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BBS Radio TV is engaged in the production and distribution of original live talk radio. We engineer and produce over 120 hours of talk show programming every week since 2004. A network of powerful personalities providing illuminating information!


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Ask the Angel with Rachel Corpus, June 1, 2026

Tue, 02 Jun 2026
Ask The Angel With Rachel Corpus with Rachel Corpus

Waking Up Beyond the Matrix: Soul Exile 13, Light Codes, and Creating Reality

Rachel Corpus Opens Ask the Angel

In this episode of Ask the Angel, host Rachel Corpus welcomes listeners into a mystical discussion about the matrix, the grid, near-death experiences, and the power people have to create their own reality. Rachel introduces herself as an angel communicator, psychic medium, and angel incarnate, then explains that the episode will focus on what the angels call the matrix or grid. She says she once went back and forth about whether reality is a matrix until she had a near-death experience that she believes took her to the other side of it.

The Sun Card and Light Codes

Rachel begins by pulling a card from Kyle Gray’s Angels and Ancestors Oracle Cards deck. The card that appears is the Sun card, with the message to enjoy success and happiness. Rachel channels that the sun carries light codes meant to help people remember who they are, why they are here, and that they are deserving of warmth, love, and divinity. She says each person experiences the sun differently, just as each person defines success and happiness differently, and she encourages listeners to sit in the sun and reconsider what those words mean for them.

Angels, Origins, and Earthly Experience

Rachel reminds listeners that angels are not tied to one religion, but are guides and messengers. She says people may come from different spiritual origins, such as angelic realms, starseed origins, or other places of consciousness, and that each soul comes to Earth to experience and learn. Rachel shares that she knows her own origin because of a near-death experience she had at age four, during which she says she went on a field trip with angels and learned she is from the angelic realm as a seraphim.

“Woohoo News You Can Use”

The episode includes Rachel’s recurring “Woohoo News You Can Use” segment. She first discusses research suggesting that serotonin, often described as a feel-good chemical, may worsen tinnitus symptoms for some people, particularly in relation to serotonin-related brain circuits and SSRI medications. Rachel connects this to a spiritual reminder that more is not always better and that balance matters. She then discusses a proposed experiment involving gravitational waves, laser light, and the quantum nature of gravity, explaining it in simple terms as an attempt to understand the hidden structure of reality.

Rachel’s Struggle with Drinking and Self-Medication

Rachel then moves into a deeply personal story about a period when she was drinking heavily and hiding it from her family. She says she was drinking about a bottle of vodka a day and had already heard God tell her that if she stopped drinking, she could create anything she wanted, but if she continued, she would be dead in three weeks. Rachel explains that she had been trying to self-medicate because, as a healer, pastor, teacher, mother, and wife, she struggled to carry the emotions and lower vibrations of Earth while being alone with her own thoughts.

Being Pulled Out of Her Body

Rachel describes lying in bed beside her sleeping husband when her chest tightened, her jaw and body locked up, and she felt herself being pulled out of her body like a backpack. She says she rose about 40 feet above her body and could see herself and her husband in bed below. She then saw a control-room-like space to her right, filled with people at computers. A woman saw Rachel and reacted as if Rachel was not supposed to be there, and Rachel noticed that the woman’s screen showed Rachel’s bedroom along with streams of data or code.

The Control Room and Orientation

Rachel says a man came to guide her and told her they had been expecting her. She was taken down an elevator into an orientation room filled with people who seemed confused, as though they had just awakened somewhere unfamiliar. Some asked about work, children, pets, whether they were dead, and whether they were in the afterlife. A humanoid figure told them their questions would be answered later and repeatedly urged them to stay calm. Rachel’s guide said the people were going through a “remembering” process and that the place was not a punishment.

Soul Exile 13

Rachel says the place she visited was called Soul Exile 13. As she toured it, she saw different levels or areas, including residential spaces, classrooms, and increasingly beautiful environments. The lower levels seemed more sterile and clinical, while higher levels included comfortable residences, fireplaces, digital windows, gardens, fresh food, and community spaces. Rachel says people there worked only about three hours a day, attended growth-oriented classes, and lived in groups of about eight souls who functioned more like a soul group than an Earth-style family.

