35 Burst results for "Brian D. S"

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Has Fox News Turned on President Trump?
"And it sounds like Fox News has turned on president Trump. Did Fox News carry his rally in Waco? If not, why not? Because if they didn't, and I don't believe they did. I think newsmax carried it, but I don't believe Fox News certainly none of the other networks carried it. And it's a huge story because it was the really the first official campaign rally for president Trump's 2024 effort. And if Fox News didn't carry it as I suspect they did not and for one of their stars, Brian kilmeade to go scorched earth on Trump the way he did, I mean, clearly Fox News is pulling for somebody else. I mean, kilmeade is also somebody who wants blamed Trump for January 6th as I understand it. But it's not just these guys don't do these take these positions in a vacuum, believe me. I know enough about how TV networks work and how cable news works. This is all calculated. And it's a, it's a big deal. It's a big deal. And, you know, I don't think I don't have anything personal against Brian kilmeade, he's a nice guy. He just hates Trump evidently. Brian kilmeade thinks Trump should ignore the very real possibility that he's about to get arrested over this nondisclosure agreement payment that he's supposedly made to stormy Daniels. You think he's going to look the other way from that?

AP News Radio
FAU holds off Nowell and K-State to reach 1st Final Four
"Florida Atlantic, the 9th seat in the east is headed to the final four after winning the east regional final 79 76 over Kansas state. The owls were down 63 57 with 8 and a half minutes remaining, but then scored the next ten points to take the lead for good and shocked the college basketball world. Brian greenley scored 16 points including four three pointers for FAU. They could say what we want to say we're a Cinderella team, say we don't belong, but we've constantly proven people wrong. All season. It will be the first trip to the final four for Florida Atlantic, which had to overcome a 30.12 assist performance by the wildcats marquise Noel, who was the regional's most outstanding player. Tom, New York

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Caller Unhappy With Dr. Sebastian Gorka's Criticism of Ron DeSantis
"I was hoping to take a minute, maybe 90 seconds and address the top of my Friday, I think. All the people that are just outright attacking Ron DeSantis the past couple of days. And I saw an interview last night. Our newsmax, where the whole interview Brian understand us. And then they brought in a couple of people to respond to runs interview and one of the people with sub gorka. And I'm just on fire after sub gorka said that Seth was all wrapped up about Santa's being silenced for two whole days. After the Trump announcement that he was going to be arrested and then he was mad about sub was mad about Ron DeSantis using the term hush money for a porn star. And he was upset because others were thinking about that's what the case is about. Hush money to a porn stock. But what really got to me was when this was a quote, Ron DeSantis looked into a camera. Point this thing, everyone said, you are a former jag rang, meaning judge efficacy general. Rule of law should matter to you. And I thought I was just, I just went back. For the past year, I'd just like to remind everybody that in April of 2022, Ron DeSantis signed a bill banning CRT from Florida schools from kindergarten to 12th grade. In August of 2022, he formed the election crimes in security office, which has been very successful, but he's looking in the voter fraud. Also in August of 22, Ron DeSantis fired that Soros prosecutor Andrew Warren for not doing his job. I want how many people remember that in September of 2022. We

AP News Radio
Ullmark's 40 saves carries Bruins past Senators, 2-1
"Down one zero midway through the first, the Boston burns scored two straight goals in the period to come from behind and beat the Ottawa senators two to one for their league leading 54th win. David karate started the scoring for Boston on the power play, and then four minutes later, Jake dubrov added the game winner on an assist from Brian marchand. Linus Olmert made 40 saves for the victory, including 22 in the second period.

AP News Radio
Biden to award first batch of arts and humanities medals
"President Joe Biden will be presenting arts and humanities medals on Tuesday. I Norman hall. Bruce Springsteen will be honored at The White House when president Joe Biden presents him with the 2021 national medal of arts. It's the nation's highest award for advancing the arts in America. The Rock music icon is among a dozen individuals and groups Biden has chosen to honor during a White House ceremony, the medals are Biden's first batch of awards for the arts and humanities and were delayed by the pandemic. Other 2021 arts on a race include authors Amy ten and Colson Whitehead. Humanity's honorees include anthropologist johnetta Cole and advocate for the poor Brian Stevenson. Norman hall,

The Officer Tatum Show
Republicans Assail New York Prosecutor Investigating Trump
"This breaking from just the news had tip forgotten man, GOP led House judiciary demands, the Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg testify about possible Trump indictment. Guys, guys, I'm getting excited. I love when conservatives fight back. We don't have to take this crap from the left. A bunch of woke punks. We don't have to take this stuff anymore. And some in Washington on our side are finally getting a clue somebody say hallelujah, all right? So Jordan noted that the statue of limitations for any alleged crimes involving the former president is set to expire soon, likely explaining Bragg's rush to indictment. So, the Republican led house on Monday sent a letter to the Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg demanding that he testify about his possible indictment of former president Donald Trump overcharges, allegedly related to hush money payments to adult porn actress stormy Daniels. The letter was sent by judiciary committee chairman rep Jim Jordan, who was joined by House oversight committee James comer and house administrative administration committee chairman Brian Steele. The letter was obtained by Fox News and it says here and I quote, in light of the serious consequences of your actions, we expect that you will testify about what plainly appears to be a politically motivated prosecutorial decision. According to Jordan, Jim Jordan representative Jim Jordan. Of course, Trump said over the weekend that he expects to be indicted Tuesday, which would be tomorrow, but neither Briggs nor his office has confirmed the statement.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Kash Patel and Sebastian Unpack the Newly Released J6 Footage
"You're a former terrorism prosecutor for the DoJ. So we've got the footage here that Tucker's team released of Brian sicknick, the puts to bed, for example, that he was murdered by the January 6 protesters. We see him after he was allegedly murdered, walking around the capital. Do we have the footage, Eric? But Brian sicknick should not be reduced to a prop for the political ambitions of the Democratic Party. He was a human being. The facts of his life matter, including how he died. To this day, media accounts describe sicknick as someone who was slain on January 6th. The video we reviewed proves that is a lie. Here is surveillance footage of sicknick walking in the capitol after he was supposedly murdered by the mob outside. By all appearances, cyclical. So we see he's fine. He's walking around in a helmet. We see the footage of Jacob chansley, this quote unquote James shaman, being a Scottish through the building at times by up to 9, 9 capital police officers, you're the former prosecutor, are there any forget politics? Are there any legal ramifications? Can we get this guy out of prison who's given 41 months? What happens to everybody else? You're the expert. Is this just a political win or is there something deeper going on here? Well, there's got to be analysis look as a former federal public defender who challenged the DoJ out DoJ on so many cases in federal court about what we call Brady violations, violations by the DoJ prosecutors for failing to intentionally disclose exculpatory evidence and evidence of impeachment. So it's called Brady and giglio. Let's put the legal parlance aside. What due process the constitution the Supreme Court demand prosecutors in the DoJ must turn over all evidence that even might be evidence of innocence and evidence of impeachment. They don't have to use their judgment to answer the question. It's just a maybe. 41,000 hours of videotape said is evidence.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Julie Kelly and Sebastian Discuss the Death of Brian Sicknick
"Let's drill down on a couple of things. We have to talk about Proud Boys. We have to talk about this. This amazing article that I've mocked up, which is your handy January 6th fact sheet. But let's talk about the first pieces of footage that Jacob translate footage and the Brian sicknick off cyclic footage. So with the case of sicknick, here we have heard again and again and again, the president, the vice president, Pelosi and others say that police officers died that day. No police officers died that day. Only people like Ashley babbitt were killed that day. The actual January 6th demonstrators and now we have proof positive do we not that there was no violent event on behalf of a January 6th protester that led to the death of Brian sicknick. If I had to pinpoint the most outrageous lie related to January 6th, then there are a lot. I would point to the exploitation of the tragic death of Brian at age 42 by all accounts a really decent man who had served his country with capitol police officer, I've been in communication with one of his closest friends who he actually texted. On January 6th said they'd antifa was there, by the way, that's been lost in a lot of the coverage as well. But Brian sicknick tragedy, tragically died of a stroke caused by two blood clots on January 7th. The next day, though, The New York Times rolled out a completely fabricated piece sourcing two anonymous law enforcement officials that claimed Ryan sicknick had been bludgeoned to death with a fire extinguisher by Trump supporters. Now this provoked an understandably nationwide outrage that Trump supporters would beat to death a capitol police officer with a fire extinguisher. Of course, I didn't believe it from the beginning because there was still no video or pictures that even claimed came close to showing that. But nonetheless, his death was exploited by the news media. By House Democrats by Republicans,

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Julie Kelly Unpacks Tucker Carlson's J6 Footage Release
"Whole Tucker Carlson footage release Kevin McCarthy promise and so forth. There are those who have said it's amazing. Especially when we see the coverage, the actual footage of Brian sicknick, safe and well after he was meant to have been killed by the January 6th protesters, we see jape chansley being escorted through the building at times by more than 9 police officers who did nothing to stop him. Then we have Mitch McConnell, we have Chuck Schumer saying, don't release any more footage, and it looks like something happened the next show Tuesday night with Tucker was not the show he clearly was preparing to release less footage came out than we expected. Talk to us about what you think is going on and more importantly, what the consequences of the handing over of these 44,000 hours from speaking McCarthy to at least one news outlet could be. Is this good news? Will it make a difference, Julie? I think it will. And look, as someone who I believe was the first on our side back in May of 2021, to call for the release of all of the video after the capitol police filed in one of the cases that they considered this all of this footage highly sensitive government material, the DoJ was putting it under protective orders. Weed American greatness were like, wait a second. No, no, no, no. If you're going to call this a terror attack, we deserve to see all of it. So it was very gratifying to see Kevin McCarthy fulfill his pledge really at the behest of a handful of Republican lawmakers to release this video. I really did not think that he would. I supported giving it to Tucker and here's the reason why stab. First of all, you have to be extremely knowledgeable and informed about the events of January 6th to know where to look, see who some of these people are, what their movements were and to build a case about some sort of malfeasance. They're very few people and Tucker is one of them who's followed this from the very beginning, as you know, he produced a three part documentary patriot purge in 2021. So he was on to this from the very beginning.

