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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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Shadow Politics, June 7, 2026

Mon, 08 Jun 2026
Shadow Politics with Senator Michael D. Brown

Remembering Barney Frank: Shadow Politics Replays a Conversation on Democracy, DC Statehood, Reform, and Public Service

Michael D. Brown Opens with a Tribute to Barney Frank

In this episode of Shadow Politics, Former Shadow Senator Michael D. Brown opens by explaining that the program will not take live calls because it is replaying a special interview with Congressman Barney Frank. Brown says Frank had recently passed away and describes him as an important Democratic stalwart whose public service spanned decades. He frames the replay as a tribute to Frank’s life, career, intellect, humor, and long support for democratic representation, including DC statehood.

Revisiting the 2022 Interview

The replayed interview comes from a 2022 edition of Shadow Politics, hosted by Michael D. Brown with then co-host Marília Duffles. Brown introduces Barney Frank as a legendary former member of the U.S. House of Representatives who served from 1981 to 2013, chaired the House Financial Services Committee, and was a leading co-sponsor of the Dodd-Frank Act. Brown also notes Frank’s status as one of the most prominent openly gay politicians in the United States and thanks him for his early support of DC voting rights and statehood.

DC Statehood and Representation

Brown begins the interview by recalling a previous backstage encounter with Barney Frank, Tom Harkin, and Bill Clinton in Iowa, where Frank and Harkin jokingly debated who supported DC statehood first. Frank discusses his long support for giving the District of Columbia representation and notes the irony that states with smaller populations than DC can help block the District’s path to full rights. Brown connects that issue to the filibuster and the difficulty of advancing statehood legislation in the Senate.

The Economy, Inflation, and the Midterms

The conversation then turns to the economy and the 2022 midterm elections. Brown asks whether Democrats were doomed because of inflation and economic frustration. Frank says Democrats were in trouble politically, but argues that inflation was a worldwide issue tied to energy, the war in Ukraine, and global economic pressures rather than simply the fault of President Biden or Democrats. He also notes that despite inflation, the economy had strong areas, including low unemployment and wage growth among lower-income workers.

Dodd-Frank and Financial Reform

Marília Duffles asks whether the Dodd-Frank Act actually made the financial system safer or simply created more regulatory complexity. Frank defends the law, saying it worked well and helped prevent a financial crisis during the severe disruption of the pandemic. He explains that the law was broad because it combined what could have been many separate bills into one package, largely because of Senate filibuster realities. He also says major financial leaders had since acknowledged that the law was functioning effectively and did not require major changes.

LGBTQ Rights, Race, and Social Progress

Brown asks whether LGBTQ rights were under greater attack in the country. Frank replies that gay people have always faced attacks, but argues that conditions for LGBTQ Americans had improved dramatically over the decades, especially regarding marriage equality and general social acceptance. He says transgender rights remained more contested, but expresses optimism because younger generations are far more supportive. Frank also contrasts progress on LGBTQ issues with what he sees as more troubling regression on race, especially after the weakening of the Voting Rights Act.

Democratic Politics, Young Voters, and Biden

The interview also covers President Biden’s standing with voters, especially young people. Frank says Biden could do more on student loan debt and marijuana policy, both of which he believes matter to younger voters. However, he also argues that Biden and congressional Democrats accomplished a great deal despite having only 50 Democratic senators. Frank says frustration often comes from voters expecting more than the political reality allows, especially when senators such as Joe Manchin limit what can pass.

Ukraine, Putin, and Global Democracy

Marília raises the war in Ukraine and asks whether the United States could do more to help. Frank praises Biden’s handling of the crisis, especially his ability to build and maintain a broad coalition of European and allied nations against Russia. He compares Putin’s aggression to earlier authoritarian expansion and says Biden’s coalition-building has been a strong example of foreign policy leadership. Brown then asks whether Russia, China, India, North Korea, and other authoritarian or illiberal forces could form a dangerous bloc, and Frank says the democratic response today is stronger than the weak response to Hitler in the 1930s.

