MikeSlater
Politics • Spirituality/Belief • Culture
Tucker Fired from FoxNews!
April 24, 2023

Today's episode of Politics by Faith is about FoxNews firing Tucker Carlson. There is a relevant story for us here about betrayal, courage and contentment.

We're now including the transcript below, (hopefully, you find that of value) in addition to the podcast here on Locals before it's available on iTunes etc.


Welcome to Politics by Faith, I'm Mike Slater. Thanks for being here. Tucker Carlson no longer at Fox News. Dan Bongino was also fired or let go or left Fox News. Also as I'm recording this podcast here, Don Lemon was fired from CNN. What is going on? We're gonna focus mostly on Tucker today. One of the difficult parts of this podcast is what story to pick. I was going to do it on Joe Biden announcing that he's gonna run for president again, which is just bonkers to me, and a new NBC poll said 70% of Americans do not want Biden to run for a second term.

0:00:43
70% of Americans are like, don't do it, but he's gonna do it anyway. But we'll save that for another day. I'd rather talk about Tucker Carlson. Again, Don Lemon wrote this. He says, I was informed this morning by my agent that I've been terminated by CNN. I'm stunned. After 17 years at CNN, I would have thought that someone in management would have had the decency to tell me directly.

0:01:08
At no time was I ever given any indication that I would not be able to continue to do the work I've loved at the network. And he was given like a week off for some misogynistic things he said. They're like, everyone knew you were on the fritz, Don. It's clear that there are some larger issues at play. With that said, I want to thank my colleagues and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. So that's Don Lemon. I don't care about Don Lemon. And Bongino, it seems like they left on fine enough terms. I don't know.

0:01:35
But the Tucker is what I'm most fascinated by. He is the number one cable news show. Number one show. Fired. That is something. I don't know, maybe it's because I'm in the industry. I'm a guppy compared to Tucker. So maybe I'm extra fascinated by this or it's because I'm a big fan of Tucker. I was not a fan a couple years ago and then maybe I was just jealous, I don't know.

0:02:02
And then I became a bigger and bigger fan over time. And now I think his opening monologues are wonderful, terrific. And I'm fascinated by him as a person, which we'll get to in a little bit as well. But I still think this is relevant for all of us because we all watch cable news, or we all watch the news. But also, any of us can be fired at any moment. There's a story there, too, and that causes anxiety.

0:02:30
The idea that you get laid off tomorrow, and be like, oh, last day was on Friday. That causes anxiety, and that's what we are here to try and alleviate, that anxiety. So let's get to it. Let's talk about Tucker Carlson. What's going on? So a couple things are interesting about Tucker Carlson's childhood. First, his dad was an orphan, grew up in the home for little wanderers, that's a real name, and then went on to become a successful business man.

0:02:59
His mom and dad divorced when he was nine years old and his mom moved to France. No, excuse me, when he was six, Tucker was six, and his mom moved to France and that was it, they never talked to each other. Never talked to each other ever since then and she died relatively recently and he got a phone call about how she died and part of him was worried that maybe he'd like have a breakdown because of his like non-existent relationship with his mom but he didn't at all and he said over decades I came to terms, came to peace with the fact that I don't know this woman and she's not my mother. His dad remarried and that woman it became her mother And he never talked to his mom ever again, but he learned a really important lesson from from that abandonment I think Turned it into something as good as one could turn it into here He is talking to Megyn Kelly and so I didn't want that I wanted a totally happy family where everyone's close and everyone's named after someone else and like everyone gets together all the time.

0:04:02
And I've had that. And it's the greatest thing in my life. And I really do not take that for granted. And the second thing is criticism from people who hate me doesn't really mean anything to me, I think. It really doesn't. I care what the people I love think. I care deeply. If my wife is upset with me, I can't even function because I care so much about what she thinks.

0:04:21
And my children, same thing. My close friends, I have a bunch of lifelong friends, people I work with, I feel that way about them, too But like some random, you know, the ADL doesn't like me or something. Mm-hmm Partisan who runs it like I don't care. Why would I care? I'm not giving those people emotional control over me Well, I've been through that I live through that as a child. I'm not doing that again One thing that I admire of Tucker's he grew up upper-class He'll tell you that and that's my point, he'll be the first to tell you that and he doesn't pretend otherwise. You get a lot of people in politics who grew up wealthy and they pretend to be the coal miner.

0:04:58
Joe Biden literally talks about how he or his parents were like coal miners. They weren't, they literally were not coal miners. But they do this game, right? And Tucker's like, no, I grew up really wealthy and I therefore know these people. I've interacted with these people, I've lived next to these people, I've spent time with these people, I know these people and they're not good people and they're not people who we should be in charge, let in charge of our country.

0:05:26
I admire that perspective and that honesty from him. He's been all over cable news, CNN, had a show on MSNBC, the whole thing. I heard an interview with him a while back and the person said, oh, here we've got Tucker Carlson, number one show on cable news, and Tucker interrupted and said, yeah, well listen, I've also hosted the lowest rated show on cable news. Right now I have the highest rated show. I've also hosted the lowest rated show.

0:05:52
And he talked about, just, you know, sometimes you're up and sometimes you're down and it's just the timing of it all and who knows. Isn't that wild? I mean, Tucker Carlson used to host the Fox and Friends weekend. Like, I don't know, like, and then he gets the 8 o'clock show, and he's the number one by far. Very interesting.

0:06:13
But he talked about how you can't be prideful when you're up, or depressed when you're down. You just keep going. Now, even when he's up, I mean, his show, about three million people would watch his show every night, about three million. Number one on cable news by far. A lot of cable news shows are two or one million. That's nothing compared to broadcast news. You know the number one broadcast news?

0:06:40
I don't even know what time it is, six o'clock? Is it six o'clock news, seven o'clock news? ABC News, David Muir, 7.5 million people. So more than twice as many people who watch Tucker Carlson watch ABC World News tonight I haven't seen a broadcast news In like 20 years. I don't know what time they're on I've never even seen a clip of one like clips from the broadcast news don't even make it Out of the broadcast news. I don't even on Twitter or Facebook. I don't even see like oh, did you see a segment the other day I say nothing I didn't even know they existed. And over two times as many people watch ABC World News Tonight as Tucker Carlson.

0:07:23
So, again, that speaks to Tucker's like, yeah, I'm number one, but I could get fired any day now. And he did. There's plenty of verses in the Bible about contentment. But I really like this one from Philippians 4.11. I've learned in whatever situation I am to be content. I know how to be brought low and I know how to abound. I like that from Paul. Paul, he didn't just speak about being down, he spoke of abundance.

0:07:47
He knows contentment in times of abundance. Paul knew how to properly abound. When Tucker was number one, it seems like it didn't get to his head because he knew what it was like to be at the bottom and in the middle and then back at the bottom and then unemployed and then start your own thing, the Daily Caller, and then leave that and then, oh, look, you're number one. And it's like, oh, I could get fired.

0:08:11
And he did, and he seemed always okay with that. Another thing I valued about Tucker is his connection to nature. He lived in Maine. He did the show from Maine. And I think that changes a person. I think, I've always said I think Fox should be headquartered in Tennessee or Oklahoma. It's got to get out of New York City. It changes you.

0:08:34
New York City changes you. It changes you when you live there, the producers who live there. It can't not affect the content that comes out of the camera to the TV. And Tucker was in Maine. I think that gave him a disconnect from it all. He also didn't have any social media or anything. So he could just do his own thing. And I valued that. And he seemed content. And it took time to go hunting and spend time outside with his dogs and all that.

0:09:05
I think that affected, I know that affected his show. It had to have. So that's a little about, anyway, he got fired. So I don't know what he's going to do now. But what's really going on here? Before we get to the broader lesson for all of us, I think there's a bit of a cautionary tale. So why was he fired? We don't know. If I had to guess, it's probably because his boss had to pay $787 million in a settlement with Dominion Voting Machines.

