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October 15, 2025 116 mins
Day 15 of the shakedown shutdown, and the spin machine’s still running.
On today’s Rick Robinson Show, we dig into what Townhall calls the “Schumer Shutdown” — Senate Democrats blocking three clean bills to reopen the government — and how President Trump’s “Scissors Strategy” is turning cuts on paper into pink slips and paused paychecks.
We track how it’s hitting home: Oklahoma schools bracing for delayed grants, local air-traffic training under strain, and animal shelters surviving on bake sales while national charities live high on the hog and local shelters fight for scraps
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Oh no, seriously, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (00:03):
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
of Klrnradio dot com. We are probably the largest independent
podcast network that you've never heard of. We have a
little bit of everything, and by that what I mean
to tell you is we have news, pop cultures, special events, inspire, attainment,
true crime, mental health shows, drama productions, and pretty much

(00:25):
everything in between. So if you're looking for a new
podcast home to grab a little bit of everything that
you love all in one place, come check us out.
You can find us on x under at KLR and Radio.
You can find us on our rumble and our YouTube
channels under the same names. You can also find us
at klr and radio dot com and pretty much every
podcast catcher and known demand. So again, feel free to

(00:46):
come check us out anytime you like. At KLR.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
M H.

Speaker 4 (01:14):
They shut them lines down there in the city and
see its cisterns on the roads.

Speaker 5 (01:20):
While the same hands and broken hold your pee check
and your hosts.

Speaker 4 (01:25):
They'll sell your sepail.

Speaker 6 (01:28):
Call y'all sacrificefully whatever drive truly bleeds.

Speaker 7 (01:34):
Another line of belief freedomism Bree.

Speaker 8 (01:38):
Has called them load and stone.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
The prizes.

Speaker 9 (01:45):
And go on every promise tags they every breathe.

Speaker 4 (01:53):
Shin still call freedom freedom miss.

Speaker 2 (02:03):
Free from marble towers while they're feelings on front y'all
they w a fling man out of rules and call
them being the smart they'll bring you stange hell my

(02:29):
green bod.

Speaker 3 (02:30):
Freedom don't need.

Speaker 10 (02:31):
From miss, just needs man who bleeds freedom free.

Speaker 8 (02:37):
Let's call him blood and.

Speaker 11 (02:39):
Sto still standing all the promise we read little.

Speaker 3 (02:55):
Still lead.

Speaker 12 (03:00):
Bread on mans on freeze, Freedom is free.

Speaker 13 (03:09):
It's written in red on history s page worn into
the tyrant sat the cows up the east.

Speaker 14 (03:18):
They can bury of his island, but the true sill
screen free read ons on free read mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (04:05):
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Contact us at advertising at klrnradio dot com.

Speaker 18 (05:19):
The windy cries to the broken hills, the voice of
love that nerve stills.

Speaker 19 (05:30):
Grace flows down like healing streets, breaking shades and mending dreams.

Speaker 9 (05:42):
Down, less mercy and less God through the tat.

Speaker 8 (05:55):
Mercy, free grace.

Speaker 20 (06:00):
In chais Ma the sit last.

Speaker 8 (06:21):
Now I am found.

Speaker 21 (06:23):
On holy ground where hope abouse the south side.

Speaker 8 (06:32):
The dawn takes hold the story. It's hellong, great song,
how it burns.

Speaker 22 (06:48):
The sacred flame, calling Musu whispering Manna, would.

Speaker 8 (07:02):
Less us.

Speaker 9 (07:05):
Less, guiding me through the talkkas nine Boulest save me
free grades, Chris.

Speaker 3 (07:45):
That's.

Speaker 23 (07:48):
Like a heart be true, backpipes Well, the skies breakthrough
a song of it, a song Oh Fi, lifting me.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
From the world's mind.

Speaker 24 (08:20):
M m hm.

Speaker 16 (08:47):
You are listening to kate l r N Radio, where
liberty and reason still rain.

Speaker 25 (08:55):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Senter
discretion is advised.

Speaker 13 (09:31):
From Red to the Rose to the Capitol steps Ricks
calling through No town for regrets, Fire.

Speaker 26 (09:39):
In his Wolds, facts in his hand, talking sense to
the hat of this land.

Speaker 27 (09:45):
Gets the rich Robinson show either true rises, no spin,
no scrip, just an neagle Scott from DC to Chilsea.

Speaker 24 (09:55):
He's coming out, smile, getting his hand.

Speaker 8 (09:58):
Yeah, he's got the clouds fall.

Speaker 10 (10:00):
And ready hoorah and real tune little speak up and feel.

Speaker 20 (10:06):
What we few.

Speaker 28 (10:13):
He's breaking down the nose, cutting through the last shining
lights with shadow hats, I guess.

Speaker 13 (10:22):
In the mix and callers on cue. He's a voice
for the many nots.

Speaker 8 (10:28):
Revo Coffee, raise.

Speaker 10 (10:31):
A flag, stand your brown nevile wave that red news
with the backbone voice of free ricks got the boss
of liberty. He's a wreck Robinson showbold on a free truth, bombs,
drop fed red, stable.

Speaker 8 (10:49):
Red from the place to the power.

Speaker 10 (10:51):
He's speaking is loud with the mina mission that makes
us sprawl top for the people, top that free.

Speaker 24 (11:01):
Saying what we feel.

Speaker 29 (11:09):
Oh, oh, guess what day it is?

Speaker 8 (11:12):
Guess what day it is?

Speaker 1 (11:14):
Eh?

Speaker 7 (11:15):
Anybody?

Speaker 3 (11:16):
It is Wednesday in my duds.

Speaker 1 (11:28):
And welcomay to the program. For those of you who
are wondering why I looked really confused on camera at first,
for some reason, restream had my background all like bluish,
and I was afraid that was how it was going
out on the streams and I still don't know what caused,
but it wasn't. So we're here, we're live, and it
is Chat Lives Matter Day, which means this is the
day that every single one of you chat lives matters.

(11:48):
Dennison's mean the most to me, although that's pretty much
every day for those of you who wonder how that
got started. So this was way back during the beginnings
of the whole BLM stuff, and we were doing a
show with Sam the managing editor of Twitchy called Fubar,
and she would always RaSE the chat because when when

(12:10):
we first started doing stuff together, and this was years ago,
she was always the one that brought everybody into the
chat room. So after a while, she just started just
being completely enre to the chat because you know, she
sucks at showing emotion, so she would start an end
every show with chat sucks. So the rest of us
in Rebellion started a hashtag movement called chat Lives Matter,

(12:33):
and it's been with us ever since. We've got if
you haven't. If you haven't found it yet, you can
go to the store Gladio dot com forts last store.
We actually even have Chat Lives Matter merch. We've got
a bunch of new merch and people have been asking
me when I'm gonna start selling some of the AI
music I've been putting out. I'm trying to figure out
how to do that without stepping on toes because a
lot of music places are ticked off with AI, especially

(12:55):
now that it's gotten good. So, yeah, apologies for char
answering to my own intro, but I wrote that so
with the help of AI and a bunch of different
tweaks from different versions that I had been messing with
for the last several months. But I think we're gonna
stick with this one for a while. We're also gonna
start playing more of the license stuff that I have

(13:16):
access to, because even though I do have music licensing,
it's a pain when I broadcast everywhere else because then
I have to give them copies of the license number
and make sure it's put it in all the feeds,
and do this and do that. I don't want to
do that anymore. I don't want besides, it's expensive. So
now that AI is able to put stuff like this out,
we probably will not be messing with that anymore because

(13:38):
I can get full licensing to play this music for
ten dollars a month as opposed to friggin thousands of
dollars a year that I've been paying for as CAPSISAK
and be am. I but you have to because I
found out the hard way, so you know back and
you have to remember I've been doing this for almost
twenty years at this point. Yes, I'm rounding up a

(13:59):
little bit, but is pretty darn close. Everybody was just like, oh,
fair use you could use like thirty seconds or something
and they can't say or do anything. Yeah, that was
never a thing. I actually got a cease and desist
from Ozzy Osbourne's attorneys way way back in the day
because when I first started America Off the Rails, his
song Crazy Train was perfect and I was using the

(14:19):
part that caught the entire thing about the meaning of
the show, and then somehow they found out about it.
It was probably one of the first times that show
tried to explode. Ears heard it, it got passed along.
I got a cease and desist email and yeah, so
fun times. But yes, we have broadcast rights. I will
slowly start moving away from some of that stuff for

(14:39):
most of us, especially for those of us that go
out across multiple platforms, which is why you're starting to
hear less of the actual, you know, current rock catalog
that I have access to, and more of our own stuff.
By the way, freedom isn't Freeze. Also one of the
ones I just put out and work on on another
one and then so and the other one is Boundless Mercy. Yeah,

(15:03):
I wrote that one too, So anyway, I like that one.
That kind of feels a little bit like a doctory
song mixed with Christian rock. I didn't know how I
would feel about it, because you have done it. I don't.
I can't write music, but I can tell AI what
I want without having the right sheet music, and it
usually takes a few tweaks, but we get it there.

(15:24):
And I'm that one. I like that one a lot,
like the part when you can just imagine him on
stage rocking out why the bagpipes are going nuts?

Speaker 6 (15:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (15:33):
That?

Speaker 1 (15:34):
Yeah, I like that anyway. Sorry, I'm kind of all
over the place this morning. It was a late night.
I was up on the manor ram the panel till
after eleven, got show notes put together, got the stuff
put out for the different newsletters that I'm starting to
produce for the different shows. You can find anything politically
related for the shows, You'll find under my substack rix Rants.

(15:55):
That's where show notes for America Off the Rails and
The Rick Robinson Show are going to start going, So
you can go I'll find that if you want and
subscribe to it. It'll kind of give you a cliff
notes version of the notes. We use sources that we pull,
so you can go back through and read through them
if you want. There's also a newsletter for Kingdom and
Country now called the Kingdom and Country Dispatch. That one
will have show notes for the series that we do.