Reparations, Harvard, and Institutional Responsibility

Brown asks about Harvard and other universities committing money or institutional efforts toward reparations or recognition of slavery’s legacy. Frank says universities such as Harvard and Georgetown are acknowledging that they directly benefited from slavery and related exploitation, making those efforts a form of deferred payment or responsibility for services and labor that helped build those institutions. On national reparations, he says the policy is more complicated, but he supports strong efforts to address the economic damage caused by slavery, racism, and later discrimination.

Political Polarization and the Loss of Collegiality

The interview closes with reflections on Congress, political polarization, and public service. Marília asks about the decline of substance, civility, and intelligence in politics. Frank says collegiality has collapsed and that more extreme elements have gained influence, partly because reasonable voters often withdraw from the process while extremists show up in primaries. He argues that voters must punish destructive behavior if they want it to end. Frank also reflects on missing the people of Congress, especially talented staff and colleagues, while enjoying the reduced stress of retirement.

Closing Tribute

The replay ends with Brown thanking Barney Frank and dedicating a closing song to him, describing Frank as someone he admired during and after his time in Congress. The current episode’s tribute framing gives the interview added weight: it presents Frank not only as a policymaker, but as a sharp, funny, principled public servant who spoke clearly about democracy, equality, reform, representation, and the responsibilities of political life.

The Global Freedom Report, June 7, 2026

Mon, 08 Jun 2026
The Global Freedom Report with Brent Johnson

Accountability Against the Administrative State:
Brent Johnson with Guests, Ann Vandersteel and Chris Burns on DOJA, CPS, and Parental Rights

Brent Johnson Opens The Global Freedom Report

In this episode of The Global Freedom Report, host Brent Johnson opens with his usual focus on liberty, government power, and the question of whether a functional free society can exist in today’s globalist world. Before bringing on his guests, Brent comments on California politics, election laws, ballot harvesting, Los Angeles mayoral politics, and the state’s broader government problems. He then turns the program toward the main subject: the work of the Department of Government Accountability, or DOJA, and its efforts to expose corruption inside government agencies.

Ann Vandersteel and Chris Burns Join the Program

Brent welcomes Ann Vandersteel and Chris Burns of the Department of Government Accountability. Ann is introduced as an investigative journalist, constitutional advocate, public speaker, and author of The CPS Pipeline: State-Sanctioned Kidnapping. Chris is introduced as an attorney with more than 20 years of experience in family law, criminal defense, personal injury, estate planning, and corporate law. Brent frames both guests as people working to expose government overreach and restore accountability where agencies have abused families, parents, and citizens.

DOJA’s Mission and the Fight Against Agency Power

Ann explains that DOJA is a citizen-led accountability initiative connected with American Made Action and American Made Foundation. Its mission is to document misconduct, support whistleblowers, organize legal action, use media exposure, and apply public pressure against officials who violate constitutional rights. She says the work has been difficult because agency government is deeply entrenched, often behaves as if it does not answer to the people, and protects itself through bureaucracy, funding structures, and institutional inertia.

Child Protective Services and Title IV-E Funding

A major focus of the episode is Child Protective Services and the federal funding incentives that Ann and Chris say encourage family separation. Ann argues that many children are removed without meeting the proper legal threshold and that Title IV-E and related funding streams reward foster placement more than family reunification. She says DOJA’s strategy is to reduce wrongful intake by raising the legal threshold for removal, thereby cutting off the financial incentive for agencies to take children unnecessarily.

Proposed Legislation to Strengthen Due Process

Ann describes proposed legislation designed to restore stronger due-process protections for parents in child welfare cases. The bill would limit removals to cases involving serious imminent risk, require rapid judicial review, require stronger evidence before removal or continued separation, and force courts to consider less restrictive alternatives such as in-home safety plans, family support, or kinship placement before foster care. She also says the proposed legislation would create a right to a six-person unanimous jury trial in dependency and termination-of-parental-rights cases.

Chris Burns on the Legal Reality for Parents

Chris explains how child protective cases often work in practice. He says the state may accuse a parent of abuse or neglect, initiate court proceedings, and place the parent into a process where the burden of proof can be surprisingly low despite parental rights being fundamental rights. He describes the system as difficult to challenge because parents often want the fastest path to getting their children back, while systemic appeals and constitutional challenges can take longer than the case timeline itself. Chris says this makes it hard to find cases that can fully challenge the structure of the system.