0:09:30
The billion-dollar settlement probably had something to do with it. So the claim from Dominion Voting Machines is that Fox News defamed the company by saying the election was stolen when the Fox News hosts knew that it wasn't really stolen. And through court order, they were able to get text messages that they say proved that the Fox hosts knew that the election wasn't stolen, but they would keep going on the air and saying it was. And we have all these text messages from Tucker. In one text to a producer, he said, there wasn't enough fraud to change the outcome. And he said, Sidney Powell was lying. This is a private text.

0:10:07
He said he was done with Trump and his unfounded claims of a rigged election. This is just a little bit before, it was two days before January 6th. We're very, very close to being able to ignore Trump most nights. I truly can't wait. At another point he said, I hate him passionately. I can't handle much more of this. He says we're all pretending we've got a lot to show for it, the Trump presidency, because admitting what a disaster it's been is too tough to digest. But come on, there really isn't, there isn't really an upside to Trump. So Tucker then said in a radio interview about this, he says, I think this is in the text, and those were all grabbed completely illegitimately, in my opinion, in this court case, which I guess I'm not allowed to talk about, but I'm enraged that my private texts were pulled. So there's context to all of these. He said one of the context when I was speaking badly about Trump was that some idiot called him an idiot on the Trump team sent Tucker names of dead people who voted in Georgia to prove the voter fraud and turned out not to be true. Tucker says we went and I repeated them on air and it turns out some of them were alive so I felt humiliated. So we felt burned by Trump's team from that.

0:11:15
He says, there was no doubt that, this is in the text, there's no doubt that there was fraud in the election, but at this point Trump and Lin and Powell have so discredited their own case, discredited their own case, and the rest of us to some extent, that it's infuriating, absolutely enrages me. On November 9th, Carlson was talking about Dominion and said, the software, crap, swear word, is absurd. But then on TV that night, he said, we don't know anything about the software that many say was rigged. We don't know. We ought to find out.

0:11:46
So you see the claim from Dominion. Like behind the scenes Tucker was saying, it was nonsense, but on air, he's like, oh. There's other text. Laura Ingram wrote to Tucker and Hannity, we are officially working for an organization that hates us. That's my favorite one, I like that too. Anyway, he was probably fired because Rupert Murdoch couldn't have the guy on air who was a part of costing him a billion dollars.

0:12:14
Even if he was the number one show. I've actually, I've been surprised that Tucker was ever allowed to stay on the air. The fact that he was on at all, and the fact that he was on, I guess made me think that they would never fire him. Like if they haven't fired him already, just because of the provocative things that he says that I've never heard anyone else say on TV. I just thought he was bulletproof, but alas.

0:12:40
Also in the text messages, Tucker swears a lot, and he says the C word a lot. Having a foul mouth is in the Bible as well. Ephesians 5.4, let there be no filthiness or foolish talk, nor crude joking. Ephesians 4.29, let no corrupting talk come out of your mouths, but only such as is good for building up, as fits the occasion, that it may give grace to those who hear. Colossians 3.8, but now you must put them all away, anger, wrath, malice, slander, and obscene talk from your mouth. Last one, 2 Timothy 2.16, I like this line, avoid worldly empty chatter.

0:13:18
Another version has, avoid irreverent babble. For it will lead people into more and more ungodliness. The context here is to avoid false preachers. But I like the idea that the words you say, other people hear. And the words you say can lead people away from what is good, beautiful, and true. Other people overhear you, and you are responsible for that, for what you say. Not necessarily how people interpret it, that's up to them, but the things you say.

0:13:44
And that's why David, Psalm 141, three says, "'Set a guard, O Lord, over my mouth. "'Keep watch over the door of my lips.'" Especially when people are gunning for you. When people are looking for ways to take you out, and obviously talk at the number one show, he had a huge, like all of media matters, every day was constantly trying to destroy him, right? So when people are looking to do that, you can't give them more reasons.

0:14:16
You gotta be above reproach. So anyway, that's probably why he was fired was the Dominion stuff and I bet some of the foul language was like a little cherry on top of they could say, oh he was creating a toxic work environment, something like that they could probably get away with. Alright, let's lament here for a little bit. to tell the truth in, actually, let's take a break here. Let me tell you about Public Square. This is perfect timing.

0:14:50
Public Square is an app. You can download it for free. And it connects you with people who run businesses that share your values. Did you see the other day the VP at Bud Light who was responsible for the whole Dylan Mulvaney thing is on a leave of absence, should probably get fired, which is great. It's like the first conservative boycott I've actually seen make any real inroads and last for longer than a day.

0:15:26
So that's awesome. Go well, go broke, man, that doesn't happen as much as I'd like it to. So we need an alternate parallel marketplace where we do business with people who share our values. And that's what Public Square does, it connects you with those people, locally and then also nationwide. And I know Michael, the founder of Public Square, and it's a company of people who tell the truth. That's what I just thought of them right here.

0:15:53
I lamented how difficult it is to tell the truth, and Michael is a man who tells the truth. And he's created this great app and this great company that's thriving, they're going public, it's awesome. So jump in early on it. PublicSQ.com. You can read the five values that every business owner has to agree with. And you can download the app for free. Public Square.

0:16:10
And they're the first sponsor of this podcast. I'll never forget that. And I've been a user of theirs. I was at their launch party a couple years ago. They're great. Public Square, free download. So I lament how difficult it can be to tell the truth. In the media world, there is a strong pressure for a host to say what they think the audience wants to hear.

0:16:31
There's a huge financial incentive. It makes sense, right? If I don't say what my audience wants to hear in an entertaining way, then no one will listen. And then we won't sell advertisements and then I lose my job and I can't pay my mortgage. Like, right now, you're like, well Slater, you just did an advertisement. Yeah, I'm not, I think I don't even know how much, I've never even been paid, I haven't even been paid a penny for this podcast.

0:16:56
I don't even know what that, what I'm getting paid for that podcast, for that advertisement, I literally don't even know. Maybe, maybe, maybe like a thousand bucks over the year. I really don't even know. But if, the bigger you get, the greater that incentive is to make sure you don't lose your audience. Make sure you don't say something that will destroy the business.

0:17:20
And then if you are running a big company with employees, now you got those families. Like what you say, you can lose everything. And then all these other families are going to be hurt. Oh, the pressure. I wish people wanted to hear the truth. That's it, right? There's always going to be that pressure to say what your audience, you think they want to say. Here, I want an audience that just wants to hear the truth.

0:17:54
I wish that's what people wanted to hear, even if they disagreed with it. We don't have that, we just want to hear, people agree with us. That's what I agree. That's just what we gravitate to. So that's that, I also lament being fired. I was talking to someone in this industry that I'm in, and he said the company that he works for has a history of just randomly firing people, for just no rhyme or reason.

0:18:26
It could be the number one host. It could be the number one host on the number one station in the market and they're gone. And for this company, it's just money, dollars, bottom line and no sense behind it, no justice behind any of it. And that stings. But I was talking to him about it and he said, no, it's good in a way because it's made me learn that every day is gravy, every day is a gift.

0:18:52
Every day I wake up expecting to be fired and I expect every show to be my last. And I actually think that's a really healthy way to go through life because you don't know if today is literally your last day on earth. This weekend, I happened to listen to a speech that Tucker Carlson gave at the Heritage Foundation's 50th anniversary dinner. And I guess, this must have been like a Friday night or Saturday night I guess the dinner and I don't know if he knew he was getting fired on Monday when he gave this talk or not that'd be interesting if he kind of knew in the back of his head but didn't say anything I don't know but he would this is the last question he was asked when everyone wakes up tomorrow whether they're staying here or they're able to go home what should be top of mind for them to do in their local community.

0:19:38
Oh well the very first thing you should do every single day is tell all the people you love that you love them for two reasons. Because you do in affirming things out loud makes them real. Words are the most important and most powerful thing that we have. And of course I have an interest in saying that I sold Chrysler's I'd be like cars are the most important thing. But words are. In the beginning was the word. And so articulate it. And that is also simultaneously an acknowledgement of a truth that we don't face, which is we don't know what's going to happen today.

