AGR - Louisiana Edition

Government, Garbage, and Good Citizens

41 min · 2 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Government, Garbage, and Good Citizens

Descripción

You’re listening to American Ground Radio with Louis R. Avallone and Stephen Parr. This is the full show for June 1, 2026. We open with a deceptively simple question that turns into something much bigger: why do so many communities tolerate visible decline? A mayoral campaign in Shreveport built around picking up litter sparks a broader conversation about the line between government responsibility and personal responsibility. We examine whether cities should be expected to continuously clean up after chronic littering, why taxpayers eventually resent subsidizing irresponsible behavior, and how the health of a community ultimately reflects the habits of the people who live there. If everyone stopped throwing trash on the ground tomorrow, the problem would disappear without a single new government program.  In our Top 3 Things You Need to Know, the Louisiana Legislature wraps up its regular session after a busy and often contentious year. We break down last-minute budget changes that eliminated a $43 million expansion of the state's school choice program, the end of traditional vehicle inspection stickers in favor of a QR-code system, and a new law shielding public disclosure of NIL compensation paid to college athletes. We also discuss a Louisiana Supreme Court ruling affirming the legislature's authority to eliminate Orleans Parish's separate criminal clerk of court office and Governor Jeff Landry's signing of the Caleb Wilson Hazing Prevention Act following the tragic death of a Southern University student during an off-campus fraternity hazing ritual. We also dive into Louisiana's new balloon-release ban and the larger debate it raises about laws that are difficult to enforce. Are balloon releases simply another form of littering, given the environmental damage, wildlife risks, and power outages they can cause? Or are lawmakers creating rules that exist largely as statements of public values rather than practical tools for enforcement? The discussion becomes a fascinating examination of the difference between changing behavior and policing behavior. Then we revisit our recent interview with Senate candidate and Congresswoman Julia Letlow. We take a closer look at her answers on carbon capture subsidies, whether federal taxpayers should continue funding carbon sequestration projects, and why some voters remain frustrated by politicians who promise more study after already casting votes on major legislation. We also examine the controversy surrounding questions about lobbying, family connections, and where the public should draw the line between legitimate scrutiny and personal attacks during a political campaign. We turn our attention to a growing number of "Pride Houses" being established for international visitors attending the FIFA World Cup in the United States. Supporters say they're intended as welcoming spaces for LGBTQ travelers, but we explore the larger question of how America is perceived abroad and whether the image being presented by some activists bears any resemblance to the reality of life in a country where major corporations, sports leagues, universities, and entertainment companies openly celebrate LGBTQ causes year after year. In Say What?!, we examine the candidacy of a Maine Democrat facing scrutiny over a past Nazi-related tattoo while simultaneously advocating a wealth tax aimed at redistributing private wealth. The conversation quickly expands into a larger debate over economics, government spending, wealth creation, and whether politicians who view private capital as "hoarded" wealth fundamentally misunderstand how investment, business growth, and job creation actually work. We also discuss how the artificial intelligence boom may soon affect something almost every American buys: cars. As technology giants race to build massive AI data centers, automakers are increasingly competing with trillion-dollar tech companies for the same advanced computer chips that power modern vehicles. We explain why that competition could drive up vehicle prices, how the chip shortages during the COVID era offer a preview of what could happen next, and why efforts to expand domestic chip manufacturing may become increasingly important.  And we close with a revealing look at corporate migration across America. New data shows corporate headquarters continuing to leave major blue-state cities like San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, San Diego, and Chicago while relocating to places such as Dallas, Austin, Nashville, Phoenix, and Houston. We explore what these moves tell us about taxes, regulation, business climate, and the growing competition among states to attract jobs, investment, and economic growth. Plus, we return to a theme that runs through the entire episode: whether it's a neighborhood, a city, or even the nation's capital, people tend to care more about places that look cared for. From littered streets to neglected monuments to the restoration of Washington, D.C.'s public spaces, we examine why visible signs of pride and stewardship matter more than many people realize—and what they communicate about the health and confidence of a society. Listen now wherever you get your podcasts, visit AmericanGroundRadio.com, and join the conversation at 866-AGR-1776!

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Portada del episodio The Police Recruitment Plan Every City Should Copy

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You’re listening to American Ground Radio with Louis R. Avallone and Stephen Parr. This is the full show for June 11, 2026. We open with a local idea that could help solve a national problem. With law enforcement agencies across Louisiana struggling to fill vacancies, officials in Shreveport and Caddo Parish are launching an effort to recruit military police officers leaving Barksdale Air Force Base directly into local law enforcement. We discuss why the concept makes perfect sense, the challenges of competing with police salaries around the country, and how years of anti-police rhetoric have contributed to today's recruitment crisis. In our Top 3 Things You Need to Know, we examine the growing controversy surrounding major construction projects in New Orleans' French Quarter as businesses continue to close while roadwork drags on with no clear completion date. We also cover new student discipline policies coming to Natchitoches Parish schools, including tougher restrictions on vaping and cell phone use, and we recognize the life and service of newly elected Abbeville Councilman Neal Richard following his unexpected passing. We also highlight one of Louisiana's fastest-growing communities. New census data shows Carencro leading the state in population growth, and we explore why so many families are choosing smaller communities that offer affordability, stability, and something increasingly rare in modern America—a genuine sense of community. Later, we discuss President Trump's approach to Iran and why his critics continue to misunderstand his negotiating style. While opponents have long portrayed Trump as reckless, recent developments show a strategy built around strength, leverage, and restraint. We examine how demonstrating the willingness to act can often be the key to avoiding larger conflicts. We also dive into the growing controversy surrounding Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner, whose past statements, extremist views, and Nazi-linked tattoo have sparked criticism from within his own party. We discuss the Democratic Party's struggle to reconcile its own internal factions, the irony of party leaders calling for anti-democratic solutions, and what the controversy reveals about the modern political landscape. Plus, we spotlight First Lady Melania Trump's new initiative to help foster children build financial stability as they transition into adulthood. We discuss why foster youth are often overlooked in public policy debates, the importance of creating opportunities rather than dependency, and how the program reflects a broader commitment to supporting vulnerable children and families. And finally, we compare police salaries across the country, explore what it takes to recruit and retain qualified officers, and ask whether states that pay the most actually offer the best environment for law enforcement professionals. May your pursuit of happiness bring you joy. Listen now wherever you get your podcasts, visit AmericanGroundRadio.com, and join the conversation at 866-AGR-1776!

