On February 14, 2024, Brandi Bradley, James Lyons-Weiler, Victoria Alexander, Trent Loos, and Ramey Johnson joined the show. Discussed House Bill 24-1092 mandating prison time for child traffickers and legislation restricting foreign adversaries from purchasing Colorado farmland Warned about transhumanist agenda pushing AI-human integration and discussed IPAK-EDU courses examining genetic engineering and neural implant ethics Explained how biological systems differ fundamentally from computers and challenged tech industry claims.
Brandi Bradley, Colorado State Representative, exposes the hidden reality of child trafficking in suburban communities. Unlike the dramatic portrayals in films like “Sound of Freedom,” trafficking in Colorado often involves children coerced by people they know, including family members. Bradley’s House Bill 24-1092 mandates minimum incarceration periods for those who exploit children through prostitution.
The bill faces opposition from Democratic leadership despite no formal lobbying against it. Bradley notes the incongruity of arguments against mandatory sentencing when Colorado already imposes such requirements for other crimes. The legislation heads to the State and Veteran Affairs Committee, known as the “kill committee,” where citizen testimony remains crucial.
Bradley also champions legislation restricting foreign adversaries from purchasing Colorado land. With nearly 600,000 acres sold to foreign interests last year, Colorado leads the nation in such sales. Farmers and ranchers report foreign buyers demolishing productive land and reselling at inflated prices, pricing out young farmers from their family heritage.
“They think that mandatory Department of Correction time should never be allowed. They think it’s unconstitutional, even though we have mandatory Department of Correction time for many crimes in the state of Colorado.”
Brandi Bradley, Colorado State Representative
James Lyons-Weiler, scientist and founder of the Institute for Pure and Applied Knowledge, warns against the transhumanist agenda pushing humanity toward integration with artificial intelligence. Through IPAK-EDU, Lyons-Weiler offers courses examining the ethical implications of genetic engineering, neural implants, and Elon Musk’s Neuralink technology.
The conversation turns to societal pressure tactics already visible in pharmaceutical marketing. Once enhancement technologies become available, Lyons-Weiler predicts medicalization of normal human conditions. Parents might face accusations of neglect for refusing genetic upgrades for their children. The dystopian implications extend to education, employment, and fundamental definitions of human identity.
Victoria Alexander, philosopher of biology and IPAK-EDU instructor, challenges the core assumptions of transhumanist thinking. Her course “The Perils of Coding Humans” debunks headlines claiming AI breakthroughs while exposing how tech companies use fear-mongering to push digital ID requirements and eliminate online anonymity.
Alexander explains that biological systems process information fundamentally differently from computers. The transhumanist error lies in reducing the complexity of living organisms to machine metaphors. Side effects remain unpredictable because bodies interpret and associate information in ways computers cannot replicate. This same unpredictability produced the adverse effects seen in COVID-19 vaccine rollouts.
“We don’t need a billionaire to buy free speech for us. We have that as an inalienable right.”
Victoria Alexander, Philosopher of Biology
Trent Loos, sixth-generation Nebraska farmer and rancher, exposes how government raids on small producers threaten food sovereignty more than foreign land purchases. The recent raid on Amish farmer Amos Miller in Pennsylvania exemplifies regulatory overreach against private food cooperatives operating outside traditional retail channels.
Loos redirects the foreign ownership debate to a more pressing threat: federal and state governments already control one-third of American land. The Super Bowl’s celebration of 100% renewable energy required 641,000 solar panels in the Nevada desert, displacing livestock grazing and food production. The electricity cost roughly $2.50 per kilowatt hour compared to Loos’s $0.09 in Nebraska, with taxpayers subsidizing the difference.
Solar panel components come from China’s Uyghur region despite laws prohibiting imports from forced labor sources. The contradiction reveals priorities: fear of Chinese land ownership while importing Chinese products manufactured through slavery. Real threats to domestic food production come from policies favoring green energy over agriculture.
“I am more concerned about what the states and the federal government is doing in removing land from food production than I am about Chinese or foreign ownership of land. China owns less than 0.3 percent, a third of a percent of the land of the United States. Meanwhile, your federal government, along with state governments, own one in three acres, 33%.”
Trent Loos, Farmer and Rancher
Ramey Johnson, former Lakewood City Councilwoman and State Legislator, sounds the alarm on illegal immigration overwhelming Denver metro communities. Denver Mayor Johnston’s sanctuary city declaration created a $180 million crisis he now seeks to distribute across neighboring cities through regional burden-sharing.
Lakewood residents packed city council chambers with 550-600 concerned citizens opposing any participation in Denver’s self-created problem. Johnson reports 353 migrant children enrolled in Jefferson County schools in just three weeks, with one elementary school absorbing 50 new students and straining resources for existing students.
The safety and security concerns extend beyond schools. Home Depot parking lots feature solicitors asking for money. Street corners have people demanding to wash windshields. Johnson emphasizes that Colorado’s position at the intersection of I-70 and I-25 makes it ground zero for trafficking routes. Community hospitals remain silent despite obvious impacts, suggesting fear of speaking out permeates institutions meant to serve citizens.
“We’ve all got to speak out regarding this. Many people are afraid, Kim. I have reached out to our two county hospitals for comment, for sit-down meetings. I will continue to reach out to them. It affects them, but I think that people are afraid to speak out.”
Ramey Johnson, Former City Councilwoman
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