0:20:17
And we could die. That's the one thing that unites every person, is the certainty of death. And reminding yourself of that every single day will bring you, paradoxically, joy. I love you. That's the most important thing. I think that's a really healthy posture. This could be my last. And then when it is taken away, you're like, well, sounds about right.

0:20:38
Can't believe it lasted as long as it did. Now let's get to some historical and biblical perspective here. Let's start with historical. So I'm on a Jonathan Edwards kick. Jonathan Edwards led the Great Awakening in America. This was in the 1730s and the 1740s. So it was led by, or sparked and led by Jonathan Edwards. So I've been, I think we need another Great Awakening in America. So I'm reading about Jonathan Edwards because I'd like to see the parallels and maybe how we can replicate similarities and differences. So Jonathan Edwards was fired from his job. A vote by the entire congregation, his congregation. This was in 1950. Only 10% of his congregation voted to keep him on the job. He kicked him out. You're gone.

0:21:25
One of the most brilliant men in American history. Leader of the Great Awakening. His own congregation fired him. Why? Here's what he wrote. He said, a very great difficulty has arisen between my people relating to qualifications for communion at the Lord's table. My honored grandfather, Stoddard, that's who ran the church before him, my predecessor in the ministry over this church, strenuously maintained the Lord's Supper to be a converting ordinance and urged all to come who were not of scandalous life, though they knew themselves to be unconverted." So he said, anyone who is not a Christian, you can take communion. I formerly conformed to this practice, but I've had difficulties with respect to it, which have been long increasing, till I dared no longer proceed in the former way, which has occasioned great uneasiness among my people and has filled all the country with noise. Everyone's talking about it. Everyone on Twitter is talking about it.

0:22:26
So again, the guy before him said anyone could take communion. And then Jonathan Edwards finally came to the conviction that no, no, only Christians are allowed to take communion here. I'm going to protect the table. So he took a stand. He took a stand on something. He had a conviction. People don't like that. People rarely like it when someone has a conviction. It's odd. Maybe it's because we're growing up, we're living in this soup of, oh, I don't know, everyone each to each his own, beauty's in the eye of the beholder.

0:22:59
So it's like if anyone makes a stand, oh, you think you're better than us? It's like, oh, no, I just think this is really important and I think this is true. Jonathan Edwards strived for truth and holiness and purity. He was trying to preserve something of great importance. People didn't like that. Even the people of his own church. I want to read this quote from J. H. Thornwell.

0:23:27
This was in 1846. He was noticing that churches were becoming more liberal. In 1846. I cannot imagine what these guys would have thought of many churches today. I want to read this quote here, but check out the parallels to cable news. He's talking about the church, but similar theme. He said, our whole system of operations gives an undue influence to money. Where money is the great want, numbers must be sought. And where an ambition for numbers prevails, doctrinal purity must be sacrificed. The root of the evil is in the secular spirit of all of our ecclesiastical institutions.

0:24:04
What we want is a spiritual body, a church whose power lies in the truth and the presence of the Holy Ghost. To un-secularize the church should be the unceasing aim of all who are anxious that the ways of Zion should flourish. That's true about our political system today. Our whole political system, I'm just going to re-read the quote here, but apologies, our whole political system gives an undue influence to money. Where money is the great want, numbers must be sought. And where ambition for numbers prevails, truth must be sacrificed. Having a conviction about anything.

0:24:54
I want to be a people, I want to, me personally, I want to have convictions. And I want to be a part of a group of people that have convictions about things. Who feel strongly about important things. Don't you think that's good? But that's all a bit of an aside. The reason I bring up this is because Jonathan Edwards got fired, and I'm sure he felt betrayed. I'm sure Jonathan Edwards, it's like I gave my life to this church, to you, to you, this congregation, you fired me? I gave so much time and energy to this company.

0:25:25
I feel like this is a common thing when you get fired to this company, and you fire me just like that? I'm the top salesperson here, I'm the top executive here, I've made this company way more money than you've ever paid me, and that's how you repay me now you fire me like that's got that feeling of betrayal must be common if you are laid off. Biblically of course I think of Judas betraying Jesus. One of Jesus's twelve disciples he was in Jesus's inner circle and he went to the Pharisees he said what will you give me if I deliver him over to you?

0:26:04
And they paid him 30 pieces of silver. That was it, 30 pieces. So how much was that? Don't really know, I've heard as high as 120 days wages. So a third of your salary. So what, 20, 30 grand, that's it? We're gonna betray Jesus for 30K? Matthew 26, 48, now the betrayer had given him a sign saying the one I will kiss is the man, seize him. And he came up to Jesus at once and said, greetings rabbi.

0:26:29
And he kissed him. And Jesus said to him, friend, do what you came to do. Then they came up and laid hands on Jesus and seized him, betrayed with a kiss. Back then a kiss was a sign of deep respect and honor and brotherly love. There's an intimacy there. Obviously, you need to get close to the person to do it. And this was one of his disciples. This was a student showing his love to his teacher on the outside but on the inside he was betraying him, leading him to the cross.

0:27:00
Luke 22 3, then Satan entered into Judas who was one of the number of the twelve. Satan entered into and Satan thought he won. Satan thought he won. Let me show this verse. David obviously was betrayed many times. He said, if an enemy were insulting me, I could endure it. This goes back a little bit to what Tucker was talking about about I only care what my friends and family think of me. I don't care what media matters thinks about me. If an enemy were insulting me, I could endure it. If a foe were rising against me, I could hide. But it is you, a man like myself, my companion, my close friend, with whom I once enjoyed sweet fellowship at the house of God as we walked about among the worshippers." Ah, to be betrayed by a friend or family.

0:27:46
Job said similar, Job 19, 19, those I love have turned against me. It didn't work out for Judas. Later the Bible says, then when Judas, his betrayer, saw that Jesus was condemned, he changed his mind and brought back the 30 pieces of silver to the chief priest and the elders saying I've sinned by betraying innocent blood. So what is that to us? See to it yourself.

0:28:09
And throwing down the pieces of silver into the temple he departed and he went and hanged himself. Not a biblical thing but Dante's Inferno, the ninth circle of hell, the deepest circle of hell is for betrayers and this circle of hell is called Judaica, named after Judas, who betrayed Jesus. So Judas is, so betrayal is like the worst sin and the worst betrayer of all. The innermost, lowest, deepest, hottest circle of hell is Judas. Actually, no, I got that wrong. It's not hot down there. Anyway, that's just art. But if you've ever been fired, you have this feeling of betrayal from your employer. Maybe you're even feeling it as a Fox News viewer for them firing a host that you like. All I can say is get ready for a lot more of it.

0:29:16
In our culture, in our media, from brands like Bud Light, in politics and in life. Maybe you experienced some of that during COVID. You're like, oh, wow, like friends and family, what, really? But as you experience it, because part of societal breakdown and civilizational breakdown is going to be more of these sinful things occur. And one of them is, the worst of them is betrayal. So as it happens to you, know that Jesus was betrayed.

0:29:46
He knew it was going to happen. God knew it was going to happen. And it was to bring about the greater plan. Satan thought he won. So as you're being betrayed, or if you were, or when you are, God knows everything that is happening to you. And he knows what's gonna happen next. And maybe it's to bring about a greater plan, which you could never understand right now in the moment. None of us can.

0:30:11
That was Monday's morning motivation, was all about the tapestry, about how we can never understand the moment. We can't turn around the tapestry and see what's being built, see what's being created, see what's really going on. Jesus knew he was gonna be betrayed. He knows everything about what's going on with your life right now, but he also knows what it's like to be betrayed, so go to him.

0:30:30
Tell him about it. He knows. So, Sleater, what's in my control? First, practically don't text or say anything to anyone ever that you would not want posted everywhere always. So just don't do it. You cannot put anything in writing that you would not share, you would not share it everywhere, that you would not want put on the news.

0:30:53
And the truth is, anything you text, God sees it anyway. That's actually more important than it going in public. So first thing, don't put anything in writing. Second thing that's in your control, tell the truth always. Just tell the truth. We have to try to resist those urges of, but what about my audience? Or what about this? What about that?

