On October 2, 2024, Pete Boddie, Rachel O’Brien, and Trent Loos joined the show. Republican candidate for Colorado HD-28 discusses his campaign against the incumbent, citing concerns about inflation, crime, illegal immigration, TABOR protection, and a legislative amendment affecting backflow testing businesses Open the Books Deputy Policy Director reveals Biden administration’s record $1 trillion in improper payments and investigates Tim Walz’s campaign donor connections.
Pete Boddie, a hydrologist with 40 years of experience in South Jefferson County, describes his campaign to unseat the incumbent Democrat in House District 28. After recently retiring from water consulting, Boddie says he has the time and motivation to fight what he sees as California-style policies taking over Colorado. He cites inflation, crime, and illegal immigration as top concerns he hears while knocking on doors.
Boddie takes particular aim at what he calls “the big backflow blunder,” a last-minute amendment by his opponent that requires licensed plumbers to perform backflow device testing. He argues this threatens small businesses across the state and could result in public utilities receiving health violations. With 525 bills passed last legislative session, Boddie pledges to vote “no” on any bill he cannot clearly understand and explain to constituents.
“Well, I have a hat that says, make Colorado, Colorado again.”
Pete Boddie, Candidate for Colorado HD-28
Rachel O’Brien, Deputy Policy Director for Open the Books, addresses the unexpected death of founder Adam Andrzejewski and the organization’s commitment to continuing his mission. O’Brien reveals that under President Biden, improper payments by federal agencies will exceed $1 trillion for the first time in any single administration. These payments, sent to wrong recipients, in wrong amounts, or for wrong reasons, totaled $235 billion last fiscal year alone.
The scope of waste is staggering: dead people received nearly $300 million in benefits, prisoners collected $171 million, and the IRS issued $25 billion in erroneous tax credits. While about 29% of overpayments get recovered, O’Brien notes that sophisticated fraud schemes remain undetected. Medicare and Medicaid account for over $100 billion in improper payments, representing 43% of the total waste.
O’Brien also presents findings from Minnesota’s state checkbook showing connections between Governor Tim Walz’s campaign donors and state contracts. Between 2019 and 2022, Walz accepted at least $890,000 from employees of vendors who received billions in state payments. Neither the governor’s office nor the Harris-Walz campaign responded to questions about potential conflicts of interest.
“So these are improper payments, and they’re exactly what they sound like.”
Rachel O’Brien, Deputy Policy Director, Open the Books
Trent Loos, a sixth-generation farmer and rancher, warns about escalating water conflicts across the American West and the danger of proposed CO2 pipelines. While the Southeast deals with Hurricane Helene’s devastation, western states face severe drought conditions. Loos connects government subsidies for AI centers, Bitcoin mining, and CO2 compression to exponentially increasing water demands that will eventually compete with agricultural needs.
Fresh from debating proponents of South Dakota’s Referred Law 21, which would remove local control over CO2 pipelines, Loos emphasizes the lethal danger of compressed CO2. At 2,200 PSI, a pipeline rupture would expand CO2 at 500 times its compressed volume. Any environment exceeding 5% CO2 concentration proves fatal within two minutes. Loos criticizes those who told him he was “too stern” in the debate, noting that lives are at stake.
The discussion turns to Denver ballot initiatives seeking to ban fur sales and shut down Superior Farms, a lamb processing facility. Loos exposes the true intent behind these measures, pointing to language citing the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and promoting “plant-based food systems.” He reminds listeners that cities like Chicago, Denver, and Kansas City were built on the meatpacking industry, and animal rights organizations claiming to protect animals actually euthanize donated animals while collecting half a billion dollars annually.
“They are creating a CO2 chamber in all of the Great Plains of America.”
Trent Loos, Sixth-Generation Farmer and Rancher
Episode from The Kim Monson Show
Episode from The Kim Monson Show
Episode from The Kim Monson Show