HR1:
* Guest: Dr. Scott Bradley, Author of the book and DVD/CD lecture series To Preserve the Nation. In the Tradition of the Founding Fathers - FreedomsRisingSun.com
* Weekly Q&A Webinars, Thursdays at 7pm w/ Dr. Scott Bradley, FreedomsRisingSun.com
* Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. unveiled major changes at his agency, including large-scale layoffs and the merging of some divisions.
* President Trump withdraws Elise Stefanik as US ambassador to the UN.
[00:00:13] Broadcasting live from atop the Rocky Mountains, the crossroads of the West. You are listening to the Liberty Roundtable Radio Talk Show.
[00:00:22] Have you along, my fellow Americans, Sam Bushman live on your radio. Hard-hitting news that efforts refuse to use, no doubt, starts now.
[00:00:48] This, my fellow Americans, is the broadcast for March 28th in the year of our Lord, 2025. This is Hour 1 of 2, and the goal always to protect life, liberty, and property, to promote God, family, and country, radio, and the traditions of our founding fathers. Yes, indeed, ladies and gentlemen, we use the supreme law of the land, the Constitution for the United States of America as our guide. Remember all the incredible checks and balances the founding fathers put in place?
[00:01:16] That is indeed the peaceful, restorative solution we the people have at our fingertips. Never forget it. Get involved. Get involved. Caring for your liberty is not a spectator sport, ladies and gentlemen. It's a get involved. The founding fathers were told, or I guess told the American people, you have a republic if you can keep it. By the way, it is a freedom-loving. Fantastic. We're taking America back one heart, one mind, one issue at a time.
[00:01:42] Friday. A faith-filled Friday, ladies and gentlemen, where we believe that our Savior Jesus Christ will indeed return. And therefore, we have an obligation. Well, can you hear me okay, Jay? Okay, perfect. Anyway, I'm getting all kinds of beeps on my cell phone. I'm traveling down the road. I'm finishing up the incredible conference that took place this week in Las Vegas, ladies and gentlemen.
[00:02:13] It's called Shop Talk. And man, it was a very, very fascinating conference, to say the least. It's all about technology. It's about the Internet. It's about AI. It's about sales. It's about e-commerce. It's about – I mean, the list goes on and on. It's a high-tech show, to say the least. Very fascinating. It's the first one I've ever been to. The show's growing by leaps and bounds, I might add.
[00:02:40] There were over 1,400 vendors there. Thousands. I don't even know how many people were there. And I'm just telling you right now, it was very educational, very unique. I've never been to a conference like it. Number one, it's an expensive conference to go to. However, I mean, you get free lunch every day when you go there. You get free breakfasts. There's all kinds of meals people invite you to. There's keynote speakers. I mean, it is something to behold. And one of the most interesting things that I found at the conference,
[00:03:07] of all the conferences I've ever been to, and make no mistake, I've been to a lot of conferences in my day, right? But the most unique thing about this conference was they had these things called meetups and roundtables. And they don't do roundtables like Liberty Roundtable, mind you, not even close. But, you know, they do their best. I get it. We're the original roundtable people, not kind of the knights of the roundtable, right? Anyway, I digress. The meetups are one-on-one meetings where they match people with vendors.
[00:03:37] And so what happens is when you sign up for the conference, they have you fill out an extraordinary amount of information, details about yourself, who you are, what your position is, what you do. And at first it's overwhelming and you kind of like want to give a lot of pushback and go, man, I don't want to fill all this crap out. But you really realize the value in doing so once you go to one of these conferences. So they literally match you, your company, your directive, your goals, your position, who you are, what your relationship is,
[00:04:06] whether you're a decision maker, what kind of budget, what you're trying to accomplish at the conference, all kinds of details. And then they match you with these one-on-one meetups that are basically 15 minutes long. And so you run around to these different tables and sit down and meet with people. And I really got a lot of intel, a lot of details about businesses that I want to work with or, and some of them, they're a match in terms of you at the end of the meeting go, this is something that I can literally use. Please follow up with me.
[00:04:35] Or some of them are clearly not a match. So there's one company that had some incredible technology, but at the end of the day, they are more meant for enterprise businesses. And I'm in kind of the SMB is what they call it or small business world. And small businesses companies under like $50 million a year in annual revenue, $50 million or less, or, you know, $100 million or less is considered small business. So I'm not tiny business, but it's interesting.
[00:05:03] Some of these enterprise companies, I mean, you know, they have contracts. Hey, you know, we start at $100,000 a year for our services or whatever. Well, hey, you know, I'm not really in that realm. And so a couple of the people that I met with were not a match. But that's the unique thing is that I would spend in the old days, a couple of hours trying to figure out, hey, is this a match? And they don't have pricing on their website. Then you got to call somebody and talk. Anyway, you can get to the bottom of things really quickly and see if it's a match and if it's worth following up or not. And just tremendous.
[00:05:32] And so I found those one-on-one meetups very, very valuable because out of those 1,400 vendors, I can't even possibly walk the floor. I mean, it's like going to Disneyland. It's crazy. I can't even possibly walk the floor, meet all those kind of people. It's just not possible. But when I'm able to have these people match me and meet with certain companies, I got some actual one-on-one time that was very meaningful because they're not only matching me with a business they think I might be able to utilize or that I'm interested in,
[00:05:59] but they're able to get the right person at the table with me. So if I go to a booth, hey, the right person just went to lunch. The right person is not really at this show or whatever. I find that all the time. In this case, I was actually really able to meet with those who have the ability to truly deliver and answer questions that I need. It was very informative. The roundtables are interesting because they're more like mini think tanks. They let you run around the table and introduce yourself. You learn about the different eight people in your group.