0:31:19
What about the client? What about this? What about, just tell the truth. Third thing, have courage. Here's another moment from that Heritage Foundation speech that Tucker gave just this last weekend. The truth is contagious. Lying is, but the truth is as well. And the second you decide to tell the truth about something, you are filled with this – I don't want to get supernatural on you – but you are filled with this power from somewhere else.

0:31:46
Try it. Tell the truth about something. You feel it every day. The more you tell the truth, the stronger you become. That's completely real. It's measurable in the way that you feel. And of course, the opposite is also true. The more you lie the weaker and more terrified you become. We all know that feeling. You lie about something and all of a sudden you're a prisoner of that lie. You are diminished by it. You are weak and afraid. Drug and alcohol use is the same way. It makes you weak and afraid. heavy price for telling the truth. And they are cast out of their groups, whatever those groups are, but they do it anyway.

0:32:27
And I look on at those people with the deepest possible admiration. I am paid to do that. I face no penalty. Someone comes up to me, you're so brave, really? I'm a talk show host. It's like I can have any opinion I want. That's my job, that's why they pay me. It's not brave to tell the truth on a cable news show, and if you're not doing that, you're really an idiot.

0:32:52
You're really craving. You're lying on television. Why would you do that? You're literally making a living to say what you think, and you can't even do that? Please. But how about if you're a senior vice president at Citibank? I'm serious. Citibank. And you're making, you know, four million a year. And you've got three kids in Bedford and two are in boarding school and one starting at Wesleyan next year. And like, you need this job, honestly. And your whole sector is kind of collapsing and you know that. There is no incentive whatsoever for you to tell the truth about anything. You just go into little re-education meetings and you're like, yeah, diversity is our strength, that's exactly right.

0:33:39
So if you're the one guy who refuses to say that, you are a hero, in my opinion. And I know some of them. In fact, my job is to interview them. And I sit back and I look at these people and I give them more credit than I do people who display physical courage, which is often impulsive, by the way. And I'm not denigrating physical courage, which I deeply admire. But you interview people who do amazing things, you know, who rush into the proverbial burning building And like every man is kind of trained from birth to fantasize about what he would do when the building catches fire and you hear a baby crying and so you run inside No one is trained to stand up in the middle of a DEI meeting at Citibank and say this is nonsense and the people who do that, oh Oh, they have my deepest admiration.

0:34:26
And so their example really gives me hope. It thrills me. I talk to them all day long, people like that. That's the first thing. We should, in this sad moment of profound and widespread destruction of the institutions that people who share our views built, by the way, earlier generations that would agree substantially with every person in this room, they built those and now they're being destroyed.

0:34:50
And oh, that's so depressing. But we can also see rising in the distance new things, new institutions led by new people who are every bit as brave as the people who came before us. Amen. And finally, the things that are in your control. So again, be careful what you put on paper or text. Tell the truth always. Have courage and go to God. Make Him your strength, not your job or anything else. May God your strength. Habakkuk 3.17, though the fig tree should not blossom, nor fruit beyond the vines, the produce of the olive fail, and the fields yield no fruit. Sorry, real quick, I'm just thinking of Tucker in Maine today.

0:35:32
I have no idea what Tucker's, I have no insight to Tucker, or whatever, I've never talked to him before. But I just imagine him in Maine just hunting right now. He's just going for a long walk in the woods with his dogs. At least this vision of Tucker I've created, or what I hope I would be, is wouldn't even care at all. Wouldn't, now it's easy to say when you get paid $35 million a year or whatever, hopefully he's stored some of that away, financially he'll be fine, that's different.

0:35:59
But still you hope he'd be like, you'd hope you'd trust in God enough. And as the Bible says, though the fig tree should not blossom and all these bad things, right? The flock be cut off from the fold and there be no herd in the stalls, even all these terrible bad things, yet I will rejoice in the Lord. I will take joy in the God of my salvation.

0:36:24
God the Lord is my strength. Not my bank account. He makes my feet like the deers. He makes me tread on my high places. Amazing. All right, so final thought here. Final thought to think about. Final thing to meditate on. First let me tell you about Patriot Gold Group, one of the sponsors of this podcast. One of the themes of this podcast, as we just talked about, is you can't rely on earthly things. 100% true. You also have to be a good steward. You also have to make good, wise decisions for your family. And for me, financially, I bought gold.

0:37:05
And I bought it from Patriot Gold Group. Lots of places to buy gold, I assume. I bought it from Patriot Gold Group. They are the consumer affairs top-rated gold IRA dealer six years in a row. group. They are the consumer affairs top rated gold IRA dealer six years in a row. I've only heard Tucker talk about this. Maybe other people on cable news have, I haven't heard anyone other than Tucker talk about the petrodollar, about how Saudi Arabia and China and other countries are talking about trading oil with something other than U.S. currency.

0:37:38
And that would be the downfall of the reserve currency of the U.S. dollar of the world. And that's a major problem for everyone, literally everyone. I haven't heard anyone talk about that except for Tucker. So listen, what's the dollar going to be worth over time? Zero, right? What's gold going to be worth? It's always been worth something. It's been around for thousands of years. 888-617-6122. Consider it.

0:37:59
See if it makes sense for you and your family. And as you consider it, definitely call Patriot Gold Group. 888-617-6122 for a free investor guide. 888-617-6122 or their website, patriotgoldgroup.com. Final thing to meditate on, I mentioned earlier this idea that you may lose your job at any moment so be grateful for it when you have it. I'm sure there's many people listening right now who have lost a job and thought it was devastating at the time, but then have a great story that ends with, thank goodness I was fired, otherwise I never would have filled the blank.

0:38:41
And that's a wonderful thing. Let me end with this sermon from Jonathan Edwards, who we spoke of earlier. This was his, I don't want to say his first big sermon, but this was a remarkable sermon. It was at a church in Boston, and it was the same weekend as the Harvard commencement. So there are a lot of big wigs in the audience. Jonathan Edwards was not from Boston, so he was an outsider, wasn't a Harvard graduate, he was a Yale grad, an outsider.

0:39:07
He was only 28, he was young, and he gave this wonderful sermon called God Glorified by the greatness of man's dependence upon him. You can get the theme based on the title. God is glorified in the greatness of man's dependence upon him. And this is the final line. Let us endeavor, let us endeavor to obtain and increase in our great dependence on God. To have our eye to him alone, to mortify, to put to death, a self-dependent and self-righteous disposition.

0:39:44
Man is naturally exceedingly prone to exalt himself and depend on his own power or goodness, as though from himself he must expect happiness. He is prone to have respect to enjoyments alien from God and His Spirit, as those in which happiness is to be found. But this doctrine should teach us to exalt God alone as by trust and reliance so by praise. Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord. Let us not find our identity or glory in our job and may we always no matter what difficulty or suffering we're going through, or uncertainty. May we always look to God for our full and complete dependence.

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Fox & Friends

We were on Fox & Friends talking about all of the train robberies in CA. It's so bad the train company says they may have to ride right THROUGH Los Angeles entirely and never slow down lol. What a joke this state it.

https://archive.org/details/FOXNEWSW_20220122_110000_FOX_and_Friends_Saturday/start/5640/end/5700

That link is a bit odd, I've attached a short video to get the gist.

In short, The rich get richer, the poor get the handouts and the middle class gets out of town.

This causes these progressive politicians to get even more entrenched.

We haven't hit rock bottom yet.

00:00:32
Boys to men, girls to women

How do you do it? Advice please!

Dean Abbott,
"Why contemporary relations between the sexes are so messed up. The problem starts with men because men lead, the masculine pursues and initiates, and problems always start at the level of leadership.

Most men aren't taught that a relationship with a woman means accepting responsibility. No one tells us that a woman represents not only pleasure, but obligation.
The fact that having a relationship with a woman means responsibility and obligation never enters many men's minds.

