On November 20, 2024, Danny Roebuck, James Lyons-Weiler, and Trent Loos joined the show. Veteran actor and producer discussed his new Christmas movie opening at the 88 Drive-In Theater, sharing how the true story of a grieving father who became Santa Claus reflects his belief in faith-based filmmaking Founder of IPAC and close advisor to RFK Jr Sixth-generation rancher exposed Doug Burgum’s deep ties.
Danny Roebuck, veteran actor and producer, discussed his new Christmas film “St. Nick of Bethlehem,” opening at the 88 Drive-In Theater in Commerce City. The movie tells the true story of a Pennsylvania man who, after losing his teenage son, found healing by adopting the persona of Santa Claus. Roebuck, who grew up in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, relocated the story to his hometown, the “Christmas City,” to enhance its thematic resonance.
The actor, whose career spans from 1984’s “Cave Girl” to playing Count Dracula in “The Munsters” and Santa in “Terrifier 3,” emphasized the importance of family-friendly content. His nonprofit organization, A Channel of Peace, produces films designed to uplift audiences while acknowledging a higher power.
“We always say God weaves tapestries that are so beautiful you almost don’t notice that they exist, because things seem to fall in place, but things can’t fall in place without a higher power.”
Danny Roebuck, Actor and Producer
Dr. James Lyons-Weiler, founder of the Institute for Pure and Applied Knowledge (IPAC) and close advisor to Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for nearly a decade, provided insight into Kennedy’s nomination as Secretary of Health and Human Services. He characterized Kennedy’s endorsement of Trump as “one of the most important political moves, probably in the last hundred years.”
Lyons-Weiler outlined the fundamental problems plaguing American healthcare: the NIH’s focus on “translational research” that prioritizes getting products to market, the revolving door between regulatory agencies and pharmaceutical companies, and the perverse incentives that pay pediatricians based on vaccination percentages. He noted that medical error ranks as the third leading cause of death in the United States, a statistic he believes worsened during COVID due to improper treatment protocols.
The conversation turned to Colorado’s Governor Jared Polis and his apparent reversal on vaccine policy. Kim recalled RFK Jr. testifying against vaccine legislation at the Colorado statehouse in 2020, where Polis had supported the mandate. Now, with Kennedy poised for national influence, Polis has expressed support for his approach.
“The win really showed that Kennedy’s endorsement was one of the most important political moves, probably in the last hundred years or so.”
Dr. James Lyons-Weiler, Founder of IPAC
Trent Loos, sixth-generation farmer and rancher, raised serious concerns about North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum’s nomination to lead the Interior Department and head the new Energy Council. Loos detailed Burgum’s deep ties to Bill Gates: Gates purchased Burgum’s Great Plains Software company for $1.1 billion, Burgum served as a Microsoft executive for eight years, and Gates remains his largest campaign contributor.
More troubling, Loos explained, was how North Dakota’s corporate farming law was circumvented to allow Gates’s Red River Trust to purchase the Campbell Farm for $13.5 million, despite statutes requiring a family member to live on corporate-owned farmland. Attorney General Drew Wrigley’s investigation found no violation, a decision Loos called suspicious given Burgum’s relationship with Gates.
The conversation expanded to cover CO2 pipelines threatening property rights in Nebraska, where counties believe they lack authority to control pipeline construction. Loos reported on a meeting in York, Nebraska, where pipeline construction had begun despite community opposition raised in February. He praised South Dakota’s Referred Law 21 victory, where grassroots volunteers spending less than $200,000 defeated a $5 million campaign, demonstrating that “the citizenry figured out they are the government.”
“And that is that through the referred law 21 ballot measure that went to the general election in South Dakota and won in a landslide, the citizenry of South Dakota figured out they are the government.”
Trent Loos, Sixth-Generation Rancher
Kim and Trent discussed Colorado’s election challenges, including the defeat of ranked-choice voting despite $15 million in support. Kim detailed her Colorado 2024 Election Project, which filed two lawsuits: one through United Sovereign Americans revealing over 1.4 million questionable registrations, and another targeting unclean voter rolls. The conversation addressed automatic voter registration, the secretary of state’s BIOS password exposure, and the need for hand-count audits before election certification.
Episode from The Kim Monson Show
Episode from The Kim Monson Show
On January 1, 2024, Everett Piper and Ben Rall joined the show. Examined the connection between family structure and economic health, arguing that the...