Fixing Elections, Protecting Kids, and Fighting for Property Rights

May 15, 2024 01:52:01
Fixing Elections, Protecting Kids, and Fighting for Property Rights
The Kim Monson Show
Fixing Elections, Protecting Kids, and Fighting for Property Rights

May 15 2024 | 01:52:01

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Show Notes

On May 15, 2024, Erin Lee, Marly Hornik, Trent Loos, and Paula Sarlls joined the show. Discussed her family’s experience with school-based gender transition documented in the film Art Club, and Protect Kids Colorado’s ballot initiatives requiring parental notification and protecting girls’ sports Exposed approximately 1 Reported from the Williston Basin Petroleum Conference on abundant oil reserves, warned about property rights erosion in Weld County, and.

Voter Roll Violations and Election Integrity

Start listening at 32:55 – Hour 1

Marly Hornik, founder and CEO of United Sovereign Americans, exposes systemic problems in Colorado’s voter registration database that call into question the legitimacy of certified election results. Her organization discovered approximately 1.5 million registration violations in Colorado’s voter rolls, including backdated registration dates, manipulated voter histories, and illegally duplicated records.

Hornik explains that these database irregularities resulted in over 100,000 potentially invalid votes in the 2022 election, far exceeding the federal accuracy threshold of roughly 21 ballots statewide. Additionally, 34,912 more votes were counted than voters who actually voted, creating fundamental questions about ballot chain of custody and tabulator accuracy. United Sovereign Americans is filing preliminary injunction litigation in multiple states to ensure the 2024 election meets federal standards under the National Voter Registration Act.

“So that’s not an issue of election outcome. It’s a civil rights abridgment.”

Marly Hornik, CEO, United Sovereign Americans

Parental Rights and Protecting Children

Start listening at 18:45 – Hour 1

Erin Lee shares her family’s experience with gender ideology in Colorado public schools, a story documented in the film Art Club available at artclubmovie.com. Her 12-year-old daughter was transitioned behind her parents’ backs through an after-school program that turned out to be a transgender activist indoctrination session rather than the art club it claimed to be.

Lee now leads Protect Kids Colorado, gathering 125,000 signatures by August 3rd for two ballot initiatives: one requiring parental notification when children identify as the opposite sex at school, and another protecting girls’ sports. She reports that her school district claims over 30% of students identify as LGBTQ, evidence of what she calls a social contagion. Only 30% of Colorado third graders read and do math at grade level, a consequence Lee attributes to teachers spending time on social agendas rather than academics.

“And social transition over 90% of the time, if the child is affirmed, leads to medical transition, puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, surgeries. It’s not a harmless act to call a child, you know, the name and pronouns of the opposite sex.”

Erin Lee, Founder, Protect Kids Colorado

Property Rights Under Assault

Start listening at 73:39 – Hour 2

Trent Loos, reporting from the Williston Basin Petroleum Conference in Bismarck, connects energy policy to property rights and American sovereignty. He notes that current assessments show a minimum of 200 years of oil supply remaining, with some estimates reaching 1,000 years, debunking decades of scarcity narratives used to justify climate mandates.

Loos details concerning developments in Weld County, where cities are attempting to control property decisions within three to five miles of their boundaries, effectively governing residents who cannot vote for their city councils. He also reports on the Palise Farm case in Brighton, where a metropolitan district seeks eminent domain over farmland for a drainage study, drawing standing-room-only crowds to the courthouse in opposition. The sixth-generation farmer emphasizes that showing up at local county commission and school board meetings matters more than focusing on federal politics.

“He said: son, don’t give me lip service. Exercise the rights that we have protected for you. That’s how you really say thank you.”

Trent Loos, Sixth-Generation Farmer and Rancher

Honoring Those Who Served

Start listening at 103:04 – Hour 2

Paula Sarlls, president of the USMC Memorial Foundation, announces their first golf tournament at The Ridge in Castle Pines North. The event features NFL alumni including Wade Manning, Linton Thomas, and Ryan Harris, along with Iwo Jima veterans Jim Blaine and Al Jennings, who are approaching their 98th, 99th, and 100th birthdays. The tournament supports the Foundation’s mission of honoring veterans through memorial preservation.

“All our friends are turning close to 100 this year, so we want to make sure and honor them and what they did for our freedom.”

Paula Sarlls, President, USMC Memorial Foundation

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