Addiction is a physiological condition involving changes in the brain's chemistry and receptors, not merely a matter of willpower or character weakness. When individuals become addicted, their brain develops cravings that require medical intervention to address. Effective treatment approaches, such as intravenous administration of NAD (Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide) and other substances, can help restore brain function and eliminate cravings, providing a path to recovery that addresses the underlying physiological changes caused by substance abuse.
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James Talarico in Texas, Economic Update & More | Jim Pfaff, Dan Eastman & MoreAdded:
This is Brandon House live. Whether the issue is law, science, economics, history, family, social issues, education, religion, government, or national security. Brandon brings the issues of the day into clear focus through the lens of a Judeo-Christian worldview. And now here is your host Brandon House.
>> And good evening. Welcome to the broadcast on this May 28th, 2026. May 28, 2026. May May. It's gone really fast, hasn't it? We're going to be in June very, very soon. Hey, that rhymed.
We're going to be in June very, very soon. Uh, let's see. There are 31 days in May. So, there you go. By Monday, it will be uh June 1st. All right. We're gonna be moving quickly into what we refer to, I guess, as summer, although not officially, the unofficial summer. Well, let's see here, folks. Tonight, we're going to have on with us um we're going to have on Nick Pulchure again because people are all asking about the Ebola thing, and I want to try to understand.
Okay, right now it's already human to human. You can get it, right? But they got to what? Sneeze in your face, get blood on you, that kind of thing. Or I guess if they touched a door and there's saliva, you would touched it and then rubbed your nose or eyes, I guess, right? So human to human contact. Okay, I get that. But the talk of it being engineered into a boweapon where it is transferable in the air. That's what I want to get to tonight. I want to try to understand that because that's what's I guess I'm being told by some of the folks they're worried about is this thing is going to be weaponized in that manner. So let's talk about that. We also have breaking news tonight. Uh study finds pediatric flu shots are a complete failure. Pediiac pediatric pediatric flu shots are a complete failure. study of an entire region, 400,000 people, found no reduction in flu cases or hospitalizations after mass flu shot roll out to children 6 months to 5 years old. All right, let's talk about that and more uh with Nick. We're going to talk about this one, too. Real world clinic outcomes of ivormectin and meenazol in cancer patients results from a prospective observational cohort.
We've been talking about that a lot. And by the way, I think we have that if you go over to worldviewhealthcare.com, worldviewalthcare.com. I think we have a big old link over there cuz people are asking about it. We wanted to try to make it as uh friendly to find as possible. Yeah, there it is.
worldviewalthcare.com top right hand corner.
All right, there you go. You click on it and it's going to bring you to the page where you need to be to check all that out. Okay, so you might want to do that.
All right, worldviewalthcare.com.
worldviewalthcare.com.
Let's also have on Jim PA, our guy in Washington DC to talk about John Cornin.
He didn't just lose.
He lost as President Trump would say bigly. He uh 30 points I think.
Now it's Ken Paxton against Jimmy Telerico. Play some clips tonight of Jimmy, what Jimmy's saying. And uh can can Ken Paxton win Texas? I can't imagine folks in Texas going to vote in massive numbers for what this guy's saying. Got more clips by him tonight, Jimmy Telerico. Got to hear that. Um let's talk about the midterms, the midterms and where we're going with that as and and more with our guy in DC. Then let's have on uh the professor, Professor Dan Eastman. He's he's a regular broadcaster here. I want to talk with him about things we talked about last night with Ed Dow. The death of the dollar, our massive debt, inflation. The average American, the average American is really hurting with this inflation and it's getting worse. New reports in it's getting worse. So, where are we going with this economy? And what does he think about how much longer the dollar will last and um central bank digital currencies? I also want to ask you about what does he think about what President Trump is doing when it comes to Iran and um the energy crisis. Is there a bigger strategy here with President Trump? What does he think's going on? Let's see who else tonight. Um also we're going to have on Chad and Katie Brewer. They run a clinic at Lake of the Ozarks. They've been on before.
um they're going to tell their story again and hopefully offer some hope. Do you have somebody in your family that is addicted to alcohol or has gotten addicted to painkillers? Yeah. Sometimes we as Christians get sad, we get depressed, we get anxious. Uh and some people that are Christians definitely just like you know people in the world, we we're real people, right? Us Christians, we have the same problems much of the people in the world have. um we're not just because we're a Christian doesn't make us immune from certain things, right? So, I think there's sometimes in the Christian community an embarrassment to talk about these things and people don't want to talk about it.
They always want to put their best foot forward and I get that. But I think we also need to be sensitive to the fact that there are people that are are good Christians that love the Lord that started out socially drinking and next thing you know they're addicted or got a back surgery or knee surgery, got on painkillers, next thing you know they're addicted and they need real help. And 30-day treatment centers for some of them and just this idea of talk talk and willpower uh doesn't work because there's a physiological thing going on.
There's something going on in the brain where the body is craving this. How do you deal with that? Well, Chad had that very issue and uh he for I don't know a decade or more has been absolutely alcohol-free, but it was cuz his wife put him in the car and took him to a clinic many hours away and they put him in a chair and they gave him IVs all day, NAD and other things that took away those cravings and dealt with those physiological issues. And um through that he decided and his wife decided to start a clinic in central Missouri as a businessman. He'd been very successful and he thought well you know this really helped me that this saved my life saved my marriage. Um I need to use my business skills to offer people an answer and solution and hope. So he used his business skills and started a clinic in his area central Missouri because he was given hope and for I think better than 10 years hasn't had a drink.
I think their success rate's really high. I think you're going to be shocked. We haven't had them on in a while. And what sparked this is someone in our audience, a dear person in our audience, reached out to Melissa this week on u on the phone said, "I need the name and the number of that clinic and those people that Brandon's interviewed in the past. We have an emergency. We need their help now." So, I said, "You know what? I think it's been a while since we've interviewed them. Let's get Chad and Katie back on because there are good people out there, including good Christians that are struggling sometimes with real issues. And the old, hey, let's talk about this. Pull yourself up by your bootstraps. Willpower, you know, that just doesn't work sometimes when you get up every day and you have the craving and the craving and the craving because something has changed because you got an addict. And that's where the science comes in with what we're going to talk about tonight with Chad and Katie. So, if you know someone that is struggling, you might want to tell them that here uh our last guest tonight. I pre-recorded the interview with Chad and Katie. So, our last guest tonight will be Chad and Katie and a pre-recorded interview I did with him this afternoon.
And of course, we'll put it up online tomorrow at worldview tube.com. Maybe you could send that link tomorrow to someone you know, the spouse or the individual you know, or maybe the parent of someone who's dealing with this and say, "Here is a solution." We've had quite a few of our people, we'll ask them tonight, I'm not sure how many, but we've had several of our people uh who watch this broadcast go through their clinic and have had great success because again, it deals with the physiological issue. There's a doctor on staff with them. There's RNs on staff and you go in from like 9:00 to 5, you know, 9:00 in the morning till 5 and sit in a recliner and get an IV of NAD and other things that can bring you back and deal with the cravings. And um we'll you'll learn more about it tonight, but again, we've seen some of our own folks um go to the clinic for themselves or their family member and they've had success and we're thankful for that. So again, we'll deal with that tonight. So, um, Logan, we're going to have on Nick Holshire, Jim Path, Dan Eastman, and Chad and Katie. I got everybody. Yep, I think that's everybody. All right. How is everything in the control room tonight?
Good. How is Max doing on the next course? The course now you can take online if you're a Vault members. We have a 53-hour revelation course. Watch the video, read an overview, and then take a test at the end. Get a certificate. The next course is Grave Influence. How close are we to launching that?
>> We ran into a little bit of a roadblock, but we should have it done by tomorrow.
>> Really? What was the roadblock?
>> The last episode that we thought was the last episode was not.
>> Did we find it?
>> Not yet.
>> You think you know where it's at?
>> Uh, not really. It's not in the hard drive that the other ones are in. So >> So I might have to refilm that one.
>> Well, we'll we'll look.
>> We'll look. How many How many lessons are there?
>> Well, we thought there was 21, but 21.
You teased the next one. So, >> okay. Well, I may have to film the last one again. But anyway, it's 21 right now. 20 hours. Supposed to be 21 cuz there's 21 radicals ruling America from the grave. That's >> No, there's 21 we have done now.
>> Oh, you have done 21.
>> Yeah.
>> Well, then what's the last one?
>> I'm guessing 22. Hopefully, not 23.
>> Oh, all right. Well, anyway, we'll figure it out. Those guys will figure it out. I guess I didn't keep everything together like I should on external hard drives and load. See, at one time this was pretty much a oneman show, guys. You all You all know that, right? This was a one-man show pretty much for years. I I post edited every TV show that went on the network. I filmed them and I posted them. If we weren't live, and a lot of times we weren't because I I am I gonna produce live TV. Melissa was producing live TV for me on Sunday nights. Logan was producing the live TV for me on Sunday nights when he was still pretty young. Um, but other than that, everything was pretty much filmed and I posted edited all of it myself. And that means I have all these external hard drives that stuff's on and they're all trying to find out if I missed out and loading some stuff, which apparently I have. Can you believe I did all this by myself for years, Logan?
>> I know. It's crazy.
>> It is crazy. I don't know how I did I think we I think 22 will be the last one because it's Roger Roger Baldwin.
>> So, you think 22 is the last?
>> Yeah.
>> Do you think we have them all?
>> No. I said if we find 22, that will be the last.
>> All right. If not, I'll film it again.
But can you believe all the years, all the content we cranked out and and it was just me, a oneman show, >> plus all the other shows you had, too.