Classes, Soul Growth, and Remembering

Rachel describes the classes on Soul Exile 13 as therapy-like sessions where people were asked questions about childhood, memory, love, life, and meaning. The purpose was not to pass or fail, but to support soul growth. She says people graduated upward when they were ready, not as a reward or punishment, but because learning too much too soon would overwhelm them. Rachel explains that the system was designed to help people remember gradually, rather than shock them with truths before they could handle them.

The Pod Room and the Holographic Earth

The most dramatic part of Rachel’s account comes when her guide takes her to what she calls the pod room. She describes rows and rows of upright coffin-sized pods filled with fluid, each containing a young-looking human body. Rachel says she was told that every person on Earth has a body in a pod, while their consciousness is projected onto Earth as an avatar. According to what she was told, Earth is currently in its thirteenth version and exists as a holographic or grid-like projection created collectively by consciousness.

Source, Soul Choice, and Returning to Earth

Rachel asks whether God is involved in this system, and she says the beings told her that Source is involved in everything, though religious concepts of God belong more specifically to Earth. She explains that souls can choose whether to remain on Soul Exile 13 or return to Earth. If a person chooses to stay, an avatar version of them continues on Earth with their memories and abilities, though children, pets, or highly intuitive people may notice something different. Rachel says she chose to return because she wanted to be with her husband Edward and her children.

Returning Through the Pod

Rachel describes being shown how to return to her Earth life by entering an empty pod. She says she was told to press one button to avoid suffocation as the pod filled with fluid and another button if she wanted to remember the experience. She pressed both. When she pushed the second button, she woke up in bed and initially wondered whether it had been a dream. Over time, she came to believe it was not a dream, especially after hearing other people describe similar experiences of waking up beyond the matrix.

Working with the Matrix

Rachel says the lesson from the experience is that reality is more malleable than people realize. She describes Earth as a projected experience and asks how people can “mess with” or consciously work with the matrix. She introduces Grabovoi codes, which she describes as number sequences connected with specific intentions or outcomes. She gives examples for creativity, prosperity, and confidence, explaining that writing, repeating, or focusing on the numbers can help recode the energetic field.

Sigils, Intentions, and Reality Creation

Rachel also demonstrates how to create a sigil, a symbolic image made by combining the letters of a word into one visual form. She uses the word “money” as an example and explains that a sigil can hold a person’s intention, collapse unhelpful timelines, and concentrate energy toward a desired reality. She also suggests writing intentions on mirrors, door frames, or other visible places as reminders and energetic anchors. For Rachel, these practices are ways of participating consciously in the reality people are already helping to create.

Closing Blessing and Invitation

Rachel closes the episode by clearing the space with rose and mugwort smoke, offering a blessing, and inviting listeners to find her on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and her website. She reminds listeners that they can book a session through RachelCorpus.com and ends with love, encouragement, and her familiar reminder to keep their halos straight. The episode blends angel communication, personal testimony, spiritual cosmology, practical manifestation tools, and Rachel’s central message that people are more powerful creators of reality than they often realize.

Prophecy in the Spotlight, June 1, 2026

Tue, 02 Jun 2026
Prophecy In The Spotlight with Daniel Goodwin and Dr. Charles Hiltibidal

The Bible and UFO's
Dan Goodwin and Dr. Charles Hiltibidal on Deception, Prophecy, and the Rapture

Dan Goodwin Frames the Episode Around UFO Deception

In this episode of Prophecy in the Spotlight, hosts Dan Goodwin and Dr. Charles Hiltibidal discuss UFOs, UAPs, government disclosure, Nephilim theories, and what they view as spiritual deception. Dan opens by connecting the episode to the previous week’s discussion on apostasy and deception, arguing that the current UFO phenomenon may be part of a larger end-times deception. He says he believes UFOs may eventually be used to explain away the rapture, discredit God, and weaken people’s faith in the Bible.

Science Fiction, Culture, and the UFO Generation

The hosts begin with a humorous reference to science-fiction culture, describing the modern audience as the Star Trek, Battlestar Galactica, and Star Wars generation. Dan says he is not opposed to science fiction as entertainment, as long as people understand it is fiction. Dr. Hiltibidal adds that the problem is that many people now treat what once belonged to fiction as reality. The hosts argue that this cultural conditioning has made people more receptive to UFO claims, alien narratives, portals, and speculative interpretations of Scripture.

