Sons of Liberty Radio, June 10, 2026
SONS of LIBERTY Radio with Bradlee Dean
Mercy In The Midst Of Judgement
The Gay Manifesto, Pride Month Agenda, and Biblical Mercy in the Midst of Judgment. Mercy, Judgment, Free Speech, and the Biblical Standard for Public Life.
The Gay Manifesto Exposed
The host opens by reading the full text of Michael Swift’s 1987 Gay Manifesto, which was published in Gay Community News and entered into the Congressional Record, detailing explicit plans to seduce and recruit youth, infiltrate institutions, rewrite laws, and target churches and heterosexual society.
Chai Feldblum and Government Interest
The host discusses Chai Feldblum’s writings and nomination by Barack Obama, highlighting her argument that religious liberty must yield to government interests in advancing gay equality, leaving no room for conscientious objection based on faith.
Mercy Belongs to the Obedient
Drawing from James and other scriptures, the host explains that biblical mercy rejoices against judgment only for those born of the Spirit who keep God’s commandments, contrasting this with an idolized “all-love” God lacking justice, sovereignty, or wrath.
Scott Pressler and Conservative Hypocrisy
The host criticizes Turning Point USA and Charlie Kirk for promoting openly gay activist Scott Pressler as a conservative leader in Wisconsin, contrasting his views with Scripture and calling out Fox News for platforming him as controlled opposition.
Big Tech Censorship and Child Protection
A video is played exposing a transgender youth advocate charged with raping a six-month-old; the host condemns Facebook and big tech for censoring criticism of such crimes under hate-speech policies, arguing this inverts justice and endangers children.
Caller Henry and Call to Bold Action
Caller Henry urges Christian men to confront corruption and examine themselves per 2 Corinthians 13:5; the host agrees, stressing that parents and citizens must condemn sin rather than tolerate it, warning that failure to magnify the law invites national judgment while Leviticus 26 and Romans 1 outline God’s sovereign blessings and curses.
Mercy and Judgment in Biblical Perspective
The episode centers on the host’s argument that mercy must be understood within the framework of divine judgment, repentance, and obedience to God’s commandments. He rejects what he describes as an unbalanced picture of God as only love, grace, and mercy, arguing instead that biblical teaching also includes sovereignty, holiness, justice, wrath, and accountability.
Christian Ethics, Civil Liberty, and Moral Law
The program repeatedly ties American civil liberty to Christian moral law, using quotations attributed to Noah Webster, Thomas Jefferson, John Dickinson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Reverend Peter Thacher. The host and prerecorded segments present the Bible and the U.S. Constitution as the two main standards by which public life, law, and civic responsibility should be measured.
Culture War, Public Policy, and Free Speech
A major portion of the episode discusses cultural conflict, religious speech, and what the host portrays as a clash between biblical teaching and modern social policy. The host criticizes big tech censorship, arguing that platform restrictions silence lawful religious and political speech while protecting wrongdoing or unpopular public-policy agendas.
Political Conservatism, Public Figures, and Accountability
The host discusses conservative politics, TPUSA, Scott Pressler, Charlie Kirk, Donald Trump, Fox News, and other political or media figures as examples in his broader criticism of what he sees as compromised leadership. These comments are presented as the host’s opinion and are framed around his claim that many public leaders no longer reflect biblical or constitutional standards.
Caller Segment and Citizen Responsibility
During the call-in portion, Caller Henry agrees with the host’s concerns about government, culture, and children. The conversation emphasizes the host’s view that citizens should examine themselves, speak openly, confront corruption, and respond lawfully rather than assuming someone else will solve the nation’s problems.
Repentance, Covenant, and the Closing Biblical Appeal
The final segment returns to scripture, especially Leviticus 26 and related biblical passages, to argue that national consequences follow disobedience and that mercy begins with confession, repentance, and faith in Jesus Christ. The host closes by urging listeners to acknowledge sin, seek God’s mercy, and understand current events through a biblical framework.
Key Words / Key Phrases -- biblical judgment, mercy and repentance, Christian constitutional worldview, moral law, free speech censorship, big tech censorship, civil liberty, cultural conflict, public accountability, biblical repentance