>> Yep. Yep. Yep. Yep. Cuz USA would come in, I'd film those. Chamom, Andy Woods.
people would come in and I'd film them and then I would they'd leave and I would post edit them all and put them online. Um, I'm so glad I don't have to do anymore. I'm so thankful for Logan and all the guys in the control room because now instead of me postedding a ton of television that freed me up to do documentaries, write books, it really freed me up to do the things that I can do and they can do the things they can do. But man, I was I cannot believe all the years I did that without a team. But I had to wait for Logan to grow up and get out of high school and and then his friends to grow up cuz most of them there worked in the control room are from his friend group. So now we got a whole team and look at the volume of content coming out. But very soon Logan I'm thinking by what? By by next week we ought to be able to offer the full course of Grave Influence 22 23 hours, right?
>> Yeah. If not tomorrow.
>> Not tomorrow.
>> No, if not tomorrow.
>> Oh, if not tomorrow. Look at that.
>> If we find 22, we can we can edit it and have it out.
>> Well, there you go. All right. So, Revelation courses online, grave influence coming very, very soon. And then the next one will be put your beliefs to the test, right? Yep. Yep.
And we're going to continue. So, all of these are courses you can take. Watch a video, read an overview of the course of the of the hour you just watched. You watch it, then you read an overview worksheet, and then you take a quiz online, and then you get a certificate at the end of the course. And so we got Revelation, Grave Influence. Put your beliefs to the test, others coming there. And you don't have to um pay extra if you're a Vault member. This is just one of the many different things we're adding to the vault.
Worldview.com/vault.
If you're a Vault member, you're also going to be able to live stream our fall conference coming up October 23 and 24 if you're a Vault member. That conference is free to attend in person, but you have to be a Vault member to live stream it. Okay? So there you go.
All right. Don't forget all the other ways you can support us.
Worldview.com/sponsors.
What? What's that?
>> I have one disclaimer. What?
>> If you were watching on YouTube, we pre-taped with Nick. So, we're gonna air that on World YouTube and every other platform. But if you're watching on YouTube, we're going to stay live and go to the to Dan or No, we're going to gym first, aren't we?
>> Yep.
>> We're going to go to Jim and then on YouTube and then on Worldview X and Rumble, we're going to roll the Nick interview.
>> Okay? Because we we we don't want to get censored.
>> Yeah. Well, >> or get a strike.
>> Yeah.
>> So, what are you telling people on YouTube to what? Come back here.
>> Come to worldview.com or the app or Rumble or X.
>> Okay.
>> And then you can go back to YouTube.
Unless you just want to skip the Nick interview and go to Dan or Jim.
>> No. You mean if they want to?
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. All right. There you go. Now you get it, folks. Now you get it. All right. Um remember worldview.com/sponsors worldview.comsponsors you know all the great products there many of them will support your health and us at the same time worldview.com/sponsors worldview.comsponsors Bella Grace Numei Gatatana worldview talk it's all there you know it uh u I don't need to promote it all you know it worldview.com/sponsors all Right. Thank you for supporting us, folks. We sure appreciate it as we keep pushing all this content out. We got to bring in about 40 grand a month just to keep this network up and running, folks.
So, between our sponsors and our foundation, we appreciate your support.
Now, is our uh reporter and broadcast partner on the ground in the nation's capital. Uh he is, by the way, also a guy that runs his own organization, the Conservative Caucus. Uh it was founded by uh Howard Phillips, who I had the chance to get to know. My mother taught his children at a Christian school in Northern Virginia, Fairfax Christian, Fairfax Christian School. And uh years later, I got to know Doug Phillips um through Dick Bot of Bot Radio Network.
And Howard Phillips started that organization, the Conservative Caucus, now led by none other than our guy in Washington, Jim PA. Jim, welcome back to the broadcast. Thanks for being with us.
>> Thanks for having me. Good to be with you, Brandon.
>> You, too. All right. So, where are we going, Jim, with the midterms? Right now, it looks more hopeful. Uh, Rhino John Cornin defeated in Texas. And not just defeated, I mean, soundly defeated by like 30 points, right? Yeah. And I think James Terico, the Democrat nominee, the Democrat heretic, uh, we don't know if he has a girlfriend that he says he has for four years, etc., etc. that that did not appar that does apparently suddenly like meat when he was a vegan, James Terico should be scared about the fact that the the counties in Texas that the difference in support for John Cornin during the primary, this was the runoff on Tuesday, >> during the primary compared to the runoff was a massive shift towards Paxton. And there's a lot of energy in certainly amongst MAGA people who support Donald Trump, but I I think in Texas at least there there was real evidence that there is Republican energy there. So generally with the uh elections in you know in congressional seats and senate seats around the country yeah I think there's a hope to think that uh Republicans can keep the house in the senate in spite of the fact that thanks to people like John Thun who won't pass the Save America Act and uh Speaker Mike Johnson who was whining about the fact that members of Congress uh still only make $174,000 a year since 2009 in spite of the fact that they're saying those things and doing the best they can to dispirit uh GOP voters, I I think that there is definitely a positive movement towards keeping both chambers.
>> So So in other words, if guys like Mike Johnson would stop snatching uh defeat out of the jaws of victory, we'd be fine.
>> Yeah, you stole my phrase there. You know, I say that all the time, but yeah, it's it's so true.
Republican leadership in Washington DC.
And for those who may not know, I worked for eight years on Capitol Hill as a chief of staff for a couple different members of Congress. I mean, I'm I'm I'm what you call an insider, except I really hate DC insiders, at least that are not of the same mind I am. These members of Congress are really absurd.
So many of them are so absurd. We've got a few heroes up there. No doubt about it. and you hear about them when on on programs like Worldview Tube, but uh there are a whole bunch of people that just they've lost track of what even really matters at all. And uh and that's why they keep failing so much. The Senate is the worst of the worst. John Thun on an 80% issue, the Save America Act, 80% of Americans, 70 to 77% of Democrats support voter ID requirements and support the other provisions of a way to put our elections back to where they were uh at the beginning of the century, which were the gold standard in all human history and worldwide. They can't even do something like that because they have totally lost a touch with reality. That said, Donald Trump is winning. I mean, I'm the ran war thing is really, I think, a little bit problematic if he can't get it done going into the elections. That that may be a problem if gas prices stay up. But every other economic indicator shows at least relatively positive or extremely positive results for the American people that they are feeling right now in some cases in spite of the fact that they're paying higher gas prices. No tax on tips, no tax on overtime, no tax on social security. That's very positive.
and jobs are increasing because capital investment after the one big beautiful bills provision so that companies can immediately expense capital investment that's already beginning to have an effect in the job market and that's just going to continue to grow throughout the rest of the year as we lean into November. So yeah, I have I have some real hope in spite of Republicans. I mean let me go back to Texas real quick.
Yeah, in spite of Republicans. Let me go back to Texas real quick.
The Rhinos were saying that that Ken Paxton, who we've interviewed in person several times and vi via technology, and we've invited him on the program. We've reached out to his people that some of his folks have worked with him uh text us back yesterday. We're trying to get him onto the program and interview him.
I don't think Telerico will come on the broadcast, but he's welcome to come on here, but I don't think he's going to do it. Um but let's go back there. Some of the Rhino people are trying to tell us that if Ken Paxton won that uh he has so much baggage and there's going to be so much that comes out that's going to be so detrimental to Ken Paxton. What on earth are they talking about? I mean, I know there were a few things in the personal category, but nobody's electing saints. Okay, nobody's electing the church elder. You're you're electing a guy to be a US senator. But what on earth? Why are these people already being so negative about Ken Paxton?
>> Well, because John Cornin plays the game well in Washington DC in a manner that they prefer. That that's why I mean that that's what they want. You know, we have a muscle memory in Washington DC that was developed by people like Mitch McConnell for these 20 nearly 20 or maybe a little over 20 years that he was Senate majority leader. It's like well let's keep our head down. Let's not do anything controversial.
Uh we we'll be we'll play nice with the Democrats and every once in a while we'll lose the majority, but overall we'll keep it for the most part except that they've totally destroyed everything that matters to the American people. I mean, you're right. We're not electing saints because Donald Trump's president and the and and and I would like to elect saints, but you just know that's not going to happen all all the time. Ken Paxton though, one of the reasons he gets in there gets to be energy behind him is because they made a failed attempt to try to impeach him in the uh the Texas legislature that it failed miserably and people like Carl Rove were pushing it cuz they wanted to get rid of a guy that was actually being effective in the attorney general's seat. He does have a very real issue with his ex-wife and and that's certainly something there. But when you compare that to James Terico saying that his this was in 2022 was a previous campaign of his where he said we're an all vegan campaign because we care about the environment. When he continues to assert that there are six genders. when he calls God binary when God is you you just read the scriptures very clearly that God is the father then we have the father and then the son right there in the bible it's very clear when you look at him saying that uh ga the angel Gabriel g supposedly giving Mary a choice about whether or not to take on the son of god the father um that that that proves that the Bible promotes abortion while ignoring the ten commandments, thou shalt not kill. Um you know the these are the weird things and many others that Terico promotes. So whatever negatives one can find with Kin Paxton, there are hundreds of others certain dozens to hundreds of others with James Talerico. You are going to see evangelicals and Catholics, people of faith, uh, coming out in droves to make sure a heretic, a confirmed heretic like uh, James Tarico doesn't get elected.
So, no, Kim Paxton's not a weak candidate. He's actually very strong because he's been the most proTrump.
John Cornin was telling Trump not to run prior to 2024 cuz he couldn't win. These are the smart people in Washington DC.
