BBS Radio TVSociety & Culture

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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Shadow Politics, July 5, 2026

Mon, 06 Jul 2026
Shadow Politics with Senator Michael D. Brown and Co-host Liberty Jones

America at 250: Hope, Division, and the Fight to Keep Democracy Human

A Fourth of July Conversation About America’s Future

In this episode of Shadow Politics, host Michael D. Brown and co-host Liberty Jones use the Fourth of July weekend and America’s 250th birthday as the starting point for a broad conversation about democracy, opportunity, division, and the future of the country. Brown opens by asking whether America is still the land of opportunity, while Jones, speaking as a first-generation American and recent college graduate, says her expectation is that the United States can persevere through division, injustice, and political instability without crumbling.

Opportunity, Generational Anxiety, and the American Promise

Brown reflects on his own life story, describing himself as a high-school dropout and orphan who eventually earned a master’s degree, started a business, served as a United States senator, raised a family, and built a life he believes could only have happened in America. He contrasts that experience with his fear that younger generations may not have the same chances. Jones responds that her generation faces economic uncertainty, nonstop media pressure, and government inconsistency, but she also believes hard work, adaptability, and optimism remain necessary. Together, they frame America as a country still capable of renewal, but only if opportunity remains real for ordinary people.

Political Theater, Trump, and the Power of Performance

A major section of the program centers on Brown’s critique of a presidential Fourth of July event and speech. He says the event was well-staged, emotionally powerful, and carefully designed through flags, veterans, astronauts, military imagery, crowd placement, and cheering sections. Brown argues that this kind of political production can be dangerous when it wraps nationalism, fear of socialism or communism, Christian identity, and anti-immigrant rhetoric into a patriotic spectacle. Jones agrees that modern politics increasingly resembles performance and “clickbait politics,” where citizens are drawn into emotional theater rather than honest civic discussion.

MAGA, Division, and the Need to Rebuild Common Ground

Jones challenges Democrats and anti-Trump voters not merely to attack MAGA supporters, but to understand why they feel heard by the movement. She argues that division will only worsen if Americans keep treating one another as enemies, and she uses the World Cup as a metaphor for fierce competition followed by mutual respect. Brown expands that point, saying Americans must recover respect for one another by focusing on shared concerns such as children, family, safety, and opportunity. Both speakers argue that the country needs a new way to speak across political lines without surrendering core principles.

Immigration, Guns, and Fear as a Political Tool

Brown discusses immigrant workers he sees building homes in his community and rejects rhetoric that broadly labels immigrants as criminals. He compares today’s immigrants to earlier generations of American families who came seeking work, dignity, and survival. He then turns to guns, arguing that many people cling to firearms because they feel afraid and want control. Brown says the gun debate should be reframed around protecting children rather than insulting gun owners, while Jones adds that gun violence has become dangerously normalized, especially when young people can buy guns before they can vote or drink alcohol.

Universal Health Care, Rights, and Accountability in Government

When Jones asks Brown what he would prioritize in a future presidential agenda, he says his first major goal would be universal health care, ideally guaranteed through constitutional amendment. Brown argues that people fear what they cannot control, and health care is one of the clearest examples. He also says politicians should face consequences for knowingly spreading falsehoods, and he emphasizes that American freedom was not fully present at the founding but had to be expanded through later law and struggle. His larger point is that the Constitution’s strength is its ability to evolve toward a more inclusive and more perfect union.

Freedom, Acceptance, and Preparing for the Next Chapter

The closing section returns to sports, humility, and preparation. After joking about soccer, Brazil, Norway, and the World Cup, Jones says Brazil is already preparing for the next four years, and America should do the same. She argues that people should not let political “giants” make them hopeless or allow any one leader to define the country’s 250th anniversary. Brown agrees and closes by saying the episode was meant to share how he and Jones feel about America at this moment. The program ends with a dedication of Neil Diamond’s “America,” a nod to Bubba the dog, and the Shadow Politics outro theme about representation, freedom, and unheard voices.

Financial Fitness with The Money Doctor, July 5, 2026

Mon, 06 Jul 2026
Financial Fitness With The Money Doctor with Frances Rahaim, Ph.D. "The Money Doctor"

Financial Fitness – Q&A - Money Doc in the Hot Seat!

What happens when real financial questions come in live — and there’s no script?