[00:06:28] And they have three questions that they want you to discuss. And those discussions bring out some very interesting things. For example, how are you going to be using AI in your business in 2025? Or what's the most important initiatives in 2025 you guys are going to do? What are your spends going to be in 2025? What technology are you looking to implement? Or these kind of things. Tremendous questions. And it's interesting to get feedback from some of the other participants as well. Anyway, it was a great conference. I'm glad I went.
[00:06:58] I learned a lot. I got a lot of follow-up companies to deal with. There's your summary. Dr. Scott Bradley is with me. freedomsrisingsun.com, his website. And I keep an eye on tech so you don't have to. That's my tech world reality. And Dr. Bradley is the constitutional A1 game man. When it comes to the Constitution, nobody knows it like the good doctor. That's why he does his weekly webinars. Q&As on the Constitution and more. He had his webinar last night. Every Thursday.
[00:07:25] If you go to freedomsrisingsun.com, you can sign up and participate as well. Welcome to the broadcast, Dr. Bradley. Well, Sam, that sounds like you've got a bunch of things going today. You're on the road, too. So I hope you don't lose your signal coming north out of Las Vegas. I always do. If I do, though, the good news is you can take care of business for me. And I'll be back as soon as I can. But I'm hoping not to lose connection. Well, yeah. Like I say, there may have been some upgrades along that I-15 corridor.
[00:07:54] But I've always lost sales service at different spots along there. It gets spotty. But it sounds like you had quite a little get-together down there. I mean, I'm sure there were some things you really enjoyed, like the food. It sounded like, you know, knowing you're kind of a foodie. I ate the food, Dr. Bradley. That was horrible. No, I'm just kidding. It was awesome. You know, I know. I know. I've been to some places with you. It seems like you know all the hot spots to eat. But in addition to that, the technology thing is interesting.
[00:08:22] It sounds kind of like, I don't know what they call those things, where they do power dating deals where people get together and they have a little, you know. Yeah, it was very similar to that in a lot of ways. Exactly. It's a great, it was kind of speed dating. I wouldn't say dating. It was like speed matching for meeting with vendors. It was very fascinating. And I've never seen a conference that does that. But it's a really impressive feature. Well, it does sound like it. And it sounds like a great exchange for a lot of things.
[00:08:49] Although, you know, finding a match for the niche that you're in, you know, sometimes takes a while. But, you know, maybe you can hone it in over time with the thing. But it sounds like quite an experience. And hopefully you'll have a safe journey home. But you were there all week, huh? Yeah, we got there Monday evening. The event really, we got our registration all done on Monday afternoon, evening as we drove in. And it was a whole Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, full day event.
[00:09:16] And what they do, you know, everybody loves to drink and party and, I don't know, meet people for I won't even go into the details stuff. We didn't participate in any of that, you know. So at 4 or 5 p.m., we went back to our hotel and I went to work on a lot of my projects. And, you know, anyway, so we skipped a lot of the party atmosphere. And I'll tell you one other interesting thing about this. They have an IV booth at this thing where you literally can get an IV of saline solution and vitamin B and all this kind of stuff.
[00:09:46] We walked up to this booth because they're giving out these, they normally cost like $100 and $150 for IV or whatever. But in this case, they were giving them out free. You can walk up there. Say again? An infusion. Yeah, an infusion. Yeah, that's right, an infusion, an IV. Anyway, and so, you know, these people would get these. And I went up to the lady to ask, what on earth are you guys doing? I mean, who would want that? And she's like, listen, people get all hung over.
[00:10:12] They party hard and then they come back the next day and they need to go to work and they can't because they're just too beat up. But if they take one of these IVs and get some saline solution in there and get rehydrated and get some vitamin B and pretty soon they're ready to party again, she says. And I'm just like, oh my goodness. I want nothing to do with this. He didn't get any green or anything like that. I had nothing to do with it. All I'm telling you is I just said I'd like some of your lemon water. Is that okay? And she said, sure. Anyway, quick pause.
[00:10:41] You are listening to the one and only hard-hitting news and efforts of use to use Liberty Roundtable where real life meets reality. The Foundation for Moral Law is a non-profit legal foundation committed to protecting our unalienable right to publicly acknowledge God.
[00:11:08] The Foundation for Moral Law exists to restore the knowledge of God in law and government and to acknowledge and defend the truth that man is endowed with rights not by our fellow man but by God.
[00:11:45] The Foundation for Moral Law is a non-profit tax-exempt 501-6. This is a battle. A battle between truth and deceit. A battle between forces that would enslave this country in darkness and between a media that wants to present you with the truth. We are being censored. America's news outlets no longer provide the truth.
[00:12:15] 90% of news outlets in the United States are controlled by six corporations. The mission of The Epoch Times is to chase the truth. To ground all statements and facts. The Epoch Times dot com. Looking for an IT partner that truly understands your needs? Managed IT services is the answer. We meet with you regularly to discuss your goals and form a tailored technology plan. Our customers have called us a trusted advisor who delivers. When it comes to IT, we do it all. Firewalls, cloud storage, server migration, and more.
