Today's Issues continues on AFR with Steve Paisley
>> Fred Jackson: Today's Issues continues on AFR with your host, Tim Wildmon, president of the American Family Association.
>> Tim Wildmon: Hey, welcome back, everybody, to Today's Issues on the American Family Radio Network. Thanks for listening to AFR on this Monday, September 29th, National Coffee Day. Just want to make everybody aware of that. This, is, So Tim and Fred. And joining us now, Steve Paisley. Jordo.
>> Steve Jordahl: Hey, everybody.
>> Tim Wildmon: How you doing, Steve?
>> Steve Jordahl: You know, I'm well, except I got a, My computer is very worried about me right now.
>> Tim Wildmon: How's that?
>> Steve Jordahl: A.I. actually on my computer, because I was, going through my newsfeed right. On Twitter, as I often do, looking for stuff, and I came across a guy that was totally unhinged. Tds, you know, Trump derangement syndrome, man, he had it bad. And he was holding up a. A Tylenol package, okay. And he said, Dr. Trump, Dr. Orange, banana, whatever he called him. he was just so disparaging. And he said, I'll prove that Tylenol isn't. And he takes a handful of Tylenol and starts stuffing them in his mouth. I thought, well, this isn't good. So I needed to find. I looked, I counted. It was seven pills. It looked like 10 or 15.
>> Tim Wildmon: This wasn't just phony. This was.
>> Steve Jordahl: No, this is real.
>> Tim Wildmon: An unhing Trump hater.
>> Steve Jordahl: Very much so.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yeah. Had one of those pink protest hat ons.
>> Tim Wildmon: Oh, yeah. Okay.
>> Steve Jordahl: And, so I thought, well, how much do you have to take in order to. To do damage, to kill yourself? So I typed in, how many Tylenol do you have to take to overdose? And now my AI wants to send me to a suicide prevention site. Thinks I'm ready.
>> Tim Wildmon: See, those computers, they just. They're not as smart as they think they are.
>> Steve Jordahl: Maybe not. But on the one hand, I was talking to jj, Said it's good that they actually are, you know, are not giving out that kind of information. I didn't even cross my mind that it would mistake what I was asking.
>> Tim Wildmon: Saturday, I was at a ball game, baseball game. One of my grandsons, many grandsons who play many baseball games. And, so I had a little minor headaches. Tell my wife. She was in the. She went to the car. I said, get me a Tylenol while you're there. I said, I'm not pregnant. So I went ahead and took it.
>> Fred Jackson: Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: So anyway, so, you better be careful with that AI search.
>> Steve Jordahl: I know now, now every commercial I get from now on, on my computer is going to be for suicide prevention. It's Going to.
>> Tim Wildmon: Oh, my word.
>> Steve Jordahl: I just doomed myself to.
>> Tim Wildmon: All right, what's your first story, Steve?
Bill Gates Foundation has funded skin implants that deliver quantum dots to verify vaccines
>> Steve Jordahl: All right, hey, I wanted to talk about, the, totalitarian state that we are almost under, that we are getting ready to be under. Fred pointed out a story to me this morning that I'm going to be doing for afn. Talks about England, Britain. They're getting id, cards. And these are cards that they will have to carry around, that will allow them to live basically civil life.
>> Tim Wildmon: In Britain.
>> Steve Jordahl: In Britain, okay. But not the U.S. no. But I came across a study from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. This is a recent study, has funded skin implants. These are microneedle patches that deliver permanent quantum dots to verify vaccine status. The authors of the Gates funded study note that the quantum dot markings should persist for at least five years. The quantum dots can be detected with adaptive smartphones for use in real world settings. Quantum dot implants would be used as biological vaccine passports where their detection in human skin would be required to enter. Enter grocery stores, restaurants, gyms, and to travel.
>> Tim Wildmon: They're really going to do this?
>> Steve Jordahl: Well, they have, they have proved it possible.
>> Tim Wildmon: What do you call them? Quantum spots.
>> Steve Jordahl: You call them, they're called, quantum dots. Quantum dots.
>> Tim Wildmon: Only way I'm getting quantum dots.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: Is if it makes my college football team win. Other than that, Fred, I'm not getting quantum dots. No.
>> Fred Jackson: I see the Book of Revelation all over that. All over that. Especially getting down to the point where to get in the grocery store you have to have these dots. I mean, this.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay, okay. I was setting up my joke there, and my joke fell flat.
