[00:00:06] It's time to tune into the Kate Dalley Show, America's newest addiction. The show starts now. Inflation is our friend. Consider this. In the year 2000, if current trends continue, the average blue-collar annual wage in this country will be $568,000. Think what this inflated world of the future will mean. Most Americans will be millionaires.
[00:00:36] Everyone will feel like a big shot. Wouldn't you like to own a $4,000 suit and smoke a $75 cigar, drive a $600,000 car? I know I would. Addison is back with me. I'm so glad because I begged him to stay. Begging can do a lot.
[00:01:02] And I'll tell you what, I'm so grateful because I really want to hear what Mel has to say in maybe some things that have surprised him, maybe in a positive light. And I think everyone needs to hear what he has to say. So he's going to stay with me for a couple of segments of the show. And of course, phone lines are open, 888-673-1450. I'm really, really glad that you stayed on, Mel. Thank you. No, happy to be here.
[00:01:28] I want to wrap things up with some positive news because a lot of what I've said doesn't sound too great. But I think ultimately where we are heading is actually a pretty good place. Interesting. Okay, so you know I'm so skeptical. So some things have surprised you. What has surprised you? And really the question is, for the average Joe like me, I'm not in your world of finance.
[00:01:56] I'm not in what you've educated yourself into in so much of what we've talked about in the last hour. Because this is really where you bloom. Okay, so for the average person like me, how will it hit me? How will all of this going into this year, how will this affect my life? That's usually what people want to know too. So what has surprised you?
[00:02:19] Well, I think what's going to happen is we are going to have significant sustained inflation. But it's going to be a completely different variety than the Biden inflation. So think about it a little bit maybe like cholesterol. There's good cholesterol, there's bad cholesterol. There's good inflation, there's bad inflation. When is inflation really bad?
[00:02:45] When you open up the borders so that wages don't go up as they should and you actually lose purchasing power. So the average Joe saw inflation of 25%, 30%. Their wages might have gone up 10% or 15% or even 20%. But at the end of the day, they're making less. Their cost of living has gone down. I think we're going to see the opposite. We're going to see good inflation.
[00:03:11] We're going to see 3%, 4%, 5% prints on the CPI reports. And those government reports are light. So it's actually going to be a little bit more than that. So we're going to have significant inflation. But I think that the border is going to be closed.
[00:03:28] And what's going to happen is we're going to see what we started to see at the end of the COVID pandemic when unions got more power, when people were able to leave a job and go to another job and make a 10% or 20% pay raise because we're not going to have these open borders and all of these workers flooding in from the 7 billion population of the world that lives outside of the United States.
[00:03:53] So if we close the borders and we do the financial policies that I think are necessary, who they're really going to hurt is they're going to hurt bondholders. So if you're a family of four and you make $75,000 a year and you have $30,000 in credit card debt, in two or three years, you might be making $85,000, $90,000 a year. Yes, prices will go up.
[00:04:17] But that $30,000 in credit card debt, in what we call real terms, it's going to feel like $20,000 because it's just going to be inflated away. And we're not just going to do that for individuals that have debt. We're going to do that for the country. We're going to deflate away the government debt. And this is exactly what we did after World War II. People don't realize it, but 1946 and 1947, we had around 15%, 16% inflation two years in a row. You compound 15%.
[00:04:45] That's almost 40% devaluation. That was how we brought down the debt to GDP level after World War II to a manageable level. And we need to do that again. But back then, we also had wages rise. During Biden, we didn't have wages rise commiserate with inflation. We had wages rise, but not as much. And so people lost their wealth, their purchasing power. I think we're going to have wages rise more than inflation. We're going to re-industrialize.
[00:05:15] We're going to start building our own stuff again. We're going to put ourselves on a better footing eventually. But there's going to be a period of chaos ahead of that. What's your take on Greenland, Mexico, Canada, USA region that could be emerging from some of the steps we've taken? Also, the USMCA deal back in 2019 that sort of cemented the North American. So basically, we'd be moving the border to the bottom of Mexico.