[00:12:44] Say goodbye to long-term contracts and hello to a team that earns your business month after month. Call 801-706-6980 now and let managed IT services transform your IT experience. All right. Back with you live, ladies and gentlemen. Sam Bushman on the road. Dr. Scott Bradley in studio.
[00:13:14] Hope you're all doing fantastic. We sure are on this faith-filled. Fantastic. Freedom-loving. Friday. And so I was talking about these IVs, these infusions people are getting. And so they literally get there, 9, 10 in the morning, take an infusion. They're ready to party again. And so to me, a lot of these people, they're there just for the partying and the hookups and the, I don't know, weird stuff that I want no part of. And I just found it fascinating how they live for this stuff. And it's like they're so beat up they can't even hardly function.
[00:13:43] But if they get one of these IVs, these infusions, then they go party again. And it was amazing. And so all I did was take a little bit of lemon water and told them thank you. But I just found it fascinating. Dr. Bradley, the reason that I bring this up is no wonder America's in trouble, sir. Well, it seems like we are looking for what we need in all the wrong places. I mean, you know, there's, it's, you talk about speed dating and stuff like that.
[00:14:09] I assume that that's kind of a phenomenon that people need to get a little more depth to their lives. And whether it's a business world kind of situation or it's a, you know, a relationship kind of situation that's more personal, it seems to me like we spend way too much time kind of,
[00:14:31] we overlook the really deep, wide, intensely valuable kinds of things for something that's more of a cheap thrill. I don't know how to put it really, but to me, it's so sad though. So you've got these sons and daughters of almighty God that live in the land of the free, who have liberty and, and man, they're just squandering away all that they have. So the big, the big push at the party where they have this beach party in Las Vegas at
[00:15:00] Mandalay Bay and little, little John or whatever you call this guy. He's this rapper guy. I don't even know anything about him. And, uh, and everybody's just so excited, man. We just skipped that concert. I don't want to be, I don't even want to be near that sucker anyway. And so all these people are all excited about all these things. And the next day people are like, Oh, I went, it was incredible. And I'm just like, Oh yeah, man, I went and did a little bit of work and went to sleep, got a great rest. I feel great. I'm ready to go. And everybody else is half dead. It's just an interesting comparison.
[00:15:24] And, and I compare that to the week or so ago, I went to my, um, my, uh, a baptism for my grandson. And, uh, you know, I just compare that or I'm given a little talk, a little discussion of the Holy ghost, because he's going to receive the gifts of the Holy ghost and things. And you're getting back to, I'm comparing that to this and, and, and the trajectory that we're all on. And I just think, wow, you know what agencies at the heart of all this doctor?
[00:15:54] Well, like I say, you can spend, you know, everybody has the same amount of time every day, the same number of days in a week and weeks in a month, et cetera, et cetera. And, and years in the life. And sometimes, you know, you say, where's our focus and what's our time best spent in? And very often, I think we have been kind of almost ingrained with the concept of, of seeking cheap thrills. And that's maybe not the best description of it, but it's the first thing that came
[00:16:23] to mind when I started talking. And, and oftentimes the, the deep, wide, you know, kind of intensely, uh, valuable kind of experiences get set aside. And it's kind of a tragic situation where we each use each day, each moment, according to the, as you point out, the dictates of our conscience or our own choice or agency. And, um, I, I, without going into a whole bunch of detail, I remember one time at church, we
[00:16:52] had this big carnival kind of thing, if you will. And, um, the guy that put it together was, was pretty sneaky. I thought he gave you the impression that there was big prizes. You know, you had all these games of chance, you know, that you could do, you know, throwing darts against balloons and get points for it or, you know, spin the dial and how many points you got were points that you got.
[00:17:16] And the impression everybody had was that at the end of the whole get together, the people with the most points were the winners. And, uh, and, you know, there were some things that were there. Nothing overtly stated it, you know, like a big TV, a big screen TV, uh, uh, uh, kind of a motor home. You know, you're assuming that you could get a two week vacation in the motor home and all the trip to Hawaii, all these kinds of things.
[00:17:43] And so there were people that were just rabidly going after the, the point games and, and, uh, a good friend of mine, he has 11 kids. Um, and he thought, you know, between him and his wife and his 11 kids, they could accrue the most points. And so they went after this with a vengeance and, uh, you know, off little corners, quiet places, no points involved with things that could, could, you know, like it'll teach you
[00:18:08] how to better immerse yourself in the scriptures and family things that were kind of a building of character or stuff, stuff like that, you know, but they were not really in the mainstream of anything. And, and it's interesting that this friend of mine that I just mentioned, they went after the points and man, they amassed them like it, you know, and at the end there was a division that happened. You know, the, the MC master of sermon, someone who's got up and, you know, these people that
[00:18:37] have this many points or more go here and this go here and this go here. Well, they all ended up in hell. I mean, I'm, I'm truncating the whole conversation. And while those that spent the time trying to do the things that built character and family and, uh, godliness and everything like that, they're the ones that got to go be with God. Okay. I mean, it was a point that was taken and my friend just, I mean, he felt he had been hijacked
[00:19:03] into a stupidity and he was so ashamed he left in a storm. Um, but at any rate, the point being that that's life, we get to choose every single day, the focus of our lives and, um, the, uh, glitzy and the glitter and all that kind of stuff. And there's, you know, there's stuff to be said, you know, you could have time to kind of recharge the batteries if you will, but it doesn't have to be debauched. Of course, it can be something that uplifting and elevating.
