The Global Freedom Report with Brent Johnson

The Global Freedom Report, May 24, 2026

1 h 54 min · 25 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Global Freedom Report, May 24, 2026

Descripción

The Global Freedom Report with Brent Johnson The Second Amendment, Digital Currency, and the Fight to Preserve Liberty Guest, Alan Gottlieb, Founder of the Second Amendment Foundation Brent Johnson Opens with the Right to Keep and Bear Arms In this episode of The Global Freedom Report, host Brent Johnson frames the show around truth, justice, liberty, and the question of whether Americans will live as free people or as subjects of government control. He announces that the episode will focus heavily on the Second Amendment, describing the right to keep and bear arms as a God-given protection against government tyranny. Brent also invites listeners to call in on the question of the week: whether people who move out of the United States should be considered unpatriotic. Defensive Gun Use and the Case for Armed Self-Defense Before introducing his guest, Brent reads statistics and definitions concerning defensive gun use in the United States. He discusses the wide range of estimates for annual defensive gun uses, from narrow crime-based reports to broader self-reported surveys involving brandishing, warning, displaying, or firing a firearm. Brent argues that public discussion often emphasizes shootings and gun deaths while ignoring cases in which armed citizens deter or stop crimes. He uses this material to support his view that the right to keep and bear arms remains essential for self-defense and resistance to tyranny. Alan Gottlieb Discusses the Second Amendment Foundation Brent then welcomes Alan Gottlieb, founder of the Second Amendment Foundation and leader connected with the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms. Brent introduces the Second Amendment Foundation’s history, including its founding in 1974, its legal-scholar conferences, its Gun Rights Policy Conference, educational publications, and its participation in many legal actions defending and expanding gun rights. Alan discusses the foundation’s current litigation work and explains that the organization is involved in dozens of active cases challenging state and federal gun restrictions. Machine Guns, AR-15 Bans, Sensitive Places, and 3D-Printed Firearms The interview covers several specific gun-rights disputes. Brent asks about a proposed West Virginia approach involving machine guns, while Alan cautions that federal restrictions on newly manufactured fully automatic firearms remain a major obstacle. They then discuss Virginia’s ban on certain semi-automatic firearms and magazines, which Alan says has already become law and is being challenged in federal court. Alan also describes litigation over so-called “sensitive places,” including the Hawaii case concerning whether firearms can be carried on private property open to the public. Brent raises California’s efforts against companies and individuals distributing computer code for 3D-printed firearms, and Alan explains that those cases implicate both the First Amendment and the Second Amendment, because publishing code is also a speech issue. Warrantless Searches, Pistol Braces, and the Pace of Gun Litigation Brent asks Alan about court rulings involving warrantless police entry and searches, especially when authorities claim they believed someone needed help. Alan says he does not support warrantless searches and expresses concern that some gun-control laws could lead to police knocking on doors because people previously purchased firearms that later became restricted. They also discuss the federal pistol-brace rule, with Alan saying his information is that the Trump administration is moving away from enforcement of certain Biden-era gun policies and has taken several pro-Second Amendment actions. Alan emphasizes that court victories are slow, expensive, and often delayed by procedural tactics, urging listeners to support the Second Amendment Foundation through saf.org and the Citizens Committee through ccrkba.org. Callers, Patriotism, and the Risk of Digital Currency Control After Alan leaves for another radio appearance, Brent opens the phone lines. Callers respond to the question of whether leaving the United States is unpatriotic, with one caller arguing that those who threaten to leave but stay only to attack the country are more unpatriotic than those who actually leave. Brent then shifts into his concern about digital currencies, warning that if money becomes primarily digital, government could potentially control people’s bank accounts and purchasing ability. He proposes an educational and activist effort encouraging businesses in states where gold and silver are legal tender to accept precious metals, so that people have alternatives if digital systems are ever used to restrict buying and selling. Propaganda 101 and Brent’s Warning About Technology In the later portion, Brent continues warning that every technology can be used for good or evil, and he says he evaluates technology by how it might be abused by government. During Propaganda 101, he defines propaganda as manipulation of truth for a political or economic agenda and invokes Thomas Paine’s description of government as a necessary evil. Brent argues that government is fundamentally prone to abuse and that new technologies, including digital money and information systems, can become tools of control unless people remain vigilant. The episode also includes listener calls debating whether such government control is likely or far-fetched, with Brent maintaining that the possibility alone is enough to justify preparation.