When these men enter into a relationship with a woman, they are overwhelmed by her needs, her feminine communication style, and her emotions.
Moreover, he unconsciously resents her for having needs at all since he has been conditioned to see her solely as a source of pleasure.
When her anger and disappointment over his irresponsibility gets intense enough, he splits in search of another woman.
He mistakenly believes the problem wasn't his attitude nor that it is a ...

00:07:55
Surly this will be kicked off twitter eventually
00:06:34
Morning Motivation, April 21, 2023

I found a way to easily transcribe the podcasts, so I will post them here first before they go out to iTunes and the rest.

Good morning. Welcome to The Morning Motivation, brought to you by Public Square and Patriot Gold Group. I'm grateful you're here. I was reading a sermon by the great Puritan preacher John Owen in the mid-1600s. I'm so fascinated by this time period, 1600s, early 1700s. We focus a lot on our founding fathers. I think that the Tea Party movement and just conservatism in general has focused a lot on the founding fathers, and that's amazing, but I'm very fascinated by our founding grandfathers or great-grandfathers, the people who created the culture that our founding fathers were raised in.

0:00:44
Isn't that a fascinating era? We got like 1776, like that's great, I love it, I want to know more, I don't know nearly enough. But what about the 1720s? What was going on there? Or the late 1600s? What was going on in America at that time? And you know, we've all heard of the Puritans, but you ...

Morning Motivation, April 21, 2023
Inflation and ANGER

I am angry and frustrated. With our Rulers. For getting us in this terrible economy. It doesn't have to be this way.

How could they never learn from past mistakes! This is ANCIENT history, stop printing money...yet, after COVID, we never printed more. Amazing.

Please leave a 5-star review on Itunes. We have a ton of momentum, this is about to break through! Thank you!

Also, I haven't done any lives anywhere becauase we're hosting a daily TV show "Road to Misterms" on thefirsttv.com, and it's taken all of my extra time. And my wife is giving birth any day now, so...it's been a lot around here. But after the midterms, time will free up.

Inflation and ANGER
Politics by Faith: Parkland and the Death Penalty

I've gone back and forth on the death penalty many times over the years. I've recently come down on the other side.

Should the Parkland murderer have gotten the death penalty or life in prison?

Please leave a review on iTunes! We need to get to 1k :-)
www.thefirsttv.com/mikeslater

Btw, we're getting the momentum we need, more downloads every day, THANK YOU!

Politics by Faith: Parkland and the Death Penalty
November 26, 2025

Baptized Brethren contest with each other AND against The Church, calling “Lord, Lord” (Mt 7:21-22, 25:11; Lk 6:46), in the Devil’s disunity, whilst the enemy has breached the Gates and is welcomed at and obliged at the most august Court. “Lord, Lord.”

Faith of our Fathers. Jer 6:16; Mal 3:6; Heb 13:7-9; Jam 1:17; Gal 1:6-12; Jude 3; 1 Pet 5:5

THE CODE OF CATHOLIC CHIVALRY

The knight receives as his law the knightly Code of Honor, which is the expression of his absolute fidelity to God:

I. The Knight battles for Christ and His Reign.
II. The Knight serves his Lady the Blessed Virgin Mary.
III. The Knight defends The Holy Church unto blood.
IV. The Knight maintains the Tradition of his Fathers.
V. The Knight fights for Justice, Christian Order and Peace.
VI. The Knight wages war without truce or mercy against the World and its Prince.
VII. The Knight honors and protects the poor, the weak and the needy.
VIII. The Knight despises money and the powers of this world.
IX. The Knight is humble, magnanimous ...

November 19, 2025

You were terse and dismissive in this morning's 7:25 Eastern time call with the Man with four step children applying for Naturalization from his Naturalized U.S. Wife of Philippine descent. You should be more considerate of history about America's relationship such as with the Philippine People, which is quite notable with intrinsic factors which should have favorable weight in consideration the Filipino propensity to immigrate and become American Citizens.

"The Resident Commissioner of the Philippines was a non-voting member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1907 until the Philippines gained independence in 1946. This role was established under the Philippine Organic Act of 1902, allowing the Philippines to have representation in Congress, similar to current non-voting members from U.S. territories."

Don't be so apparently xenophobic and stop misrepresenting American (and Christian while you're at it) History in omission through culpable ignorance.

The Philippines, 1898–1946
...

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November 11, 2025

Happy Veterans' Day.
Support our Troops. Before. During. After.

St. Martin, Bishop of Tours, Confessor, Soldier of the State, Soldier of Christ
November 11
https://www.bartleby.com/lit-hub/lives-of-the-saints/volume-xi-november/st-martin-bishop-of-tours-confessor

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James Van Der Beek and Going All The Way
Politics By Faith, February 13, 2026

James Van Der Beek, an actor who was a part of every Millennial's childhood, passed away at the age of 48. He died with dignity. One thing we can learn from his dying is to proclaim the whole truth. Don't hold back.

Welcome to Politics by Faith. This is where we take the news of the day, we bring it to the Bible, and we can walk away with a perspective and peace. There's new headlines every day, but Ecclesiastes says there's nothing new under the sun. So thanks for being here. I'm gonna get the true story. Sola Deo Gloria, glory to God alone. 

I want to talk about James Van Der Beek, who passed away. To every millennial who's listening now, he was an important part of our childhood, star of, I was gonna say Party of Five, Dawson's Creek, and then Varsity Blues as well. He was 48 years old and died from colon cancer. He had six kids, beautiful family, kids like over the top cute. And he wrote on Instagram relatively recently, just posted this stunning picture of his family. And he said, being a father has been the most treasured honor of my life. 

Thank you to my kids for reteaching me how to live, laugh, love, and show up in my own life and in the world. And thank you to my superhero of a wife who constantly exceeds the boundaries of what I thought was human capacity. I love you with all of my heart. Being a father has been the most treasured honor of my life at Scream. His family shared pictures of his final days here on earth. This very handsome man, weak, frail, skin and bones, in a wheelchair, out in nature, outside, looking at the sunset. 

Here's a note from a friend. Spending these final days with you has been a true gift from God. I've never been so present in my life. When you know time is sacred, you don't waste a single breath. How can we live like this every day? How can we live treating life sacred? 

You don't rush. You don't scroll. You don't worry about tomorrow. You sit. You listen. You hold hands. 

You watch the sky change colors and let it change you, too. In these past days, you taught me more about being present than any book ever could. You showed me what it looks like to trust God's plan, even when it breaks your heart, especially when it breaks your heart. You are a gift, an incredible husband, an extraordinary dad. The way you showed up for your wife and your children, steady, strong, devoted, was a blessing to witness. It has been an honor to stand by your family in these sacred moments. 

It's pretty incredible how someone can fight so hard for so long, travel the world battling so much, and somehow still look so handsome doing it. You've given this world so many gifts. Your presence was a bright light in my life and in so many others. And maybe the lesson you leave us with is this. The present moment is everything. Love the people in front of you. 

Say the words. Watch the sunset. Trust God even when you don't understand. Very nice. Katie Holmes, who's, again, to millennials, indistinguishable, the two of them. together, but she wrote out this really nice note to him and hand -written and then took a picture of it, which is a nice way to present the note. 

At the end of it, she said, life is art, creating a beautiful marriage, six loving children, the journey of a hero. 

It's great. 

Someone else said, I think I can finally see the beauty in death. It's sad, but it's also one of the few things that forces us to be fully present and accept our mortality. And suddenly, everything except the people you love matters less. Maybe we're never more human than when we're dying. Okay, so this is usually the section of the podcast where I talk about what's broken in the situation and that's maybe a bit, it's not quite right, not broken. 

I just want to offer this as an encouragement. There are some videos that are making the rounds of James Van Der Beek and I want to use these to encourage you as well and not wait till the end of your life to have boldness. And I think James Van Der Beek in these videos, although beautiful and well -presented, it's missing that last little, no, I didn't say little, that last most important bit of truth. So I'm gonna play this video, it's three minutes, sit back and enjoy it for what it is and how it's presented. And then we can talk about what's missing. 