[00:19:30] And, and, uh, but, but this was a very good object lesson for me. I mean, this friend of mine, he almost abandoned the religion over it. He was so angry. So, so anyway, it's funny how every, every choice we make in life has some kind of a, a parallel to that little, that little game, if you will, that, uh, the games of chance and the high score with the world and versus the rest of the things that really have some eternal value.
[00:20:01] It to me, I mean, I, I took a wake up call, so I didn't have any points, but that's the recommendation, ladies and gentlemen, on this radio program is that you put God almighty first. You first seek for the kingdom of God. Don't seek for riches, uh, seek for, to do good, uh, keeping God's commandments, serving your fellow men, if you seek riches to bless the lives of others. Okay. After God, that makes some sense to me.
[00:20:28] You've got to really use your agency wisely. You've got to put God first in your life. And in my opinion, you seek to, uh, promote God, family and country. And when you do things in your life seem to fall into place. When you don't, I'm telling you, the apple cart gets overturned. It does not go well, ladies and gentlemen. And I just see this contrast everywhere I go. And it, you know, what do you pursue? What is, what matters to you? What, what makes your life sing?
[00:20:57] And I'm telling you right now, service to others around you, leadership, uh, about who we are, what we stand for. Realizing that agency, if used wisely, grants more agency. That's the principle, ladies and gentlemen, agency used unwisely turns out to be nothing but negative consequences and your agency becomes more and more and more restricted. And I mentioned this on the, on the broadcast.
[00:21:24] I think yesterday, Dr. Bradley, it's kind of funny to me how everybody says, oh man, you guys that are religious zealots, you're all clones. You know, you all act and think and behave alike. And on this radio program, all you do is talk about the same things, talk about liberty all the time. And it gets kind of boring, Sam. And so then I kind of respond. And I'm like, you know, when you guys watch your basketball games, the only thing they do is try to get the ball in the hoop over and over. That's all they're doing is get this little ball in this round hoop over and over. And if you get the ball in the hoop four times than the other guy, you win. And if you don't, you lose.
[00:21:54] And how mad people get crazy getting. So if I talk about the same things all the time with our variety based life based stories and everything else, and all they're doing is getting a ball in the hoop. That's all they're doing the whole game long, 48 minutes of it. All these grown up adult people, you know, and all they're doing is getting a ball in this hoop. Who's doing the same thing and focusing on the same thing over and over and over? Me or them? Kind of a fascinating thought process, right? Well, it is. But here's the deal.
[00:22:21] It is even a greater astounding thing to me is people sitting in their armchair or their couch with their nachos and cheese or whatever the heck, and they're watching their team represent them in some dramatic event called a sports event. And they sit on their fat butts and watch this happen as though they've got some skin in the game, some kind of tie to this.
[00:22:50] I mean, it's like, oh, the colors of the uniform. I don't know. Maybe it's the mascot. I don't know. Or maybe it's some iconic celebrity kind of player that they're into. But you know what? It has absolutely zero, zero personal involvement in that other than what they create for themselves as they eat their nachos. And I just find that absolutely astounding. I don't care if it's a Super Bowl or March Madness or some other Broadway Sierra that's going on. Yes.
[00:23:20] Doctor, let me tell you about an incredible tragedy. It's March Madness Month, my friend. It's almost over. And Brigham Young University took a fall last night. You heard that, right? I have no idea what you're talking about. BYU basketball lost last night. All the people that love Brigham Young University are kind of melting down today. It's just a horrible tragedy, sir. Well, I got my master's.
[00:23:48] I don't think there could be a worse thing that could happen, doctor. I got my master's degree from BYU, and I could not possibly care less about any of those outcomes. And somebody would say, oh, you're not a fan. You're right. I'm not. There's other things that I'm distracted with. Ladies and gentlemen, I just, I tell you that because, again, we need to make our lives about the important things. We are here on Earth for a reason. To get a body. To make wise choices. To embrace the sacred cause of liberty.
[00:24:15] Put God, family, and country center in our lives. We ask for your involvement, your help, your interest in our great sacred cause. When we come back, we'll talk about the webinar that took place last night with a good doctor, and we'll do it on your radio.
[00:24:50] Pursuing liberty. Using the Constitution as our guide. You're listening to Liberty News Radio. News this hour from townhall.com. I'm Rich Thomason. The work of Doge will mean good things for Social Security recipients. That assurance from the man leading President Trump's war on government waste, fraud, and abuse. Elon Musk is claiming Social Security beneficiaries will collect more benefits, not less,
[00:25:20] because of the work of the Department of Government Efficiency. He didn't offer specifics, but Musk told Fox News, Doge's cost cutting won't affect the amount of Social Security benefits. And you can only receive your benefits if the country is operating in a healthy and competent way. Musk also said he expects to receive complaints. The most amount of fake righteous indignation? The fraudsters. Ed Donoghue, Washington. Inflation update.
[00:25:45] The Commerce Department reports consumer prices increased 2.5% in February from a year earlier. That matches the January annual pace. Anxious to hold on to the slim GOP House majority, President Trump has withdrawn the nomination of New York Congresswoman Elise Stefanik for U.N. Ambassador. In his statement announcing the move, President Trump said that the Congresswoman would rejoin the House leadership team. Speaker Mike Johnson echoed that plan, saying he would, quote, invite her to return to the leadership table immediately.