Prophecy Teachers, Nephilim Theories, and Extra-Biblical Books

Dan and Dr. Hiltibidal criticize what they describe as a major trend in the prophecy world toward Nephilim, UFO, and return-of-the-giants teaching. They argue that much of this teaching rests on a weak or fictional reading of Genesis 6 and on ideas inserted into the biblical text rather than clearly taught by it. They also warn against promoting books such as Enoch or other extra-biblical writings as if they were missing parts of Scripture. The hosts maintain that such material was never part of the biblical canon and should not be treated as authoritative.

Government Files, UAPs, and Public Fascination

The hosts then discuss articles connected to recent government UFO or UAP file releases. They note that officials now often use the term UAP, or unidentified anomalous phenomenon, rather than UFO. The discussion includes references to historical State Department cables, FBI records, NASA transcripts, and a Pentagon portal created for disclosure-related materials. Dan remains skeptical that these releases will reveal the truth, arguing that many sightings are likely military technology, misunderstood light, experimental aircraft, or other explainable phenomena rather than extraterrestrial or angelic craft.

Lauren Boebert, Spiritual Dimensions, and Demonic Speculation

A portion of the discussion centers on Representative Lauren Boebert’s comments suggesting that some UFO or UAP phenomena might be spiritual rather than extraterrestrial. Dan and Dr. Hiltibidal acknowledge that she is trying to frame the issue through a biblical worldview, but they disagree with her interpretation. They object to claims that the Bible teaches modern Nephilim/UFO ideas and push back against language about portals or spiritual dimensions. While they believe demonic deception is involved in the broader UFO narrative, they do not believe fallen angels are literally piloting spacecraft.

Man-Made Technology and the Flying Wing Example

Dan uses historical military aircraft to argue that unusual things in the sky are not necessarily otherworldly. He points to Germany’s World War II-era flying-wing technology as an example of something that would have seemed impossible or alien to ordinary observers at the time. He argues that if someone had seen such a craft in the 1940s, they might have concluded it was from another world simply because they had no frame of reference. For Dan, this illustrates how advanced military technology, secrecy, and public imagination can create UFO stories without requiring extraterrestrial explanations.

The Rapture and a Possible Alien Explanation

One of the central prophetic claims of the episode is Dan’s belief that UFO or alien narratives may be used after the rapture to explain why believers disappeared. He suggests that if the rapture occurs and people are left behind, a prepared UFO framework could allow the world to believe Christians were taken by extraterrestrial forces or removed because they were harmful to society. Dr. Hiltibidal adds that this kind of narrative could help people accept the Antichrist by obscuring the biblical meaning of the rapture.

The Vatican, Telescopes, and Possible Future Claims

Dan also discusses the Vatican’s telescope in Arizona and suggests that the Roman Catholic Church may eventually claim contact with beings from space. He worries that such a claim could be used to revise or challenge biblical teaching. The hosts speculate that if the Vatican or other authoritative institutions announced contact with extraterrestrial beings, many people would accept it. They connect this possibility to their larger concern that UFO disclosure narratives could undermine confidence in Scripture.

Dangers of UFO Hype

Dan lists several dangers he sees in UFO hype. He says it can draw believers away from the clear teachings of the Bible, cause discord among Christians, lead people into fables, waste time that should be spent doing what God has called believers to do, create rabbit holes of speculation, discredit Christians before the world, and make believers unwitting partners in deception if the narrative is satanic. Dr. Hiltibidal agrees that chasing such stories can pull people away from Scripture, salvation, and the practical work of evangelism.

Closing Call to Stay Grounded in Scripture

The episode closes with Dan urging listeners not to get caught up in UFO hype from prophecy ministries, government officials, or popular culture. Dr. Hiltibidal emphasizes the need to make sure one is truly born again and to spend life trying to win others to Christ rather than chasing what he calls fairy tales. The hosts end by reinforcing their main message: believers should remain grounded in the Bible, resist sensational deception, and keep their focus on salvation, Scripture, and the return of Christ.