[00:05:42] So what are your thoughts on region? What are your thoughts on that, on Greenland and Canada? I think the entire military-industrial complex. I think people high up in Trump's administration. They're understanding that, like I said, we're not in 2010 anymore. We're not the only superpower in the world. We have a peer competitor in China. We have a defiant superpower in Russia.
[00:06:10] We are now on a war footing, but it's more or less economic in nature because unlike 1939, we have nuclear bombs. And so if the great powers go to all-out war, it's game over for civilization. And so what we are is we're in World War III, but it's not a hot war. It's a cold war. It's a gold war.
[00:06:32] It's a war where we have to fight and claim territory wherever we can in the same way that we did in the 1940s. But we have to do it with a bunch of deceit and lies because it's simply come out and say we're at war with China and Russia. You know, you can't do that. But we are at war with China and Russia. We're just not admitting it. And so what Trump understands is that the Arctic Circle is a vital strategic area. It has resources.
[00:07:01] If you go over the poles, you can attack these places immediately. You have the ice is melting, whether it's man-made or just solar cycles or, you know, ice has been melting for the last 10,000 years since the last ice age. So the sea lanes are opening up. So we are now looking at things through a strategic lens that we have not looked through since the 80s and 90s when we were fighting the Soviet Union. And so this whole paradigm has shifted in the last 10 years.
[00:07:29] And a lot of the world hasn't realized it because the people in power can't tell people that because then it's like, well, if we're at war with Russia and China, why aren't we, you know, sending our Navy over to bomb Beijing? Well, we have to do it. It's a stealth war. It's an undercover war. But we're in World War III. Okay. 888-673-1450. So more or less, maybe you're in favor of the region, of doing it as a region?
[00:07:59] I think we need to do whatever we need to do to maintain our strategic dominance on the planet. And if we don't, other countries will step in and fill that void. If we just abandon it and say, well, you know, we're not going to care about, you know, Asia. We're not going to care about the Arctic. We can do that. But then that's a whole different, you know, route to go on. And I think you could make an argument for it. It's something called autarky.
[00:08:27] Autarky is unlike an oligarchy or, you know, totalitarian regime. And autarky is essentially a state where everything is internal. And that might be kind of a Jeffersonian dream that I could actually get behind to just say we're going to abandon the whole world stage. We're just going to give up on everything. We're going to start producing everything in the United States.
[00:08:53] And I think in my ideal world, that's probably what I would want the United States to do because we're so blessed by God. We're so resource rich. But in the real world, like it's just very difficult to do that. It's very difficult to just pull back the United States and all of our corporations. And so I think what's happening right now is the United States is playing great power politics in a way that we haven't done since the Cold War. And we're asserting our dominance.
[00:09:23] We're reasserting the Monroe Doctrine. You don't control Panama. We do. This is the Western Hemisphere. You know, so these things make sense if you look at it through a war lens. If you look at it through a peacetime lens like China and Russia are our friends, then they don't make sense. But if you think, hey, we're at war with these people. We need to do – and if you make that leap, then you understand we're not going to let the bond market control things just like FDR didn't let the bond market control things.
[00:09:51] He told the Federal Reserve what to do. He took away Federal Reserve independence. He said here's what you're going to do whether you like it or not. And I think that's where we're going, and I think Trump is going to butt heads with Powell. I think, you know, this is just heading towards 1940s-type scenario. It's nothing new. We saw it only 80 years ago.
[00:10:12] But then FDR created the biggest socialism push that we've ever seen in this country and normalized the government control as far as instigating and adopting more government, more government programs, more government everything, right? Well, that's true. And I – yes, exactly. And he was a socialist. Yeah. And a lot of the country was socialist back then. They didn't understand what a failed policy socialism was.
[00:10:42] Hopefully Trump understands that, and he puts in a free market. But here's the problem. He does have these people like Peter Thiel, J.D. Vance, Elon Musk, the PayPal mafia that have this whole idea that instead of socialism, we need private sector doing all of these things. And so this is not like – there's a positive side of the story, but it's not a fairy tale where everything is perfect. Private slash public, right? So they have our dollars, but they appear to be private, right?