[00:26:14] But it was unclear where Stefanik will fit in after relinquishing the position of House GOP conference chair, which she held for nearly four years upon her nomination for U.N. Ambassador. Trump said he was pulling her asses pick to go to New York City because of the House's razor-thin majority. Bernie Bennett, Washington. Hundreds of evacuations in wildfire-ravaged areas of the Carolinas. The battle against raging fires goes on. Myanmar and neighboring Thailand have been hit by a powerful 7.7 magnitude earthquake.
[00:26:43] A high-rise building under construction in Bangkok collapsed. More than 40 workers feared trapped in the debris. Watching Wall Street, the Dow down 279 points. The Nasdaq off 133. More on these stories. Townhall.com. Just hearing the word IRS can make people break out in a cold sweat. No one wants to deal with the IRS. And now you don't have to.
[00:27:07] The good news is Legal Tax Defense has been successfully negotiating with the IRS for more than 15 years. It doesn't matter how much you owe, whether it's $5,000 or $5 million, you deserve the best in the business on your side. And that is Legal Tax Defense. Even if you're working with someone else and just want a second opinion, there is no cost or obligation to call. They can prevent levies, liens, wage garnishments, even file back tax returns.
[00:27:34] And the best news about Legal Tax Defense is they won't take your case unless they know they will reduce or eliminate your tax debt. Call Legal Tax Defense right now for a free, no-risk consultation. 800-292-7875. 800-292-7875. You have nothing to lose but everything to gain. 800-292-7875. Have you ever had great honey?
[00:28:01] No, I mean really good all-natural raw honey? Well, now you can thanks to LocalHoneyman.com. We can ship out our locally made honey all across the U.S. So don't worry, you won't miss out. Plus, Local Honeyman has so many different flavors like Utah Wildflower, High Desert Delight, Happy Valley, and Blackberry, just to name a few. So purchase your delicious raw honey today at LocalHoneyman.com. Do you treasure your liberty?
[00:28:31] Well, at LovingLiberty.net, we most certainly do. And we want to help protect your liberty too. Become part of the family. Everyone knows that the core of any society is the family. Therefore, the government should foster and protect the integrity of its family. We the people. Won't you join us as a Loving Liberty sponsor to help us promote the principles in the 5,000-year leap? Let's restore the miracle that changed the world at LovingLiberty.net.
[00:29:01] Regrets? Oh, we're all going to have them. Doesn't matter who you are or what you do. At some point, you're going to wish you'd done something differently. You know, the woulda, coulda, shouldas. But let me tell you a couple of things you'll never regret. You'll never regret spending extra time talking to your teenager. Trust me. You'll never regret answering your three-year-old's question about where the water in the bathtub comes from.
[00:29:30] And I've never seen anyone wish they hadn't sat in the kitchen laughing with their children and telling them goofy stories about when they were kids. Yeah, sure. We're all going to have regrets. But talking too much with our kids won't be one of them. No matter what you talk about, love is what they'll hear. A thought from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Visit us at mormon.org.
[00:30:14] Rocky Mountains. The crossroads of the West. You are listening to the Liberty Roundtable Radio Talk Show. Ladies and gentlemen, all knowledge is not equal. And we do our very best to really bring to you some of the personal experiences in our lives, to bring to you what makes us tick behind the scenes and off the radio, onto the radio. Because that's what matters most.
[00:30:42] And I really believe that promoting God, family, country. Webinars on the Constitution and more are one of the great keys of this life. To learn to reject things that are irrelevant. Things that are distractions. Things that are not helpful in your life. And replace them with the great. The things of infinite worth. The greater things, if you will. The things that will change your life for the better. The things that will bring down the blessings from heaven.
[00:31:10] The things that will let you have a life well lived. And as you look back on that life, you'll have hopefully as few regrets as possible. And I get that we're all going to have regrets. That's part of the living and learning and experience that we need to gain in this mortal realm in which we live. But we want to look back and have as least amount of regrets and as much amount of appreciation as we can. And it reminds me of a radio commercial where they talk about, you know, this guy, this executive.
[00:31:39] And he's basically getting this big award at the end of his career as he retires. And basically they say, you know, you probably wish that you spent more time at the office. Wish you had done this. And then he's like, not. I wish I had spent more time being with my wife. I wish I had spent more time with my children, attending my children's events.
[00:32:02] And so you want to realize at the end of your life when all the pomp and all the money and all the fame and all the getting and spending and all the fancy clothes and all the places to be in. When all that's shipped away, what will matter most to you? And I think attending the weekly webinars from Dr. Bradley gets close to the top of the list.
[00:32:26] Listening to this radio hopefully is top of the list, not because I'm important, not because Dr. Bradley's important, but because the things that we discuss and the focus, the direction, the compass that we provide, hopefully will help you live as fulfilling of a life as you possibly can. Dr. Bradley, what did you discuss last night, sir? You know, it's interesting.
[00:32:51] And just as for those that may not have ever tracked with what we do on these webinars, every Thursday night, 7 p.m. Mountain Time, we get together. We do a Q&A. Anybody in the world can get on. All you've got to do is have an invitation. So to get an invitation, you go to freedomsrisingsun.com, our website, and then you go, it's on the front page, and you click on the button that says Register for Webinar. Put in your email and your first name, and you're good to go. You'll probably get more invitations than you want to get.
[00:33:21] Every week you'll get an invitation the day before and an invitation like an hour before to come on the webinar. And if you click on the webinar, you get to come and participate. And like I say, anybody in the world can do this. So it's kind of a high wire, no safety net kind of event. And you type in questions, and my wife Tamara receives those questions.