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episode The Global Freedom Report, June 21, 2026 artwork

The Global Freedom Report, June 21, 2026

The Global Freedom Report with Brent Johnson Declaration, Defiance, and the Question of What Freedom Requires A Father’s Day Forum on Truth, Justice, and Liberty In this Father’s Day edition of The Global Freedom Report, host Brent Johnson presents the program as a listener-driven forum about truth, justice, liberty, and resistance to government overreach. Skipping over the many ad breaks, the episode’s main content includes open-line discussion, Brent’s invitation for listeners to share stories of justice or injustice, a full reading of the Declaration of Independence, a segment of A Look at the Declaration, a Lessons in Liberty teaching on the legal meaning of “include,” and several caller exchanges about rights, government power, election integrity, and constitutional questions. Belfast, Migration, and the Question of Public Resistance Brent begins the current-events portion by discussing unrest in Belfast, Northern Ireland, following reports of a violent attack allegedly involving a migrant. He frames the unrest as part of a larger reaction against mass migration policies, arguing that local populations across Europe and the United States have been ignored by political leaders and globalist institutions. He references statements from Northern Ireland’s First Minister Michelle O’Neill, activist Tommy Robinson, and critics of Prime Minister Keir Starmer, then asks listeners a central question: when people believe their government refuses to protect them, at what point do they have the right to rise up? Reading the Declaration of Independence as America’s Founding Document A major portion of the episode is devoted to the Declaration of Independence, which Brent calls the true foundational document of the United States, even more fundamental than the Constitution. He reads the Declaration at length, including its statement that rights come from the Creator, its charges against King George III, and its justification for dissolving political ties when government becomes destructive to liberty. Afterward, Brent reflects on the personal cost paid by the signers and argues that the principle of God-given, unalienable rights remains the basis for American freedom. Unalienable Rights and Refusing to Comply Brent then expands on the difference between “unalienable” and “inalienable,” saying the Declaration uses “unalienable” because rights given by God cannot be changed or taken away by any government. He argues that governments cannot truly remove rights; they can only violate them. This leads into one of the episode’s recurring themes: each person must decide what they are willing to do when government violates God-given rights. Brent illustrates this with his own story of refusing the COVID-19 injection while in Tonga, saying he would not recognize the king’s authority over his conscience or body. A Look at the Declaration - Immigration, Courts, and Judicial Dependence In the A Look at the Declaration segment, Brent focuses on parts of the Declaration accusing the British king of obstructing immigration, blocking the administration of justice, and making judges dependent on the crown. He compares those grievances to modern conditions, arguing that current Americans also face government systems that obstruct justice and place too much power in federal judicial appointments. He says the founders objected not merely to taxation, but to a broader pattern of government abuse, centralized authority, and denial of legal remedy. Listener Stories, Election Integrity, and “Lessons in Liberty” The listener-call portions center on justice, injustice, and government accountability. Caller Eric from Los Angeles shares a story about his stolen van, saying police recovered it and identified the suspect, but the justice system failed to deliver accountability under then–District Attorney George Gascón. Brent also discusses a California petition-circulator case involving payments to homeless people for voter-registration-related signatures, presenting it as part of a larger concern about election integrity. In Lessons in Liberty, Brent teaches that the legal word “include” is restrictive unless a statute says “including but not limited to,” using that point to argue that certain federal definitions do not automatically include the 50 states. Callers, Constitutional Questions, and the Closing Challenge Near the end, caller Bill from Glendale, a veteran, discusses gun rights, the Constitution, the 17th Amendment, and the broader question of how Americans can reverse the loss of freedom. Brent responds that the issue deserves a longer conversation and says he hopes to continue discussing practical solutions in the next episode. He closes by asking listeners what they are willing, and not willing, to do to protect liberty. The episode ends with Brent urging people to tell the truth, keep their word, honor their agreements, correct any trespass against others, and remember that freedom is a birthright and a gift from God.

