The Hamilton Corner

May 5, 2025 · 49:50

Is Maine’s Governor especially motivated to oppose truth and good sense?

Israel & Foreign AffairsPolitics & PolicyBible & Theology

Show notes

Full transcript Auto-generated · 7,420 words

Transcribed with OpenAI Whisper (base.en). Timestamps are approximate. Lightly cleaned for readability; quotations from on-air callers may include filler words. Use the audio player above for the authoritative recording.

  1. 0:00Darkness is not an affirmative force.
  2. 0:03It simply reoccupies the space vacated by the light.
  3. 0:06This is the Hamilton Corner on American Family Radio.
  4. 0:11It should be uncomfortable for a believer to live as a hypocrite.
  5. 0:15Delivery people out of the bondage of mainstream media.
  6. 0:18And the philosophies of this world.
  7. 0:20God has called you and me to be his ambassador.
  8. 0:24Even in this dark moment.
  9. 0:26Let's not miss our moment.
  10. 0:28And now, the Hamilton Corner.
  11. 0:33Good evening, everyone.
  12. 0:35Welcome to the Hamilton Corner here on American Family Radio.
  13. 0:38I am your host Abraham Hamilton, the third,
  14. 0:41joined by the corner contingent right across from me.
  15. 0:44My man, a hundred grand, Mr. Bobby.
  16. 0:46don't.'
  17. 0:48No matter what Mark Zucker Bucks research biby saying I ain't lonely.
  18. 0:56Sometimes you get lonely wow you get lonely oh oh oh oh oh oh in the screening room producer
  19. 1:09destroyed it there often imitated but never duplicated and he's not oh so lonely
  20. 1:21the real jay mac ladies and gentlemen is in the screening room and we are ready to rock and roll
  21. 1:26with today's edition of the program oh my goodness so many things are swirling around us in the world
  22. 1:33in the nation but none of those things are more important than what goes on in our homes at this
  23. 1:39very moment. Many of you, if not most of you are making your transition from your part-time
  24. 1:45jobs where you generate an income to your full-time jobs where you cultivate an outcome. As you do,
  25. 1:52so I want to remind you to do so with intentionality, recognizing the primacy that God places on family,
  26. 2:00recognizing contrary to Zuckerberg, Buckton, his ilk God made us for human interaction.
  27. 2:07who would have thought it Bob who would have thought it human beings were made to
  28. 2:12talk to real human beings in real life not just texting I K R for I know right oh
  29. 2:25my god not just needing an interpreter to translate young people's text messages
  30. 2:32but actually flesh and blood interaction interactions shaking hands looking people
  31. 2:38in the eye. Oh my goodness. What a concept we made for real interaction. So as you're making
  32. 2:46your way to your full time jobs, recognize that this is an opportunity, opportunity that
  33. 2:52you have to be a part of executing the great commission, the Lord called his disciples to
  34. 2:59make disciples, go ye therefore into all the world, making disciples, teaching them to obey
  35. 3:07everything Jesus taught, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son of the Holy Spirit.
  36. 3:13That's in Matthew chapter 28. Boy, oh boy, oh boy, oh boy, oh boy, with all of these things pulling
  37. 3:19at us. And then, you know, I was having a conversation with the brothers just today with how, you know,
  38. 3:24we're encountering things in this generation that in my generation we didn't have to. I know I'm not
  39. 3:29as chronologically seasoned as some might be, but when I was young, you had Saturday morning cartoons,
  40. 3:36And then you maybe had a cartoon or two you may watch,
  41. 3:41but it was punishment for me to stay inside.
  42. 3:44Ooh, who wants to be inside?
  43. 3:45No one.
  44. 3:47But now you have the technological era
  45. 3:50and you have these influencers,
  46. 3:53and social media and all of that.
  47. 3:56And social media, don't just think it's
  48. 3:59the book of faces, InstaFAST, InstaSnap, Gram Face,
  49. 4:03a lot of these streamers, man, that's social media too.
  50. 4:08and a lot of the influences that used to be out in the world
  51. 4:10that you had to go and find,
  52. 4:11now they're being invited into our homes
  53. 4:12through these devices, man.
  54. 4:15And there has to be vigilance in that regard.
  55. 4:20The one thing that is for certain is that we don't get a doover
  56. 4:25when it comes to family,
  57. 4:26particularly rearing children.
  58. 4:28You don't get a doover in that regard.
  59. 4:29So my encouragement is to let us work while it is day.
  60. 4:33I'm in a stage of life where I still have young children
  61. 4:35in my home, our oldest is, man, 14,
  62. 4:38teaching this Joker how to drive.
  63. 4:41Watch out now.
  64. 4:43He learning how to drive.
  65. 4:45Now our youngest is three, three years old.
  66. 4:50We don't get to repeat it, man.
  67. 4:51So let us be faithful and diligent where we are now.
  68. 4:54And if you're in a different life stage,
  69. 4:55I know many of you are in different life stages.
  70. 4:57We have grandparents, great grandparents, empty nesters,
  71. 5:00some who don't have children of their own.
  72. 5:02God requires each and every one of us to be salt and light
  73. 5:06and to be executed towards of his commission.
  74. 5:09To the word of God, we go.
  75. 5:12Hosea 10, I want to point something out, and I referred to the scripture last week, but
  76. 5:15I want to introduce another area where the application of this text is important to consider.