(16:16):
I've also made an executive decision because of how our
programming calendar works. We'll be doing a king and Country
every other Wednesday night at seven pm Eastern. I've decided
that one's going to be a Bible study night. We're
gonna save the heavier theme topics for Sundays, and then
we're just going to do a kind of a get
together and talk about different scriptures and stuff like that.

(16:38):
So that is one where chat feedback would be awesome.
On the scripted stuff, the more thought out stuff you
guys can still throw your feedback, but I'm usually pretty
heavily in notes on those. For this one, it'll be
more of kind of like a pitch and catch, kind
of like the whole you know, more informal Wednesday night service.
That's kind of where I'm going with that. So that

(16:59):
was an executive and I just made this morning, so
I'm about to start putting that together once we get
done with this one. Again, want to thank you guys
for taking the time to hang out with us. We
absolutely are killing it on x We are hitting anywhere
between one thousand to fifteen hundred people a day, depending
on the number of shows that we do hanging out
with us, it's usually about an average of three hundred
an hour. But since that's a movie theater and a half,

(17:21):
I will take it. And I'm sure as we get
more consistent and keep typing and tightening things down and
building things up, it will probably get even better. For
those of you who may not have noticed yet, can
actually see my face a little bit more. Some of
you are sad about that, keep it to yourself. I
did warn you guys years ago, though, that I have

(17:41):
a face made for radio. Nobody wanted to listen to me,
you have to start doing video, Rick, It's the only
way you're ever gonna get noticed. I'll get noticed, all
right for having, you know, one a headlight anyway. Sorry, Yes,
I know I could get a fixed with a surgery,
but if you know how many times I almost died
on the table during various different surgeries, you would understand
why I just don't really care. At some point, I'll

(18:03):
just start wearing an eyepatch probably and open every show
with army DS. I'm kidding mostly all right, So that
was a weird intro vamp, but let's run with it anyway.
That I mentioned I'm sleep deprived, which is probably why
things are being a little weird. That and I honestly
got thrown off when my entire display was blue. I

(18:25):
was like, what is going on? Because yeah, there's been
some weird things like last night in pre show for
the Manorama folks. It took me until like the third
person mentioned that I sounded funny to realize that my
MIC was default set to the webcam mic, not my
actual studio mic, and I'm.

Speaker 25 (18:41):
Like, I don't get it.

Speaker 1 (18:42):
I was like, oh yeah, I forgot this one has
a microphone. Oh yeah, So I need to fix that. Oh,
which is awesome that it kind of does have a microphone,
because at some point I may start doing maybe a
more news style format. But for that I'm going to
figure out how to get a lab mic, tied end
and an earpiece. So I'm not that way on the

(19:05):
news style programs. I can get the mic and stuff
out of the way. Working on that too over the
digital beacon side, but I want to get kill or
in knocked in as much or locked in as much
as I can. I guess knocked in depends what works too,
depending on how stubborn you want to be about it.

(19:25):
All Right, so let's take a look at what's going
on around the news cycle. So of course we're in
day fifteen of the shutdown. First things first, they took
another vote here it is right here on the screen,
and Democrats are still keeping the government shut down. Now,
of course, the Democrats want to spend it as if

(19:45):
it's the Republicans keeping the government shut down. The problem is,
according to a recent Reuters poll, they're starting to lose
that argument. There's now a growing growing plurality that blame
the president but also Democrats. You know, the folks that
just can't let Trump go. When Trump has to be
the bad guy about everything. They're still blaming Trump. The

(20:06):
rest of America is starting to figure out this is
honestly the Democrats fault, which is funny when you think
about it, because that was their entire framing, and you
remember Chuck Schumer just a few days ago. The longer
this goes on, the better it looks for us, except
for Donald Trump keeps finding ways to get things paid
for to try to mitigate this thing a little bit

(20:27):
at least for our troops. He's now and we'll be
getting into this a little bit in just a few minutes.
He's now looking at programs to cut, which should have
all the Democrats nervous, but for some reason they're not. Again,
I can't help but wonder if they are not secretly
maga themselves and just trying to break away from the
crazies in their party, because I just don't really understand

(20:50):
exactly what's going on, all right, So.

Speaker 11 (20:56):
So again.

Speaker 1 (20:58):
I can't really give her credit for it, because a
lot of folks are calling him. But this is from
Amy Curtis's recent town Hall angle about the town Hall
article about the Schumer shutdown, or as I call it,
the Schumer shakedown. She wrote, the tenate Democrats have now
blocked three different House Continuing resolutions, each one cleaner than
the last, all to hold the line for Ukraine funding

(21:19):
and climate spending. So while headlines say Republicans stall, the
roll call shows Democrats refused three times. That's not a stalemate,
that's a strategy. And then numbers are again starting to turn.
According to Rasmussen, only twenty eight percent now blame House
Republicans for the shutdown. The rest point the finger at
Schumer and the White House translation, unlike what Schumer thought.

(21:44):
The longer he keeps the gates locked, the harder it
is to sell this as a GOP problem for poor
little Schucky, Poor little shucky Chucky. Agencies are still dark.
IRS refunds are all stalled. FA controllers are going unpaid,
National parks in waves. Schumer's holding the purse strings, and
Trump's reaching for the scissors. See what I did there?

(22:09):
All right? So again, we're gonna get the full list
by Friday. But Trump is starting to set his sights
on taking some scissors to Democrat programs. President Trump says,
if Congress won't open the government, he'll just shrink it.
Reuters confirms he plans to release a list on Friday

(22:29):
of Democrat aligned programs to shut down things permanently. His quote,
we're closing up programs we never wanted to see in
the first place, and they're not coming back. So again,
on the Senate floor, the Democrats are busy playing a

(22:49):
game of rock paper scissors, and while they're insisting on
more paper, Trump is taking to the scissors. Now, in
a second, we're going to take things local and explain
what some of this means for the folks that may
be in Oklahoma. But before we get to that, we
still got to talk about what's going on in DC.
So in the clown show known as Washington, d C.
The Democrats actually tried to storm the Castle. No, not really.

(23:12):
They did try to storm Mike Johnson's office though. So
Democrats attempted to storm House Speaker Mike Johnson's office on
Tuesday evening, with one representative accusing a police officer who
stepped in to stop them. I'm sorry accosting, not accusing.
The mostly female members marched through the halls of the
Capitol Building holding signs readings swear her in while chanting

(23:34):
the same phrase. That's a reference to at Alita Zirava,
who was recent who recently won a special election in Arizona.
Johnson has understandably refused to move forward with seating Ziravalla
Jira Gialva. Sorry, I'm gonna I may learn to say
that eventually, I may not as long as Democrats continue

(23:54):
to keep the government shut down on that front. An
eighth attempt to pass a Republican back to clean continuing
Continuing resolution failed the Senate just hours prior. Still, the
Democrats gathered the cameras because this was nothing but a
lame photo op, and tried to force their way into
Johnson's office anyway, apparently not seeing the irony in their demand.

(24:17):
I know people that went to jail for months for
doing that.

Speaker 30 (24:21):
Anybody anyway, anyway, anyway, anyway, So I had I thought
a video somewhere, but I think I lost it. When nope,

(24:43):
there it is, all right, hang on, this isn't very long,
but I just want to show you, like I said,
there were there were people on January sixth, twenty twenty
one who went to jail for less than this.

Speaker 1 (25:00):
Just watch.

Speaker 29 (25:06):
Now.

Speaker 1 (25:06):
There's no audio, unfortunately, but you can. Look, I want
to let it play again. I mean, unfortunately, we can't
really hit them with obstructing official preceding charges since the

(25:27):
governments shut down, so I can kind of understand why
that didn't happen in this instance. But still, sorry, guys,
I just realized for some reason, I don't have the
shut up on the mainscreen. Let me fix that, Okay, yeah, hey,
well yeah, it's completely different when they do it. But yeah,

(25:48):
I guess this just occurred to me. I guess we
really can't hit them with obstructing government proceedings since there
are no official government proceedings happening right now, so maybe
that's how they got away with it. Anyway, I want
to give a quick shout out to Eody hanging out
in the chat Sea Broken Word see Denny ceol so far.
If I've missed anybody, we'll come back around to you
in a moment, but thank you for hanging out with us.
I know it's early on a Wednesday, so some of

(26:09):
you are like, why do you do the show so early?
Lucky for you, I changed my mind and my sleep
schedule has made that impossible. I was really gonna do
this show from like five to eight and then spend
like nine to one writing every day and then take
a lunch break and then come back and do the
evening show stuff. But my sleep schedule doesn't let me
do that. It would make my life so much easier.

(26:29):
I may eventually figure out how to do that, which
I know was gonna cut my audience in half. But
it makes my life easier because I do too many things.
I don't get to write everything that I want to
write because by the time I'm done doing this and
doing the show preps for everybody else and all the
other things, there aren't enough hours in the day. And
what makes me sad is it's been a long time,

(26:51):
and I know I'm off on a tangent right now,
but we're fixing to take the bottom of the eye
break anyway. It's so it's not that I haven't enjoyed
doing what I've been doing. Now I can do a
full time and have been doing a full time for
the last couple of years. But I have to admit
I started getting a little bit burned out on it
because of all the stuff that I'm trying to do
and all the different things that I have going on.
But now that I have, you know, figured out how

(27:13):
to use AI as a bit more more of an
assistant and had it helped me a little bit more
with my creative outlets, show outlines and where I know,
I'm gonna start feeding it some videos on how to
set up OBS so I can next level the studio setups.
That's next on my list, because I've watched the video.

