3463 – September 4, 2024 – COWARDS! – In addition to the dictionary definition: A politician who lies to you because they are hiding from the truth of what they stand for or intend to do. Lies are a way of hiding and running away. The Dems NEED to LIE, or no one would vote for them. But there are PLENTY of lying Republicans too. Don’t let them run away from their platform and/or beliefs! Hold their feet to the fire until they tell you (admit to) the truth!

COWARDS!

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[00:00:01] Hey, where are you going?

[00:00:03] I gotta get home.

[00:00:04] America, it's time to come home.

[00:00:08] It's time to come home!

[00:00:09] By bringing Common Sense back into the nonsense.

[00:00:13] Welcome to Common Sense Coalition Talk Radio, where America comes home.

[00:00:21] Down this dirt road, you're gonna find determination and grit,

[00:00:24] opinions that matter, and a big ol' helping of good discernment.

[00:00:28] And now, the woman that wishes the DC occupiers would stop making her use her mom voice.

[00:00:34] She's not! Make me come down there.

[00:00:35] Here's your host and the voice of Common Sense.

[00:00:39] Beth Ann.

[00:00:41] And I welcome you today to CSC Talk Radio.

[00:00:44] It is my honor and my privilege and my pleasure to be here with you today.

[00:00:47] We're gonna go straight to the Lord in prayer.

[00:00:50] For such a time as this, almost gracious heavenly Father,

[00:00:53] my request today is courage.

[00:00:57] We thank you Father, for your grace, for your love, and for your mercy.

[00:01:06] Father, you have done so much for each one of us.

[00:01:10] We are spoiled children to the degree that we don't even recognize all the blessings.

[00:01:17] But we know, Father, they come from you.

[00:01:22] Father, we're living in turbulent times here in this nation and across the globe.

[00:01:29] I ask for your courage.

[00:01:37] Make us a courageous people.

[00:01:41] Yet, may we go out, go forth with love.

[00:01:51] Father, I beg you protection around Donald Trump and all those who are protecting him.

[00:01:58] Father, for the hostages, we've been praying for them.

[00:02:02] And Father, so many were brutally murdered just recently.

[00:02:06] Others are believed to be dead somewhere.

[00:02:09] Their families are hurting.

[00:02:13] I pray for them that your arms of comfort and peace will be around them.

[00:02:19] And I pray for those hostages.

[00:02:23] Give them courage, Father.

[00:02:26] Let them feel your presence.

[00:02:29] The hostages of war and the hostages that we have here in our own country.

[00:02:35] Held in prisons.

[00:02:41] Father, crime is rampant.

[00:02:43] We have evil just a cloud of darkness across this nation.

[00:02:52] May your children rise up with your light and be courageous.

[00:02:58] May we go forth in love but with a righteous anger that we will no longer tolerate this evil in our country.

[00:03:11] Father, thank you so much for all that you have done.

[00:03:17] You have blessed this nation beyond.

[00:03:22] We just can't fathom all that you've done for us.

[00:03:26] But we have not turned around and blessed you.

[00:03:32] May we turn from our wicked ways now, Father.

[00:03:34] May we be courageous as we march forward as your soldiers for your righteousness.

[00:03:42] It is in Jesus' name that I pray.

[00:03:45] Amen.

[00:03:48] Yesterday I was thinking about the word coward.

[00:03:52] Cowards.

[00:03:54] According to the dictionary, a coward is a person who lacks the courage to do or endure dangerous or unpleasant things.

[00:04:02] An example is they had run away the cowards.

[00:04:09] I would add to this although now the dictionary, not the dictionary definition,

[00:04:14] but a person who wants to have your vote so that they can be in a place of authority over you,

[00:04:22] but they have to lie to receive that vote so you will not know the truth of who they really are and what they really stand for.

[00:04:31] I believe that is cowardice.

[00:04:34] A person with honorable intentions doesn't have to lie or hide from you or the media.

[00:04:40] Lies are a way of hiding and a way of running.

[00:04:44] Cowards will lie.

[00:04:46] They almost have to lie.

[00:04:49] Communist Kamala and I spell communist with a K to match her name.

[00:04:53] And her VP choice, China-loving testosterone free tampon, Tim, cowardly duck and weave from the media

[00:05:01] and refuse to congregate in places where they might have to face real Americans and real questions.

[00:05:08] They refuse to take responsibility for the failures that they have done

[00:05:13] and then accuse others of political stunts.

[00:05:16] And I'm speaking of the 13 Gold Star families who they shunned.

[00:05:22] It seems Democrats have a history of disrespecting Gold Star families.

[00:05:27] I do remember a story of Hillary Clinton having such a scar on her political record.

[00:05:32] Yes, cowards are known for running and hiding and they have to lie to hide their dishonesty.

[00:05:40] They run away from what they have done not because they're ashamed of it

[00:05:46] but because they don't want you to know about it.

[00:05:48] Remember when China floated this balloon over our nation

[00:05:52] checking out all our military facilities and such?

[00:05:56] It seems with all the spies they have in the Democrat Party

[00:06:01] maybe that balloon wasn't really necessary.

[00:06:05] Diane Feinstein and her office manager, Chinese spy.

[00:06:10] Eric Swalwell actually sleeping with a spy.

[00:06:13] I believe he should have been kicked out of the office for that.

[00:06:16] Why wasn't he?

[00:06:18] Were we too cowardice to kick him out?

[00:06:22] That was more of an offense, more egregious than Santos,

[00:06:25] which Romney had to go after and they got rid of him.

[00:06:30] Swalwell is an idiot and a gassy coward, tabooed.

[00:06:35] National security risk he is.

[00:06:38] Why is he still in office?

[00:06:41] The Biden cartel compromised, selling America out

[00:06:44] to China, to Russia, to Ukraine.