In this episode of Financial Fitness with The Money Doctor, Jess fires unscripted money questions from viewers, and Dr. Frances Rahaim responds in real time with thoughtful, practical, and often surprising answers.

No canned advice. No one-size-fits-all solutions. Just honest questions about money — and deeper conversations about what’s really going on beneath the surface.

Topics include:

• What to do when you owe more than your car is worth

• Whether to pay off debt or save for retirement first

• How to know when spoiling your grandchildren is financially harmful

• Talking with your adult children about money survival - for you both

and more.

What makes this show different is context. The right financial answer is rarely just about math — it depends on the whole picture. That’s where clarity begins.
Learn more at HugYourMoney.com.

Show Breakdown:
Money Questions, Real-Life Pressure, and the First Steps Toward Financial Control

Real Questions From Real Financial Lives

In this episode of Financial Fitness with the Money Doctor, host Dr. Frances Rahaim joins co-host Jess Tyler for a listener Q&A focused on practical financial problems that are also emotional, relational, and psychological. Jess explains that Frances has not seen the questions in advance, which gives the show a spontaneous, real-world feel. The episode addresses credit card debt, emergency savings, retirement worries, adult children needing support, upside-down car loans, Social Security timing, grandparent spending, buy-now-pay-later services, and anxiety around opening bills.

Credit Card Debt Versus Emergency Savings

The first listener, Melissa from Greenfield, asks whether she should use her $1,000 in savings to attack $6,000 in credit card debt. Dr. Rahaim advises against draining all savings to pay the card, even though the interest rate may be high. She explains that without emergency reserves, the next unexpected expense may simply send the person back to the credit card. Her advice is to balance both priorities: continue building cash reserves while also sending something extra toward principal, but only after tracking real spending and understanding how the debt was created in the first place.

Starting Retirement Savings at 48

Kevin from Turners Falls asks whether it is too late to make a meaningful difference if he is 48 and has very little saved for retirement. Dr. Rahaim says it is never too late, but stresses that “meaningful” needs to be defined carefully. She explains that if someone is carrying debt, especially a mortgage, car loan, credit cards, or student loans, then paying down debt strategically may sometimes function like retirement planning because it frees future cash flow. She encourages people to compare scenarios: saving while carrying debt versus using structured debt-reduction strategies that eventually open up more room for retirement contributions.

Helping Adult Children Without Sacrificing Retirement

Donna from Shelburne Falls asks how to help an adult son who is struggling financially without damaging her own retirement. Dr. Rahaim says this is one of the hardest questions for parents because they are used to putting children first. She advises having an honest adult-to-adult conversation, explaining personal retirement limits without blame, and inviting the child into a cooperative plan. Rather than continuing to act as an ATM, she recommends shifting toward a “buddy system” where both parent and child work on financial improvement together, while the parent avoids lecturing or shaming.

Upside-Down Car Loans and Social Security Timing

In the second half, Mona asks what to do when a car payment is consuming too much of her paycheck while she owes more than the car is worth. Dr. Rahaim explains several options, including repossession, refinancing or recasting the loan, trading the vehicle and rolling negative equity into another loan, or selling the car and borrowing only enough to cover the shortfall. She says repossession is often the path people fall into, but it damages credit and may still leave a balance owed. Tom from Colrain then asks about taking Social Security early versus waiting. Dr. Rahaim says the decision depends on need, health, life expectancy, and personal circumstances, but all things being equal, she tends to favor waiting because benefits rise by roughly 8% per year.

Grandkids, Buy-Now-Pay-Later, and Hidden Financial Patterns

Nancy from Gill asks how to know when spending on grandchildren is beginning to hurt her finances. Dr. Rahaim says the fact that she is asking the question may already mean it is affecting her mentally or financially. She recommends small pullbacks, teaching children money skills, and using tools like spend-save-share jars rather than abruptly cutting them off. Ashley from Millers Falls asks about buy-now-pay-later services for clothes and household items. Dr. Rahaim warns that these payments can layer quietly until they become unmanageable, comparing them to the frog-in-the-pot effect. She emphasizes awareness, visibility, and understanding how companies use immediate gratification to encourage spending.

