The “Red-Pilled” Mary Poppins w/ Julie Lavender Le Doux |EP781
The Big Mig ShowMarch 02, 2026
781
01:13:5267.64 MB

The “Red-Pilled” Mary Poppins w/ Julie Lavender Le Doux |EP781

THE BIG MIG SHOW

MARCH 02, 2026 

EPISODE 781 – 11AM

 

Storyteller, artist, and Jazz musician, Julie Lavender, concocts adventures that are unexpected, whacky, and playfully thought provoking. Julie says, "it's like Aslan, Willy Wonka, and The Cat in The Hat are throwing a party in my brain and I never know who else might show up!”

Find Her Books Here https://www.thequestforwonder.com

 

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00:00:00
All men are created equal, but they are endowed by their

00:00:04
Creator with certain unalienable rights by.

00:00:09
Liberty. If liberty means anything at

00:00:15
all, it means right to tell people what they do not want

00:00:42
Let's talk for a second. Welcome back to the big big

00:00:44
show. Of course I'm your host Lance

00:00:46
Miliaccio with my Co host George Ballantine.

00:00:49
It's Monday morning. Rise and grind, tip of the

00:00:52
spear. And if liberty means anything at

00:00:54
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00:01:18
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Brother, how are you? It's just another manic Monday,

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educate and unify the country. Got to call them out on

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everything. Of course, the big news is Iran

00:01:57
in the news cycle. George got it right.

00:01:59
He called the attack on Friday or Saturday.

00:02:01
They thought the Connecticut event would start.

00:02:03
I had called it for Monday. So I got to, I got to own that.

00:02:07
I, I thought for sure it was going to be there Monday.

00:02:09
I thought Sunday. But hey, look, you know George,

00:02:12
you got it right, buddy. Yeah, Yep.

00:02:16
I mean, it is what it is. Listen, we lost what, four

00:02:19
soldiers so far? So right now it's, you know, say

00:02:23
some prayers for our military, their families and our and the

00:02:26
ones that have lost their lives. Yeah.

00:02:29
As sadly as it is, I mean, they know that joining the military,

00:02:32
but we don't like to lose anybody.

00:02:34
But you know, let's just pray for their families right now

00:02:35
and, and the other soldiers to keep them safe out of harm's

00:02:38
way. Yeah, yeah, no doubt.

00:02:41
I appreciate that. All right.

00:02:42
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you're you're talking about, then we'll, we'll further the

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discussions. All right, But you know, besides

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crypto, George and I love our gold and silver.

00:03:08
What's this is the prepper bar and of course, gold and silver

00:03:11
on the move whenever there's a an event like this.

00:03:14
And with the Strait of Hormuz potentially being shut down

00:03:17
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00:03:20
long time. Who knows what's going to happen

00:03:22
to oil? Oil could go to $130.00 a

00:03:24
barrel. I think it's sitting at 70 and

00:03:26
change. But gold and silver are also

00:03:27
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00:03:29
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00:03:33
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00:03:35
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00:04:21
So, you know, lots going on, you know, and it's interesting.

00:04:25
The memes have been flowing. Lots and lots and lots of them

00:04:28
all over the Internet, Lots of funny stuff.

00:04:30
If you haven't spent much time on X looking at them, you got to

00:04:33
love AI for that. It's one of the greatest uses.

00:04:36
And listen, we've got a great show today.

00:04:38
You know, we're always worried. We've talked about it so many

00:04:40
times. The grooming, everybody knows

00:04:43
I'm not a huge fan of TikTok. I'm not a huge fan of what's

00:04:46
going on in our education system, but here's somebody that

00:04:49
gets it right. How about an anti groomer?

00:04:51
How about somebody that sees it, as she calls it, storyteller and

00:04:55
artist and jazz musician Julie Lavender Ledoux.

00:04:59
She has all kinds of adventures she's concocted that are

00:05:02
unexpected, wacky and playfully thought provoking.

00:05:05
It's like, it's like an Asian Willy Wonka and the Cat in the

00:05:09
Hat are thrown in a party in my brain.

00:05:11
So she never knows what's really going to come out, but she does

00:05:13
it because she thinks the narrative needs to be corrected.

00:05:17
She lives with her husband and kids at the Dream Farm, where

00:05:19
they explore the world of wonder together.

00:05:21
They call her the red pilled Mary Poppins of middle grade

00:05:25
fiction. And she's here today.

00:05:27
As as always, we like to diversify our view.

00:05:30
You know our viewers and interviews.

00:05:32
Let's go ahead. And get here before I'm gonna.

00:05:36
I'm gonna go on outer limb. I think it's a lado.

00:05:38
You say it, but I don't know. We're gonna find out.

00:05:40
Welcome to the big, big show, Julie Lavender Lado.

00:05:44
Ladue is it? Is it ladue?

00:05:46
Okay, I'm wrong. Yeah.

00:05:49
Yeah, you gotta get the Lavender in there.

00:05:51
There's another author named Julie Lavender who writes some

00:05:53
kids books and rather than just. There's no other authors named

00:05:57
Julie Lavender. There's only one.

00:05:59
Okay, Let's understand that right now.

00:06:01
You're on a big, big show. There's no other Julie

00:06:03
Lavenders, okay? Thank you.

00:06:04
Because I don't want to have to break her knuckles.

00:06:06
That's what I thought, man. She's taking up too much space

00:06:08
out there. So it's either break her

00:06:10
knuckles or add my married name to the to the maiden.

00:06:13
So there you go. Anyway, yeah.

00:06:15
It's, it's always, you know, whenever it's like that.

00:06:17
The internet's an interesting thing too, of course.

00:06:19
So they often come, you know, propel the people.

00:06:22
I know it's difficult in the vertical you're in.

00:06:24
It's never been easy when it comes to in the publishing

00:06:27
world. You know, we've had Tony Lyons

00:06:28
on and he's a publisher that's a lot of times picked up different

00:06:32
authors that, of course, were not picked up by publishers for

00:06:37
obvious enough reasons that they're always trying to control

00:06:40
the narrative. But let me start in a different

00:06:42
spot for a minute, Julie. You know, not everybody.

00:06:44
I don't know what your plan was when you started out.

00:06:46
I don't know if you always wanted to be an author.

00:06:47
I don't know if writing was something that you pursued in

00:06:50
your earlier life. What exactly got you started in

00:06:53
this vertical Is there? Can you give us a little

00:06:55
background for the audience? Well, initially it's because I

00:06:58
could see what no one else was seeing and I was watching where

00:07:01
kids were going. When my kids were very young, I

00:07:03
was seeing the outcomes of what different systems were

00:07:07
producing. And so we took the weirdest,

00:07:10
strangest path you could possibly take in so many ways

00:07:15
with our kids. We were in Southern California,

00:07:16
we were in San Diego and we often moved to a pre

00:07:20
revolutionary era farmhouse built, established in 1743 in

00:07:25
Southern New Hampshire. Pulled it, pulled everybody out,

00:07:28
homeschooled our kids did history by driving around to the

00:07:33
locations, you know, and doing field trips and reading real

00:07:35
books and and then we started a jazz, I'm a jazz musician.

00:07:40
So we took our renovated historic barn and turned it into

00:07:43
a jazz venue. So we were thinking, how do we

00:07:46
get our kids out of the classrooms, out of the systems,

00:07:49
even out of unhealthy church situations and, and the pressure

00:07:53
of Southern California intense, you know, cell phones, money,

00:07:58
act constant action and have have kids with souls, right?

00:08:02
And so we were doing all these crazy things.

00:08:04
My kids grew up with some of the best jazz musicians on the East

00:08:07
Coast. They grew up, they grew up

00:08:09
travelling, they grew up asking questions.

00:08:11
They grew up doing comedy shows and all kinds of things, right?

00:08:15
And and so out of that we became non conformists, but joyfully

00:08:20
so. And so I began to write books

00:08:23
about about a non conformist family.

00:08:27
And because I'm interested in the topic, and this was around

00:08:31
2019, somebody, there's a author who loved my concept and

00:08:36
encouraged me to write a series. And so I'm writing, I'll just

00:08:40
throw it up here real quick. I'm writing the first book,

00:08:43
Constance and the Battle for Wonder, and it's about the only

00:08:47
family in an entirely color blind town that can see color

00:08:53
because they interact with the supernatural realm called

00:08:55
Wonder. And because of that they won't

00:08:58
conform to something called the Prescribed Order, which makes

00:09:03
everyone color blind over time. And they're the evil elders of

00:09:07
the order behind the scenes. So I'm writing this just because

00:09:10
I'm interested in the topic of how to produce kids with souls,

00:09:14
kids who can stand, kids who are different.

00:09:16
And then guess what happens? 2020 I wake up in a prison

00:09:20
planet. You wake up in a freaking prison

00:09:24
planet. And I could see it.