(27:35):
For some reason, OBS, my brain and OBS don't lock
in all together. Maybe it's maybe it's the eye thing.
I don't know, there's some sort of disconnect going on
between my visual processing and everything else. So I'm thinking,
since I know chat GPT can help with that kind
of stuff, if I start telling it what I'm looking
for and feeding at the instructions, that might be able
to translate it to Ricineese for me so we can

(27:56):
get that locked in. But anyway, so yes, it has
been an evolution for the last couple of years. Things
have been a lot different for us since we started
doing the video broadcasting. And Jeff, I know if you're
listening somewhere, and you probably are, even though you're only
looking for the moment, I know it was your idea
and I should have listened years ago. Don't at me,

(28:17):
don't at me, but look back to this stuff. I mean,
this is an absolute clown show, and they're losing. They
don't even realize that they're starting to lose. Now again,
I'm not a big fan of polls, but when Reuters
is starting to say, hey, Democrats might suck on this one,

(28:38):
it might be time for at least the Democrats to
start listening, you would think. But they can't because you
know why they can't because if they're seen to work
with Donald Trump, Jeffries is going to get primaried and
so is Schumer because they have left. They've left the

(28:58):
asylum folks in charge. The inmates are now running the asylum.
The leftist have control of everything. And if you don't
believe me, just look at what's going on with Mom
Donnie man Dami. Yeah, I think it's the other way, Mandami.
I think that's it. No, no, no, it's it's mom Donnie.
That's right, because anyway, I hate that name. New York

(29:22):
City's gonna make me learn how to say that name too.
I already know, because they're if you guys vote him in,
you get what you paid for it. I'm gonna start
petitioning all the states around you to just build a wall.
I'm being honest, being honest, all right, So I think

(29:48):
we're gonna go ahead and take a music break here
for just a second. Let me kind of get my
my discombobulate itself back in order here. But yeah, so
hang out for just about maybe three and a half
four minutes. My name is Rick Robinson. This is my show.

(30:09):
We do this thing every Tuesday through Friday between while
starting at ten am Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, we cut
the fees off at noon almost said midnight, holy crap,
although that's not too far off, honestly.

Speaker 8 (30:24):
Pardon me.

Speaker 1 (30:26):
And then Friday we do a three hour show because
we do the weekend news round up with Brad Schlager
from town Hall, Red State right here a KLM Radio,
and any other newsy types that might want to hang
out with us for the hour. But we'll be right
back because apparently I need another cough drop. Stay tuned,
every body.

Speaker 18 (31:07):
The windy cries to the broken hills. The voice of
love that never stills.

Speaker 19 (31:18):
Grace flows down like healing streets, baking shades and mending dreams.

Speaker 20 (31:30):
Down, less Nrty and less.

Speaker 9 (31:35):
God through the tastless, sat.

Speaker 24 (31:46):
Graced the city lasting.

Speaker 8 (32:08):
Now I have found on holy ground.

Speaker 21 (32:14):
We're home abouse the south side. The Dahn takes hold.
The story is along greats, how.

Speaker 22 (32:34):
It burns the sacred flame, calling MSU whispering manna.

Speaker 8 (32:49):
Ou less, mesty less.

Speaker 3 (32:56):
Through the top is nice, graz.

Speaker 29 (33:36):
Like a heart, betrue.

Speaker 8 (33:39):
Blackpipes.

Speaker 23 (33:39):
Well, the skies breakthrough, a song of fa, a song
of fire, lifting me.

Speaker 3 (33:52):
From the world's mind.

Speaker 17 (34:34):
You are listening to k l r N Radio, where
liberty and reason still rain.

Speaker 25 (34:43):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advice.

Speaker 1 (34:50):
Hey, hey, hey, it's may contain now we're working on
that around here. Anyway, Welcome back into the program, ladies
and gentlemen. And uh, where are you sure? No hobos were?
You don't know, you don't know anyway. Being raised by
the chat for my AI songs, I think, But that's
all right, that's all right, all right, So all right,

(35:14):
So I told you guys after the break we were
gonna discuss the whole impact to Oklahoma with all the
shutdown stuff, And it is starting to be discussed. What
may happen next? Now I had to do a lot
of tweaking to get it, to get the program that
helps me with my notes to stop screaming the sky

(35:36):
is falling. So the notes took a long time today,
But I just wanted to be as upfront and honest
with everybody as I can, because if this goes on
any longer, there may actually start being impacts felt in
Oklahoma because there is the Federal TRIO office in Washington,
and that all of those folks have been laid off

(35:56):
with a reduction in force. That's the crew that processes
college prep grants nationwide. Oklahoma has thirty three active TRIO
projects and about seventeen thousand students. They're still running everything
off of last year's appropriations, but renewals are frozen until
someone in DC turns the lights back on. Add to that,

(36:21):
cuts the special Ed and Civil Rights staff at the
Department of Ed furloughed, WICK funds taking towards exhaustion, and
OU and OSU research grants in Limbo. And this may
start being felt locally here. But here's the problem. Anytime
this is when this is, this is when I have

(36:45):
to be completely honest with you. Anytime we start trying
to make changes for the better, there is going to
be pain. Think about this from the perspective of your
own body. When you have been too sedentary for a
while and you get up and you start deciding you're
going to be more dive again, even if it just
means walking around the block. How much of those first
few steps suck every single time until you get back

(37:08):
into a rhythm. How much worse is it every time
when you decide, okay, so I've done the block now
for two weeks, let's go up to two blocks, and
then three blocks, and then four blocks, And every single
time you keep thinking I can't add any more to this,
But you're actually helping yourself in the long run. Trust me,
this is a fact kid talking who has been working
on this same stuff myself at every opportunity when I'm

(37:30):
not stuck at my desk for twelve hours a day.
But government and funding is the same way. If we're
going to get serious about decentralizing our education again, it
means we got to start cutting off the federal spigot.
There's gonna be some detoxification going on, folks, if we

(37:52):
actually do If Donald Trump actually does what a lot
of us sent in to DC to do, which is
to break up the monster, to slay the Leviathan. There's
going to be some detoxification, and there's going to be
a lot of people screaming and yelling about how we
need this funding back and we need that funding back.
But that's just it. You're talking about money that's being

(38:15):
funneled out of every single state into federal coffers just
to be redistributed to the states. Again, what is the
point in that. How is it that we don't seem
to understand that education is not a cookie cutter approach.
With today's technology, with the tests that we can run,

(38:35):
with the different ways that we understand how people learn,
we should be putting schools together that are tailored to
how specific children learn so that they're not just stuck.
And I know this from experience. My oldest son absolutely
hated school, hated it. He's always a kid that enjoyed

(39:01):
learning with his hands more than by reading a book.
But I didn't have a choice. And as a matter
of fact, before he wound up going to live with
his aunt because he did. When he was fifteen years old,
we were going through a truancy problem with him. We
started trying to teach him a lesson because we kept
getting phone calls that he was skipping school, so we

(39:24):
made him go to court. Did just put us on
the hook for it. We're like, your honor, We're trying
to teach this kid that he has to go to school,
and all you're doing is telling us we have to
pay a fine. That doesn't help anybody. But you know
what happened. So he drops out, moves in with his aunt.

(39:45):
We go through the process to provide paperwork to the
school saying that you know, he's living with her, she's
got temporary you know, rights to do this, this, this,
and this, and dude, it I think sixteen, well no,
because they wouldn't let him take it yet. But at eighteen,
as soon as he was able to take it, he
took his ged and aced it. So it wasn't that

(40:09):
he didn't understand it. It wasn't that he wasn't smart
enough to do the work. He just didn't care because
he already knew he could do work. We have got
to change how we teach our children because if nothing else,
what COVID has shown me and this is only from
me hearing about it from my kids who have kids. Now,

(40:31):
the schools are terrible. I mean, they're not as bad here.
My granddaughter goes to a school from in a tiny
little town about four miles north of us, and they
have small class sizes and they have good curriculum and
the teachers actually give a damn. But some of these
city schools, man, they they're just diploma mills. And it's

(40:55):
happening everywhere. And all we keep being told is we
have to throw all money at the problem. We have
to throw all money at the problem. We have to
throw more money at the problem. But just like we're
going to be talking about leader in the program, money
doesn't always work. Money doesn't always work, all right. So
because I went super long and winded for the weird

(41:17):
windy road monologue that I did, I got two live
reads I got to do to get them out of
the way. So first I want to talk to you
about our friends over at Freedom Chat. So if you've
been paying attention to that political article that broke with
all these you know the text messages that supposedly came
from young Republicans, but they don't seem to side anywhere
where they actually came from. It's just a bunch of
screen grabs with AI the way it is today? Do

(41:39):
you really trust that? I don't. Look if it's true,
they never should have said those things. But also after
reading through them, I can kind of see we're probably
ninety nine point nine percent of them were kids being
sarcastic because the Democrats don't have a sense of humor.
And until you can show me where somebody running for

(41:59):
attorney general wanted to put a bullet or I'm sorry
two bullets in somebody's head and make sure their little,
tiny fascist kids went with them. Yeah, why am I
saying all this to you?

Speaker 3 (42:10):
Though?