[00:06:48] Literally.

[00:06:51] Testosterone-free tampon Tim praises China.

[00:06:54] He is one scary coward of a man.

[00:06:58] Did you see him literally run from the media

[00:07:01] when he was asked about the death of the American?

[00:07:06] Hamas killed.

[00:07:07] Woohoo, that chubby man could run with his hands full of food.

[00:07:11] He had a big old sandwich there at the state fair he took off running.

[00:07:17] It seems to me that we have cowards in high places

[00:07:21] in this nation and it's time we kicked him out.

[00:07:24] Maybe it's us, the American people who are cowards.

[00:07:30] Or are we overly trusting and forgiving when it comes to politicians?

[00:07:35] Are we just too lazy to make a change?

[00:07:39] Have we grown so dependent on our government

[00:07:42] that we ourselves cannot break free from these chains

[00:07:45] that bind us to those social programs

[00:07:48] which in all honesty cost us much more than they provide?

[00:07:55] Lest you think that I'm too cowardly to point out

[00:07:59] that Democrats are not the only cowards in office.

[00:08:02] There's Lindsey Graham, Mitt Romney,

[00:08:05] Liz Cheney, the Bushes, all of them.

[00:08:08] Alaska's own Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins from,

[00:08:12] I believe she's from Maine, and there are many more.

[00:08:15] Oh, how about Kevin McCarthy?

[00:08:17] I consider him a coward.

[00:08:20] And the one who could have maybe made a difference

[00:08:24] on January 6th, Mike Pence,

[00:08:31] they talk pretty when they lie,

[00:08:35] but they're really cowards hiding,

[00:08:38] hiding what they really intend to do to you,

[00:08:44] not for you and your families.

[00:08:47] They are cowards when it comes to your liberty.

[00:08:52] They will not stand up when it really, really counts.

[00:08:56] They'll take advantage and then stab you in the back,

[00:09:00] AKA Mitt Romney,

[00:09:03] who begged Donald Trump for his endorsement

[00:09:05] so he could get reelected and then turned on him,

[00:09:07] just like that.

[00:09:11] They are not honorable.

[00:09:15] They are liars.

[00:09:18] They are cowards.

[00:09:22] But we, we the people,

[00:09:25] it's time that we...

[00:09:28] I yesterday substacked, grew some independence.

[00:09:32] It's time that we grew some courage

[00:09:35] to bring America home.

[00:09:37] You're listening to CSE Talk Radio.

[00:09:39] This is Beth Ann, and we'll be right back.

[00:10:00] For centuries, those who raise, breed and work with animals

[00:10:03] have been revered and lauded for what they do.

[00:10:06] Today across America, the rights to own and raise animals

[00:10:09] are under attack by animal rights activists

[00:10:11] and their increased influence on government

[00:10:14] and non-government agencies.

[00:10:16] This onslaught regularly violates protection

[00:10:18] from legal search and seizure

[00:10:19] and a citizen's right to due process of the law,

[00:10:22] all of which are outrun specifically

[00:10:24] in the U.S. Constitution.

[00:10:25] Protect your animals, your animal enterprise

[00:10:28] and your property from this abuse of power.

[00:10:31] With a membership to the Cavalry Group,

[00:10:33] membership provides immediate access to their team

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[00:10:37] and animal enterprise against unwarranted search

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[00:10:42] They also work to protect their members' interests

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[00:10:47] Get the shield that protects you, your animals

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[00:10:50] Join the Cavalry Group today.

[00:10:52] Call 8-5-7-4-8-40-2-10

[00:10:55] or go to their website at thecavalrygroup.com

[00:11:02] Did you hear that?

[00:11:03] That's the sound of energy.

[00:11:05] And America has plenty.

[00:11:06] Power the Future is dedicated to those

[00:11:08] who power the future for all Americans.

[00:11:10] It is their hard work, sweat and determination

[00:11:13] that keeps the lights on in all American homes.

[00:11:16] Their livelihoods are under attack

[00:11:18] by radical environmental groups.

[00:11:20] Power the Future is advocating

[00:11:21] for their jobs and American energy.

[00:11:23] Daniel Turner is the founder

[00:11:24] and executive director of Power the Future.

[00:11:26] Daniel is an expert in energy and environmental issues

[00:11:30] as they pertain to jobs, rural communities,

[00:11:32] the U.S. economy, international affairs

[00:11:34] and our national security.

[00:11:36] If the radical environmentalists have their way,

[00:11:39] our natural resources will be less available

[00:11:41] and less affordable.

[00:11:43] Power the Future is a sponsor of CSE Talk Radio.

[00:11:45] We advocate for America's energy independence

[00:11:48] and national security.

[00:11:49] Visit powerthefuture.com

[00:11:51] and let's work together to keep the lights on

[00:11:53] and bring America home.

[00:12:01] In a word, as a man who's said to have a right

[00:12:03] to his property, he may be equally said

[00:12:06] to have a property in his rights.

[00:12:08] What? Who said that?

[00:12:09] James Madison, I'm learning about our property rights

[00:12:12] for my upcoming Bring America Home conference.

[00:12:14] What is that?

[00:12:15] Saturday, September 14th from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

[00:12:18] So are you having speakers?

[00:12:20] Oh my, I'll say Daniel Turner,

[00:12:22] CEO of Power the Future

[00:12:23] and his communications director, Larry Barons.

[00:12:25] Linda Rance will educate us on election integrity.

[00:12:28] Mindy Patterson, the CEO

[00:12:30] of the Calorie Group and a few others.

[00:12:32] Okay, where are you doing this?

[00:12:33] We'll meet at the beautiful Performing Arts Center

[00:12:35] in California, Missouri and lunch is included.

[00:12:38] Now what does it cost?

