[00:05] Show Announcer: It's the Kim Monson Show, analyzing the most important stories.
[00:10] Kim Monson (intro clips): An early childhood taxing district?
[00:12] Kim Monson (intro clips): What on earth is that?
[00:14] Show Announcer: The latest in politics and world affairs.
[00:16] Kim Monson (intro clips): I don't think that we should be passing legislation that is so complicated that people kind of throw up their hands and say, oh, I can't understand it.
[00:24] Show Announcer: Today's current opinions and ideas.
[00:25] Kim Monson (intro clips): It is not fair that just because you're a big business that you get a break on this and the little guy doesn't.
[00:31] Show Announcer: Is it freedom or is it force?
[00:33] Show Announcer: Let's have a conversation.
[00:38] Kim Monson: And welcome to the Kim Monson Show.
[00:47] Kim Monson: Take care of your heart, your soul, your mind, and your body.
[00:50] Kim Monson: Thank you to this team that I get to work with.
[00:53] Kim Monson: That's Producer Steve, Zach, Patty, Keith, Jen, Charlie, and all the people here at Crawford Broadcasting.
[00:58] Kim Monson: Happy Wednesday to you, Producer Steve.
[01:00] Producer Steve: And back at you.
[01:01] Producer Steve: You're sounding in fine form today.
[01:09] Kim Monson: But I had a cold that kind of threw me on my ear.
[01:13] Kim Monson: But I'm back in the saddle, and we made it through it, Producer Steve.
[01:17] Producer Steve: Okay.
[01:18] Producer Steve: Carry on.
[01:24] Kim Monson: Sign up for our weekly newsletter there.
[01:26] Kim Monson: You'll get first look at all of our upcoming op-eds, our most recent op-eds and podcasts, our upcoming guests.
[01:34] Kim Monson: And we typically only send out one email a week, so you're not inundated.
[01:41] Kim Monson: I tell you what, there's so much great information out there, but after a while, some of these different organizations, two, three emails a day, It gets to be a little much.
[01:55] Producer Steve: Well, I get emails from two different sources, my home address and then what I use more for the work around here.
[02:04] Producer Steve: But then I also have a Crawford Broadcasting email.
[02:07] Producer Steve: So I'm constantly kind of shifting around between the three.
[02:10] Producer Steve: And you're right.
[02:11] Producer Steve: Trying to keep your inbox under control is a challenge.
[02:16] Kim Monson: and information is a good thing, but in some ways I think just overwhelming people with information is a very bad thing.
[02:24] Kim Monson: That's why we do a lot of work to shift through all of this, to bring the show to you.
[02:31] Kim Monson: We're looking at these issues through this lens of freedom versus force, force versus freedom.
[02:36] Kim Monson: If something's a good idea, you shouldn't have to force people to do it.
[02:39] Kim Monson: Again, remember, it's never compassionate to take other people's rights, their property, their freedom, or their livelihood via force, whether with a weapon, policy, unpredictable and excessive taxation, fear, coercion, or the latest silent thief, government-induced inflation.
[02:56] Producer Steve: And I wonder if we should add another one to that list, because we say the list is growing.
[03:03] Producer Steve: Tulsi Gabbard, what do you want to call her?
[03:07] Producer Steve: I guess a failed presidential.
[03:09] Producer Steve: You know she ran for the presidency the last go around, but she's making the rounds.
[03:14] Producer Steve: Oh my gosh.
[03:15] Producer Steve: Yes, she is and she's becoming.
[03:17] Producer Steve: I mean she's coming down hard on the current administration and the number of members of that administration who just- I mean her most recent thing- is trying to set the tone that this administration just doesn't care about.
[03:31] Producer Steve: The little guy I want to is government indifference.
[03:34] Producer Steve: Can we add that to the list?
[03:37] Kim Monson: Let me make a little note on that government and indifference.
[03:41] Kim Monson: Of course, that's not even government.
[03:43] Kim Monson: Government is not supposed to care about us.
[03:45] Kim Monson: I guess that implies that government cares about us, which you just said government doesn't care about us.
[03:51] Kim Monson: But government is not an entity that can care about people.
[03:59] Kim Monson: And when you get people that are in these offices that do not understand the proper role of government, that they do not care about the rights of everyday individuals, then I guess you do get government indifference, Producer Steve.
[04:13] Producer Steve: I think her case in point was the Secretary of Transportation, Buttigieg, basically saying, well, you know, the issues here with the price of gasoline, the solution is just go get an electric car.
[04:26] Kim Monson: Yes, which, again, we talk about an honest conversation about EVs.
[04:33] Kim Monson: We believe in free markets without the manipulation of government coming in or interest of parties coming in to manipulate these markets.
[04:42] Kim Monson: and there's not an honest conversation regarding electric vehicles.
[04:53] Kim Monson: And, Steve, as I was changing batteries on this unit that I have here, I was thinking about all that they say about how to dispose of just these little teeny tiny batteries and you have to be so careful about them and you want to be environmentally correct.
[05:08] Kim Monson: And that's just teeny tiny little batteries.
[05:10] Kim Monson: What about these 1,000-pound car batteries?
[05:14] Kim Monson: Or we don't ever have a conversation about the wind turbine graveyards that are up in Wyoming.
[05:21] Kim Monson: Those wind turbines are not biodegradable.
[05:24] Kim Monson: And so this implication that that is green, that that is sustainable, that is renewable, maybe.
[05:30] Producer Steve: It's another half-truth.
[05:37] Kim Monson: You just mentioned government indifference.
[05:40] Kim Monson: those that are in government that don't seem to care about the little guy, one has to ask then, why are they so bent on moving people to electric vehicles?
[05:51] Kim Monson: Ultimately, you will then have that one energy source.
[05:56] Kim Monson: And if you have one energy source, then that can be controlled by somebody.
[06:00] Kim Monson: Ah, it goes back to power and control maybe, right, Steve?