[00:33:46] I don't try and read the questions while I'm on the air because, honestly, you can get so distracted with a scroll that it's kind of, you know, you waste more time squinting at the screen than you do, you know, answering questions. And a lot of times multiple questions are asked. They're really the same kind of topic, different details or different whatever. Somebody's got to concatenate that and put it into a topic for discussion, et cetera, right? Exactly. And so we try and compile and do the best we can.
[00:34:14] I tend to, as you probably, for people who have listened to me recognize, I give a long-form answer. We're limited by bit shoot where we post these to a maximum of 15-minute response. Sometimes my wife has to edit them down to get them, takes all my breaths and pauses out to get them down to 15 minutes. But we're supposed to go for an hour. I usually go over time a little bit.
[00:34:44] Last night I got to eight questions is all. Now you say eight questions in an hour. It's about an hour and 20 minutes is what I actually spent on the air. We post these afterwards. We take them, in fact, right now as we're speaking, my wife is taking each question and making a discreet video out of that that will be posted on our BitChute channel, which is, so you go to bitshoot.com, and then you search on Freedom's Call. No apostrophes or spaces.
[00:35:12] Just a smushed together word, Freedom's Call, and that will bring up probably about 700 videos that we've made. The most recent ones will come up first. And she's trying to edit those to the point that she can put up these discreet little videos. And by the way, ladies and gentlemen, that's 700 videos after the enemies of free speech took down 1,500 videos that he had up before.
[00:35:37] So think about the breadth and depth of the incredible detailed constitutional conversations that are happening, Doctor. Well, and it's quite frustrating to be at that point where you put a lot of labor and love into this. And anyway, so it's posted on BitChute and Rumble. The Rumble is really, I don't know what the heck is going on there. There seems to be a, I don't know, you've talked about the shadow banning and stuff like that.
[00:36:04] It happens, sometimes, you know, you get, oh, several hundred views in this. You're thinking, wow, people are interested in that. Then the next day there are six or eight views. I mean, it's just astounding what, I mean, it looks like, oh, nobody's interested in that. But it really is a kind of a barometer, I guess, of a lot of things in society. But at any rate, so last night, and maybe, I mean, if you think about what's on people's minds and what people are interested in,
[00:36:34] maybe these are good subjects to talk about. And I could run through all eight, and you can tell me if you want to talk about any of them or whatever. But just very briefly, the first one was Bobby Kennedy's proposed cuts for the HHS. All right. Now, that's a line item that I have. Believe it or not, I have that next in my list of things to talk about. So let's just rock and roll. And if there's anything we don't cover in my little headlines here, I think you'll have it nailed, though. The topics are, I'm telling you, we're in sync already.
[00:37:04] Okay. The next one talks about Lee Stephanik. No, let's stick with this first one. Let's just work on the first one. So Dr. Bobby Kennedy is doing, he's shaking up his organization big time over at the Institutes of Health or whatever it is, HHS. And he's laying off a ton of people, what, up to 10,000 people, they say? Well, they had 10,000 people that took the early out, you know, the retirement package. And so now there's another 10,000.
[00:37:30] I think the organization has about 62,000 employees. So they're losing to almost one-third. And, of course, there's all sorts of ointed offals going through the media right now. And I say to you, it's a great start. It's not enough. But we'll welcome the start they've got, right? Unquestionably. Unquestionably. And so it really is just a good, let's go out the gates with this. And there'll be realignments on a lot of things.
[00:37:59] You know, Kennedy had probably the most acrimonious confirmation hearings I've heard in a long time. And it really came down to about one vote. I mean, somebody gave the nod finally and he got through. But the fact of the matter is, oh, he's anti-science and all this kind of, well, wait a minute.
[00:38:16] Was Fauci for science when he says he was the science and when there was no science whatsoever in the approval of this emergency authorization for the jab that has been so deleterious across the entire world with deaths? Yeah, it's literally propaganda science is what we're talking about. Well, there is no science in this. I mean, if they have a Bunsen burner in their office or their lab or something, they call it science.
[00:38:42] But truly, what was happening before was fake science, if you will, where we have a revolving door with pharma executives coming into the committees that are reviewing the pharma that's coming along. I mean, all of that kind of stuff.
[00:39:02] It's absolutely astounding to me that the captured industry, they're captured committees that basically go along with what the big pharma companies want. You know, this idea that, oh, we're just going to assume that this is safe, blah, blah, blah, for whatever. And do you remember, Sam, when we did that review? It's pretty much driven, just so everybody understands. The cycle is the cycle of money and the cycle of people. People go in and out of the administration, in and out of big pharma.
[00:39:32] Money and people, money and people, money and people. And it's really propaganda, filthy, lucre-driven relationships, right? I mean, that's really the problem here. Well, it is. But you know what? We're the unfortunate guinea pigs. I mean, humanity. Remember the review we did about the Epoch Times article? It's 70 million people worldwide have died from the jab. And I don't know where they got their data to do the analysis.
[00:40:03] But total, total, total, total people killed in all of World War II, where everybody around the world was trying to kill each other, was only 55 million. And when one jab can come up with far exceeding that, you know, a 50% exceeding of that. And it's stuff that people made bazillions of dollars off of, and it was all a lie. And so Bobby Kennedy's efforts in this thing, I applaud.