The Dan Bongino Show
Amber Athey: Changing the Rules on 'Gay, Homosexual & Queer'
"When I was there guest hosting one time I'll never forget being there in the morning I don't know I think Brian Wilson was there whatever at the time This is a while ago And the story came over you know it's a morning you know how this morning so you barely like awake I mean you get up at like two in the morning or whatever And this story came over and it said something to the effect of I remember like it was yesterday This leftist activist group is just declared the term and I don't remember which one it was I'm being candidly gay or homosexual It's offensive You're going to use one I don't remember which one was supposed to be the offensive one And I thought to myself because I forgot the story halfway through the segment we were doing which word it was and I thought isn't that the point The left you just said It's a really don't care It's not even about the word It's a way to control you It's a way to say no no no We've arbitrarily decided this is how you're going to speak about LGBTQ members of the community And if you don't use our language instead of your language then we're going to declare you a bigot and we're going to make you persona non grad I mean that is that's power right there That's exactly what that is And I mean I remember growing up the term queer was a slur against gay people and now it's actually part of their alphabet LGBTQ They describe themselves And it's like a point of pride And you don't even have to actually be gay to consider yourself clear You can be like a girl who likes to wear overalls and cut your hair short And you can say that you're queer and you immediately become part of this victim class that really is one of the most powerful groups in society because again they're controlling the language they're controlling what is culturally acceptable They're controlling the ability of people to engage in polite society You know they have to go along with all of the rules otherwise they get canceled or they get destroyed So it's really fascinating to watch

AP News Radio
Autopsy: 'Cop City' protester had hands raised when killed
"The family of a slain environmental activist killed by law enforcement near Atlanta in January allegedly had raised hands at the time. I Norman hall, Manuel paes Tehran was fatally shot in January during protest against a police training center just outside Atlanta that opponents call cop city, authorities have set officers return gunfire after the 26 year old shot and seriously injured a state trooper while officers cleared activists from a forest or officials plan to build the training center. But civil rights attorney Brian spears told WSB that a second autopsy commissioned by the family raises questions about what really happened to Pius Tehran, who went by the name tortuga. Manuel was looking death in the face. Hands raised when killed. The investigation is being handled by the Georgia bureau of investigation. I Norman hall

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Caller: Politicians Push J6 Propaganda Like 'Triumph of the Will'
"Listen. Germany, there was a lady by the name of Lenny rife and stall and she was a Nazi propagandist. She made the movie called triumph of the will. This movie convinced Germany to accept the white Aryan nation. Okay, and then of course we have Hitler come in and do what he did. There's nothing different here with our media in the left. The politicians are only picking out what they want the Americans to see and now we see the evidence that's out that there wasn't an insurrection. And yet they're going to do whatever they can to back up their claim that this wasn't insurrection continuing to brainwash instead of getting down to the facts of we really need to look what happened. They're covering up. This was nothing more than a coup. They took over the capitol kick Trump out and they're trying to erase anything that's happened. Well, I'm not sure they're killing them. I don't know the kick Trump out, but here's what's amazing. Here's a guy Jacob chansley who's rotting in prison four years and his lawyer didn't get access to the exculpatory evidence showing the capitol police escorting him pleasantly through the capitol. Isn't that interesting to the mainstream media? Don't they find that newsworthy? How could that not be newsworthy, Jeff? It is these worthy. And the capitol police were used. I believe antifa was used. Look, insurrectionists, people that are trying to take. The people wearing the backpacks and the helmets, that's antifa anywhere you see that that fits all antifa. Well, the best line of the best line of the night, Jeff was Tucker pointing out, is the accusation now that people are coming up with against Tucker was that he somehow cherry picked videos that there were videos that he's just, well, yeah, what you're supposed to do, play 44,000 hours. He's showing what we didn't see. He's showing officer Brian sicknick, walking around directing protesters through the capitol.

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Mike & Mark: McConnell Opposes Release of Unseen J6 Footage
"Headline for you to just salivate on. You just let this headline ruminate in your brain. Mitch McConnell opposes the release of previously unseen surveillance video from January 6th, said Fox did the wrong thing in highlighting this revealing this to the American people. Mitch McConnell joins Chuck Schumer and the media meltdown was predictable. Of course. Of course. They didn't get their hands on it, believe me, if CNN got to release, first of all, they wouldn't have released anything that showed anything except the popular narrative. And you know what's so funny about the criticism that Tucker is getting on this? He's showing an acknowledging plenty of violence. In fact, the interview that he did last night with one of the former capitol police officers who lost his job over very wisely donning a maga hat to wade through the crowd to get to his fellow officers work his way through the crowd without being aggrieved by them. You can't wear a maga hat for any reason, even if it's to be with a crowd to try to, well, anyway, the fact that Tucker's even talking to him about the trapped officers acknowledges the Tucker is willing to say, yeah, of course there were some bad actions that took place that day. He doesn't deny that. He said there were hooligans and there were people that committed vandalism and violence. He hasn't ignored it. What he's doing is presenting other videos that the January 6th committee didn't let anybody see showing peaceful strolling through taking selfies, smiling, the shaman, the QAnon shaman getting a guided tour by this is the weird, this is the weirdest thing. For me, it's the weirdest part of the video other than officer Brian sicknick, returning from the dead to direct people around the interior of the capitol.

Mike Gallagher Podcast
New Video Shows Brian Sicknick Appeared Healthy Following Jan. 6
"Here's the clip that shows officer Brian sicknick. This is supposedly after the time where he was assaulted with some sort of spray, whether it was bear spray or mace, The New York Times falsely claimed that he was bludgeoned to death with a fire extinguisher, Anderson Cooper on CNN repeated that bald faced lie. It turned out to be completely false. He died of a stroke, the day after the riot, and the medical examiner ruled that it was a death by natural causes. But so here's the clip. If this is tough. The Brian sicknick should not be reduced to a prop for the political ambitions of the Democratic Party. He was a human being. The facts of his life matter, including how he died. To this day, media accounts describe sicknick as someone who was, quote, slain on January 6th. The video we reviewed proves that is a lie. Here is surveillance footage of sicknick walking in the capitol after he was supposedly murdered by the mob outside. By all appearances, sicknick is healthy and vigorous. He's wearing a helmet, so it's hard to imagine he was killed by a head injury. Whatever happened to Brian sicknick was very obviously not the result of violence he suffered at the entrance to the capitol. This tape overturns the single most powerful and politically useful eye that Democrats have told us about January 6th. And it was indeed a lie. The January 6th committee knew perfectly well that Brian sicknick was walking normally through the capitol after he was supposedly murdered by Trump supporters, and they know that because they saw this tape.

Unchained
Senators Question Binance on Eerily Similar Claims to FTX
"7 a.m. Friday March 3rd, 2023. Senators questioned violence on eerily similar claims to FTX. U.S. senators have alleged that the limited public information about binance's finances suggests that it is a hotbed of illegal financial activity. In a March 1st letter addressed to binance CEO chomping zhao and binance, U.S. president Brian Schroeder, senator Elizabeth Warren, Chris van hollen and roger Marshall requested information about. The post senators questioned by eerily similar claims to FTX appeared first on unchained crypto.

CoinDesk Podcast Network
Crypto's Center of Gravity Is Shifting Away From the U.S.
"All right guys, well today we have an interesting theme. And we're going to spread this out over a couple of pieces, and I think a good way to kick it off is to point to a tweet which really deserves the visual, but it's from Brian quintessence of former CFTC commissioner who's now at andreessen Horowitz, and he shared a chart put together by electric capital that is the percentage of all of the world's crypto developers who are in the U.S.. The proportion of the developers in the U.S. has steadily declined year over year. In 2017, it was around 42% in 2018. It was around 39% in 2019. It was around 36% in 2020, it was around 33% in 2021. It was around 31%, and in 2022, it was around 28%. Now, I don't think there's anything wrong with developers coming from all over the world, and the best way to read this chart or the most hopeful way to read this chart would be that other developers from other places got in the game. However, I think, as you'll see from our topic today, that there might be something else going on, and certainly that was the point that Brian was trying to make. The comment that he added to the chart was this. For Gary gensler, this is what success looks like. The point of course is the U.S. seems to be determined to push crypto offshore, and that is the theme of the conversation today. So we're going to start with a piece by Noel atchison who used to be the head of research at coindesk and genesis trading that's called the future of crypto markets will be driven by developments in the east. Crypto investors need to keep an eye on geopolitical shifts playing out on the regulatory landscape, specifically some upcoming changes in Asia. Noelle writes, as political experts focus on the diplomatic dance and building tensions between the United States and China, punctuated by some balloon shaped comic relief that might end up not being so funny after all, a more benign battle is brewing in the halls of financial regulators. While local for now, nothing stays local for long and global markets. The potential ramifications go well beyond crypto markets, potentially shaping economic influence that. In this changing landscape, is more geo strategically important than ever. Earlier this week, Hong Kong securities and futures commission or SFC published a proposed text of its upcoming crypto regulations, slated to go into effect on June 1st, and opened it up for public comment. Its scope includes the licensing for crypto asset service platforms, which were originally only going to be allowed to service accredited investors. The SFC is now seeking input on whether or not retail investors should also be allowed to participate, and what types of protection should be in place. Also open for discussion as the range of quote unquote approved assets, which in principle would only include a limited selection of the most liquid tokens.