Speaker 1 (42:11):
Freedom chat would have solved this problem for everybody all
the way back to Signal Gate in the beginning of
this Trump's second term. So freedom Chat is an app
that allows you to communicate with people that are also
on the app with you. You can set up conversation
groups based on different different topics, et cetera. Now, I,
for one other than usually work related stuff and a

(42:31):
few friends that I like to chat with. I kind
of agree with Jesse Kelly. There's no reason to have
any group text anywhere ever, because it's different when it's
like a DM group or something on X. I don't
am I just the only one that doesn't like group
text on phones. I hate those. Maybe it's just me,
but maybe that's my anti social stuff coming in. But

(42:53):
look either way, freedom chat you can find all the
information you need to figure out how to put it
on your phone. Shoot you decide to take advantage of
that freedom chat dot com it is an iPhone or
an Android app. But the coolest thing about freedom chat
is you have the control as the person who creates
the conversations. You're the only one who can let somebody
into a conversation that you've created. You also have the

(43:14):
ability to set it to where messages only stay on
the screen in the chat for a certain amount of
time before they go away and are erased forever, because
unlike most places, freedom Chats logs are not necessarily forever.
You also have the option to flip a switch for
any group that you have created that disallows anyone to

(43:36):
be able to take a screen capture. I won't even
tell you that somebody did take it and let them
capture it. It just sends them back a blank screen.
I don't really know how that technology works, but I've
tested it. It's amaze balls. I am the person that's
created some of these conversations that I'm in and I
can't even take a screenshot. I've tried because I wanted
to test it. So freedom chat dot com. Go check

(43:58):
them out, put them on your phone. If you are
a freedom loving American like me who doesn't want big
brothers snooping through your stuff, that's probably gonna be the
best way to get it done. Also, before I forget,
because it's important, klar and Radio Players are presenting their
fall play this year, and of course we're aligning it
with Spooky Season, as we normally do. When we do
a fall play, Friday, August October twenty fourth, eight thirty

(44:22):
pm Eastern Time, the Klarn Radio Players will be presenting
the Day the year stood Still. Make sure you join
us again. That is a week from Friday, in what
we lovingly around here call Aggie Time because almost all
of our shows kickoff at that timeframe, so we've just
kind of adopted that anytime we do specials, especially if
we're trying to include her, because you know, Diva is

(44:43):
gonna Diva just kidding. In case you're listening, Aggie still
love you just had to give you, give you a
hard time, but yeah, so make sure you check that
out a week from Friday, right here live on Klar
radio dot com. So now we're gonna get back to
some of these cuts later because there's other ways that

(45:07):
this will be impacting Oklahoma's but that's we're We're gonna
pull a Jensaki and circle back to that later. So
let's move on to the next bit that we have here,
which is sourced out by both routers right well Routers
Red State and locally here in Oklahoma. Illinois Coates Coits

(45:30):
good Lord get paid to talk for a living, can't
seem to pull it off today. Illinois courts again have
recently blocked the White House from activating State Guard for
non disaster missions. According to Governor Stitt, Oklahoma won't seed
command either, So there is still an ongoing fight over
who controls our citizen soldiers, the state that raises them

(45:54):
or the feeds who fund them. So that's actually a
pretty good question. But again, look, I've said this before.
I am not in one hundred percent agreement with Donald
Trump on this whole spinning up the State Guard stuff.
I understand why why he did what he did in DC.

(46:15):
DC is a special case. It is technically a federal territory.
He can do that, and there's not much anybody can
do to stop him as long as he keeps it
within certain guardrails. My problem with him trying to spend
troops up into blue cities and blue states where the
governors and the mayors don't want in there. I don't
really care about the mayors. It's the governors that are
the issue. And I've there was an optical way to

(46:37):
fix this, and I really wish somebody that had his
ear would have pointed it out. You have red states
that have blue city problems, get permission from those governors
to tackle those blue city problems. Even if you're only
able to get one or two governors to give you permission,
that still allows you to go in and start cleaning

(46:58):
up some of the same issues that are happening like
we're seeing this happen in Tennessee. Tennessee is a red
state with a blue city problem. If he focused there,
even if he only started with one or two test cases,
he would have had And I talked about this yesterday,
all the blue city kids in blue states with their
windows pressed up against the glass, going hey, mommy, how

(47:19):
want some of that? Why do we not have any
of that here. But you know, I don't have the
presidents here. And I mean, like again, even in term one,

(47:39):
you know, Amish and I, well mainly Amish started it.
I just kind of ran with it, started calling him
the Leslie Nielson of presidents because even if he backed
into it sideways, sometimes it seemed like he didn't even
really know what he was doing, but it seemed to
work for him anyway. This time, he's much more on task,
much more on target, and he's doing a much better job.

(48:00):
He's actually got control of the agencies of assignments that
are relying on the people that were already in place
underneath him before, which is why I laugh at all
the people when he starts talking when Trump starts talking
about the fact that there were FBI agents placed in
the crowd on January sixth, and they're like, but it
was your FBI. Yeah, but it wasn't his administrative staff.

(48:23):
We talked about this early on in the Trump administration.
There was this mid level bureaucracy barrier that is the
exact definition of the deep state, which is a bunch
of people that are high enough in position that they
have access to power and influence and low enough in
position that they've been staying under the radar. They were
the ones that were given permanent hiring status. There was

(48:43):
a specific tag they used for it at the time
that was uncovered shortly after Trump was elected, and I
can't remember what that is, and I don't have it
in my notes. But those were basically the midwind bureaucrat
pushers who were telling everybody, just do what your supervisors
tell you to do. Don't pay any attention to the
dude to the White House. They were resisting him the

(49:03):
entire time. He just didn't know because he was naive
the first time. He's like, I won, I should get
to do what I want. These people should fall in
line behind me, except they didn't. They continue to try
to take him out. They continue to try to try
to basically get his administration to run off the rails,
and they pretty well successfully did it the first time

(49:25):
with all the impeachments and everything else. This is why
he has taken a much more heavy handed approach to
FBIDJ and everything else this time because of what they
put him through the first time, and it's working for him.
Even the media is having to start basically conceding the
fact that his stuff is working. We can't really see

(49:45):
it right now because of the shutdown. But last I heard,
right before the shutdown, they were saying GDP was four percent,
or in the neighborhood of four percent, assuming that number
is anywhere near accurate. When is the last time you
remember being told that our GDP was above one point
nine to two percent. That's a big deal. We're back

(50:07):
to strengthening the dollar, albeit slowly, instead of trying to
weaken it. I mean, there isn't a quick way to
strengthen it, because it would rip everything apart if we
just automatically reattached to some sort of tangible asset. I
don't know if we're ever going to be able to
get back to that, but we can at least stop
the depreciation, and Donald Trump is doing a pretty good
job of that right now. We've also got the meeting

(50:30):
coming up with China later this month, assuming it still happens,
because China is suddenly feeling a little bit froggy. Let
me explain to you why China is feeling a little
bit froggy though, because they haven't been telling us the
truth for a very long time. Their population has been
about a third smaller than what they reported ever since
they started doing the only one child per household thing

(50:52):
because the other weird thing about Chinese culture they prefer boys.
Now I get it, Americans were the same way too,
but we didn't murder our daughters just to get sun.
They did because if they're only allowed one, they abort
the girl as soon as they know it's a girl
and then wait for a boy to pop out. Then
there's this COVID hit them a lot harder than they
wanted anybody to believe, or they're still willing to admit,

(51:15):
and not not even including the people that they welded
into their homes with their metal doors and just welded
them shut until they expired. China's in trouble. From different
experts that I've been looking at, they have about ten
years on the map. If they don't find a way
to inject some you know, fresh DNA into their population,

(51:38):
they're done in a decade. This is why they're starting
to eye expansion again because you know the little island
that they're eyeing, it's full of Chinese DNA. Guess what's
happening with Russia and Ukraine. This is something else nobody's
really ever talked about except for Stacy. I saw Stacy

(51:59):
write about it all the time when she was with
PJ Media. Russia tried to absorb the parts of Ukraine
that were ethnically Russian because they're in the same boat.
Now that they've lost hundreds of thousands of troops per
year for the last couple of years, they're in even
worse shape. This is again why Putin is feeling a
little bit froggy. They are on the verge of collapse.

(52:21):
What happens when civilizations are on the verge of collapse,
They either go the way of the Dodo or they
lash out and start trying to expand to territories around
them to try to hang on for survival. Donald Trump
has done a lot to bring peace back to the
world stage. Donald Trump has done a lot to put

(52:42):
America back out leading in front again instead of this
weird lead from behind philosophy that both Biden and Obama
seem to favor, which I never really have understood. But
you know, and that's another thing that they can't deny.

(53:08):
I mean, watching Donald Trump walk into the Kanesset, it
get a rousing round of applause. Have people channing for
BBNT and y'all who after he goes off script and says,
mister president, you should pardon this man, and everybody starts
cheering and chanting for bb Then within a few short hours,
he's in Egypt with a bunch of Muslims and they're

(53:30):
cheering him too. When's the last time you saw a
president able to do that? I don't remember this ever happening. Now. Granted,
when Reagan was in office, I was a kid, so
I wasn't paying that much attention yet. So I may
not be giving him enough credit because something similar may

(53:50):
have happened during his timeframe. I don't really know. But
Bush forty one, Clinton forty three, forty four, I never
saw any of this stuff. You know where I saw
it the first time. Forty five. You know where I'm
seeing it again. Forty seven, same guy, the Democrats and

(54:12):
the media pundit's like to tell you, Well, he says
he's this great deal maker, but why won't he make
a deal with the Democrats on the shutdown? Because they
want one point four trillion dollars of your money back.
They have literally shut the government down. They're holding it hostage,
and they've walked in to the Oval office and said, hey,
mister President, a nice little government and some nice upswings.

(54:36):
You got going be ashamed if something happened to them,
be a shamed. It'd be so be so sad if
something happened to all the work that you've put in.
All we need from you is one point four trillion
dollars and we'll get out of your way for the
next few weeks. In case you haven't noticed that, Donald

(54:57):
Trump has kind of proven that, I mean, he's willing
to negotiate with Terris, but he takes a hard line
with them. And again going back to the rock paper
scissors stuff that's being played out in this on the
Senate floor right now. Did they think he was bluffing,

(55:19):
He's already sent out he's already sent out riff notices.
Did they think he was bluffing. He's told you he's
going to go in and target some of the things
that he identifies as some of the most socialist, abhorrent
democratic led programs ever and start turning people loose with scissors.
All I can say to that is bring it, let's go.