00:09:26
The minute they hauled out the masks, I could see it.

00:09:29
I knew it. And so now I'm deep in and I'm

00:09:34
taking, I'm taking all these characters through everything we

00:09:38
lived through and what it meant and where it came from on a deep

00:09:41
level because I'm laying foundations.

00:09:44
So this is where the red pilled Mary Poppins thing came in

00:09:48
because because Mary Poppins is this character who comes into a

00:09:53
highly dysfunctional situation, right?

00:09:56
And if you think about it, what's crazy about the story is,

00:10:00
is Miss the she flies in. And it's really, it's, it's

00:10:05
deeper than people think about because the mother's a political

00:10:08
activist who's completely disconnected from reality and

00:10:12
the dad's a British banker. So you've got the corrupt

00:10:16
banking system, you've got the woke politicizing and making

00:10:22
this family disconnected. And she flies in and she brings

00:10:26
her supercalifragilistic and her spoonful sugar and she and she

00:10:31
uses words and she uses wonder to reunite this family and to

00:10:36
bring healing. Well, if Mary Poppins flew into

00:10:38
the 21st century and took the red pill from the Matrix movie

00:10:42
and she was here right now, she would not use her little

00:10:44
spoonful of sugar to help those kids clean their room like they

00:10:48
did in the movie. She would use them to write the

00:10:51
books that I'm writing because it is imperative we reach the

00:10:54
kids. I speak a lot to some of the

00:10:58
most red pilled red meat eating people in the world.

00:11:02
But when when we really look at what is offered to kids at the

00:11:06
conferences on the radio shows, the topics you and I are like

00:11:10
constantly into and wanting to know the next thing and

00:11:13
understand the corruption, understand now the system.

00:11:16
Who's telling the kids who's helping the kids understand the

00:11:21
story we are living right now. Well, I am, I am and I'm doing

00:11:26
it through metaphor. It's.

00:11:27
A struggle because the system is, it's pretty obvious.

00:11:31
I mean, we look at what's happened in the school system

00:11:34
over the last several decades and it's been a constant

00:11:38
onslaught. It used to be that I remember

00:11:39
doing the pledge allegiance. I remember prayer in school.

00:11:42
I went to a Lutheran grade school and then I went to a

00:11:44
Catholic, all boys high school. My parents are already focused

00:11:47
on our education. They kept us out of the public

00:11:49
school system. But you know, they've changed

00:11:51
everything. They want to change our history.

00:11:54
You look at, you know, what they did to take down so many

00:11:56
important historical figures, statues.

00:12:00
They want to change the names of so many, you know, buildings and

00:12:05
bridges and and military bases were named after important

00:12:09
historical figures. They kind of want to wipe all of

00:12:11
it out. But our history has always been

00:12:12
under attack. They've always kind of wanted to

00:12:14
filter the truth. We know there's lots of history

00:12:17
that, that that has been kind of wiped from the history books

00:12:20
because it didn't fit the narrative they chose.

00:12:22
But it's difficult. I mean, social media has pretty

00:12:25
much been weaponized against our kids.

00:12:26
We've covered it. I mean, George and I got

00:12:28
attacked because we, we were, we knew, we recognized that COVID

00:12:31
was a scam right from the get go.

00:12:33
We got suspended. We lost a relatively decent

00:12:36
account on YouTube. I think we were up to about

00:12:38
30 followers. They've never given us back.

00:12:40
They've allowed us back on YouTube because of course, one

00:12:43
of the reasons they banned us was because of the COVID

00:12:45
narrative we didn't buy into. We had a lot of important

00:12:47
figures, Doctor Stella Emmanuel, right?

00:12:50
Mike Kovitz, you know, Doctor Malone, I mean, you name it, we

00:12:54
had all of them on here. We recognize that something

00:12:57
wasn't right about what we were being told.

00:12:59
You know, I never, I caught COVID twice.

00:13:02
I ran through it very rapidly using the Zelenko protocol and

00:13:05
other things. It just other than my sense of

00:13:08
smell, has been the only lingering thing.

00:13:10
Made me tired. But it's incredible what they

00:13:13
did to us. Everybody wants to deny that it

00:13:16
really happened, but of course, it has become part of the truth

00:13:20
that's been released. But, you know, our kids are

00:13:21
just, they're in a tough spot. I mean, I look at what's on

00:13:24
social media. I mean, popular figures like the

00:13:26
Kardashians, you know, they cut their teeth on pornography.

00:13:29
I mean, let's face it, that's how they did it.

00:13:31
That's how they got their leverage.

00:13:33
I don't like real what they stand for.

00:13:34
But, you know, the music's the same thing.

00:13:36
We've got trouble in the music industry.

00:13:38
It isn't just P Diddy. There's a darkness.

00:13:40
We did a show the other day talking about the connections

00:13:44
to, you know, the, the Satanism in music and how there seems to

00:13:48
be this, this nonstop effort to convert, you know, the, the

00:13:54
audience, which of course is mostly the youth.

00:13:56
That's where the music, the like of music.

00:13:58
You know what, even the music we grew up with had some of that,

00:14:01
but not anywhere near the amount there is now.

00:14:03
I think jazz is probably one of the few areas that hasn't had as

00:14:06
much of that in it. But you know, it's, it's, it's a

00:14:08
struggle. And I think parents just don't

00:14:11
know what to do. George, you and I have, I mean,

00:14:13
I don't know how many times we've talked about this.

00:14:14
I and I'm not a fan of TikTok as an example, TikTok challenges

00:14:18
where they challenged kids to go out and lick a public toilet

00:14:21
seat as part of the challenge just doesn't seem like good

00:14:24
material that I would want my children to watch.

00:14:27
But how do you do it? Because every kids got a cell

00:14:29
phone. You know, you almost become an

00:14:31
ogre saying, hey, I don't want you to have a cell phone yet.

00:14:34
Let's wait. And it makes sense because the

00:14:36
grooming, I mean, these men dressed up as women online,

00:14:40
that's a struggle trying to advise our children.

00:14:43
And it seems like, you know, all the agendas are terrible.

00:14:47
And I'm, you know, I'm always cautious now because I want our

00:14:49
message to get out because I catch myself restricting,

00:14:52
because I know that certain channels we're on right now, if

00:14:55
you go into too much of any particular category, that's it,

00:14:58
you're gone. No, no discussion, no appeal, no

00:15:01
nothing. George, you give me your

00:15:03
comments because I know you and you and I have both.

00:15:05
We got suspended, but you know, very shortly, within a couple of

00:15:08
minutes after Donald Trump on X. And I think a lot of it had to

00:15:11
do with our election integrity calls.

00:15:13
I'm still. Getting suspended, Lance, I just

00:15:15
got suspended on TikTok like a month ago.

00:15:17
I have to make another new account.

00:15:18
I think it's the third one all for talking about elections and

00:15:22
that, you know, allegedly, allegedly.

00:15:25
Yeah, I was. Just going to say that United

00:15:26
States people bought it. I don't know if they've fixed

00:15:30
algorithms, but I gave a lot of bad reviews on their on the App

00:15:33
Store. I know because what happened.

00:15:34
When they reached out to you on the App Store, I don't.

00:15:36
Know they say you got to you know you can reach out to the

00:15:38
dev team just go into TikTok. But you can't once you're bad,

00:15:42
you can't get into there is no way to reach out to dev team

00:15:45
period. First of all, so I don't know

00:15:46
what they're talking about. It's just just BSI just keep

00:15:49
leaving bad reviews, no big deal.

00:15:51
So let me. Ask you this on on.

00:15:53
That note Julie, you know, tell me about did you did you feel

00:15:56
like that you've had suppression?

00:15:58
I mean, I know you're self-publishing and that's a

00:16:01
choice that a lot of authors have to make nowadays.

00:16:03
I. Did for a different reason

00:16:04
because I had a show that was very popular was was shared by a

00:16:09
lot of strong influence influencers at the time called

00:16:15
my fear free life live fear free living with Julie Lavender and I

00:16:19
was taking on how you daily beat fear as as a brain training and

00:16:27
faith exercise. And I was walking people through

00:16:31
every single day, five days a week from COVID.

00:16:33
And when Trump got banned, my biggest influencers got banned.

00:16:38
And then so basically I just disappeared.

00:16:41
You know, I was getting and, and it sent me to into a different

00:16:45
place. And I think that's when I around

00:16:47
the time I started writing these kids books, because you guys,

00:16:50
you know, politics and all this stuff is downwind from culture

00:16:54
and culture is generated by narrative and story.

00:16:59
You see, the number one factor that will determine our success

00:17:03
and what we, what we become and what our children become is the

00:17:06
story we believe about ourselves and about the world.

00:17:09
And if we do not give our children a great, big,

00:17:12
beautiful, victorious, hell vanquishing story to live out

00:17:16
of, that's fun and heart pumping and trauma healing.