Chuck and Julie Show, June 1, 2026

Tue, 02 Jun 2026
Chuck And Julie Show with Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden

Colorado GOP Shakeup: Craig Steiner, Opt-Out, Party Strategy, and the Road Ahead
Guest, Ted Harvey

The CO GOP elected a new party chair - Craig Steiner from Douglas County. Supporter Ted Harvey joins the show and assures grassroots Steiner fully backs opting out of the disastrous open primary.
Plus Tina Peters is free today!

Chuck and Julie Open with Colorado Republican Party News

In this episode of The Chuck and Julie Show, hosts Chuck Bonniwell and Julie Hayden open with major news from the Colorado Republican Party. They discuss the party meeting in Buena Vista, where Craig Steiner of Douglas County was elected the new Colorado GOP chair after defeating Joe Oltmann and Jeremy Goodall. The hosts bring on former Colorado legislator and strategist Ted Harvey, who supported Steiner’s campaign and helped explain what the leadership change may mean for the party going forward.

Ted Harvey Describes Craig Steiner as a Tactician

Ted Harvey describes Craig Steiner as a political tactician rather than a loud partisan figure. He explains that Steiner previously served as secretary and chair of the Douglas County Republican Party and created a voter-targeting program called Voter Spectrum, which has been used for get-out-the-vote efforts, door knocking, phone banking, and campaign organizing. Harvey argues that Steiner is strong on conservative issues such as life, guns, taxes, unions, and education, and points to Douglas County victories, including Republican wins and school-board efforts, as evidence that Steiner understands how to organize and win.

Ballot Harvesting and Get-Out-the-Vote Strategy

Chuck asks about ballot harvesting and whether it will be part of the Colorado GOP’s future strategy. He recalls using absentee voting and ballot collection in Glendale years earlier and argues that Republicans have often been outworked by Democrats on this front. Harvey says Douglas County Republicans have used similar tactics successfully, especially in smaller races where turnout is lower, but acknowledges that large-scale ballot harvesting requires money, volunteers, organization, and paid effort. He also notes that the Colorado Republican Party does not currently have much money, making fundraising and organizational rebuilding essential.

The Opt-Out Issue and Republican Primaries

A major focus of the interview is Colorado’s opt-out issue, tied to the party’s ability to opt out of open primaries and return more candidate selection power to Republican caucus and assembly participants. Harvey says he has been on the front line helping push opt-out efforts and would not have supported Steiner if Steiner were not aligned with him on that issue. He says Steiner opposed Proposition 108 when it was on the ballot and believed the party should opt out as quickly as possible. Harvey argues that establishment figures have used open primaries to influence Republican nominations and keep conservatives from winning.

Party Debt, Legal Bills, and Donor Confidence

Chuck and Julie also ask about party finances, debt, and legal bills left from the previous administration. Harvey says donors were reluctant to give money while the party appeared focused on legal battles and internal fights rather than electing Republicans. He says Steiner’s first task will be to understand the lawsuits, invoices, and financial obligations facing the party. Harvey believes that if donors see competent leadership and assurance that money will go toward winning elections instead of paying attorneys, they may begin contributing again.

Neutral Leadership and Avoiding the Enemy List

The hosts discuss internal party fights, including what they describe as “enemy lists” and attacks on grassroots conservatives under prior party leadership. Harvey says Steiner will not create an enemy list and will not use the chairmanship to put his thumb on the scale in primaries. While Chuck and Julie express interest in seeing some establishment Republicans challenged, Harvey argues that the chair should not personally drive primary attacks. Instead, he says the state party should focus on making the process fair and preventing establishment forces from tilting the playing field against conservatives.

The RNC, NRCC, and Future Assemblies

Harvey says the Republican National Committee and national Republican groups will need to decide whether to work with the Colorado GOP if the party moves forward with opt-out. He argues that Steiner’s temperament may help because Steiner is not a bomb-thrower, but someone focused on doing the work. Harvey says the party will need to prepare for a very different nomination process, including state, county, state House, and state Senate assemblies where Republican activists and caucus participants will have far more influence in selecting nominees.