(55:40):
This is what I voted for. So the Democrats have
basically the next, what forty eighty showers to get smart
and pass the CR or they're not going to recognize
the government when he gets done with it. I don't
know which one I'm voting for more to watch them

(56:02):
cave and realize they've lost, or to have them be stubborn,
stick to it, and then to permanently lose because they
will if he manages to go in and gut all
the things that they've secretly been using to fund all
their outraged farms. They're done. So I don't know which

(56:23):
one I want more. So that's my question to you guys,
as we get ready to take the top of the
hour break, which one do you want more? Watching the
Democrats go hat in hand to the president like Obama
did with the Republicans, because they seem to forget this
part ol of why won't he negotiate with us? You know,

(56:44):
try to negotiate with Bama. With Obama within weeks of
them being sworn in, the Republicans, they went to the
White House hat in hand, mister President, you won were
ready to work with you. What can we do? I
don't know if this is exactly how this played out,
but this is how it played out. In my head,
Barack Obama sitting there at the behind the resolute desk

(57:10):
and basically putting his feet up on it because you know,
I do I him being that disrespectful, or imagine him
being that disrespectful, and then basically saying, hey, boys, guess
what elections have consequences and I don't need your votes.

(57:33):
My name is Rick Robinson. This is my show Chat
Lives Matter Day right here live on Kayler Radio. Don't Forget.
Come back tonight starting at seven pm Eastern for a
special Wednesday edition that happens every two weeks of Kingdom
and Country. For those two week episodes, we will be
doing an extended Bible study session with all the verses
of the day that I have put out throughout the
week because there's usually a theme and we're going to

(57:54):
be discussing that tonight, so I hope to see you
guys there. Also, after that, we should have Conservative Communtion
Radio show followed by Behind the Enemy Lines Radio. I
don't know if there's gonna be a Rick and Ordy tonight.
Amish is doing a Nevada run, so he may or
may not be back in time. Once I know you'll know,

(58:16):
there may in fact be an emergency rail session tonight too.
I'll have one ready to go just in case, depending
on if Shawn's back or not. Because if Shawn's not
back and Almish can't do the show, then I may
just roll straight into Bz's closer for the night. Anyway,
My name is Rick Robinson, will be right back. Stay tuned.

Speaker 4 (58:55):
They shut them lives down there in the sittings and
say it see turns on rooms.

Speaker 5 (59:00):
Wore the same hands and broken. Hold your peedi checked
and your hopes.

Speaker 6 (59:06):
They'll sell your sea still call your sacrifice really whatever
drive truly plea.

Speaker 31 (59:14):
That's another line of believe. Freedom is a free has
called them load and stole stuper prizes and every promise
tacks they every.

Speaker 29 (59:32):
Breathe she still called freedom. Freedom is free.

Speaker 2 (59:55):
From marble towers while they're filling on your broa.

Speaker 14 (01:00:00):
They we have a fla man out of rules and
calling me smart for there.

Speaker 10 (01:00:11):
But freedom don't even mission. It's just needs man who
bleed freedoms Freeze. They's call him blood and.

Speaker 20 (01:00:19):
By man.

Speaker 3 (01:00:23):
And do the deal and.

Speaker 11 (01:00:26):
The promise.

Speaker 20 (01:00:31):
Read the.

Speaker 3 (01:00:36):
Still lead cause.

Speaker 12 (01:00:41):
Freedom Mason Freeze.

Speaker 1 (01:00:48):
Treads Freeze.

Speaker 29 (01:00:49):
It's written in red on history's page worn into the
tyrant and the cowards.

Speaker 3 (01:00:57):
Of the east.

Speaker 12 (01:00:58):
They can battery, but the true sales screen.

Speaker 1 (01:01:46):
Not to be a backseat driver.

Speaker 15 (01:01:48):
But can you say for sure you've got the best
monthly payment possible on your auto loan? Could it be
that you might have gotten a better deal by shopping
the loan at a few places and have a lower
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Speaker 16 (01:02:20):
KLRN Radio has advertising rates available. We have rates to
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Speaker 29 (01:03:00):
The windy cries to the broken hills.

Speaker 19 (01:03:06):
The voice of love, the nerve steals grace flows down
like healing streets, breaking shades and mending dreams.

Speaker 20 (01:03:23):
Down, Less Marty and less.

Speaker 8 (01:04:00):
Must now I am found.

Speaker 21 (01:04:04):
On holy ground, were home abouse the south side.

Speaker 8 (01:04:12):
The tom takes home the story.

Speaker 22 (01:04:16):
It's how we birds the sacred flame calling Musu, whispering Manna.

Speaker 8 (01:04:42):
Oless Musty.

Speaker 20 (01:04:48):
God through the.

Speaker 32 (01:04:53):
Bound sad, free Grayson. Mm hmmm, like ad be it true?

Speaker 8 (01:05:32):
Blackpipes?

Speaker 12 (01:05:33):
Will the Skies breakthrough?

Speaker 24 (01:05:37):
A song of face, A song of fire, lifting me.

Speaker 3 (01:05:45):
From the world to my.

Speaker 17 (01:06:12):
H You are listening to k l R and Radio
where liberty and reason still range.

Speaker 25 (01:06:37):
The following program contains course, language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 13 (01:07:13):
From Red to the Rose to the Capitol steps. Rick's
calling truth, no town or regrets, firing.

Speaker 26 (01:07:21):
His voice, facts in his hand, talking sense to the
heart of his lamp.

Speaker 29 (01:07:27):
Gets the Rick Robinson Show.

Speaker 10 (01:07:29):
Whither Truth rise high, no spim, no scrip, just an
eagle in the sky from DC to too. So he's
calling it out mine, getting his hand, He's got the
clouds falling Radio Roy real tune, Little speak up to
feel what we feel.

Speaker 28 (01:07:55):
He's breaking down the nose, cutting through the last shining light.

Speaker 29 (01:08:02):
Oh, guess what day it is?

Speaker 7 (01:08:05):
Guess what day it is?

Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
Eh?

Speaker 7 (01:08:08):
Anybody?

Speaker 29 (01:08:09):
It is Wednesday in my days a.

Speaker 12 (01:08:15):
Way that new bagball for some free.

Speaker 8 (01:08:24):
Robins Show.

Speaker 1 (01:08:30):
Welcome back into the program, ladies and gentlemen. My name
is Rick Robinson. This is my show, and it is
Chat Lives Matter Day right here live on Kayla Radio
Dot com one of our most full days of programming,
one of the busiest days of my week, but I
wouldn't have any in any other way. So because you're
enjoying the show so far today, and then don't forget

(01:08:51):
to come back tonight, where we should hopefully have programming
running until about midnight or one my time, depending on
who all's available, because crazy time. Yeah, so don't forget
tonight's King and Country. We did just start a new series,
but I've decided what I'm going to do for the
every two weeks episodes is We're just going to take
a break from this series and do a Bible study

(01:09:12):
so that way I don't have to keep having continuity issues.
So plus, I've started to put out a Day well
it started. The idea was originally a weekly newsletter. I
think it's going to start being a daily with versus
of the day kind of thoughts for the day kind
of thing, going out usually about five point thirty every morning,
and then that'll be where we pull the material for

(01:09:33):
the Bible study on the every other Wednesday shows, and
then we'll keep the theme running clear and straight and
strong on Sundays. So anyway, all right, so enough about
that well, as we're opening the show, we got to
talk about this. So Charlie Kirk posthumously received the the

(01:09:55):
Congressional Medal of Freedom. Some folks are kind of and
I guess it depends on your point of view. Some
folks are like, oh my god, they carved a cross
on it, and other folks are like, oh my god,
they called it they carved a cross on it. I don't, yeah,
I mean it's a it's a big deal for Erica

(01:10:17):
and it'll be cool for the kids. And I think
the reason they made sure the cross was on there
was because they really do feel like dude laid his
life down for his faith. So I kind of get it.
I do, and I know some of all, what about separation,
don't even start with me. That does not even mean
what we have built it up to mean. It was
supposed to be freedom of religion, not freedom from religion.

(01:10:40):
This country was founded on religious principles, point blank, and
we have turned away from that for so long, for
so hard. And the funny thing is gen Z is
the one lighting the way to bring us back to
this in a lot of ways, and I think primarily
because of folks like Charlie now, he was the one

(01:11:02):
leading the way, but there are there have been other
people that have taken up his mantle and started building
up their TP, their Turning Point USA chapters in their schools.
There was one who was on the Will Kaine Show
yesterday who instead of going straight, instead of going into college,
went to the military first, then went to college, and

(01:11:22):
now he's a senior in high school.

Speaker 4 (01:11:23):
He said.

Speaker 1 (01:11:24):
When he joined his Tea Party USA chapter, it was
him and three other guys. They now have over one
hundred members because the four that were originally there got
together and started working on building it up. Now we're
going to talk a little bit about this young Republican
scandal and a little bit more detail. Because we brushed

(01:11:45):
it on our one, we're going to get into it
a bit deeper on hour two. First with some of
the hot takes from the media, which I've got one
of those qu'ed up right now, so give me a second.
But Keith, is that stept I got to remember to
fix the volume on. But Keith, is that what you're

(01:12:06):
saying is that this is representative of the party.

Speaker 33 (01:12:09):
I am saying exactly that the Republican Party in the
past ten years has moved down the road of racism.
So it's not surprising that you see the open embrace
of Nazism, of anti semitism, of homophobia, of transphobia, of sexism,
of attacks on immigrants, and xenophobia because the Republican Party.

Speaker 8 (01:12:34):
Has doubled down on this racism.

Speaker 1 (01:12:36):
All right, And but Keith, is that what you're saying
is that this is representative of the Yeah, all right, Sorry,

(01:12:59):
I had a bit of a glid going there, but
is my imagination and was doing mad because he seems
really really mad and I'm not necessarily saying he doesn't
have grounds to be mad. But let's keep the clips
going here. Sorry, And of course this is why I
had the other one open on next already, because I

(01:13:20):
knew you were going to do this to me today
one moment. Please, do I have any people, anybody willing
to produce for like literal peanuts, maybe some popborn just kidding.