00:17:21
We have to this is where I'm, I'm way, way back in the

00:17:24
strategic place again, where I can see what's coming.

00:17:28
And I'm not, I'm not, I'm not dealing with TikTok.

00:17:32
I'm going for the next generation, right where they

00:17:35
live in that heart, where that precious sacred imagination is

00:17:39
for the children. So you and I can can cope with

00:17:42
all the stuff we know somehow, right?

00:17:45
And but I'm appealing to to your listeners to take a break and

00:17:51
and give the children in your life something that will pre

00:17:55
empt the narrative. I'm a highly subversive person.

00:17:59
I understand subversion. I understand going into systems

00:18:03
and and seeing what's going on and planting good seeds, good

00:18:07
subversion, good, you know, to give kids an underpinning.

00:18:12
And so I'm teaching them about the supernatural realm of wonder

00:18:15
in my books and how these kids can go there.

00:18:19
And it's a metaphor. It's a metaphor for everything

00:18:22
good and beautiful and heaven has for us and how this one

00:18:26
family that interacts with wonder is bringing solutions and

00:18:31
for the greatest issues of our time.

00:18:32
Because I take I take on the abuse of education, the abuse of

00:18:36
science, propaganda in the media, mind control.

00:18:40
By book four, I take on the whole issue with with injuries

00:18:45
from medical procedures that are forced on people.

00:18:48
And by book five, I take on the World Economic Forum, the Great

00:18:52
Reset and weather weaponry, all in five books.

00:18:55
I tell the story, the truth story of what's happened to us

00:18:58
in the 21st century. My book books are history books

00:19:02
because I'm telling history and metaphor one thing, and it and

00:19:06
they're they're, they're written to last.

00:19:08
They're not consumables. They're not just throwaway

00:19:10
books. I've got study guides.

00:19:12
They're the vocabulary's intense.

00:19:14
Remember, I homeschooled, so I understand about creating

00:19:16
conversation and educating kids and doing it through fun and

00:19:21
imagination and excitement because you have to write good

00:19:24
stories. So these books are for kids 10

00:19:27
to 14. But you know what?

00:19:29
Adults love them too because they're trauma healing books.

00:19:33
We have been highly, highly traumatized and controlled,

00:19:36
manipulated through trauma. So you have to reach the heart

00:19:40
and soul of children and the, and the childlike hearts within

00:19:44
adults who need to, to find healing in the midst of all the

00:19:49
trauma we're, we're living through and all the

00:19:51
disappointment, right? And so if we can take a break

00:19:54
from what we know that's so disillusioning to us, sometimes

00:19:58
so discouraging, and we can say, hey, wait a minute.

00:20:01
Here's something I can stop and I can do something to change the

00:20:05
world because I can give kids the amazing series and it will

00:20:09
rewrite their history in advance.

00:20:12
That's what I'm doing. I'm rewriting history in advance

00:20:16
for a whole generation of kids. And this is what the mission of

00:20:21
these books are, is because like I said, I'm taking on the

00:20:24
deepest, the deepest, most troubling things we faced when I

00:20:29
was writing book 3. It's called bombastic Bifle Gab.

00:20:33
It's about propaganda. I, my family was living through

00:20:37
a, a metaphor of COVID just like we were.

00:20:41
And I didn't know if the characters in my books would be

00:20:44
OK. Like to go to the page everyday

00:20:47
was like going with sweaty palms.

00:20:49
Like I couldn't believe the psychopathy surrounding me and

00:20:54
the way people were functioning out of absolute mind control,

00:20:57
right? And fear and terror and giving

00:21:00
up any sense of of their own agency and choice and believing

00:21:04
what was fed to them and who believed it and how they got

00:21:08
sucked in, including churches and all that stuff was

00:21:10
horrifying. And I'm doing this Daily Show on

00:21:14
fear. I want to make sure I'm lying,

00:21:16
right? I don't want to interrupt you.

00:21:17
So were you already out of San Diego?

00:21:19
You're already in the harmed by the time COVID kicked off.

00:21:21
Yes, yes, many years we had lived in New England.

00:21:24
Let's go back. To San Diego for a minute,

00:21:25
because of course you know the liberal, you know the the

00:21:29
liberal the. Population, it's a different

00:21:31
place now than when we left, you know, but it was heading into

00:21:34
that, that deep pit of that California has slid into in many

00:21:39
ways, you know? Yeah, the leadership in

00:21:41
California has done an amazing job in brainwashing a lot of the

00:21:44
people there. I'm surprised they'll put up

00:21:46
with it because of course now they're getting, you know, so

00:21:48
attacked financially. I just saw something California

00:21:51
was going to talk about, some kind of a tax you'd have to pay

00:21:54
when you sell your house. I didn't look at the full

00:21:56
article. Something like $60 when you

00:21:59
go to sell your home additional on top of any capital gains or

00:22:03
anything else, which is incredible.

00:22:04
They're already well funded, but of course they waste the money.

00:22:07
They can't even track where they, what they did with the

00:22:09
high speed rail money you got Gavin Newsom.

00:22:11
That's just so, so leftist and so well groomed.

00:22:16
He's the, he's the epitome of a, you know, he presents himself.

00:22:20
He, you know, I always say that he should get, you know, an

00:22:22
Oscar for the amount of acting he does on every presentation.

00:22:25
And you know, he even acknowledged that.

00:22:27
I think he said he he only got an 800 score on his SA T's

00:22:30
total. He says he can't.

00:22:32
Read, He says he doesn't even know how to read.

00:22:35
He admitted that on on an interview the other day.

00:22:37
Which which in itself we always talk about he's.

00:22:40
Dumb and IQ. And George, you, you and I, you

00:22:43
know, say how incredible that it is.

00:22:44
And we've got so many low IQ individuals in spots of

00:22:48
leadership. But of course, those are the

00:22:49
easiest people that have installed in leadership.

00:22:52
If they're very low IQ, they're easier to manipulate.

00:22:54
They're not thinkers. But when I think about, you

00:22:57
know, Ilian Omar, I think about AOC.

00:22:59
And it's not just one side of the aisle.

00:23:01
This show is very specific. We go after everybody because

00:23:04
even if you're not actively trying to destroy the country,

00:23:06
which it appears that that seems to be the main role of the

00:23:09
Democrats. I hate to even say Democrat or

00:23:12
Republican, because on the other side is this party that alleges

00:23:15
they're going to do this, this and this, and they stomp their

00:23:17
feet, but they're inactivity. They're just as guilty.

00:23:20
We can't get anything passed in Congress and the school system

00:23:23
is so horrible. I don't know how the school

00:23:26
system, you, you took your children out.

00:23:27
Did you even try to use a school system when you moved or would

00:23:30
you just right away identify? No.

00:23:31
We knew, we knew we, we have even a small, you know, kind of

00:23:35
religious type school, but even that the kids there were so

00:23:39
programmed. It was hard.

00:23:41
I didn't, I, you know, homeschoolers didn't look cool

00:23:44
to me. I didn't, I didn't want to do

00:23:45
that. But then I saw it and I realized

00:23:48
we can, we can be ourselves while we do this, which took us

00:23:51
into art, which took us into jazz and all I did as a, as a,

00:23:54
as a recording artist and all those kinds of things now.

00:23:59
Your jazz background, is it instruments or do you sing?

00:24:02
I don't know what? Oh.

00:24:02
Yeah, I play guitar, piano, and I write and I sing.

00:24:06
But you know, again, we have to. We have to pull up and think.

00:24:11
What seeds are you and I planting today in the next

00:24:14
generation? So I'm with you.

00:24:17
There's probably nothing you can say on this show that I'm not

00:24:19
like. Oh, Yep.

00:24:20
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's, yeah. That's true.

00:24:23
But you see, children have to understand where we are.

00:24:26
We could do all of this. We could do all we're doing, we

00:24:29
could do at the conferences I go to.

00:24:31
Those parents, those adults are working really hard.

00:24:34
Their eyes are open. They're red pilled.

00:24:36
But they'll go home and have very little resources that they

00:24:40
can give to their children that will immunize them against the

00:24:44
disease of this, of the corruption we're seeing.

00:24:47
And the books that I write are the immunizations in one sense.

00:24:51
Because if you capture a child's sense of self through story and

00:24:55
they see the larger story, is our story a doom story?

00:24:59
No, absolutely not. I think this is the most amazing

00:25:02
time to be alive in the history of the world.

00:25:05
This is why they released COVID, because think of the Yellow

00:25:07
jacket people. We're all out in the streets.

00:25:09
People were waking up. So they had to clap back.

00:25:13
And that awakening has is not receding.

00:25:16
It's increasing. And guess what?

00:25:18
Our children have to understand, they need to, they need to be be

00:25:23
able to process this. Think for a minute.