Administrative Courts, Judicial Rights, and Systemic Corruption

Brent and the guests discuss the difference between ordinary judicial protections and administrative proceedings. Brent argues that administrative courts can short-circuit constitutional protections, while Chris and Ann describe agency power as one of the major barriers to justice. They also discuss the Loper Bright decision and the broader question of whether agencies should be allowed to interpret, enforce, and effectively adjudicate rules that affect people’s rights. The episode repeatedly returns to the idea that government agencies must be forced back under constitutional limits.

Chris Burns’ Own Legal Pressure and Burnout in Family Law

The conversation also touches on Chris Burns’ personal experience as an attorney working against child welfare abuses. Chris says attorneys who handle abuse, neglect, and family-law cases often burn out quickly because the cases are emotionally heavy, poorly paid when court-appointed, and difficult to win against the state. He also discusses professional pressure placed on him, including the suspension of his license, and says that while he may temporarily step back from giving direct legal advice, other attorneys have offered to help continue the work.

Whistleblower Protection and Public Exposure

Near the end of the interview, Brent asks Ann about whistleblower protection. Ann explains that DOJA works with attorneys who specialize in protecting whistleblowers because people inside government systems often face retaliation when they speak out. She says people frequently contact her with documentation but are afraid to go public themselves, so media exposure, legal protection, and public pressure all become part of the accountability strategy. Ann presents whistleblowers as essential to exposing misconduct that would otherwise stay hidden.

Closing Message: Citizen Action and Accountability

The interview closes with Ann directing listeners toward American Made Foundation and American Made Action, while Brent promises to include contact information for both Ann and Chris on the show page. Brent praises their commitment to truth and justice and says he is encouraged that people are actively working to counterbalance corrupt systems. The episode’s larger message is that accountability will require citizen action, legal challenges, legislative reform, whistleblower protection, and continued public exposure of government abuses.

Financial Fitness With The Money Doctor, June 7, 2026

Mon, 08 Jun 2026
Financial Fitness With The Money Doctor with Frances Rahaim, Ph.D. "The Money Doctor"

New Ways to Protect Your Assets from Long-Term Care Costs

Many people understand the importance of long-term care planning—but struggle with the idea of paying expensive premiums year after year for coverage they may never use. In this episode of Financial Fitness with The Money Doctor, Frances Rahaim, Ph.D., and co-host Jess Tyler explore alternatives to traditional long-term care insurance and discuss how some newer planning strategies may help protect retirement assets from catastrophic long-term care expenses.

Topics include:

- Why long-term care costs can threaten even well-prepared retirement plans

- The difference between traditional long-term care insurance and newer asset-based approaches

- Home care, assisted living, nursing home care, and Activities of Daily Living (ADLs)

- Medicare and Medicaid misconceptions

- Questions to ask before considering any long-term care strategyHow some solutions may allow unused assets to pass to beneficiaries. This discussion is intended for educational purposes only and is not legal, tax, insurance, or investment advice. Individual circumstances vary.

Questions? Call 413-773-3333

Learn more at HugYourMoney.com

Frances Rahaim Opens Financial Fitness

In this episode of Financial Fitness, host Frances Rahaim, “The Money Doctor,” joins Jess Tyler for a practical conversation about aging, retirement savings, and the financial risk of long-term care. Frances explains that many people work hard to get out of debt, save money, and build a nest egg, only to discover later that long-term care costs can threaten the assets they planned to use in retirement or leave to their family.

Why Long-Term Care Costs Are So Dangerous

Frances explains that long-term care does not always mean a nursing home. It can involve help with activities of daily living, such as dressing, bathing, eating, continence, cognitive impairment, or basic mobility. She notes that many people prefer home health care or help from a trusted person rather than being forced into a facility, but those options can be expensive. The risk is especially difficult for people who have too much money to qualify easily for aid, but not enough money to comfortably absorb years of care costs.

The Problem with Traditional Long-Term Care Insurance

Frances says traditional long-term care insurance has never been her favorite solution because it can be very expensive and often works like “rent”: a person pays premiums for years, but if they never need the benefit, they do not get the money back. She acknowledges that traditional long-term care insurance can be right for some people, but says many clients resist it because of the cost, the emotional discomfort of imagining future care needs, and the possibility of paying large premiums without ever using the coverage.