[00:11:12] Yeah, it's a complicated, nuanced story, and it's not just black or white. It's a lot of gray, and that's the muddy waters that we're going to have to navigate. And I think that to just say, okay, Trump good, Biden bad just kind of simplifies things in a way that's not completely realistic. Like you've got to know the whole picture. But you have more or less a more – you're surprised by your own positive view.
[00:11:40] You think more positives coming out, yeah? Yeah, I think at the end of the day we can do this. Like I think – like at the end of the day I guess I'm an optimist or a believer in the American people or like think about all the tough times we've been up against before. Right. You know, think about 1860. Think about – or 1776. Think about 1939, 1941.
[00:12:07] I mean when you think about the odds we've been up against before and somehow managed to wind up on the other end of those odds in a good place, I feel like we're in one of those moments. And that's why I said we're in the craziest kind of economic geopolitical moment we haven't been in for 80 years. But at the end of the day I think we're going to come out on the other side stronger and better. But it's not going to be all roses on Monday when Trump gets inaugurated. Yeah. Interesting.
[00:12:37] Okay. Come right back. I want to talk about insurance with you just a little bit in that smaller segment of the show. Be right back. We'll be right back. Kate Daly Show. More with Mel Madison when I come back. MelMadison.com. Be right back. Southwest Oral Surgical Arts or SWOSA is home to many oral impairments.
[00:13:07] This is the Kate Daly Show. All right. Welcome back. Kate Daly Show. More with Mel Madison. And he's going to stay so you can ask him questions. Yay. 888-673-1450. If you would like to ask any questions I'd love to get your input along with Mel Madison. We have a lot to share with you. And of course allfamilypharma.com. Get over there.
[00:13:34] I would just be prepared for anything and make sure that you are taking ivermectin because parasites are a lot more of a thing than people think they are. And you need to be taking it in Dr. Merritt's view at least more than several times a year. I'd say at least a couple of times a year just to get rid of those parasites that are in everything. Are they in the fog? Ooh, I shall talk about that tomorrow. Some of the fog people experienced and there's more coming. I'll talk about that tomorrow.
[00:14:05] All right. So Mel Madison, when we're looking at Make America Great Again, what does again mean to you? What do I mean when? What are we striving for? Because you laid out some history and so what does it mean again? Yeah, exactly. So we've talked about all kinds of different economic and social periods on this program.
[00:14:31] I've talked about post-revolutionary period where we had the continental currency, which literally lost 99% of its value in like a three-year period. So if you want to talk about inflation, even the 1980s were nothing compared to the 1770s.
[00:14:51] If you look at the 1860s and what happened there, if you want to talk about we're in a period of political division compared to the 1860s, I would say not so much. We killed 600,000 of our fellow countrymen during that decade. So we have been through these periods. And if you think, you know, Make America Great Again, I think you have to think about, well, what are you talking about? Yeah, what are we trying to replicate if it's again?
[00:15:20] When was this perfect period in American history where we had everything going great and there wasn't a J.P. Morgan robber baron, there wasn't a Rockefeller, there wasn't a Civil War, there wasn't World War I, World War II. There wasn't Vietnam, you know, War of 1812. I mean, I could go on and on and on. So in other words, there's never been this perfect golden age.
[00:15:46] I think the golden age only exists in fictional memories in people's minds. And what we're doing is we're constantly striving. It's right in the Constitution, right? It's like in this pursuit of a more perfect union. And we've never had the perfect union. We're still trying to progress to the more perfect. And I think, you know, even if you look back and you say, oh, well, the 1950s were pretty good. You know, we were talking during the break.
[00:16:12] Well, what price did we in the world have to pay for the 1950s? Yeah, the 50s were pretty good. But what about the 40s? There was like 60 some million people killed in wars. There was over 400,000 Americans killed. We literally were nuking Japan. I mean, the 40s were pretty tough. Not to mention the fact that right before the 40s was the Great Depression. And so I think the universe owed us, you know, a good decade.