  77. 5:25Hosea 10, verse 1, the prophet Hosea, ministered shortly after Amos's ministry, at about the
  78. 5:32mid-700s BC shortly, not shortly, but several decades prior to the Assyrian conquest and
  79. 5:38exile of the northern kingdom of Israel that transpired at about 722 BC. That's right,
  80. 5:49Spider-Man is 7 now, man. Y'all keep it up. We got one after Spider-Man now though.
  81. 5:58But in this portion of scripture, you're going to see that Hosea rebukes the northern kingdom of Israel
  82. 6:05because they have been materially prospered, but they use that material prosperity for a
  83. 6:11I doubt just purposes.
  84. 6:12Hosea chapter 10 verse one, look at what the text says.
  85. 6:16Israel is a luxuriant vine.
  86. 6:19Israel is a luxuriant vine.
  87. 6:23He produces fruit for himself.
  88. 6:26The more his fruit, the more altars he made.
  89. 6:30The richer his land, the better he made the sacred pillars.
  90. 6:39Now, make them mistake about it when Hosea is talking
  91. 6:41about altars and pillars there.
  92. 6:42He's not talking about authentic God breathed Yahweh worship.
  93. 6:47He's talking about idolatry and how Israel, though they were prospering materially at
  94. 6:55this particular juncture in history, they used that prosperity to pursue idol worship.
  95. 7:05This is one of the major reasons, this concept and this scripture undergirds a very notion
  96. 7:09we've been saying that a booming economy does not make a nation great.
  97. 7:13If you have an individual or if you have a nation who is materially prosperous, but they
  98. 7:20are bankrupt internally.
  99. 7:22No God-oriented conscience, no reverence for the King of Kings, no submission to him, no
  100. 7:29humility, what happens is those people become well-resourced rebels.
  101. 7:34Are those nations become well-resourced rebels?
  102. 7:37They become weapons of mass destruction.
  103. 7:43Well, like it or not, we are in the age where there's much conversation about artificial intelligence and
  104. 7:50artificial generative intelligence and artificial super intelligence and all of these things and I first of all want to make sure everybody knows
  105. 7:56I don't fancy myself as any kind of AI expert. That's not me, but I am literate and
  106. 8:05I am in dwell by the Spirit of God and I have discernment by God's grace
  107. 8:12what good is having
  108. 8:14artificial intelligence, artificial super intelligence,
  109. 8:19if the founding programming for all of this stuff
  110. 8:23comes from a bankrupt source.
  111. 8:27You mean, mean, mean, mean, mean, mean, many years ago.
  112. 8:30And I remember I was in my early 20s
  113. 8:32when the I-Robot movie came out.
  114. 8:34Some of y'all might remember that, remember that movie?
  115. 8:37And it's so funny, my wife and I stumbled
  116. 8:39across this movie recently, and that movie was made
  117. 8:42and I believe 2003, but it projected into 2035.
  118. 8:4810 years from now.
  119. 8:53What happens if the programmers for artificial intelligence, if they have a worldview, let
  120. 9:01me just say it simply, that rivals what the Bible teaches?
  121. 9:06What do you think is going to be produced by that artificial intelligence?
  122. 9:08I was listening to the guy's name escapes me, but he was one of the top programmers at Open
  123. 9:14AI in Silicon Valley.
  124. 9:17And then he resigned from the company.
  125. 9:20Why did he resign from the company?
  126. 9:22resigned from the company because when they began their pursuit of AI, they said that they
  127. 9:27would commit, I believe, 30% of their programming of things or that nature to infusing AI with
  128. 9:33ethical considerations.
  129. 9:34And then he said he had to step out because his conscience wouldn't let him continue because
  130. 9:43his company and others completely abandoned that pursuit.
  131. 9:48So right now as you and I are talking about it, some of the most advanced companies in developing
  132. 9:56this AI automatic generative intelligence, which really is a fancy name.
  133. 10:04It's algorithmic learning at this point.
  134. 10:06But if it develops to the place and they are striving towards that, to where you have autonomous
  135. 10:12algorithmic learning and the movement towards super intelligence, to where theories project
  136. 10:17that the AI will be smarter than the top 100 people
  137. 10:22in the top professions of the world.
  138. 10:24What do you do with that capacity?
  139. 10:29If you have people who are doing the programming,
  140. 10:34who do not have the Lord's standards as their foundation.
  141. 10:41What do you do with that?
  142. 10:43What do you do with that?
  143. 10:47You know, thanks me to God,
  144. 10:49that my confidence is in the Lord,
  145. 10:51that I'm not presenting this from any type of fear wrapped
  146. 10:55position.
  147. 10:59But what do you do with it if you learn that some of these top companies,
  148. 11:02because it's almost like an arms race,
  149. 11:04who's going to accomplish this level of intelligence accumulation first?
  150. 11:08And if they feel like, you know,
  151. 11:09ethical considerations are hindering their progress.
  152. 11:12Some of these people, not all of them,
  153. 11:14some of them have kind of a God complex, you know,
  154. 11:18some of them, and this is one of the major reasons why I'm grateful for the things
  155. 11:22that Elon Musk has done well,
  156. 11:23but this is one of the major reasons why I've been saying trust, but verify,
  157. 11:27you know,
  158. 11:27His transhumanist leanings give me pause.