[00:40:30] I don't know the details about who's being put out the door. But unquestionably, they're overstaffed. And the whole bottom line, it's all unconstitutional. I mean, if you need an FDA. Well, and Bobby's far from perfect. And people can be critical and say, oh, he's not going to get the job done. And they may be right to some degree. But look, we've got the focus on this like we've never had before. Let's skip the break. Doctor, continue. Okay.
[00:40:56] Well, that's the thing is that there's a lot of critical statements that are out there about this. And oh, ain't it awful? We're all going to die because Medicare is not going to be administered as well. And blah, blah, blah. We might actually be able to survive this, Doctor. Well, the farther you stay from pharma, this is a kind of an aphorism that I live my life by. The farther you stay from pharma, probably the longevity, you know, begins to excel in your life.
[00:41:24] And this is kind of extraneous, but it has to do with it too. Normally, my wife and I try to hike regularly. And we had some grandkids that their mom and dad were going to go run in the mountains. And so, okay, we'll take the grandkids and push the stroller around the cemetery that's in our little local community because, you know, there was no snow on the end of the walkways and everything. Anyway, I got looking. It was astounding to me.
[00:41:49] You know, when they bury people, you know, before they put the sod on the grave, they usually put an astral turf kind of thing there, let the dirt settle in a little bit, and then they put sod on them. Well, the most I've ever seen in our little cemetery is two or three of those sod blankets. I didn't count them exactly because there were so many, but there was probably 20 to 30 sod blankets in our little cemetery when we were doing this little walkthrough. And I go, what the heck is going on?
[00:42:18] How come there's so many people dying? Well, so we started going, and out of, you know, my natural curiosity, I started looking at headstones, headstones that had been there since 2021. And I was absolutely astounded. 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, and now 2025, headstones. Our little cemetery has probably grown by at least 30 to 40 percent since 2021, people that have been planted there. Okay?
[00:42:46] And it's like, what happened different? You know, these unexplained, and why would they? We found husbands and wives that died within just a couple of months of each other. And there were young people, you know, like 40, 45, 48 years old. And it was like, holy cow. And nobody makes these connections. And in my little community, something has happened that caused these anomalies. And there's been some research. But it's not just your community, doctor. It's worldwide, sir.
[00:43:17] Oh, unquestionably. But I'm just taking this little sampling out of my little community. We've got a little, it's a relatively recent little cemetery. It started, I think, in 2008. They put some, you know, stuff together for a cemetery. And holy cow, it is absolutely astounding. I mean, the other night, I don't know if I've mentioned this before, but it was probably about two weeks ago. My wife and I were out to dinner. And another couple saw us there that, you know, they were sitting at another table.
[00:43:47] They came over to talk to us. It's kind of, we had a very, we had a half an hour conversation about it. But I'd worked with this guy probably 20, 25 years ago on some vendor kind of things that he was doing for me. Anyway, he recognized me, came over to check out. How you doing? Blah, blah, blah. Blah, blah, blah. He told me that he'd had 25 strokes. 25 strokes, Sam. And I said, holy cow, what do they attribute that to? You know, this is a lead in.
[00:44:16] And he says, oh, unquestionably, it's the jab. I said, really? I said, does your physician say that to you? He said, oh, absolutely. He's admitted it completely. It is jab related with all of the blood clots that have been attributed to that. And by the way, I've had experts on the radio with us that have done research studies. There's a big, there's a guy and his name is Tom. And I don't have it all in front of me because I'm on the road.
[00:44:40] But Tom did a research study about funeral directors and embalmers and everything and what they're seeing in the blood of these people. And no doubt the evidence is there in their blood, doctor. It's not even debatable. Well, this is unquestionably in his mind and his physician's mind. But this even gets even better in a sense. His son, him and his wife and him were both there and they were talking to us.
[00:45:05] And so their oldest son is a senior executive in a pharma company back east. I mean, he's not like a research scientist or anything like that. He's a CFO or CEO or something like that. He's a business kind of guy. Anyway, when all this started, the dad, I mean, the mom and dad get this call from their son. And the son says, don't under any circumstances get the jab. Do not get the jab.
[00:45:35] I mean, he was just in their face over the phone, so to speak. You can't do this. Just make certain you don't do it. Well, they got it anyway. Okay. And, you know, the motivation for all that is a bunch of Bravo Sierra that goes with all of the encouragement everybody got. And this guy started having strokes. And in the time since he's got the jab until now, he's had 25 strokes.
[00:46:01] I mean, he has lost so much cognitive ability, so much physical ability. I mean, it's really basically similar to an advanced case of dementia where he is right now. Okay. And so I say, holy cow. Okay. So these guys didn't all die. They got it like the Epoch Times, you know, article said.
[00:46:26] A lot of them got long-term, life-changing experience, whether it's strokes, whether it's heart problems, whether it's, you know, Guillain-Barre disease, which is really basically a new name for polio based upon the symptoms you get. I mean, the paralysis and everything like that. And we have friends, we haven't talked to them for quite some time now, but we've known them fairly well for years. She got Guillain-Barre and she could not even blink her eyes. She was paralyzed to that degree.
[00:46:56] And it's vaccine-related. Okay. So you see these kinds of things that you have personal interaction with people and you say, holy cow. Wow. And these are all, they go through the FDA, the CDC, the NIH, the Fauci-driven, you know, run, death is near, you know, rendesivir, all of those kinds of things. And Bobby Kennedy needs to clean house. That's the bottom line. And I hope he does.