Trusts, Family Transfers, and Medicaid Planning

Jess asks whether people should simply move assets out of their own names so they can qualify for help later. Frances explains that trusts, family transfers, and related strategies can have merit, but they also carry risks and should be handled carefully with an attorney and financial advisor. She warns that putting money in a child’s name can expose those funds to the child’s lawsuits, illness, financial problems, or other risks. She also explains that if a trust is revocable and the person still has access to the money, those assets may still be counted.

Newer Hybrid Long-Term Care Options

The main focus of the episode is a newer category of long-term care planning tools that are not traditional “use it or lose it” policies. Frances describes contracts that combine long-term care benefits with either life insurance or annuity-style structures. These products may allow someone to reposition conservative assets they do not expect to need for income, turning those assets into a larger pool of potential long-term care coverage while still preserving a death benefit or beneficiary value if the care benefit is not fully used.

A Real-Life Example of Leveraging Assets

Frances gives an example of clients who had about $400,000 in a 401(k), with enough other assets to support their retirement income. She suggested moving about $200,000 into a long-term-care-focused contract. In that example, the contract value increased for benefit purposes and created more than $500,000 in long-term care coverage from the $200,000 repositioned asset. She also explains that some contracts can include riders such as inflation protection and joint coverage for a married couple, allowing the benefit to grow and potentially cover both spouses.

What Medicare and Medicaid Actually Cover

Frances clarifies that many people mistakenly assume Medicare will cover long-term care. She explains that Medicare may cover only a limited early period in a facility, often around 90 days depending on the plan and circumstances. After that, Medicaid may become relevant, but Medicaid is needs-based and looks at income and assets. If someone has too much income or too many assets, they may not qualify until they spend down resources. For married couples, some assets may be protected for the spouse still at home, but the situation can become complicated and financially stressful.

Key Questions Before Choosing a Policy

Frances recommends asking detailed questions before choosing any long-term care solution. People should ask how they qualify, what underwriting is required, whether health conditions matter, how benefits are triggered, whether the policy reimburses receipts or pays a monthly benefit, how taxes are handled, what happens if the money is not used for care, who receives the death benefit, and how beneficiaries are set up. She especially likes policies where a person has one assigned representative and benefits can be used flexibly rather than requiring constant reimbursement paperwork.

Planning Before a Crisis

The episode closes with Frances emphasizing that long-term care planning is easier before a crisis occurs. She notes that some people may still qualify even at older ages, including an example of someone around 80 years old who was still eligible for one of these products. Her larger message is that people should not assume they are too old, too unhealthy, or too late to explore options. Instead, they should identify what they are trying to protect, review their assets, talk with qualified advisors, and decide whether a hybrid long-term care strategy could help preserve dignity, choice, and family assets.

Bible News Prophecy, June 7, 2026

Mon, 08 Jun 2026
Bible News Prophecy with Dr Bob Thiel

Continuing Church Of God 48
True Education for Real Success: Dr. Bob Thiel on Wisdom, Preparation, and Philadelphia Love

Steve Dupuie Opens Bible News Prophecy

In this episode of Bible News Prophecy, Steve Dupuie introduces Dr. Bob Thiel for a discussion about success, education, spiritual preparation, and the role of the Church in helping people grow in truth. Steve begins by asking why some people seem successful while others do not, framing the question around what many might call luck. Dr. Thiel responds that true success is not luck, but the result of following God’s way, growing in love, and being properly educated and prepared.

Love as the Foundation of Success

Dr. Thiel begins with a spiritual definition of success, citing the biblical statement that love never fails. He connects this to 2 Peter 1, where believers are instructed to add virtue, knowledge, self-control, perseverance, godliness, brotherly kindness, and love to their faith. In his view, real success is tied to developing these qualities and becoming fruitful in the knowledge of Jesus Christ. He especially emphasizes Philadelphia, or brotherly love, as a key part of Christian growth.

Wisdom, Education, and the Right Goal

The conversation then turns to education and preparation. Dr. Thiel cites Ecclesiastes to say that wisdom brings success, and he draws from Herbert W. Armstrong’s booklet The Seven Laws of Success, especially the idea that people must set the right goal and then prepare for it. He explains that humans are not guided by instinct the same way animals are, so people must be taught, trained, educated, and prepared if they are going to fulfill their purpose.