[00:12:39] Oh, it's just $25 a person if you pre-register.

[00:12:42] I'm so excited.

[00:12:43] Come join CSE Talk Radio Saturday, September 14th.

[00:12:47] Okay, how do I pre-register?

[00:12:48] Well, you go to csetalkradio.com

[00:12:50] or better yet, just call 5-7-3-7-9-6-2-1-6-6.

[00:12:54] Bring America Home Conference Saturday, September 14th.

[00:12:57] Let's see you there.

[00:12:58] All right.

[00:12:59] And we have Recharger listening to CSE Talk Radio.

[00:13:07] This is Beth Ann.

[00:13:08] This is the week to have guests on

[00:13:10] and I'm kind of excited about this young woman.

[00:13:13] She came to me through a representative

[00:13:17] that kind of puts people out there.

[00:13:20] This is she's coming from Epic Times,

[00:13:23] Darlene Chansenchez.

[00:13:25] And in the email that I received it said,

[00:13:28] Darlene talked with self-proclaimed hillbillies

[00:13:31] and heard what they want from Washington.

[00:13:35] And I think that's what we're going to talk about.

[00:13:37] Darlene Sanchez is, like I said, a reporter from the Epic Times

[00:13:42] and she covers the border security, immigration,

[00:13:44] election integrity and Texas politics.

[00:13:47] And with 20 years of experience in media,

[00:13:50] we welcome you today.

[00:13:51] Darlene, how are you doing?

[00:13:53] Hi Beth Ann.

[00:13:54] I'm doing great.

[00:13:55] Thank you.

[00:13:56] Well, you're very welcome.

[00:13:57] Thank you for being with us today.

[00:13:59] So you went to the hillbilly country.

[00:14:02] I'm going to tell you right now, you're talking to hillbillies.

[00:14:06] We are smack dab in the middle of Missouri,

[00:14:09] smack dab in the middle of this nation and somebody said,

[00:14:13] well you talk Southern.

[00:14:14] I said no we talk hillbilly.

[00:14:15] That's what we talk.

[00:14:17] So where did you find out from the hillbillies?

[00:14:20] Well, I'm very familiar with the neck of the woods

[00:14:24] where I was at.

[00:14:25] I spent some time there previously,

[00:14:29] before I was here in Texas.

[00:14:32] So I went to, through East Tennessee

[00:14:35] and to Southwest Virginia

[00:14:37] and Western North Carolina.

[00:14:40] I stayed along the Appalachian Mountains basically.

[00:14:44] They're part of the, of course, the chain.

[00:14:47] It would be the Southern Appalachian Mountains.

[00:14:49] Beautiful country.

[00:14:49] And just started going into small towns

[00:14:52] and talking to people about, you know,

[00:14:54] what they thought about Washington,

[00:14:57] who they thought they would vote for,

[00:14:58] what are their values,

[00:14:59] and how they saw this election coming up.

[00:15:04] And I will say that most, of course,

[00:15:07] so that they wanted to vote for Trump and Vance,

[00:15:10] there were some who were undecided

[00:15:11] and then there were some who said,

[00:15:13] you know, they were definitely going to vote for Kamala,

[00:15:15] Harris and Walt.

[00:15:17] So it was a mixed bag,

[00:15:19] but I would say, you know, overall,

[00:15:20] it was independent.

[00:15:23] Most people said they were independent,

[00:15:25] but they were going to vote for Trump,

[00:15:26] which I found interesting.

[00:15:28] And the number one topic for pretty much everybody,

[00:15:32] even those who said they were going to vote Democratic,

[00:15:35] was the economy and inflation.

[00:15:38] So why would they vote Democratic

[00:15:41] if economy is a concern?

[00:15:44] Because the economy, are they buying the lie

[00:15:46] that it was Trump who did this mess

[00:15:50] with the economy instead of the current administration?

[00:15:54] No, I think the way they were talking is

[00:15:57] other concerns to them were more important,

[00:16:00] such as, you know, their right to an abortion.

[00:16:03] Basically, they call it women's reproductive rights.

[00:16:07] And, you know, I talked to one young man down there

[00:16:09] and, you know, it's also got to do with, I think,

[00:16:13] you know, this thing of, oh, let's elect,

[00:16:16] you know, the first woman president,

[00:16:17] the first black woman president.

[00:16:19] I think that had a lot to do with it as well

[00:16:22] from when I was talking to this one young man who said,

[00:16:25] you know, he was in North Carolina,

[00:16:26] he was a transplant from Tampa, Florida,

[00:16:29] I believe is what he was telling me.

[00:16:30] And he said, you know, his wife was very much

[00:16:35] in the camp of Kamala,

[00:16:39] and so he was going to vote that way too, you know.

[00:16:42] So that's just, you know, they look at it

[00:16:44] as more an issue of, I think, you know,

[00:16:48] that she is history for women.

[00:16:50] And I think that that's what, you know,

[00:16:52] is driving some of this.

[00:16:55] I did speak with a Republican woman

[00:16:58] in Southwest Virginia who said that she was suitable

[00:17:02] that women would be voting for Kamala

[00:17:06] because simply for the fact that she was a woman

[00:17:09] and simply for the fact of, you know,

[00:17:10] they wanted a particular race

[00:17:13] in the White House, you know,

[00:17:15] a black female would be a first.

[00:17:18] And she was concerned about that because, you know,

[00:17:20] she was a white woman as well

[00:17:21] and she was saying, you know, she was hearing some of that.

[00:17:25] You know, I'm concerned about that too

[00:17:27] and I had mentioned that to my guest yesterday.

[00:17:30] And both of you female

[00:17:32] and I think that we can speak to the women out there.

[00:17:35] I think voting for someone because of their gender

[00:17:37] or even just for their party,

[00:17:40] I think it's the wrong way to vote.