Today's my birthday and it has been the hardest year of my life. And I wanted to share something that I learned with y 'all. When I was younger, I used to define myself as an actor, right? Which was never really all that fulfilling. And then I became a husband, and that was much better. And then I became a father, and that was the ultimate. 

I could define myself then as a loving, capable, strong, supportive husband, father, provider, steward of the land that we're so lucky to live on. And for a long time, that felt like a really good definition to the question, who am I? What am I? And then this year, to look my own mortality in the eye. 

Quick timeout. Last time I'll stop. Super important to make sure you find your real identity as soon as possible. And it's not in any of these things. Beautiful things. Some people identify themselves as things that are not good, but even if people identify themselves as things that are great, but it's not your truest identity. 

And when you get to the end of your life, you realize that when you lose your body, you lose your ability. Maybe you identify yourself as a runner. Okay. What if you lose your legs? What if your legs don't work anymore? Who are you now? 

Not a runner. What are you? Well, I'm a radio show host. You lose your job. Now what are you? Oh, it better be something that's unbreakable, which actually was the last segment of our last TV special we did about building your house on a rock. 

James Van Der Beek had to confront this issue. 

I had to come nose to nose with death. And all of those definitions that I cared so deeply about were stripped from me. I was away for treatment, so I could no longer be a husband that was helpful to my wife. I could no longer be a father who could pick up his kids and put them to bed and be there for them. I could not be a provider because that wasn't working. I couldn't even be a steward of the land because at times I was too weak to prune all the trees during the window that you're supposed to prune them. And so I was faced with the question, if I am just a too skinny, weak guy alone in an apartment with cancer, what am I? 

I meditated and the answer came through. I am worthy of God's love simply because I exist. And if I'm worthy of God's love, shouldn't I also be worthy of my own? And the same is true for you. And as I move through this healing portal toward recovery, I wanted to share that with you because I think that revelation that came to me was due in no small part to all the prayers and the love that had been directed toward me. So I offer that to you, however it sits in your consciousness, however it resonates, run with it. 

And if the word God trips you up, I certainly don't know. I can't claim to know what God is or explain God. My efforts to connect to God are an ongoing process that is a constant unfolding mystery to me. But if it's a trigger, it feels too religious, you can take the word God out and your mantra can simply be, I am worthy of love because you are. Thank you for the loving prayers, everyone. 

So close. 

Let's go to the Bible. Maybe my frustration is a strong word. It's that, oh, it's like great. And then it's, well, however you define God, you're like, oh man, just according to the Bible, we are not worthy of love. We're horrible sinners. who are worthy only of God's wrath. 

Ephesians 2 .1 says we are dead in trespasses and sins. We are spiritually dead and unable to merit God's favor. It is God who demonstrates his love by choosing to save us. Ephesians 1 .5, in love he predestined us for adoption as sons through Christ Jesus. Our righteousness, whatever we think we do, is filthy rags. But Jesus 

died to save us from hell. And now if you make Jesus Lord of your life, you can come before God and spend eternity in heaven. Or however you think is best to divide, right? I mean like Hebrews 10, 19. Are you with me with that last little quip that I threw there? It's either this or not that. 

It can't be everything. It can't be this very specific thing. And then however you feel good about a thing, that I'm saying, but want to take the words, but use very different meanings for the words, like not a Hebrews 10, nine, therefore brothers, since we have confidence to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus, by the new and the holy places, by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain, that is through his flesh. I love in the Bible, how when Jesus died on the cross, the curtain at the temple was torn from the top. So it was not by human hands from the bottom, but it was torn from the top. It was the curtain that separated. 

in the tabernacle or in the temple, from everyone else, from the most holy place, ripped. And since we have a great priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a true heart and full assurance of faith with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering for he who promised is faithful. In Hebrews 4 .16, let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need. This is scripture. My encouragement for you, for all of us. 

is to go all the way because people desperately need to hear it. They need to hear the truth, not half the truth and then new age mumbo jumbo, not 90 % of the truth and then a cop out of or whatever else you think people need to hear all of the truth. 

It also sounds like this diagnosis helped you find some sort of new perspective on faith. 

Before cancer, God was something I tried to fit into my life as much as possible. 

After cancer, I feel like a connection to God, whatever that is, is kind of the whole point of this exercise on this planet. He's right. He's right. Glorifying God, but exactly who we know him to be from the Bible is the point of life on this planet. Go all the way with the truth. Don't hold back. 

MikeSlater . Locals . com. Transcript commercial free on the website MikeSlater .

 

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Why Do Democrats Release Murders? 
Politics By Faith, February 10, 2026

Roy Cooper is running for Senator of North Carolina. When he was governor, he released 3,500 criminals from prison because of COVID. 51 of those criminals were serving life sentences. Why? Why would a governor do this? We'll explain here with a warning from Numbers 4.

Welcome to Politics by Faith. This is where we take the news of the day and we bring it to the Bible so we can walk away with perspective and peace. There are new headlines every day, but Ecclesiastes says there's nothing new under the sun. Thanks for being here. Let's get to the true story. Soli Deo Gloria. 

Glory to God alone. I know I missed the Super Bowl halftime show. It's now two days after it. So that's old news now. So I apologize that you didn't get my hot take right when it happened. In short, it's degenerate filth that you should keep your kids away from. 

And you. The lyrics are as obscene as you could try to make them. And all the church ladies were right when they said that CBS shouldn't allow Elvis's hips to be on the TV because it's a slippery slope downhill from there to hell. And all those church ladies were right. If we could fast forward the church ladies 50 years from when they were making the argument that Elvis was a bad influence on youth. They'd have a heart attack after they said, we were right. 

If this is what we call normal dancing and lyrics, I'm gonna break. One thing that really annoys me, and then we'll get to the show. It's when people who are talented, they're talented, but then they just sell filth. Lady Gaga, she can sing. She can play the piano. Her little bit she did was lovely. 

She was dressed beautifully and had a nice band behind her that was playing some nice puerto rican music and everyone was dancing nice and it was it was good why can't like why not just be normal why not be good money's in filth i suppose so celebrities and artists just spit out the filth first john 269 the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life. All right, let's get to the story of the day. We talked to Michael Watley. Michael Watley is running for Senate in North Carolina. He's running against Roy Cooper. 

Roy Cooper, the Democrat used to be the governor of North Carolina, used to be the attorney general before that. And he's running for Senate. He's got a good name recognition. It turns out that Mike, excuse me, uh, Roy Cooper, when he was running, excuse me, when he was governor, during COVID released 3 ,500 prisoners. Because the NAACP and the ACLU, who've always wanted to release prisoners, said, oh, we can't keep them in prison because they'll get COVID and we don't want them to get the sniffles. And Roy Cooper did it. 

He released 3 ,500 people from prison. 51 of those people were serving life sentences. Why in the world would you release someone who's serving a life sentence? So what's the background here? We should know that one of the reasons why there was a major spike in crime across the country, and blue places in particular, is because in 2014 there was a Supreme Court ruling in California that said California prisons are overcrowded, and that's cruel and unusual punishment, because criminals aren't getting the healthcare that they deserve in prisons. So the Supreme Court said, you've got to fix that problem, California. 

This was back in Moonbeam. What's his name? Jerry Brown's second term. And the state of California, instead of fixing the overcrowding problem by building more prisons, they released a bunch of prisoners into the jails. And then the jail said, well, we're full. So they released a bunch of people onto the streets. 

And then the activists said, well, what if people get arrested? Where are we going to put them? So that's when. the activists in California passed Prop 57, which said, well, let's just not arrest anyone anymore. Let's make it merely a misdemeanor to steal up to $800 worth of stuff. And that was the beginning of the, I shouldn't say the beginning. 

That was a major push forward in the decriminalization movement across our country. And then crime went out of control and then we elected Donald Trump. But in the midst of that, when COVID came along, the NAACP and other prison abolition groups went to governors, blue Democrat governors, and said, we have to release the prisoners. And Roy Cooper did. 3 ,500 of them. And 51 were serving life sentences. 