Epicenter
Jesse Pollak on Base, The Optimistic Gateway to Crypto Adoption
"So coinbase is famously a publicly listed company, which means you have fiduciary duties to your shareholders, right? So what's the high level business case behind introducing base and bringing coinbase on Shane? Because basically kind of just justifying that with ideology, isn't enough for shareholders, right? You have to have a business case. Yeah. Yeah. And if you look at what coinbase, what's made coinbase's business over the last ten years, I think what you'll see is that we've made money by making it easy for users to interact with and access crypto. And for the longest time, the thing that users have wanted to do in crypto is trade. They want to speculate. And so we've made money by making it really easy for them to buy crypto, sell crypto, hold crypto, do that in a secure way. That's trusted with easy interface. But I think from the beginning, this is pretty well laid out in Brian, our Armstrong, our CEOs, secret master plan for coinbase, which we wrote in 2016. The vision for coinbase is to bring about an open crypto economy where there are millions of apps that billions of people are using that are not just trading, not just speculative, but are actually things people have to use on the day to today life to go about the things they care about. And I think our thesis is that if we can accelerate the number and quality of those applications, then there will be tons of opportunity for coinbase to continue building easy to use interfaces that are trusted for our users to use those applications. And we'll be able to make money off of that because users will be able to continue users will be excited about paying for the privilege, we're paying for the access that coinbase will provide. That's kind of a gateway to web three,

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Gov. Kemp Questions Letting Buckhead Leave Atlanta as Vote Looms
"There was an effort in Atlanta and the Atlanta suburbs of Buckhead to secede from the city. Buckhead is a very wealthy area of Atlanta and the citizens there have been hit especially hard with crime and with criminals. And their argument is that while they're paying perhaps the most the most taxes in the entire city, they're getting the least city services. So the good people of Buckhead decided we are going to petition the state House to secede from Atlanta. Now you would think this would not be a problem, especially since Georgia is controlled by Republicans. But word coming out now, that governor Brian Kemp is going to stand in the way of whatever secession effort comes up. This is the headline from Fox News, Georgia governor Kemp deals blow to Buckhead suburb, trying to secede from Atlanta over violent crime. And the story goes on to outline how the governor's cohorts in the state House are trying to stop this from happening. Now, they're supposed to be voting today in the state legislature on this. But there is a big, big problem, and the problem is coming from the governor's office. And I'm curious to know, ladies and gentlemen, especially those of you who are listening to us in Georgia and we have a lot of listeners in the Atlanta area. Should the people of Buckhead or for that matter should any suburban city that is not being protected from the criminals, should they be allowed to secede from their cities? And that kind of an issue has been talked about all over the country and

Dr. Drew Podcast
"brian d. s" Discussed on Dr. Drew Podcast
"Shows, you can see those there, be a part of that. You can get on the restream or you can get over to Clubhouse. We take calls on Clubhouse from the Congo shows. Usually it's like Monday Tuesday Wednesday at 3 o'clock Pacific time. And do check out some of the other social media, like Instagram, Dr. Drew Pinsky. Twitter, Dr. Drew. And today, Brian Simpson, comedy special, the stand up season three available right now on Netflix. Episode one of season three. Well done. Right, welcome. What's happening? I left out loud a lot during your, did I see that? Was I looking at the Netflix thing? I send you the Netflix thing as well, but we first started with David Spade cliff. Oh yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I was like, oh, I want to talk to Brian. I'm ready for that. That's good. But I was telling Brian that today I have diverticulitis, which is this thing I get like every 6 months. It's like having appendicitis on the left side instead of the right side. It needs a surgery, but I've been avoiding it. It's like peritonitis, localized peritonitis. And it doesn't help me. So your colon, can you show me a picture of diverticulitis? Well, I'm guessing divert divert is the root word. No, no. I don't know why the diverticulum is I think the operant part of it. Show a picture. So you can see here. Yeah, keep going. You got to blow one up for us. Give us a diagram. Yeah, yeah. No hold Jesus Christ. I hope I'm not doing that. It shows how bad it can get. Anyway, there are these little outpouching. The do you see the kind of there? Yeah, yeah, okay, so those little outpouchings along the side of the colon on the right. Oh yeah, yeah. Yeah, some people develop those. And we don't know why they develop they're sort of genetically programmed. And they can fill with debris and start to become abscessed and get infected and leak in the leak goes actually in your abdominal cavity so you get peritonitis. It's good, right? Why is debris such a hilarious word? Do you tell me you're the comedian? Debris is a good word. So that's me. And so I have to take all these antibiotics and it makes me weak and it's just nothing funnier than that, though, a little diverticulitis. And it's recurring. I was just thinking as I drove up here when I had colonoscopies on a regular basis. But three years ago, guy looked at me and went, you're going to have to have that surgery. It's surgery. You've got to get the surgery done. And I was like, fuck you, I'm gonna take it. Yeah, of course, he's right. Why are doctors the hardest ones to convince? Because it's kind of like you know how to push the envelope. It's like, that's why you attorneys do such shady stuff. They know right where the line is. And a doctor, you know right where the line is from a health standpoint, too. I know I'll do poorly. I do horrible after surgery. It just destroys me for weeks and weeks, weeks. I don't want to deal with that. Anesthesia destroys me. I don't want to deal with that. But this thing is driving me crazy every 6 months. I'm just laid out for 5 days. How many times do I have to do that before? I'm like, all right, enough enough. Let's talk about you. Where'd you grow up? I grew up in PG county, Maryland. Where is that? PG county. It is the, it is the part of the southernmost part of Maryland that's wrapped around D.C.. Got it. And how did comedy happen? Well, that's a whole other thing. Comedy happened because from the military. I joined the Marine Corps. And that the usual course to comedy. No, no. Military actions, hysterical. Yeah, yeah. I mean, the short sweet stories that I was a foster kid. We had multiple homes or just a one or no multiple homes. I moved at least. What is that? I look at people that are resilient like doing great like yourself. And I hear that history and I go, I don't think I'm built for that myself. It would have destroyed me. I mean, there are long term you have stuff. Things, yeah, because trust. Tries to trust. I think trust bleeds intimacy issues. A 100%. But you know it. You know, yeah, but it doesn't make it. Even you know, you can know something intellectually. Yeah, yeah. But not feeling emotion that's exactly right. And sometimes it's like no matter how close I feel to somebody. After a while, I'm just like, I need you to get the fuck away from me. Yeah, yeah. You know? Yeah. And that's sort of what happens with abandonment, right? You can't get that close because the vulnerabilities to intense. Exactly. But it's a weird thing where it's like you know that the closeness is what you need and you fight to get there, but you're so used to the opposite that the closer you get, the more unfamiliar it is. It is. Yeah, it's terrifying. Yeah. And by the same token. So what people normally do is they go after people that are not available for a close relationship. Or like you said, you get in and then you end it and then you're like, this thing's too good. I get the fuck out of here. Right on the money there. Yeah. Yeah, there are the therapies designed to treat that are not that tough. I mean, they're not like difficult or anything. And they may take a while. I mean, I've done the cognitive, so when I first moved to LA, I was in a homeless shelter for a couple of years. It was for veterans only. Or something? Yeah, it was on sunset and they make you do these. They call them group sessions, but you have to do them. Depending on your level of privilege, do X amount. Where you earn it. Right. Will you earn doing less of them? I need some information. So you were in the marine for how long?.