Um and and yet Ken Paxton at every turn was supporting the president, turning back the Biden agenda when when uh Joe Biden was still president. That's the kind of fighter we need in Washington DC coming from Texas. And here is the here's a clip from Telerico. Listen to this. Here we go. And this guy thinks he's going to win Texas going all vegan. Here we go. We have I think heard more and more um issues >> of course >> welfare I think not just because it's the right thing to do and the moral thing to do but also it's as all of you know necessary to fight climate change it is now existential that we try to reduce our meat consumption and that we try to respect animals in all aspects of society and so I I am proud to say that our campaign um has officially become a non-meat campaign so We um have we are um we are only buying vegan products from from our local vegan businesses. Um some of you may know big nonas. They they were little nonas and then they opened up brick and mortar. So another big nonas but uh we just got our pizza from there. Uh >> all right. So this guy thinks he can win in cattle country and he's already backtracking that I'm being told.
>> Oh, he's working very hard to say, oh no, they're taking this stuff out of context. I'd like someone to show me how that was taken out of context.
>> Yeah. How about this one? How about this one?
>> I also saw that Ken Ken Paxton uh started calling me Talafricco and I am I am proud to announce that we have I'm a Talafrico t-shirts on our website.
So when you go home tonight, make sure you grab one. Wow. All right. So he's going to he's going to own that. Let's see what else we got. We have another one here. Yeah, let's let's check this one out. Here we go. You ready? Here we go.
>> This is not.
>> There. Let me go.
>> This is Texas. This is not.
>> There are many more than two biological sexes. In fact, there are six.
>> This is Texas. This is not.
>> The American flag is such a complicated symbol for most of us.
>> This is Texas. This is not.
>> They're going to call me a radical leftist.
>> This is Texas. This is not >> something that you love. that's not family or friends.
>> Um, I love, and I'm just saying this because it's on my mind, the trans children.
>> This is Texas. This is not.
>> Our southern border should be like our front porch. There should be a giant welcome mat out front.
>> This is Texas. This is not.
>> It is now existential that uh we try to reduce our meat consumption. I am proud to say that our campaign has officially become a nonmeat campaign.
>> This is Texas.
>> This is not >> uh that looks like paid for by Ken Action for Senate. So >> that's his first one out of the gate.
Yeah, >> that is his first one. So you knew about this?
>> Yes.
>> Okay. It's fantastic commercial.
>> Well, some I was going to say sometimes the ads that get put out by the candidates are weak. the best c the best campaign ads sometimes are put out by the people, right? You're kind of seeing that with the Spencer Pratt running for mayor uh in LA. The best ads are coming from grassroots people putting together AI videos. And you know, I was watching that wondering who is this going to be a Kin Paxton ad or is this a, you know, some grassroots campaign. So Ken Paxton's people are coming out of the gate. They're they're you can already tell that what this is going to be about. You can already tell he's got a much more wellorganized campaign than probably John Cornin would have had.
John, you know, John Cornin, well, I shouldn't say unorganized. I mean, John Cornin would have organized the uh consultant class in Washington DC to come in and make their millions of dollars off of placing ads that mayor that'll be really smarmy and stupid and boring. Whereas Ken Paxton is hitting it out of the gate. Listen, politics is about contrasts. I I don't believe in venge vengeance politics where someone did me wrong and now I'm going to make him pay. No, what we're doing here is we're fighting evil. To be candid, that's literally where we're at. We used to be Democrat Americans fighting Republican Americans. That used to be the case in this country. It's not the case anymore. We are fighting evil in the Democrat party that is has its fundamental foundations in socialism and mauist communism. That's literally where they're at. and their attempts to overthrow the American republic because they want to bypass the Constitution as Joe Biden did entirely during his administration. When Ken Paxton makes these distinctions, it's clear to Americans. It's definitely clear to Texans cuz he hit all the right Texas Texas uh sensibilities there. And so that's very effective. That's what you do in campaigns. Paxton's going to, I think, have a very good run.
>> And uh here's one. You got to watch this. Oh, tell me if you've seen this.
Here we go.
>> Part of this Christian nationalist movement isn't is uh trying to pass these things called private school vouchers. And if you're not an education policy person, you may never heard of this, but essentially it's uh an effort to take tax dollars out of our public schools, which are underfunded as they are. Texas is 43rd in the nation in per student education funding. Wow. Um, so it's taking dollars out of the classroom and giving it to unaccountable private schools, usually Christian private schools. Again, part of this effort to blur the lines between church and state.
And the governor of Texas, Greg Abbott, made this his top legislative priority for the year last.
>> Okay. So, you're a Christian nationalist if you're in favor of Christian schools.
And of course, I think we have to be careful, and I've been saying this since the early 90s with my books. Got to be very careful with school vouchers because normally the money can pick up, you know, mandates. You take the money, now you have to take the curriculum, the testing. What I'm in favor of is not vouchers as I am tax credits. I think that parents ought to get tax credits.
If the public schools are so bad, which most of them are, that you're not doing the job, and they're the the ratio of student to teacher is is poor, and you've got crime and and you're teaching LGBTQ garbage, and you're not teaching phonics, and you're not teaching the traditional subjects, and a parent's like, "I'm not doing this." and you want to put your kid in a homeschool program that you do in a homeschool co-op or a private Christian school or just a private school, then you ought to be able to get a tax credit because you're being forced to pay for the government school system, which I think is completely unconstitutional.
Completely unconstitutional to force taxpayers to pay for a public educational system. And I can say that because I never plan on running for office. Um, and I think it's wrong to have me paying for kids to go to school when my kids are grown. Why? Why should I have to pay for a school system that I don't even access? Okay. But then to say that you can't get a tax credit or in this case, he says voucher. I'm for tax credits. And I explained why. Uh, is Christian nationalism. No. And and as far as the schools being underfunded, we know the schools aren't underfunded. We know that a lot of these teachers are making uh the the the administration, they're making very big money. They get very good pensions. Maybe the money doesn't trickle down to the teachers.
Depends on the state and the school district. Well, if it doesn't trickle down, then maybe you ought to look at how heavy up top everything is. But you're getting more than enough money.
And when you're building hundred million dollar, and I know that's going on in Texas, when you're building hundred million dollar football stadiums and complexes and high schools, don't tell me you don't have enough money. The issue is mismanagement because look how the homeschoolers do it on a shoestring.
So, we could do it. They're they're not underfunded. No, Siri. But you're now a Christian nationalist if you're not for the secular humanist now what is the cosmic humanist new uh school system. He says that that this is a violation of separation church and state. No, it is not. What is a violation of separation of church and state is when you only allow one religion into the schoolroom.
you they have ushered Christianity out the front door while they've brought in secular humanism traditionally in the back door because the father of modern education was John Dwey a secular humanist who signed the humanist manifesto who went to Russia in the late 20s early 30s uh 1920 1930s to study the Carl Marchway education came back to America implemented that here uh and of course joined with um Edward Ar Merl in his early 20s to bring all of the cultural Marxists from the Frankfurt school here in the about 1933 and dropped them down at Brandeise, Berkeley, and Princeton to have a cultural Marxist revolution by starting out by destroying the American male.
Now, it's not secular humanism so much as it is cosmic humanism. Many of these schools, and I can show it going to the early '9s, are teaching kids to have their own spirit or master guide. That's cosmic humanism. So whether it's secular humanism, cosmic humanism, or really what is now the dominant worldview in our educational system, postmodernism, don't sit there, Jimmy, and tell me that Christians wanting to educate their kids and keep some of their own money to do it through a tax credit or voucher are somehow violating the separation of church and state when the only allowed funded worldview, religious worldview, is either secular humanism, cosmic humanism, or post-modernism.
No, Jimmy, you won't come my show. I'll tell you why you won't. A, I would prove you to be a Romans 1 fool according to the Bible. And two, I would prove you're a bigger idiot than most people know.
So, I dare you to come on my show live so it can't be edited. But I know you won't do it cuz I've been doing this a long time. Jim's been doing this a long time. You would not make it in a toe-to-toe debate on the issues and a worldview and debate on the Bible. You'd be in you you'd well again you'd be proven to be the Romans one fool that I think he is. Now I'm gonna hop off my soap box, but that one ticks me off right there. Well, it it it actually is an hypocrisy on his part. He's trying to claim Christian fidelity and he's trying he's shoving Christians out of the government schools. You know what's interesting as well just to add to all that you said there the first amendment protects p when it comes to religion amongst the other things the first amendment protects it protects the free exercise of religion that means the government doesn't get to tell me in any private public or government institution that I can't exercise my religion period it is a restraint on government from telling me I can't exercise religious faith Okay. So that's that's a a big issue there. Secondly, I'm going to slightly demir from what you said. We when you and I were growing up, secular humanism was the guiding principle in the government school monopoly. That has actually shifted pretty strongly towards a neopaganism.
If this was secular humanism, you could still appeal to basic moral principles because secular humanists, they they stole moral principles from God's moral principles in the Ten Commandments.
Next, you're right about school vouchers. Listen, I I think the homeschool community in particular, but anyone should be concerned about vouchers. We need to give tax credits.
But his whole idea of the funding structure is entirely ignorant. It's it's actually probably purposefully ignorant. I looked up the numbers today when I saw this uh video. In Texas, they have in primary education about $12,000 per pupil that they spend. It is actually 44th in the nation. What he doesn't point out is that achievement amongst that same group of children is 27th in the nation. Like they get a big bang for the buck. Mississippi, which is also very low in per pupil spending.
When you adjust uh uh pupil outcomes, educational outcomes by demographic, Mississippi has the best education system in the country. But there are also other things too like uh the one other example $31,000 per student in the DC area and they have absolutely the 51st in when it comes to achievement whereas Massachusetts has a similar amount they do per student and they have very high achievement in primary and secondary. It has nothing to do with uh the amount of money per pupil and they steal our money to put it into a government education and monopoly. James Telerico supports a neopagan continuation of the government monopoly over education. That monopoly needs to be broken. What Arizona does is probably the best. whether you personally spend it or you spend it on behalf of someone else, you get a direct uh tax uh credit to your overall taxes when you do education. And we need to go towards that direction exactly as you've talked about Brandon. But James Taler Rico, he is a secularist pagan approach to education and government because he does not believe as Christian nationalists or those who won't use that term believe that rights come from God. They do not come from government. James Talerico believes your rights come from government and should be adjudicated by some government bureaucrat. It's why he's not going to be successful in Texas. He he would be successful in California maybe, but not in Texas. It's not going to happen. But the American people also are not with him. And he's he's going to be lampuned for months now. Ken Paxton needs to run a great campaign to oppose it cuz Terico is going to attract a lot of money. But I feel confident Ken can do that because he actually understands what really matters, what Trump mega voters want and what the American people want. So, I think he's going to be successful.