[00:17:42] I think we need to vote our conscience.

[00:17:44] We need to vote constitutionally.

[00:17:47] And right now the Democrat Party is anything but constitutional.

[00:17:54] They are anti-American if anything.

[00:17:56] Now all of a sudden, you know,

[00:17:58] since Kamala's running they're throwing the flags up

[00:18:00] and it's just a few years ago

[00:18:02] they were saying how fearful that was to everyone

[00:18:04] if you had a flag flying and now it's okay.

[00:18:08] But I am concerned that women will vote just strictly

[00:18:13] because she's a female.

[00:18:15] I had people call in on my show

[00:18:18] when Hillary Clinton was running

[00:18:20] and that's the only reason they were voting for Hillary.

[00:18:23] And that does concern me.

[00:18:26] Yeah, I mean I understand that too

[00:18:28] and it was interesting, you know,

[00:18:30] when I was speaking with her

[00:18:32] and she, you know, definitely considers herself a hillbilly

[00:18:37] and she was saying that, you know,

[00:18:40] to her it needs to be the best person for the job.

[00:18:43] And she said in her view that wasn't Kamala Harris.

[00:18:47] You know, she didn't have what it takes

[00:18:50] she thought to be, you know,

[00:18:52] the next president of the United States.

[00:18:54] So she would not be voting for her.

[00:18:56] Even though, you know, she was a Republican,

[00:18:58] of course, this lady I was speaking with.

[00:19:01] She was in her 40s.

[00:19:04] Had lived in North Carolina for a while.

[00:19:06] Grew up in the area of Southwest Virginia.

[00:19:08] That's coal mining country.

[00:19:10] Yes, it is.

[00:19:11] Or at least it used to be, you know,

[00:19:12] now coal mining everywhere has been, you know,

[00:19:15] basically rapidly decreasing because, you know,

[00:19:20] the current administration does not want

[00:19:23] a lot of fossil fuel production in the United States

[00:19:26] as most people understand.

[00:19:28] So that ended up being another issue too

[00:19:31] for a lot of folks in the Southern Appalachian Mountains.

[00:19:34] They didn't like the current administration

[00:19:38] stance on energy production.

[00:19:41] Or lack of energy production.

[00:19:44] Yes, well fossil fuels I guess,

[00:19:46] fossil fuel production, energy through what

[00:19:48] we have an abundance of in America.

[00:19:51] They were very much puzzled by that.

[00:19:53] I actually spoke with a retired coal miner.

[00:19:58] He worked in the Strip Mine in the area there,

[00:20:02] Southwest Virginia.

[00:20:04] And, you know, he said it used to be,

[00:20:06] you know, there were good paying jobs there.

[00:20:07] You know, he only went through the sixth grade.

[00:20:11] He said, and he started chuckling and he said,

[00:20:13] well, he doesn't even know if he actually passed

[00:20:15] the sixth grade because he didn't go get his report card.

[00:20:20] And so he says, you know,

[00:20:22] but it was very poignant in a way because he said,

[00:20:25] you know, I didn't get much schooling.

[00:20:27] He said, but I can certainly tell you there's

[00:20:29] something wrong with America right now.

[00:20:32] I'm smart enough to see that.

[00:20:34] It doesn't take a genius.

[00:20:36] Yeah, you know, and he was very articulate.

[00:20:39] He seemed to understand politics.

[00:20:42] And the other interesting thing about it was

[00:20:44] he's never voted before in his life and he's 74 years old.

[00:20:47] And he says, but now this year he's going to vote.

[00:20:51] And he's going to vote for Trump because he says

[00:20:53] he feels like the current administration is running

[00:20:57] the country into the ground and he's very worried about it.

[00:21:00] Worrying enough to vote for the first time,

[00:21:02] even though, you know, he's 74.

[00:21:05] That is amazing that I'm and it's amazing to me

[00:21:08] that he's 74 never voted before.

[00:21:10] Yeah, that's just and they say there's a lot of those

[00:21:13] out there and to me that's just amazing.

[00:21:16] I mean, I've been in radio now for 30 some years,

[00:21:20] but before that I always voted.

[00:21:24] But I was, I will say that I didn't really follow politics too much.

[00:21:29] I raised five children and I used to laugh at the gossip

[00:21:32] going around them in a small town and other things

[00:21:35] that were happening in the news.

[00:21:37] And I said, if it's not happening in my kitchen

[00:21:38] or my laundry room, I don't know about it.

[00:21:41] And that was kind of a bad attitude.

[00:21:45] It was just being truthful.

[00:21:46] I was a busy little mama.

[00:21:47] But that was a bad attitude, but I still always voted.

[00:21:52] And most of the time I voted Republican,

[00:21:55] but I never until the last several years voted a straight ticket.

[00:22:00] But I won't vote for another Democrat now.

[00:22:04] Not the way the party is.

[00:22:06] Well, and the other interesting thing is I did speak

[00:22:09] with the Democratic chair of a county there

[00:22:14] in Eastern Tennessee.

[00:22:16] And he was telling me one of the main concerns in that area,

[00:22:23] that neck of the woods was healthcare and the cost.

[00:22:28] Of course that, of course also got into abortion rights, etc.

[00:22:32] But they are concerned about the cost of healthcare in general

[00:22:36] because some of these areas here,

[00:22:39] the poverty levels are at 30%,

[00:22:42] up here in some of these mountain communities.

[00:22:45] The towns, the jobs have all fled to other areas.

[00:22:50] And that was part of what the coalman I was speaking to,

[00:22:54] what he was saying, you see all these good-paying jobs here.

[00:22:57] And now they're all gone.

[00:22:58] And that's caused high-level poverty in some of these areas.

[00:23:02] You can see the downtown crumbling.