Speaker 33 (01:13:36):
Whole history of racism in the Republican Party, it started
in nineteen had slavery.

Speaker 8 (01:13:42):
We were against it, Okay, let the Democratic Party.

Speaker 1 (01:13:45):
Slavery is the Democratic.

Speaker 33 (01:13:50):
Tell us about black history. On that one, every American
should be able to tell you about to say that
the party the Party of flavoryout.

Speaker 8 (01:14:01):
Let me just say.

Speaker 33 (01:14:05):
Because I do think that whole history of racism in
the Republican Party it started in nineteen all right.

Speaker 1 (01:14:14):
So there's a pretty heated back and forth. I'm going
to say this again. I didn't see any names listed
anywhere in any of those things. And I'm gonna say
this again. One, Black history and white history, same history.
So let's talk about history, not color coded history, because

(01:14:35):
that's that's communism. I don't think you guys realized how
much communism has actually seeped into this country. All these
different checkboxes they want you to want to be able
to check, have you check off, so they can put
you in specific categories. That is to divide us, that is,
to make us feel different than everybody else. That is
one of the That is step one in the communist playbook.

(01:14:56):
Because in Lincoln said it himself, a house divided against
itself cannot stand. We didn't learn that lesson because we've
just continued to allow ourselves, well, you're not wide enough,
you're not black enough, or oh my god, you're native due.
Who cares? Were they born here or are they citizens?
Have they taken the oath, then it doesn't matter that

(01:15:18):
we need to start focusing on the people that are
in this country that are Americans and the people that
are in this country that are not Americans. Then once
we get that part figured out, we need to focus
on the people that are here that are actually Americans
who actually care about America, and then start looking at
the people that are trying to destroy America. And I
don't mean the left's version of destroy America, because again,
remember for the left everything is opposite. Day. When they

(01:15:40):
say the right wants to destroy America, what they're really
saying is we want to destroy it, but they're stopping us.
And that's just it. Beasy. We are still trying to
undo the damage from Barack, who saying Obama's to for
eight years in office. I was trying to say two
terms and it didn't come out right, so I had

(01:16:02):
to fix it on the fly. But that's just it.
We went back to nineteen sixties race relations overnight should
have been the exact opposite thing that happened, because for
the first time in American history we had a black president.
This should have been a moment for them, you know,
kind of like remember the line from the Jefferson's pilot,

(01:16:24):
when you know, she realizes that the Jeffersons live in
a freaking sky high rise apartment and have like a penthouse,
and then there's the mixed couple that's living there too.
And one of the very last lines of the pilot
episode is, why did anybody tell me that we made
it that was the seventies? How is it that from

(01:16:48):
the late seventies, early eighties, all the way to two
thousand and nine we went backwards, all the way back
to nineteen sixties pre riot race relations? How and why
did we allow it to happen? Because I grew up
in a time where it didn't matter what the color

(01:17:09):
of your skin was. Now, I'm not saying we didn't
still have racism when I was a kid. My grandfather,
God rest his soul, was a very racist individual, but
he was born in a different time. I didn't recognize
it as racism though, because I was a child, there
was an air of innocence. I've told you guys this story.

(01:17:30):
I was four or five years old. I think they
had just opened the mall in Midwest City and we
were walking through sears and I'm walking hand in hand
with my mom and because I'd heard my grandpa say it,
and because I'd heard my dad say it, and I
knew who they were talking about, but I didn't know
it was a bad thing. I was like, ooh, look,
mommy and nigger. Yes, I said it, which is why

(01:17:52):
I said it on air. I was five years old.
I didn't know any better. I didn't know it was
a bad word. I didn't know it was a racial slur.
And as a matter of fact, if you look it
up in the dictionary, it's not we've made it a
racial slur. When you give words power over you, you
are giving away your agency. When you give labels power

(01:18:18):
over you, you are giving away your agency. Why would
you do that in a country where you were allowed
to be whatever you want to be? Should you have
the ability to be able to make that happen when
you can study whatever you want to study, especially today,
You know, that was one of the most astounding things

(01:18:39):
for me with Charlie Kirk is finding out that that
man pretty much took every single free course that Hillsdale
College offered, was reading dozens of books a year, and
still doing all the work that he was doing. You
know what I figure out, dude, must not ever watch TV.

(01:19:00):
I'm starting to think I need to adjust my approach
a little bit and use TV for news sourcing only.
In the rest of my time, have my head buried
in books and stuff like that. You can say the
bigger word beasy. It's fine, everybody knows what it means. Now,

(01:19:22):
I'll let you say it though. Oh anyway, Oh but yeah,
I mean, And in a lot of ways, I'm the
same way. I mean, I went through I went through
high school and some college, and but everything everything that
I've learned, everything that I've taught myself how to do
with this stuff, all everything that I've learned, mostly about history,

(01:19:45):
has been stuff that I've taught myself, and it's been
going down a lot of different rabbit holes. Like if
if anybody in this country actually knew what Reagan, what
almost said Reagan, what Lincoln's real plan was for the
black comunities after the Civil War, he wouldn't be the
hero that he is today. He didn't like them either.

(01:20:10):
He was going to round them all up and ship
them to their own country that he was creating for them.
We don't talk about that, though, because we can't, because
it is impossible. Once you've put somebody on a pedestal

(01:20:31):
to take them off without destroying something. But the truth
about the Civil War is this slavery was already on
the way out, or at least getting to the point
where it was about to be relabeled. The industrial revolution
was doing away with the need for slaves in the North.
The South, which hadn't industrialized as much yet, was still

(01:20:52):
dependent on slave labor. So it was becoming an issue
of competing. The other thing that nobody tells you about
with the Civil guess what. There was heavy Mexican influence
in the South to fight for independence. There was heavy
French Canadian influence from the north to do the same.
There have been forces at work to tear this country

(01:21:15):
apart from the moment that it was created. And instead
of understanding that, and instead of teaching that to our
children and helping them understand how precious and important this
country is and what it does mean to the rest
of the world. And if you didn't ever believe that
it meant what it means to the rest of the world,
all you have to do is look at the last

(01:21:37):
forty eight hours. We really are the city on the hill,
or we were. We're starting to be again. The question is,
are we're going to hold the course? Are we gonna fold?
Are we gonna do what we always do? Get things
pointed in the right direction. Well, you know, there's been

(01:21:58):
some things that I don't like about, so may maybe
we should Maybe we should gohe and let the Democrats
be back in charge of the House again. Maybe maybe
if we put the Democrats in charge of the Senate,
don't get things done. You're a bunch of squishes. You
tell your Congress critters what you want, but then you

(01:22:20):
don't give them the runway to be able to do it.
That makes you squishes. Donald Trump, and I've been saying
this for a long time, is going into gamer speak
for a moment, is single handedly taking an instance all
by his lonesome and holding everybody at bay all at once,
with a handful of lesser characters behind him cheering him on,

(01:22:44):
and then other folks from his own party saying, well
what about this? What about that? You know what I'm
so tired of hearing is freaking Thomas Massey talking about
the Epstein files. Look, they've released as much as they
can release, and the House doesn't have the authority to
overturn a judge's seal. Last I checked that takes a

(01:23:07):
two third majority vote from the Senate, so it's pointless.
It's pro forma, and all it's doing is putting a
knife in the back of your president. I'm gonna say
this again. If there was anything, anything in those documents

(01:23:28):
that put Donald Trump in a bad light, that would
have come out in twenty fifteen, twenty sixteen, twenty seventeen,
twenty eighteen, twenty nineteen, twenty twenty, twenty twenty one, two,
twenty twenty three, twenty twenty four, over and over and
over again. There was nothing there. So that's why they
came after him in every other way possible, because they

(01:23:48):
know there's nothing there. Now, the easiest way to put
it to bed would be to release everything else that
they can release. But the Democrats and now some House
Republicans are for grand jury testimony to be released. You
realize what that's gonna do if people realize those things

(01:24:13):
can be used later, made public later. Do you know
what that's gonna do to our ability to get justice
in this country. Have you thought about what that means,
because I've thought about what that means. Just throwing that
out there. All right, So before we change gears, let's

(01:24:35):
do this one more time. Let's talk about our friends
over at freedom Chat last time for the show for
the real Oh my god, he's doing it again. Freedom
chat dot com. Go check them out, especially if you
like secure communications, if you like being in chats where
people can't screen crap, screen capture the crap and use
it against you later. That's the best place for you
to think. And if you're involved in any any chats

(01:24:57):
in freedom Chat, please make sure you reach out to
whoever's running. Hey, can can you make sure that that
little buttons pressed that says we can't that nobody can
do screen captures? Please? And thank you again, mostly talking
about muckety MUCKs and those in politics and new circles
and everything else. That is a very handy feature to have,
because again, signal gate never would have happened if the

(01:25:18):
administration was using freedom Chat, because even though the press
dude was invited in, it would have been really hard
to get screen captures. I've already figured out a workaround.
I'm not going to tell you what it is, though,
because it probably still wouldn't turn out that great anyway.

(01:25:39):
All right, let's see what other quick hits we have
before we take the bottom of the hour break. Oh wow, okay,
so we got to talk about this. We've only been
kind of circling the Ice stuff lately because I'm kind
of tired of listen into the left whine about it.