00:25:25
You know, there's certain things you can't avoid telling your

00:25:27
kids. The dog died, grandma's sick

00:25:32
with cancer, or, God forbid, your mother and I are getting a

00:25:35
divorce. You do not avoid those

00:25:37
conversations. You can't.

00:25:39
So if there really is a group of ghouls out there trying to kill

00:25:44
us, trying to destroy our lives, trying to take all the tyranny,

00:25:47
trying to ruin the justice system and succeeding in many

00:25:50
ways, what makes us think we can avoid telling the kids?

00:25:56
But most people have no idea how they're going to tell kids this.

00:25:59
So they avoid it. They memory hole it.

00:26:00
They don't want to talk about COVID.

00:26:02
And then guess what? The kids don't want to hear a

00:26:04
left brain version of what we've been hearing all day in our

00:26:08
podcasts. They need story, they need

00:26:12
narrative. They need to know what's amazing

00:26:15
about being alive and they need to believe it's possible to live

00:26:20
in victory, to live in, in, in wonder, in peace, in in, in

00:26:27
overcoming, you know, power and authority.

00:26:30
And this is what I'm teaching. I'm teaching every book line

00:26:34
upon line as I take on the most serious issues of the day.

00:26:39
And did I tell you your? Question.

00:26:41
I was stopping there. For a minute you.

00:26:42
Know of all you know, of course, because, you know, it's a bold

00:26:45
choice to do homeschooling. It's time consuming.

00:26:47
I didn't do it not because of that.

00:26:48
I was basically a single dad. My mom was helping me a lot.

00:26:52
You don't have patience for that, Lance.

00:26:53
Let's just well. It's not so much the patience.

00:26:56
The problem was during that time period, my business, I was

00:26:58
travelling a lot. I was flying 100 and 2000 and

00:27:01
30 miles a year. So I was thankful I had my mom

00:27:03
because my, my ex at that time, it kind of disappeared out of

00:27:05
the picture. She came back into my daughter's

00:27:07
life later, which I think was good for my daughter.

00:27:10
It was a positive thing. I don't think it was negative,

00:27:13
although you know, ideology wise, sure.

00:27:15
I'm probably the other end of the spectrum.

00:27:17
I don't think my ex was ever really political and, and I

00:27:21
really wasn't that political, to be honest with you.

00:27:23
I wasn't that concerned. I always thought that making

00:27:25
money was the solution, that having a, you know, a large

00:27:28
amount of money would solve any of the issues I had because I

00:27:30
could take myself out of what needed.

00:27:32
And at least that was my my mindset then maybe not

00:27:35
recognizing, although I've early on read, you know, the creature

00:27:38
from Jekyll Island and so many other books like that, because I

00:27:41
was always looking for alternative message.

00:27:43
I was a proficient reader. My mom had been had been really,

00:27:47
I think forward thinking enough that you put me in speed reading

00:27:50
when I was a young child and I gained a lot of you know, and I

00:27:53
had a very high retention rate because I have a marginally

00:27:56
photogenic memory. So I'm able to retain things and

00:27:59
I go back and look and say, this doesn't make any sense.

00:28:00
I was always questioning. I get a lot of that even as a

00:28:03
child. That was always one of those

00:28:04
kids is why, you know, I don't understand what's the reason

00:28:06
behind that. Why do we have to do it like

00:28:08
that? I never really accepted things

00:28:10
the way. But not every child is like that

00:28:11
during this, you know, you're in this fight clearly for the, you

00:28:15
know, the hearts and minds of children.

00:28:17
Your own were the first reason did there was there were there

00:28:20
different moments like maybe where, you know, the your

00:28:23
children were questioned like, well, mom, I don't understand.

00:28:25
You seem to really think it's like this.

00:28:27
But my friends are saying that I don't know how much interaction

00:28:29
they had with other children on the farm.

00:28:31
I don't know in your neighborhood what it was like.

00:28:33
You know, we had in my neighbor when I was a kid and George, I

00:28:36
don't know if you I assume you have this.

00:28:37
You know, in New York when we were kids, we everybody played

00:28:40
outside. You know, like we've seen the

00:28:41
message. It's 10:00.

00:28:43
You know, your children were because pretty much you were out

00:28:45
to a certain time and then you better get your ass home or you

00:28:48
might get the wooden spoon or a family ice water.

00:28:50
Who knew if you weren't paying attention to the policies.

00:28:53
But you know, in our neighborhood we were playing

00:28:55
kickball, stickball. We were out playing hide and

00:28:57
seek. I lived on when we moved out of

00:29:00
the city, we moved out of Fordham Rd.

00:29:02
We ended up in White Plains and I lived in a very historical

00:29:05
area, Battle Hill, so Alexander Ave. of course, lots of

00:29:09
Revolutionary War history, even to the point that we had a metal

00:29:12
detector early on. And if you went out of our yard,

00:29:14
you could find, you know, musket balls and all kinds of crazy

00:29:17
stuff because we were all going out in other people's yards

00:29:20
looking for all kinds of stuff, Buttons from uniforms, you could

00:29:23
find all kinds of stuff. The point is that, you know, you

00:29:27
still have this infrastructure of other children around you

00:29:29
that might have been influenced one way or another, you know,

00:29:32
and we all had different childhood.

00:29:34
Did you find a lot of times you were in a battle with other

00:29:37
parents? Or did you, you know, as you

00:29:38
were doing this homeschooling, your children were probably

00:29:41
getting a much higher level of education than all the other

00:29:43
kids around them. I'm assuming they were very

00:29:45
articulate, extremely intelligent.

00:29:47
Was there a conflict? Did you have a lot of that?

00:29:49
Because that's what parents get into, right?

00:29:51
They've got an issue. They love the message that

00:29:53
somebody like you brings out. But then they get this pushback

00:29:56
and they find themselves pulling back a little bit because

00:29:59
they're not trying to get their children alienated.

00:30:02
You know? How did you deal with that if

00:30:04
you dealt with? It, I mean, resource wise, This

00:30:07
is why I've written what I've written because this is a the

00:30:10
books that I give people and the approach is pulling kids even up

00:30:15
to age 14. And then I have older age books

00:30:18
and into story that's so gripping.

00:30:22
They're, they're receiving message in depth without you

00:30:26
beating it into their heads, right, Which is important.

00:30:29
So we, the thing I love about homeschooling and look, there's

00:30:32
a lot of ways to do it. People are terrified of it.

00:30:34
They think it's harder than it is.

00:30:36
It's way easier to me it was to have my kids around and I knew

00:30:42
exactly what was happening for the most part and I could coach

00:30:46
in to the experiences that they are going to have with everyone

00:30:50
who disagrees with them and the debate debates with the

00:30:53
neighbors and and I'm in New England.

00:30:55
Did you find? Other parents pulling away from

00:30:57
you because of your ideologies? Well.

00:30:59
I pulled away from them in some ways, you know, because I'm

00:31:01
looking for cream of the crop relationships.

00:31:04
I don't have time for everybody, even there were a lot of people

00:31:07
we drew into our circle because it was an opportunity community

00:31:11
to outreach and to and to help help kids in stress.

00:31:15
So we had some experiences, you know, with a couple of kids we

00:31:18
brought into our home for periods of time that were

00:31:20
really, really messed up and distressed.

00:31:24
And so there were that was very intentional.

00:31:26
We're very intentional about what we do there.

00:31:29
We, we weren't Amish, you know, so we, we were out and about and

00:31:34
my husband's in was in government and all kinds of

00:31:37
things and in business. And so it wasn't about pulling

00:31:40
away, but it was about being present and coaching through

00:31:43
each opportunity, right. And so that this is where I

00:31:47
think what is so diabolical about sending your children away

00:31:50
for 6 to 8 hours a day is you have no idea how early on they

00:31:55
will switch loyalty because children have to survive.

00:31:59
And it's not that they get to school and think, jeez, I'm

00:32:01
going to jettison everything my parents owe me.

00:32:05
It's the fact that they intuitively, psychologically

00:32:08
realize they're in a classroom, you're not there, and they're

00:32:11
going to have to survive. And they get the cues of what

00:32:14
it's going to take to be OK in that environment.

00:32:17
And that separation from you as parents begins way earlier,

00:32:22
first, second, third grade. But it manifests usually during

00:32:26
adolescence when a child has more agency and choice.

00:32:30
But why never ran from that? In fact, we had some real deep

00:32:34
pain in our family from contradiction.

00:32:37
And this is what I deal with in my books.

00:32:39
I don't run from contradiction. And what I mean by contradiction

00:32:42
is you have your set of values, you have your set of beliefs,

00:32:46
you trust God or whatever. And then the exact opposite

00:32:50
happens and it sucks and it hurts and it's disillusioning.