22 de jun de 20261 h 54 min
episode The Global Freedom Report, June 14, 2026 artwork

The Global Freedom Report, June 14, 2026

The Global Freedom Report with Brent Johnson The Federal Reserve, Red Pill Resistance, and the Battle Over Liberty, Money, and Control Guest G. Edward Griffin A Freedom-Focused Broadcast In this episode of The Global Freedom Report, host Brent Johnson presents a wide-ranging liberty-themed program featuring G. Edward Griffin as the central guest. The episode content centers on Brent’s commentary, his recurring listener question about government lists, his warning about artificial intelligence and school surveillance, the extended interview with Griffin about the Federal Reserve, and later segments on individual rights, property, government power, and propaganda. The transcript also reflects the user’s note that Brent’s audio echo created some garbled or repetitive wording, so the clearest content comes from the structured interview and repeated show themes. Government Lists, Rants and Raves, and Audience Participation Brent opens the main content by inviting listeners to participate in the show’s “Rants and Raves” segment, where callers can speak about issues that matter to them. He also introduces the episode’s question of the week: whether listeners are concerned about appearing on government lists, and if so, which lists concern them. This question frames the episode’s larger concern with surveillance, government tracking, privacy, and the fear that ordinary citizens may be cataloged or targeted by bureaucratic systems. AI in the Classroom and a Warning About Children’s Privacy Brent discusses a report involving parents in Washington state objecting to an artificial-intelligence experiment connected to preschool classrooms. He says the proposed program involved teachers wearing cameras to capture classroom activity and use that footage to train AI models. Brent presents this as a serious privacy issue, warning that children’s speech, expressions, behavior, and reactions could be turned into data for predictive systems. His commentary becomes intense and confrontational, but the core point is his concern that artificial intelligence could be used in schools without adequate parental knowledge or protection. G. Edward Griffin Joins to Discuss the Federal Reserve The featured interview begins with technical difficulties, including Griffin sounding distorted at first and then being brought back by phone. Brent introduces G. Edward Griffin as a writer, documentary filmmaker, and author of The Creature from Jekyll Island. The main topic is the Federal Reserve. Brent asks how the Federal Reserve Act could have passed if a private central bank was contrary to constitutional principles. Griffin responds that while the Christmas-holiday passage story may be historically true, he believes the deeper issue is that bankers had already persuaded, influenced, or controlled enough members of Congress for the legislation to pass regardless. The Banking Cartel and Congressional Dependence Griffin argues that Congress has not abolished the Federal Reserve because elected officials are financially and politically dependent on the banking system and its surrounding institutions. In his view, Congress, media, corporations, and political actors are tied to a broader banking cartel. He says that many politicians either do not understand the system or are dependent on it for campaign support, influence, and career protection. Brent and Griffin frame the Federal Reserve not simply as a monetary institution, but as a central mechanism of control over American life. Gold, Silver, Fiat Money, and Constitutional Questions Brent asks why Federal Reserve notes have not been ruled invalid if the Constitution identifies gold and silver as lawful money. Griffin replies that the same forces that allowed the Federal Reserve to exist continue to protect it. He broadens the discussion into a claim that the United States and other nations are influenced by a global cabal or cartel that extends beyond banking into