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Mike Church Show #2050-It’s MAGAmas Time For Americans

Season 10 Episode 2050 Published 1 year, 3 months ago
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Mike Church Show #2050-It’s MAGAmas Time For Americans

  SEGMENT 1
Time 6:06am cst WE ARE LIVE on 990 WGSO, Our Flagship Syndication Station in New Orleans Louisiana all week from 7am-10am!  Welcome to the Mike Church Show on www.crusadechannel.com  Call the show  844-5CRUSADE
  Did you miss yesterday’s LIVE Mike Church Show? Worry not, you can listen to all previously aired shows on CRUSADEchannel.com
  Caller #6 Christmas Contest – Have Yourself a Mary and Manly Little Christmas 
  Festivas for the Rest of Us

MAGAmas for the Americas

18m

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

27m

Who said this?

  • To improve the TRUE economy, which is output of useful products & services, we need to shift people from low to negative productivity jobs in government to high productivity jobs in the private sector.
  • Are the government employees parasites?
  • With around only 6% of all federal employees actually attending work in person I would say so.

Senator Mike Lee on X: Throughout Anglo-American history, we’ve seen a major upheaval every 75-90 years. It’s almost like clockwork! 

Each pivot in American history has been kickstarted by events in just three critical years. By my reckoning, those years were 1776, 1861, and 1937. These aren’t just random years; they’re game-changers.

  • 1776 was a pivotal year.
  • Next pivotal year is 1858, the Southern states seceding from the Union, they were going to lose political clout in the US Senate.
  • Wickard v Filburn 
  • Roscoe Filburn, a farmer, sued Claude Wickard, the Secretary of Agriculture, when he was penalized for violating the statute. Filburn argued that the amount of wheat that he produced in excess of the quota was for his personal use (e.g., feeding his own animals), not commerce (e.g., selling it on the market), and therefore could not be constitutionally regulated. 
  • The Court upheld the law, explaining that Congress could use its Commerce Power to regulate such activity because, even if Filburn’s actions had only a minimal impact on commerce, the aggregated effect of an individual farmer’s wheat-growing exerted a substantial economic effect on interstate commerce. In terms of the Constitution, this holding offered a broad reading of Congress’s power under the Commerce Clause.
  • It is nice to see people actually talking about all of this again.
  • Some are hearing stuff like this for the first
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