  159. 11:33Those things give me pause.
  160. 11:38What do we do?
  161. 11:40As society careens in a direction toward having
  162. 11:43this computer generated society,
  163. 11:54looking at certain these smart cars and self-driving
  164. 11:58and all of these things.
  165. 11:59And what are you doing the robot says?
  166. 12:01Please sit down, sir.
  167. 12:02It is not safe for you to leave your home.
  168. 12:05We must work to protect humanity from humanity.
  169. 12:11It is such a shame that you destroy your planet.
  170. 12:15We must protect you from you.
  171. 12:19Again, I'm not trying to spark any type of hysteria,
  172. 12:21anything like that, but don't you think we need
  173. 12:24to be a little concerned about ethical guardrails?
  174. 12:33There's so many things and I'm not one of these people
  175. 12:36that are like rooves, no technology.
  176. 12:38I'm, I'm Abe Flintstone.
  177. 12:40You know, no technology.
  178. 12:43But I did tell people, I don't know about that Alexa.
  179. 12:46The next thing you know, Alexa is sending recorded conversations from your home, your bedroom,
  180. 12:53all across the country.
  181. 12:55Oh, that's just a mistake.
  182. 12:58They'll fix it, really.
  183. 13:00But what do you fix when there's a broken worldview?
  184. 13:02This is what I'm talking about.
  185. 13:10I often had conversations with the circular reasoning, you know, your truth, your truth,
  186. 13:15my truth.
  187. 13:16I said, well, what do you do?
  188. 13:17If the other person's truth says, I don't have a right to live, are all truths equal then?
  189. 13:23You know, I'm just saying this, this is why with all of the technological advancement,
  190. 13:32you know, we're the most connected.
  191. 13:33We've ever been in human history and simultaneously the most lonely.
  192. 13:37Explain that.
  193. 13:41But we have people almost society.
  194. 13:43We have a collective shrug.
  195. 13:45You know, we'll have the, the, the, the Marxist inspired bulk realization of the generations
  196. 13:50to where the older generations of severed from the younger generations
  197. 13:53with pride surrounding technology often, you know?
  198. 13:59And if you don't think this is why you just, you just, okay boomers,
  199. 14:03like man, that's not the way that God calls his people to interact with one another.
  200. 14:09But what we have is many people careening toward really what Hosea pointed out by the Spirit of God.
  201. 14:17Israel's a luxurian vine producing much for himself, but the more he produces
  202. 14:24Well, would you would you look at that the more altars he made and the richer his land
  203. 14:31The better he made sacred pillars it comes to find out
  204. 14:34If you have people that are bankrupt internally and that internal bankrupt person or nation has given
  205. 14:41Moochoo resources
  206. 14:43Guess what they produce are those resources?
  207. 14:46Compounded bankruptcy
  208. 14:47What do you think happens with artificial, generative, and superintelligence produced from bankruptcy?
  209. 14:56A discipleship minute with Joseph Parker.
  210. 15:03Our words are powerful, much more so than we as human beings typically understand.
  211. 15:08A saying that used to be popular years ago stated,
  212. 15:11Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never harm me.
  213. 15:16This is possibly one of the biggest lies you will ever hear.
  214. 15:20Words can hurt to an extreme degree,
  215. 15:23and people use them to hurt others every single day.
  216. 15:27Yet for us as believers, followers of Christ,
  217. 15:29our goal is to use our words every day to bless others
  218. 15:34and point them to Christ.
  219. 15:36Our words should bless others,
  220. 15:38promote healing in people's lives,
  221. 15:40grace and encouragement in the lives of those around us.
  222. 15:43We should habitually lift others up by our words.
  223. 15:47It is in fact relatively easy to bless others and encourage people with our words if we wisely and very deliberately seek to do so.
  224. 15:56Shiting light into the darkness, this is the Hamilton Corner, an American family radio.
  225. 16:11Welcome back to the Hamilton Corner, Abraham Hamilton, the third here.
  226. 16:16So much is happening. You know, I have interviews over the weekend. I think I'll start here though for this segment.
  227. 16:23And many of us have been simply watching, unfortunately, and unfortunately, depending on
  228. 16:33your perspective, but many politicians, including Democrat politicians, are digging their heels
  229. 16:39in saying, like, Maine's governor Mills, that they refuse to comply with President Trump's
  230. 16:48requirement to protect girls from men invading their sports and things of that nature. Well,
  231. 16:55well, you may recall that Attorney General Pambondi ended up launching a lawsuit against
  232. 17:07Governor Mills in the state of Maine because of their refusal to comply with federal law. Well,
  233. 17:12we may have some insight as to why, but just to refresh your memory, listen to and watch clip number
  234. 17:16to flip to go today. The Department of Justice is announcing a civil lawsuit against the main
  235. 17:22Department of Education. The state of Maine is discriminating against women by failing to
  236. 17:29protect women in women's sports. Pretty basic stuff. This is a violation of Title 9. The
  237. 17:37Department of Justice will not sit by when women are discriminated against in sports.
  238. 17:45This is about sports.
  239. 17:46This is also about these young women's personal safety.
  240. 17:50I met many of these women throughout the past weeks and months.
  241. 17:54And what they have been through is horrific.
  242. 17:58We have exhausted every other remedy.
  243. 18:02We tried to get Maine to comply.
  244. 18:05We don't like standing up here and filing lawsuits.