Tina Peters Released from Custody

After the Ted Harvey interview, Chuck and Julie turn to the release of Tina Peters, who was freed that morning. They discuss her interview with Steve Bannon, where she said she remained concerned about election machines and vote-flipping claims. Chuck and Julie criticize media descriptions that characterize Peters as being imprisoned for “election fraud,” arguing that the actual charges related to official misconduct, impersonation, and attempts to influence a public servant. They also criticize Republicans and Democrats who opposed her release, while noting that Governor Jared Polis may have had political reasons for granting relief.

Colorado Politics, Jared Polis, and Party Divisions

The hosts speculate about Governor Jared Polis’s motives, including whether his decision regarding Tina Peters may be connected to future national ambitions. They also discuss divisions within Colorado politics, the role of county clerks, and the divide between grassroots Republicans and establishment figures. Chuck argues that the state may eventually become ready for a real alternative to Democratic governance if economic and political conditions continue to decline, though he also acknowledges that opt-out alone will not guarantee statewide Republican victories.

Media Humor, Spencer Pratt, and Campaign Messaging

The episode later shifts into commentary on media, campaign ads, and political humor. Chuck and Julie discuss Spencer Pratt’s Los Angeles mayoral campaign messaging and praise a satirical ad portraying left-leaning media outlets as a kind of ideological treatment. They argue that humor can be powerful political messaging when it is funny because it contains truth. The hosts contrast this style with Republican messaging they see as less creative, saying conservatives could benefit from sharper, more intelligent humor.

CBS, CNN, Barry Weiss, and Legacy Media

The hosts also comment on legacy media upheaval, including reports involving Barry Weiss, CBS/60 Minutes figures, Scott Pelley, Anderson Cooper, CNN, and possible changes in major network leadership. Chuck and Julie frame these developments as signs that old media institutions are losing influence and that some longtime media personalities may not understand how much the media landscape has changed. Their broader point is that legacy outlets can no longer assume the same level of audience control or cultural authority they once had.

Closing Thoughts on the Colorado GOP’s Future

Chuck and Julie close by saying they believe Craig Steiner’s leadership could help stabilize and revitalize the Colorado Republican Party, especially if the opt-out process moves forward. They describe him as a calmer, more practical chair who may not be as combative as past figures but may be better suited to rebuilding party structure. The episode ends with optimism that the party may be moving toward a more grassroots-driven future, even while acknowledging that organization, money, unity, and candidate quality will still determine whether Republicans can win.

The Power of Synergy, June 1, 2026

Tue, 02 Jun 2026
The Power Of Synergy with Gabrielle Cardona

The Human Factor: Technology, Personality, Connection, and the Power of Synergy

Gabrielle Cardona Opens the Call-In Coaching Show

In this episode of The Power of Synergy, host Gabrielle Cardona introduces the program as a call-in advice show focused on life and relationships. She explains that she normally charges for individual coaching, but the show gives listeners a chance to receive practical advice at no cost. Gabrielle describes herself as a relationship coach with more than 20 years of experience and says her work focuses on teaching people what is right about them rather than labeling what is wrong.

Coaching People Toward What Works

Gabrielle recalls several early coaching experiences, including clients ranging from a 12-year-old girl to a 67-year-old man who wanted to learn how to be happy. She also tells the story of meeting her first client, a district attorney, in a coffee shop. When he asked why his life looked perfect on paper but he still was not happy, Gabrielle used personality-function language to explain that his career required too much social interaction and not enough time for his natural introverted intuition. She uses the story to show that many people are not broken or mentally ill; they may simply be living in ways that conflict with their nature.

Technology and the Loss of Human Connection

The central theme of the episode is what Gabrielle calls the human factor. She argues that technology and social media have made people more disconnected, less trusting, less self-aware, and less capable of healthy face-to-face conversation. Gabrielle says social media is often anti-social because people say things online they would not say in person if they had to be accountable. She asks listeners to consider whether technology has improved their relationships or weakened their ability to relate directly to others.

The Computer Gender Joke and Human Accountability

Gabrielle shares a joke from her oldest son about whether a computer is more like a man or a woman. She uses the joke not only for humor, but also to illustrate how people project their frustrations and misunderstandings onto technology and onto each other. Her larger point is that tools can be useful, but they become toxic when people use them to avoid accountability, direct communication, and genuine human interaction. She argues that power, influence, and responsibility must go together.