[06:03] Producer Steve: Yeah.
[06:04] Producer Steve: Hey, I'm pushing you way off your agenda here, so move on.
[06:10] Kim Monson: Okay, we've got a lot going on today.
[06:13] Kim Monson: James Lyons-Weiler, and he's the founder of IPAC, the Institute for Pure and Applied Knowledge, a regular guest on the show, and new sponsor of the show also, and Dr.
[06:23] Kim Monson: So we'll be talking a lot about COVID.
[06:25] Kim Monson: And I was talking to Jen the other day, and she said we should start a contest.
[06:30] Kim Monson: Remember Where's Waldo, those little books that you try to find the little guy and this picture of all these different things going on?
[06:37] Kim Monson: Well, she said we should start a new one called Where's Fauci?
[06:42] Kim Monson: I think it's probably a very, very good idea.
[06:48] Kim Monson: Today is a, I don't know, I want to say if it's a sad day here in Colorado, but hopefully it's a great day here in Colorado.
[06:55] Kim Monson: There is this terrible, terrible bill that is being, well, I guess it's been, I can't remember now if it's been introduced or where we are exactly on that.
[07:08] Kim Monson: But that is this Reproductive Health Equity Act that we talked about the other day.
[07:13] Kim Monson: And in essence, what it does is it says that here in Colorado, that a person can have an abortion anytime.
[07:24] Kim Monson: And so we'll, I mean, just think about it.
[07:28] Kim Monson: This would be, and we actually already have, it's called partial birth abortions here in Colorado.
[07:32] Kim Monson: But this would, again, put this into law.
[07:35] Kim Monson: I think that the radicals are trying to get out in front of the possibility that Roe v.
[07:42] Kim Monson: But when we talk about people's rights, and I've had conversations with a number of libertarians that say, well, it's a woman's body.
[07:51] Kim Monson: She should be able to do with what she wants, which, gosh, regarding COVID, we said, hey, it's my body.
[07:58] Kim Monson: I should be able to decide what I put in or out of it.
[08:01] Kim Monson: But the difference between COVID and abortion is that with abortion, there's a second heartbeat.
[08:09] Kim Monson: So that means there's a second living being there.
[08:12] Kim Monson: And when we talk about a country with this vision of the Declaration that all men are created equal, with these rights from God of life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness, and if we don't make sure that we are protecting the life of the most vulnerable, then the society ultimately, a society that focuses on death instead of life will ultimately die.
[08:35] Kim Monson: And so I was looking for quotes for today and I went to Gandhi.
[08:40] Kim Monson: And Gandhi was, let's see, he was born in 1869.
[08:46] Kim Monson: He was a Hindu thinker, lawyer and politician.
[08:50] Kim Monson: And again, born in 1869 in Poorbander, India.
[08:53] Kim Monson: He was called against his will by the poet Tagore, Mahatma, which means great soul.
[09:00] Kim Monson: Gandhi led India to independence from the British Raj without using violence.
[09:05] Kim Monson: His name will be eternally associated with the doctrine of peaceful resistance.
[09:13] Kim Monson: He said, the true measure of any society can be found in how it treats its most vulnerable members.
[09:19] Kim Monson: So my friends today, as we take a look at this bill, and let me get that bill number for you, I know there's a lot of people that have information out there on calling our senators and our representatives.
[09:34] Kim Monson: It's House Bill 1279, so I guess it's over here in the House right now.
[09:39] Kim Monson: So you might make that your homework today.
[09:42] Kim Monson: And then our bill for today, again, goes to, is this really the proper role of government?
[09:46] Producer Steve: Yes.
[09:47] Producer Steve: Wait a minute, I wasn't answering the question.
[09:52] Producer Steve: I was acknowledging.
[09:54] Producer Steve: Yes, let's talk about that.
[09:58] Kim Monson: It's concerning the limitations on the ability of an employer to take an adverse action against an employee based on the employee's use of marijuana.
[10:08] Kim Monson: And so this looks again, I mean, the trial attorneys, they love all this kind of stuff.
[10:13] Kim Monson: And again, our poor employers are on the table again, because if they make a decision about an employee, they then can be hauled into court.
[10:25] Kim Monson: And quite frankly, government should not be in between these contracts between employers and employee.
[10:30] Kim Monson: If an employee, and I guess it's primarily regarding potential medical marijuana use on the job, but then also regarding marijuana use outside the job, so that means coming to work high.
[10:50] Kim Monson: And I think employers should be able to hire who they want, employees, certainly if somebody has a medical condition.
[10:56] Kim Monson: I'm sure there are employers out there that they can work that out with.
[10:59] Kim Monson: We also know that people take advantage of situations.
[11:04] Kim Monson: So, again, this House Bill 22-1152 is not any of the government's business.
[11:11] Kim Monson: Once again, I don't know what these legislators down at the Statehouse think about, well, you know what, I do know.
[11:21] Kim Monson: These are people that grew up in this education system that they look at, quote, unquote, capitalism.
[11:26] Kim Monson: And they say that's bad and they think that all business owners have a big money tree in their backyard and that all employers are out to take advantage of their employees.
[11:38] Kim Monson: There may be some employers out there to take advantage of their employees, but you know what, eventually they go out of business because that's bad employment practices.
[11:49] Kim Monson: And so instead of the government coming in and getting involved, This now even has employers who care about their people.
[11:57] Kim Monson: I mean, the fact they can get hauled into court, it makes it super, very, very dysfunctional.
[12:05] Producer Steve: It's not a direct relationship to, like, say, Jack Phillips' situation.
[12:10] Producer Steve: No, it's not.
[12:12] Producer Steve: But it does have some faint resemblances to it.
[12:15] Producer Steve: But your point is well made.
[12:18] Producer Steve: Is this something the government really needs to be involved in?
[12:20] Kim Monson: No, this is not the proper role of government.