[00:16:37] The 50s, by the way, we were getting experimented on just like we still are today by the brand new intelligence industry taking over and taking over the presidency. And we had all that stuff going on. So people go, well, I have really great memories of my childhood in the 50s. It's like, yeah, except for the fact that there was a ton of stuff happening. Right. I mean, some things were great and then other things weren't. So there's what is the Golden Age mean? Exactly.
[00:17:03] The 50s were good, but the 30s and 40s were two of the worst decades in human history. So, I mean, you know, what were they preceded by? And so, you know, I think we're trying to pursue this more perfect union. We're following in the footsteps of our forefathers and we are trying to do it. But let's not do it with blinders on and in rose colored glasses and think, oh, you know what? It's just everything was great. 10, 20, 30 years ago.
[00:17:32] We lost it because Biden or Obama was elected. Look, I didn't like their regimes. I don't like their policies. I think they were misguided and horrible. But there wasn't some perfect period that then Democrats and Trump is not going to be this panacea, like a pill, like a GLP one that you just take and, you know, lose all your weight. Like there's going to be this continuing struggle to try to create this more perfect union. And that's what we're in store for.
[00:18:00] And I think if you look at it like that, then we're on this like human adventure and it's actually kind of exciting. But if you just try to be bitter and say we had it perfect and we lost it and now we need to try to fight to get it back, I think you might wind up, you know, maybe not in the best mental space. Ah, OK, because, you know, I did a show on that. And I can't remember when it was. It was years ago, but it was like name that perfect time because it is very difficult to do because there's always the other side of the story.
[00:18:30] And maybe somebody didn't want to look at it, but there was always the other side. And so it does give you a different kind of context thinking about where we're at right now. The loss of liberty has gone only in one direction for us. But we'll talk about that when we come back. You can ask questions. Mel Madison, Kate Daly. This is the Kate Daly Show.
[00:18:55] I'm back. Mel Madison. I'm so glad he's joined me in this last third hour of the show. So crazy. So amazing. And so I'm I'm I want I so badly just want to hear what you have to say, because I take in all information and I just really want to digest so many different points of view. And I think we should all be like that all the time.
[00:19:23] I think that no matter what they're there, by the way, old glory bank dot com. Dr. Ben Carson, who's been on the show lots of times, like three times. And John Rich, Larry Elder started a bank called Old Glory Bank, kind of going back to the old Main Street, the old, you know, the old style of banking. And you can go to old glory bank dot com. You can even become an owner right now and go check it out. Just go check it out and see what you think.
[00:19:51] But I just OK. So when I look back at the last one hundred and twenty years, I see media infiltrated with disinformation artists and intelligence rackets. I see intelligence experimenting on us and coming up with the lone gunman. And I see a lot of socialism being adopted and normalized.
[00:20:12] And I see that the only change, the only differences between, I think, Republicans and Democrats are really their their education, the education of what government is supposed to do, not supposed to do. I think that's a fundamental, not the only, but the fundamental. And then I see I see our liberty being erased. But if you try to go back and say, well, when was the perfect time? Maybe 30 years post-constitution, you could say that we had more freedom, of course, than we do today.
[00:20:41] But at that at that time, you had a lot of issues with even trying to trying to institute a whole new form of government. I mean, we had a lot of stuff going on with a lot of old school thinking going on going into that 30 years. But it was God inspired. So I love it. So going back, you're right. I think that it's really difficult to define any time. When was the time that we're going back to again? Because we're trying to make it great again. I love that you brought that up. I think it's really important.
[00:21:11] No, exactly. And even if you, you know, look at those periods in, you know, 20, 30 years post-constitution, you know, we had the War of 1812. We had Canadian troops burning down the White House, you know, I mean, these were not these were not perfect times. And, you know, it's one of the things that I get a lot of solace from and I love to do is just to really study history and to understand, you know, all the trials and tribulations.