[00:47:26] But that was question number one, my friend. I mean, we had eight questions like that. So just know that the people are watching out there, people, you know. They're watching and stuff is happening. And Americans have got to wake up, truly. You still there, Sam? All right. All right. Sam may be in a dead zone.
[00:47:54] Let me just run into a few of these other questions and see if there may be want to be some discussion. Elise Stefanik was withdrawn as the United Nations ambassador by Trump. And there's a real interesting story there about the thin margins that the Republican House have as a majority right now and some critical votes are coming up. And how the New York governor was going to slow roll her replacement in an election.
[00:48:23] All those kinds of things. This is bare knuckles politics stuff that's happening. So Trump withdrew Elise Stefanik, one of his supporters in the House, and so they could maintain something of a majority in the House. Mike Waltz and Matt Gatz are being replaced in a Florida special elections, too. And one of them is pretty sure, I think. I'm not sure the other one's a sure thing. I think the Republicans will end up winning it.
[00:48:51] But their margins are a question. And we talked for a while about the vandalized Tesla dealerships because they're catching some of those people that are doing that. And by the way, the interesting point about that is that license plate recognition.
[00:49:13] In all of the cases that I know of, license plate readers have been instrumental in having that happen. It's a ubiquitous kind of world we're in nowadays. Everywhere you go, you've got eyeballs on you, whether it's filmed you or whatever. And they find these guys through license plate recognition. It's kind of interesting.
[00:49:40] South Carolina, Colorado, Oregon, we talked about those a little bit. All across the country. And the license plate readers are the things, which is another commentary, in my humble opinion, about the fact that we're big brother is watching all the time. So, you know, Sam, just chime in. And there's good and bad in that, Dr. Bradley. For the most part, it's a bad thing. I don't like that eyes on everybody, monitoring everybody. You know, there's a probable cause discussion here.
[00:50:10] The government shouldn't be that embedded in our lives. On the other hand, when you see some of this criminal activity happening, and, you know, I know they're upping the ante of that to terrorism. I'm a little hesitant of that, because at some point, every act will be a terrorist act, and there'll be no due process. There'll be, you know, tribunal kind of discussions if you're not very careful. The line is blurring, ladies and gentlemen.
[00:50:32] And this continued involvement in every aspect of our lives, this continued big brother monitoring, this real ID discussion, this monitoring of license plates 24-7. And I understand that there's some value and some benefit to it, especially if you're not a criminal. You can stop the criminals with it. But if you're not very careful, those lines get blurry fast, doctor. Well, they do indeed. And what's interesting to me is it just – it's kind of – I guess I don't have enough information to be dangerous on this at this point.
[00:50:59] But my initial response to the Tesla attacks was Antifa-driven. And, you know, the Nazi tie-ins and Antifa's against fascism, you know, supposedly. They're just different flavors of the same poison. But I made an assumption initially that it was Antifa involvement. But I don't know enough to know if the people that they've arrested at this point have any ties to Antifa.
[00:51:25] So any of the stuff that I've been reading is kind of incomplete, in my opinion. But the license plate thing –
[00:52:00] It's absolutely intentional. Make no mistake about that. Yeah, it probably is all planned. But the common thing that I've seen in these is the license plate readers. So the next question was the Greenland issue, which is really quite interesting. And the lame-brained media is trying to say, oh, no, no, no, we – you know, it's NATO. We just got to have NATO. I mean, both Greenland and Denmark are in NATO. Let's strengthen the NATO alliance. And it's like, bravo, Sierra.
[00:52:29] Let's get out of NATO, you know, so that we could talk a little about why Greenland is important. And Trump is putting such a push on it. We've got the vice president and his wife there. We've got Energy Secretary Chris Wright there. Doctor, before we do this, what I want to do is I want to pause Greenland until the next hour a little bit because I really want you to spend some time on this. I think this is critical to understand. You know, the question is, are we for taking over Greenland? Are we for, you know, whatever?
[00:52:57] And Donald Trump seems to want to buy Greenland. And I think we're completely broke and we don't have any money to buy Greenland. That's another topic. I know there's rare earth minerals and things there. There's some real advantage to that land. And I understand all that. But we'll get into the details next hour about this because I think this is a really, really, really important discussion about should we have an expansion or whatever you want to call it?
[00:53:25] Should we annex in all this land or take over these? You know, there's only about 50,000 people, 50,000 to 60,000 people in Greenland. So from a population point of view, it's not very big. From a land mass point of view, it is absolutely huge. And people in the past thought that it was kind of worthless land or not valuable. Now that we understand kind of what's there from minerals and some of those things, it becomes very vital land.
[00:53:54] And so strategically, what should we do? How should it go down? What are the options? What constitutionally does the president have the right to do, the authority to do and not to do? And I mean, it's very, very complex. I believe in self-determination for the people of Greenland, number one. Number two, can we make a Louisiana purchase out of it? And Dr. Bradley will kind of drill into all that and what happened on the webinar next hour. I think this is a critical topic worthy of our discussion to say the least. I'm Sam Bushman.
[00:54:23] With me, Dr. Scott Bradley. His website, freedomsrisingsuns.com. Check out his incredible webinars on Rumble and on BitChute. Incredible stuff. freedomsrisingsun.com. I'm Sam Bushman. Liberty Roundtable Live is syndicated by the Loving Liberty Radio Network. LovingLiberty.net. Spread the word. Share the love. And God save the Republic of the United States of America.