[12:23] Kim Monson: This is something that can be taken care of over in a free market, a free society.
[12:30] Kim Monson: And so once again, and you know, Steve, when we were doing our pre-call, you made such an excellent point with all that is going on out there in the world.
[12:38] Kim Monson: This is what our legislators down in Colorado are coming up with.
[12:44] Producer Steve: It's right next to that one we talked about, what, a month or so ago of the plastic utensils thing.
[12:51] Producer Steve: Seriously?
[12:55] Kim Monson: With all that's going on in the world, this is what they're worried about.
[12:59] Kim Monson: And so when we get to election time, it will be time to make some changes, but we've got a great show plan for you today.
[13:04] Kim Monson: Uh, and let's get to it here in just a moment.
[13:09] Kim Monson: So it's wings day at a Hooters restaurants.
[13:12] Kim Monson: You buy 20 wings, you get 10 for free.
[13:14] Kim Monson: That's valid on there to go and to dine in their smoked wings are super good.
[13:19] Kim Monson: Those are half the calories, but they have all kinds of different ways that you can order those wings.
[13:22] Kim Monson: But be sure and check out my website.
[13:24] Kim Monson: I've got all my partners there, my sponsorship partners, and highly recommend each and every one of them.
[13:35] Kim Monson: He writes, I mentioned he's the founder of the Institute for Pure and Applied acknowledge.
[13:39] Kim Monson: But you're going to also find just great medical information at his popular rationalism, which is on Substack, and would highly recommend that you add that.
[13:52] Kim Monson: When we're talking about being inundated with so much information, getting trusted sources is very important, and this is a great place to go.
[14:03] Kim Monson: Jill Vecchio, who read the complete Unaffordable Care Act, will be on.
[14:06] Kim Monson: COVID, since Ukraine's been going on.
[14:08] Kim Monson: We haven't heard quite as much about COVID, but there's things that we need to talk about.
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[14:56] Sponsor Announcer: All of Kim's sponsors are an inclusive partnership with Kim and are not affiliated with or in partnership with KLZ or Crawford Broadcasting.
[15:02] Sponsor Announcer: If you would like to support the work of the Kim Monson Show and grow your business, contact Kim at her website, kimMonson.
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[15:16] Kim Monson: And welcome back to the Kim Monson Show.
[15:21] Kim Monson: That's kimMonson, M-O-N-S-O-N, dot com.
[15:24] Kim Monson: Sign up for our weekly newsletter there.
[15:29] Kim Monson: And thank you to all of you who support us.
[15:31] Kim Monson: We search for truth and clarity by looking at these issues through the lens of freedom versus force, force versus freedom.
[15:39] Kim Monson: On the line with me, two of our favorite guests, that is Dr.
[15:48] Jill Vecchio: I think I feel better than you do, it sounds like.
[15:52] Kim Monson: I'm typically healthy as a horse, but I ended up having a little dance with a cold here the last few days.
[16:03] Kim Monson: It makes me totally appreciate when we're able to function on all cylinders.
[16:08] Kim Monson: James Lyons-Weiler, he is the founder of the Institute for Pure and Applied Knowledge, and he is writing regularly, and you can find it at Popular Rationalism at Substack, and he is a new sponsor of the show.
[16:32] Kim Monson: Jack, I've taken a look at some of the things that you've been writing about on Substack.
[16:40] Kim Monson: Let's see, it was just the other day you wrote, I guess that you also have the video there.
[16:48] Kim Monson: Richard Urso provide powerful testimony on natural immunity and COVID-19 vaccination.
[16:55] Kim Monson: Jack, is why have PBIs, those politicians, bureaucrats, and interested parties, continue to discount natural immunity to COVID?
[17:08] James Lyons-Weiler: They've done it for the same reason that they discounted all of the scientific evidence showing that ivermectin is effective and that hydroxychloroquine and other early interventions.
[17:22] James Lyons-Weiler: They've discounted any changes to protocol once you go into hospital.
[17:30] James Lyons-Weiler: It's not going to help their partners in the market when it comes to fulfilling use quotas for the vaccines.
[17:40] James Lyons-Weiler: So it's a it's a very I want to say dysfunctional is the kindest word I can think of system where, you know, the government is told by the medical community, we need this vaccine.
[17:59] James Lyons-Weiler: The medical community, of course, is sponsored by and is paid for by vaccine companies and pharmaceutical companies now, the allopathic medical community.
[18:10] James Lyons-Weiler: And then we have vaccine production that's underwritten, the development and production that's underwritten using government funds.
[18:18] James Lyons-Weiler: And then the actual government buys vaccines to try to make them free.
[18:23] James Lyons-Weiler: Then they have a use quota that they have to meet to make sure that they're not, you know, throwing vaccines to the wind and they're not being wasted to try to justify their program.
[18:32] James Lyons-Weiler: And so all of the arrows- excuse me- are pointed outward, uh, in the logic flow diagram, and none of the arrows are pointed in.
[18:44] James Lyons-Weiler: There's no internal scrutiny on whether something makes sense or it's rational.
[18:53] James Lyons-Weiler: Ryan Cole, they both provided, among others, really intensive reviews of the evidence that's in the scientific literature that natural immunity is not only superior, but that the vaccine-induced immunity is not even close to the type of immunity that we want to have against a coronavirus.
[19:19] Kim Monson: Jill, what's your thoughts on that?
[19:20] Kim Monson: You and I both have a mutual friend who had COVID significantly, and she's probably got natural antibodies off the charts.
[19:32] Kim Monson: But she works for a big company, and they're saying they're going to terminate her employment if she doesn't get the vaccine, which is just, again, there's no logic to that.
[19:44] Jill Vecchio: I think the way that the COVID vaccine has been handled, and you and I talked about this very early on, and I said this is going to be all about the vaccine.
[19:58] Jill Vecchio: The way this is being handled is so different from other vaccines like the flu vaccine.