>> Steve Jordahl: I agree.
>> Tim Wildmon: But my joke fell flat because Fred quickly spits the Bible prophecy. And I, was talking about college football. So let's, let's rewind this thing for a second because I do want to talk on a more serious note about this, but Steve's describing is that like, like the Bible talks about chip implants.
>> Steve Jordahl: yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: where you. Where you have to have something to buy, sell or trade.
>> Fred Jackson: That looks very similar to Mark of the Beast.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah, Mark of the Beast, like something under the skin. So is this what we're talking about here?
>> Steve Jordahl: It looks very similar to me now, the Bible doesn't.
>> Tim Wildmon: Is that mandatory now?
>> Steve Jordahl: No, it is not. It is not even. I don't even know that there's a plan to use them. But this is a study that shows that the technology can be effective.
>> Fred Jackson: And that's the big news that we have, arrived at. The point where the technology is now in place that, goes along with what the Bible describes as an Antichrist, who then controls who buys, who sells. And you get this mark. You have to have this mark. You have to worship the Antichrist, you have to have this mark to buy and sell, etc. Etc. And if you don't have the mark, you don't get to eat. And, you know, for, for years and years. And you can understand it, when people read that portion of the Book of Revelation, they said, how, how can any government control this head back then was branding. Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: For a couple thousand years.
>> Fred Jackson: How could you possibly do that? But what, what Steve is referring to, we now have the technology. But this is why, on a more current news story, this is why the United States, the Trump administration getting out of the World Health Organization, because the World Health Organization. We talked with Michele Bachmann and others. I think, you know, there's others conservatives have said the World Health Organization, because we were about to, under the Biden administration, I would say, succumb to the dictates of the World Health Organization under the umbrella, oh, if we have another Covid, we want everybody in the world to get the shot to protect us. That was the reasoning. And so the United States, thankfully, under the Trump administration, says, no, we're not going to have a world body dictate to the United States how we should handle, a pandemic of sorts. And so I'm just happy stay away from this stuff.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yeah. Okay. So a couple of things theologically and, Fred, you could tell me if you agree with this, but I've checked out with some people who should know, you will not be able to accidentally take the mark of the beast.
>> Fred Jackson: No.
>> Steve Jordahl: So, God forbid, if this ends up being the mark of the beast that Revelation talks about, and it's available before there's an Antichrist, before this all comes out and you don't know better and you get it, you haven't signed up for the mark of the beast.
>> Fred Jackson: No, you haven't.
>> Steve Jordahl: The second thing is that, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Has been talking about this. Remember how they called him unhinged and he's like some crazy man before he got to the Trump administration, and even now some are. He was talking about this kind of control in 2022. I have a speech that he gave a little bit of it. let's listen to cut last, what.
>> Abraham Hamilton III: We'Re seeing today is what I call turnkey totalitarianism. They are putting in place all of these technological Mechanisms for control, we've never seen before. It's been the ambition of every totalitarian state from the beginning of mankind to control every aspect of behavior, of conduct, of thought, and to obliterate dissent. None of them have been able to do it. They didn't have the technological capacity. Today, the mechanisms are being put in place that will make it so none of us can run and not at risk. And I. Wow.
>> Tim Wildmon: it's hard to believe RFK in 2022.
>> Steve Jordahl: That's in 2022.
>> Fred Jackson: It's hard to believe that that is a Kennedy. Stop and think about that.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah, of course.
>> Fred Jackson: The Kennedy of, Of that. You know, John.
>> Tim Wildmon: John F. Kennedy would be way too conservative.
>> Fred Jackson: Yes.
>> Tim Wildmon: He'd be a. Yeah. For the Democrat Party today.
Robert Kennedy Jr. has three rules of totalitarianism
Yeah, he was, but RFK.
>> Steve Jordahl: Let me finish.
>> Tim Wildmon: Oh, well, RFK Jr. There, of course he's Trump Secretary of Health and Human Services. the many in the media and the left wing side try to make him seem like he's cuckoo.
>> Fred Jackson: Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: if you ever listen to him talk for any length of time, you may disagree with his observations or his statements. But he's not cuckoo. No, he is, very thoughtful, he's very well educated. And a lot of the things that he says actually sound like common sense to me. What he's talking about here. In other words, all the additives we put in foods for examples. And also in search of what. What's led to the explosion of autism among m. Children. so I think, anyway, I listen to him when he makes statements like this.