[00:21:41] And it's very hard to find more than a 10, 12 year stretch of like really good times. Like eventually something happens. And I think, you know, there's like an old Chinese proverb or curse, like may you live in interesting times. And I think we live in interesting times and it's a blessing, but it's a curse. And we've got these things going on and we're dealing with them.
[00:22:04] And I think what's so important about what you do and your show and stuff is that, you know, a lot of what is out there, whether it's mainstream media or even other alternative media, it's so biased. It's so like, you know, we're on this side or we're on this team or that team. It's AP news. Government news is what I call it. Government news that's just that's just ripe with propaganda every day being shoved in people's faces. They care not for facts.
[00:22:33] They care not for telling the truth. You know, it's like the old throw quote, you know, give me no money. Yeah. Give me fame. Give me truth. Right. And and you kind of referenced that a little bit in the last couple hours ago. And it's like, you know, the truth is something that is just not easy to come by out there these days because people are all playing from one side. They've got some corporate, you know, lobbyists or politicians they suck up to and they censor people. Yeah.
[00:23:03] Yeah. They don't want messages out because you got a censor, you know, because you got to get out to be friends with the politicians. Exactly. They don't want an honest conversation about what's really going on where we can talk about. OK, yes. You know, J.D. Vance says a lot of good things. I think there's good aspects to him. But was he also handpicked by Peter Thiel out of Yale Law School and taken to a hedge fund and a venture capital fund, excuse me, in the Silicon Valley?
[00:23:30] And then Peter Thiel bankrolled him to basically invest 10, 15 million dollars, which is nothing for Peter Thiel in Ohio. And then bankroll his campaign, bankroll his book, he'll build the elegy. Yes. You know, that is exactly what happened. So let's be honest. That's the world we live in instead of trying to say, well, I'm on the red team or I'm on the blue team. And I better be rah, rah, rah for anything Trump or his people do and boo, boo, boo for anything.
[00:23:59] Right. Right. They definitely have us in tribes. And so when you try to critique anything, you are then called anti whatever it is. Right. You're just anti. It's like I'm not anti. I'm just critiquing. I'm saying, hey, you know, the Treasury pick is a George Soros fund partner. That doesn't look very good for us. And we have lost so much liberty. And so, of course, the propaganda news network will AP News. Absurd propaganda is really what it stands for.
[00:24:29] We'll never address the loss of liberty or the institutionalized socialism that we all seem to beg for now and like for some weird, strange reason. Like we lost. It was a God inspired constitution, but we've really lost our way in our own thinking of where we're at right now. And so I think people when they say make America great again, it's more like let's go back to the 50s. Right. That's kind of what people are thinking. Right. And that's because I think 70s. I'm like, oh, my gosh.
[00:24:57] Remember standing in line for gas and things were really tough. And in the 60s, I mean, we got overtaken by intelligence in the U.N. And we've had nothing but war since. And so it's been really crazy. But I think people think in their minds the 50s, don't you? I think that's the 10 years. Yeah. And we had good things back then, right? Yeah. Yeah. It was very easy for one man to have a job and support a family. Moms were at home. It was nice.
[00:25:26] We also did have a permanent underclass, especially where I live now in North Carolina. Right. We had segregation. We had, you know, these things. So it was not perfect. So, you know, you cannot go back even to the 50s and say everything was great. You know, maybe if you're a white male, you think everything was great. But if you're a black man, you certainly don't look back on the 50s to that time. So in the South, we'll say in the South, everywhere else. In the South. Exactly.
[00:25:54] So, you know, that's where I live, you know, here in Durham. And, you know, this was just the way that the world was back then. So there's always been these issues and these things that we're trying to deal with. Yeah. And they haven't been easy. And but there has been, I think you're absolutely right, a pattern of a steady erosion of freedom. Yes. And an attempt to move toward a globalist regime. Yes.
[00:26:19] And I think what's different between now and then is that technology enables it a lot more. You know, when you look at this A.I. push, when you look at. So it's not so much that the motivations of the elites have changed, but they've got a whole new toolbox in order to ramp up the control. And so that's what we really have to be vigilant against.