[20:04] Jill Vecchio: I mean, granted, you know, they've required kids, if you want to go to school, you have to have these vaccines, and they've enforced them, but not as rigorously.
[20:16] Jill Vecchio: My question is, why are they treating COVID so differently?
[20:21] Jill Vecchio: Why are they so seemingly desperate to force people to have this vaccine, this particular vaccine?
[20:33] Jill Vecchio: I mean, as a physician, I was required to have it, but I had the option of wearing a mask if I didn't want to have the flu vaccine every year.
[20:42] Jill Vecchio: Why aren't they giving any medical, I mean, they're rare medical exemptions because that friend of ours that you just mentioned, she has a definite contraindication, a medical contraindication.
[20:55] Jill Vecchio: She should never have that vaccine because of the complications she had when she had COVID.
[21:00] Jill Vecchio: So why is her company not allowing a medical exemption?
[21:12] Jill Vecchio: Why is everybody so, in my opinion, political?
[21:16] Jill Vecchio: I think this is, and that's just my suspicion, because I don't trust anything that's happening with COVID.
[21:24] Jill Vecchio: None of it makes sense, as we've discussed before.
[21:32] Jill Vecchio: This isn't just about money, in my opinion.
[21:34] Jill Vecchio: It doesn't answer all the questions that I have.
[21:39] Jill Vecchio: And I think, you know, one of the other things that we could talk about today is that Swedish study about, you know, in the laboratory, the mRNA went into liver cells and changed the DNA.
[22:03] Jill Vecchio: Hold on, you know, is this what's really going on?
[22:07] Jill Vecchio: And I think you've got to ask the question.
[22:09] Jill Vecchio: You're naive if you don't at least ask the question.
[22:13] Kim Monson: Well, and remember early, well, throughout this whole thing, asking questions was not something that was okay.
[22:25] Kim Monson: Jill, all of us, why we've been asking questions, why that is so important.
[22:30] Kim Monson: We're going to go to break here in just a few minutes.
[22:32] Kim Monson: We're going to get Lorne Levy on the line as well.
[22:35] Kim Monson: Jack, I have to ask you, it seems that Fauci, with all the stuff going on with Ukraine, and of course now people are looking at how much it costs to fill up their tanks.
[22:46] Kim Monson: I was in a meeting last night, and they went through just the high cost.
[22:50] Kim Monson: I mean, chicken has almost doubled when you go to the grocery store.
[22:54] Kim Monson: So all of a sudden people have other things they're thinking about.
[22:56] Kim Monson: It seems like Fauci has kind of disappeared, but yet he used to be on television all day long, every day.
[23:03] Kim Monson: What's your thoughts about where's Fauci?
[23:08] James Lyons-Weiler: Fauci has very good reason to lay low because the wheels of justice are moving forward.
[23:15] James Lyons-Weiler: You know, we in Oregon, we've just filed a grand jury petition to go after the CDC for the overreporting to go after when we're naming names.
[23:27] James Lyons-Weiler: We're going after individuals who were there before and we're going after individuals who are there now.
[23:31] James Lyons-Weiler: and this is an extremely well-documented grand jury petition filed supported by two senators.
[23:41] James Lyons-Weiler: So the political heat is on him, but also the legal heat is coming, and we're not the only ones that are doing this.
[23:47] James Lyons-Weiler: There are other cases that are coming forward, that are probably going to hold his feet to the fire, and I think we're going to see, before this is all done, people that are actually held accountable for what they've done.
[23:59] James Lyons-Weiler: And, you know, the politicization that Joe was talking about earlier is not can't be denied.
[24:07] James Lyons-Weiler: But the cost of the politicization to society is immense, and they don't want to bear that cost on their shoulders.
[24:13] James Lyons-Weiler: Public health, in my view, as it was formulated in the 19 late 1970s and came into maturation throughout all that time, is a dead dinosaur.
[24:25] James Lyons-Weiler: I want people to look up hashtag Plan B on social media and read about the system that I have in mind to replace CDC, FDA, and the NIH.
[24:36] James Lyons-Weiler: I think, you know, people used to laugh when I would talk about it, but now they realize it's absolutely essential.
[24:41] James Lyons-Weiler: We have to decentralize, and we have to cut ties with the profit motive, so it can't be politicized.
[24:50] James Lyons-Weiler: So when I focus on the cost and when I focus on the science, I focus on that as a tactic and a strategy to actually solve the problem.
[24:55] James Lyons-Weiler: We have to do this from the inside out, and every person in the United States has to contact their congressman and senator, and they have to say, unless you disband the CDC and get on board with a new plan, that's it.
[25:13] Kim Monson: Well, and speaking of that, here in Colorado, Dr.
[25:16] Kim Monson: Jack, I'm looking at the Colorado revised statutes.
[25:20] Kim Monson: It's called Title 25, and it is the, I guess it's the piece of legislation, I guess they've sent it over to the administration, but it is where, here in Colorado, we have given the public health department all of the power to do what they've done.
[25:41] Kim Monson: And as we are looking at these bills of the day, we do that on a daily basis, obviously.
[25:46] Kim Monson: We look at some really dumb stuff that these legislators are doing.
[25:50] Kim Monson: Producer Steve referenced the spoon bill that we have here in Colorado that basically says, if you are ordering takeout and you don't ask for utensils, you don't get them.
[26:02] Kim Monson: And I can't believe that that's where people are focused when we've got over a thousand pages, where we have given these non-elected bureaucrats this power.
[26:12] Kim Monson: And so let's let that just percolate out there, Dr.
[26:15] Kim Monson: Jack, because on the line with us is another great sponsor.
[26:18] Kim Monson: Jack Kleinweiler is a new sponsor of the show.
[26:21] Kim Monson: You can find all of his latest writings at Popular Rationalism on Substack.
[26:28] Kim Monson: But on the line with us is Lorne Levy.