00:32:56
We had one of our children sexually abused by another

00:33:00
Christian homeschooled child. That is called a contradiction

00:33:03
to your faith. OK, So I do not run from trauma

00:33:08
in terms of hiding it, and I do not run from contradiction or,

00:33:12
or difficulty or debate. And so we're building an

00:33:17
environment where here it comes, I'm homeschooling on a pre

00:33:22
revolutionary era farmhouse and one of my children is sexually

00:33:25
abused right there. OK, now this is what I'm saying.

00:33:29
But this is what people are dealing with, the level of

00:33:32
trauma, the level of pain. And so This is why I

00:33:36
particularly wrote these books, not only to be educational, but

00:33:39
to be healing books, because we need to be emotionally whole

00:33:44
enough to do what's waiting for us to conquer the next day,

00:33:49
right? So let me.

00:33:51
Hold you right there. We're going to stop for a minute

00:33:52
with Julie and of course, we'll be right back with her.

00:33:54
We're going to take a short break here on the Big Ming Show.

00:33:57
Stay tuned. While we're on the break, take

00:33:58
the live link, share it far and wide.

00:34:00
Personally, for the parents out there, this is the kind of

00:34:02
message you want. We're trying to help you along

00:34:05
the ride and here's a great opportunity to do so.

00:34:08
We'll be right back with George Valentin, Lance Miliacho and

00:34:11
Julie Ledoux. I wake up.

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00:37:53
big, big show. Here we host Lance Migliacho,

00:37:55
yours truly George Valentin, and our special guest, Julie

00:37:59
Lavender Ledoux. Ledoux, sorry, but don't forget

00:38:03
to hit the thumbs up button. Follow, like, share her links in

00:38:07
the chats under the more section of this video.

00:38:10
Plus, I've been putting banners up.

00:38:11
She can't see those banners in the backstage, but I've been

00:38:14
putting them up. So check out our website.

00:38:16
We're going to bring it up later.

00:38:19
I hit that thumbs up like follow and share button.

00:38:21
And if you could do that subscribe button for, you know,

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Take a screenshot, save it to your photo files, but go there

00:39:34
later because we got more stuff to talk about Julie and Julie, I

00:39:37
have a question. We see it more and more that the

00:39:42
liberals, the these elites, they're indoctrinating our kids

00:39:45
now from an even younger age. They're trying to do it from

00:39:47
like kindergarten and up. And I know your, your books.

00:39:51
They're it, it says tailored to kids like 10 to 14.

00:39:54
Are you thinking about doing anything for even younger?

00:39:57
Going younger age well? I think you know.

00:40:01
There's already some pretty good resources out there for littler

00:40:04
kids, like if you are aware of the homeschool community.

00:40:07
But then there's that book club that oh gosh, all the stars

00:40:12
write for them and I'll think of the name.

00:40:15
But they the problem with a lot of the resources, you'd know the

00:40:20
it's like elephants are not birds.

00:40:22
The book about gender is a famous company.

00:40:27
Anyway, they had some big names writing for them and then they

00:40:30
put them out and they're they're targeted for that age.

00:40:33
OK. And so there are good resources

00:40:37
for that. But the real hole to be honest

00:40:39
with you is in the is in the age group that I've I've been

00:40:42
targeting. And you know, most parents still

00:40:46
feel like they can, they can pretty much keep their hands in

00:40:49
protection and get their values to those younger kids, although

00:40:53
they're not realizing what a classroom situation will do to

00:40:56
the psyche of a child in many ways.

00:40:58
But it begins to manifest right around the time that they're

00:41:02
that they're processing their ideas starting ten, 12/13/14

00:41:06
right. And then my books are going up

00:41:08
into the YA age group it for high school.

00:41:11
And I do have younger kids read the books and love them.

00:41:16
But the issues, the ideas are very deep.

00:41:19
This is why I have study guides available.

00:41:21
This is why, you know, if you get the books on my site, you

00:41:24
get the audio books for free so that you get this great package.

00:41:28
And then parents can listen to the books in the car or

00:41:30
whatever, Have your kids read them and you now are engaging

00:41:35
with the same ideas so you can have conversations.

00:41:37
And you know, Lance, you mentioned something about

00:41:41
parents who homeschool and, and, and they're trying to integrate

00:41:45
into other settings with, you know, parent people who school

00:41:48
differently or have their kids in sports.

00:41:51
You know, look, this is the whole point.

00:41:53
This is the difficulty that we're facing, how to be a non

00:41:57
conformist, but to have such compellingly great ideas that

00:42:02
you are not threatened by the challenges that must inevitably

00:42:06
come for your children and yourself when they're different.

00:42:11
And this is the thing, how different are we willing to be?

00:42:15
We can all have our platforms and I had one.

00:42:17
I have my daily podcast Fear Free Living with Julie Lavender

00:42:21
and right during COVID, you know, really massive amount of

00:42:26
people, you know, engaging with these ideas.

00:42:28
But when the when the lights go off and you and I are home with

00:42:32
our kids and there are people in conflict with us, that's where

00:42:36
the rubber meets the road. That's where where the story we

00:42:39
believe about ourselves is manifest.

00:42:41
Whether we can graciously and firmly say, no, I'm not headed

00:42:48
where you're headed. But here's why I behave with

00:42:51
more grace, with more dignity, dignity, with more security and

00:42:55
self-confidence because I do have a higher set of values.

00:42:58
And so homes, any kind of child rearing is not for sissies.

00:43:02
And if we think we're going to plug into a system that's going

00:43:05
to get us all the way from kindergarten all the way up to

00:43:08
prom, you know, and they're and our kids are going to be fine,

00:43:11
that those days are over. I'm not sure they ever really

00:43:13
existed the way we thought they did.

00:43:16
So my hope is that by talking to red meat, eating, red pilled

00:43:21
audiences like yours, people who are awake, that, that they'll

00:43:28
take the time to plant the seeds into the next generation with

00:43:32
just the kinds of books I'm writing, because they are.

00:43:37
What I want to jump in here for a second because you know,

00:43:40
parents are under, you know, the, the, the family that we all

00:43:44
hoped we would have right early on, it's already started that

00:43:47
they're under attack. I mean, I mentioned earlier that

00:43:49
I think my parents paid $9600 for their house in White Plains,

00:43:53
NY when we moved out of Fordham Rd. in the Bronx.

00:43:56
And that's the thing right now. It's gotten so tough.

00:43:58
I mean, that, you know, Donald Trump's come out and said, oh,

00:44:00
it's gotten cheaper at the grocery store.

00:44:02
It's gotten better. Eggs are cheaper.

00:44:04
And some things have gone down, but lots of things haven't.

00:44:06
We're seeing higher prices than ever.

00:44:07
And it's really created this attack on the family because you

00:44:11
find most homes have to have both parents working.

00:44:15
They're not connected. So what happens is they've used

00:44:18
TV and cell phones and iPads as a babysitter and that and the,

00:44:24
and the, the struggle is real, really at the end of the day.

00:44:27
And that's the the hard part about all this.

00:44:29
You guys made a very competent choice, but some people feel

00:44:32
trapped. Maybe they couldn't leave.

00:44:34
And again, it's not that they couldn't leave, but it's hard to

00:44:36
leave. Let's say San Diego, you've got

00:44:38
both parents working, we've got both got amazing income streams

00:44:41
and it's making the life easier because things have gotten so

00:44:44
much more expensive now. You know, we that we allowed and

00:44:47
Donald Trump says he's passed some policies.

00:44:48
I don't know if they're in place or not.

00:44:50
Kind of like they were going to lower interest rates.

00:44:52
We heard that credit cards are going to be maxed for at least a

00:44:55
year, 10% that went right out the window.

00:44:57
He mentioned it was going to happen February 20th.

00:45:00
That shit never got delivered, you know, single family homes.

00:45:03
We have allowed all these major companies to buy these houses

00:45:07
up, a lot of them coming out of foreclosure and distressed

00:45:10
sales. So, you know, to get a house

00:45:12
nowadays, it's so expensive and that's the struggle that parents

00:45:15
have and financially they find themselves both having to work

00:45:19
and that's where it gets tricky. You guys had the ability to make

00:45:22
that move and, and really a great move.

00:45:25
It sounds like amazing, you know, with the, with the jazz

00:45:28
center and music and everything else.

00:45:29
You had your children surrounded.

00:45:30
And I asked you during the break, I wanted to ask if your,

00:45:32
your children participated in sports.

00:45:34
And if so, maybe you can mention how you did that.

00:45:36
But that's the hard part, right? We want our family to suit, you

00:45:40
know, everybody wants that. They want their own home and

00:45:42
they want the ability to live in a certain way, you know.

00:45:45
But look, even cars, I mean, I remember we had a brand new

00:45:48
Volkswagen Bug and I got to say, I think it was under $1000 car

00:45:52
my parents had bought at one point.