Anxiety, Avoidance, and One Small Change

Jason from Orange says his finances are a mess, but he avoids opening bills and checking balances because it makes him anxious. Dr. Rahaim says many people, including wealthy people, experience money anxiety in different ways. Rather than telling him to immediately open every bill, she recommends changing one small, non-threatening thing first, such as taking a daily walk. That positive experience can build confidence, which can later be applied to money tasks in small steps: first bringing bills to the desk, then opening them later. She closes by encouraging listeners to send questions to info@HugYourMoney.com or through Jess, and reminds them they can reach her office by phone or visit HugYourMoney.com.

Bible News Prophecy, July 5, 2026

Mon, 06 Jul 2026
Bible News Prophecy with Dr Bob Thiel

Scoffers, Sorrows, and the Weather Warnings of Prophecy
Continuing Church of God 52

Earthquakes, Troubles, and the Beginning of Sorrows

In this episode of the Bible News Prophecy Program, hosts Steve Dupuie and Dr. Bob Thiel discuss whether people mock the things Jesus prophesied, especially warnings about earthquakes, famines, pestilences, and troubles. Dr. Thiel begins with Matthew 24 and Mark 13, saying Jesus described these events as the “beginning of sorrows.” He then points to recent earthquake reports involving Venezuela, Japan, and Northern California, presenting them as examples of the kinds of troubles he believes align with biblical prophecy.

Mockery, Anti-Christian Criticism, and Prophetic Response

Steve asks how tragic earthquakes relate to people mocking Christians, and Dr. Thiel explains that after he wrote about the Venezuela earthquakes and said those affected were in his prayers, an anti-Christian or apostate website criticized him and mocked his use of Mark 13:8. Dr. Thiel says the site dismissed the prophetic meaning of earthquakes by appealing to seismometer counts and normal fluctuation. He argues that increased seismometers do not explain the devastation of major quakes, and he connects the mockery itself to biblical warnings about deception and scoffers in the last days.

Peter’s Warning About Scoffers in the Last Days

Dr. Thiel then turns to 2 Peter 3, reading and discussing the passage that warns scoffers will come in the last days, walking according to their own desires and saying that all things continue as they always have. He applies that passage to people who dismiss prophecy and treat modern troubles as ordinary events without spiritual meaning. He emphasizes Peter’s teaching that God’s timing is not human timing, that the Lord is longsuffering, and that the day of the Lord will come unexpectedly. For Dr. Thiel, these verses show that mockery of prophecy is itself part of the prophetic pattern.

Heat Waves, Europe, and Weather as a Warning

The conversation shifts from earthquakes to weather. Dr. Thiel refers to his earlier book 2012 and the Rise of the Secret Sect, where he wrote about odd weather patterns, natural disasters, and the beginning of sorrows. He cites reports about record-breaking European heat, including extreme temperatures in France and heat-related deaths in Spain, and frames these events as additional warning signs. He argues that the repeated breaking of heat records should not simply be dismissed as normal, but should be considered in light of biblical prophecy and calls to repentance.

Amos, Calamity, and Weather-Related Blessings or Curses

Steve asks what scriptures skeptics should consider, and Dr. Thiel answers by turning to passages from Amos. He quotes Amos 3 to argue that God is involved in calamity and reveals His purposes through His servants, the prophets. He then discusses Amos 4, where God withholds rain, sends rain on one city and not another, and uses agricultural troubles such as blight, mildew, and locusts as warnings to people who still do not return to Him. Dr. Thiel uses these passages to argue that weather is not as random as many believe, but can function as a divine warning.

A Call to Pay Attention and Repent

In his closing comments, Dr. Thiel says scoffers ignore what God has prophesied about weather and refuse to repent. He warns listeners not to adopt the same disregard for Jesus’ words or biblical prophecy. While he acknowledges that many people will continue to see unusual weather as ordinary natural variation, he argues that severe, weird, and odd weather patterns are part of God’s warning message. Steve closes by thanking Dr. Thiel and directing listeners to BibleNewsProphecy.net for more interviews, articles, audio content, and Continuing Church of God resources.

One Voice, July 5, 2026

Mon, 06 Jul 2026
One Voice with Dr. Pastor Larry Montgomery

04 Providence The Bible

The King Is Coming, July 5, 2026

Sun, 05 Jul 2026
The King Is Coming with Jeff Kinley

Uncovering The Mysteries Of God Episode 7

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