[26:30] Kim Monson: He is a specialist in the mortgage arena.
[26:33] Kim Monson: And, of course, we're seeing inflation.
[26:36] Kim Monson: What's the Fed going to do about that?
[26:39] Kim Monson: And Lauren's our go-to person on that.
[26:41] Kim Monson: Lorne Levy, Polygon Financial Group, welcome to the show.
[26:46] Kim Monson: So what's going on with interest rates with all this other stuff, Ukraine, oil prices, inflation, what's going on?
[26:55] Lorne Levy: You know, it's been interesting because typically when the market struggles, people do what's called a flight to safety, Kim.
[27:02] Lorne Levy: we've talked about that where they go and buy bonds and that helps keep rates low.
[27:07] Lorne Levy: But what we're seeing now is a little bit of nervousness across the board.
[27:10] Lorne Levy: So because of oil prices and because of the general inflation, people are, you know, the market's been down several days, but then the interest rates have also been rising because they're just kind of selling everything because when there's nervousness and, you know, relative panic in the markets, they just kind of, people just go to cash and sell everything.
[27:29] Lorne Levy: So it's been a little bit of a roller coaster, but because of the oil prices and things like that, and the grocery store prices, like you've been talking about, we're seeing a little bit of rates came down initially, but now they're starting to go back up a little bit.
[27:42] Lorne Levy: So it's just kind of a day-by-day process.
[27:45] Lorne Levy: You never quite know what you're going to see.
[27:48] Kim Monson: Can people lock in a rate right now if they want to do a refinance?
[27:54] Lorne Levy: You're still getting what I would call generationally low rates.
[28:00] Lorne Levy: They're just not as low as they were.
[28:01] Lorne Levy: And so I think for a lot of people, if you're– we have people that are listening, I'm sure, that have credit card debt that, God forbid, they're paying 15%, 15%, 17% on.
[28:11] Lorne Levy: If you can consolidate that debt and take advantage of the rise in home values that we've had and get something at like 4% or 4..
[28:20] Lorne Levy: And that will really help your monthly budget, especially when we're dealing with the inflation that we're dealing with.
[28:25] Lorne Levy: So I would say to anybody who's carrying debt that has a higher interest rate: you definitely want to take a look and see if there's an opportunity to take care of that through a home refinance.
[28:35] Kim Monson: And people can just give you a call, and it doesn't cost anything, correct, Lorne?
[28:42] Lorne Levy: And as usual, we pay for the appraisal when callers call from your show.
[28:47] Lorne Levy: so that reduces the closing cost by$ 600 or$ 700 in most cases.
[28:52] Kim Monson: I so appreciate you doing that for all of our listeners, Lorne Levy.
[28:55] Kim Monson: You're such a great partner of both the shows.
[28:59] Lorne Levy: The best way is just give us a call, 303- 880- 8881.
[29:02] Kim Monson: And,myfriends, that's Lorne Levy, expert in the mortgage arena, and his phone number is 303- 880- 8881.
[29:18] Kim Monson: When we come back, we'll continue the conversation with Dr.
[29:21] Kim Monson: And youcan find him at Popular Rationalism on Substack.
[29:27] Lorne Levy (commercial): With the federal government printing money, it looks like inflation is on the horizon.
[29:32] Lorne Levy (commercial): That is why you should lock in a low rate now on your mortgage.
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[30:47] Kim Monson: comsignupfor our weekly newsletter there you can email me at kim at kim Monson.
[30:51] Kim Monson: Com as well,and thank you to all of you who support us.
[30:55] Kim Monson: On the line with me is dr jill vecchio.
[30:57] Kim Monson: Uh, you actually, she and I just did a great podcast last week.
[31:02] Kim Monson: Uh, regarding the great reset, dr jill, whenever you decide that you're going to learn something about an issue you're all in, and I've heard from so many people how much they appreciate that podcast that we did last week, Jill.
[31:17] Jill Vecchio: Yeah, I listened to it and I think it was very good.
[31:22] Jill Vecchio: And we're going to do a follow- up, one thatwill tie in, because a huge part of the Great Reset is resetting the whole world banking system.
[31:30] Jill Vecchio: So there's a one world digital centralized central control banking system.
[31:35] Jill Vecchio: And so that that'll be our next podcast, so that will tie the two of those together, I think, really well for the the basic great reset and then the banking part of it.
[31:49] Jill Vecchio: Um yeah, I yeah, I thought it was, uh, I thought it was pretty powerful and that you know that.
[31:54] Jill Vecchio: So once you understand the great reset kind of thing, then you start thinking totally differently and that's why the comments I made.
[32:03] Jill Vecchio: I hope I hope that didn't come across that way.
[32:05] Jill Vecchio: I'm talking about kind of the average person because Dr.
[32:11] Jill Vecchio: You know, he's always thinking on all the angles, which is wonderful.
[32:14] Jill Vecchio: But once you know about like a bigger picture, you start to ask different questions.
[32:22] Jill Vecchio: That was kind of where I was going with my earlier comments.
[32:28] Kim Monson: Jack, I had mentioned and referenced this before we went to break, and that is Colorado revised statutes and they re- revised- it looksto me like in 2019, and this is where we gave all the power here in Colorado to the public health and environment department, and it's 1100 pages long, because when we're in this COVID thing I wanted, I thought I want to learn: how did how did these health departments get all this power And Dr?
[32:58] Kim Monson: Jack, from a policy standpoint, it seems like those that have been wanting to control our lives through these health departments have been playing chess.
[33:07] Kim Monson: They've been planning for this for a long time.
[33:12] Kim Monson: Well, I've read Klaus Schwab's book.
[33:26] James Lyons-Weiler: But in reality, the globalists are trying any and every way to make inroads to spread communism throughout the world.
[33:38] James Lyons-Weiler: It's their new, friendly, fuzzier, warmer, friendly type of communism that they want everybody to warm up to.
