The Science That Al Gore Doesn’t Want You to Know

The Science That Al Gore Doesn’t Want You to Know

They are Selling you Fear and Destruction

The planet is improving, not in spite of increasing CO2 and rising temperature, but because of it. The very framework of the climate-catastrophe argument is being confronted with scientific facts. 

“I talked earlier today about what’s coming out now, finally, as this overpopulation bomb and the fact that that’s been dispelled and the reality is that never came to fruition. And it was really one of the biggest lies foisted upon mankind. And what I said, Gregory, was climate change, global warming, whatever you want to call it, I believe down the road is going to be in the same situation.” ~ John Rush

“Oh, absolutely. And if we look at, I mean, I look at, I’m a geologist, so I look at the big picture and we’re being told, aren’t we, that “Oh, my God. We can’t let it get a degree and a half or two degrees warmer or there’s going to be famine.” Right? Nasty population. Everything imaginable is going to go wrong. Well as a geologist, Again, I look back. What’s happened over the last five or 6,000 years since the first-grade civilizations arose. What happened whenever temperatures got to those levels? Well, I’ll tell you what happened. Humanity and the Euros ecosystem thrived. Food was abundant with great abundance during periods that were warmer than today.” – Gregory Wrightstone

In this podcast

  • Overpopulation Debunked by John Rush
  • Why the Florida condo collapsed
  • EV’s are not for everyone and their dangers
  • Charging stations in rural areas

CLIMATE CHANGE ANALYST: Gregory Wrightstone, is a geologist and the Executive Director of the CO2 Coalition in Arlington Virginia. He is the bestselling author of the book “Inconvenient Facts: The Science That Al Gore Doesn’t Want You to Know.”

BIO: Gregory Wrightstone is a geologist with more than 35 years of studying the Earth’s processes. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Waynesburg University and a master’s from West Virginia University, both in the field of geology. He has presented the results of his research around the world, including India, Ireland, and China. 

Gregory’s book was the result of a quest for the truth about climate change — a subject uncritically reported by the mainstream media of an Earth lurching inexorably toward climate apocalypse. Contrary to the hyperbole of climate alarmists, Wrightstone’s review of the science provides the historical context of the Earth that shows clearly that rising temperatures and increasing carbon dioxide are benefiting both the planet and the human condition. 

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The Population Bomb? It’s a Dud.

The Population Bomb? It’s a Dud.

If Ever There Were an Ironclad Scientific Consensus, This Was It.
And They Were Wrong.

The population bomb, doomsday scam, the narrative we’ve been forced fed for decades is finally being abandoned by its strictest adherence.

As reported in the American Spectator.


“This is out of The American Spectator. But they pulled some things even out of The Wall Street Journal. And the reality is, I could really say this, probably in one sentence. It never happened, folks. There never was an overpopulation of the Earth.

In fact, we have now entered into a day and age where there is a lot of countries, including the likes of China, where they’re looking at their own population, saying, wait a minute. We don’t have enough young people running around to really meet the demand of what we as a country and economy need moving forward.” – John Rush

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The greatest environmental demographic scare of the second half of the century, overpopulation is now officially conceded to have been a monumental fraud.

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To appreciate what an embarrassing reversal this is for the Green movement. Consider that 40 to 50 years ago, nearly all the scientists, policymakers, Us government agencies, and experts at the UN told us that a rampaging population growth would lead to the doomsday with the world in our lifetime running out of food, energy, and nearly everything else.

Does this sound familiar, folks? Does this sound a lot like global warming, climate change, where you have, quote, Unquote, all of the experts, including the government and the UN, believing that if we don’t do something, that the existential threat right now, the largest crisis you’ve heard Joe Biden and his crony say this, the biggest threat we have in the world today is climate change. Does it not sound eerily familiar to overpopulation?

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“The New York Times put the point even more emphatically in its coverage of this amazing twist of fate by acknowledging in a headline that the dreaded population bomb of the 1960s and ’70s has turned into a global population bust. Folks, the reason why I’m reading this to you is because these are things that I’ve talked about on this program now off and on for the past seven years.” ~ John Rush

Greg Bloom from Barber’s Foods on Food, Freedom, and Mental Blocks

Greg Bloom from Barber’s Foods on Food, Freedom, and Mental Blocks

Food, Freedom, and Mental Blocks ~ Show Clips

Greg’s experience of living in Southeast Asia for two years.
What is the Strangest food John has eaten?
Jersey Joe Comments on working and eating in Communist China.
Tabasco on Ice cream. Monkey brains. Why are the Wagyu steaks so popular?
Why the bad wrap on Hot dogs isn’t deserved and how they are made. The best and the worst of hot dogs and what is the best way to cook one. (Hot dog info 34:15)

Greg Bloom – Barber’s Foods 

Hour One Highlights 

  • Wagyu Sliced Beef Pucks:
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 5:30

  • John from Cheyenne and his go-to Brats with Beer.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 8:13

  • The Steak Test.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 16:25

  • How Barber’s Foods packaging makes meats last longer. Much longer.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at  23:27

  • Limitations on buying half or quarter of beef.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 24:35

  • Grass-fed vs. Grain-fed.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 26:46