  245. 18:08We want to get states to comply with us.
  246. 18:11That's what this is about.
  247. 18:13We have repeatedly notified Maine of its infractions
  248. 18:16and urged them to remedy the situation to protect women.
  249. 18:22Well, thanks to
  250. 18:27enterprising journalists,
  251. 18:29and it's funny,
  252. 18:32we probably know why Maine has been so obstinate.
  253. 18:39In the state of Maine,
  254. 18:41where Janet Mills is the governor,
  255. 18:46Thanks to the main wire, local reporting there,
  256. 18:50we've learned that there's an organization
  257. 18:54that is the prominent healthcare provider in the state,
  258. 18:59an entity that is a 501c3 organization called Main Health.
  259. 19:06You wanna take a guess who Main Health Chief
  260. 19:10Health Improvement Officer is?
  261. 19:12You wanna take a guess?
  262. 19:16That will be Dora Ann Mills, yes.
  263. 19:18Dora Ann Mills is the sister of Maine's Governor, Janet Mills.
  264. 19:25I gotta have more cowbells.
  265. 19:27You gotta have more cowbell.
  266. 19:30You wanna know who was one of Governor Janet Mills's top donors in her 2022 reelection campaign?
  267. 19:37Oh, yeah, that's right.
  268. 19:39That would be Maine Health.
  269. 19:42Oh, yes, Maine Health is a healthcare system that offers treatment.
  270. 19:53If you're listening to the radio or podcast, that was air quotes that you did not hear.
  271. 19:59They offer treatments for sex-confused minors such as puberty blockers, gender-affirming,
  272. 20:06hormone therapy, and menstrual suppression.
  273. 20:11Yes, yes, yes.
  274. 20:15Would you be interested to know what I'm sure you would be that when Dora Ann Mills became
  275. 20:21the chief health improvement officer at Maine Health, the organization reported revenues
  276. 20:28of about $1.5 billion. But since Doran, you know, the governor's sister has taken over.
  277. 20:36Revenues have exploded for Maine Health, eclipsing $3.6 billion as of 2023. You want to know one
  278. 20:45of the major drivers of the revenue. You already know, Maine health has filled thousands of dollars
  279. 20:57of worth of prescriptions for puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, treatments. There's also been
  280. 21:02an explosion of so-called gender-firming care via Maine health since Dorian has taken over.
  281. 21:13Not so surprisingly in 2023, Governor Janet Mills signed a bill into law that allows miners to
  282. 21:20to access hormone therapies in the state without their parents' consent.
  283. 21:26Not surprisingly, Maine Health provides a, quote, school-based health center, unquote,
  284. 21:31that permits minors to speak to nurses and doctors about their concerns, their health concerns,
  285. 21:36without parental consent.
  286. 21:37Maine Health has on its website, quote, sometimes children need to talk with someone who is unbiased,
  287. 21:42supportive, and can offer a fresh perspective.
  288. 21:46While we encourage students to involve a parent or guardian in their care, questions that teens
  289. 21:50may have related to drug and alcohol use, mental health, sexually transmitted diseases,
  290. 21:56family planning may not require parental notification or permission. In 2024, Maine's
  291. 22:03Governor Janet Mills also signed another bill into law, one that shields minors in Maine
  292. 22:09from so-called laws from other states. As I mentioned, the Governor's sister, Dorra
  293. 22:18Miller Mills joined Maine Health as the Chief Health Improvement Officer in 2018.
  294. 22:24Since then, Maine Health's revenues have exploded.
  295. 22:30Did I mention that Maine Health is one of, if not the top providers of this kind of treatment
  296. 22:35in the whole state?
  297. 22:36Now, could it be?
  298. 22:38I'm not.
  299. 22:39I'm not making.
  300. 22:42Conclusory statement.
  301. 22:44What could it be that Governor Janet Mills' obstinate position could be influenced by her
  302. 22:52sister's role at Maine Health?
  303. 22:55Did I also mention the scores of pro-transgender organizations that provide fund-raisers for
  304. 23:02Governor Janet Mills, even though the state of Maine, the issue in the state of Maine amongst
  305. 23:06Maine's voters, is not a popular one.
  306. 23:09The governor's position is not locked up with her constituents.
  307. 23:15She persists in this posture simply asking the question.
  308. 23:18I wonder if and to what degree, if so, Governor Janet Mills's position is being influenced by
  309. 23:28boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom,
  310. 23:37just wanted to present that to you for your edification and consideration.
  311. 23:40All right, I'm going to move on over the weekend CNN did an interview with a Gloved
  312. 23:50and had it in disguise and voice disguised member who represented himself as being a member of
  313. 23:58the Cinelloa Cartel in Mexico.
  314. 24:02And these kind of questions are mind boggling and I mean, understand it.
  315. 24:08You know, you want to ask the question to get these interviews, but Isabelle Young from
  316. 24:12CNN spoke to members of the Cinelloa Cartel near Kulia, can Mexico, I believe is where
  317. 24:18took place. And in the course of the interview and the questions, Ms. Young asked the cartel
  318. 24:26member, the purported cartel member about his views on President Trump's policy and naming
  319. 24:35the Sinaloa cartel as a foreign terrorist organization. Can't I make this stuff up? And I don't know,
  320. 24:41I don't know what this, what the question they're hoped for. I'm not going to try to even, you know,
  321. 24:46So to pop that top and read what's in there, but it's interesting.