00:45:53
It was only brand new car we ever owned as a child.

00:45:55
And my parents always bought used cars because we weren't

00:45:58
that financially well off. We were, we were probably lower

00:46:01
middle class financially and you know, so it's it's interesting

00:46:05
when I hear somebody that made the commitment that you did.

00:46:08
And I always wonder, you know, you guys had that ability that

00:46:11
you bought the farmhouse, you went in and I don't know, did

00:46:13
you say your husband was you mentioned about the book, but it

00:46:15
was your husband in banking. Was that what he was doing when

00:46:17
you met? Oh.

00:46:17
He's a he is a supplement manufacturer, has a plant in San

00:46:23
Diego County still. But you know, this isn't about

00:46:29
about comparing who's the best homeschooler who has the best

00:46:34
thing. I mean, this is about the fact

00:46:37
that God calls each of us to take a risk of faith into that

00:46:40
sweaty palm might, you know, moment where you're not going to

00:46:43
be in control. You may not have enough, but you

00:46:45
better get your key and core values aligned right quick with

00:46:50
what will matter in eternity and no matter what it costs you here

00:46:55
and then. It's a trust.

00:46:57
It's a step of faith. Every year we we homeschooled, I

00:47:00
had no idea how we were going to do it.

00:47:02
I had no idea how we were going to.

00:47:04
My kids are all five years apart.

00:47:07
I'm not a math teacher. I'm not this, I'm not that.

00:47:09
I have some strengths. There are serious weaknesses.

00:47:13
And how are we going to get through high school biology?

00:47:16
How are we going to meet this? How, how was I going to deal

00:47:18
with the child that wasted so much time?

00:47:20
How was I going to deal with the child, with the, with the sexual

00:47:23
abuse trauma? How was I going to how was I

00:47:25
going to deal with the culture we were in?

00:47:27
And how? Old are your children now?

00:47:28
Can you? Right now, 3430 and 24 and you

00:47:35
know, so I mean, I'm, I'm, I'm not, it wasn't, it wasn't a

00:47:39
little house on the Prairie, you guys.

00:47:41
It was, it was hard. It was every day I got, I got up

00:47:44
and I prayed God, how we're going to do this today, how we

00:47:46
have the time, the energy, the money.

00:47:48
What if I fail? What if, what if I ruin them?

00:47:51
You know, all the things. And did we do sports every,

00:47:54
every stay's a little different. But in New Hampshire, you as a

00:47:58
homeschooling person, you could, you could avail yourself of

00:48:01
certain classes in the school and you know, on a on and off

00:48:05
campus basis and you can do sports and things like that.

00:48:09
Homeschooling people are getting very, very, very, very, very

00:48:12
creative and there are a lot of doors opening for them.

00:48:15
And there are people even who do a thing called unschooling where

00:48:19
they they believe that I've never heard.

00:48:22
Me neither, right? You shouldn't try to curriculize

00:48:26
your kid into anything. You should just let them go and

00:48:29
watch what they're interested in and give them resources to to

00:48:33
discover and, you know, want to know something.

00:48:35
Even unschooling kids are doing a lot better than than those in

00:48:38
the traditional settings. So I read a book called Dummies

00:48:42
guide, Idiots Guide to Homeschooling when I was

00:48:44
thinking about it and I was so overwhelmed because we're not, I

00:48:48
have friends who are military homeschoolers and they terrified

00:48:50
me because like they had, they started with a flag exactly at

00:48:54
7:45 every morning and then they had snack and then we had this

00:48:57
and the other. I'm like, well, what are you

00:48:59
gonna do to I'm an artist, blah, blah, blah, get your butt out of

00:49:02
bed. What do you, you know, I mean

00:49:03
like and wasting time and messing up and, and then this

00:49:07
contradiction of the pain my kids went through and, and

00:49:10
pornography invaded, right. All these things, even in a

00:49:15
homeschool setting, pornography, issues with betrayal, loss,

00:49:20
friendships crisis, it's all there.

00:49:24
But This is why I'm, and I'm not just trying to make a sale here.

00:49:28
I'm trying to help people understand the scope of what

00:49:31
story can do the narrative you live out of why those early

00:49:36
stories you give your children are essential for their mental

00:49:40
well health well-being. I'm teaching kids that there's a

00:49:43
supernatural realm called wonder and it's, it's, it's real.

00:49:46
It's not just an idea that that it, that if they will access,

00:49:50
they will have the resources they need to stand up to the

00:49:53
most difficult and horrifying circumstances we're facing.

00:49:57
But but, but always with humor. I mean, I got characters in my

00:50:02
books that are so hilarious because they're mirroring who we

00:50:06
lived with. I have a character named Miss

00:50:09
Anthropomorphia Slouchy. She's the center of the she's

00:50:13
the commissioner of the Center for Color Control.

00:50:16
The CCC who mandates that color could kill you.

00:50:20
And because of that, you have to wear Gray glasses on your eyes

00:50:23
at all time to see you from wearing seeing a speck of color

00:50:27
because there's a disease and you have to be locked in your

00:50:30
houses until you take our safety drops for your eyes to make you

00:50:35
permanently colorblind. So you can come out.

00:50:38
But but Miss Slouchy AKA Flouchy and the CDC shows up as the CCC

00:50:45
in my books. So I'm not backing away and I'm

00:50:47
not giving away easy little skittle answers.

00:50:51
I'm like, come kids, let's step into reality and let me give you

00:50:55
an example of how this works. You guys watch the Wizard of Oz.

00:50:59
Did you know that that was that was a complete metaphor book

00:51:02
about goldback currency versus silverback currency.

00:51:06
Mike Oz was trying to wake the world up to what was happening

00:51:09
and he was using metaphor. The Grimm's fairy tales were

00:51:13
telling the truth story about the heinous crimes happening to

00:51:16
children and others during that period of time.

00:51:19
And children need to have we and adults, we've got to put down,

00:51:25
turn off our podcasts and read dealing books.

00:51:30
I watch a lot of podcasts, but I have to make myself now be quiet

00:51:35
and read good things. You can do both, but you have to

00:51:39
have and you have to know that when you're handing your kids

00:51:43
books that they are VIP book experiences.

00:51:49
They are the the top level of quality in all these ways,

00:51:53
right? I.

00:51:54
Have a question for you from the chat?

00:51:57
Who is unschooling for older children?

00:52:01
I don't know if I it was never going to be my thing, so I

00:52:04
didn't dig deeply into it. But there are people who give

00:52:07
their kids a relatively free environment and many of them are

00:52:10
in on farms with farm animals and they have them out

00:52:14
exploring. And so they make everything that

00:52:17
the child is interested in a part of a, of a communal family

00:52:20
experience. And they teach that way.

00:52:22
Now there's some wacky homeschoolers.

00:52:24
So some people are like, but you know, and you're only your,

00:52:28
your, your schooling is only going to be as healthy as your

00:52:31
family becomes as you grow, right?

00:52:36
Yeah. You know, it's, it's, it's

00:52:37
interesting cuz you know, we always had encyclopedias back

00:52:40
then. I think we had Encyclopedia

00:52:41
Britannica, but we had two different encyclopedias.

00:52:44
I can't think of the name of the second one.

00:52:46
And even the material in there was just, you know, it wasn't

00:52:50
tilted one way or the other. It's not like nowadays people

00:52:53
think Wikipedia is the encyclopedia cancer.

00:52:56
And of course it's not. It's completely weaponized.

00:52:59
And the write ups about people that are more normally attacked,

00:53:02
of course Elon Musk saw that and that's why he's come out with

00:53:05
Grocopedia. It seems to be a more neutral.

00:53:08
I've looked at a lot of the listings on there and I'm the

00:53:10
neutrality is obvious. They're not trying to pitch it

00:53:13
one way or the other. Will it stay like that?

00:53:15
Who knows, But you know, that's the the tough part because it's

00:53:18
in our books, it's in it's in our newspapers, it's in schools

00:53:23
and they're under this constant. It's like, you know, not only is

00:53:26
it their surveillance state, I saw something awful that I late,

00:53:30
I was up late last night and I see how they're using Bluetooth

00:53:34
now where they can identify through the vibrations.

00:53:38
They're able to use, use it as a surveillance tool.

00:53:41
They can use the Bluetooth in your home, the Bluetooth mesh to

00:53:44
listen to everything you have to say, identify how many

00:53:46
individuals are in the house. And it's very easy to do.

00:53:49
It doesn't take a lot. I'm talking to a hacker right

00:53:52
now that I want to get on the show.

00:53:53
That's a very sophisticated guy. He creates electronics to kind

00:53:57
of anti surveillance for people. But I, you know, it's

00:53:59
frightening that we're we have to worry about it even in our

00:54:02
own home. The privacy is being invaded and

00:54:04
they don't think any big deal of it.