>> And I want to make sure you and I are on the same page. I I don't believe secular humanism is the dominant worldview today. And I've been writing about that for a long time. Sadly, I still read about many of the pro- family leaders.
Many of them are stuck back in the 70s and 80s >> cuz you and I both know some of the pro- family leaders. Some of them are just they're not real sharp people. I mean, they don't they're not readers. They don't read. They don't. They're good at fundraising and oneliners, but they're not like Francis Schaefer type people like like you and I love to read and consume, right? And I still see them talking about secular humanism. I'm like, guys, >> that is still a worldview. It's still there, but that is not the dominant worldview anymore. It is mostly, as you say, neopaganism, cosmic humanism, new age, uh, postmodernism is its own worldview as well. though this cosmic humanism and postmodernism are your dominant worldviews today. I mean you could also throw in there socialism which really would be communism or Marxism linism but all of it's kind of been mixed together and thrown into the different subjects but secular humanism this idea that man for those who don't know this idea that man doesn't have a soul you die that's it it's over most people today are embracing the idea that that man has a soul that there's a spiritual world we need to tap into it that you go somewhere after you die uh that you have reincarnation good karma bad karma There are spirit guides, master guides. A lot of people have abandoned the idea that you die and that's it. That's secular humanism. So just so everybody understands, you and I are one of the some of the few people though in the pro family religious environment that get this. You know that, right?
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. Listen, what the the philos the philosophical construct of Democrats right now is much closer to Nietze than it is to even existentialists who h really have that materialistic chance worldview about uh evolution and uh now there's still some of that that that feeds itself in but what's important about Friedrich Nichze that people should understand Nietze who proclaimed the death of God he actually really proclaimed the death of God not so much because of a hatred for God but because he was so angry at Christian culture in Europe in the 19th century that he felt like that that actually that Christians killed God. That was his the main construct of where he came from with that. But what and to replace that in his despair, he he looked back towards Roman culture. And this is where he got the idea of the uber mch where, you know, the uber mch is going to set his own course. He's going to do what he thinks needs to be done. He's going to build his house, as Nietze said, on Vuvius, which was an active volcano in his time and still is to this day. You know, he was going to be the tough guy that was going to figure out his own way. that hearkens to Roman culture which I mean I think a lot of people should look at Roman culture more closely. There was a lot of good that came from Roman culture in terms of architecture and mathematics and and various things that they did but it was a brutal culture. The family structure, which was strong in terms of the fact that it tended to stay together, was still very brutal in the way that it treated particularly women, but people in younger generations from the oldest one. You look at the way that that culture demanded feelalty to the gods to the point where they were killing Christians and in in horrid ways for about the first 200 years of the church.
off and on. You you look at what uh Roman culture did then. They had believed in an afterlife. They demanded that everyone worship the pagan gods that they put forth whether it was the emperor or other gods. I think something very similar to that is as you rightly point out they it's a more spiritual approach this neopaganism. I think it's very similar to Roman culture where they're going to demand that as a Christian you bow down to the secular gods that they create in their government structures or if they have enough power to do it they would kill you. I don't think Democrats imminently want to kill people that oppose them.
But I think the logical end, if you look out 20, 30, 40, 50 years from now, if they are able to do what they began to do in the Biden administration, it will come to that sort of persecution where they're going to totally shut down your life and demand that you worship at the government altar and at other uh cultural altars. They tried to get us to worship at transgenderism, at DEI. They got tried to get us to worship at the climate crisis that they falsely put together. This is this is where they're at right now. We need to be aware that they will go there if given power. And isn't it interesting that we have pictures of Hitler staring at a bust of Nichi? He liked Nichi, like Darwin, the Superman as you're talking about with the Darwinian evolution, merging those together. Uh Nichi talking about master morality, slave morality. He even talked about spiritualizing cruelty used to sign his letters. Nichi the antichrist sometimes just the antichrist. I mean that's that's one of your founders of postmodern thought. The other one of course is uh Michael Fuko the French philosopher who who who uh I think he's the one that um talked about sex by murder uh murder by sex you know infecting his lovers with AIDS without them knowing it. Are you're aware of that?
>> Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Absolutely. Yeah.
>> Mhm. So people >> well and by by the way keep in mind that um what's really interesting that a lot of Christians know about Nietz and he said the death of God and they wouldn't ever read him. I actually think it it's worth reading Nietze thus spake zerathustra in particular where he proclaimed the death of God so you understand really where he's coming from. What's very interesting about Nietze and he was a brilliant guy. I mean, he really was a very smart guy.
But the problem is he built up so much despair because of seeing the ineffectiveness and the hypocrisy of Christian culture that was mostly coming out of the liberal theology of the 19th century showing that they were totally ineffective in society and he built that despair out of that. I think that Christians need to understand why Nietze made that turn because in my opinion the church is on a similar path right now.
Like we've got a lot of great people in the church but you pointed out even in the pro- family movement we've got some very weak very shallow thinking people who ought to be deeply understanding of the theology of God, who he is, what his moral standards are. Why Jesus very first preaching was repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. What does that mean and how does that apply in culture? We should be fighting in culture and in politics and entertainment everywhere. We should be fighting in those spheres to advance the truths of God's kingdom. Jesus and that's why we of course teach biblical worldview to apply all those areas to all areas of life. Let me go to one more clip by this guy before we run out of time. Look at look at this one. Yeah, we're >> seeing that climate change is here and that we need action. And so I think if if it can happen in Texas, if we can build that bipartisan coalition to save the planet, if we can do it here, then there's hope for us doing it across the country and across the world. And and so we've got to keep this issue on the front burner, pardon my pun, to make sure that that folks understand that this is no longer a theoretical possibility. It is no longer something in the distant future for our kids and grandkids to deal with. It is here and it is killing Texans and Americans by the thousands.
>> Wow. Climate change, global warming, killing Texans by the thousands. What?
He >> He's so He's so intensely involved in this that to say he was putting something on the front burner. His his pardon.
>> He shouldn't be using any burner if he's worried about climate change. Right.
>> That's true. Listen, it's absurd.
Climate change was put in as a philosoph at at best a philosophical construct.
It's much worse than that. To inject socialist communist ideas into government. Yep. to bring us under an authority so that government control can be the way to go. Do not underestimate this. By the way, some people say, "Yeah, I mean, I've heard that, Jim, but I'm not sure."
When you go back to the critical um thinking stuff that that came across that you referred to earlier that that critical theory was an attempt to take the economic construct of communism and build up the angst in society around cultural and social things to try to inject communism. They the the whole critical theory people were pro-communist. They wanted to bring communism into western culture as Marx had tried to do. When it failed with Russia, they just came up with a different construct. But climate change falls into that construct too. It was another way to bring back in economic approach to things to try to allow government to control society because they believe government needs to control society because they're godless in their way of thinking. They do not want to accept God's ultimate authority over all authority on earth and uh his moral authority over the earth as the invisible imminent um uh universal creator of all things.
He is a spirit. He transcends everything that's finite on this earth. He's literally all powerful. But these are people that are still in satanic rebellion in their mind against where rights come from and God's authority over the earth. That's what we're literally fighting against. It's why every Christian needs to understand they got to get engaged in the culture and politics, but they also need to get engaged in what's being said in Ephesians 6 because these are principalities and powers of darkness that want to overthrow mankind. And this is it's a very spiritual satanic thing that we're fighting against. We got to be in prayer, but we also have to be in regular action knowing the construct of these things. So, uh that that's what I I when I see Torico, he's a fulfillment of all of these outrageous ideals that have controlled the heart of mankind mostly since the 19th century.
>> The conservative caucus.com. Great conversation tonight, Jim.
>> Thanks. Good to be with you, Brandon.
>> You too, my friend. And by the way, okay, Logan, I'm going to get this wrong. Jim and Logan are on Monday through Thursday at 6:30 Central.
>> Ding, ding, ding.
>> I got it right. There you go. 6:30 Central, 7:30 Eastern Standard. Wow. All right.
>> First time in months. Great job.
>> It is. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
The Conservative Caucus.com. Thank you, Jim.
There is a website the conservative caucus.com. We'll be right back after this short break. Friends, this is Brandon House. For more than a year now, I've been teaching through the book of Revelation, and the response from you has been overwhelming. You've asked me again and again. When are you going to put this study in print? We want to mark it up. We want to share it with our families. Well, it's here. my brand new two volume commentary on the book of Revelation verse by verse, chapter by chapter. This is not a watered down allegorized replacement theology approach to Revelation. This is a literal, grammatical, historical study the way the Lord intended his word to be read.
And I connect the prophecy of Revelation to the headlines you're watching unfold right now. The rise of global government and the convergence of endtime events the Lord Jesus warned us about. Folks, we are living in serious days and there has never been a more important time to understand what God has told us about what is coming. Get your two volume revelation commentary today at worldviewstore.com. That's worldviewstore.com.
Joining me now is Professor Dan Eastman.
He is an attorney and a professor of economics. He uh he joins us to talk about what's going on in the economy. We have according to Wolf Street inflation surges further away from Fed's target now nearly double the Fed's target and five plus years above target. Trend reversal started a year ago. Service inflation stuck at a high rate for a year. Now prices of food, energy, computers and software uh and gold jewelry uh all surged. Gold jewelry, gold price spiked all surged.
