Looks like a winner! Starring Dennis Quaid and Jon Voigt. First, the trailer. See below the Rubin interview of Dennis Quaid, who plays Ronald Reagan.
Looks like a winner! Starring Dennis Quaid and Jon Voigt. First, the trailer. See below the Rubin interview of Dennis Quaid, who plays Ronald Reagan.
Scary. For the first time in my life, I’m happy I probably won’t be here twenty years from now.
‘A deep dive into the politics of money, gold and their connection to our freedom!’ This week in an interview with bullion expert Nick Ward, Neil pulls back the curtain on the element that makes the world go around!
On Labor Day, we recognize the remarkable American workers who comprise the greatest labor force in the world. American workers are the heart and soul of our Nation’s economic resurgence. Since my first day in office, I have followed through on my promise to fight for an agenda that puts American workers first.
To honor all of those who work hard every day, and for those who did so for many years and are honorably retired!
There are many great songs celebrating workers – the good bits and the bad bits. What’s your favorite?
[Labor Day is] a peculiarly American holiday. It is a most characteristic representation of our ideals. . . .
To my mind America has but one main problem, the character of the men and women it shall produce. It is not fundamentally a Government problem, although the Government can be of a great influence in its solution. It is the real problem of the people themselves. They control its property, they have determined its government, they manage its business. In all things, they are the masters of their own destiny. . . .
The door of opportunity swings wide open in our country. Through it, in constant flow, go those who toil. America recognizes no aristocracy save those who work. The badge of service is the sole requirement for admission to the ranks of our nobility.
Speaking of the working men and women of America, here is a young guy I watch. Continue reading
In the aftermath of Mark Zuckerberg’s open letter to Jim Jordan and the arrest of Telegram’s Pavel Durov, renowned investigative journalist Ashley Rindsberg exposes the troubling history of media and social media bias and censorship at the highest levels. In this interview, Ashley reveals how the New York Times has shilled for authoritarian regimes from Stalin to Hitler and again today in America.
He unpacks the troubling capture of Wikipedia by progressive interests and it’s relationship with YouTube, Google and the political establishment. The conversation explores the broader “digital civil war” as alternative voices challenge the establishment’s grip on information control.