No Neutral Energy and No Inertia

Gabrielle introduces two principles of human interaction. First, she says there is no neutral energy: people either have a positive or negative effect on those around them. Second, she says there is no inertia in relationships: people are either moving toward one another or away from one another. When people move together in a healthy way, she says they can synchronize and create synergy, empowering each other rather than merely adding to each other. When they remain together in negative energy, they can end up hurting each other.

Personality Function and Daily Alignment

Gabrielle then explains personality function using Myers-Briggs-style language, focusing on dominant, auxiliary, tertiary, and inferior functions. She gives the example of her husband as an ESTP, explaining that his dominant function is extroverted sensing, while his auxiliary function is introverted thinking. She says this means he thrives through hands-on, physical, people-oriented activity, but needs solitude when making logical decisions. Gabrielle uses this example to show that people can understand themselves and others better when they know which activities energize them and which ones drain them.

Matching Work to Nature

Through the ESTP example, Gabrielle explains that different people need different kinds of daily activity to stay healthy. Some need physical, sensory interaction with people; others need quiet reflection, analysis, or solitary work. She says conflict in relationships often arises when people expect others to function the same way they do. By understanding someone’s natural pattern, people can offer love in more useful ways, such as giving someone space to think rather than taking their need for solitude personally.

Humans, Animals, and Emotional Substitutes

Gabrielle also discusses what she sees as the growing tendency to substitute animals, sex toys, or technology for human relationships. She says animals can provide comfort and companionship, but they cannot fully replace human emotional connection. She cautions that when people demand from animals what only humans can provide, they may be using the animal to fill a deeper relational or spiritual void. For Gabrielle, people need real human bonds, not only substitutes that cannot truly reciprocate on the same level.

Laughter, Connection, and the Chemistry of Happiness

Gabrielle talks about happiness chemistry through the acronym DOSE: dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin, and endorphins. She says two human experiences can release all four together: laughter and orgasm. Her point is that people often chase artificial or isolated forms of pleasure while neglecting shared laughter, emotional warmth, and connection. She describes connection as an art built from appreciation, respect, and trust, and encourages listeners to return to people, ask questions, understand differences, and build real relational bonds.

Becoming a High-Quality Version of Yourself

In the final section, Gabrielle focuses on becoming a high-quality version of oneself. She compares self-care to putting on an oxygen mask before helping someone else, stressing that people should take care of themselves so they can serve others well, not so they can remain selfish. She encourages listeners to identify what they truly need, regain focus, stretch and move their bodies, breathe properly, manage low energy, and understand the difference between anxiety, fear, and anger. She says anxiety relates to what could happen, fear to what is happening, and anger to what has happened.

Affirmations, Positive Thinking, and Synergy

Gabrielle closes by encouraging listeners to use affirmations to rewire negative thinking. She advises writing statements that include truths already believed, truths partly accepted, and truths that are difficult to believe, then reading them aloud until they become internalized. She reminds listeners that they have power to affect others and should ask whether they make people better or worse. The episode ends with Gabrielle directing listeners to her books and website, inviting archived listeners to email questions, and reinforcing the idea that relationships are the foundation of human performance.

LEO Round Table, June 1, 2026

Mon, 01 Jun 2026
LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock

S11E106, LRT Arrives At The PLECET Conference In Dallas With A Few Friends

Live from the PLEASANT Conference: Training, Community Trust, and the Future of Law Enforcement

Chip DeBlock Opens LEO Roundtable from Dallas

In this episode of LEO Roundtable, host Chip DeBlock broadcasts live from the PLEASANT Conference in Dallas, Texas. He explains that the show may sound different because the team is on location with foot traffic, background noise, and conference activity happening around them. Chip introduces co-host Captain Brett Bartlett, sponsor and guest Jeff Nicholas of Compliant Technologies, and Sergeant Corlea Moore of the Brookhaven Police Department in Georgia, who works in community engagement. The episode is less of a standard news breakdown and more of a live conference discussion about law enforcement, training, community relations, leadership, and non-lethal technology.