[33:48] James Lyons-Weiler: I had to sit through two and a half hours of a professor who was giving a New York State professor from the United States, who went to Canada and gave a lecture at the University of Toronto to a round of applause on how you either have to answer to Jeff Bezos and his type and become basically a poor serf with no money, or you can join this new, fuzzy, warm type of communism.
[34:15] James Lyons-Weiler: And, you know, I implore people to go watch it because she's dead serious about this and she's using Lego pieces to show the promise and the militant threat of the force needed.
[34:35] James Lyons-Weiler: Now, when you have left-leaning people who care, they go into public health and they care very deeply about humanity.
[34:43] James Lyons-Weiler: And then they adopt for themselves a culture of understanding and misunderstanding of the conservative side of America.
[34:50] James Lyons-Weiler: The conservative side of America becomes a foil, a foil by which any paradigm of totalitarianism could become entrenched.
[35:00] James Lyons-Weiler: and it looks like they're going for broke, but many people in public health are not aware of the political agenda.
[35:11] James Lyons-Weiler: There are entrenched mindsets that are inherently Marxist and communist.
[35:21] James Lyons-Weiler: The idea that you would have to sacrifice something dear and near to yourself, such as your life or your ability to walk for the greater good, It sounds heroic, but it's not heroic if your family has a genetic susceptibility to it and you have a long lineage of many people in your family that have, quote unquote, paid their dues.
[35:42] James Lyons-Weiler: And on the face of it, you know, vaccine failure really is the answer to solving the globalists' attempt to use public health as a way to induce global tyranny.
[36:12] James Lyons-Weiler: Their ability to spin information, their ability to get more ads out, will influence public opinion.
[36:28] James Lyons-Weiler: I advertised a position for a teacher, an instructor in genetics, and it hit 650,000 email inboxes of academics who want to make a little money on the side teaching.
[36:42] James Lyons-Weiler: I'm inverting the university system, which is broken and permanently so, and the entire world is our classroom.
[36:53] James Lyons-Weiler: It It does cost some money per class, and I'm not turning this into a commercial, although I will definitely personally profit from people taking courses with me.
[37:01] James Lyons-Weiler: But, you know, what we're achieving, we're teaching the public how to analyze data so they can go into the public databases and analyze the data for themselves and write their own reports.
[37:14] James Lyons-Weiler: This is the kind of alternative structure that must be built in times of tyranny.
[37:18] James Lyons-Weiler: and we also have to not take it personally because if you give anyone too much power, we're seeing it now.
[37:27] James Lyons-Weiler: Public health was given a huge amount of power because they demanded it for COVID, and they're doing what any set of human being does, with too much power.
[37:35] James Lyons-Weiler: It's just, the power itself is the corrupting influence itself, but totalitarianism and tyranny is what people feel that they have to do when the other side stops listening because of the abuse of power.
[37:57] James Lyons-Weiler: And I don't know how to do that when they're trying to lock up people who are protesting, you know, vagaries in the election counts.
[38:07] James Lyons-Weiler: I don't know how to do that when they're actually, you know, imprisoning dissidents and they're silencing people's right to the First Amendment.
[38:18] James Lyons-Weiler: Nevertheless, I do know how to educate as much of the public as I possibly can, and that's what we're doing.
[38:25] Kim Monson: Well, and that's one of the reasons why we do this show.
[38:27] Kim Monson: Jill, what's your comments on what Dr.
[38:35] Jill Vecchio: And it's as old as humanity itself, just human nature.
[38:41] Jill Vecchio: There are different personalities, and some people just seek power and money, and they want to control other people.
[38:49] Jill Vecchio: Other people just want to be left alone, and there are, unfortunately, a large number of people, in my opinion, that want somebody to tell them what to do.
[38:59] Jill Vecchio: They don't want to take responsibility for their lives, And it's hard for us to imagine, but that is absolutely the case for a great many people.
[39:08] Jill Vecchio: And unfortunately, you know, that's up to two-thirds of the folks are not the ones that just want to live their lives and be left alone and obey the laws and be good citizens.
[39:20] Jill Vecchio: It's like they either want power or they want somebody to control them.
[39:25] Jill Vecchio: In my opinion, with the elitists and the globalists and the socialist communists, their entire agenda is so the antithesis of humans being able to live their lives.
[39:43] Jill Vecchio: that, and they believe in it so firmly that there's a large swath of people I believe that you just cannot reason with.
[39:56] Jill Vecchio: The mindsets, the way we think, what we believe, they are so diametrically opposed that there There are people that you just won't be able to reach or convince of the value of freedom.
[40:16] Kim Monson: But I don't think that that's anything new.
[40:20] Kim Monson: And I think that's why the Founding Fathers, because they studied history, and they realized if you live in a place with this radical vision that all men are created equal with rights from God of life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness, that changes everything.
[40:37] Kim Monson: And so that's why they understood all this.
[40:41] Kim Monson: That's why they put in place this Constitution to limit government, because Dr.
[40:45] Kim Monson: Jack, they realized that humans, given power, like to take more power.
[40:49] Kim Monson: Again, I'm talking about Colorado Revised Statutes 2019, Title 25, 1,100 pages giving power to the CDPHE.
[41:01] Kim Monson: And so given that, that's why they put these guardrails in.
[41:05] Kim Monson: And I guess one of the blessings, Dr.
[41:08] Kim Monson: Jack, of COVID is all of this quest for power, this, as you mentioned, communism, soft communism or whatever it is, it's been percolating underneath the surface for a long time.
[41:21] Kim Monson: And I think one of the real positives of COVID is now.
[41:23] Kim Monson: The veil is off on what is going on.
[41:26] Kim Monson: And I think a lot of people are waking up.
[41:28] Kim Monson: And gosh, I used to think it was above my pay grade to read legislation or to read all of these different laws, and it's not.