[00:23:04] Yes, all across America.

[00:23:07] It doesn't seem to be coming back a bit.

[00:23:09] We're here in the music, so we're going to go into a break.

[00:23:11] I want to talk about that part of the country.

[00:23:16] And here, small-town USA, they are crumbling.

[00:23:19] And it isn't because...

[00:23:22] It is because of policies.

[00:23:24] And what they're doing to help us isn't helping us.

[00:23:27] You're listening to CSE Talk Radio.

[00:23:29] This is Beth Ann with Darlene Sanchez,

[00:23:31] and we will be right back.

[00:24:02] If you want to educate and encourage your group,

[00:24:04] invite Beth Ann in her Bring America Home message

[00:24:07] to your community or event.

[00:24:08] Call 573-796-2166

[00:24:11] or email rootys at csetalkradio.com

[00:24:14] to invite Beth Ann to speak at your next event.

[00:24:17] Beth Ann has been behind the microphone for almost 30 years

[00:24:20] fighting to bring America home.

[00:24:22] She brings her unique perspective,

[00:24:24] drawing from her many life experiences

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[00:24:28] As a young girl, her family moved from the big city

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[00:24:33] marry her husband and together raise five sons.

[00:24:35] Along the way, she worked in factories, retail,

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[00:24:39] and now lights up the airwaves on CSE Talk Radio.

[00:24:43] As the DC occupiers continue to drive our society

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[00:28:07] And we have Recharge listening to CSE Talk Radio.

[00:28:09] This is Beth Ann with Darlene Sanchez.

[00:28:11] She recently took a little tour through Hillbilly Country.

[00:28:16] And you know, the sad thing is Darlene is the small town USA.

[00:28:23] They are crumbling. We have a little small town here in mid-Missouri.

[00:28:28] And the little town I'm in happens to be the county seat.

[00:28:31] We have the courthouse.

[00:28:34] And they used to...the area, the square around the courthouse was hopping.

[00:28:40] You know, shops and hopping things. It's not that way anymore.

[00:28:44] They're crumbling. The buildings are crumbling. The sidewalks are cracked.

[00:28:47] And grass is growing in the streets and growing in the sidewalks.

[00:28:51] And it's all because of the policies.

[00:28:54] When government tries to help you and they control the markets, this is farmland.

[00:28:59] This is farm country. Cattle and corn and soybean, hogs, chickens.

[00:29:05] And the more they try to help us, the worse things seem to get.

[00:29:14] Did you find that in the small towns where you were driving through and visiting?

[00:29:19] Well, what I found was a distrust of government, particularly Washington.

[00:29:26] And this feeling of being left behind.

[00:29:32] That nobody in Washington had any clue as to what their lives were like,

[00:29:39] trying to make ends meet in these small communities.

[00:29:43] But the other thing that I found, which I thought was very encouraging,

[00:29:48] was...and I think this came from, you know, basically,

[00:29:51] these were their ancestors were pioneers.

[00:29:54] They'd go out and settle these places.

[00:29:59] This was Daniel Boone country there in East Tennessee in North Carolina.

[00:30:05] So what I did find was, for example, this guy who...in East Tennessee,

[00:30:12] he told me that he didn't make it through high school.

[00:30:15] He ended up dropping out because he got in too many fights.

[00:30:19] But along the way, you know, he's had to be very creative

[00:30:24] and come up with solutions to make ends meet.

[00:30:27] You know, he went into construction.

[00:30:29] When the jobs dried out there, he learned to be a handyman.

[00:30:33] When the jobs dried out there, he learned to work on cars.

[00:30:36] And he said, you know, he's in his like 50s, he's like,

[00:30:39] you know, he's like right now, he's like,

[00:30:41] I'm making more money than I ever made, but he's like,

[00:30:43] you know, our ancestors, you know, they built this place.

[00:30:48] They built America.

[00:30:49] And now, you know, I'm seeing these young kids laying around

[00:30:54] and, you know, they don't want to work a lot of them.

[00:30:57] He's like, you know, where I've been, you know, he's been,

[00:30:59] you know, busting his bottom to try to get out there

[00:31:04] and do something, you know, make enough money.

[00:31:07] He sees them laying around and he's very concerned

[00:31:09] about what he's seeing there.

[00:31:11] And in terms of crumbling towns, I did go through

[00:31:16] Jefferson City, Tennessee and it's downtown.

[00:31:19] It's historic, but yeah, it is crumbling.

[00:31:22] And I did meet this one gentleman there who's trying to set up

[00:31:25] a coffee shop.

[00:31:27] And, you know, he already is making coffee there

[00:31:29] in that old downtown building.

[00:31:31] He bought it.

[00:31:32] He's made it inside.

[00:31:33] It looks really, really great.

[00:31:35] You know, it's not open yet.

[00:31:36] He let us inside actually and gave us a little tour.

[00:31:39] And he's doing his best.

[00:31:41] He wants to open it back up, you know, hoping that it will

[00:31:43] revitalize that downtown.

[00:31:45] He's a transplant, you know.

[00:31:48] He lived elsewhere and then came here several years ago.

[00:31:51] He says he's going to vote for Trump.

[00:31:54] He says he doesn't really pay that much attention

[00:31:56] to the politics, but he said luckily there he didn't,

[00:32:00] you know, he had to fight to get like a new

[00:32:01] sewer system, septic system set up there for that

[00:32:05] old building and it took years to do it.

[00:32:08] I think he said about three years.

[00:32:09] So it's not like there's a lot of help that seems

[00:32:13] like in these small towns.

[00:32:14] Now they will give you these little grants every now

[00:32:17] and then and fix up the historical buildings,

[00:32:19] but then they've got you, you know.

[00:32:22] They give you a grant.