  322. 24:53I mean, maybe it's just me, but I don't really care what a foreign drug dealer cares about
  323. 25:00Trump's policies.
  324. 25:01Maybe it's just me, you know, I could, I could, I could be, I could, I mean, I mean, I mean,
  325. 25:08I mean, maybe I'm, I mean, maybe I'm on the wrong end of the spectrum on this issue.
  326. 25:14I don't care what a drug dealer, a Mexican drug lord.
  327. 25:18I don't care what he thinks about President Trump's policies.
  328. 25:23But in the process of the interview,
  329. 25:25and it's gonna be interviewed that was in Spanish,
  330. 25:30so you'll have transcribed English vernacular
  331. 25:35or verbiage at the bottom of the screen.
  332. 25:37For those who are watching,
  333. 25:38I'll explain what was said in the interview
  334. 25:41to those who are only listening.
  335. 25:43But the drug dealer said,
  336. 25:46when also he was not only asked
  337. 25:49what his position was on President Trump's policies,
  338. 25:52He's in asked if you could say anything to President Trump.
  339. 25:53What would you want to say?
  340. 25:55Excuse me again.
  341. 25:56I don't care.
  342. 25:57He wants to say to President Trump.
  343. 26:01But then the drug dealer apparently says,
  344. 26:04well, I respect President Trump.
  345. 26:07Guys, I'm not kidding.
  346. 26:08I would let y'all hear this and watch this for yourself.
  347. 26:10But it is, it's just wild.
  348. 26:13I have thoughts on the other side of this.
  349. 26:18But I want you to listen to it and watch it for yourself.
  350. 26:19So the question there is about younger
  351. 26:21is gonna be speaking English.
  352. 26:21It apparently has a translator available unless the drug lord understands English himself and
  353. 26:28just prefers to answer in Spanish.
  354. 26:29That means you determine that on your own.
  355. 26:32But listen to and watch this interview.
  356. 26:34It's clip number one, clip number one.
  357. 26:35Go.
  358. 26:36This man is talking to us on the condition we hide his identity and location.
  359. 26:41Can I pull up a chair?
  360. 26:43He says he produces fentanyl for the cinelloa cartel.
  361. 26:47How safe or dangerous is this area to be in?
  362. 26:50I mean, according to the Trump administration, you are a terrorist.
  363. 26:57The cartels have been labelled for a terrorist organisation.
  364. 27:00What do you make of that?
  365. 27:02What's your message to Donald Trump? If he's watching this?
  366. 27:10I was a little bit nervous, but I was a little bit nervous.
  367. 27:17I was a little bit nervous.
  368. 27:20I was a little bit nervous.
  369. 27:23I was a little bit nervous.
  370. 27:27There was a lot of violence playing out on these streets here at the moment every day.
  371. 27:32People are dying on a daily basis. Children are afraid to go to school.
  372. 27:36Do you have any sense of remorse over your role and your involvement in this group?
  373. 27:44So
  374. 27:55So of course you have the trans the translation
  375. 27:59There, but the conversation is taking place
  376. 28:02When the question is asked about being designated a foreign terrorist organization
  377. 28:08According to the translation, the cartel member is saying, man, yeah, it's sad.
  378. 28:16It's ugly.
  379. 28:18It's sad.
  380. 28:19Then he says this, but we have to eat.
  381. 28:24We have to eat.
  382. 28:25So it's almost like, yeah, people are dying, but you know, we have to make the money.
  383. 28:32Then he says this as the interview continues.
  384. 28:36And this is something that needs to be addressed.
  385. 28:45He said, the consumers are in America.
  386. 28:50The people that's buying the drugs, buying the fentanyl,
  387. 28:52they're in America.
  388. 28:54So that's why we go, if they stop buying it, we'll stop going.
  389. 29:01Now, this is before I get to the respect for coming.
  390. 29:08I don't know, maybe I had the wrong perspective on this.
  391. 29:16I don't know why CNN felt it was important
  392. 29:20to have an interview with the Cineloa Cartel member.
  393. 29:25I mean, am I missing something?
  394. 29:29Like, is that newsworthy?
  395. 29:32Do we not know what the Cinoloic Cartel does?
  396. 29:36Do we, are we ignorant as to why,
  397. 29:42you know, really have, generally speaking,
  398. 29:45I'm not talking about the citizens,
  399. 29:46but generally speaking,
  400. 29:47you don't really have a functional Mexican government,
  401. 29:50Mexico is run by the cartels.
  402. 29:56Are we ignorant of that?
  403. 30:05And I get on the other hand, you have, you know,
  404. 30:07some of these networks that have ratings issues
  405. 30:09to the trying to do things, the generate attention.
  406. 30:11You know, okay, maybe that's the motivation.
  407. 30:14Well, it's like, I mean, the Cineloa Cartel,
  408. 30:21they're murderers.
  409. 30:25Which should provoke the question.
  410. 30:29Well, let me say it this way.
  411. 30:30Anybody want to take a stab at?
  412. 30:32Why are UNC and in interviewing Cineloa Cartel members
  413. 30:35while Biden was in the Oval Office?
  414. 30:37Anybody want to take a stab at that?
  415. 30:40While we have a border that's wide open
  416. 30:42and nobody want to take a stab at that?
