On July 21, 2025, Kim Monson examines two critical threats to American freedom: the forced transition to electric vehicles and the integrity of Colorado’s election systems. Automotive expert Lauren Fix exposes the collapse of EV mandates, and election integrity advocate Marly Hornik reveals shocking findings from a Jefferson County voter study.
Lauren Fix, known as the Car Coach, breaks down why the electric vehicle market faces a critical tipping point. With the end of the $7,500 federal tax credit approaching in September, automakers are scrambling to move inventory that consumers never wanted in the first place. Ford dealerships overflow with Lightning trucks and Mach-Es while Tesla maintains market dominance through domestic production.
Fix explains that manufacturers were forced to produce vehicles consumers did not want, and the lack of charging infrastructure makes EV ownership impractical for most Americans. Cold weather reduces range and increases charging time, creating what Fix calls “charging anxiety.” She warns that hybrid vehicles, while appealing, carry hidden costs since they essentially contain two powertrains that can fail outside of warranty.
The freedom of mobility discussion extends to road diets, 10-minute cities, and apartment buildings constructed without parking. These policies, Fix argues, are designed to frustrate drivers into abandoning personal vehicles. The federal judges blocking Trump administration efforts to roll back EV mandates represent another obstacle, though Fix expresses confidence that the administration’s legal team will prevail at the Supreme Court level.
“They were forced to make something that consumers didn’t want.”
Lauren Fix, The Car Coach
Marly Hornik, co-founder of Unite for Freedom (formerly United Sovereign Americans), reveals explosive findings about Colorado’s voter registration database. The organization’s analysis of the 2024 election uncovered 628,000 voters whose registration dates appear after they voted, an impossible scenario that demands investigation rather than dismissal.
The problems extend beyond registration dates. Some 644,000 primary voters had their voting history deleted from the official records, and 33,000 registrations were backdated. Hornik characterizes this chaos as administrative mayhem that no corporate filing or personal tax return would ever tolerate.
An investigation into Jefferson County, funded by Kim Monson Show listeners, produced even more alarming results. Private investigators using commercial databases found nearly 20,000 voters without Social Security numbers, 1,790 voters who cannot be found in any database, and approximately 17,000 votes from addresses where the voter no longer resided. These findings exceed the margin of victory in key races, including Rebecca Stewart’s contested victory over Ramey Johnson.
“We found out that 1,790 voters who had their votes counted in Jefferson County in 2024 cannot be found in any of these databases.”
Marly Hornik, Co-Founder of Unite for Freedom
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