Dr. Drew Podcast
"brian d. s" Discussed on Dr. Drew Podcast
"Going to bring the union together. And just by the way, we're fighting for slavery, but that's not the main reason you're fighting. But it gradually, that became the main reason we were fighting. That's what it's about. They did not have slaves. They didn't have slaves. We wouldn't have had the war. Yes. But the north wasn't ready to emancipate the slaves. If you said you were fighting for Emancipation, they would have said, no. So how do you get them to your rep? How do you bring the country what's left of your country around to what you're thinking? Show them that you tried everything. And maybe colonization while a theory might have thought about. He said, I have an idea. Let's make a show of this. And when it fails and no one takes me up on it, let them know that this would never work. We have to learn to live with each other. And the reason and that's why I didn't invite Douglas. Yeah, I can't read his mind. But I read a lot of his words, and he definitely had a eurocentric white view of the world. That's his perspective, and that's all he'd ever been exposed to. Let's be fair. But I don't think you have to really remember that abolitionism was a radical position at the time. Radical. And the closest thing to an abolitionist was seward, and he did not get elected president, and yet Lincoln, that was his singular adviser. That was his probably closest adviser. He loved seward and loved seward's point of view. So he may have had more sympathy for that than we know, just judging by that relationship. Number one. But he but I really believe in his soul. He's a lawyer. That's his, that's his made up, like a lawyer. And so wrong. Yeah, and so he interpreted what was happening through a narrow legal lens of contracts amongst equals, right? The constitution is a contract amongst equal to form a more perfect union. One side of that contract is not allowed to just exit the contract without the agreement of the rest. That was his legal interpretation. Therefore, the idea of Succession didn't exist. There was no such thing as Succession, and you know where that logic first came out was Andrew Jackson. Andrew Jackson had a succession crisis, and he used the same logic. Exactly. This is not something that exists. Therefore. Yeah, therefore, it's an insurrection. You were in rebellion because there is no secession, the constitution does not allow for that provision of secession. So here's what the deal is. In the meantime, I have an obligation to send food and resources to the mail. I have to continue to deliver the mail and to the forts like fort Sumter. And so it was when he sent the ship in to provision fort Sumter because the south said, if you sent provisions and we're going to fire on you, which they did. And that was the beginning of the war. And did he know that? Did he provoke it all while they accused FDR leaving the ships out there in order to start a war that he thought we belonged in? Yeah. Yeah. So, I mean, they can go back and forth. I also think the one thing I talk about, I get on stage, I decided to do my own thing on stage and out wait for the speeches because the speeches weren't coming in this environment. So I talk about all these all these I talk about all these stories in one. And one of the things that comes up is people evolve. And just because you don't think that in the beginning, it doesn't mean that you're thinking at the end, you gave up your values. People change. You can grow. Yes. That's what you used to you would be doing if you weren't talking to me on television. You're helping people grow. There you are. Yes, I think we should we should applaud people for evolution and growth. That should be celebrated when people come particularly if they go from more racist attitudes to more of equanimity. I mean, it's just like, come on, let's shouldn't condemn that person for the rest of their life. We should like that they were like that, but come on more with the rest of us and equity. I'd be great. So I don't understand condemnation. And Lincoln evolved a lot and Douglas was part of it. And Douglas Douglas is such an interesting dude. I mean, oh my God, was he smart? And we lost Brian for seconds. We're back now. Douglas was an interesting dude. A brilliant dude. And found most acceptance early in his career in England and Europe, interestingly. Where his thoughts were just consumed as though he was some sort of profit talk speaking from on high. It was really interesting to me the way he was accepted in Europe. And it took quite a while to get it going here. He had some real headwinds. All the way through his life was terribly mistreated, including his newspaper being burned down late in his life. And maybe his house. They suspected arson. And it's just a lot there when I went back there to do this TV special on it. It's true, but he still came back, right? I mean, he still came back. He could have went to Europe and had an easy life. And he came back to finish the work here, make America more perfect union. And I think this is what you understand about him. Yeah, he had an absolute, again, as I understand him, commitment to the notion that the slaves as they became citizens were every bit a an important piece of the history of this country and B citizen with a full rights and privileges and look forward to them participating as any other citizen in this country would participate. And almost got there. It was early in the early and reconstruction. It was kind of going that way. And then Johnson and then the Democrats and then the democratic state leaders just destroyed everything. And that's why I think I told you on my other at the time we were on the air together. I would say that the single person who did the most damage to America is not on the outside force and the Japanese and Pearl Harbor. It was John Wilkes booth. Because if you had this Lincoln and you combine them with we now know of grant, the greatness that he was, the great person he was in his own way. And then you combine that with the genius of Frederick Douglass as a self made man. We would have been a different we might not have needed the 1960s. Yeah. Yeah, and understand what Brian is saying is that we were going towards.

Dr. Drew Podcast
"brian d. s" Discussed on Dr. Drew Podcast
"Mercury during the first half of his presidency, and the major side effect of mercury is depression. And he is described as having had severe depressions during those early years. So isn't that interesting? Is it another sidebar? I never knew that. Sidebar of history. So anyway, so the next day I went into my radio station, my program director went. Hey, that was interesting. We said about Trump last night. Can you give us 30 seconds for our website? Yeah, I can just distill it down. And then as I'm getting up, he goes, you know, balance it out, how about 30 seconds on Hillary, everything you want to say about her? And I went, you know, funny thing. They just released her medical record. And the care she is getting is atrocious. I have so many critiques of what the doctors were doing with her. I could tell it was the patient dictating the care. They clearly wasn't getting proper medical care. So I did 30 seconds on that. I wake up the next day, the drudge report puts out a headline, finally a doctor says she's not suitable medically for office, which is not what I said at all. And it became this viral nuts and CNN came down on me like a ton of bricks. Like a ton of bricks. That was the first time I didn't countered anything like that over there. And then a week later, we canceled the show because we had planned already to do that. And then, of course, now the viral story is see he was canceled because he had because he spoke out on Hillary, which I had neither were true. And I went back to CNN and said, how about I come on and set the record straight? I've hard feelings. This has not been a fun experience, but this whole experience with you guys has been great and I'm happy to set the record today. They're like, shut up. Just shut up. And that was never been on their sense. Was that interesting? Yeah. I do remember reading that. But you do stand by when you said in that you do think she was getting bad care, right? Oh, listen her doctors responded to everything I said as though they were interrogatories. They literally said they really and they sent her to a hematologist for a hypercoagulation workup exactly as I suggested. Because she was getting really suboptimal. She had she had two clots in her legs and a clot in her transverse sinus and her skull. That is way out coagulation abnormalities. Something is going on. And they had her on a medication. And by the way, she had a stroke as a result of the clot of her skull. That's why she wore that those glasses with the opaque thing. It's called internuclear ophthalmoplegia from the stroke, and they were giving her armor thyroid and she wasn't even formally hypothyroid. And I thought, oh, that's the patient saying I want to lose some weight or I need some energy and armor thyroid was reported. I did a literature search as causing hypercoagulation. So I was like, this is horrible medical care, and they did adjust. They just did course quite a bit, so there you go. That's going through that. Going through that was really disconcerting, all right? Disconcerting. It's terrible. It's awful. And it was one of my early experiences with shit storms. Although every time I'm on your radio show, I've come to anticipate a shit storm because you producer will take out something I said and take it out of context and push it out and then lo and behold, shit storms ensue. But I'm getting kind of almost used to it. You know what I mean? They're just so many now. And that's why I want to hear people are sort of seeing through some of this stuff. It's like, ugh. Yeah. And I feel like they're my thing with the text messages with January 6th. 6 riots. So I'm going from TV to radio. I have 6 minutes and which time I was on the air with Pete hegseth. Peter Texas covering it the rally. I go, where those people go and pee, because they go into the capitol. And I say, well, that's not going to be good. There better be security there. And I go upstairs and I go to do radio. I look up. And I see what we all have seen a million times. Yeah. So while this is going on, I do what I always do. If I want to get new information, I text newsmakers all the time. Is this true? Did this happen? Did the president really go to the basement during the riots? He goes, you will tell this on the record. You can set this straight. And I could sit there and give my show the best information. And I knew for this window, I would have great contacts. I don't know if I'm gonna have an ex presidency. Well, the next one, but I have that one. So when this happens, I text Mark Meadows, and I text, and I'll tell you, I'll text Mark short. I take care of your McEnany. What is going on? Do you understand how bad this is? I also test members of the Trump family, not Donald junior. And I said, Eric, you got to stop these guys. I go, this is this. Do you want this? He's like, absolutely not. He goes Brian. You've been to my rallies. This is not our people. Our people are violent. These are in our people. So I obviously am in the eye of the storm. Wow. Eric has never would never say something like that. For Don Junior, by the way, to say, tell my dad to get on TV or whatever he said. It shows you there was no script to that. Nobody wanted that to happen. If son who gave the keynote address during that stupid ill advised rally, if he didn't know this was happening to him was bad that shows you that actually, I think shows you Trump had no idea, but he should have hopped on TV earlier. So they exposed it, but the thing that they missed true is that I never changed my stance on January 6th. I never saw pedal that. So I went back and I pulled all the shots of me saying January 6th. Okay, how many people were there just to create havoc? Trump set it up by staying go to the capitol and be heard. And Rudy Giuliani said, basically show your muscle. And I said that my guy stopped pulling sound bites after about 15. 6 months. The weird things to me is cat brought this up the other day too, that somehow the anchors at Fox endorse that behavior or that whole January 6th. Not one of you that I've ever talked to is anything other than that was a bad, horrible thing. It was all right. The riot. Yeah, I mean, but do I think that CNN should be doing 15 minutes of every hour on it? And that's why their ratings are crater. You have never seen ratings as slow on.

Couples Therapy
"brian d. s" Discussed on Couples Therapy
"Or maybe <Speech_Male> he's doing locks of love. <Speech_Male> He's waiting to grow <Speech_Male> that hair Dyson <Speech_Male> long. <Speech_Male> Then he'll give it to <Speech_Male> someone <SpeakerChange> a knee. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Sure, <SpeakerChange> yeah. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I also don't understand why <Speech_Male> she keeps <Silence> watch she keeps <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> doing whatever <Speech_Male> she needs <Speech_Male> to be. Why does she keep <Speech_Male> doing that activity? <Speech_Male> Why she feels <SpeakerChange> like she can't <Speech_Male> stop. <Speech_Male> Maybe she's <Speech_Male> into it. Maybe she's <Speech_Male> maybe smooth <Speech_Male> balls on her kink. <Speech_Male> Her kink? <Speech_Male> No, <Speech_Male> or maybe <SpeakerChange> being disappointed <Speech_Male> as her kink. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> Yes. Maybe <Speech_Male> she gets on her. She's like, <Speech_Male> again. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Yep. And now <Speech_Music_Male> she's ready. That's her turn on. <Laughter> She's ready. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> She's like, <Laughter> I need one more sample. <Laughter> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Oh my God. <Speech_Male> That's how you <Speech_Male> end an episode. Brian. <Speech_Male> Jesus. <Speech_Male> Brian, thank you for <Speech_Male> so much for coming <Speech_Male> on this podcast. <Speech_Male> It was so <SpeakerChange> delightful <Speech_Male> to talk to you. Thank <Speech_Male> you all for <Speech_Male> having me, man. I'm <Speech_Male> so <SpeakerChange> lucky that <Speech_Male> I met you all <Speech_Male> the way I did. You're <Speech_Male> the best. You're the best. <Speech_Male> And everybody. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> I can't wait to see your half <Speech_Male> hour. I know everyone get ready to watch <Speech_Music_Male> Brian's half hour <Speech_Music_Male> on Netflix. <SpeakerChange> It <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> will change the game <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> for you. And <Laughter> <Advertisement> keep ready to watch Naomi's <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> half hour. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Well, <Speech_Music_Female> I'm always talking about <Speech_Music_Male> that. They know that about <Speech_Music_Male> you. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> They know. <Speech_Music_Male> But <SpeakerChange> all <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> right y'all, we'll see you <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> next week. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Music> <Music> <Music> And. <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Advertisement> I will <Music> <Advertisement> say about that. <Music> <Advertisement> <Silence> <Advertisement> <Music> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Silence> <Advertisement> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> Want <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> the