[00:26:42] And that is the dark side of this, because what I do see coming with A.I., I mean, they basically want us to take prescription meds, go into virtual realities, get universal basic income. So, you know, I mean, maybe I'm not an optimist. Maybe I'm just a realist because there's a lot of dark side things that I see on the horizon as well. Sure. No, I get that. It's a mixed bag. And I think a good, healthy understanding, like you said, of history, because we can't just paint it the way we want to see it in a photo album.
[00:27:11] We have to you have to go back into that area and go, wow, this is really context is everything. This is what this is how like like productions like AP News and Reuters. They love to paint stuff without a single ounce of context so that the American people are always left in stupidville because we don't know anything from our past. We're just sold on ideas and we're sold on things.
[00:27:39] And so this is how they're trying to get us to love the future with that toolbox, love the future with world government kind of overtaking America. So it's it's always this don't look at anything. Don't go understand anything. Just just be hyped up on emotion from what we're about to tell you. And we're going to teach you how to feel about everything. That's why I think people that go by the AP News and Reuters, which is a constant diet of these things.
[00:28:06] They're so emotional and they're there. It's just moronic. We've turned people into morons and we've got to get if we want to get anything back. Let's get curiosity back. Let's get some intelligence back. Let's go back into history, like you said, because I love that you love history as much as I do going back into that and figuring it out because otherwise we don't change anything. We're just being taught how to feel about everything with I did an AP article where it's one hundred and eighty nine adjectives telling you how to feel in one story. Twelve hundred words.
[00:28:36] Be right back. Kate Daly show. This is the Kate Daly show. Welcome back. Kate Daly show. Interesting conversation.
[00:29:05] I always love that. I do. I study history a lot like Mel does. And a constant erosion of our liberty has been what has been happening over the last hundred and some odd years. I mean, you could you could have a conversation about that. But I mean, it's been happening for a very long time. And the news isn't telling you that. And our propaganda machines aren't telling us that. And it's not honest.
[00:29:34] And so I love that you're talking about this. Like, what what are we trying to do? Like, what's what what are we trying to get back to? And what can we do? And it's the people that are going to have to demand that they or see. And this is why this is important to do this show, to see what's actually really happening to us, because the presidency isn't going to save us. It never has.
[00:29:56] We the presidency has never been in a position to save because the presidency has been overtaken by the uniparty for decades upon decades upon decades upon decades. So people keep going, well, now's the time. And I'm like, it's not going to happen there. But it's a tough conversation because everybody wants it to. So they don't have to do anything. What do you think, Mel? No, I mean, I think, you know, Jefferson, the founders, I think they were right.
[00:30:23] Like that government, which governs least, governs best. You know, yeah, if men, if men were angels, government wouldn't be necessary. And so, you know, there's just like this inherent, you know, flaw. And I don't know if flaw is the word, but it's just not the natural, you know, state, you know, that God probably intended us for to be in.
[00:30:47] But once we started growing to a size as a species and as a population and we began organizing. Yes, we entered into a situation where you where you really have to just, you know, deal with the negative consequences of this hierarchical, large systemic organization.
[00:31:08] That's beyond what, you know, was like a natural tribal size, let's say, where people knew each other, where there were leaders that were elected, but also known by those they governed. And once we entered into this situation, you just allowed like, you know, psychopaths to progress to corporate and governmental positions. You started to get.
[00:31:31] So this is part and parcel, I think, of just the nature of the situation we've gotten us in as a species to really get philosophical and back it up a little bit. And I don't know if there's a way to organize 7 billion people where you don't have these negative influences at work that are completely trying to control, suppress, propagandize. Right. You know, it's almost like fait accompli. Hmm.
[00:31:59] I saw a video where a guy was trying to ram a door and he just kept going into the door, into the door, into the door. And everyone was laughing. It was funny, but he couldn't get the door open, but he just kept ramming the door. And you figure after like the fifth, sixth time, you feel like you're probably not going to get through. But it was like 15 times. OK, and I feel like as a nation, we have been trained that that is the way out, that this door is the way out. And that is the presidency of the federal government. This is the vehicle.