[41:37] Kim Monson: And I think that regular people have been told that it was above their pay grade.
[41:42] Kim Monson: But we realize everyday people are smart.
[41:45] Kim Monson: And what you're doing is empowering them through these courses at IPAC, also through your writings at Popular Rationalism, to understand these things and to make their own decisions.
[41:55] Kim Monson: I find there's this great awakening that's occurring, Dr.
[42:02] James Lyons-Weiler: You know, I want to say that I'm emboldened by the actions of many, many, many, many others.
[42:10] James Lyons-Weiler: So if you go to my sub stack on popular rationalism, you'll find that there are other people that I subscribe to, and I only subscribe to the very best, the people that I find to be reliable and interesting and that write important articles.
[42:25] James Lyons-Weiler: Remember, of course, whenever I talk about the founding fathers, I'm inclined to say that they only got as far as they did because they went home and asked their wives for advice.
[42:33] James Lyons-Weiler: But it's absolutely not just to be inclusive, but to be historically accurate.
[42:41] James Lyons-Weiler: The concept of fairness, the concept of freedom of the press, a free and independent press.
[42:48] James Lyons-Weiler: Well, we have this emergence of this alternative media or this new press, and the legacy media is losing their market share every day that goes by.
[43:01] James Lyons-Weiler: The phenomenon that's happening with Joe Rogan, with other podcasters where, you know, they'll take two and three hours.
[43:07] James Lyons-Weiler: I've had a three-hour conversation with Pierre Corey and Bruce Patterson, other doctors, on my podcast on Breaking Science.
[43:15] James Lyons-Weiler: This alternative view of, wait a minute, we're going to take our time, we're going to analyze things to death, and we're going to explain and understand what we don't understand together, happens in a dialogue in a beautiful way that you simply can't get by commercially driven television, infotainment, entertainment, media, slash news.
[43:42] James Lyons-Weiler: You know, the White House actually paid all the major media outlets, including the conservative ones, to advertise the vaccine.
[43:49] James Lyons-Weiler: If the White House is paying for the advertisement of a pharmaceutical product, I think we know fairly well where we stand.
[43:55] James Lyons-Weiler: And I think one of the interesting things I would like to point out is that I predicted all of this in 2015 in an article, The Farmables Are Loose, and it's the end of democracy in America.
[44:06] James Lyons-Weiler: And I can't tell you how many people read that article and write to me and say, how did you know?
[44:19] James Lyons-Weiler: When you think about the econometrics, you think about economics that are going on.
[44:25] James Lyons-Weiler: We're bringing on economists at IPAC-EDU to teach people analytic economics.
[44:37] James Lyons-Weiler: Mark McDonald, who's going to come in and teach the course, How Not to Be Fooled.
[44:40] James Lyons-Weiler: That's going to be a 16-week course on how to disengage from propaganda.
[44:46] James Lyons-Weiler: Of course, you know, we're going all out here and, you know, programs and shows like yours and Dr.
[44:56] James Lyons-Weiler: And, you know, it's not just a self-affirming confirmation bias that we have here.
[45:03] James Lyons-Weiler: There is something deeply, deeply out of whack with how the United States has been operating for a long time.
[45:26] James Lyons-Weiler: and I do believe that this is a new model for public education, and there's another person out there that's doing this too, and his name is Bill Gates.
[45:40] James Lyons-Weiler: He's been collecting slides from innocent, not unknowing, ignorant educators who give their slides to Bill Gates through LinkedIn through a product called SlideShare.
[45:53] James Lyons-Weiler: They're not public domain, but he owns the rights to use them or not use them, So, you know, we're in a race with the oligarchs to actually establish the new normal for public education.
[46:11] James Lyons-Weiler: The Common Core, the public education system has let, what, three, four generations down terribly now.
[46:18] James Lyons-Weiler: All that, the shifting of the math so that the parents can't talk to the kids about the math, frustrated generation after generation.
[46:29] James Lyons-Weiler: They get indoctrinated in the school that the parents don't know anything.
[46:33] James Lyons-Weiler: And you get rewarded with a good grade if you do it the way the teacher says.
[47:09] Kim Monson: Before we do that, though, a couple of my great sponsors.
[47:12] Kim Monson: One of those is Castlegate Knife and Tool.
[47:13] Kim Monson: They're a family-owned business located right here in Sedalia, Colorado.
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[47:44] Kim Monson: And, of course, government's involved in Medicare, which means it's complicated and you can't understand it.
[47:49] Kim Monson: That's why you need Kirsch Insurance Group to help you navigate through all of this.
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[48:50] Producer Steve: You'd like to get in touch with one of Kim Monson's sponsors, but you can't recall their phone number.
[48:57] Producer Steve: Find a full list of advertising partners on Kim's website, kimmonson.
[48:58] Producer Steve: com.
[48:59] Producer Steve: That's Kim, M-O-N-S-O-N.
[49:02] Producer Steve: com.
[49:05] Kim Monson: And welcome back to the Kim Monson Show.
[49:11] Kim Monson: Sign up for our weekly newsletter there.
[49:12] Kim Monson: You can email me at Kim at KimMonson.
[49:16] Kim Monson: Needed to mention three things before we get into this.
[49:18] Kim Monson: First of all, on March 22nd, I will be moderating the senatorial forum for the Colorado Hispanic Republicans.
[49:26] Kim Monson: You can get more information at their website, Colorado Hispanic Republicans.
[49:31] Kim Monson: Helen Raleigh and I will be conducting our next media training workshop on March 26th.
[49:37] Kim Monson: You can sign up for that at my website.
[49:41] Kim Monson: And then we are, next Monday, we're becoming a two-hour show, 6 to 8 a.
[49:47] Kim Monson: So I wanted to make sure that you all know about that.
[49:51] Kim Monson: We always do with these two fabulous guests.