Couples Therapy
"brian d. s" Discussed on Couples Therapy
"There's a mobile app. I mean they are really trying to help us get our heads right. And for listeners, a couple therapy, you can receive 65% off your first month of medication management and care counseling at get cerebral dot com slash therapy. Yep, go to get cerebral dot com slash therapy for 65% off your first month, which means it only costs $30 to get started. Join cerebral today on their mission to make quality mental healthcare accessible and affordable for everybody. Hey y'all, wanted to pop in real quick and let you know that if you like what you hear and you wanna support the show, there are a couple different ways. Most of our support comes from our wonderful Patreon community for $5 a month you get two bonus episodes of just us mostly spilling the tea. And occasionally searching for crazy bread in Los Angeles. Plus, lots of other bonus content. We love our page pals, and we couldn't do this without you. And if you want to join, go to Patreon dot com slash couples therapy pod. We also have merch, which includes gotta miss a bitch and jubu t-shirts, which you can find in the link tree in our Twitter or insta bios. And for absolutely $0, you can rate and review the show on Apple. 5 stars, please. It'll only take ten seconds and it helps us tremendously. Okay, that's it. We love you deeply. Now back to the show. And we're back, Andy with Brian Simpson. We ready to handle your.

Couples Therapy
"brian d. s" Discussed on Couples Therapy
"Then they'll try to change you. They've seen them. Oh, I've never seen anything like it. Can you be more like something I've seen before? Okay, so we know we know you as an RT story now. I think we've gotten there and drew. But here, you know, couples therapy honey. It's not. We're not here to talk about the biz, but of course I can't help it. We're here to talk to people about their relationship problems. They're, you know, romantic platonic familial honey. So we need to know where you're at, okay? Talk to us about relationships for you. You know, as a male comedian, the standards for you are not high. Okay. We're not expecting male comedians to have it together to let anyone in emotionally, you know. What has that been like for you? Is that a male comedian thing? I thought it was just me. It's a male comedian thing. Oh, wow, okay, yeah. I mean, obviously it's weird that I, 'cause I just finished real actual therapy. Right before this. Okay, interesting. I felt like you had a calmness about you. Now we know. Yeah. Well, but no, I think that I have. I just have to face the fact that I have intimacy issues. I have trouble being close. I don't have trouble getting close, but I have trouble being close. And I think what it is is I've been, you know, I trace it back to the foster child thing. Of, you know, sort of anticipating being kicked out of homes. And so avoiding closeness and so it's like, I think after years and years and years of avoiding closeness, even though I want closeness, I don't know how to be close once I get there. You know what I mean? It makes me it makes me uncomfortable and so I become one of those people and I think this is normal. I've become one of those people that at the first sign of just the first whiff of anything that's negatively happened to me in the past and I'm done with you. You know, and the people I really like, I keep it arms distance 'cause I don't want that to happen. You know, you don't want to see it. You don't want them to mess up. And in other words, if you're in my life, you are always welcome at the house. But you can't come in the house. You know? We're gonna have a stoop set. Yeah, exactly. If I really care about you, you can slide by whenever you want, but you can't come in. Okay. You know, it's that kind of thing, emotionally, I mean. Yeah, you were telling my real house. You know, but I've never said, I've never told somebody to make themselves at home. Uh huh. You know, I'm like, no, make yourself like you got someone else to live and want to go there soon. So does that mean like have you had any long-term romantic relationships or do you just kind of have hookups or just Friends? I've had dysfunctional long-term relationships. Well, I went to this, I went to this phase in my in my 20s to early 30s where I was dating, broken people. You know, it was sort of like, I think my logic was or my subconscious logic was that I would, you know, then if it was a fucked up person that needed me that they couldn't judge me for my fucked upness. You know? And maybe we could help each other or understand each other, but really what ends up happening is that you're just too fucked up people. Yeah. You know? It's like the blindly in the blind. You just it's impossible, right? And so yeah, and now I just, like I said, I just keep people at a distance. I never let it get past the interested phase. This is like, okay, that was fun. And, you know? It well, now Brian, what are we doing to work on that in therapy? You're too lovable. You're gonna keep me at a distance, but we all wanna be so close, Brian. I mean, honestly, I think I'm doing better than now because, you know, you gotta mix that also with the. Tremendous insecurity that comes from then in this business. You know, because it's also a thing of like, now that I'm on the verge of success, I feel like safer, does that make any sense? 'cause it's like and so now that I have my own base and foundation, now I feel like I can more ready to open up to someone or more ready to risk. Because what it is, right? Like love is risk. It's open up the gates. It's giving you the password. It's showing you the secret passageways. And so it's like, I think I'm more prepared for that risk. Now that I don't have to worry about starving or failing, you know, and that's what yeah, I like that love is pulling the candlestick and letting the bookcase. Right, right, it's basically going, you know, it's like, it's like, I'm an invincible warrior, but here's my weak spot. Yeah. And it's like, and I think I've met so many people that 'cause you know they say hurt people hurt people. So you dating her person and you tell them your vulnerability and then they go you ate the last donut. And then twist the knife right in your fucking Achilles heel. Oh my goodness. Yeah. When did you start to figure this stuff out? Is this relatively new? Or is this like something you've been working on for a little while? You know, it's something that I've always thought about, but I think I'm exiting that phase where because this happens, I used to notice this in my Friends and now I guess I'm acknowledging it myself, but you know sometimes you learn you get the words for something where you don't know where your problem is and then you read a book or you hear a quote or something and it has a language for it. And I think sometimes we learn those words and it's such a relief to actually be able to articulate the feeling that we think we've solved the problem because we can not because we can point at it and identify it. And so we don't actually do the work. You know, it's like we need to look like, oh, sorry, I'm bipolar. Like that. Because they know that what they did was okay. You know what I mean? Yes. It's that sort of thing. So it's like, I think I've known what's a call my issue for a longer than I've been actually working on the problem. So that's new, working on it is new. Yeah. You know? Yeah. Did you start therapy for the first time in the pandemic or before? No. Well, I mean, when I was a kid, I was going to therapy all the time when they make foster kids do that. Oh, I didn't they made you do. Yeah, but as an adult, yeah, this is the first time I've regularly gone to a therapist, 'cause I tried it before and I always quit them. Yeah, 'cause the first time I feel judged by a therapist, I'm out. Okay. 'cause I can't open up to you if you sitting over there judging me. You know what I'm saying? It's like, no matter what I tell you, if I tell you I killed a man or I drowned, drowned a lizard. I need you to keep a straight face. Right. Yeah..

The Eric Metaxas Show
"brian d. s" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"Those were so angel hair native folks I'm talking to Brian kilmeade. Formerly of Fox and Friends actually, he's still with Fox and Friends, but right now he's in this studio talking as an author of a new book the president of the freedom fighter Abraham Lincoln Frederick Douglass in their battle to save America's soul. So you were just sharing something and this is so instructive that Lincoln and Douglas and at that time, people are actually debating what many people are debating today. I mean, this is a debate that goes on in who we pick for the Supreme Court. Is the constitution valid today or do we need to throw it away, start over again? We have more woke values. I mean, I'm fascinated to hear that there were people then. Like Douglas, you said, and garrison, I guess, who thought that we need to get rid of the constitution? Absolutely because they saw what kind of how could this be the land of the free of 4 million or enslaved? Good question. With only 1% of the black population in the north, you can live and die and not fully understand what was going on in the south, back to your point earlier. There were compromises made to get 13 states together that believed absolutely different things. Rhode Island wanted a lot different than South Carolina. And if you got rid of the slaves at that time, which, by the way, it was going on in every continent on the planet, including Europe. If you get rid of them at that time, you lose South Carolina. The thought was Virginia would have gotten rid of them. But the South Carolina and south. No, they're going to keep it. So do you want to get this country together or not? You're lacing together. You give compromises. Are we bad people for allowing that? In retrospect, idealistically, in 2021, why did we? I don't know. Let's go back to 1776 and 1783, and then 1789, you want this constitution signed to what? You had to bring Washington out and that 6 year period to save the country, he just fought for, and we were constantly being tested, and I'm just used the word evolved. In 2008, Barack Obama said, marriage is being a man and a woman. In 2012, he ran on same sex marriage, and today most people accept it if a politician came out and said, I'm against gay marriage. They probably wouldn't get a vote certainly not the nomination. Was he a terrible person in 2008? Was he a better person in 2012? I don't know. Depending on your view, but he changed. I think he's a terrible person who evolved on that issue. Right. But actually, seriously, talented, though this issue. So no question about it. But this issue, this is a big thing because this is where we are right now. You have people saying tear it all down, burn it all down. But people like Martin Luther King Jr., he said that the and you mentioned this earlier that our founding documents were promissory notes. In other words that if we didn't get them, if we didn't start the country with these compromises, we would never get to a place where we would abolish slavery. We never get to a place where we would abolish Jim Crow. And you can never win that game in the sense that there's always going to be somebody saying it wasn't worth it. It was an evil. It was an evil compromise. And it's not like they don't have a point. Evil compromise, but I would take America along the way compared to the rest of the country doing simultaneously. That's right. Right? So and I look at 1619 project. I know they're rolling out a book and I welcome the debate on that. And I was just reading it down and it's New York Times nice of them to announce. We had a book coming out on this that America fought their revolution for to keep their slaves. And they point to the Somerset agreement that freed the slaves in 1760 in England fine. But she kept him everywhere else and all you colonies, including the Caribbean. Remember, so we had no interest in fighting England for slaves. Do you hear the things taxation without representation? Do you ever hear about soldiers being billeted against their wills in the oppressive rules of the king? So I mean, now all of a sudden they want to revamp and they wonder they say, why are you so defensive? Because the foundation of the country and the sanctity of our beliefs is being questioned, you have no business doing that. There is no look, there's no question. You're better man than I, because I mean, a lot of times if I'm watching Fox or something and people are talking about this, I got to turn it off because the idea of something like the 1619 Project, it's so ridiculous, I know that they are 95% gaslighting. The idea of getting into an actual debate, I would say, I'm not gonna debate somebody who's playing head games. I think they're playing head games. You really believe they believe it. No, no, or if they believe it, they're crazy, crazy people believe crazy stuff, but the 60 19 project is so beyond so ridiculous. Tons of black historians have rebutted it. I mean, but they have an axe to grind and they simply don't care. They're making some political hay. I mean, it's flat out ridiculous from an historical point of view, but even if you go beyond that, slavery existed since the beginning of humanity. There's no such thing as slavery having anything to do with racism. Slavery is people enslaving weaker people if they can. And then those weaker people will enslave the people than a slave them. This has been going on since the beginning of time need to tell you so happening. Well, of course it is. And we know that, you know, the black Africans were selling their black brothers and sisters into slavery to other blacks and then to the white men and stuff. So the idea that they want to go back and make it a racial issue in that way, I just think it's disingenuous. I think it goes along with the cultural Marxist kind of program of dividing, dividing vines. So I don't have the I don't have the Temperance to debate people on that because I just think it's crazy. Well, yeah, but the thing the reason why we have to is because it went from a series that wins awards because they give awards to each other. And to a curriculum. And that's why. Yeah. And that's why I said, well, I'm going to wait for that to go away. Yeah. And it didn't go away. Right, because people are putting it in. But I love so much is what's in the news right now. Parents standing up and being upset at getting mad at their school board. And they act like, well, that's the Republicans. That's the Republicans. Have you met the Republicans? They could never organize protests at school board meetings in small towns in America, let alone a loudon county, but which one by 20 or 30 points to a Democrat, but it's also comedic to me when Terry.