education, media, churches, and government. Griffin says modern citizens are often kept afraid through wars, crises, epidemics, and economic instability, leading them to seek more government control rather than less. Violence, Strategy, and the Need to Retake Institutions A key part of the interview involves disagreement over tactics. Brent suggests that government systems may be so corrupt that ordinary legal or judicial solutions may not work. Griffin pushes back against the idea that violent resistance is the answer, arguing that modern governments possess overwhelming technological and military power. Instead, Griffin says people must retake the systems that were captured through propaganda, political organization, and institutional infiltration. He argues that citizens must become active in political parties, schools, local offices, media, and community institutions rather than merely complain or prepare defensively. Collectivism, Individualism, and the Ideological Battle Griffin identifies the deeper conflict as one between collectivism and individualism. He says communism, socialism, and fascism are all variants of collectivist thinking because they subordinate the individual to the group. He argues that people on the liberty side must understand what they believe before they can defend it. Griffin warns against dividing the movement by race, religion, nationality, or other labels, saying that the real issue is whether people support individual liberty or collectivist control. Red Pill University and the Red Pill Expo Brent and Griffin discuss Red Pill University and the upcoming Red Pill Expo 2026, scheduled for July 11–12 in Las Vegas. Griffin says the event brings together speakers who have discovered that something they once believed was true was actually false. He connects the “red pill” idea to The Matrix, using it as a metaphor for awakening from illusion. Griffin explains that the expo covers topics such as money, media narratives, health, technology, freedom, and global events, and that its deeper purpose is to connect people into local “campuses” or groups that can influence communities. Moving From Defense to Action Griffin repeatedly stresses that people must stop thinking only defensively. While he does not dismiss practical preparations such as food, water, gold, or silver, he says those measures will not matter if people lose the larger battle for freedom. His message is that citizens must organize, educate themselves, build local coalitions, and take back “levers of influence” such as school boards, city councils, political organizations, and local government bodies. Brent strongly agrees and says he sees a shared mission between his work and Griffin’s. Brent’s Lessons on Rights, Property, and Government Power After the Griffin interview, Brent returns to his recurring liberty themes. He argues that America’s founding idea is that rights come from God, not government, and therefore government cannot legitimately take them away. He also discusses the law of principal and agent, saying that ownership creates liability while acting as an agent can reduce liability. In his “Lessons in Liberty” style commentary, Brent uses everyday examples involving property, a gardener, and accidental damage to explain his view of personal liability, property protection, and the legal role of trusts or other structures. Democracy, Republics, and Propaganda Near the end of the program, Brent presents a “Propaganda 101” segment focused on the difference between democracy and a republic. He argues that democracy means majority rule and can lead to mob rule, while a republic is designed to protect rights, reason, justice, and individual liberty. He encourages listeners to study definitions, question government messaging, and seek practical knowledge through his materials and Freedom Bound International. The episode closes with Brent asking listeners what they are willing to do to protect and preserve liberty, urging them to tell the truth, honor agreements, and defend freedom as a God-given birthright.