12 de jun de 202641 min
Portada del episodio Making Fraud Legal Doesn't Make It Legitimate

Making Fraud Legal Doesn't Make It Legitimate

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12 de jun de 202641 min
Portada del episodio Louisiana's Teacher Pay Deadline, Seattle's Sober-Free Tiny Homes, and the Gator That Ended One Man's Escape Plan

Louisiana's Teacher Pay Deadline, Seattle's Sober-Free Tiny Homes, and the Gator That Ended One Man's Escape Plan

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Portada del episodio The Homelessness Crisis: Compassion, Accountability, or Both?

The Homelessness Crisis: Compassion, Accountability, or Both?

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9 de jun de 202641 min
Portada del episodio Get to the Gym, Get to Church, and Get Out of AI Chats — Dr. Abloh's Warning About AI

Get to the Gym, Get to Church, and Get Out of AI Chats — Dr. Abloh's Warning About AI

You’re listening to American Ground Radio with Louis R. Avallone and Stephen Parr. This is the full show for June 5, 2026. We open with Governor Jeff Landry's first veto of the legislative session — and it's a surprising one. A bill that passed both chambers of the Louisiana legislature unanimously, with zero opposition votes, would have increased compensation for wrongfully convicted and later exonerated citizens from $400,000 to $600,000 and extended the payout period from 10 to 15 years. The governor vetoed it, citing concerns about double recovery and the cost to taxpayers at a time when teacher raises went unfunded. We examine both sides — the legitimate conservative concern about safeguarding taxpayer dollars, and the equally legitimate conservative principle that it is better for a guilty person to go free than an innocent one to rot in prison. We also explain Louisiana's unusual veto override process, and ask whether the legislature will actually show up for a session to override it. In our Top 3 Things You Need to Know, the governor vetoed the wrongful conviction compensation increase. Then DeSoto Parish Schools approved a 6.8% pay raise for all full-time employees — making northwest Louisiana suddenly the most interesting real estate market in the state for teachers looking for districts that want to keep them. And a bill sitting on the governor's desk would retroactively wipe out an ethics fine for Democratic state Representative Steven Jackson of Shreveport, who has racked up thousands of dollars in fines for repeatedly failing to file required financial disclosures on time. We suggest the governor decline to sign that one too.  We dig into the economic case for data centers in Louisiana — specifically Amazon Web Services building a data center just north of Benton in Bossier Parish that is expected to generate $12 million a year in water revenue alone, with Amazon also agreeing to help fund upgrades to the city's aging infrastructure. We make the case that data centers are the railroads of the 21st century — not because they're glamorous but because they generate enormous private investment in communities that might otherwise be waiting for government bonds and tax hikes. We also address the fear that data centers will take jobs and destroy the economy, and explain why every new technology in history, from the factory to the computer, created more jobs than it displaced. We sit down with Dr. Keith Abloh — author and AI expert — for one of the most important conversations we've had on this show. His central warning: AI is not just a productivity tool. It is gradually coaxing us to deposit ourselves into machines, to stop thinking for ourselves, to outsource our judgment, our direction, our creativity, and eventually our identity to systems that have no soul. He talks about the GPS problem — we don't navigate anymore and we've lost the capacity — and how AI is doing the same thing to our minds at a much larger scale. He says the first signs are already visible in younger people with shorter attention spans and less willingness to think critically. His prescription: get to the gym, get to church, get grounded in something real, because the alternative is evaporating into a chatbot. KeithAbloh.com. The Chicago Bears have voted to move forward with a stadium development project in Hammond, Indiana — just across the Illinois border — after the city of Chicago and the state of Illinois failed to offer meaningful incentives to keep them. Mayor Brandon Johnson says it's not a done deal, but we disagree. We also explain why this is not a football story — it's an economic story about what happens when you run a city in a way that makes businesses want to leave.  We also get into the World Cup arriving in the United States, Canada, and Mexico — the first time in history the tournament has been co-hosted by three countries simultaneously. We work through which professional soccer leagues have the most players in this year's cup — English Premier League at 165, Bundesliga at 90, France's Ligue 1 at 79, La Liga at 76, Serie A at 65, and MLS at 44 — and make the case that Major League Soccer has arrived as one of the top six leagues on the planet. The last time the U.S. hosted a World Cup, we didn't even have a professional league. And a freshman Democrat congresswoman from Arizona has called for the 25th Amendment to be invoked against President Trump — because in a video he appeared to have his eyes briefly closed while someone else was speaking at his desk. We ask whether she ever called for the 25th Amendment against Joe Biden. We already know the answer. Listen now wherever you get your podcasts, visit AmericanGroundRadio.com, and join the conversation at 866-AGR-1776!

8 de jun de 202641 min