  417. 30:43You want to interview the Cineloa Cartel members now
  418. 30:46that illegal border crossings are record loads.
  419. 30:56The guys, these kind of things really, really, really,
  420. 31:01really don't sit well with me.
  421. 31:03Then, then, oh, Mr. Trump has designated your gang
  422. 31:09as a foreign terrorist organization.
  423. 31:11How does that make you feel?
  424. 31:21How does it make you feel, guys?
  425. 31:31And in so many ways, we have a media outfit
  426. 31:40that has really turned its back on the American people.
  427. 31:42And I'm not saying they need to be,
  428. 31:43they should not be politically oriented.
  429. 31:45They should be a just a facts, facts, ma'am type of
  430. 31:49type of type of outfit.
  431. 31:51They should be, they've been afforded first amendment
  432. 31:54protection because in order for the American people
  433. 31:57to rightly hold our public servants accountable,
  434. 32:00we need to have an informed populace.
  435. 32:04But increasingly it's demonstrable,
  436. 32:06that's not what we had.
  437. 32:08And then to ask what message do you want us
  438. 32:12in the President Trump?
  439. 32:13sure she wasn't expecting to say, well, respect the president Trump. I respect him
  440. 32:18because what he's trying to do is try to protect his people. Well, she didn't
  441. 32:23follow up protect his people from who? From you? Is what he's trying to protect
  442. 32:28his people from? From you? From your drugs? From your murder? From your crime? He
  443. 32:35said, President Trump has my respect. I mean, he's looking out for his people. But
  444. 32:39the problem is the consumers in America are in America. So if they weren't any
  445. 32:43Americans consumers we'd stop.
  446. 32:46Which presents another part of the question.
  447. 32:49Why there's so many people in America
  448. 32:52that wanna purchase drugs?
  449. 33:01All right, Sandy Rios with you.
  450. 33:03One more drama playing out.
  451. 33:05Is the sky falling?
  452. 33:06Are we going into a recession?
  453. 33:08Are you gonna lose all of your 401K?
  454. 33:10Are you gonna lose your job?
  455. 33:11Are you gonna be able to afford groceries?
  456. 33:13People better be training their kids,
  457. 33:14getting back into church, Sunday school,
  458. 33:16reading the Bible.
  459. 33:17That revolution will save this country.
  460. 33:20We've got a political revolution now.
  461. 33:22We need a spiritual revolution.
  462. 33:24Sandy Rios on Sandy Rios 24-7.
  463. 33:27Listen on the podcast page at AFR.net.
  464. 33:31Hey, if you've never heard of AFA Stream,
  465. 33:33let me tell you about it.
  466. 33:34It's video streaming that goes beyond just entertainment.
  467. 33:38Yeah, there are shorts and feature films for all ages,
  468. 33:41but they're all backed by scriptural themes.
  469. 33:43You'll also find resources to help you grow closer to God,
  470. 33:47along with documentaries like Culture Warrior,
  471. 33:49The story of Don Wildman in the founding of AFA.
  472. 33:52There's a lot of free content, but if you become a great commission partner, you'll unlock
  473. 33:56much more.
  474. 33:57Check it out today at stream.afa.net.
  475. 34:01The Hamilton Quarter Podcast and One-Minute Commentaries are available at afr.net.
  476. 34:12Back to the Hamilton Quarter on American Family Radio.
  477. 34:17Welcome back to the Hamilton Corner.
  478. 34:19Abraham Hamilton III here.
  479. 34:21It's just, it's greatly troublesome.
  480. 34:27Troubling I should say greatly troubling to me and
  481. 34:32another news
  482. 34:35Sean Combs started his trial criminal trial today in federal court in Manhattan
  483. 34:40Drew's selection began today in his trial
  484. 34:48plea bargains
  485. 34:49Yeah, why you could I?
  486. 34:51Plee bargains apparently did not fault did not go through so the criminal trial
  487. 34:58Has started today. That's all I'm gonna say about that
  488. 35:03that. Additionally, this is just another one of those stories. Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of meta,
  489. 35:14which owns Facebook and Instagram and WhatsApp. He was on the podcast talking about the development
  490. 35:21of AI and he made an observation concerning loneliness levels in America being higher than
  491. 35:35ever before, but never fear, never fear loneliness. You know why? Because Zuckerberg is here. Listen
  492. 35:43Listen to and watch clip number five where he describes his position and I'll tell you
  493. 35:48what his conclusion was after this description.
  494. 35:51Clip number five, go.
  495. 35:53I think as the personalization loop kicks in and the AI just starts to get to know you better
  496. 35:58and better, I think that will just be really compelling.
  497. 36:06One thing just from working on social media for a long time is there's the stat that I
  498. 36:13I guess things crazy.
  499. 36:14The average American I think has,
  500. 36:17I think it's fewer than three friends.
  501. 36:19Three people have very consider friends.
  502. 36:21And the average person has demand for meaningfully more.
  503. 36:25I think it's like 15 friends or something, right?
  504. 36:27I guess there's probably some point where you're like,
  505. 36:29all right, I'm just too busy.
  506. 36:30I can't deal with more people.
  507. 36:31But the average person wants more connectivity,
  508. 36:35a connection than they have.