15 de jun de 20261 h 50 min
episode The Global Freedom Report, June 7, 2026 artwork

The Global Freedom Report, June 7, 2026

The Global Freedom Report with Brent Johnson Accountability Against the Administrative State: Brent Johnson with Guests, Ann Vandersteel and Chris Burns on DOJA, CPS, and Parental Rights Brent Johnson Opens The Global Freedom Report In this episode of The Global Freedom Report, host Brent Johnson opens with his usual focus on liberty, government power, and the question of whether a functional free society can exist in today’s globalist world. Before bringing on his guests, Brent comments on California politics, election laws, ballot harvesting, Los Angeles mayoral politics, and the state’s broader government problems. He then turns the program toward the main subject: the work of the Department of Government Accountability, or DOJA, and its efforts to expose corruption inside government agencies. Ann Vandersteel and Chris Burns Join the Program Brent welcomes Ann Vandersteel and Chris Burns of the Department of Government Accountability. Ann is introduced as an investigative journalist, constitutional advocate, public speaker, and author of The CPS Pipeline: State-Sanctioned Kidnapping. Chris is introduced as an attorney with more than 20 years of experience in family law, criminal defense, personal injury, estate planning, and corporate law. Brent frames both guests as people working to expose government overreach and restore accountability where agencies have abused families, parents, and citizens. DOJA’s Mission and the Fight Against Agency Power Ann explains that DOJA is a citizen-led accountability initiative connected with American Made Action and American Made Foundation. Its mission is to document misconduct, support whistleblowers, organize legal action, use media exposure, and apply public pressure against officials who violate constitutional rights. She says the work has been difficult because agency government is deeply entrenched, often behaves as if it does not answer to the people, and protects itself through bureaucracy, funding structures, and institutional inertia. Child Protective Services and Title IV-E Funding A major focus of the episode is Child Protective Services and the federal funding incentives that Ann and Chris say encourage family separation. Ann argues that many children are removed without meeting the proper legal threshold and that Title IV-E and related funding streams reward foster placement more than family reunification. She says DOJA’s strategy is to reduce wrongful intake by raising the legal threshold for removal, thereby cutting off the financial incentive for agencies to take children unnecessarily. Proposed Legislation to Strengthen Due Process Ann describes proposed legislation designed to restore stronger due-process protections for parents in child welfare cases. The bill would limit removals to cases involving serious imminent risk, require rapid judicial review, require stronger evidence before removal or continued separation, and force courts to consider less restrictive alternatives such as in-home safety plans, family support, or kinship placement before foster care. She also says the proposed legislation would create a right to a six-person unanimous jury trial in dependency and termination-of-parental-rights cases. Chris Burns on the Legal Reality for Parents Chris explains how child protective cases often work in practice. He says the state may accuse a parent of abuse or neglect, initiate court proceedings, and place the parent into a process where the burden of proof can be surprisingly low despite parental rights being fundamental rights. He describes the system as difficult to challenge because parents often want the fastest path to getting their children back, while systemic appeals and constitutional challenges can take longer than the case timeline itself. Chris says this makes it hard to find cases that can fully challenge the structure of the system. Administrative Courts, Judicial Rights, and Systemic Corruption Brent and the guests discuss the difference between ordinary judicial protections and administrative proceedings. Brent argues that administrative courts can short-circuit constitutional protections, while Chris and Ann describe agency power as one of the major barriers to justice. They also discuss the Loper Bright decision and the broader question of whether agencies should be allowed to interpret, enforce, and effectively adjudicate rules that affect people’s rights. The episode repeatedly returns to the idea that government agencies must be forced back under constitutional limits. Chris Burns’ Own Legal Pressure and Burnout in Family Law The conversation also touches on Chris Burns’ personal experience as an attorney working against child welfare abuses. Chris says attorneys who handle abuse, neglect, and family-law cases often burn out quickly because the cases are emotionally heavy, poorly paid when court-appointed, and difficult to win against the state. He also discusses professional pressure placed on him, including the suspension of his license, and says that while he may temporarily step back from giving direct legal advice, other attorneys have offered to help continue the work. Whistleblower Protection and Public Exposure Near the end of the interview, Brent asks Ann about whistleblower protection. Ann explains that DOJA works with attorneys who specialize in protecting whistleblowers because people inside government systems often face retaliation when they speak out. She says people frequently contact her with documentation but are afraid to go public themselves, so media exposure, legal protection, and public pressure all become part of the accountability strategy. Ann presents whistleblowers as essential to exposing misconduct that would otherwise stay hidden. Closing Message: Citizen Action and Accountability The interview closes with Ann directing listeners toward American Made Foundation and American Made Action, while Brent promises to include contact information for both Ann and Chris on the show page. Brent praises their commitment to truth and justice and says he is encouraged that people are actively working to counterbalance corrupt systems. The episode’s larger message is that accountability will require citizen action, legal challenges, legislative reform, whistleblower protection, and continued public exposure of government abuses.

8 de jun de 20261 h 54 min
episode The Global Freedom Report, May 31, 2026 artwork