The Eric Metaxas Show
"brian d. s" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"Doing this program because I learn stuff. For example, I'm talking to Brian kilmeade, author of the president and the freedom fighter, and you just shared something that I really was I never thought about this. So when Lincoln is elected in 1860, a number of states had seceded. First South Carolina 6 more. Okay, and so that's before his inauguration. Before he gets to The White House. Okay, so he's elected. They secede. And then on the assumption he's going to free the slaves and they're not going to deal with it. And he says to get them back into the union, he says you can have your slaves. Thirteenth Amendment could be yours. Okay, so that's the freed slaves. You could be enslaved. And so exactly how did that go? So obviously you said that Frederick Douglass feels betrayed. So it took him some time. I mean, it's kind of funny because you get this with Lincoln. He takes off everybody and at some point, right? And a real conservative today would say suspending habeas corpus. I don't know. You know, it's like it's very interesting that real leadership will do that. It will take off everybody in a way. But so for a while, it seems to me that Frederick Douglass must have not been very pleased with him. Absolutely not. And then when he brings up colonization to solve the problem of the African Americans in America, he say, listen, we made a big mistake. It happened before we were born. So can we send you back? So he invites newspapers, all the press with him, like selective members of the press. And he brings in African American leaders, doesn't invite Douglas. And he says, made a big mistake. Obviously, blacks and whites can't live together, and it's part of this part of the reason this is the reason for the war. So I would like to make you an offer give you plenty of money to go back to Central and South America or wherever you want to go. Douglas, everyone in South America or Africa. Africa, too. He said you could go wherever you wanted to go. We will send you. So we will free you and let you go. Absolutely out of the country. Out of the country. And this bothered Douglas. Beyond by these, I'm an American. I don't want to go anywhere. Where am I born? I'm born here. You got to send me elsewhere. Since when camp blacks and whites get together, remember, and I haven't brought this up yet, but they have another similarity. They both read this book called the Colombian orator. The Columbian order teaches how to speak publicly, teach how to hold yourself and also has great essays from these people like Cicero, Socrates, George Washington, people in our past, and they're thinking big and grandiose. So you wonder why that speech worked at 28? Lincoln's been reading every day since 7. That's right and envisioning himself on that level without the cockiness and ego with the humility to know that it may be what he was capable of. So when he brings up colonization, that is a theory. And I subscribe to it. That linking was trying to show everyone, I tried everything. We have to learn to live together. That's why he brought the press to hear that offer. And that's why he didn't bring Douglas in by far the most famous and respected African American lib black leader in the country at the time. That's a theory. Now, people will push back on that. Good luck. You go interview Lincoln. We'll never find out for sure. So that makes to me makes more sense. Because since when is he welcoming the press to take down something so controversial? So when that appears, you see his rebuttal, you see Douglas rebuttal in the north store. It's kind of funny because Lincoln really does come across as real like a canny backwoods thinker. Like somebody who just he's playing 3D chess, he's playing with his opponents. He's playing with their expectations. I mean, it's fascinating that he would do that because that's part of leadership. And I think that that's difficult, especially when you're dealing with something as visceral as the issue of slavery, you know, to play that to play that game politically. Did Frederick Douglass well, so what happened with the Emancipation proclamation and with regard to Frederick Douglas? Oh, it's one of the greatest moments he's told to expect it and when it finally expects it. He chronicles and in speech he gave afterwards and the emotion that they feel as it comes down, delayed for a day and then it finally comes down. It's the moment. But he didn't free the slaves in the border states. Why Eric? Not because he felt less of them, but if he loses Marilyn in Delaware, and they flip to the other side, then he suddenly outnumbered by the Confederate States of America. So he's got to play. It's what does he care? Of course not. But I have to deal with this is what I'm dealing with. This is my neighborhood right now. I'm going to fix the neighborhood when I can fix the neighborhood. Well, but this gets right back to the founders. I mean, you just said that Lincoln read their books. He knew what they thought. But today we know that the founders wanted to get rid of slavery at least most of them did. And they couldn't, and they had to make this devil's bargain to create the new country to create the constitution. And they don't get any credit for that in the same way that a lot of times people are today tearing down Lincoln statues. They don't understand their real leadership makes you do things sometimes that, you know, you're not happy to do it. You just feel it's the best of two bad options. When we see his parents, you know, you gotta push back and you gotta steal your kids for things that are coming down the line, you maybe feel reluctant, but you know when the big picture, you're doing the right thing. Because it's about outcome. While having integrity, but to your point, when this, there's so much that you can learn about this. Number one, as a country you evolve, you see in this book, both men of, in the beginning, Frederick Douglas gets out William wood garrison is his mentor, and they agree that the constitution is flawed. It's got to be torn down to this country's got to be remade. Wow. He gradually moves away from that. And said, by the way, he was also into nonviolence. Frederick Douglas getting attacked in certain areas, the things he's saying provocative, William Roy garrison mentors them, he becomes his first speaking agent, puts him in different places as a legitimate slave with tremendous intellect and natural gifts in front of people. He's half Malcolm X half Muhammad Ali and half Martin Luther King. He's everything. He's got that type of talent and smarts. And he's going around speaking, and he because he's always reading and learning. Next thing, you know, he meets Garrett Smith and Garrett Smith believes the constitution is great and we are not living up to it. Did he evolve that he changed was he? What was he bad? Is that life? But that question is also alive today. The question of the constitution, the founders do we throw it away? We'll be right back talking to Brian kilmeade the book is the president and the.