>> Steve Jordahl: He has three rules. what he calls three rules of totalitarianism. Robert F. Kennedy does, and they are as follows. Number one, any right that the government turns into a privilege and takes from you.
>> Tim Wildmon: Right.
>> Steve Jordahl: It will never return. Number two, the government will abuse to its fullest extent that. Right. That it takes. Or that it calls for privilege and takes from you. And number three, no one in the history of. World. Of the world has ever complied their way out of totalitarianism.
>> Tim Wildmon: Totalitarianism, you may say. Well, what is that exactly? Well, it's like China.
>> Fred Jackson: Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: It's really like even some Muslim countries like Saudi Arabia, for example. This is where basically a dictatorship. that's that is the same as a. What'd you call it? A. What was the word we used right there? Totalitarian. Totalitarian state.
Quebec has placed a little girl in the custody of three gay men
>> Tim Wildmon: All right, next story, Steve.
>> Steve Jordahl: All right, I'm gonna put this on, on, Fred. Because he didn't solve this problem before he left Canada.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay.
>> Steve Jordahl: the the county of Quebec, or the province of Quebec, its Youth Protection Services have placed a little girl in the custody of three gay men who are supposedly married all to each other.
>> Fred Jackson: M. Yeah.
>> Steve Jordahl: And they have allowed this threesome to adopt a little girl.
>> Fred Jackson: Okay, well, that's, that's just the thinking. This goes all the way back to the Supreme Court decision in Canada many m. Many, many years ago, to legalize homosexual marriage. It was so sad. I remember when this happened because prior.
>> Tim Wildmon: To when the US Did.
>> Fred Jackson: Oh, yes. and in full disclosure, my uncle, he's deceased now, was a pastor in the United Church of Canada. The United Church of Canada. When this was being presented to the Canadian Supreme Court, the United Church of Canada put a friend of the court brief in endorsing homosexual marriage, much as what we saw here in the United.
>> Tim Wildmon: States, United Method with the, with the mainline Protestant denominations, Episcopal Church usa, all of those.
>> Fred Jackson: so they, Canada just bought into this a long, long time ago. So I'm saddened by your story, Steve, but not shocked. Right, because once you open these doors and we're seeing it here now, the whole transsexual movement and exposing kids to these awful things and having, trans and pro homosexual books and pro trans books in our schools and all these sorts of things, once you open that door under the guise the umbrella of human rights, then, nothing can stop it.
>> Steve Jordahl: You might remember, the debate that was going on in this country in the first term of Barack Obama, I think was. Do you remember when he was asked at the Rick Warren summit, do you endorse homosexual marriage? He said, no, no, no. it's, the Bible. I'm a Christian. The Bible says between a man and a woman. And then he evolved.
>> Fred Jackson: Yes.
>> Steve Jordahl: And all they said, all we want is just the same rights and recognitions that you have as heterosexual couples. That's all. We're not asking for anything else. We just want to be treated the same. But no, no, it's the same as the federal government. They're going to abuse whatever right that they're given to the maximum possible. So all that we've seen since then is a natural outcome of the next story.
President Gustavo Petro joins anti-Trump rally in New York
so you know that they just had the, United, Nations just had all the leaders, of the. The world in to talk about. President Trump gave a speech. Benjamin Netanyahu gave a speech. Well, one of the presidents decided to come to, the United nations was the president of Colombia, Gustavo Petro.
>> Tim Wildmon: Not Columbia University. No, Columbia. The country.
>> Steve Jordahl: Columbia. The country In South America, not the university. So he came and he made a little pit stop on the way to the un he stopped at an anti Trump, anti ICE rally in New York City, picked up a bullhorn and he advocated for the, What they're saying here is the encouraged insurrection against a duly elected government official, namely the President.
>> Tim Wildmon: What, so you got the President of Colombia visiting New York to go to the United nations and he joins a rally against President Trump and he's saying what, what does he want to do?
>> Steve Jordahl: Well, it was an anti ICE rally, an anti authoritarian government rally, this leftist. So I don't know what he has a problem with authoritarianism. But, so, the State Department says, oh, no, you can't do that. And they on the spot revoked his visa. Now he left. He left early. I don't know if he left early because of the revocation or he was going to leave anyway, but he is no longer. Ah, welcome.