[00:32:27] And if we can just change the vehicle, we can just do this or do that. We're going to be OK. And really what it is, is it because of the nature of how our government was set up, that government was overtaken a long time ago. The feds, because they would have had to have been, because liberty's only gone one way. Socialism has only been on the rise. We've only gone this one direction over this time, right?
[00:32:53] And so when you're looking back, I mean, will the only answer be local and state? Will that be our only answer to try to get anything right again? Or I don't even know what again means, but to get it right? Because the feds have overtaken. I don't know that that door will ever open. We keep going every four years, every eight years. Oh, it's going to open now. What do you think?
[00:33:19] Well, you do definitely notice a completely almost different world when you go to different parts of the country. Yes, yes. You know, you can be in the middle of the south side of Chicago and you can be in the middle of, I don't know, some small town in, you know, Arizona or somewhere. It's going to have a totally different feel. Like even though there's going to be a Walmart in both those towns, Walmarts are going to be completely different.
[00:33:47] So, I mean, I was literally just in Southern California. I was doing some hiking and camping, you know, with my wife around Joshua Tree National Park. Nice. And, you know, we went into the Yucca Valley Walmart. Now, this is in California. Yeah, yeah. But Yucca Valley is a completely different world than L.A. or whatever. I'm sure. And we went in there and everything was freshly stocked and the roasted chickens were perfect. Yeah.
[00:34:17] You know, the workers were educated and spoke perfect English and helpful and the checkout lanes were fast. Right. And this is a Walmart and it's in actually California. But it was completely different than the Walmart that we go to in Durham. Yeah. And, you know, this is the thing about the country. We're seeing this start to happen, which is we're seeing migration patterns. Right.
[00:34:40] We're seeing people leave places like L.A. and San Francisco and New York and move to, you know, North Carolina or Utah. Yeah. And that creates a whole other problem because sometimes they bring their politics with them that created the messes that they're leaving. So, you know, we're seeing people adapt and transform. And I think there is room for local, you know, differences. Yes.
[00:35:07] And, you know, luckily we live in a big country and, you know, sometimes it's hard because of family or job situations. But, you know, sometimes I think people are voting with their feet and just saying, I don't want to deal with this anymore. Yeah, it's so true. I like your message of, look, we've always been through things. We're going to get through things and push forward. We're just, you know, we have to get our liberty back. That's a huge, big deal. And, I mean, the biggest deal.
[00:35:35] And we have to work towards that. And we also have to work towards the understanding of that, what we're supposed to look like, what it's supposed to be like, and why they founded it the way they founded it. Because we're way off the reservation now from where it was founded. But I like your message of, look, no time was perfect. You know, let's try to do our best that we can in educating. That's all we can do. Yeah, definitely. And we are, we're definitely seeing, like, the deterioration of our cities.
[00:36:02] Like, it's becoming a little bit of, I think it was H.G. Wells. He had the, you know, time travel machine. And in the future, it looked like a perfect world, and there were all these people on the surface. But at night, these creatures came out from the caves and ate the other people. And it was like, you know, two worlds had developed. And, you know, we need to try to stop that because our cities are really falling apart. They are.
[00:36:29] We need to step away from the federal door that's not going to open for us because they're going to do what they're going to do. And as a country, work through 3,000 counties to make them what they should be and how they should operate. It's going to take educating those politicians because they do not have an understanding. Trust me on that one. They have a zero understanding of what's supposed to be because most of them are all in the take. Thank you so much, Mel, for staying on. I so appreciate you. That was a fun conversation, actually. Really.
[00:36:59] I adore you. I enjoy it, and I'm happy to be here. Thank you for having me. Oh, Mel, thank you. And really and truly, thanks for your time. And, of course, I'll be back tomorrow, and Investigator Dave is on. It should be a fun show. And be faithful. Be fearless. I'll see you back here. I'll see you back here tomorrow.