00:54:05
But the privacy of our minds has been invaded for so long and

00:54:09
kids have the struggle. Let me ask you, your kids now

00:54:12
they're they're basically grown up.

00:54:13
I don't did they go to universities or colleges?

00:54:15
Did they take that into they all?

00:54:16
Did different things. A couple of my my kids actually

00:54:18
graduated early from high school.

00:54:21
We're all doing college work as high school age kids and all

00:54:25
solve that problem and unique in different ways.

00:54:27
So they did not have any debt whatsoever.

00:54:31
And our third child went through College Park primarily and then

00:54:37
decided that that was going to be a waste of time.

00:54:40
And now she's an entrepreneur and, you know, has her own

00:54:43
publication. And so we we realized we were

00:54:46
going to have to let go of all of our comfort, comfort,

00:54:49
historic choices about what the what it would all look like in

00:54:52
the end. Because we remember you thought,

00:54:54
you know, when I'm done, my kids can have a college degree and

00:54:57
going to have this kind of job. And we're outside of Boston.

00:55:00
So a lot of the people in our neighborhoods worth.

00:55:03
We have kids that went to MIT and shop for Harvard and they

00:55:06
were in that really, really intense act.

00:55:09
Our kids had friends were in the very academic circles and

00:55:13
completely sold out to the Boston leftist.

00:55:17
But Brainiac Academy and part of the process I think anybody has

00:55:24
to go through to survive and thrive is real humility.

00:55:28
You have to have humility in this time that that you you will

00:55:32
produce and reproduce with your life.

00:55:36
People who have souls, people who still have private lives in

00:55:40
their hearts between them and God and and think for themselves

00:55:44
in the quiet space when the Bluetooth isn't on.

00:55:47
This is why you have to tell yourself.

00:55:49
You have to read and have good stories and you have to know

00:55:53
your place in the story. You are the central character in

00:55:57
your own story. You on the center stage.

00:56:00
God has written a story for you, but everybody has to step into

00:56:03
it and that takes so much courage, right?

00:56:06
The ones that entered more commercial academia, I don't

00:56:09
know what their situation was. For me, I struggled a lot.

00:56:12
I felt like Rodney Dangerfield and back to school because I had

00:56:16
grown up around my godfather was a COPO for the Gambino crime

00:56:20
family. So I grew up a lot around a lot

00:56:22
of mob guys as a child. And of course I'd seen things

00:56:25
from all perspectives. I knew the system we.

00:56:27
Do like homeschooling with crime families.

00:56:29
That'd be a fun like reality show.

00:56:32
Well, it's interesting because I, you know, I grew up one of

00:56:35
the places they had was a money laundering operation was a pet

00:56:37
store. You can teach a lot of math

00:56:39
through money laundering. Well, I have to tell you, I grew

00:56:42
up around, you know, of course he ran a crew.

00:56:44
We had a whole lot of guys around him.

00:56:46
So I was around there a lot as a child and you know, I learned a

00:56:50
lot. He was a great salesman, funny

00:56:52
guy, you know, and I, there was a lot I learned from that.

00:56:54
But the other end of it was when I got to college and of course,

00:56:58
high school, I had, I'd always had the opportunity and I, I,

00:57:01
they were constantly hijacking trucks.

00:57:03
So I was making money by selling those goods to the Catholic

00:57:10
priests to the other parents, especially around Christmas

00:57:13
time. They'd asked me what I had

00:57:15
available as they would buy the stuff out of the trunk of my

00:57:17
car. But the point was when I got to

00:57:21
college, I struggled with these professors because I, I had a

00:57:24
dual, I had a dual major and, and I was, you know, I always

00:57:28
gotten really, really good grades in school.

00:57:30
My parents had always seen to that, of course, with private

00:57:32
schooling and of course my parents also a lot of reading,

00:57:35
you know, and that environment. My dad was, had been kind of a

00:57:39
Broadway star at that time. So a lot of music in our home.

00:57:42
He was also an opera singer. So there was, we grew up in that

00:57:45
environment, but the part that I'd seen, because I'd seen the

00:57:49
real world, you know, operations of different businesses on all

00:57:53
levels because they had legitimate operations and were

00:57:56
in the forefront. Of course, they laundered money

00:57:57
through it and there was lots of other things going on.

00:58:01
When I got to my university, there was often when they would

00:58:04
get into these lectures, I'm sure the professors didn't like

00:58:06
me. It was pretty obvious because I

00:58:08
was challenging. Like what about the, you know

00:58:09
what I felt like I was going to say?

00:58:11
What about the payouts to the unions?

00:58:12
How are you going to run that business if you're not paying

00:58:15
the unions? And what about the bribes to the

00:58:17
when you're building out your, you know, So of course I wasn't

00:58:21
with what they normally dealt with.

00:58:22
I was pretty outspoken. I went to college at in Colorado

00:58:26
because my parents at one point had thought they were going to

00:58:27
move out there. And then my dad got bone cancer

00:58:30
and things got kind of derailed. Even though I was out there, I

00:58:32
never left. And then I spent some time in

00:58:34
Northern California before I moved on to other things.

00:58:38
But my point is that's the struggle.

00:58:40
Did your kids find themselves struggling where they heard then

00:58:42
that they were now obviously real thinkers?

00:58:44
They were thinking for themselves, you know, they

00:58:46
realize there was a whole different version of the world

00:58:48
when they got there, especially if they were in any kind of the

00:58:51
Ivy League schools because talk about some brainwashing.

00:58:55
Did they find themselves and they were calling to go mom.

00:58:57
It's ridiculous. I'm listening to these

00:58:58
professors and I just. Oh, they still do shit is.

00:59:01
Basically what I'm trying to get to we have.

00:59:03
All kinds of conversations. We have all kinds of

00:59:06
conversations all the time about different things.

00:59:09
And they're more red pill than I am.

00:59:12
You know, they're out researching things and bringing

00:59:14
things to my attention that I hadn't thought of.

00:59:17
But they've all had their moments of disillusionment.

00:59:20
They've all had their moments of questioning everything we taught

00:59:23
them. They've all had they, they're,

00:59:25
they all love Jesus. But they've had their moments

00:59:29
when they thought God threw them under the bus.

00:59:31
They've all had that. There's no question.

00:59:33
You don't get through life without dealing with a with deep

00:59:36
betrayal or what you perceive as betrayal either by your parents,

00:59:41
your God, your, your country. It's part of it.

00:59:44
It's part of putting your big big kid pants on is to deal with

00:59:47
the reality of betrayal. And is God big enough?

00:59:51
Is is is he big enough? Is wonder the reality of the

00:59:55
wonder of who he is, the resources he has?

00:59:58
Is that big enough for your issue?

01:00:00
This is where it all lands. This is what I'm teaching into.

01:00:04
This is what I speak into. This is how I reach people.

01:00:08
I even have written a book that is a family guide to trauma

01:00:12
healing during story time or we, we haven't talked about that,

01:00:16
but it's on my website. I take the.

01:00:18
On that note, because. Of that, yeah, let's take.

01:00:21
People in here, let's go into the websites right now.

01:00:23
I don't want to run out of time and not cover this.

01:00:24
So kind of take us through here, you know, an interest that's an

01:00:27
interesting guide you just brought up, but let's talk

01:00:29
about. What you're going to see here is

01:00:32
right now the books one through 3 of the amazing series where we

01:00:36
get all the way through the propaganda and the plague, the

01:00:40
Covic narrative in books one through three.

01:00:43
They are available now in print. Gorgeous illustrations gorgeous

01:00:48
beautiful illustrations and quality archival do the.

01:00:52
Illustrations. Or do you work?

01:00:53
No. But I, I, I work closely on

01:00:55
every part of the, the output of this project.

01:00:59
And I, if you go to my website and you order these books, you

01:01:03
get them at a really great price because they're not consumables.

01:01:06
They're archive quality paper and, and illustrations.

01:01:09
So these are long term, sit on your shelf history books.

01:01:12
People are going to pick up 30 years from now and say, Oh my

01:01:15
gosh, she was telling the truth about what happened right now.

01:01:18
Is this the? 1st edition set?

01:01:20
Do you have first edition set? Yeah, well, these are, Yeah,

01:01:22
it's the first edition, but see if you get the books, if you

01:01:25
order books one through 3, you get audio books for free.

01:01:27
All the voices, all the characters, you can order here.

01:01:30
Some people who love the books and their testimonials.

01:01:33
You can get study guides. They're not super heavy.

01:01:36
So if you want to have conversations with your kids or

01:01:39
you want to reinforce the vocabulary or the science or

01:01:43
those are available. And then in books 4-5 and six

01:01:48
are on their way to the printer right now.