[00:32:23] You have to do things their way.

[00:32:25] And that goes back to something called Agenda 21,

[00:32:28] the new Green Deal and all these things, you know,

[00:32:31] where the government, they want to come in and help.

[00:32:34] But when you do that, then that's the carrot

[00:32:37] on the stick, you know, and you're captured then.

[00:32:41] The ancestors that established that area

[00:32:44] that you're talking about and even here,

[00:32:46] they were the exceptional Americans.

[00:32:48] You know, they went through everything.

[00:32:49] And when you think about our ancestors

[00:32:52] and how they came over here, they knew they

[00:32:55] were never going to see that family abroad again.

[00:32:59] Very exceptional.

[00:33:00] And the children that aren't working today,

[00:33:04] the teenagers that don't want to do anything,

[00:33:05] I kind of blame not just society, but the parents on that,

[00:33:09] because you have to step in and I realize my children are grown,

[00:33:13] but I have a ton of grandchildren.

[00:33:16] And you know, it's, they've taught their children to work

[00:33:22] like I taught them to work

[00:33:23] and my one son was sharing something with me the other day

[00:33:27] about so-and-so didn't know this and that.

[00:33:30] And he said, even when he was in the Army,

[00:33:31] they didn't even know how to do their laundry or anything.

[00:33:33] And I looked at him. I said, you're welcome.

[00:33:36] You're welcome.

[00:33:38] But I think that's part of it.

[00:33:39] We all, they're not, they need to take the phones away from the kids.

[00:33:43] They need to take some of these devices away from the kids

[00:33:46] and I am concerned about that as well

[00:33:50] because we need working Americans.

[00:33:52] And the 74-year-old, he's soon going to not be able to work anymore

[00:33:55] and so is the 50-some-year-old.

[00:33:58] And it's got to be the kids.

[00:33:59] And you've got to admire this 50-some-year-old man

[00:34:02] that just kept changing what he was going to do.

[00:34:05] Just kept changing you, well, that doesn't work.

[00:34:07] I'll go do this and I'll learn how to do that

[00:34:09] and I'll help people and I'll make a living at it.

[00:34:12] And that is America.

[00:34:16] That is what Americans do.

[00:34:18] They survive. They adapt.

[00:34:22] And you know they want to call us in D.C.

[00:34:24] They want to call us rubes and deplorables.

[00:34:26] But if it wasn't for us, there would be grass growing in their streets

[00:34:31] because it's the hillbillies out here.

[00:34:35] It's the farmers, the ranchers, the producers,

[00:34:38] not just of food but of other things that are keeping this nation going

[00:34:42] and when they sell it to some place overseas,

[00:34:46] then our towns begin to crumble

[00:34:48] and if our towns crumble eventually there's will too.

[00:34:52] So you were out in the heartland of America with the hillbillies.

[00:34:58] They're the ones that are making this country survive.

[00:35:03] I believe they're going to be the ones who save this nation.

[00:35:06] What do you think?

[00:35:08] I think that, you know, these...

[00:35:10] Like I said, the thing that to me is admirable

[00:35:15] is their resourcefulness and their willingness.

[00:35:19] Like, you know, we were talking about the one guy in his 50s there

[00:35:22] who, you know, he just kept on going, you know.

[00:35:25] He had figured out something to make ends meet.

[00:35:28] And you've got to be concerned as to

[00:35:32] is that resourcefulness now gone with the new generation?

[00:35:37] Yes.

[00:35:38] And, you know, there are signs of hope, of course.

[00:35:40] You do see young people out there doing things,

[00:35:44] you know, trying to work, working hard, trying to make a living.

[00:35:47] But then of course you do have the others like, you know,

[00:35:50] this gentleman was talking about that don't want to work

[00:35:53] or just laying there.

[00:35:55] So, but I do think that that work ethic

[00:35:59] that hillbillies grew up with

[00:36:01] and the idea that you're going to make it, you know,

[00:36:05] one way or the other, I think that's extremely important.

[00:36:09] And I think that that is, you know, a quality that,

[00:36:13] you know, everyone in America, anyone who's suffered

[00:36:16] some sort of hardship in their life, I think that kind of,

[00:36:20] that makes them.

[00:36:22] Okay?

[00:36:23] I think what doesn't kill you makes you.

[00:36:25] That's what it is to figure out a way forward

[00:36:29] that a lot of our young people have not experienced yet.

[00:36:32] And I think we need to hope, you know,

[00:36:35] you don't wish ill on anyone, but hopefully, you know,

[00:36:38] when life throws you that curve ball,

[00:36:40] they'll figure out a way to come back up

[00:36:43] and dust themselves off and stand up.

[00:36:46] Do you find that a lot of those there,

[00:36:48] and I'm not saying this in a critical way,

[00:36:50] just in a matter of fact, we are on welfare?

[00:36:53] That's interesting. You said that in Saplets, Virginia

[00:36:56] when I went over there, I talked to one lady who said,

[00:37:00] you know, food stamps are just a way of life, you know,

[00:37:03] but they work too.

[00:37:05] I guess they work enough, you know,

[00:37:07] to where they can still get the food stamps

[00:37:09] even though they're working.

[00:37:11] She was working as a waitress, and she said, you know,

[00:37:13] all these, this talk with all these jobs are out there.

[00:37:17] She's like, I had trouble finding a job.

[00:37:20] She's like, you know, I'd go in a fun,

[00:37:23] they say, oh, we filled it, or no, it's no longer available.

[00:37:27] And she said, finally, she did get a job

[00:37:29] for her husband, Lester, you know,

[00:37:30] her kids group were grown, but she still had to support herself.

[00:37:34] And, you know, she went out and got her a job,

[00:37:36] finally found her a job as a waitress,

[00:37:38] but she said it's hard.