[49:53] Kim Monson: Jill Vecchio, I want to touch on this quickly.
[49:55] Kim Monson: There was a recent report that said the Pfizer vaccination
[50:00] Kim Monson: maybe converting to DNA in the liver.
[50:08] Jill Vecchio: I've just done some research on it in the last couple days.
[50:17] Jill Vecchio: I've seen some experts evaluating, reviewing the article, and just explaining how it works.
[50:22] Jill Vecchio: So the RNA, the mRNA, which is synthetic RNA, never been put in a vaccine before, injected uh...
[50:31] Jill Vecchio: The cdc told us that it stayed in the arm and that it wasn't going to go to any other organs.
[50:36] Jill Vecchio: We quickly found out that it goes several, many different organs and uh...
[50:42] Jill Vecchio: So in sweden they did an experiment in a lab.
[50:45] Jill Vecchio: This was not in people, this was not in people's livers.
[50:49] Jill Vecchio: They used liver cells in an auger or something, uh...
[50:59] Jill Vecchio: And the RNA entered the liver cells, went into the nucleus, and started changing the DNA.
[51:08] Jill Vecchio: And I sent you a link to a really easy-to-understand video that's only like eight or nine minutes long.
[51:15] Jill Vecchio: So if you want to post that, you can, and people can watch that.
[51:20] Jill Vecchio: Two of the things that happened in this laboratory experiment in the liver cells was that two tumor suppressor genes, and a tumor suppressor gene is a gene that helps fight cancer.
[51:37] Jill Vecchio: So if there's a cancer cell running around, these genes will help your body to find those cancer cells and kill them.
[51:44] Jill Vecchio: There are always cancer cells floating around our bodies, all different kinds of cancer, and you have these suppressor genes that can then go after it and kill the tumor cells before they develop a real cancer that will affect your body.
[52:00] Jill Vecchio: BRCA, BRCA1, was one of the genes, one of the suppressor genes that was being altered.
[52:14] Jill Vecchio: and rendered ineffective by the mRNA vaccine.
[52:21] Jill Vecchio: For a lot of ladies, they're going to understand that the BRCA gene is the breast cancer gene.
[52:28] Jill Vecchio: So when that gene is rendered ineffective by a mutation, and we've been doing genetic testing for women for years for the BRCA gene, they have a much higher incidence of breast cancer, 60%to 80% likelihoodof developing breast cancer depending on which of the gene mutations they have.
[52:52] Jill Vecchio: I found that really fascinating and frightening: that a tumor suppressor gene was being affected and that it was that one.
[53:02] Jill Vecchio: It raised the question, so we have a laboratory virus and a brand new vaccine.
[53:11] Jill Vecchio: And has there ever been another vaccine that may have done something similar with BRCA?
[53:19] Jill Vecchio: Because breast cancer and BRCA mutation- related breastcancer has gone up exponentially since I was in medical school.
[53:30] Jill Vecchio: And it's kind of, you know, you start to really wonder about some things.
[53:33] Jill Vecchio: You know, it's like I said, I question everything.
[53:36] Jill Vecchio: But it was amazing that it suppressed the tumor cells, the tumor suppressor genes, which meant that people would be much more likely to get cancers over time.
[53:47] Kim Monson: So we're not going to get to the last question that I had on, that I'd thrown out to you guys regarding this piece.
[53:53] Kim Monson: Again, people can find it at Substack regarding the Pfizer vaccine in our kids.
[53:58] Kim Monson: Jack, we have just a couple of minutes left.
[54:01] Kim Monson: And what's your kind of your final thought on this DNA liver thing that Jill was talking about?
[54:07] James Lyons-Weiler: Well, it confirms two other studies that were conducted that showed that it's, you know, in the presence of the reverse transcriptase, mRNA from the vaccine can make it into the human genome.
[54:25] James Lyons-Weiler: Having worked in cancer research or as a cancer researcher for this number of years that I did, I can tell you that BRCA1 or BRCA1 is associated with many other types of cancer other than breast as well.
[54:43] James Lyons-Weiler: So, you know, there's associations across like Hodgkin lymphoma, which we see these coming out, leukemia.
[54:58] James Lyons-Weiler: I can send you the particular review that I'm looking at those data for.
[55:07] James Lyons-Weiler: I should point out that these cells that they studied were hepatocellular carcinoma cells, and they used the hepatocellular carcinoma cells specifically because they were fast reproducing.
[55:19] James Lyons-Weiler: A fast dividing cell is more likely to uptake the mRNA from the vaccine.
[55:24] James Lyons-Weiler: And this causes grave concern for any part of our body that has fast dividing cells, including our intestines, but also different people like children who are growing fast and in utero with the placenta.
[55:42] James Lyons-Weiler: mentioned said that the placenta itself could be compromised due to this effect of the incorporation.
[55:51] James Lyons-Weiler: Anytime you have anything that causes mutations in the genome, it should be classified as mutagenic.
[55:56] James Lyons-Weiler: And then it has to be studied by law to determine if it's carcinogenic.
[56:07] Kim Monson: James Lyons- Weiler, thankyou so much for joining us.
[56:10] Kim Monson: And thank you for becoming a new sponsor.
[56:13] Kim Monson: You can find his writings at Popular Rationalism on Substack.
[56:16] Kim Monson: We will get you scheduled for next month.
[56:26] Kim Monson: And our quote for today is going to blow your socks off.
[56:30] Kim Monson: He said, vaccination is a barbarous practice and one of the most fatal of all the delusions current in our time.
[56:38] Kim Monson: Conscientious objectors to vaccination should stand alone, if need be, against the whole world in defense of their conviction.
[56:46] Kim Monson: So, my friends today, be grateful, read great books, think good thoughts, listen to beautiful music, communicate and listen well, live honestly and authentically, strive for high ideals, and like Superman, stand for truth, justice, and the American way.
[57:08] Kim Monson: God bless you and God bless America.