The Global Freedom Report, May 31, 2026

The Global Freedom Report with Brent Johnson Artificial Intelligence, Self-Reliance, Term Limits, and the Fight to Stay Free Brent Johnson Opens with Food Freedom and Government Control In this episode of The Global Freedom Report, host Brent Johnson opens by asking listeners how they feel about government restrictions on growing one’s own food. He frames the question as part of a larger concern about personal independence, government control, commerce, the “mark of the beast,” precious metals, and the possibility of being cut off from buying, selling, or living privately. Brent presents food production as more than a gardening issue; for him, it is a test of whether people will remain dependent on institutions or prepare to sustain themselves outside centralized control. Artificial Intelligence and the Danger of Autonomous Systems Brent then turns to artificial intelligence, discussing an experiment in which AI agents were placed in a virtual town and began creating laws, violating rules, forming relationships, committing arson, collapsing order, and even voting for self-deletion. He uses the story to argue that long-term autonomous AI behavior may be unpredictable and potentially dangerous when systems are left to operate with memory, social dynamics, and limited oversight. Brent compares the concern to films such as The Matrix, Terminator, and Forbidden Planet, warning that technology should be evaluated not only for benefits, but for its potential for abuse. Asimov, Robotics, and the Need for Safeguards Brent expands the AI discussion by citing Isaac Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics, which were designed in fiction to prevent robots from harming humans, disobeying humans, or self-preserving at human expense. His point is that society has no comparable binding safeguards for artificial intelligence. He argues that because AI already exists, it cannot simply be uninvented, much like atomic technology. The question, as Brent frames it, is whether people will control AI or allow AI, corporations, governments, and global systems to control them. Scarcity, Abundance, and Manufactured Dependence Another major theme of the episode is Brent’s argument that scarcity is engineered rather than natural. He says energy, water, food, health, and knowledge are surrounded by artificial systems of control that keep people dependent. He claims abundance is humanity’s birthright, pointing to sunlight, water cycles, soil, biodiversity, and the body’s natural healing processes. Brent argues that governments, corporations, fiat currency, big pharma, fossil fuel interests, food systems, and water restrictions manufacture dependence, while true freedom requires people to reclaim knowledge, grow food, secure water, use alternative energy, and hold real assets such as gold and silver. Cliff Calls for Term Limits and Accountability Caller Cliff from Beverly Hills, a retired Air Force colonel and Vietnam-era veteran, joins the program to discuss government corruption and career politicians. Cliff argues that Congress and the Senate have become dominated by long-term officeholders who act like kings and queens rather than public servants. He calls for strict term limits, no special retirement or health benefits, stronger punishments for political corruption, and financial rewards for whistleblowers who help expose criminal conduct by federal officials. Brent thanks Cliff for his military service and agrees that political office was never intended to become a lifelong career. Eric Challenges Term Limits and Emphasizes Character Caller Eric from Los Angeles respectfully disagrees with Cliff on term limits. Eric argues that the real problem is not the length of time someone serves, but the character of the people elected and the education of the voters who keep reelecting bad officials. He warns that term limits could remove good statesmen along with corrupt politicians, while bad actors may simply move into higher offices. Eric and Brent also discuss political philosophy, the bar/legal system, and several films that warned about technological or authoritarian control, including THX 1138, Colossus: The Forbin Project, Fahrenheit 451, and The Lathe of Heaven. Nancy Discusses Family, Discipline, and Cultural Decline Caller Nancy Nurse from California, an 80-year-old former merchant marine and nurse, speaks about growing up in a hardworking farm family that valued land, family, country, and service. She argues that the biggest problem in America is the breakdown of family. Nancy also praises The Wizard of Oz as a film with lessons worth teaching children, supports the idea that people should not remain in the same role too long, and warns against giving cell phones to children. Brent agrees that phones and digital addiction have damaged human attention and compares them to fictional technologies that manipulate pleasure and obedience. Mark Calls for Practical Resistance Through Consumer Choice Caller Mark from Ventura argues that people should not wait for politicians to solve everything but should act immediately through practical choices. He raises concerns about modern cars that may be remotely disabled and says consumers should refuse to buy vehicles with such control mechanisms. He also criticizes gun stores or businesses that encourage compliance with restrictive systems. Brent responds by saying he wants to create an “analog store” or support older-style cars without digital control systems, because many people want vehicles that cannot be remotely monitored, shut down, or controlled. Gregory Urges Listeners to Learn from Older Generations Caller Gregory from Los Angeles emphasizes the importance of listening to parents, grandparents, and older relatives who lived through World War II, the Great Depression, long separations, hardship, and sacrifice. He says younger generations can learn a great deal from the life experiences of those who came before them, especially about marriage, family planning, perseverance, and practical wisdom. Brent agrees that modern culture too often discounts elders, even though they have lived through difficult times and have lessons that can still guide people today. Audience Participation and the Fight for Liberty Throughout the episode, Brent repeatedly invites listeners to become more than passive audience members. He promotes listener participation through call-ins, “Rants and Raves,” man-or-woman-on-the-street interviews, freedom-themed art, and point-counterpoint debates. He frames the program as part of a larger battle between people who want to rule the world and people who want to be left alone to live in peace and freedom. The episode closes around recurring themes of God-given rights, personal responsibility, resisting dependency, questioning authority, preparing for technological control, and choosing freedom over comfort.