>> Fred Jackson: Well, at the very least, not very smart.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah.
>> Fred Jackson: You're visiting a country.
>> Tim Wildmon: President Trump would probably call him. Low iq.
>> Fred Jackson: Yeah. Low iq.
>> Tim Wildmon: Low IQ guy.
>> Fred Jackson: You know what's been happening here in the United States, you know, with President Trump and his policies, and we're deporting hundreds of thousands of people who are in the country illegally. And I'm sure the President of Colombia has seen the news stories on tv, there in Colombia and, and you come up that, that's just like, you know, I'm going to go up and spit in the President's face.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah.
>> Fred Jackson: And if he thought he could get away with it, you know, it's just, it's as I say, at the very least, not very smart.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yeah.
>> Fred Jackson: Low iq.
>> Steve Jordahl: Low.
>> Tim Wildmon: Like you. President Trump says, a low IQ person.
An American congressman says there may be UFO bases under the sea
Hey, we're going to get to the UFO story or not. Do you even know about this?
>> Steve Jordahl: Oh, yeah, well, we can, because.
>> Tim Wildmon: I think it's time for a UFO story.
>> Steve Jordahl: I think we do. Let me have to look it up because I know the general outline of it bas, someone has said that there's UFO bases under the sea.
>> Tim Wildmon: it was on the SpongeBob show and I, saw it on there. I thought we'd bring it up, on this show. okay, type it in. I read about it last night and I thought it was a joke.
>> Steve Jordahl: Right. I don't know why you would.
>> Tim Wildmon: Well, you guys pull the story. I sent it last night.
>> Steve Jordahl: I got it. I got the Ms.
>> Tim Wildmon: It was a United States Congressman from Tennessee, a Republican. They were quoting in the article Tim Burchett. Okay, quoting him. Do you. Do you want to read the first couple of paragraphs of that?
>> Steve Jordahl: According to an American congressman, there may be five or six undersea bases off the US coast where aliens could be hiding. According to Congressman Tim Burchard of Tennessee, alien entities are already residing on Earth's deep waters. Social media is rocked by the assertion made by the member of the House Oversight Committee that deals with UFOs. Burchett made the suggestion that intelligent alien entities or civilizations might have been lurking beneath the waters for millennia in a now viral video that was uploaded to X on September 17. I do not have the video or the sound.
>> Tim Wildmon: Congressman Tim Burchett.
>> Steve Jordahl: B U R C H E T.
>> Tim Wildmon: T. You know, I don't know if I've ever met him, but I've, Where's he represent?
>> Fred Jackson: it's a. Tennessee. Yeah.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yes, in Tennessee. I don't know if it's Chattanooga or Knoxville or Nashville. Anyway, so. All right, Fred, I'm gonna throw it to you here. Congressman Burchett is saying there's. Is he. I don't want to misquote him. Did you quote him? M. Right, Steve?
>> Steve Jordahl: well, I read. I didn't. I didn't have. Well, yeah, as. As acc. As Ms. As, MSN is, I don't quote them. His congressional district is number two, and it does include Knoxville.
>> Tim Wildmon: Knoxville. Okay, Fred. Fred, you're smiling here. Fred, you don't believe in UFOs? Fred, what's wrong with you, man?
>> Fred Jackson: I don't believe in little green men coming from other planets.
Congress is taking this issue seriously, Congressman Burch says
Okay, all right, let's get.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay, I don't think that's what he's suggesting. Is he Congressman Burch.
>> Steve Jordahl: But alien life.
>> Tim Wildmon: Alien life. okay, Alien. We don't know if they're little green men.
>> Fred Jackson: They may be alien life.
>> Tim Wildmon: Maybe they may be blue with gills. Gills. Women, for all we know. Anyway, go ahead.
>> Fred Jackson: so, yeah, I don't believe in little green men from other planets, but I do believe, there are demons. I believe, as you were saying earlier, you believe in Satan. Satan is real, and he has his demons. Is it possible that they reside in whatever the congressman is describing there at the bottom of the sea? I. I'm skeptical at that point, but, sometimes we get into these stories and. And. And we laugh about it. You know, we've. We've done the area 51 stories many times and that sort of thing. We've had credible evidence given before congressional hearings by fighter pilots who say they see things flying, in the air. And, you know, I. I don't doubt these are pilots are serious bright people.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yeah. Ah.