Uh Dan, welcome back. Thanks for being with us. Professor Eastman.
>> Yeah, Brandon, thanks for having me on.
It's always a pleasure.
>> You You too. Let's see if we can help the American people figure out where we're going. Had on uh Ed Dow last night. He says we're going to go to $10,000 gold by 2030. Uh he says that the dollar and the into this system is in the next 2 three years.
And he says we're going to see a 30, 40, maybe 50% correction in the market. that it's not based on real legit. You know, it's kind of what Allan Greenspan years ago called it irrational exuberance.
Remember that quote? And he he says that housing prices are coming down in a lot of the markets. You know, I don't think they've overheated here in the Midsouth like Florida or LA or different places, but that housing prices could be a 30% correction. He talked about uh baby boomers. Too many of them have too much of their net worth in the market. 90% in the market baby boomers are people retired. Um some of them of course many of them have a home and then a vacation home and that when this market tanks a lot of them are going to be in trouble and they're going to have to sell one of these homes. And he says all of this is going to create a reset. Uh but then it'll all start going right back up. and he anticipates uh the dollar actually shooting up for a while before it goes down and we have to go to a new system.
All right, that's basically the bullet points. What are your thoughts on all that?
>> Well, I'm not so sure that he's that far off. We're certainly in a complicated economic situation and it's all really driven by the fact that our United States Congress continues to spend vastly more money every year than it takes in in revenues. We we have a tax revenue of about $5 trillion that's generated from 165 million American taxpayers plus corporate taxpayers and you know tariff money. We have $5 trillion to spend and of course Congress dutifully spends 7.5 trillion which creates uh $2.5 trillion deficit and the only way to fund that deficit is the federal treasury goes out and sells Treasury bonds into a global market and uh borrow the money and then they spend they spend $2.5 trillion more than they take in and that adds to our national debt which is about $39.5 trillion dollar right now which is larger than the entire GDP, gross domestic product of the entire American economy. So Congress has dutifully spent us broke over the last 250 years and that's why everybody's excited about 250 years.
Let's celebrate. Um as long as we don't look at the balance sheet, I guess we can have an apple pie and drive a Chevy and wave the flag. It'd be great. But the problem is when you run that type of systemic deficit for 250 years and rack up $39.5 trillion in debt and keep in mind the debt service on that debt today is 25% of that $5 trillion. 25% of every tax dollar is going to pay interest on money we already spent long ago long ago. So when you when you look at the federal government's spending habits and then you ask the question why are we seeing inflation in the system? It's because in order to keep the interest rates within a narrow band, and that's what the Federal Reserve does. It keeps the interest rates within a narrow band to regulate the economy. In order to do that, they are constantly having to step into this global debt market and buy bonds with fresh money that they create out of thin air. This is this is the one entity that can create money out of nothing. And they create $2.5 trillion.
And they buy those extra bonds and they put them on the balance sheet. And the Fed balance sheet has been growing and growing and growing since 2007208 when quantitative easing became a thing.
So you're seeing a lot of money being pumped into the economy. And of course if you follow Milton Friedman and some of the great monetary theorists, too many dollars chasing too few goods creates inflation. So by this deficit spending year after year after year accumulating a massive $ 39.5 trillion dollars, they're pumping money into the system like there's no tomorrow. But it's not equally distributed. We don't go we all don't get a check. Each 330 million Americans, we don't get a check for the same size. It's unequally distributed. So what's happening is those in the cash flow are doing very very well in this economy. It's a K a K-shaped economy. the rich and the people who have access to money are doing very very well. This is a very very prosperous time in America if you're on the right side of the tracks.
If you're on the other 90% of us on the wrong side of the tracks, what you're seeing is inflation in food and of course energy and of course clothing imports. All of those those inputs basic human inputs are becoming more and more and more expensive. And when you look at the uh inflation index numbers, we have the consumer price index and then we have the PCE index, which is what the Federal Reserve pays attention to.
They're both showing headline inflation at about 3.8%.
Now, the Federal Reserve has a mandate from Congress back when back in the olden days when it was created in 1913 and then went live in 1914. There are three functions. Number one, be the lender of last resort. If a bank is failing, shovel money in the back door so Jimmy Stewart can hand it over the counter and calm the panic and everybody goes home. The bank didn't fail. Merge it into a stronger bank. That's what the Federal Reserve is very good at. And we're thankful we have that feature. The other two elements, of course, is the dual mandate. Keep unemployment at 5% or less, and right now we're running 4.3, so we're in the good zone. And keep inflation at 2% or less, and we're at 3.8. And this is the conundrum we have.
In order to bring inflation under control, the Federal Reserve is going to have to raise rates. Well, President Trump just elected or nominated, I should say, uh Kevin Walsh to be the uh the new chair of the Federal Reserve, and he's sort of doubbish. He wants lower interest rates to stimulate the economy, keep people working, grow the economy, business is more profitable.
Let's grow the economy. The other side of that, it's a dog and a tail. the dog waking the tail is that when you stimulate the economy, inflation goes up. So, we can project in the American economy that we're going to see rather robust inflation for quite a period of time. Now, I will point out under the Biden administration, they were so inept in management that they allowed the inflation rate, at least the whole the retail rate, the headline rate to touch 9%. And the Federal Reserve had to react dramatically to raise interest rates to stop that inflation. And they did. They brought it down to 3.8%. But the housing market has been in the tank ever since.
And if you look at the mortgage market, you know, we're looking at mortgages at 6 12 to 7% for a standard 30-year mortgage. Uh that's expensive money. Now his historically that's still a pretty good rate for a mortgage, but we have lived with 0% interest or zer. Okay? We we lived with very close to 0% interest for for a generation and a half when people were out buying homes and you know two 2% mortgage 2 and a half% mortgage you could buy a lot of house and it raised the prices because it's a competitive housing market. So now we have highpriced homes and we have higher priced mortgages which has basically flatlined the housing industry and uh here we sit we see most Americans are struggling to buy. Of course, gasoline is up temporarily right now because of the Iranian situation, but also food.
You go to the grocery store, you see food and clothing, and you see more and more of the basic needs, health care and health insurance. The prices are very very dynamic, double-digit inflation year after year, which is not factored into the 3.8% headline CPI. So, the the average American is is seeing a take-home pay. When you look at your pay stub, you know, there's the gross pay and then there's everybody with their hand in your paycheck and whatever dollars you get at the end, the take-home pay, that number is not increasing anywhere near as quickly as insurance premiums are and food costs and just basic general living costs. And then you look at housing prices, which are not coming down. There's index after index after index shows that the American housing prices may have stalled, but we're not seeing a deterioration in too many markets. As a matter of fact, the K Schiller index came out. I talked about it on my show and uh it's still up 883% year-over-year. And that's the 20 largest markets. Now, real estate's local local. You know, real estate, what are the what are the most three most important things in re real estate? It's location, location, location. Well, that's very true. And there are some markets that are just overbuilt or poor quality construction, those markets are soft. But when you look at it from a macro level, there's no indication that prices are coming down in the United States. So what does it leave the average American to do? Well, if you have any extra money after you bought your groceries and paid your rent or your mortgage and your car payments, the average price of a car in America is now over $50,000 for the average price of an automobile.
Well, when you look at uh monthly payments, automobile payments at, you know, $900 to $1,200 a month, that used to be a house payment, and we see that in default rates in car loans, and we see default rates increasing across the board on credit cards because as people run out of take-home pay, they're living on credit card debt, just like the federal government. They do exactly the same thing because you have to keep going. And this is why Congress needs to address this. And I think this is why President Trump, you know, he's doing a brilliant job as president, especially in the Iranian situation. But I think there has to be a sensitivity to the masses of Americans who are struggling with the current economy. And you add inflation to that, if you don't have hard assets, if you're living in an apartment and you don't have gold in the sock drawer where you hide it, you're going to have a problem because you're not going to keep up and you will fall farther and farther and farther behind.
And that again bifurcates the American economy into the people who have assets and the people who don't. There are a lot of voters who don't have assets.
>> Wow.
>> So it's it's the halves and the have nots.
>> Well, it's always been that way. But when you have a government that's the Marxists love to talk about that the halves and have nots.
>> Well, it's it's it's human nature. I mean people not everybody has the same worldview of accumulation of assets. But when you think about it from the federal government's perspective by creating a very unstable currency that is affecting us domestically, you have to take that into political consideration in a country of 330 million people or maybe 180 million voters because people tend to vote. It's like Bill Clinton, great President Bill Clinton once said, it's the economy stupid. Well, he wasn't bidding about that. uh people vote their pocketbook and they're going to vote their gas tank and that's something that needs to be >> So what do you think that means for midterms?
>> Well, you know, it's always hard to predict and of course I'm of the opinion that that the American election mechanism um has very serious problems that transcends an honest election. If if we were to have handcounted paper ballots in every jurisdiction, we would have an honest election and we know we'd find out how the people are thinking. uh but for the last 5 years there's been quite a bit of thought that the uh the mechanized and digitized American election system doesn't properly reflect the American opinion and I think that's why it's hard to predict what's going to happen in November. Um it's hard to predict. It's very >> So you do see us reaching though the next few years the end of the dollars we know it. I I think that's uh it's it's possible. Although if you look at President Trump and and he has played Iran masterfully, nobody really understood what it is he was doing in Iran. But the but the bottom line is he saw the Middle East, Iran in particular, as funding global terrorism. and they they whoever they are made the decision that in order to stop the funding of domestic terrorism in excuse me in in Iranian terrorism global terrorism you have to defund that and how do you defund it well the Persian Gulf produces about 20% of the oil used around the globe and by starting this realignment in Iran and shutting the horm straight what President Trump has done has shifted production into the western hemisphere from Canada to the Dakotas to the Peran basin to Mexico. We we suddenly befriended Venezuela and then Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Argentina, all the way down the line. President Trump is shifting oil production away from the Persian Gulf. He's taking their money away. And of course on the Shia side, the Persian side, that's the goal to defund an Islamic regime that's been creating terrorism around the globe for 47 years. on the western side of the Persian Gulf or the Sunni side of the ill-lamic equation and they are beginning to realize that they are the losers and that's why Saudi Arabia has built the plan uh the pipeline to Yanbu in the uh in the Red Sea which of course through the Suez Canal feeds Europe and the United Arab Emirates is now building a pipeline to circumvent the the Hormuz because they know that by the time President Trump is done Iran is going to be broke and out of the terrorism business, but more importantly, all of the oil production is shifting away from the Persian Gulf. We will not be thinking about Arab oil embargo like we thought of in the 1970s. They're going to have to compete mightily for 20 or 30 years to get back the market share they had. And at a time when we're shifting back to nuclear power for for data centers and for electric fleets, electric trucks, electric cars, there will come a day when prices of oil will collapse because nobody wants the stuff.