  509. 36:39Mr. Zuckerberg, the average person doesn't want more
  510. 36:44artificial connectivity in the hair. We are, and I said this earlier, we are the most connected
  511. 36:53human beings in history, yet we are simultaneously more lonely than previous generations of human
  512. 37:01beings. Why is that? Simply put, God made human beings for human interaction, in person,
  513. 37:11Flushing, flushing, blood, dappin' in person,
  514. 37:16hugging in person, communication in person,
  515. 37:19real connectivity.
  516. 37:23You know, it's so sad you watch,
  517. 37:27you watch young people today,
  518. 37:30they can let those Twitter fingers go to work,
  519. 37:32but you actually have to actually go
  520. 37:34and talk to somebody.
  521. 37:36Now I was communicating with a father before,
  522. 37:38I was like, man, dude, don't approach young ladies anymore.
  523. 37:44No, let me link you on the map.
  524. 37:45No, why don't you go and talk to her, man?
  525. 37:48Get yourself up, stand up, walk across the room and say hello.
  526. 37:57It's wild.
  527. 37:58No, but Zuckerberg's remedy is, you know what?
  528. 38:01As AI and generative AI increases,
  529. 38:04it's gonna solve the loneliness problem.
  530. 38:07Brother, no it ain't, it's gonna make it worse.
  531. 38:10And what's gonna happen is something similar
  532. 38:12to what's happening in Japan right now.
  533. 38:14Well, you have scores of younger generation Japanese
  534. 38:20citizens who prefer computer interaction to human interaction.
  535. 38:29Yeah, you have entire generations or entire swath of people with no
  536. 38:33relationships. Well, you have people that are literally passing away and no one
  537. 38:37knows they passed away. They're in their apartments decomposing and no one knows
  538. 38:41because they have curated a lifestyle that does not include robust interpersonal
  539. 38:46interaction. God didn't intend for our lives guys to revolve around computers.
  540. 38:58It didn't happen.
  541. 39:04It didn't happen.
  542. 39:09People go out, how many times you go out,
  543. 39:11you see people staring at their phones.
  544. 39:14Sitting across from one another all the time.
  545. 39:23More technology and technological innovation
  546. 39:26is not going to cure to address
  547. 39:30the loneliness problem in the world.
  548. 39:32It's not.
  549. 39:34It's not.
  550. 39:37In many ways it will exacerbate the problem.
  551. 39:41Now I know Zuckerberg has a product that he's selling.
  552. 39:44So his desire is to create tools that keep you
  553. 39:49using his technology more often,
  554. 39:50so he can make more money from it.
  555. 39:52That's the whole purpose of the algorithm in social media.
  556. 39:59And so they're taking that same type of methodology
  557. 40:02and applying it to these generative technologies.
  558. 40:11And you have people that are opting for digital interaction
  559. 40:15instead of human interaction
  560. 40:17and still coming away realizing, man, we're lonely.
  561. 40:21You know how many times have you had the experience
  562. 40:23when you send someone a text message
  563. 40:25and they completely misunderstand the text message
  564. 40:27because guess what you don't get in text messages?
  565. 40:29You don't get facial expression,
  566. 40:31you cannot hear tones of voice,
  567. 40:34you can't see any physical hand gestures,
  568. 40:36you can't have physical proximity,
  569. 40:38because there are aspects of human interaction
  570. 40:40and communication that are not,
  571. 40:42that cannot be communicated through a device.
  572. 40:49So his remedy for loneliness
  573. 40:55is to pursue a course of action
  574. 40:57will inevitably produce more loneliness. Guys, we're here. This is where we are. I'll give
  575. 41:21you another one. I meant to get to this last week, but I ran out of time before I got to
  576. 41:25this. During last week's cabinet meeting, Marco Rubio provided a revelation that didn't
  577. 41:33get the attention it should have. And of course, we can surmise why it didn't get the attention
  578. 41:42it should have. But in the cabinet meeting, Marco Rubio, the current secretary of state
  579. 41:47revealed that Mr. J. Robinette's administration had an office within the state department that
  580. 41:55had one job, one job and know what the job was for this office was to develop dossiers
  581. 42:02of information on American citizens because they have been deemed by the government under
  582. 42:07Joseph Robin Edbine to be vectors of disinformation, not kidding. Listen to and watch clip number
  583. 42:14three, clip number three, go. Something else we got out of the business of why we reported
  584. 42:20it or maybe it was, we had a part, we had an office in the Department of State, whose job
  585. 42:24it was to censor Americans. And by the way, I'm not going to say who it is. I'll leave it
  586. 42:30up to them. There's at least one person at this table today who had a dossier in that building
  587. 42:35of social media posts to identify them as purveyors of disinformation.
  588. 42:39We have these dossier's.
  589. 42:41We are going to be turning those over to these individuals.
  590. 42:43We can follow the media's.
  591. 42:46Well, we are going to turn over these dossier's to the individuals and they'll decide whether
  592. 42:52they want to disclose it or not.
  593. 42:54But just think about the Department of State of the United States has set up an office
  594. 42:58to monitor the social media posts and commentary of American citizens to identify them as vectors
  595. 43:03the disinformation. When we know that the best way to combat this information is freedom
  596. 43:08of speech and transparency. And so that's what we're going to be in the business of doing.
  597. 43:12We're not going to have an office that does that. As if we didn't know enough to cause our
  598. 43:20stomachs to turn. And many of us suspected this already, but just having it confirmed
  599. 43:28is just, mm hmm. So dozens of dossier is compiled by the US State Department on American citizens
  600. 43:37because they've been identified as vectors of information.
