Guests - Scott Schara, Brett Mecum, Bill Sullivan, Rodney Glassman

Wildcats Advance Toward National Title as Tucson Confronts Government Overreach, Space Leadership, Iran Strategy, and Attorney General Accountability

Kathleen Winn opens the show with excitement over the Arizona Wildcats heading into the Final Four, noting the growing number of U of A flags around Tucson and the team's hard work under Coach Tommy Lloyd. She expresses hope they go all the way, calling them her heroes.

Scott Schara on Government Protocols, Daughter Grace's Death, and the Population Reduction Agenda Exposed in "Is the Government Legally Killing Us?"

Scott Schara, author of the newly released book Is the Government Legally Killing Us?, shares the heartbreaking story of his daughter Grace, who had Down syndrome and died at age 19 on October 13, 2021. Schara explains they took Grace to the hospital for a cold with 88% oxygen saturation, expecting a safe environment. Seven days later, she was dead after receiving a combination of Precedex, lorazepam, and morphine—the same protocol used in hospice to hasten death. "They gave her a combination of Precedex, lorazepam, and morphine, which is what you give somebody if you're trying to kill them in hospice care."

During the family's jury trial—the first and likely only one for wrongful death with COVID listed on the death certificate—medical expert Dr. Gilbert Berdine called the decision to administer morphine "the worst clinical decision he's ever seen in 46 years of medical practice." Schara reveals the doctor had placed an illegal do-not-resuscitate order on Grace's chart without consent, and nurses refused to enter the room despite his daughter Jessica's pleas. "They hollered back, she's DNR, do not resuscitate... They obeyed the order instead of saving Grace." The family watched her die on FaceTime.

Schara details how he spent over 4,000 hours researching after reviewing medical records, uncovering that Grace's case was not isolated. He connects it to broader government actions during COVID, describing the pandemic as a "complete PsyOp orchestrated by the United States government" tied to a population reduction agenda. "The scam is way bigger than COVID. COVID revealed the scam." The book exposes how the medical industrial complex, protected by laws like the PREP Act and standards of care, operates with immunity. "The PREP Act is child's play compared to the immunity from liability by following standards of care."

Schara emphasizes the book is dedicated to Grace and that 100% of proceeds support her foundation. He urges readers to recognize government overreach: "Until you realize the state is against us and we are the enemy, you will never be protected." The trial loss (11-1) highlighted systemic bias, with defense experts claiming implied consent in hospitals and that the drugs were "normal in an ICU." Schara calls for awareness: "Grace's story... it was a gift from God... Millions of people saw what was behind the curtain for the first time."

Brett Mecum on Artemis II Launch, Arizona's Critical Role in Space, and Strategic Competition with China

Brett Mecum, chairman of the Arizona Space Commission, describes witnessing the Artemis II launch from Cape Canaveral as "electrifying" and "awe-inspiring." As the most powerful rocket ever built, the Space Launch System carried the Orion capsule with three American astronauts and one Canadian on a mission circling the Moon. "To see that come over you, it absolutely takes your breath away."

Mecum highlights Arizona's deep involvement: Honeywell contributes electronic systems, Northrop Grumman builds boosters in Gilbert, and the Orion parachute tests occur in Yuma. He notes every Apollo moonwalker trained in Arizona. "Arizona has a rich history of supporting these space missions." The Artemis program, continued across administrations, tests capabilities for a permanent lunar base, with Artemis IV planned for the first crewed lunar landing.

Arizona's advantages—libertarian mindset, vast land for testing, positive tax structure, and weather—position it for growth in the space economy. Mecum cites companies like Virgin Galactic building Delta-class spaceships in Mesa, Phantom Space in Tucson, Paragon Space Development Corporation, and Lunasan. "Whether you've got minerals, water, other materials underground, they've got sensor programs that can do that."

He frames the mission in the context of a new space race with China. "We are absolutely in a new space race." A lunar base provides strategic advantage, scientific research, and a stepping stone to Mars, leveraging the Moon's one-sixth Earth gravity for easier launches. "If we're actually going to get to Mars... it makes so much more sense to be able to go to the moon first."

Bill Sullivan on Iran's Conflict Resolution, Space Program Priorities, and the Necessity of Faith in National Restoration

Retired U.S. Navy Captain Bill Sullivan addresses President Trump's speech on Iran, agreeing the conflict appears headed toward resolution within weeks. "The logical explanation... it seems they would have to come to a close within a month or so." Sullivan notes the Marine Expeditionary Units and 82nd Airborne deployments could secure key nodes or serve as a head fake, but the overall strategy prioritizes quick, decisive action. "The president... has not disclosed his strategy... but the outcome of that... has everybody guessing."

He praises the Artemis II launch as demonstrating American leadership, aligning with space as a national priority amid global competition. On faith, Sullivan asserts America's restoration requires returning to God: "This country can only be saved if there's a return to God... We will only be restored if there's a return to God, period." He connects this to accountability, noting how fear of God prevents justifying wrongdoing. "The reason that I don't... is because I understand God's watching me... I'm accountable to him."

Sullivan warns against complacency, citing how young people in mobs looting stores reflect a lack of values taught at home. "How we do it is important... We ought not to turn our back ever on the type of content that they're seeing." He ties this to broader national challenges, urging vigilance against those who "hate somebody so bad that you can't even acknowledge good things."

Rodney Glassman on the Attorney General Race, Enforcing Laws, Protecting Kids and Cops, and Election Integrity

Rodney Glassman, candidate for Arizona Attorney General, emphasizes the office's immense power as the state's largest law firm, overseeing 400 attorneys and 1,000 support staff serving every state agency. "The attorney general in Arizona doesn't work for the governor... The attorney general is supposed to work for the people." Unlike the federal AG appointed by the president, Arizona's is elected for a four-year term.

Glassman criticizes incumbent Kris Mayes for suing the Trump administration 39-40 times, building a "resistance resume" while neglecting core duties. "Every time that Chris Mays is on TV, all she's doing is damage to Arizona." He pledges to withdraw Arizona from those lawsuits on day one, rescind political indictments, and enforce immigration and election laws. "I will withdraw Arizona from the 39 clickbait lawsuits... I'll be able to rescind the political indictment."

On protecting children, Glassman notes the Department of Child Safety and education rely on assistant AGs under the elected AG. "When it comes to protecting kids... the lawyers that are there to serve and protect Arizona's school students... are all assistant attorney generals." He highlights failures in family court and CPS, where inexperienced judges handle vulnerable cases. "The attorney general... can speak on behalf of that system."

Glassman stresses election integrity: "Arizonans... care about law enforcement... Arizonans know that if you're born a biological boy, that you're a boy." He is the only Republican candidate with prosecutorial experience, having served 17 years in the Air Force JAG Corps and as a private attorney. "The attorney general... runs the largest law office in the state... and the attorney general... is in charge of not only enforcing the laws, but doing all the appellate work."

Glassman urges voters to visit rodneyglassman.com and contribute $39—one dollar per lawsuit Mays filed—to support a candidate who will prioritize Arizonans. "We need to nominate a Republican with the experience to defeat Kris Mayes in November."


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Guests – Ava Chen, Dave Smith