I mean, think about it in America. When you look at a barrel of oil, and I was just talking about this on my show this morning, West Texas is trading at 96.
When you look at this a pie chart of what happens to that barrel of oil about 46% is turn is distilled into gasoline by the refiners and then there's like about 11% diesel and 13% uh air air fuel. Um if you would stop and think about it at $4.50 $5 a gallon whatever people are paying the shift toward electric cars is becoming pronounced.
And once that happens, the demand for gasoline plummets and then suddenly that barrel isn't isn't 42 46% gas, it's maybe 18% gas. The world market for petroleum goes down and goes down fast because it becomes an archaic fuel.
That's what President Trump is doing. I mean, if you stop and look at this guy, he's brilliant and the people that he's working with are changing the energy paradigm. And that's why you're seeing all these new mini nuke plants coming up. And was I talked about it on my show today where nuclear fuel has always been a waste problem in the industry and there's nowhere to put it. They put it in dry cask storage out in the parking lot because Nevada wouldn't take it and bury it in the mountains. Well, guess what? Now people want to recycle and reuse that fuel and they're projecting they can they can produce enough power for 150 years for all the data centers.
So, so the paradigm is shifting in a very big way and as this happens the whole oil this may be the last Iraq for the oil for the oil business and that's that's what President Trump is doing in Iran.
>> Talk to me in in the closing minutes about China because Patrick Wood and Courtney Turner and I asked Ed Doubt about this last night. He didn't he did not disagree. No, I asked Gordon Chang about this the other night. He didn't disagree at all that President Trump is setting up a new order, a new financial order. And he went over there with Air Force One and the Tech Bros and basically, I think, told China, "Get on board or don't. It's up to you. But we've disrupted your program in Venezuela. We're disrupting it in Iran.
We're disrupting it in in Cuba. We're disrupting you all over the place. Uh we're peeling off a bunch of your bricks members. Some of the folks who are making up your bricks are now coming with us. We're building the uh India, Middle East, Europe economic corridor.
Uh and you can take part and be a part of this or you can not. Do you think that's what's happening? Is he backing China into a corner and saying by bringing the tech bros over there, we're building the new order, the new financial order, get on board or get boxed out?
>> I I think he very much is. And if you think about it, China is a 6,000year-old culture just like Persia, Iran. But China is a very very deep culture. and their business acumen goes back centuries. I mean, they go back 6,000 years. They're very good business people. And when you look at the current government in China that emerged in 1949 with Mount Metung, who was somehow brainwashed by the old Soviet Union that no longer exists to bring a world communist order. The interesting thing about China is that for years and years and years, they were governed by emperors. And the emperors had a court or a noble staff called a mandarin. And the emperors and the mandarin ran the country. But the problem is that the emperors kept dying. And then the new emperor would come along and be different mandarin. It's very unstable.
If you if you understand the history of China, it's 6,000 years of a very strong culture but very unstable government.
Well, what chairman she is worried about more than anything else is that next iteration because the old Soviet model has collapsed. The old communist model is collapsed. They love the idea of a totalitarian controlled state. But China has to play in a g a digitized global world. And by President Trump taking the the tech bros over there, we are running circles around them and everyone else on the globe and our technology. And I think a lot of this this this freak show of data centers in the United States. I I firmly believe I'm I very deeply involved from a legal perspective as well as an economic perspective. I think this is a bluff. I honestly think that President Trump is building out all these data or at least stimulating the the development of these data centers as a card to play against the Chinese to show that we will roll you over on data.
But what I know I've been to China, I've worked in China. I've taught in China. I spent some time living in China. Um it's a very powerful place but their infrastructure is not western. It's not American, it's not European and while we think of them as a big fierce country and they are it's a 1.6 billion people and Chinese people are on on average you know to to to project are extremely intelligent people. Uh we we have an opportunity to work together in a global community where it's good for trade for the United States and it's good for China. And I think that's what President Trump is doing. So I I don't think your experts are wrong at all. I think they we look at different data points and you realize that the endgame is a cooperative environment and then the the question we have as the people is where does the individual fall? Well, what happens to our individual rights? Do we get sucked into a giant surfom or are our American rights are god-given and blood paid for rights u preserved as individuals or do we all become you know bricks in the wall and I think that's a question that we have to answer and I think we have to be v vigilant about that because these are big dollars these are really big dollars moving things I mean we have this data center going out in my in my neighborhood up here in Port Washington Wisconsin $16 billion dollars built by a Japanese company and supposed to have uh well, I won't mention any two great big tech names are going to be making data. Nobody knows what that means, but they're building this plant and they're building it like 24 hours a day until the city finally told them to stop it after dark. They don't have enough electricity and we've and this is part of the legal work I'm for a client that I'm working on. We don't have anywhere near enough electricity in the Midwest to run all these data centers.
But yet they're risking $16 billion dollar to build a plant you can't plug into the wall.
There's there's a there's a bigger picture. And that's what I talk about in the Eastman uh financial report. It's the critical thinking with economic and financial news. I mean, you see that silver minnow swimming by, you know, looks really delicious. You got to look and see if there's a filament on the nose. That that's the critical thinking.
Okay. Well, I'm seeing a filament on the nose of this thing. How in the world do you spend $16 billion in capital on a plant that you can't plug in? Come on.
That's that that tells you we're in a global game of chess. And fortunately for the United States, we have a president who who can play that game. If you look at Winston Churchill could do it, and I hate to say it, Joseph Stalin kind of did it. Um Napoleon did it and Donald Trump is doing it. what we're watching today, historians will marvel at a 100 years from now. The game of chess that he's playing. It's masterful to watch.
>> Isn't that interesting? I, you know, I guess I did not pay attention that you live in Port Washington, Wisconsin.
Huh. That's interesting. Port Washington, Wisconsin. Um, the reason I find that interesting is because, you know, on Friday nights back in the '9s, you could watch Step by Step. You remember Step by Step with uh No. No.
Patrick Duffy. Patrick Duffy and uh what's the girl that was on Thre's Company? The blonde on Thre's Company.
>> Logan, you you don't know. I mean, >> you should know, Dan.
>> I'll take your word for it.
>> You should know.
>> Lovely lakeside community on Lake Michigan.
>> Suzanne Summers.
>> Suzanne Summers and Patrick Duffy played the parents on a Friday night sitcom in the early 90s or Yeah. called Step by Step. And it took place in Port Washington, Wisconsin. And I had no idea that's where you were.
>> Neither did we. Neither did we.
>> Well, you have a whole sitcom that did ran for multiple years. Was pretty popular. It was based right in your backyard. So who who >> Well, we're still struggling to get over Leverne and Shirley. We never Milwaukee never recovered from that. Nobody in Milwaukee has a Brooklyn accent. But somehow that became us, man.
>> Yeah. And then the Happy Days was there too, wasn't it?
>> Yeah. Yeah. We have a bronze statue. the fonts, the bronze fonds is still standing.
>> The bronze fonds and Port Washington Port Washington is a suburb of of Milwaukee, right?
>> It is. It's it's a small lakeside community north. It's about 30 miles north of the city and it's county is a beautiful county, smallest footprint in the state and right in the middle of it is 1,800 acres of gigantic data center that we nobody can believe the locals allowed. But but the point is it's part of a bigger strategy and I think when you look at that uh it all all the pieces fall into place if you use credit >> fascinating uh professor Eastman professor eastman.com professor professor eastman.com and he's on help me out here Logan he's on Monday through Friday I'm going to say 11:00 a.m. central 11:30 central.
>> 11:30 to 12 central. And you can find me on X. I I post economic thought on X. I try to stay away from politics, but I not that I do personally, but I just I'm on X. You can find me at Dan Eastman on X.
>> There you go. Dan Eastman on X. There you go, professor. Every day, 11:30 Central, 12:30 Eastern Standard, right here on Worldview Tube, uh, Monday through Friday. Thank you, professor.
>> Thank you, Brandon. Have a great weekend.
>> You, too, my friend. We'll be right back, guys, right after this short break.
>> Welcome to the World View Tube Vault.
Built on 35 years of research, broadcasts, and films by Brandon House and his team. Sabotage all six hours exposing how Marxists, Islamists, and their useful idiots are working to destroy America from within. Siege, five gripping parts on the clear and present dangers pushing America to the brink.
Brainwashed America parts one and two with part three coming soon revealing 12 documented tactics used to capture the minds of Americans. Plus Reagan under fire, the 1981 assassination attempt, the history of Arlington House and General Robert E. Lee, and many more being added all the time. And getting there is simple. Once you're logged in, just click Vault, go to Vault Library, and select Docu Movies. That's it. Hours of eyeopening content ready to stream anytime, anywhere. Join Worldview Tube Vault today at worldview ttube.com/vault.
Join me now are some longtime friends, Chad and Katie Brewer. They've been with us here before. It's been a while.