  • Kabobs cooking how-to.
    Comments here.  Mobile users begin at 34:15

  • Biggest cooking mistakes with beef, food safety, and the cookie sheet method.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 36:19

  • Cooking with a smoker.
    Comments here. 38:00

  • Brine poultry for smoking.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 40:47

  • Breading of conventional turkeys and how to cook.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 41:31

  • Chicken wings shortage.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 45:27

  • Ken called in asking about brine.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 45:58

  • Opening/running a restaurant.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 46:48

  • Low and slow cooking tips.
    Comments here. Mobile users begin at 53:19

 

Barber's Foods
GMC’s “Work from Anywhere” 2021

GMC’s “Work from Anywhere” 2021

Survey Data Shows Americans are Tired of Working from Home

GMC Encouraging Customers to Switch Up Their Daily Routines, Offers 30 Days of Complimentary in-vehicle Wi-Fi®Data Allowing Customers to Get Out and Explore.

GMC Challenges National Work from Home Day with ‘Work from Anywhere’ Weeklong Campaign

For over a year now, a majority of the U.S. workforce has been working in home offices, making National Work From Home Day on June 24 more of a punchline than a day to celebrate. To inspire a change to the mundane, GMC will launch a new weeklong campaign on June 24, encouraging customers to change their usual routine and explore the world around them.

GMC’s “Work from Anywhere” week will run June 24 – July 4, 2021,  and to encourage participation, GMC will offer complimentary in-vehicle Wi-Fi data for the first 20,210 existing GMC customers to opt-in and get out, while staying connected.  A recent study from Indeed showed 67 percent of all remote workers believe burnout has worsened during the pandemic, with 53 percent indicating they are working longer hours, making it harder to unplug from their home office.

While working from home has become the new reality for many, GMC recognizes that there are some that cannot work from home. GMC thanks all frontline workers who have worked tirelessly for the benefit of the greater good.  Eligible participants who engage with the “Work from Anywhere” campaign on social media can also enter the brand’s sweepstakes for a chance to win a new GMC Sierra AT42. Customers are encouraged to participate by sharing their office setups on social, tagging @GMC and #WorkFromAnywhere

How Can Businesses Rebounding From COVID Raise Much-Needed Capital?

How Can Businesses Rebounding From COVID Raise Much-Needed Capital?

Strategies for entrepreneurs and small business owners who are looking for ways to raise capital post-COVID. 

Many businesses rebounding  from the COVID-19 pandemic are in need of additional capital to bolster their balance sheets. Startups trying to get off the ground in the post-pandemic world need the same thing. 

The good news for business owners and entrepreneurs is that money is available – but it’s not just sitting there waiting for them to come take it. 

 Michael Brette, J.D., founder, president and CEO of Small Cap Equity Advisors spoke with John about that there’s more than enough capital to assist almost every business but people miss out on it because they make a lot of mistakes or have a lot of misconceptions about raising capital. It does takes time and money, and people need to know how to do it legally.

Brette covers why a business plan isn’t enough, how to be strategic and why you have to be able to answer the investor’s “why” question.

“The question those investors want answered is: Why should I invest in your deal and why should I invest at this stage?” Brette says. “People will make these presentations and talk about their technology or other details, and put everybody to sleep. But they never answer the question of why should I pull out my checkbook and write you a check.” 

To contact Michael call him at 951-236-8473 or on LinkedIn
The Greatness of One

The Greatness of One

Richard V. Battle

Author of Navigating Life’s Journey: Common Sense in Uncommon Times.

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One is a Much Greater Number Than We Think 

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It’s Easy to Be Discouraged and
Feel You Can’t Do Anything 

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“Our culture, the people around us, it’s very discouraging. And if we have ambitions and dreams and things of that nature, it’s easy to get beat down and told that you can’t do something. And so I often want to provide encouragement of people because we can do more than we think we can. And even if we don’t attain, our highest dreams will attain more than if we succumb and quit and just let the culture and people beat us now and to mediocrity.” ~ Richard Battle

“And again, I’m trying to not be, you know, super political about this, although that’s what I do pretty much daily. Richard, and what I will say is from traveling to even just one country South of us. And you look at the literally it’s oppressive. It’s oppressive because of their government. And I don’t care what anybody says it is. You can see it when you go there.” ~ John Rush

1.    We can’t do everything, but we all can do one more thing. 

A.    “It is the saddest of all mistakes to do nothing when you can only do a little. Do what you can.” – Sydney Smith 
B.    Bond issue – When one person steps out as an example, others will follow and act.

2.    We must act without everything we need. 

A.    Rough Riders 
B.    “Do what you can, with what you have, where you’re at.” – Theodore Roosevelt 

3.    We must always expend our best effort regardless of the dauntlessness of the task. 

A.    We won’t always succeed. 
B.    We will always do better and more than no effort. 
C.    We will always learn something for the future. 
D.    1970’s criminal conviction in Texas 

4.    Churchill’s leadership and refusal to surrender turned tide to victory in World War II! 

A.    Never Quit, Never Quit, Never, Never, Never, Never Quit! 
B.    Single-handedly made the difference in victory and defeat. 

5.    Navigating Life’s Journey example Desmond Doss 

A.    We can be a victim or overcomer. 
B.    We can contribute differently than expected. |
C.    Saved 75 men’s lives in Okinawa in World War II