The PLEASANT Conference and National Law-Enforcement Leaders

The panel discusses the importance of the PLEASANT Conference and the major law-enforcement figures scheduled to speak. They mention hearing from Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and look ahead to appearances by FBI Director Kash Patel, the heads of the ATF, DEA, and U.S. Marshals Service, and other major federal leaders. The panel notes how unusual and significant it is for a relatively new event to attract so many high-level law-enforcement officials, framing the conference as evidence that community engagement and police training are becoming national priorities.

Community Trust, Respect, and Faith-Based Outreach

Captain Brett Bartlett reflects on the conference’s message that policing and community purpose must be brought closer together. He says law enforcement needs to close the gap between police work and community trust, and he suggests that this kind of training should begin in the academy rather than being treated as a special-unit function. The panel also discusses the faith-based component of the conference, including initiatives such as Faith & Blue, and the idea that changing hearts can change outcomes. The conversation presents law enforcement as both an enforcement role and a human endeavor built on respect, relationships, and service.

What Law Enforcement Does Best

When asked what law enforcement does best, Sergeant Corlea Moore says officers share a common mission: protecting communities, helping people, and making sure everyone can go home safely. She explains that many recruits enter policing because they want to help people and create change in their communities. For Corlea, one of law enforcement’s greatest strengths is that officers across agencies and regions often share the same core mission of protection, service, and community safety.

Training as the Key Area for Improvement

The panel agrees that training is one of the greatest areas where law enforcement can improve. Corlea emphasizes the need for leadership training, tactical training, and practical preparation for real-world situations. Brett argues that patrol officers are the most powerful tools an agency has, because they know their zones, their people, and their communities. The group stresses that community engagement should not be left only to specialized units; patrol officers should be trained from the beginning to know people, open doors, communicate effectively, and handle situations before force becomes necessary.

Media, Public Perception, and Telling the Police Story

Jeff Nicholas argues that one of law enforcement’s biggest challenges is the way media coverage can create discouragement, division, misinformation, and demonization of officers. The group says negative or incomplete coverage can make policing look far more violent and chaotic than most officer-citizen interactions actually are. Corlea responds that agencies cannot fully control the media, but they can control how they tell their own stories. She describes how Brookhaven Police Department uses transparency, social media, YouTube, body-camera footage, drone footage, and community relationships to help residents understand what officers are actually doing.

Confidence, De-Escalation, and Command Presence

Jeff Nicholas says one of the best de-escalation tools on the street is not a product, but a confident, well-trained officer. He argues that officers who understand policy, law, equipment, and themselves are better able to command a situation, communicate clearly, and prevent unnecessary escalation. Corlea adds that articulation is a major challenge for some officers, especially when they do not fully understand policy or law. The panel connects these issues back to training, emphasizing that poor training or lack of training often leads to mistakes, discipline problems, and weak case outcomes.

Leadership, Retention, and Agency Culture

The discussion also highlights the importance of leadership and command climate. The panel says officers make better decisions when they know supervisors and agency leaders will support them if they act in good faith. Jeff argues that leadership support reduces stress and helps officers communicate and perform better. Corlea says officers should be trained and mentored at every level, from rookie to supervisor to command staff, so each person is preparing the next generation. The group agrees that training needs to be valued at the highest levels of an agency, not buried under layers of administration.

Compliant Technologies and the Glove

A major sponsor discussion focuses on Compliant Technologies and its flagship product, the Glove, which uses conductive distraction and de-escalation device technology. Jeff Nicholas explains that the product is designed to help officers gain control quickly in a humane, low-optics way, potentially stopping a fight in seconds and reducing injuries, viral violent videos, lawsuits, workers’ compensation claims, and officer stress. He says the company’s mission fits the PLEASANT Conference because both are focused on safer streets, safer officers, better community relations, and less violent outcomes.

Sergeant Corlea Moore’s Closing Message

Near the end, Sergeant Corlea Moore encourages listeners not to base their entire view of police on what they see on television. She urges people to get to know their local police departments, attend a Citizens Police Academy if one is available, and learn firsthand what officers do and how community members can help. Chip asks how people can find her, and she points listeners to LinkedIn and the Brookhaven Police Department in Georgia. The episode closes with thanks to the sponsors, acknowledgment of the conference setting, and a preview that the next show will follow Kash Patel’s address.

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