They've also attended many of our worldview weekends and exhibited. And of course, you know, we are about also offering solutions to people. And of course, we live in a time where there's a lot of stress. Uh I just saw a study.
It's over at worldviewreport.com.
Uh talking about the unhappiness. Half of Americans say the fun in their lives has disappeared and a lot of them are unhappy. And of course a lot of these are spiritual issues. But even even Christians, shocker, right? Even us Christians sometimes get sad, we get discouraged, we get feeling defeated, we get depressed, we get anxious. And yes, sometimes even Christians earn to different substances to deal with that.
And that could be uh you know things like alcohol for one. And so we have the opportunity to try to offer people some solutions, some hope. And what sparked this interview this week was a family reaching out to us to Melissa who enters handles our customer support and donor relations said you guys had a couple on talking about a a um facility that they run and they operate a clinic to help people who have become addicted to alcohol. And it's not like your traditional thing where you just got to will yourself to stop drinking. It's a clinic that helps to really deal with the issue of the brain and so much more.
They'll get into it. And can you can you tell me who that is again? We have a family emergency. We need to get in touch with them right away. So Melissa, of course, sent them Chad and Katie's phone number and they reached out to them, I'm told. And folks, we have had so many people in our audience reach out to Chad and Katie over the last few years, um, who are wonderful people.
Wonderful people. They got to know him.
They love the Lord. They're wonderful people just like everybody else.
Sometimes we as Christians, you know, we fall into a slump or into some anxiety or depression or anxiousness. And maybe it starts out with a harmless social drinking and then pretty soon it's consumed you. Or maybe it's taking some painkillers that your doctor prescribed because you had a knee surgery or back surgery and pretty soon you find yourself addicted to the painkillers very innocently, right? But that doesn't mean that that's not a problem and you're not seeking a solution. So that's where we got to know Chad and Katie through their clinic and they've been on here and they've exhibited our conference a couple times and we've had some of our folks go through their facility with great success and reporting back to us by text how much they appreciate us interviewing these people and telling them about Chad and Katie and they they join us tonight cuz that that little uh communication with one of our viewers to Melissa sparked me to get you guys back on cuz you guys are offering solutions and helping people.
Welcome back. Thanks for being with us.
>> Thank you very much. Just put me back on.
>> Let's talk about that. Um, many people, conservatives, Christians, and definitely Christians fall into some of these categories I was describing, and then they're just trying to get out of this hole. They're trying to get away from this. But for some people, they just don't find that the typical treatment centers where you basically are just willing yourself to stop drinking or to get off this medication.
You know, sometimes good willpower just is not enough. Particularly when something's now changed in the brain and you've now just absolutely got a physiological thing going on, chemical thing going on or whatever you want to say from a scientific standpoint where you're craving this, right? It's not a of course you don't want it. you know, they don't want it, but there's something going on now that they've gotten into it so deeply that their body is craving it. And just willing yourself to stop that doesn't have a real high success rate, right, Chad?
>> Yeah, Brandon, you you explained to a tea. I mean, uh, you know, growing up, been married 35 years, grew up in a Christian family, started drinking socially, and then it just started consume my life. And it literally got to the point where I'd be waking up in the morning and my first thought is, okay, what do I need to get done today till I can start drinking? And how am I going to hide it from my wife? And I didn't want to be that way. I didn't want to drink. I kind of isolated myself because of my Christian belief and I'm like, I shouldn't be like this. Christians shouldn't be like this. And it was something that was going on in my mind constantly that was almost like God on one shoulder, Satan on the other shoulder saying, "Oh, you can do this. You can enjoy it." And it got to the point where it was literally affecting my relationship with my wife, my family, my health, and I had tried everything else.
I had tried going to meetings, which work a lot for other people. I'm not knocking it. It does work for people. Uh but when my wife had found this treatment for me that works on the pathways and the receptors of the brain, obviously my first thought is, you know, being as depressed as I was, it's not going to work. And it sounds like hocus pocus to me. And if it's so great, why doesn't everybody know about it? But again, I did want to know, did want to change and uh that led me to do this treatment and it saved and changed my life.
>> And what is it? Explain it, Katie.
>> So, basically um yeah, at our wellness center, we have what's called our brain restoration formula. And by IV, we were replenishing natural things to the body and to the brain.
And what that does is it addresses the physiological changes that have happened in the brain due to substance use. Um it can also be very effective for um you know the consequences of stress and aging and that sort of thing as well. Um but when we're talking about substance use that is key. I was just speaking with somebody today um and they're really hopeful because yes, they've been the gambit of they've tried a number of things and what I said to them was, you know what, wouldn't it be exciting if this brain restoration that was the missing piece from your efforts before?
Um because they want to be successful, they want to be sober, they're they're a Christian, they love the Lord. Um and they were in a place where they're like it was discouraging and they felt really alone. I was like this could be the difference maker. That is um a big part of what we do that is different. It's outpatient but we're replenishing those natural things for healing and for restoration. And then we have a number of other holistic natural kinds of things that also in a complimentary fashion um work along with that restoration to the brain makes a huge difference. It's amazing >> like NAD is one of the things right IV IV of NAD right >> yes yeah it is and you know that's amongst other things as a part of the formula and the program but yeah that's kind of known as the gold standard for anti-aging for the brain and of course um you know the neat thing is we have a team many of which are um believers and have been with us a long time and so we have the experience to know um to put together a program that's going to be appropriate for somebody. Usually something along the lines of 10 to 10 to 14 days they're going to come to lovely Lake of the Ozarks. Um and we're going to walk alongside them as they make that journey back towards recovery.
>> And this the the the Chad the IV and you went through this and as a businessman, you've been a successful businessman run several companies. this worked for you and you said, "I'm gonna go and use my business skills to start a business to help people."
>> Like, I just got helped. And you, of course, were very skeptical when your wife said, "You're going to go to this, we're going to drive 11 hours, whatever it was, to go do this." And now you've opened this clinic and you had it open now for a several years. Um, you you haven't had a drink in how many years?
>> Uh, 11 10 or 11 years. I don't even keep track anymore. So, so, so it worked for you. You didn't >> go and fall off the wagon and go and fall off the wagon.
>> No, I was I was very skeptical like you said because I I had gotten to the point in my life where I was depressed. Uh I didn't believe anything was going to bring me back. I was 330 lbs. Uh my liver was shutting down. And if you would have looked at me 10, 11 years ago, most people would have thought there's no way that this marriage is going to work. the and Chad won't be around much longer. So, I had lost most of my hope really even though I wanted to quit and I had faith. I believed in Jesus. I'm a born again Christian, but I you just lose that hopefulness and that's where >> I think you really felt kind of powerless against it. Um, and that's the thing. I mean, that's the thing when Chad was really healed and restored from it. I mean, after he had been sober, you know, a year or so and was like back to doing things that he hadn't done in a long time, you know, back to that was the thing when he was under the influence of the alcoholism, it really squaltched a lot of who he is. He's a very passionate and creative person and all that was squaltched with the alcohol. And so when he was back to being the vibrant person that he is, he was taking up hobbies and doing things around the house and and thinking creatively and so forth. I mean, he holds patents on things, but more importantly along that way as he felt so restored, we just really felt God's call that wow, we were supposed to make this available in our hometown. And that was kind of a big call cuz we're we're not medical. We're not the medical part of the team, >> but God made us smart enough to recognize something that was lifechanging and maybe even life-saving in his life.
>> And you have a medical doctor on staff.
You have several RNs on staff.
>> And one of them I know she's come to our worldview weekend a couple times there at Lake of the Ozarks. And um so if they come to your clinic, they're going to spend the day in a private room in a recliner getting an IV of NAD and other things. Watching a flat screen television if they want to. Um Chad is very much an extrovert, so you're probably going to get fed breakfast and lunch.
You've been known to go out to dinner with the people that come to your clinic. You kind of host them if they want to be hosted. If they don't, that's fine. They can rent a home in the area, stay in a hotel, but go there for about 10 to 14 days. And Chad, how how many days after getting the IV when you went through it 11 years ago? How many days after the IV did you no longer have craving? And you were drinking in the car all the way there, you said, right?
To me, in the past. Okay.
>> So, you're drinking all the way there.
You're not thinking this is going to work. You get there, you're done drinking now. Okay. I drink all the way there because there's a craving. You start obviously having reactions if you're not on alcohol, right? You start having you can have re major reactions if you've been drinking and then you cold turkey. So you go, you're drinking all the way there. You go, you get in the chair, you get the IVs and how many days of sitting there getting an IV before you no longer had the craving for alcohol.
>> So everybody's a little different. For me, it was about the fifth day that I started thinking, "Hey, something's happening, but I still didn't believe it, you know, >> and I could kind of see the light bulb come on with him there again, about halfway through."
>> Yeah. But I didn't I didn't think it was going to last. We didn't tell our kids because I'm like I was sick of lying to my kids, telling them I'm going to quit this time and never do it and maybe last for a week or two weeks and then, you know, cave in. So, we didn't tell them because I didn't think this was going to work. And literally, like Katie said, a year or two after treatment, feeling mentally better than I had felt in 20 years, starting to get physical, physically better uh with my weight and getting more active. I looked at Katie, I'm like, why don't people know about this? And that's when we opened the center as basically a ministry because there's so many people out there that are Christians that are struggling that have been through other treatments that haven't been successful. And I want them to know, I mean, we had one of your uh listeners, Brandon, that come came from Australia and and came and visited us and went through treatment. And it's amazing to see what God has planned for these people uh once they can break that anchor of the addiction. M m. All right.
So, if they want to check this out, newwpringwwellnesscenter.com, newwpringwwellnesscentercenter.com.
What is the what is the success rate?