[00:37:40] It is hard work.

[00:37:42] We're heading into the break.

[00:37:44] We're heading into our break.

[00:37:45] Do you want to stay with us through this next segment?

[00:37:48] Do you have time to stay with us?

[00:37:50] Did you say yes?

[00:37:51] Yes, I'll be happy to.

[00:37:52] All right, hang in there.

[00:37:54] We'll finish this conversation when we come back.

[00:37:56] You're listening to CSE Talk Radio.

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[00:40:58] The American Crisis Continues.

[00:41:03] The reviews are in.

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[00:42:04] And we have return to CSETalk Radio.

[00:42:07] This is Beth Ann. We're in the final segment of today's show,

[00:42:09] but we were in the middle of conversation.

[00:42:11] I didn't want to let Darlene just drop.

[00:42:13] I wanted to continue that.

[00:42:15] Um, we were talking about the kids and welfare there

[00:42:20] and how she said food stamps were just a way of life.

[00:42:24] That's kind of sad here in America.

[00:42:27] I'm glad that they have that, but at the same time,

[00:42:33] I'm sad that we've come to this because too many in this country

[00:42:38] have to have that kind of help.

[00:42:41] And that disturbs me a little bit.

[00:42:46] What do you think, Darlene?

[00:42:49] Yeah, I mean like I said, she, it wasn't like she wasn't trying.

[00:42:53] Okay.

[00:42:54] No, I know that.

[00:42:55] Like, oh, I don't want to work. She did.

[00:42:57] And you know, luckily she did end up finding her a job there in the small town.

[00:43:01] Um, you know, it was a white dress job, but hey, you know, at least it was something.

[00:43:05] Um, and to me, it was sad.

[00:43:09] And it was sad because it wasn't like I said,

[00:43:11] it wasn't for lack of wanting to pull yourself up, you know, by your,

[00:43:16] um, you know, pull yourself up and do something with your life.

[00:43:20] That wasn't the problem there.

[00:43:21] Um, she was in her 40.

[00:43:24] Um, she though, you know, she, she caught herself at which,

[00:43:29] which I started laughing.

[00:43:30] She said, well, I asked her like, well, do you consider yourself a hillbilly?

[00:43:34] And she said, yes, I'm a hang, I'm a head bang hillbilly.

[00:43:39] And I had to laugh.

[00:43:41] Um, but, um, you know, she did have that same spirit,

[00:43:46] spirit that, you know, a lot of these mountain folks have,

[00:43:49] they're like, I'm not going to be able to do that.

[00:43:49] But she was also, I think very, um, suspicious, I guess might be the word.

[00:43:55] Um, distrustful of, um, the political system.

[00:44:00] Um, and that was sad to me as well.

[00:44:02] Cause she said she had no intentions of voting that she didn't like either party.

[00:44:07] They didn't understand her life.

[00:44:10] And she didn't think they wanted to understand her life.

[00:44:13] And she said, you know, so what if anything bad happened to them?

[00:44:17] If they die, it's just one less poor person to worry about.

[00:44:21] Well, she's kind of got some of them right.

[00:44:23] I don't think all of them are that way.

[00:44:25] Uh, I do just like the two party system.

[00:44:29] I think it's, it's a monopoly and I think they've both gone a little bit,

[00:44:32] uh, too much big government and not enough liberty.

[00:44:37] And when the government controls the markets for everything and then the

[00:44:41] government decides, well, you know, we're going to shut down this industry or

[00:44:45] that industry.

[00:44:47] Um, these people suffer and they don't see that suffering.

[00:44:51] And some of them don't want to see the suffering, but I,

[00:44:54] I see President Trump a little different than that.

[00:44:58] I think he does care about their suffering.

[00:45:00] Now I'm not going to speak to the party necessarily, but I think he who's

[00:45:04] running on that party ticket does care about that.

[00:45:07] And this is not necessarily to plug Trump.

[00:45:10] But I, I wish she didn't feel so lost, but I do understand why she does.

[00:45:17] You know, I think the interesting thing is that, you know, here you have Trump,

[00:45:24] who's a billionaire running this band who's a hillbilly.

[00:45:28] And I asked them about bands and about Trump.

[00:45:31] It's like, so then why would you want to vote for Trump?

[00:45:35] And it's because they see him as an outsider.

[00:45:41] They see him as someone who is, you know, cause you're sitting there thinking,

[00:45:44] how could you possibly relate to a billionaire?

[00:45:47] Here you are a retired coal miner, for example.

[00:45:50] Um, you know, struggling and they're like, he's, but that insulates him

[00:45:55] from all the special interests.

[00:45:56] He is, you know, so rich that that offers some protection that maybe he

[00:46:02] can do things for the working class that somebody else couldn't.

[00:46:06] And that's where they're coming from.

[00:46:08] That's why they support Trump.

[00:46:09] A lot of them did.

[00:46:10] And because of his business experience and they felt like if anybody could

[00:46:14] turn the economy around, it would be him because he is a rich guy.

[00:46:18] He knows what he's doing.

[00:46:20] So he should be able to help out America.

[00:46:22] And they of course remembered that it was better for them.

[00:46:25] Most of them, you know, four years ago.

[00:46:27] Um, the thing about dance that I thought was interesting is the one lady

[00:46:31] that was there talking about, she was fearful that women were just

[00:46:34] going to vote for Kamala Harris, you know, instead of the right person

[00:46:39] or the person they thought was the best person.

[00:46:41] Um, she loved JD Bant and um, she said, you know, because he is,

[00:46:46] he is a hillbilly like, like her and he does understand where

[00:46:50] they're coming from.

[00:46:51] And another guy started laughing too.

[00:46:53] One of the ones I said that gotten, you know, a fight in high

[00:46:56] school a lot and had to end up dropping out and did three

[00:46:59] different jobs.