>> Fred Jackson: And they have seen these things. So I'm not dismissing alien vehicles, but I. I'd like to see a little bit more proof for where the congressman is. Is trying to lead the folks.
>> Steve Jordahl: I gotta tell you. it would. Congress is taking this issue seriously.
>> Fred Jackson: I know it is.
>> Steve Jordahl: And, 20 years ago, it would have been the biggest story ever to hit the news. We've discovered life, the possibility of life on other planets, intelligent life out. I mean, this would be the holy grail of all.
>> Fred Jackson: Oh.
>> Steve Jordahl: but now we're talking about it.
>> Tim Wildmon: Well, here, listen. There's sometimes you. If I were giving advice to the congressman.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yes.
>> Tim Wildmon: And he didn't ask me for advice. I'm very. I'm sure he's very smart guy. And again, I. I think he's conservative. He's one of us on that. On many of the issues. But, there's Sometimes you don't talk about things because that's what you're going to get stuck with for the rest of your career. Because it's, it just lends itself to comedic response. Right. you start talking about UFOs. I tell you what I've got. I came up with a theme song for this committee. and I don't know the congressman, would, approve of this. That are going to talk about alien camps under the sea. Am I right?
>> Steve Jordahl: Yes, that's what they're saying.
>> Tim Wildmon: That's what we're talking about. Camping out. Out there under the sea. I gotta see if you would consider this song for their theme song.
>> Steve Jordahl: Yes.
>> Tim Wildmon: Yeah, listen, I would. Somewhere beyond the sea Somewhere waiting for me is an alien.
>> Steve Jordahl: I'm trying to place that singer, too. Who is that?
>> Tim Wildmon: I think that's Bobby Darin.
>> Steve Jordahl: That's who it was.
>> Fred Jackson: I almost. I almost saw a scene from Star wars there.
>> Steve Jordahl: Well, I was actually. I had kids. I had kids in the 90s. I was thinking Little Mermaid.
>> Tim Wildmon: Well, that was Bobby Darren. I just told Brent to pull that up just right off because I like that song. But I think that would be a good theme song for the committee.
>> Steve Jordahl: Might work.
>> Tim Wildmon: All right, moving on.
Alpha: Have aliens ever threatened us, by the way
>> Steve Jordahl: All right.
>> Tim Wildmon: From aliens living in camps out there under the sea. Alpha. Have they ever threatened us, by the way? No. You're aware of.
>> Steve Jordahl: No, not that I'm aware of. They're. They're minding their own business.
>> Tim Wildmon: Okay, I know.
Some geniuses in Portland, Oregon, firebomb Ice Cube's tour bus
>> Steve Jordahl: All right. I want to, end with the geniuses in Portland, Oregon. The, antifa type geniuses who are just livid that there is. That they are taking illegal immigrants off the sea. That ice off the sea, off the streets. And that ice is rounding these people up, sometimes putting them on buses and shipping them out. And so there's some geniuses that saw an ice bus and decided to firebomb it. So they literally. There's a picture of burn marks on this bus, but they didn't look close enough because it wasn't an ice bus. It was the tour bus of Ice Cube, the rapper who happened to be important for a concert.
>> Tim Wildmon: That's hysterical. I mean, I hope nobody was hurt. No, they hurt. Okay.
>> Fred Jackson: That's a big oops.
>> Tim Wildmon: Poor Ice Cube, man. He might want to change his name.
>> Steve Jordahl: Right?
>> Tim Wildmon: I would change it, maybe change it to Hot Tea. Hot Tea. The rapper formerly known as Ice Cube. That's what Prince was. Was formerly artist, formally another Prince. So you need to maybe the artist form. They know his Ice Cube is now Hot Tea. Anyway, just a thought. Thank you, Steve.
>> Steve Jordahl: My pleasure, Fred.
>> Tim Wildmon: Thank you.
>> Fred Jackson: Ah, alrighty.
>> Tim Wildmon: So you're not taking that stamp they got over there in Britain, are you, Fred?
>> Fred Jackson: For sure.
>> Tim Wildmon: No.
>> Fred Jackson: No.
>> Tim Wildmon: All right. My thanks to Brent Creeley. Our producer, Chris Woodward was on earlier. Steve Crampton. Was that all the guests we had?
>> Fred Jackson: Yes, sir.
>> Tim Wildmon: We hope you have a great time day. Keep listening to American Family Radio and we'll see you back here tomorrow.