(01:26:01):
But this is interesting. So this is from Red State,
written by Nick Arema. I guess La County has passed
a state of emergency, but it's well, it might be
what you expect by now for La County. It's not
a state of emergency to help ice, it's to help
the aliens. So another reason Bezi's probably happy he no

(01:26:24):
longer lives in Commifornia. How over the edge exactly is
the left in Los Angeles County? They're definitely out over
their skis for sure. They proved it, and how they
proved exactly how far they are over the edge and
past the ledge in my opinion, with the move they
made on Tuesday, and I quote, Los Angeles County officials

(01:26:44):
voted tuesday to declare a state of emergency that gives
them power to provide assistance for residents they say have
suffered financially from ongoing federal immigration rates. The move allows
the LA County Board of Supervisors to provide rent relief
for tenants who have all in behind. It was as
a result of the crackdown on immigrants. The local state
of emergency can also funnel state money for legal aid

(01:27:07):
and other services. The report even said this would likely
be and could be a first step towards an eviction moratorium.
So this mean all the all the all the all
the actual citizens, they're gonna get that name moratorium, just asking, so,

(01:27:28):
I mean, are they kidding though, you know, with all
the homeless citizens, with the people who lost homes in
the fire months ago that are currently still you know,
twisting in the wind. This is what they're focusing on.
Defending illegal aliens, Yeah, those folks, and fighting the federal
government's enforcement of the law. And notice the me that

(01:27:49):
the media in that quote ABC uses the term immigrants
when what is meant is illegal aliens. But they do
that on purpose. It's standing reality in the law on
its head and putting illegal aliens over their own citizens
and federal law. It could also lead to further problems
for residents with a question about whether there is a

(01:28:11):
problem regarding rent. So here's the other part of this
landlords are still reading from the COVID nineteen era freezers
that cost them billions of dollars in uncollected rent and
prohibited annual rent increases. According to Daniel Yuckelsen euguleson I Guess,
CEO of the Apartment Association of Greater Los Angeles, but

(01:28:31):
he said the association isn't aware of anyone unable to
pay rent due to immigration enforcement. If local jurisdictions once
again allow rent payments to be deferred due to ice
enforcement activities, this will lead to the further deterioration and
laws of affordable housing in our community. Do you ever
stop to wonder if maybe they're just starting to try to,

(01:28:53):
you know, take over the whole housing thing in California.
Are they trying to do some sort of government run
housing program. I'm starting to feel like maybe they're starting
to try to do some sort of a government run
housing program. That's where we're gonna leave it for halfway
through hour two when we come back, lots more to discuss.

(01:29:16):
This should give you ample time to get up, grab
a drink, stretch your legs, maybe smoke a little bit
of what helps you think unless you're at work. But
then again, even if you are, I'm not your boss,
and I don't judge. My name is Rick, Well, I
don't judge often, just kidding, just kidding, My name is
Rick Robinson. This is my show. We'll be r at
backstay toned.

Speaker 4 (01:29:56):
They shut them laughs down there in it's cisterns.

Speaker 5 (01:30:01):
On the roofs, while the same hands and broken hold
your pea check and your hopes.

Speaker 13 (01:30:08):
They'll sell your fair Paci call your.

Speaker 8 (01:30:11):
Sacrifice rely whatever time of truly bleede. Another line of belief,
freedom is a free has called him stone stupprices.

Speaker 1 (01:30:28):
Go on.

Speaker 8 (01:30:31):
Every promise ta ever breed.

Speaker 29 (01:30:38):
She still called freedom. Freedoms free.

Speaker 8 (01:30:56):
The breed fee from marble towers. While they fell on you.

Speaker 24 (01:31:00):
From y'all they w a fla man out of rules
and calling me smart.

Speaker 10 (01:31:10):
Hers greed. But freedom don't need from mission. Its just
needs man who bleed freedoms free.

Speaker 8 (01:31:19):
Let's call him blood Empire.

Speaker 29 (01:31:25):
The deal.

Speaker 8 (01:31:28):
They promise.

Speaker 29 (01:31:32):
We read little.

Speaker 7 (01:31:37):
Still lead cause freedom masson freeze, freedoms freeze.

Speaker 29 (01:31:51):
It's written in red on history, speage worn into the tyrant.
Send the cowards of the east.

Speaker 12 (01:32:00):
They can bury as But the true sales screen freedom is.

Speaker 1 (01:32:48):
Not to be a backseat driver.

Speaker 15 (01:32:49):
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We have rates to fit almost any budget.

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Contact us at advertising at klrnradio dot com.

Speaker 18 (01:34:02):
The Windy Cries to the broken hills, the voice of loved,
the never stills, grace fulls down like healing streets.

Speaker 19 (01:34:18):
Breaking shades and mended dreams, sound less mercy and less.

Speaker 9 (01:34:30):
Guiding through the podcast night boundless mercy, sadly free grace, Si.

Speaker 8 (01:35:00):
The city fast Now I am found on holy ground.

Speaker 21 (01:35:08):
We're home abouse the saddle side.

Speaker 8 (01:35:14):
The dam takes.

Speaker 12 (01:35:17):
The story.

Speaker 8 (01:35:18):
It's great.

Speaker 22 (01:35:28):
How it burns, the sacred flame, calling Mussul, whispering man,
bowl less.

Speaker 9 (01:35:47):
Less sides, dying me through the Tom Sny boundlesscy sets
me free, Grazdra.

Speaker 23 (01:36:30):
Like a heartbeat, true backpipes. Well, the Skies breakthrough a
song of Fai, a song of fire, lifting me.

Speaker 3 (01:36:47):
From the world to mid.

Speaker 17 (01:37:13):
H You are listening to k l R and Radio
where liberty and reason still raining.

Speaker 25 (01:37:37):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 1 (01:38:00):
And welcome back into the program for good. I had
the slider down seeing if that would help with the
fade out for the music. Anyway, So we're back, We're live,
We're almost done. I know I'm sad about it too.
Some of you are cheering right now. Let's just root
road anyway. So we've been talking about the government large

(01:38:21):
ass and the fact that they love to collect large
amounts of money and then not tell us what they're
doing with it. And it goes into things that we
had no intention of ever funding, etc. What if I
told you the same thing happened a lot of times
with your charitable charitable donations if you're not careful. So
this comes from our friends over at the Blaze. Let

(01:38:44):
me see he doesn't have a byline or was it
a group? Looks like it was put out by Tyler
Hummel Give Me Shelter, The ASPCA, and the group formerly
known as the Humane Society are living large on your donations,
according to a watchdog group that just put out a report.
So want to help animals, you're better off giving locally.
According to the Center for the Environment and Welfare, Animal

(01:39:07):
lovers Beware, some of the biggest charities in the biz
are more than happy to bite the hand that feeds them.
At least that's the contention of one Washington, DC based
watchdog and I quote. While these groups sit in Manhattan
and Washington, DC, collecting a combined five hundred and fifty
million dollars a year, they apparently only throw scraps to
local shelters. So if you ever wondered about when you

(01:39:28):
you know, you give your money to groups and you're like,
do they actually do the one use the money for
what they tell me they're going to use it for. Yeah,
Well you're not alone. And we're coming up on the
holiday season, which is America's busiest giving season of a year,
because that's when everybody's like, oh, this is the season
of giving, we should probably do that. Americans donating roughly
three point one billion dollars to charities in twenty twenty

(01:39:54):
three or to humane society groups, et cetera. About thirty
percent of all annual gears happens. It happens in December December,
with the Tuesday after Thanksgiving now known as now known
nationwide as Giving Tuesday. Yet americans growing distrust of institutions
is starting to affect their willingness to give. A recent

(01:40:15):
study found that fifty seven percent of Americans have high
trust in nonprofit organizations, more than in governments or the media. Still,
that leaves nearly half at least somewhat skeptical about how
their money is being spent, and based on this report,
they should be so when it comes to some of

(01:40:35):
these major animal charities, the Center for the Environments in
Welfare argues that skepticism is justified. On September twenty fifth,
the Center for the Environment in Welfare began airing a
national television campaign. I don't know why they didn't put
nationwide television campaign, but I didn't read the article, so
who cares? Targeting Humane World for Animals. The organization formerly

(01:40:56):
known as the Maine Society until a name change earlier
this year. The ad mark see which kind of wonder
if they were about to get in trouble. Just occurred
to me. There's usually a reason they changed names. I
may have to dig into this a bit more because
this is one of the stories that actually kind of
takes me off. And now I'm going to be a
dog with a bone with it. The ad mark. CW's

(01:41:17):
latest difference is ongoing criticism of these spending practices of
both HWA and rival large animal welfare charity, the American
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals otherwise known
as the ASPCA. Remember the sad music and the and
the chick's voice with the puppy dogs in the cages?
Yeah them, folks. CW claims that these organizations donate as

(01:41:40):
little and I'm gonna say I'm gonna say this a
couple of times, so stay with me, because if you're
not mad by the time I finished reading you this,
then you don't love pets. And I don't know how
I feel about that. So they don't. According to CEW,
they donate as little as one to two percent of
their budgets to local shelters while paying hundreds of staff

(01:42:03):
six figure salaries. I'm gonna say that again, one to
two percent typically goes to local shelters while they're paying
hundreds of staff six figure salaries. CW also alleges to
to the CEOs of the two groups earn six hundred
and fifty thousand dollars a year to one point two
million dollars a year, respectively. Stories like this almost make

(01:42:32):
me understand Mangi on almost. The ads, which will run
throughout the holiday season, encourage viewers to donate directly to
local shelters rather than national organizations. CW says it's considering
expanding the campaign to other major television networks. The public
donates hundreds of millions of dollars a year to these

(01:42:54):
two groups because when you see their ads and names
and the sad puppy dogs in the cages with the
voiceovers and the sad music, and you you can you
assume they're helping local shelters, not lining their pockets. But
apparently they're lining their pockets, like I said, almost almost okay,

(01:43:22):
sorry that see. I even knew this story was coming
because it was in my prep notes.

Speaker 3 (01:43:26):
And I.