The Eric Metaxas Show
"brian d. s" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"But he's written a lot of books. This one is called the president and the freedom fighter Abraham Lincoln Frederick Douglass in their battle to save America's soul. America soul could use a little saving right now. But we're not going to talk about that. What made you want to write a book combining these two figures? Well, I was looking for the last time I was here. You kind enough to interview me about Sam Houston, the Alamo Avengers. So I try to find an angle not plowed and the Alamo is, but San jacinto isn't 9 months later he ends up taking him out as San jacinto beating Santa Anna in 17 minutes because Texans know it, but the rest of the world. So I go, what's next? The Mexican war, I didn't think had enough. My opinion, I'm sure there's a lot there with Lee in the quartermaster grant and the fact that these generals fought on the same side and then years later, they'd be trying to kill each other and a lot of them successfully. I said, all right, the Civil War. What could I do that's not plowed ground from Ken burns a series to the remarkable book, David blight wrote about Frederick Douglas Scott? I think the book of the year, 5 years ago. And then what about Lincoln? I literally you and I gave the same situation. We get books about linking to our desks all the time, and they're all great. I'm waiting for nobody who's written been written about more. It's like maybe three people like who've written about Napoleon Jesus, Lincoln. I mean, I don't know how many books have been written about Lincoln. So yeah, what do you do for a fresh angle on the Civil War? So what I wanted to do is also I didn't mind tackling race, but I wanted to do it through quotes, not opinion. And racist never left the news, Black Lives Matter is raging at the time. And then you have you have a situation where as late as Condoleezza and rice Condoleezza Rice on the view, having to defend herself growing up in a Jim Crow south who knew all about racism, but grew up as his conservatives says, don't ever let it be an excuse. So I said, what have I talk about their parallel lives to the degree in which they read a lot of the same books? Did they overcame incredible obstacles? Nothing like Frederick Douglass. I get it. The guy was enslaved until he was in his 20 years old, two tries, got out in the second time within 7 years has a biography. It's a bestseller, and then starts a world tour and becomes famous in Scotland, Ireland, Germany, and England. This guy was a slave ten years before, but decides to come back to America because his 4 million enslaved 350,000 slave owners and he sees potential in this guy Lincoln and the Republican Party that we're finally ready to do something. Now look, I didn't see I didn't know this. People are always amazed at what I don't know. I don't know almost everything. And when I hear something like this, I say, wow, I did not know that Frederick Douglass was thinking this way and that he saw something in Lincoln. Wait what year was it that he kind of notices Lincoln? I think he notices him in the 50s. And he gets to really see him and read about him in this Douglas Lincoln Douglas debates. And what I was fascinated Eric is, we're broadcasters and everything changed and broadcasting since we got in. It used to be the network news and cable. Nobody wants cable. Now cable streaming and then who knows everyone's got to show in a network. But back then, it was give a speech, make sure that speech gets in every newspaper. So the Cooper union speech. And the Douglas debates. Yeah, they had big crowds, but it was the transcription of the debates. I made them pay to say if you pass a few days ago a few weeks ago, I drove past Cooper union. And you look at the building, this is here in New York. And you think, how is it possible that a speech that Lincoln gave in that building? Was it 1860? I guess I don't remember 1850 9. Okay, and I've been to the great hall. I've spoken in the great hall, and you think, how is it possible that that changed the course of his career, the course of American history, a speech? It is amazing, and you're telling you're saying that it happened because the wires picked it up, suddenly this is the country is able to read what he said. And he knew it. And as even though he was born to two illiterate parents and his mom dies at 9 years old and he's living in a rural agricultural life, physically, he's a specimen. And he has no push to get educated, but another theme about today's news, it makes it easy to talk about it on Fox is that education is what we're talking about. Race is what we're talking about. History is what we're talking about. Our heritage is what we're talking about. So Lincoln says, I'm going to matter. And he would take long trips just to pick up a book, as you know, and that he would sit there and talk and interact with people intellectually, while the same time physically he was working to land with a dad that said, put down the books. We don't want any more learning. You got to work for a living, but he had a mom and a stepmom that's pushed him towards that direction, becomes a lawyer, gets out on his own, determine it matters, starts running for office, has some success. If you want to study link in every speech, is written, except for the law speech, which they found a transcript of the law speech, so even that there. You see how this man evolves and how he thinks. The only thing I know about Lincoln worth mentioning at least in he was 28 years old when he gave a speech at the I guess what's called a young men's lyceum in Springfield. It is a magnificent Lincoln esque speech. He was 28 years old. I mean, it makes no sense..

The Eric Metaxas Show
"brian d. s" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"Let me just it is definitely a positive positive in people's heads. And when I was first asked to write a biography of William force, I felt the same way, I thought, I'm not a historian. How am I going to write a biography? How am I going to do this? So it is a weird thing, but I actually think that if you're not an academic, you bring a fresh perspective and have been an ability to communicate to see things, academics are, you know, they're trying to make they're trying to impress other academics. So I'm so glad Bill O'Reilly encouraged you. We're going to go to a break folks talking to Brian kilmeade. You may know him from fox and friends. You need to know him as the author of many books, the new one is the president and the freedom fighter will be right back. Ballerina you must deceive. Dancing folks. I've got to tell you a secret about relief factor that the father son owners Pete and Seth. Talbott have never made a big deal about, but I think it is a big deal. I really do. They sell the three week quick start pack for just 1995 to anyone struggling from pain like neck shoulder back, hip or knee pain, 1995, about $1 a day. But what they haven't broadcasted much is that every time they sell a three week quick start, they lose money. In fact, they don't even break even until about four to 5 months after if you keep ordering it. Friends, that's huge. People don't keep ordering relief factor month after month if it doesn't work. So yes, Pete and Seth are literally on a mission to help as many people as possible deal with their pain. They really do put their money where their mouths are. So if you're in pain from exercise or even just getting older, or the three week quick start from 1995, let's see if we can get you at a pain too, but relief factor dot com relief factor dot com or call 805 108 three 8 four 805 108 three 8 four relief factor dot com. I use it, it works. In the folks, I'm talking to Brian kill me, you may know him from fox and friends,.

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"brian d. s" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"It was the pioneering days we had to learn. learn what to do learn. Yeah so And you could hear jesse. Because i forget episodes you showed up in but eventually showed up and then So that's out there. The geek quorum is also available on Podcast an it's on youtube as well if you look decorum we have. I think i don't know how many episodes We do every episode of the mandolin. What sometimes we do a couple of as a kind of a pack bunch. You know like you're saying because it's just again too hard to do them all at once Every week released for me. Because i'm not a fulltime youtuber. Not even close right. We kind of haven't done in a while or at least i haven't edited them on a while so it it's not a full season two yet but if you wanna watch some of them and again those especially the first one's really rough so maybe skip if you get some more a little better but And then as far as like if you want to contact me or other. People do the podcast. Our podcast. emails. Always been the same for god. Thirteen fourteen fifteen years now. And that's the g corum gmail.com g. q. R u m. very nice. Very nice sir. I appreciate it I cannot tell you how much fun this was. Just a catch up into dwell and yes an awesome. You must have bruce springsteen question for me the you say you're gonna ask me about yes i was i was i was gonna I didn't know if you've done the homework. So yes we're all right so if you are Back a collective or quorum person. You're like what. Brian is on a new podcast. I have to listen to this I end every with this question. And j armstrong is an honors english teacher in the philadelphia area. He just recently retired but every year he would have his seniors Honors english class in two days looking at the song thunder road listening to the song reading the lyrics talk about the imagery and at the end of the two days. He would ask us class this mary get in the car. That was your homework brian. So does mary getting the car. Well knowing that there's this legacy of previous answers is really intimidating. Because i don't know what they are what they said but You know it's kind of it's it's a bit like his cat okay. So there's there's An unknown state of of what happens in with a song like this with Not not being able to enter that state. You can't observe it for yourself to see exactly what happens which is part of what makes it so good to speculate about as it is for that but you can infer some things walls From the lyrics from the performance. And from what i gathered The singer The wind telling this woman to come with him. it's mary with them We'll call him bruce. He's definitely going somewhere he is going. That's to me is clear. The question is whether she is and the thing is what i gather from the lyrics. And what we what he says about her when he says about the town is that she doesn't have much to live for in that town so.

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"brian d. s" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"I really really loved. I thought one division was fantastic. Yes as a show and it especially it. Being such a departure from regular television show was very brave of them. in fact. yeah. If i could even use that term with about a television show but there was brave of them to do something just so different and i think it paid off. Lucky i think was the same way Was very different. Not as different as one one. It was so out there well and it. You know growing up watching sitcoms. I i was enjoying the ride. I know some people were like okay. I don't wanna watch this if we're just gonna do this and and i do think that If they had may be dropped the first three or four episodes together versus the first two new. Maybe but i kind of trust the journey. And i loved how they you know. They're they started out with this. Almost the full parody damage and then has the series continues less and less of that but still true to the concept of yeah really really great. Acting the whole cast was amazing is just was good stuff. Yeah absolutely all along. It was agatha all the long it was just rate with that a a and going to see so yes good stuff. Mum all right so If someone wants to reach your brian how can they. What's the best way to check out. your fine work and to see what you're talking about now. Yeah well if you're listening. Podcast wise were still on i. Tunes are galactica quorum episodes. You're still there for archival posterity so you can look them up and if you're if you've never seen the show where he just wanted to rewatch listen along there like almost one hundred episodes of them and never quite got two hundred. I easily could. Cause i have material that. I could put out there as as supplemental that i could easily just bump into one hundred. I might at some point but just to forgive us again for the first couple episodes because they were you know it was..

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"brian d. s" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"But the big thing was yeah. It was serialized. Show that now just for us but for other listeners of the podcast that they would have time to watch a show. Listen to us talk about it. And then sending their own theories in we would take their theories. Read them on the air and it just you know. It was like this evolving expanding sphere of like a more interaction. That happens enough. And you recognize that people have a really good insight and and things to say about the show. And that's how we ended up expanding sort of our our cast or crew basically by Inviting people that had really good perspectives to kind of join When they could remotely and again. This is presumed. This is we had like rely on skype. Hello everyone and welcome to a new episode of set listening. Bruce your podcast. All about bruce springsteen his music and mostly is fans. I am the your host jesse jackson. We're getting off the bruce springsteen panel train today though he will come up because he normally does. And i'm going back in the delory him the tartus the time tunnel whatever way back machine to one of my first online podcast friends. I have brian joining me. Brian welcome to the show. Well thank you so much for having the show. This is the it's strange. I'm not used to being guest. This is awesome. I just. I've seen what you've done with growing this. Podcast appears in. It's pretty amazing. So hats off to you. Thank you brian. a so We're going to get to your podcast origins. But in the meantime just for my audience give them your elevator pitch. Tell them a little bit yourself where you're from and you know you know the drill. Yes i'm ryan. I am a podcast. Her since two thousand seven or eight. I don't remember don't remember but mainly of lived in maryland for several decades recently though i've relocated to central oregon and loving it here i do for a career. I'm sort of a digital multimedia artist. I currently i'm doing user interface design and in web.

