On June 14, 2024, Jay Valentine, Pam Long, John Carson, Tom Tarver, Lorne Levy, and Jim May joined the show. Valentine explains how Omega4America uses fractal technology to compare property and voter rolls, identifying fraudulent ballot delivery addresses like Walmarts, strip malls, and NGO accumulation points before ballots are mailed Long exposes the illegal experimental COVID vaccine mandate on the military, documenting tens of thousands of separations, destroyed careers, and.
Jay Valentine of Omega4America delivers a blistering critique of national voter integrity groups, arguing their focus on cleaning voter rolls is fundamentally misguided. With 130 days until the 2024 election, Valentine explains why removing ineligible voters from rolls is nearly impossible given recalcitrant election officials and lengthy investigation requirements.
Instead, Valentine’s fractal technology compares property tax rolls with voter rolls in real time, instantly identifying addresses where ballots cannot legitimately be delivered. The technology pinpoints Walmarts with 60 registered voters, apartment buildings receiving more ballots than units, gas stations, strip malls, and NGO accumulation points where hundreds of ballots collect for harvesting.
Valentine describes how the strategy saved Ron Johnson’s U.S. Senate seat in Wisconsin by stopping thousands of fraudulent ballots before they were mailed. The Milwaukee voter registrar was subsequently indicted after his team demonstrated the scale of address fraud. Valentine traces NGO registration operations to the Chinese Communist Party and describes how illegal immigrants are registered at fake addresses controlled by these organizations.
“This whole movement about getting people off voter rolls 150 days, 130 days before the election is a scam run by the national voter integrity groups because it’s how they get funded.”
Jay Valentine, Omega4America
Pam Long, West Point graduate and former Army Medical Service Corps captain, exposes the ongoing devastation from the Department of Defense’s illegal COVID vaccine mandate. While media reported 8,000 involuntary separations, Long reveals tens of thousands more voluntarily left to avoid court-martial, loss of rank, loss of pay, and dishonorable discharge stigma.
Service members lost retirement pensions after 19 years of service, pregnant wives lost healthcare coverage, and Air Force Academy cadets face $200,000 recoupment demands. Long explains how the 2003 Doe v. Rumsfeld court decision unequivocally prohibited mandating experimental drugs on military personnel, making the COVID mandate plainly unlawful.
The armed forces now face historic recruitment shortfalls. The Army missed its 2023 goal by 15,000 recruits, the Navy is short 22,000 sailors, and the Air Force lacks 3,000 airmen. Rather than restoring wrongfully separated service members, the DOD has lowered standards, allowing recruits up to age 42, eliminating high school diploma requirements, accepting prior drug test failures, and fast-tracking immigrant citizenship for enlistment.
“So, yes, DOD perpetrated a crime against tens of thousands of service members, And that’s why we need people engaged with our legislators at the federal level to correct it.”
Pam Long, Children’s Health Defense
John Carson, former Douglas County School Board president and University of Colorado Regent, campaigns for Douglas County Commissioner on three core issues: lowering property taxes, preserving open space, and fighting illegal immigration. Carson notes property taxes increased 36 percent this year due to assessment hikes.
Douglas County has declared itself not a sanctuary county and will impound buses arriving with illegal immigrants and fine drivers. Carson opposes the RWR water project that would bring water from the San Luis Valley agricultural areas and promises to remain independent of special interest funding. He emphasizes local government’s direct impact on daily life and urges voters to return their primary ballots by June 25th.
“I want to be like President Trump, the independent voice, not beholden to any special interests when I get in the job and do the best thing for the taxpayers of Douglas County.”
John Carson, Douglas County Commissioner Candidate
Tom Tarver promotes the July 6th Colorado Springs Celebrity Classic benefiting TAPS, the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors. The dinner show at Penrose Arena features The Castellows, Nashville songwriters Brett Jones and Frank Myers, and prime rib cooked by Coors Cowboy Club.
TAPS marks its 30th anniversary providing support to families who lost loved ones in military service. Bonnie Carroll founded the organization after her husband’s death in a plane crash, recognizing the military must move on while families need ongoing support. TAPS provides mentors for children, grief camps, counseling, and suicide prevention services. Last year alone, 130,000 people accessed TAPS resources.
“Bonnie said there’s something broken here. So she took her death benefit and she started TAPS.”
Tom Tarver, TAPS Colorado Springs Celebrity Classic Event Director
Lorne Levy of Polygon Financial Group reports the Fed held rates steady as expected, with one cut projected for the year. CPI and PPI data showing slowing inflation pushed the 10-year Treasury from 4.50 down to 4.20, bringing mortgage rates back into the upper sixes. Levy advises homebuyers and those with credit card debt at 20-plus percent interest rates to explore refinancing options.
“We’re back in the upper sixes out of the sevens again, which is great news for mortgage rates.”
Lorne Levy, Polygon Financial Group
Jim May of Lavaca Meat Company shares his Father’s Day tribute poem honoring his late father’s wisdom and work ethic. Despite a fire at one of his feedlots the previous night, May promotes the premium aged beef available at the Littleton store. The third-generation family business steam flakes corn and precisely formulates cattle nutrition to achieve marbling that rivals steakhouse quality.
“When we say a steakhouse experience at home, usually the steakhouses are the only places that really get the prime aged meat.”
Jim May, Lavaca Meat Company
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