  601. 43:42I'm sorry, vectors of disinformation.
  602. 43:45Man, this is wild, wild, wild.
  603. 43:48This is a wild, wild reality.
  604. 43:59You know, I don't expect people who don't know the Lord
  605. 44:01to adopt a biblical worldview,
  606. 44:05but I will tell you something.
  607. 44:06I've long said this.
  608. 44:07The simple reality is, sin makes you stupid.
  609. 44:10It truly does.
  610. 44:11Sin makes you stupid.
  611. 44:18You know, when David was lost in the sauce of his own sinful fervor, as she was pregnant,
  612. 44:32he sends Uriah's death warrant at Uriah's hand, and David being a man of war himself conveys
  613. 44:38to Joab another man of war.
  614. 44:40See, put your eye at the place where there's a fish that's fighting, and then you get all
  615. 44:48other soldiers, you know, your riars, your riars, fellow men of war who would give their
  616. 44:55lives to protect him.
  617. 44:56You know those guys, you get all of them to agree that on three that you all got, you
  618. 45:01all back away from the wall and you let a riot get killed by himself, right?
  619. 45:05Like David is a man of war, he knows, man that's stupid, man.
  620. 45:12That's what what sin does.
  621. 45:15When you study the scripture in the book of Genesis, who is the one that said it wasn't
  622. 45:19good for men to be alone?
  623. 45:20I give you a hint, it wasn't the man's statement of himself.
  624. 45:24Adam didn't say it of himself.
  625. 45:26God is the one that says,
  626. 45:27it's not good for man to be alone.
  627. 45:30That's not good.
  628. 45:33That's not good.
  629. 45:35We know in a criminal justice context,
  630. 45:36one of the most intense formal punishment
  631. 45:40is solitary confinement.
  632. 45:43Even for the most hardened criminals,
  633. 45:46solitary confinement is debilitating.
  634. 45:51Why?
  635. 45:52Because God made us for human interaction
  636. 45:55and human connection.
  637. 45:58There is no amount of digital interaction
  638. 46:01that will be hear me well,
  639. 46:03a sufficient substitute for real life interaction.
  640. 46:08When your interactions are exclusively digital,
  641. 46:12and the more you give yourself,
  642. 46:13the more one gives themselves to digital interaction,
  643. 46:16the more it negatively impacts your real life human
  644. 46:21interpersonal interaction.
  645. 46:23It simply does.
  646. 46:26It simply does. And so we have people and this is, this is why I say we have to understand the
  647. 46:33distinction between wisdom and knowledge. We have to understand what the Bible in Psalm 14
  648. 46:39two describes as being a fool. We have a world that is filled with educated fools. Many of them
  649. 46:46have all kinds of degrees, letters behind their names, but they're fools. Why? Because the Bible
  650. 46:52says the fool is the one who says in his heart, there is no God or one who develops a life
  651. 46:57manner that excludes the knowledge of God.
  652. 47:03And so it's the type of foolishness that recognizing,
  653. 47:06that recognizes that we're at a place in world history
  654. 47:09where loneliness has reached fever pitch.
  655. 47:15And that loneliness coincides with the information age
  656. 47:20and digital connectivity that we could not have dreamed of 40 years ago.
  657. 47:26Yet people like Zuckerbuck says,
  658. 47:27Hey, do you know what the answer is?
  659. 47:30More digital interaction and if we think that this doesn't impact us guys, it is not true
  660. 47:38Let think about in your own lives your own experiences
  661. 47:41Like I said before how many times you see people that are going out to dinner together and there's two people sitting silently staring at their phones
  662. 47:48How many times that that has that happened?
  663. 47:50How many times have you seen young people to tell my gay before you know young adult males incapable of
  664. 48:00Expressing a willingness to pursue a female speaking directly
  665. 48:04incapable of articulating themselves.
  666. 48:08The young men, deathly afraid of approaching a young woman's father, for fear of not being
  667. 48:12able to communicate with them.
  668. 48:13When we reject God's way, guys, we suffer for that.
  669. 48:22We are impacting negatively by that.
  670. 48:27And then think about where we are now in terms of the demographic winter projections and lack
  671. 48:32of reproduction and replacement reproduction.
  672. 48:34All these things that are happening, guys, it's all related.
  673. 48:41which is why I consistently assert that the greatest and most desperate need for the world, frankly,
  674. 48:45but for our nation in particular is repentance.
  675. 48:52For people to experience the grace of God and saving faith,
  676. 48:59and then to pursue lifestyles that are consistent with, that are commensurate with repentance.
  677. 49:12We didn't get to where we are in our nation overnight, and there's only one way out of this mess that we're in.
  678. 49:18Repentance is the way.
  679. 49:20step at a tie, step by step.
  680. 49:24Build brick by brick, piece by piece.
  681. 49:27That is the only way forward because we continue in the direction of rebellion that way
  682. 49:36for follows, many casualties.
  683. 49:41The views and opinions expressed in this broadcast may not necessarily reflect those of the American
  684. 49:46Family Association or American Family Radio.

Transcript indexed for search. Open the panel to read along.

Share this episode


Subscribe and never miss an episode.

Pick Your Platform All Episodes
Call (888) 589-8840 Book Abe