jfk and you, know it's funny when you Mentioned Donald.
Trump he he represents you know WHAT i He's he's
revealing what you're you're seeing In Donald TRUMP i saw years.
AGO i always knew that he was a great. Guy
LIKE i, said WHEN i lived In New, york you
meet a lot of people that know people and people
(01:54:20):
that knew, him and you hear all these personal stories
and things that he did for people that he did not.
KNOW i, MEAN i could just give you a book
full of stories and some well known people THAT i
met that were in my neighborhood THAT i lived in
In New, york and we'd get in discussions and things like.
That it's it's it's it's just. Amazing and that's why
(01:54:45):
even when even you AND i would have those discussions
when he was running for election about whether he Was
christian or you, know, this that and the, other AND
i always knew his heart AND i would compare him
to many ministers the big time in their own, mind
ministers and even ministers That i've known throughout my, days
(01:55:06):
and with all of us, flaws in my humble, opinion
you may totally disagree with. Me he displayed More christian
personality traits than almost any famous minister you can. Name you,
COULD i won't even name. One you could throw one at,
me AND i could prove to you That christian That Donald,
(01:55:27):
trump with all the flaws that they like to, mention
has displayed More christian principles in his actions than almost
any minister you can, name including and And i'll name,
One Franklin, graham who said That jesus would have taken the.
Speaker 8 (01:55:42):
JAB i don't think you would, Have Franklin. RON i
hate to cut us things off right, here but we
are quickly running out of.
Speaker 13 (01:55:53):
Time.
Speaker 8 (01:55:55):
Again you're you're nailing. It as, Always Donald trump shows
More christian. Metal he shows the effort to be A
christian soldier the way we're all called to. Be thank
you so much for coming on again as, ALWAYS i
do greatly appreciate, it AND i look forward to getting
together again with you next. Month thank, You, sarah keep
(01:56:17):
up your great.
Speaker 10 (01:56:17):
Work thank, you And god bless you and your, audience
and may your show continue to be blessed By. God
and may you continue to grow with your impact and
be blessed you and your family and your.
Speaker 8 (01:56:29):
Audience, well thank you for That, SARAH i appreciate that as.
Well in the, meanwhile, guys that's got to be it for.
Tonight so thank you so very much for being. Here
and as, always please do not take my word for
not one little thing you've heard me say. Tonight but
don't just take anyone else's word at face value. Either
be prepared to do your own, research your own, homework
and most, importantly use your brain if you really want
(01:56:53):
to tap into the. Truth have a great weekend, everybody
and don't forget to tune. In we will be back
On rumble next. Week we'll see you out the Fourth
god bless. Then that's.
Speaker 18 (01:57:06):
Awful your baby gone was a world of fun when
(01:57:34):
you were just a little.
Speaker 4 (01:57:35):
Squirt you learn the rules of.
Speaker 3 (01:57:39):
Defensive tool so that no one would get.
Speaker 7 (01:57:42):
Hurt you learn to, breathe and you learned to, squeeze
and your animles always.
Speaker 3 (01:57:51):
True you make a rite of passage man with your
first reel twenty Two.
Speaker 12 (01:58:03):
Now The New World order.
Speaker 3 (01:58:04):
True, well they're magian their, demands they don't feel, safe
and you are, wrong you, say Country. Shore he's using both.
Speaker 10 (01:58:15):
Hands fathers knew the second amend it was the final.
Speaker 4 (01:58:25):
One to keep Sh she's hold our other, right same attacks.
Speaker 3 (01:58:30):
And never because sheep.
Speaker 2 (01:58:37):
She's staring hit.
Speaker 13 (01:58:38):
Them now be A paul.
Speaker 4 (01:58:39):
Pot they told us things that you never. Forgot the
teach less seal guns says to.
Speaker 3 (01:58:46):
Appear the, government the fears of guns.
Speaker 13 (01:58:53):
Now The New World.
Speaker 3 (01:58:54):
Order, True, well they're, megian they're. Demands they don't feel.
Safe excuse you are. Wrong you said on, control he's
using both hands.
Speaker 2 (01:59:11):
Like a job. Free don't wait to the time in
two to, three.
Speaker 4 (01:59:18):
Give me more than a thousand nat to take my.
Speaker 13 (01:59:21):
Fattily now The New world are not.
Speaker 4 (01:59:41):
Through, well they're.
Speaker 2 (01:59:42):
Making a man.
Speaker 18 (01:59:43):
Lands they can pass one hundred, balls but we still
won't give it down.
Speaker 4 (01:59:52):
Or we stink over.
Speaker 12 (01:59:54):
Deal if they try.
Speaker 4 (01:59:55):
To take this lad.
Speaker 6 (01:59:58):
They have the.
Speaker 3 (01:59:59):
Chance you say gun control is using both.
Speaker 6 (02:00:12):
Hands h