And you mentioned someone that came in from overseas. You stay in touch with these folks if they so desire. I know you text them, uh, Chad, and send them encouragement and Bible verses, and you kind of stay in touch with them. How many of the former patients are you still in touch with? What's the success rate? I I send out over 140 texts a day with scripture on them and I literally do that one at a time and it's a time where in the morning where I sit and pray for all our patients that have been there. We have relationships like you said from all over the world and all over the country and the the success rate that we've encoura or that we've have is about 70%. Wow. And there's, you know, everybody's different. Everybody uh has different situations that they're going home to. So, you know, it's hard to say exactly how someone's going to do. But I'm telling you, when your brain's working right and wired properly and you're not craving it, the chances are tremendous.
>> So, you sit and send 140 individual texts every day, not a group text, individual.
>> 144 now.
>> 144. And those are all former patients.
Yes.
>> And obviously all 144,000 I'm guessing are doing great, right?
>> 144, not 144,000.
>> Did I say 144,000? Sorry. 144. Oh, yeah.
I know. Wow. Your clinic must be really big. Uh the 144 that you send to the 144 people, are are they all doing well?
They're all good. I I would say it's hard to keep track of all of them, you know, because obviously not everybody replies, but uh you'll I mean it's I won't hear from somebody even though I send a text every day, maybe a month later or two months later, hey Chad, I really appreciate this. This helped me today.
>> And he got a text last week from somebody who just said 18 months sober today, right? you know, yeah, we don't hear from everybody, but I guess our huge message is that there's hope for people who feel like they're in the chains of addiction and they've tried and they haven't been successful that there's hope. A lot of the people that come to you to you have tried the treatment centers where you go and you go to counseling and you talk your brains out and you will pile yourself in the 12 steps and a lot of them have failed >> 30 days and you're locked away for 30 days so you you can't access your sub substance but people return to their life. Um, >> so a lot of those people have gone through that and failed >> and then they came to you and they had success because you're not simply just trying to talk them into willpower.
You're you're giving them something via IV that takes away the craving that repairs the brain, right?
>> That addresses the chemical changes that have happened. Yes.
>> What What is the proper word we should be using, Katie?
Um well I would say it does it decreases and eliminates you know or eliminates the cravings. It does it restores mental clarity as everything um as everything is kind of running on all cylinders. Um people do have that sharpness and clarity that we hope that they'll have what we call some aha moments that they'll say aha maybe that's what that counselor said. Aha.
That's what my family's been saying that they'll go home with a clarity that will help them recognize the things that are going to be a stumbling block to their success. Um, and they'll recognize the things that they can do differently.
>> But if they go home without the craving, that's the big key, right? Because a lot of them don't want to drink or they don't want to take the painkillers that they got addicted to or whatever. But if the craving is gone, I mean willpower is one thing, but if you haven't addressed the physiological and the brain issue and the cravings, then the willpower is pretty tough, right? It' be tough. But if you have the willpower and no longer a craving, now it's a matter of now, I don't have the cravings, so I'm not going to put myself in a situation where I go out with people that are socially drinking. I'm not going to I'm not going to do this. I'm not going to And I know you, Chad, have said you can be around people that socially drink. That doesn't bother you. You're not tempted. you don't have a craving, you don't do it.
But for other people, if they can get where they don't have the craving anymore, they just they just need to make lifestyle choices where they're not putting themselves in positions where they're being peerressured into drinking again socially. Um, but also if you have a family member that's supporting you, not a family member you're going to go home to that says, "Oh, here you can still have a drink in moderation." So the key is not only getting the craving taken away, so you have no craving. Now you have the willpower, desire to stay off of it. But if you have a a a a good spouse and family structure or parents that are respecting the situation and protecting you and encouraging you, you're going to have a good track record for success, right?
>> Yeah. Absolutely. That's a great mix.
and and in and a lot of the people some people that we have honestly don't have that have been very successful and Kat surprised Katie and I because some people we've had that have been homeless that live in a car and their life is totally changed now they have a job for the first time in years you know they have their they have their hobbies that they used to have and don't have any they don't have that they have now you know that they never did while they were using substances But you're right, everybody turns to their life and the help with the cravings is key, but also that mental clarity and sharpness where they can recognize, okay, when I, you know, when I encounter this situation or this person or this trigger, um, how am I going to handle that? You know, where they go back with this sharpness so that they can have a plan. Um, because yeah, they return to their life. But if they if they have if they wake up and they're feeling different, they're not having the craving. If they feel this master of craving things, you know, they're not a slave to that craving. If they wake up with a new fresh perspective on life because they're not enslaved, doesn't that help encourage them to stay?
>> I mean, isn't that what helped you, Chad?
>> Oh, yeah. You got the monkey off your back is what I'm saying, right?
>> Well, yeah. And I didn't even want to get up before, Brandon. I didn't want to face the day because it was it was a miserable battle. And I get up now at 5 in the morning. That sun's coming up.
I'm ready to hit the day. I'm excited. I I thank God for the day. What what do you challenges do you have for me today?
And it's a whole different perspective on life. Waking up not having those cravings.
>> Hope with hope and purpose. And yeah, I mean that's that's a framework that we come from in terms of that we believe that God's got a plan, you know, and not everybody that comes to us is a believer, but we believe on their behalf that God has a plan for their life. Um, and that's the thing.
>> And by the way, you you um you you guys of course are obviously, you know, we know that you're you're strong Christians, but not everybody that comes to you are Christians. But but as you a lot of them that do come to you are Christians. So again we're acknowledging that yeah we as Christians we we have problems just like the world does right and here's a Christian couple offering a solution because they have they saw the medical solution uh personally. Um you've had some of our people come to you who they said that their marriage is on the brink that if they don't get this fixed the spouse is done. And they not only have been set free of the addiction, but their marriage was saved. You guys have told me stories of that.
>> Yeah.
>> Oh, yeah. You bet. And that was our case. I mean, uh it it's amazing the relationship Katie and I have now after 35 years. It's better than it was anytime when I was drinking. You know, we we enjoy together. We do things that we never did together before. hiking, doing activities that I never wanted to do because I'd rather sit in my chair and drink.
>> Wow. All right. So, if people want help, what they need to do is call. Do we have a phone number we can put on the screen?
>> Yeah. Well, it's 573-6931977.
>> Okay. 5736931977.
Logan, I'll also put it on the screen newpring wellnesscenter.com, but 5736931977 again 5736931977 and and you'll be the one that answers that, right Katie?
>> You bet. Most part.
>> Yeah.
>> So, if someone calls tonight or tomorrow whenever and says, "Okay, this is what we're struggling with myself or a family member, a child, a spouse, whatever, what's the first thing you're going to tell them?
you know, honestly, if they're calling for someone else, we're going to explain kind of what, you know, what we do, but reiterate that there is hope. Um, and we're going to encourage them to share with their loved one and have their loved one give us a call. We'd love to talk with them. There's no >> You get them in.
>> It varies. I mean, we only what's what's nice about what we do, Brandon, and what's nice and bad, but we only see four patients at a time. So, it's a very intimate setting. Uh it's not like people think if they've been to rehab before, it's not a 100 bed hospital where you're locked in a room. It's a wellness clinic, and we're there helping again uh the brain, the body, and everything. But normally, we can get someone in pretty quickly, but every day changes.
>> Okay. And so when they get there, you know, obviously before they get there, they're going to need to either get a hotel or an Airbnb or something, have arrangements, and you can suggest some of that. So they're coming in in the morning like what 9 in the morning and stay until 5 or what? 95. And we help arrange all the lodgings. It's nothing that they need to worry about. It's a pretty easy system. If it's something they want to do, we help with all that.
>> And you're centrally located central Missouri, Lake of the Ozark. So you're in a beautiful environment at the same time.
Oh, yeah. You bet. A little wellness retreat.
>> Yep. Excellent. All right. Well, I know you guys have helped a lot of people, but you've also over the last I would say what, four years we've been working together now? Three or four years.
>> Yeah.
>> And you've and you've had how many of our people you think have had come through there?
>> Oh gosh. I'd say probably 15.
>> Yeah, something like that.
>> 10 to 15 at least. Yeah.
>> Or across the >> from all over the country and some from outside the US.
Yep.
>> Yeah.
>> All right. Well, what sparked this was a lady reached out to Melissa and said, "That couple, what's their name again?
Where's their clinic? We got an emergency and we got them plugged in right away with you."
>> Absolutely.
>> That's awesome.
>> Good. Well, that's what sparked this conversation cuz like, okay, it's a solution. It's an opportunity. Let's get back and uh promote that to folks because a lot of there's a lot of desperate people out there. you I mean you're running into you're you're getting the phone call from people that many of them this is their last opportunity. This they've tried everything. They've tried the 30-day clinics and whatnot. For a lot of folks this is their last chance, right?
>> It's true.
>> Yes, >> it's true.
>> All right. And a success rate of about 70%.
>> Pretty remarkable. All right. 5736931977 or newwprwellnesscenter.com.
Thank you guys.
>> Thanks Brandon. Thank you, Brandon.
>> Nice seeing you.
>> You, too.
All right, guys. That was a uh pre-recorded interview with Chad and Katie. We did pre-recorded that this afternoon. Uh I hope you'll check that out. Hope you'll uh call them if you need what they're offering or visit their website. All right, that's our broadcast for tonight. As always, thank you for tuning in. Thank you for supporting us. worldviewfoundation.com.
Roll the music. Let's call it a night.
There you go. Worldviewfoundation.com.
worldview foundation.com.
Hey, thank you for praying for us. We are under constant attack, folks.
Whether it's our website under attack, I mean, I don't even tell you 90% of what goes on. We are It's Ephesians 6. I think that was already mentioned tonight. Spiritual warfare. So, yes, we appreciate you're financially supporting us, but we really appreciate you prayerfully supporting us. Thank you for that. So, next up, Brandon House. May God save America. Take care.
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