If you must release someone from prison for whatever reason, you have to release a person from prison. Wouldn't you release the guy who was serving a one -year sentence or someone who was near the end of their sentence, not someone who's serving a life sentence? So now we know who some of these people are. Kids warning, if there's any kids listening right now, but I'll keep it PG. Sean 2 Jenkins murdered a pizza delivery driver. It was an armed robbery inside of a Domino's. 

Life in prison. Simon Janopoulos. He stabbed a person 24 times in the back after he tied him up. Life in prison. Life in prison plus 26 years. Released. 

Shanone McClintock. Convicted first -degree rape and robbery broken broken to a woman's home life in prison released Javier Alexander convicted of two murders unrelated two different unrelated murders life in prison released Eric Johnson first -degree murder murder shot his 22 year old estranged wife in the head Mandatory life sentence for that crime released. I got plenty more. I mean, there's 51 of them you get the idea What in the world so? what's broken here? What's going on? 

How did we get to this point? Now you can go as cynical as you want. The great Jesse Kelly shared a video of a judge in Louisville who let a criminal who was convicted by the jury of his peers, found guilty and recommended 64 years in prison, life in prison. And the judge said, no, no, no, that's too long. I'll give you 30 years. And 30 means like seven. 

for a heinous crime, horrific, horrific, horrific crime to a woman. And unrepentant, like wildly unrepentant, said to the victim in the courtroom, I'll see you in 20 years. Like that level of unrepentant. Why would this judge let this person go? And this is, again, if you want to go down this road, it's great. I'm not going to stop you. 

Jesse Kelly said, everyone would understand this stuff better if they just read about the communist revolutions in China and Russia. You want to kill your political enemies? Who's going to do that for you? Who are you going to get to do that for you? Decent people? No. 

They recruited and protected the scum of every village. So you can say it's that intentional, or you can go down the misguided compassion, the toxic empathy that we've talked a lot about in the last couple of weeks here. Like, oh, poor kid. He never had a chance. Never had anyone love him. Fell through the cracks. 

Oh, he needs to be rehabilitated and all that. And anywhere in between those two. And maybe a little bit of both. What's the Bible say? First, we need to know. that justice is good, is biblical. 

The Bible talks about punishment for evildoers. Proverbs 21 15, when Jesus is done, it is a joy to the righteous. When a person who commits a horrific crime against a woman in this last case that I was just telling you about, when justice is done and that person is put behind bars, that's a joy to the righteous. That's a joy to the woman, the real victim. That's a joy to the rest of us. 

And it's a terror to evildoers when justice is done. Justice protects law -abiding people, and it's very bad for evildoers. It is biblical. for governments to punish criminals. Romans 13 three says governing authorities as God's servants, punish evildoers and bear the sword, not in vain. We had a great caller today who, when I was talking about these horrific things that people did that had been released, he was just lamenting that we've removed God from our society. 

And that's what this all is. And of course he's right. People who commit crimes like this, no question, but also just the whole, just our country in general, that we've created these systems that let people out of jail. That only happens when you have a total disconnection from God and his word. I want to read here a piece of scripture. All of scripture is there for a reason. 

God put it all there for good. This is a seemingly irrelevant one. Those are my favorite kinds. Numbers four, verse one. Numbers four. The Lord spoke to Moses and Aaron. 

Sorry, this is my fault. This is numbers four, verse 18. 

The Lord spoke to Moses and Aaron saying, let not the tribe of the clans of the Kohothites be destroyed from among the Levites, but deal thus with them, that they may live and not die when they come near to the most holy things. 

colon. Aaron and his son shall go in and appoint them each to his task and to his burden, but they shall not go in to look on the holy things even for a moment, lest they die. " So what's going on here? We have a Levite clan here that's tasked with transporting the tabernacle's most holy items. They're the ones who'd carry stuff on the poles, right? And you couldn't touch them, couldn't touch them. 

If you touched anything, or even looked beyond this curtain into the most holy place, you would die. So here, God said, do these things, do it this way so that no one dies. So what's the lesson we can get from this? First of all, obey God's commands, but also take God's holiness seriously. We are way too casual with God's wrath. We're way too casual with our own justice system here on earth. 

But more importantly, we're too casual with God's wrath. Don't take God's holiness casually. If God says, do this, you better do it. If God says, don't do this, woe to you. If you do it anyway. Now we are sinners, of course, which is why we're going to hell. 

Unless we make Jesus the Lord of our life, then we get to go to heaven forever. But that amazing thing that Jesus did doesn't mean anything. If you don't think you're a sinner and you won't think you're a sinner. If you don't think God is Holy, because you're not, what are you comparing yourself to the guys in jail? Of course you're better than them. You behave better than them, but that's not what you should be comparing yourself to. 

You compare yourself to God's holiness. And if you're doing that, then you won't take breaking his commands lightly. Take God's command lightly. as seriously as the Levites. And the command was don't even look at the holy things. Or else you will die. 

And you will die too. Are you going to heaven? Mike Slater dot locals dot com. Transcript commercial free on the website. Mike Slater dot locals dot com.

 

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Racist Tropes and Pagan Fools
Politics By Faith, February 6, 2026

Don't fall for the left's fake outrages of the day, especially when they are the ones responsible for the genesis of the racism.

Welcome to Politics by Faith. I'm Mike Slater. Thanks for being here. This is where we take the news of the day and we bring it to the Bible so that we can walk away with perspective and peace. There's new headlines every day, but Ecclesiastes says there's nothing new under the sun. So thanks for being here so we can get the true story. 

Sole Deo Gloria. Glory to God alone. Here's the story of the day. I'm going to bite on this Trump fake racist video controversy. Dumb made up controversies don't work like this anymore. Not like they used to. 

but we'll take a minute on it anyway. So what really happened? The president at midnight last night on Truth Social, which I don't know who's on Truth Social. I think it's like just this MAGA universe thing that Trump supporters are on and Trump himself. And this is a place for him to speak to his base, I guess. I don't see the point of him being there, but he's there and he posts a ton of stuff there all the time. 

He puts only the important things on Twitter and then he goes on Truth Social and posts dozens of things all night long. That's how that worked. And last night, among other things, he posted a 62 second video. And it's a documentary. I don't know what the documentary is from, but it's a clip of a documentary about voting fraud. And this 60 seconds of the 62 second clip is all about how easy it is to hack into voting machines, which, by the way, well, now is not the episode for that. 

But Before the 2020 election, a week before, PBS NewsHour ran a whole 12 or 17 minute piece about how easy it is to hack into Dominion voting machines. But that's not here. 60 seconds of hacking into voting machines easy it is to commit voter fraud. At the end of the video, whoever made the original screenplay of the documentary, in their screen recording, the next video automatically went to another video, but only two seconds of it before that screen recording cuts off. That two second video or two second capture is of a different 55 second AI made video made by a MAGA troll guy. 

And it's the Lion King meme it's like it's like the lion king and all the animals in the jungle are have democrats faces on them and then trump comes in he's a lion right and they all bow down to the lion but the first six seconds of that original video that that 55 second lion king movie the first six seconds has barack obama and michelle obama's heads on monkeys After those six seconds, and it has a weem away, a weem away. And then after that six seconds, it goes to Hakeem Jeffries as a meerkat. Hillary's a warthog. And then AOC and Newsom are donkeys, which aren't in, like, whatever. And then Pritzker's an elephant. And Adam Schiff is a giraffe. 

And Chuck Schumer's a zebra. And Zoran Mamdani is a hyena. And Joe Biden's a mandrill, which is another kind of monkey, but that's not racist. And then the lion walks in and has Trump's head on. Okay. It's very silly video, whatever. 

But because Trump's election fraud video or whoever recorded that originally, whoever screen captured that, that video auto -scrolled into this Lion King video. And for the two seconds of it before the screen recording ended, all people saw were this as monkeys. That's what happened. Now, what's broken? Two things. 

First one's just an aside. My second one's my main point. First one is this uptight pretend being offended at racist tropes that no one thinks is racist anymore. I'm not going to make the argument that Joe Biden is racist. Remember when he called Barack Obama an articulate, clean black man? I'm not going to make the argument that we should be talking about The important issue, this is just a distraction. 