01:01:51
And, and this is where I'm going to deal with the vaccine

01:01:54
injuries and the World Economic Forum and the Great Reset and

01:01:57
all that stuff through this funky family, this incredible

01:02:00
family. They're so hilarious and wacky

01:02:03
and there's a character for every member in your family is

01:02:07
in my family in the in the way the books are written.

01:02:10
And and then I wrote a book called Wounds to Wonder, which

01:02:14
is right now available as APDF, which is how to get your kids

01:02:19
healed of trauma through your family reading time steps to

01:02:23
overcome trauma that you walk through with your children

01:02:26
before bed at night when you sit to read, to get an.

01:02:30
I have catalogued all these various forms of trauma.

01:02:34
And then there's a character and a story for each one.

01:02:37
So again, we're engaging through story.

01:02:39
And this is a method of emotional healing that I've used

01:02:42
with people around the world as I've prayed with them and seen

01:02:47
literally memories, God drain the pain out of their memories

01:02:51
instantly. Like you could be in therapy for

01:02:53
30 years and still walk around with pain in a memory.

01:02:57
And So what I start in these books, I'll just hold them up.

01:03:03
This is the one that exposed the corruption of science, Big Bang

01:03:06
backlash. And this is bombastic baffle

01:03:09
Gab, which is all about propaganda and teaching kids

01:03:12
about mind control and propaganda and what happens,

01:03:15
what's happened to us. This one takes some kind of the

01:03:17
educational issues, the peer peer issues, and I take

01:03:21
characters from my books in the wounds to wonder book and and

01:03:26
you just go through the index and you find the issue your

01:03:29
child is having fear, grief, anxiety, sleeplessness, that

01:03:34
your child is carrying a secret. The child is anger.

01:03:37
Your child is bitter. You, you go to the chapter and

01:03:40
you find a story and then I immediately take you through the

01:03:43
steps of engaging with your child about how to help them

01:03:47
tell you their story, what's going on in their heart, what

01:03:51
have they been carrying and that they haven't known how to talk

01:03:54
to you about it. And then it's seamlessly into

01:03:57
like 4 simple steps that you do with your child in the moment to

01:04:01
get their trauma healed through story and through prayer.

01:04:07
Awesome. That's on the that is on the

01:04:09
website now as APDF, but it will be in print shortly.

01:04:12
But the bottom line is the only place you can get these books

01:04:15
and no one else in the world is doing this.

01:04:17
There's not another author doing this, not even close.

01:04:21
You need, you have to go to my website, the quest for

01:04:24
wonder.com, the quest for wonder.com and that it, that

01:04:29
extra few seconds it takes you to fill that out.

01:04:31
You're going to get incredible pricing on these because these

01:04:35
are at least $25 books because like I said, they're full color

01:04:38
illustrated archival paper, you know, and, and beautiful covers.

01:04:44
And so you get them at a great price plus you get those audio

01:04:46
books for free. So I've got all these packages

01:04:49
and, and again, four books 4-5 and six are coming.

01:04:53
I can't wait. Because what do we do when you

01:04:56
wake up with some people damaged by the medical procedures and

01:05:00
the stabs that they've mandated and and forced people into

01:05:04
doing? Our children are waking up in

01:05:06
that story. They're they're waking up locked

01:05:10
in our houses, things slapped on their faces, told they could

01:05:15
kill grandma, right? This is deep, deep psychological

01:05:19
trauma that we've all lived through.

01:05:22
And then when you I cover that in book 3 by book 4, what do you

01:05:26
do when you wake up and people have been physically damaged and

01:05:30
harmed? When the authorities have told

01:05:32
you, we're just looking out for you, We just want you to be

01:05:36
safe. And how do you talk to your

01:05:39
children about people don't don't know how to talk to their

01:05:42
children about that. People like parents are like,

01:05:46
wow, of course I want my kids to be educated, but I have no idea

01:05:49
how to do it. And I go, I've got you, I've got

01:05:53
you, I've done it for you. I've done the work.

01:05:55
I've got a whole series to unpack these issues, plus study

01:05:59
guides, plus audio books, all the things right?

01:06:02
And so I'm not, I'm not running to Amazon so you guys can self

01:06:07
publish, you know, print off a crappy book.

01:06:10
Like these are high quality things.

01:06:13
They deserve to be in your family library for years and

01:06:16
years and years. Again, people pick up these

01:06:19
books. Like when I speak at conferences

01:06:21
about trauma and I speak about this issue and these issues,

01:06:25
kids will pull on their mom and dad's shirt and say, mom, that

01:06:30
that's like what we went through and that's how you heal guys.

01:06:34
OK, All the stuff, the disappointments with the DOJ and

01:06:37
the this and the that and the wars and the things, the

01:06:39
disappointments, the crushing amount of corruption we're

01:06:42
seeing. How do you get up in the morning

01:06:45
with a healed soul? How do your children wake up in

01:06:48
every day with wholeness in their hearts for for the

01:06:52
challenges? It is through living out of

01:06:54
God's story, and not everybody knows how to help you hear God's

01:06:59
story. This is a gift I've been given.

01:07:02
It's a God story for you and your family, and I've written

01:07:06
them so anybody, anybody anywhere could pick up these

01:07:09
books. And if they want a good story,

01:07:11
they're going to, it's going to deliver.

01:07:13
And the more they read, the deeper it sinks.

01:07:16
Because I'm not writing for a subculture.

01:07:18
I don't want to preach to the choir.

01:07:20
I don't want to write Christian books.

01:07:22
I don't want to write conservative books.

01:07:24
I don't want to write these books.

01:07:26
I want to write. I want to be the Mary Poppins

01:07:30
that comes into the most dysfunctional and painful

01:07:33
situations and brings truth through words and story.

01:07:38
And then on the way out the door of healing and empowering

01:07:42
families gives you a tea party on the ceiling.

01:07:46
Yeah, this is what Mary Poppins did.

01:07:48
And that's what I'm doing for this generation and for the

01:07:51
adults that also love these books as well.

01:07:54
I think it's great. I think it's a lot of

01:07:56
opportunity. We try to give people all sides

01:07:58
of the coin. You know, when you're trying to

01:08:01
unify a country that's surrounded by people intending

01:08:04
to divide us and keep us divisional, That's why I

01:08:07
struggle with, you know, oh, it's the left.

01:08:09
Oh, it's the right, right? It's not.

01:08:11
It's the it's the fallen human condition and how people

01:08:16
against. We have to unify.

01:08:18
And the truth of the matter is the divisions intentional.

01:08:21
They have to keep us separated because of course there's 300 +

01:08:23
1 of us, at least legally, 300 + 1 of us.

01:08:26
I don't know how many are are here illegally, but the point is

01:08:30
we're trying to do something better than everybody else

01:08:32
around the globe. We're trying to lift ourselves

01:08:35
to a higher level. But when you've got such an

01:08:37
organized, fomented, you know, operation that's running and

01:08:42
we're under attack constantly, I look at mainstream media.

01:08:44
I saw some reporter getting into a battle with his supervisors

01:08:48
because he went to some rallies where there, you know, there

01:08:51
were, there were Israelis and and Iranians at the same rally

01:08:56
and they were rejoicing. And that's not what the, the,

01:08:59
the, the, the media channel wanted.

01:09:02
So he was, they said, oh, just get out of there.

01:09:04
It's not what we were looking for.

01:09:06
Cause of course they only want to represent that somehow this,

01:09:08
this, you know, action by Donald Trump was so excessive.

01:09:12
Yet you know they never talked about when Obama you see.

01:09:15
There's a perfect example, Lamps.

01:09:17
They substituted the good story for the manipulative story.

01:09:22
So I'm going to give you and your family the good stories

01:09:25
that's going to empower you. Yeah, and we appreciate that.

01:09:28
Thank you so much for your time today and the audience.

01:09:32
If you like the show, take the short form.

01:09:33
Take the long form, head over to Julie's website, The Quest for

01:09:37
Wonder. If you're looking for the

01:09:38
perfect gift for birthdays, holidays, Christmas, or just

01:09:41
because you want to give them a different version of the world,

01:09:44
here's an opportunity to do it. Get over there.

01:09:46
Check it out, Follow her on social media.

01:09:49
It's what we do here. And of course, if you love the

01:09:51
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01:09:55
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01:09:56
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01:09:58
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01:10:00
I don't care whether you're a liberal or a conservative.

01:10:02
That's your title here on this show.

01:10:05
It's all about being, you know, patriotic Americans, being

01:10:08
people that want a better life for you and your families.

01:10:11
George last words on the way out of the gate, my brother.

01:10:14
It's Monday, right? It's just Monday.

01:10:16
I don't know. Have a great day.

01:10:17
Stay blessed, stay safe out there.

01:10:20
Watch out. There's some crazy people doing

01:10:21
some dumb shit out in the United States because Iran war.

01:10:25
So just be vigilant later, Gators.

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