The Church’s Role in Teaching

Dr. Thiel argues that the Church helps provide true education through the ministry and proper hierarchical church government. He refers to Ephesians 4, where apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers are given for the equipping of the saints and the edifying of the body in love. He also points to Philip explaining Scripture to the Ethiopian eunuch in Acts 8 as an example of why teachers are needed to help people understand God’s word.

Training for Future Kings and Priests

A major theme of the episode is that Christians are being trained for future responsibilities in the Kingdom of God. Dr. Thiel refers to biblical passages about kings writing and reading God’s law, then connects that to Revelation’s teaching that believers are to become kings and priests. Because future kings and priests will need to rule and make wise judgments, he says Christians should take education, biblical knowledge, and spiritual training seriously now.

Studying, Growing, and Being Ready to Answer

Dr. Thiel emphasizes that believers must study and grow so they are not misled by error. He cites the Bereans, who searched the Scriptures to confirm what they were taught, and he refers to Peter’s instruction to grow in grace and knowledge. He also highlights the need to be ready to give an answer for one’s hope, explaining that Christians cannot answer well if they are not prepared. He connects this to the prophecy in Daniel that those who understand will instruct many.

The Holy Spirit and Prepared Witness

Dr. Thiel also discusses Jesus’ statements that believers may be brought before rulers and authorities and that the Holy Spirit will help them speak. He clarifies that this does not mean Christians should neglect preparation. Instead, he says the Holy Spirit can bring to remembrance what a person has already learned, studied, and internalized. Therefore, spiritual education, Bible study, sermons, and church literature are all part of preparing to serve as effective witnesses.

True Education Is Not Luck

The episode closes with Dr. Thiel’s central message: true success is not a matter of luck, but of love, wisdom, education, and preparation according to God’s way. He encourages listeners to pursue both physical and spiritual education, support the work of the Church, and develop the knowledge needed to help others. Steve closes by directing listeners to Bible News Prophecy and the Continuing Church of God websites for more interviews, articles, and free literature.

Dare To Dream, June 7, 2026

Mon, 08 Jun 2026
Dare To Dream with Debbi Dachinger

Mark Christopher Lee: Britain's Roswell Is Actually a Portal — And People Are Still Encountering It

Filmmaker and UFO researcher Mark Christopher Lee joins Debbi Dachinger on Dare to Dream to investigate the Rendlesham Forest incident — Britain's most significant UFO case — and what he discovered goes far beyond a Cold War military encounter. Mark shares footage, personal contact experiences, and evidence suggesting this forest may be an active interdimensional portal, drawing comparisons to Skinwalker Ranch. From telepathic downloads and dowsing rods spinning in the dark to ancient Suffolk folklore and stones falling warm from the sky, this episode challenges everything you thought you knew about UFO phenomena — and asks whether consciousness itself may be the key to contact.

Topics:
– Introduction: Mark Christopher Lee & the Rendlesham Forest incident
– Why Rendlesham may be a portal, not just a landing site
– On-site investigation: the unexplained electronic sounds and orbs
– The cryptid howl with no cameras rolling
– Ancient Suffolk folklore: black dogs, fairy folk & interdimensional legends
– The Cosmic Joker: one intelligence wearing many faces
– Telepathic binary download and psychic experiences
– C5 contact protocols: what raises the signal
– Science, consciousness, and the "mental internet"
– Law of attraction, Guinness World Record & inspired action
– How to reconnect with creative inspiration and your higher path
– UFO disclosure and humanity's coming paradigm shift

About the Guest: Mark Christopher Lee

Mark Christopher Lee is a British filmmaker, musician, UFO researcher, and author of Perfect Harmony, which bridges manifestation, neuroscience, and quantum physics. Known on social media as the King of UFOs, Mark has produced multiple documentaries including The Rendlesham UFO: The British Roswell and UFO Encounters of the Fifth Kind. His music project achieved a Guinness World Record and sparked global conversation about streaming royalties. He actively investigates ongoing UFO and paranormal phenomena in the UK.

Socials:
Website: nubfilm.co.uk
Social: @KingOfUFOs on X, Instagram & TikTok
YouTube: ‪@thekingofufos‬

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