On the July 16, 2025 broadcast, Kim Monson exposes the pharmaceutical industry’s systematic plan to undermine Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. through leaked internal documents, examines Colorado’s fight to protect taxpayer rights under TABOR, and investigates the hidden dangers of CO2 pipelines running beneath American cities.
Dr. James Lyons-Weiler, founder of IPAC-EDU (Institute for Pure and Applied Knowledge), reveals the contents of a leaked memo from the Biotechnology Innovation Organization (BIO) that outlines a detailed plan to remove Kennedy from his position by September 2025. The memo, which Lyons-Weiler received in early April, includes a social media calendar and specific strategies to undermine Kennedy’s credibility.
The document allegedly names potential allies within the administration who might be persuaded to turn against Kennedy, including suggestions to approach figures like Dr. Oz as a “voice of reason.” Lyons-Weiler emphasizes that the pharmaceutical industry is “managing the perception of risk” rather than addressing actual vaccine safety concerns, which he characterizes as closer to fraud than legitimate capitalist ethics.
Lyons-Weiler describes how he preemptively countered the trade association’s messaging by publishing articles ahead of their scheduled releases, effectively stealing their thunder on issues like redefining “resilience” to mean mass vaccination.
“To then say that we’re going to try to influence the messaging around Kennedy so that he’s no longer viable as HHS is really an affront to the process of democracy and the institutions that we’re trying to operate as they lay in shambles on the ground after the past eight years of nonsense.”
Dr. James Lyons-Weiler, Founder of IPAC-EDU
Rob Knuth, Vice President of the Colorado Union of Taxpayers (CUT), warns that Governor Polis may call a special legislative session by mid-August to potentially place TABOR on the ballot for repeal. The constitutional amendment, passed in 1992, requires voter approval for tax increases and has been repeatedly challenged by politicians seeking greater spending flexibility.
Knuth explains that CUT has been monitoring legislative activity and coordinating with minority leader Rose Pugliese to track developments. He notes that while special interest groups continuously attack TABOR, the amendment enjoys broad bipartisan support among actual voters when presented with clear information about its protections.
“the great thing about Tabor is that the taxpayers across the board- Democrats, Unaffiliated and Republicans- are heavily in favor of keeping TABOR. Once they’re really presented with the data, they usually vote their interest in keeping the TABOR in play.”
Rob Knuth, Vice President, Colorado Union of Taxpayers
Trent Loos, sixth-generation farmer and rancher, reports that screwworm, a parasitic fly larvae that has been absent from the United States for 60 years, was detected in Mexico in December, prompting border closures for cattle, bison, and equine imports. The USDA has oscillated between allowing regionalized imports and maintaining complete closures, with the latest decision shutting down the border again after briefly announcing a phased reopening.
Loos explains that while screwworm poses genuine risks, including 23 people currently hospitalized in Mexico, the U.S. spends $21 million annually on a sterile male fruit fly program that has proven largely ineffective because female fruit flies prefer larger wild males over the smaller lab-produced sterile males. He notes that ivermectin effectively treats screwworm infestations.
“We are the number one beef importer in the world. If it was not for that imported beef from Australia, ground beef and beef across the board would be a luxury item.”
Trent Loos, Sixth-Generation Farmer and Rancher
Loos raises alarm about CO2 pipeline conversion projects, reporting that a Trailblazer natural gas pipeline running directly under Wichita, Kansas is being considered for conversion to transport compressed CO2 at 2,300 PSI. He encountered a warning sign at a Wichita gas station cautioning employees about CO2 suffocation risks, illustrating the everyday dangers of concentrated carbon dioxide.
The conversion is driven by an $85 per metric ton federal tax credit that incentivizes companies to transport captured carbon dioxide, creating what Loos describes as a market distortion that puts communities at risk. Approximately 100 people die annually in the U.S. from CO2 canister mishaps at restaurants, bars, and gas stations.
“People are living on top of a time bomb, don’t even know it, and here the people who work in this gas station are being warned every day.”
Trent Loos, Sixth-Generation Farmer and Rancher
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