On the January 30, 2023 broadcast, Kim Monson examines three critical issues facing American families: how school counselors are using emotional manipulation to push transgender ideology on children, the assault on property rights through subsidized housing projects, and the unjust prosecution of police officers for following their training.
In this segment, Alvin Lui, President of Courage is a Habit, joins Kim to expose how the American School Counselor Association (ASCA) trains counselors to use language contamination and emotional blackmail against parents. Lui explains that parents are brainwashed before their children through manipulated definitions of words like “empathy,” “inclusion,” and “safe.” When school counselors use these terms, they mean something entirely different from what parents understand.
Lui reveals that counselors redefine “empathy” to mean suppressing natural protective instincts, and “safe” to mean complying with transgender ideology. He urges parents to opt out of social-emotional learning surveys and health surveys that data-mine children, and to refuse to allow their children to meet with school mental health professionals without parental presence.
“See, we often say that children are brainwashed. You hear that a lot when we’re talking about the education indoctrination. But at Courage is a Habit, we really focus on that our parents that are brainwashed first.”
Alvin Lui, President of Courage is a Habit
Holly Green, a concerned Douglas County citizen, joins Kim to discuss a subsidized housing project approved despite unanimous denial by the Planning Commission. The project would place 500 residences in three to four-story buildings on rural agricultural land surrounded only by single-family homes within a 1.5-mile radius.
Green explains how developers receive 90% of their investment back through tax rebates while charging market-rate rents, essentially building with taxpayer dollars while keeping all profits. The project violates county master plan criteria and offers no public transportation or infrastructure improvements.
“These guys will build this property, and they will get back 10% of all of their development costs per year for more than nine years. So they will get back 90% of any monies they put into the property and charge market rates for the rent.”
Holly Green, Douglas County Resident
Everett Johnson, State President of the Alabama State Fraternal Order of Police with 27 years in law enforcement, discusses Officer Ben Darby, imprisoned for 25 years despite being cleared by internal investigation. Darby responded to a suicidal subject with a firearm and saved fellow officers’ lives, yet was prosecuted because the judge refused to let the jury consider his actions through the lens of a trained police officer.
Johnson describes how the trial violated public trial requirements during COVID, and how the lack of standardized use-of-force investigation procedures allows inconsistent prosecution across jurisdictions. He notes that police recruiting is at an all-time low because officers fear prosecution for doing their jobs.
“These officers have been trained to do a job. They’ve been trained in specialized training to handle situations that they were encountering. And when they fell back on their training and fell back on what their procedures and policies are, they were still prosecuted.”
Everett Johnson, State President, Alabama Fraternal Order of Police
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