[00:46:59] You know, he was like, he's like, you know, I've always said that

[00:47:04] a redneck needs to be up there in the White House and we all

[00:47:06] be a lot better off.

[00:47:08] And you know, he thinks that it would be good if JD Bant got up

[00:47:12] there and started helping run things because he understood their

[00:47:16] lives where nobody else could.

[00:47:18] So I think it was an interesting choice that Trump made

[00:47:22] for his running mate.

[00:47:23] And I think it kind of solidified in their minds that he

[00:47:26] was for the working class.

[00:47:28] So, you know, I kind of go ahead.

[00:47:33] I'm going to say it's to be seen, but um, you know, there was

[00:47:36] also a concern by the same lady who loved JD Bant that people

[00:47:41] would like, um, you know, Tim Waltz because he was a football

[00:47:45] coach and and that spoke to, you know, the middle class,

[00:47:48] the working folks as well.

[00:47:49] So there was a concern that that would help, um, uh,

[00:47:53] from his ticket.

[00:47:54] Well, it would if he was telling the truth.

[00:47:57] Um, he wasn't really a football coach.

[00:47:59] He was an assistant football coach for junior high or or

[00:48:02] elementary and um, you know, I think that's that's the

[00:48:06] difference.

[00:48:07] I see Trump telling the truth.

[00:48:08] I know a lot of people think he lies, but I see him

[00:48:10] telling laying it out.

[00:48:11] He does a lot of, uh, joking, uh, and name calling and

[00:48:17] that kind of thing that that some people don't like.

[00:48:19] I think it's just him and, uh, not necessarily that

[00:48:23] I like that part, but I like what he does.

[00:48:26] I saw him, darling, when he ran in 2016 in 2015 when he was

[00:48:33] running campaign, I saw a change from what I see in other

[00:48:39] politicians because he really seemed to care about the

[00:48:42] people he was talking to.

[00:48:44] Uh, he still kisses the babies.

[00:48:47] You know, nobody else wants to kiss the babies anymore.

[00:48:49] He still kisses the babies and I think it's because

[00:48:52] he loves children and, uh, um, you know, he's given up an

[00:48:58] awful lot for this country and in my lifetime and I'm

[00:49:00] no spring chicken.

[00:49:02] I'm 71.

[00:49:05] I have never seen a president of the United States

[00:49:09] sacrifice the way Trump has.

[00:49:12] And so I kind of judge how he feels about this

[00:49:16] country by his sacrifice.

[00:49:19] I don't know if others see it that way or not, but, um,

[00:49:23] that's kind of how Beth sees it.

[00:49:25] Yeah, I think that there was a sense of that from the

[00:49:29] people I interviewed that, you know, look, you know, this

[00:49:33] guy almost got assassinated and, um, it was also

[00:49:37] interesting where, you know, they were talking about,

[00:49:41] you know, I asked them about their rest and all that

[00:49:43] stuff if that mattered.

[00:49:44] And, you know, the one guy said, well, you know what,

[00:49:47] he's like, we all have a past, don't we?

[00:49:49] He's like, it just didn't even come into play

[00:49:52] really for most of them.

[00:49:53] The number one issue of the inflation in the

[00:49:56] grocery, it was mainly all surrounding groceries

[00:50:00] that's really, really hitting people and that's

[00:50:03] what I heard the most.

[00:50:04] It's very hard.

[00:50:06] Mm-hmm.

[00:50:07] A guy in Eastern Tennessee was talking about for

[00:50:10] the first, you know, he worked, had a decent

[00:50:12] job working as a maintenance driver and

[00:50:14] he was working on the apartment complex.

[00:50:16] But he said for the first year, this is the first

[00:50:19] year ever, he planted a garden because, I mean,

[00:50:22] he told me, he's like, you know, when I go to

[00:50:23] grocery stores, I have to pay four dollars

[00:50:26] for two English coupons.

[00:50:28] He's like, I can't afford that.

[00:50:30] Yeah, and that's true sustainability.

[00:50:32] He's going to grow in it himself.

[00:50:34] We are, darling, we're out of time.

[00:50:37] Thank you and God bless you for what you do

[00:50:39] and thank you for helping us all bring

[00:50:42] America home.

[00:50:43] God bless you.

[00:50:43] Home.

[00:50:44] Thank you.

[00:51:16] Thank you.

[00:51:46] Oh, beautiful for spacious skies, for amber

[00:51:50] waves of grain, for companies that stay with

[00:51:53] us through thick and thin and pain.

[00:51:56] Join us as we celebrate the companies who

[00:51:58] support this nation, support CSC Talk

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[00:52:19] BethAnne.

[00:52:20] These companies have endured the economic

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[00:52:40] And always use the promo code BethAnne.

[00:52:48] Scripture warns us that there will be a day

[00:52:50] of judgment for our lives.

[00:52:52] Our works will be exposed by fire,

[00:52:54] which will reveal the foundation of

[00:52:55] our building.

[00:52:56] Figuratively speaking, have we been

[00:52:58] building with wood, hay and stubble,

[00:53:00] which are perishable?

[00:53:01] Or have we been using gold, silver and

[00:53:03] precious stones which are permanent?

[00:53:05] In this life there will be a day of

[00:53:06] judgment for our failing economic system.

[00:53:09] When the economy collapses, will your

[00:53:11] assets be in paper, which will burn?

[00:53:13] Or will you have a permanent foundation

[00:53:15] of gold and silver securing your assets?

[00:53:18] Fiat dollars are IOUs from the government,

[00:53:20] but gold and silver are the tangible

[00:53:22] assets that protect your wealth.

[00:53:24] Owning gold and silver is the permanent

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[00:53:29] Fiat dollars and debt.

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