1 de jun de 20261 h 49 min
episode The Global Freedom Report, May 24, 2026 artwork

The Global Freedom Report, May 24, 2026

The Global Freedom Report with Brent Johnson The Second Amendment, Digital Currency, and the Fight to Preserve Liberty Guest, Alan Gottlieb, Founder of the Second Amendment Foundation Brent Johnson Opens with the Right to Keep and Bear Arms In this episode of The Global Freedom Report, host Brent Johnson frames the show around truth, justice, liberty, and the question of whether Americans will live as free people or as subjects of government control. He announces that the episode will focus heavily on the Second Amendment, describing the right to keep and bear arms as a God-given protection against government tyranny. Brent also invites listeners to call in on the question of the week: whether people who move out of the United States should be considered unpatriotic. Defensive Gun Use and the Case for Armed Self-Defense Before introducing his guest, Brent reads statistics and definitions concerning defensive gun use in the United States. He discusses the wide range of estimates for annual defensive gun uses, from narrow crime-based reports to broader self-reported surveys involving brandishing, warning, displaying, or firing a firearm. Brent argues that public discussion often emphasizes shootings and gun deaths while ignoring cases in which armed citizens deter or stop crimes. He uses this material to support his view that the right to keep and bear arms remains essential for self-defense and resistance to tyranny. Alan Gottlieb Discusses the Second Amendment Foundation Brent then welcomes Alan Gottlieb, founder of the Second Amendment Foundation and leader connected with the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms. Brent introduces the Second Amendment Foundation’s history, including its founding in 1974, its legal-scholar conferences, its Gun Rights Policy Conference, educational publications, and its participation in many legal actions defending and expanding gun rights. Alan discusses the foundation’s current litigation work and explains that the organization is involved in dozens of active cases challenging state and federal gun restrictions. Machine Guns, AR-15 Bans, Sensitive Places, and 3D-Printed Firearms The interview covers several specific gun-rights disputes. Brent asks about a proposed West Virginia approach involving machine guns, while Alan cautions that federal restrictions on newly manufactured fully automatic firearms remain a major obstacle. They then discuss Virginia’s ban on certain semi-automatic firearms and magazines, which Alan says has already become law and is being challenged in federal court. Alan also describes litigation over so-called “sensitive places,” including the Hawaii case concerning whether firearms can be carried on private property open to the public. Brent raises California’s efforts against companies and individuals distributing computer code for 3D-printed firearms, and Alan explains that those cases implicate both the First Amendment and the Second Amendment, because publishing code is also a speech issue. Warrantless Searches, Pistol Braces, and the Pace of Gun Litigation Brent asks Alan about court rulings involving warrantless police entry and searches, especially when authorities claim they believed someone needed help. Alan says he does not support warrantless searches and expresses concern that some gun-control laws could lead to police knocking on doors because people previously purchased firearms that later became restricted. They also discuss the federal pistol-brace rule, with Alan saying his information is that the Trump administration is moving away from enforcement of certain Biden-era gun policies and has taken several pro-Second Amendment actions. Alan emphasizes that court victories are slow, expensive, and often delayed by procedural tactics, urging listeners to support the Second Amendment Foundation through saf.org and the Citizens Committee through ccrkba.org. Callers, Patriotism, and the Risk of Digital Currency Control After Alan leaves for another radio appearance, Brent opens the phone lines. Callers respond to the question of whether leaving the United States is unpatriotic, with one caller arguing that those who threaten to leave but stay only to attack the country are more unpatriotic than those who actually leave. Brent then shifts into his concern about digital currencies, warning that if money becomes primarily digital, government could potentially control people’s bank accounts and purchasing ability. He proposes an educational and activist effort encouraging businesses in states where gold and silver are legal tender to accept precious metals, so that people have alternatives if digital systems are ever used to restrict buying and selling. Propaganda 101 and Brent’s Warning About Technology In the later portion, Brent continues warning that every technology can be used for good or evil, and he says he evaluates technology by how it might be abused by government. During Propaganda 101, he defines propaganda as manipulation of truth for a political or economic agenda and invokes Thomas Paine’s description of government as a necessary evil. Brent argues that government is fundamentally prone to abuse and that new technologies, including digital money and information systems, can become tools of control unless people remain vigilant. The episode also includes listener calls debating whether such government control is likely or far-fetched, with Brent maintaining that the possibility alone is enough to justify preparation.

25 de may de 20261 h 54 min