Speaker 1 (01:43:30):
Yeah, wusa ousa. Maybe I should try goose Fraba. Maybe
goose Froba will work better. Cood Mmm, okay, so uh,
this kind of turned into the human interest segment. I

(01:43:52):
actually didn't mean this to happen as much as it is,
But I don't know. I may start sticking with this.
At the end of every show. G likes to usually
end on a happy note, too, and I think I
may start trying to figure out how to do that
because I got I'm up here kind of figure out
how to get back down here in about the next
ten fifteen, fourteen minutes. So what if I told you that,

(01:44:15):
while the NFL apparatus is leaning more into certain social
issues instead of less and doing crazy things like, hey,
let's give bad Buddy a halftime show, Nobody even barely
knows who he is and he can barely speak English better,
it'll be good all because he was in a movie
Dude makes it into happy Gilmore too, and all of

(01:44:36):
a sudden they want him doing the Super Bowl halftime show.
But what if I told you that, while all this
is going on in the NFL seems like not only
a house divided, but potentially about to be a house
on fire. What if I told you Apparently, according to
certain sources, more NFL players are turning back to Christ
and starting to use their platform for good. Over the

(01:44:57):
past several years, NFL players have been speaking out in him,
bracing their faith in Jesus Christ, whether it is San
Francisco forty nine Ers quarterback Brock Perty, Houston Texans quarterback C. J. Stroud,
Denver Broncos running back JK. Dobbins wus A good House
Elf Sorry, or Jacksonville Jackuars wide receiver and comeback Travis Hunter.

(01:45:19):
They and the slew of others have all used their
platforms in the unique ways to praise Jesus and embrace
Him as their Lord and savior. During Super Bowl Opening
Night in twenty twenty four, Perty said his identity is
in Jesus Christ, and we actually have a clip I
believe of some of this, So hang on all right,

(01:45:41):
let me make sure it's on the screen.

Speaker 34 (01:45:46):
Professional athlete, it's easy to get wrapped up in your job.

Speaker 11 (01:45:49):
Your job, your job.

Speaker 34 (01:45:49):
You got to do it well, rightfully, so you're getting
paid to do it for, you know, a billion dollar organization.
And I'm not taking anything away from that, but having
a perspective on what your purpose in life is with
your family, faith first and God. I think those are
for me. Those are number one, and that bleeds into
how I do my job, and it allows me to

(01:46:11):
do my job well. So those are number one. Those
are my priorities in life, even for as chaotic and
crazy as my schedule is throughout the week, those stay
at number one. Like I said, I've never tried to
hold on to the football life so tightly. It's I've
held it pretty loosely and see what God has in
store for it. I've stayed faithful to him and He's

(01:46:32):
taken me to places I could and never imagine. So
when I get drafted last, do I freak out?

Speaker 4 (01:46:38):
Do I panic?

Speaker 34 (01:46:38):
No? It's easy too. But more than anything, I was
just grateful. I had a grateful mindset, and I had
an opportunity to go play for the forty nine ers,
And obviously I took it one day at a time
and I got an opportunity and I'm very thankful for it.
So man, yeah, I would just say, you know, not
trying to hold on too tightly to your life and

(01:46:59):
what you do with your job and making sure your
identity is in Jesus and and honestly that's been the
case for me in my life. I haven't, you know,
try to hold onto the football life being a quarterback.
It's it's been about, all right, God, this is what
I do. But I am who you say I am,
and all right.

Speaker 1 (01:47:15):
So I'm gonna stop it there because it keeps going
for a little bit, not because it's not good, but
because we don't have that much show clock left, so
I don't want to take up the entire thing. We
may actually circle back to that a little bit tomorrow
because there's some good messaging there, and that may actually
be a part of the Bible study that we talk
about tonight, and that's learning to let go of your life,

(01:47:36):
learning to not hold on to it so tightly. I
have now. Part of it was I think a survival
mechanism because when my marriage ended unexpectedly for me anyway,
and turned my entire life upside down. So I've been
making a lot of changes and figuring out who I
am again and figuring out how to do the things
that I thought I wanted to do. But at the

(01:47:57):
same time, I've been, you know, leaning into God a
lot more, turning back to Him a lot more. Even
if I wasn't really showing it publicly, it was happening privately,
and that's when I started feeling like I was being
pulled into doing this kind of stuff full time. The
opportunity to write and make decent money as a side
gig became a thing. I've got retirements, I've got access

(01:48:18):
to so and then you know the generosity of you guys.
But you know, the whole point of all of this
is this. If you are a believer in Christ, you
have to be able to follow his lead. And I

(01:48:39):
know that's hard sometimes. Trust me, I'm speaking from experience.
It's definitely hard sometimes. But I think he summed it
up well, He's like, I know this is what I do,
but I am who you say I am. So if
this isn't you know, as long as I have the
ability to do this, I'm going to use it to
promote you. The one thing that I will say is

(01:49:02):
in a bit as a bit of a side.

Speaker 15 (01:49:05):
Is this.

Speaker 1 (01:49:06):
I didn't realize how old I was actually becoming until
I put up clips of people that are playing professional
football and to me, they look like they're twelve. I'm
officially old. I have tried tried to ignore it. I
have tried to run away from it. But when all

(01:49:27):
I can see is a little kid in a football
jersey talking like a big boy. And this is no
slide against him. I swear, It's just he's got the
baby face. He's got the baby face. It seems like
lately everybody's got the baby face. I'm looking at these
people that are in their twenties and their twenties, and

(01:49:49):
I'm like, they look like you're twelve. Did I ever
look that young? Really? And then I remember what my
senior picture looked like, and I'm like, yeah, I actually did,
and now I don't, and now I don't. But look,
I'm happy to see so many people starting to come
out and talk about these kind of things publicly, because
there was a time when we weren't allowed to. I

(01:50:11):
remember when in my grandparents' day, there was always these
conversations about when you were going out into public, well,
remember we're going to so and so's house, and don't
discuss religion and don't discuss politics because we don't do that.
My question started becoming, why don't we do that because

(01:50:35):
we don't want to ruvel feathers. Part of what allowed
the things to happen that have happened over the last
one hundred years or so is our inability and our
unwillingness to discuss them. And now we had once telling

(01:51:00):
us all we want you to do is sit down
and have rational discussions. They're doing it again. We want
the Republicans to come back and negotiate with us because
we didn't have any input in the CR. Yes, actually
you did. That's this is nothing but funding levels that
you had already agreed to under Joe Biden being extended

(01:51:24):
for a few weeks so they can start pushing through
the individual budget bills. So you can't say you didn't
have any input. This was Biden's baby. Y'all. Don't want
it though, because you need one point four trillion dollars
for your slush funds. You want to be able to

(01:51:44):
fund PBS and and NPR again. You want to do this,
You want to do that. You want to give like
some like a billion dollars to LGBTQIA in one foreign
country somewhere, and I know, well Donald Trump gave twenty
billion dollars to so I don't care. It's giving money

(01:52:05):
to a potential ally, not giving money to a friends group.
And again I get as far as the twenty billion
dollars seem given that. I don't care. I'm not not
a huge fan of that either, But you know what,
I'd rather go to our allies than go to freaking
people that want to teach kids that it's okay to
chop their penises off. Is that too blunt? Maybe it's

(01:52:29):
too blunt, but that's just.

Speaker 29 (01:52:33):
Me, all right.

Speaker 1 (01:52:36):
So let's do a quick spin around the news see
if we have anything else that's breaking. Looks like Katie
Porter's still in the news, so I don't know what's
gonna happen with her. The weird thing is like, she's
like this ghoul, right, but she doesn't have any cult
of personality stuff going on. The guy over in New
York City has just as much of that, you know,

(01:52:57):
ghoulish tendency and gonna do everything possible to make your
life a lot worse, but wrap it up in a
candy wrapper so you don't notice. But he's got the
culture personality thing going on, all right. So we got
to talk about this on the way out. So you
remember when Big Edward Big Ball's chorus Choruston got assaulted.

(01:53:21):
Apparently you know this happened back in August. The former
DOGE staffer was beat up by youths or shall we
say utes. You don't get the reference because you're not
hollow enough in Washington, d C after he intervened in
a car jacking. It was this attack that pushed President
Trump to federalize Washington d C law enforcement. In a
post on Choose Social the president wrote, crime in Washington,

(01:53:42):
d C is totally out of control. Local utes and
gang members, some only fourteen, fifteen, and sixteen years old,
are randomly attacking, mugging, and maiming and shooting innocent citizens
at the same time, knowing that they will be almost
immediately released. They are not afraid of law enforcement because
they know nothing ever happens to them, But it's going

(01:54:02):
to happen now. Earlier this month, Ted Cruz slam Democrats
over this soft in their soft on crime policies. But
it gets worse. So two teenagers who jumped former DO
staffer Edward big Ball's Chorustine have avoided jail after pleading
guilty to simple assault at the Washington DC court. The
boy and girl WLL fifteen, from Hyattsville, Maryland, were sentenced

(01:54:24):
to probation at a DC court on Tuesday, just over
two months after the pair were arrested for the savage
August third attack. According to WUSA nine, the boy was
handed a twelve month probation and allowed to return home
under strict house arrest, while the girl was given a
nine month probation and remanded to a local ute shelter. Yeah,

(01:54:52):
when crime has no consequence, crime becomes the way we
do things. Been pointing that out now for a while.
All Right, ladies and gentlemen, that's gonna do it for
this one. Don't forget Friday, October twenty fourth, twenty twenty five,

(01:55:13):
eight thirty pm Eastern. Join the KLARM radio players, myself
included for the day of the year stood Still. That
is a week from Friday at our lovely agaurecon time,
and don't forget to come back tonight for Chat Lives
mattera night full boat of programming as far as I know.
We'll make adjustments on the fly for anybody who is
an available and go from there. But we'll be kicking

(01:55:33):
things off at seven pm Eastern with a special Wednesday
Bible study edition of Kingdom and Country. My name is
Rick Robinson. This has been my show and I do
wish every single one of you a great rest of
your Wednesday, and thank you so much for hanging out
with me for part of your morning at least, And
I will see you later tonight and back here, same

(01:55:54):
bat time, same bat channel tomorrow on the Rick Robinson's
Your Role mm hm say good night, Gracie, hung my
prossle

Speaker 3 (01:56:18):
H
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