Sci-Fi Talk
"brian d. s" Discussed on Sci-Fi Talk
"Don davis. I'm the composer of the matrix. Reloaded and the matrix revolutions. Hi this is. John delancey kind of the things that aren't there. Well you know. Sometimes you have that experience anyway but people at all day thanks in part because if the hopeful nature of genes vision but also because of its message of diversity and inclusion today we're going tiki tiki horror course with one of the masters are. Brian used nets. And we're going to talk about his tales of blood islands. A comic book should all get behind if he loved tiki. Are i mean look at this. There's a guy ripping his head off. Come back you gotta jump on. That is just great before we start. I have to actually tell you this. This is really true story. About a year ago we surprise my brother and built a tiki bar in his in his little garage that he has and it's grown and gotten out of control. It's just totally amazing. So my family is really into tiki lately. So it's really why that's interesting because The kickstarter video shot in the valium. Trying to remember where but maybe encino or something but it was in someone's backyard tiki bar and it was if your brothers is anything like that. I was just gobsmack. i couldn't believe it. You are of course. the whole house is devoted to tiki mugs. I never realized that there was such a subculture for tiki. I've always liked going. You know every once in a while maybe you go to a a tiki. Because it was kinda like it's kinda fun you now to something different and But wow what a this bar. You'll see it in the video that someone's backyard you even show all of it. Wow it's amazing. How people kind of guam into because it's really just a there is no place like tiki. No i think it's just some kind of some kind of inspir- inspired by the g. is coming back from the pacific after world war two and they had been in the tropics yen the tropic. You tend to drink rum. Drinks as rounders bamboo bars or kinda built like that. Of course it just became a whole aesthetic of its own. That is that is just a lot of fun. Yeah his his bars pretty good. I mean it's grown in the year that he's had it and we get together there once in a while. It's such a nice little escape and you wouldn't know it. You walk into his backyard. Kodaly normal go through this beated entrance and there. It is if you if you're curious or instagram. It's the blue monkey. So google case for that one. You gotta check it out. It's definitely worth looking into. And so he house parties or does he hang out. Oh yeah oh yeah. And he his time in the sun that invites his buddies over and they have like a little already. There is fantastic. No it's really really cool when we all get together. It's a blast to go in there and have a tiki mug collector. He likes tiki mugs. And he's actually become a pretty good mixologist too he's he's actually turned put together some really good potions that has affected me in many ways i i will say but anyway we regret i love the tiki culture and everything. It's just a fun tales of blood island..

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"brian d. s" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"Now i did grow up in. A stereotypical talion catholic background. Where they'd be a picture of sinatra the pope and the last supper in that order. Hello everyone and welcome to a new episode. Is set lessening bruce. Your podcast all about bruce springsteen his music and mostly as fans. I am your host jesse jackson joining me today. We're getting off the bruce bandwagon but he will come up as he normally does A couple months ago. brian Had me on his podcast and we had a great time. And so i ask brian if he would return. The favorite did so brian. Welcome to the show. Thank you thank you for having appreciative. Yes so tell my audience a little about yourself. Well i The whole elevator pitch. I suppose Well i do work full-time Boring insurance adjuster job. And i do enjoy music. Music is that that definitely brings joining life all all sorts of music arts culture and whatnot. i. I am passionate about a lot of mental health issues as say. She gathered from our Visit on my podcast. The gist i. I enjoy just learning more discovering more. Just seeing what makes me tick name of your podcast again. Mental health film comment okay. Not not a very creative name. The fit the fit purpose of it. Yeah and so. What a lot of times this year will you will talk. Men are mental health issues and combined with pop culture for example we talked a blind by the light We touched a little bit on love and mercy on and so Yeah and it was a lot of fun. So what before. Get to your early background. What what drove you to do that. Kind of podcast. What what was the You know your origin story. Why did you decide to start talking about this. I'm not sure to be honest with you. there happened some times when i've been watching various different movies and i've watching the movie and i think there should be a podcast to talk about this movie because i was i was watching and i'll be perfectly. I was watching this movie. The effect of gamma rays on mannion. The moon miracles watching this. Which by the way is an amazing movie of you may have to seek it out because it i..

The Eric Metaxas Show
"brian d. s" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"My conversation with brian gibson bryan before we get deeper. Where can people find you online. Yeah they passers that need help opening up churches or illegal representation. We provide that as well through. Kelly shackelford and i liberty they could go to pg dot today. He dot today. Yeah yeah it's either peaceably. Got g wrought today so they. They could found our website information about us there or they can follow me on twitter at lead pastor at lead pastor at lead pastor or i love that you snag lead past got. That early abandoned. His name associate pastor so seriously when this happened. This kind of woke you up obviously made you. Hire another caller. So when do you decide. I'm going to get on a plane and fly to these riots. And the cost trouble by preaching the love of jesus while think i've always been The kind of guy that didn't mind like if there shots fired you hear gunshots run toward it. I run toward it. It's just in the dna riot crazy man so it's not a decision you make it something you have to do gotcha. There's no decision about whether i'm going to fight the to say it for some people listening but you just described as being real man. One hundred percents manhood. So yeah i was. I was raised by cowboys. Truckers football coaches and wrestling. And that was just your mom. That was mom and grandma grandma. Grandma give you a cousin. Gets you in an arm bar right. Got online on tuesday night in a what armbar. What is an arm bar all. Come on you know what an arm bar. I grew up in a european immigrant home in connecticut. So what is it. it's like a can of whoop ass you get somebody in a lock. You extend their elbow and you'd break their arm right. So yeah it's own now. I know what's up. I've heard of us need break. A little brahmin man come on. So he's like we're going in and they start burning down cities. I'll never forget. I was flying to la on pentecost sunday to help guys open up churches. Two thousand opened up out there in l. a. on that same sunday and we're flying in and they're coming into our hometown out in out in rural kentucky town of fifty sixty thousand Some and radical bill emerson showing up. And i'm on a live feed telling the gas from our church to get down there and don't let them destroy square. And this this person that works with airlines comes by and tells me to go off my feet. I can't do that in the airplane and anyway that went that went everywhere. Because i told him either. Burn down our city. We gotta do something about this. Mendham set back. When they're burning down your city only cowards. The not real men but there are there are people that will set back in fact. They're even familiar with the term setback. They would sit back. Let me just say that. This is just beautiful. And i'm just curious so you've been on fox news because i have missed I have missed you until yesterday. And i'm just so glad to get to know you You have been going into these places you flew. Well you talked about going up to. What is it called. Chop chop and seattle spent six days preaching on the street and chop and took a dozen people in there with me when we first got there. There's there's thousands of people up there right. Antifa surrounded me. I don't know how many times threatened to kill me up there. You know they had places where black folk can go but white folk can't right. It's all that kind of thing and what we did is we go and certification is an american tradition. You need to respect. It needs to respect it. You don't have to agree with it but you need to respect. Go walking in somewhere. They say you can't come here you're white. I said what you mean like Segregation no is a healing zone. I said you mean like jim crow. No no this is a this is a healing zone and then antifa guys start showing up so the little ones come first little show got a few hundred probably hire them. I'm thinking oh they're paid absolutely. They're paid but so yeah. We preach there. We preached in the brianna. Brianna taylor stuff and louisville preached in dc and the riots out in front of the white house. Now i cannot imagine that there many people there that are open minded. While the way you do it as you don't run out and scream. Jesus is coming at the top of your lungs. I would interview people. So i walk up and say tell me what are you doing here. What do you hope to see out of this. Do you feel about america. And then i take it from there and i say listen i believe we're all created in the image of god right and then like frogs jump out of their mouths and some of them absolutely manifest demon possessed. But no but i'll eight hands and prayed laid hands on black panthers prayed for antifa guys. All i got video of my wife praying for this antifa guy. That is smoking a joint. And she's giving him a word of knowledge she knows about him. You know by the spirit of god and he's smoking pot. He's like yeah that's right that's right that's right and so yeah. People people are open. They let them minister to you But it's an alert said and you're feeling mellow now. Say you're the human mind. That's not the spirit of god because anybody knows that. Wait a second as they can so you move in this in words of knowledge and stuff. Yeah yeah sure. So yes sure i mean i'm all for it but you know there are a lot of people that they don't they don't know anything about that right and they think they're christians right right and they go to piscopo churches and stuff but so tell me. How long have you been moving in that kind of I got saved her father. Her father took me in Kind of a faith based drug rehab program. Nine hundred ninety eight. I was a coke head and a meth freak and he was a healing evangelist. That preached all over the world or was in kentucky not texas texas. They sent me to texas to get away from my outlaw kentucky friends Was i was exiled. West texas so so yeah we. We are early days like that. We were around. Those kind of things hastens thing because people who have that kind of faith. There's a joy in a fire and it's just so beautiful and when you go into dark places like you're describing You really do. Bring the power of god with you. There's no fear it's not about. I'm going to convert them intellectually. We're going to break folks. i'm going. I'm talking to brian gibson. You can go to the website. Pg dot today or you can follow me on twitter at lead pastor We'll be right back talking to brian. Gibson ronin listen old. I got seven on an oldie. brian gibson. Not to be confused with.

77WABC Radio
"brian d. s" Discussed on 77WABC Radio
"All 50 states. I'm him who's Oh Fox News more than a dozen states of activated the National Guard ahead of what could be a day of protest stemming from President Trump's election loss. We have both intelligence that there's going to be activity around our capital and Capitals across the country. Much of its comes from the FBI. But our own intelligence Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, on Fox News Sunday, barricades have been set up around Michigan State House and in some states like Kentucky, Pennsylvania and Texas. The Capitol grounds are closed. Washington D C. Resembles a combat zone with armed officers on every street. Yesterday, A woman was arrested after police say she falsely identified herself as a law enforcement officer. She's currently being held, also arrested a man accused of taking part in the capital Riot. The FBI in Albany, New York, says Brandon Fellows was arrested last night he suspected of smoking marijuana inside the office of a senator. President elect Joe Biden is planning decisive action when he takes office this week. His incoming director of the National Economic Council, says he'll take on both the human and financial crisis brought on by the Corona virus pandemic. We start from where the economy is today, and the truth is right, a very precarious moment. We lost jobs last month for the first time since the spring. Last week, nearly a million Americans filed for unemployment insurance, which is higher than any week during the Great recession. Brian D. S on Fox News Sunday a revolutionary music producer who went to prison for murder has died. Phil Specter, who was made famous for his wall of sound method was 81 in 2003. He was convicted of killing actress Lana Clarkson at.