Okay, sure, fine. I'm not going to make the argument that someone in Maryland, a Maryland man, was just charged with attempted murder trying to murder Russ Vogt, the head of OMB. Let me quote this. Police say they were called to a Virginia residence after a witness reported that a man wearing a surgical mask and rubber gloves, who appeared to be concealing a firearm under his shirt, was on Russ Vogt's porch. No one in the media was outraged at that attempted murder of a Trump cabinet member. Only a dumb one -second video. 

Where you can make the argument, I think is a fair argument, is that this is a dumb Trump self -enforced error. And I'll hear the argument that all boomers need to stay off Facebook and stop engaging in all boomer Facebook slop. And that goes for even the press of the United States. Boomer Facebook slop on Facebook. I'm redundant. Boomer Facebook slop is awful and should just be avoided at all costs. 

That's as far as I'll go there. But stop falling for the communist tricks that everything is racist all the time. All the communists want to do is divide. All they want to do is rip open old rules. of racism for their own power. No one is really offended by this. 

It's all an act. It's all pretend outrage. Again, self -enforced error politically? Sure. 

Racist? 

Give me a break. All right. No, here's the real point I want to make. What's really broken here is evolution. Slater, what do you mean? How could you possibly bring the Bible into this story? 

Glad you asked. That's why we're here. Do you know where this racist idea came from that black people are the same as monkeys were that came from evolution. It came from the idea that we all evolved from monkeys, but that black people just haven't fully evolved as much as white people have. This idea, this is evolution. This is the wicked, from the pit of hell idea of evolution that comes not from Christians, but from pagans. 

It sort of started in the early 1800s. There's a scientist named Gregor Johann Mendel. He's an Austrian fella. And he was a scientist, a researcher on pea plants. And he did all the hereditary breeding of pea plants. And he's the one who coined the terms recessive and dominant genes. 

From his research, the eugenicists came and took all that and applied it to their eugenics movement, which is all anti -Christian pagan wickedness, which led to the abortion movement, which said we should kill black people and all undesirables. Margaret Sanger was a leader of that. And she founded what became Planned Parenthood. These racist eugenicists, not Christians, said that in the process of evolution, there was a separation in Africa. white people and black people became separate species and Africans are closer in evolutionary terms to the monkeys that we all came from than the Europeans are. Talk about slop. 

That is pagan, eugenist slop. There were some scientists back then who thought that, uh, maybe they wanted to, even if they wanted to say that man sort of popped out of nowhere, even not from a Christian perspective, but like man started first. Uh, there are scientists that believe like the ancient Greek was the first man, but then as they moved around the planet, man degenerated. So monkeys are degenerate versions of original man. So it was all kind of messed up. And then Charles Darwin came along and Charles Darwin said, no, no, no. 

We are all evolved from a single organism that came about by spontaneous creation. He never even tried to explain how that came about. But that little amoeba turned into a fish, which turned into a frog, which turned into a monkey, which turned into a human. Stupidest idea I've ever heard in my life. None of that's Christian. The Christian view of creation eliminates racism because God made man. 

End of story. We didn't evolve from anything. God made man. Then also God made animals and gave us dominion over the animals. We are not animals. We did not evolve from animals. 

We're separate from animals. And God made man in his image, in God's image. Here's the Bible, Genesis 126. Then God said, let us make man in our image. according to our likeness. Let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth. 

" Genesis 126. There is an unbridgeable gap between human life and animal life. We did not evolve or as some scientists back in the day believe devolved. No, there's no connection. We are distinct. Humans are distinct in our moral, intellectual, and spiritual capabilities. 

And I love it. These evolutionists, they try so hard. 

They'll be like, Oh, well, look, here's a video of a monkey using a tool. 

Remember monkeys made tool. That's it. Monkeys made tools and they broke a stick. off a tree or found a stick and they stuck it in a hole and they eat the ants off the stick. You're like, I don't know. It's not really a tool. 

Show me when monkeys manufacture a miter saw that can challenge the local DeWalt factory. And we'll talk about monkeys can make tools. It's ridiculous. Made in God's image means humans have a soul. Animals don't. We have reason, morality. 

We are a reflection of God's holiness. Now, of course, then Adam sinned. Then we're an enemy of God. But we can be born again and restore that communion. And we all know this. And if you choose not to accept it, then the Bible says you are a fool. 

Romans or worse, Romans 1 .18, actually not worse. We think of a fool is not that bad. We did a segment on this recently, an episode. A fool back in the Bible meant wicked. But Romans 1 .18 says, Invisible attributes, namely his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived ever since the creation of the world and the things that have been made. So they're without excuse. 

For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking and their foolishness. were darkened. Claiming to be wise, they became fools, and exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things. Not the creator. Therefore, God gave them up to their lusts, to their hearts, to impurity, to dishonoring of their bodies among themselves because they exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worship and served the creature rather than the creator who is blessed forever. Amen. 

It's Romans 1 18. The world today worships the teaching of Charles Darwin and evolution. And if you're an idiot, if you believe in the biblical account of creation, but in reality, the fools are the evolutionists and woe to them. I'll quote here, George Whitfield. I saw a movie trailer. He said there's a movie coming out about him called A Great Awakening about the relationship between him and Ben Franklin. 

I can't wait for that. And he gave a sermon about Nicodemus, asking questions about being born again. And in that sermon, Whitefield says, Being made in the very image of God, undoubtedly before the fall, man had no other will but his makers. God's will and Adam's were like unisons in music. There was not the least disunion and discord among them. Now he hath a will as directly contrary to the will of God, as light is contrary to darkness or heaven to hell. 

We all bring into the world with us a carnal mind, which is not only an enemy to God, but enmity itself. Praise God that we can be born again. That comes from paganism and Darwinism that says that man is nothing but a beast as opposed to something separate and distinct and made in the image of God. So if you want to reject monkey and black people tropes, whatever, great, reject them and reject Darwinism and paganism because it's all connected. If we stayed away from Darwinism in the first place, we'd be much better off today. But politically, don't be fooled by people pretending to be outraged by it. 

especially when they're the pagans who believe in evolution themselves, which gave rise to this trope and gives it any ounce of power, whatever it still has today. Rejected entirely and acknowledge that God made all humans in his image. And you can be saved so that you can go to heaven and be with God forever. And for that, I want to play one last clip here. I, I don't endorse Jesse Lee Peterson. 

I don't know enough about him to one way or the other, but his YouTube page where the shorts that make the short videos are hilarious because no one is funnier at repeating the question multiple times, over and over. 

And his guests, I don't know where he finds these people, they refuse to answer his question and he just asks it over and over and it's just great. 

This isn't necessarily one of those clips, but it's still a funny clip nonetheless that I just saw the other day. 

Is a human being an animal? 

No. 

Oh. 

Are you sure? 

Uh -huh. So human beings aren't animals? No. 

Well, I mean, that's not debatable. That's science. Humans aren't animals. 

No, they act like animals when they fall away from God. 

I know they act like animals, you're right, those in that fallen state, but they're not animals when they are God. 

that fallen state. You gotta agree. You gotta agree. 

No, I mean, there's no debating. 

I mean, like you learned this in elementary school. 

Humans are animals. 

Oh, you believe that humans are animals? 

That's not up for debate or discussion. 

So do you believe that humans are animals? 

It is. 

You believe that? 

100%. 

You should go back and beat that teacher. Which one? 

That lied to you about that. I went to the number one teacher. public school in the country. 

No, they lied to you. They do act like animals in a fallen state. 

You believe human beings are in a fallen state? You're taking this to a spiritual conversation, but just on a scientifical, what is platform? Humans are animals. 

Humans are not animals. Unlike animals, humans are created in the image of God, so they're not animals. They do all kinds of crazy things like animals, but they're not really animals. I don't know if you know that, but she went to the number one public school in the country. It's a very scientifical school. Mike Slater dot locals dot com is where we put the episode without commercials and the transcript. Mike Slater dot locals dot com.

 

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