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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The Global Freedom Report, May 22, 2026

Sat, 23 May 2026
The Global Freedom Report with Brent Johnson

Jury Nullification, Individual Liberty, and the Power of Citizens to Resist Unjust Laws

Truth, Liberty, and the Question of Government Power

In this episode of The Global Freedom Report, host Brent Johnson introduces a program centered on truth, justice, liberty, personal privacy, and resistance to government control. He frames freedom as the birthright of Americans and other free people, asking whether individuals govern their own lives or live subject to bureaucratic permission. Brent previews a discussion of jury nullification, along with the recurring segments Lessons in Liberty and Propaganda 101. He also poses a listener question about what immediate effect confirmed extraterrestrial visitation might have on the world.

Privacy, Succession, and Freedom Bound Entities

Before the main interview, a caller named Freeman from Alaska asks Brent about succession planning involving a Panamanian Private Interest Foundation and an International Business Corporation. Brent describes these structures as tools intended to provide privacy, asset control, and international business flexibility, while explaining the roles of a foundation’s protector, beneficiaries, successor protector, and related corporation. He tells the caller that a foundation may hold passive income while an International Business Corporation may conduct profit-making activity, and he recommends a private consultation for advice tailored to the caller’s proposed structure.

Robert Anthony Peters and Jury Nullification

Brent then welcomes Robert Anthony Peters, an actor, filmmaker, policy advisor, and chairman of the Fully Informed Jury Association, also referred to as FIJA. The central discussion focuses on jury nullification, which Peters describes as a conscientious acquittal: a situation where jurors may believe the facts support a guilty finding, but also believe that conviction would produce injustice because the law itself is unjust or is being unjustly applied. Brent and Peters present juries as an important safeguard against government abuse and argue that citizens should understand the authority they possess when serving on a jury.

Historical Examples and the Modern Jury System

Peters discusses historical examples of jury nullification, including the trial of William Penn in England and the colonial trial of publisher John Peter Zenger, whose jury acquitted him after he published criticism of government officials. He also references later examples involving the Fugitive Slave Act and Prohibition, when jurors sometimes refused to convict people accused under laws they regarded as unjust. In discussing the modern system, Peters says jury nullification still exists, but argues that judges, prosecutors, jury-selection procedures, and a lack of public awareness make it difficult for jurors to exercise independent judgment.

Callers, Jury Service, and Conscience in Deliberations

Several callers join the discussion. Gregory from Los Angeles reflects on his parents’ World War II sacrifices and expresses concern about the direction of the country. Eric from Los Angeles answers the extraterrestrial question by offering his personal theory, then asks about the distinction between “trial by jury” and “jury trial,” along with the loss of jury protections in traffic cases. Brent and Peters continue discussing jury selection, plea bargaining, administrative courts, and what jurors should do when they believe a law is unjust. Peters emphasizes that jurors must be willing to stand by conscience even when facing pressure from fellow jurors or court officials.

Propaganda 101 and the Closing Call to Defend Liberty

The closing portion returns to Brent’s broader message about government, propaganda, and personal freedom. In the Propaganda 101 segment, he argues that listeners should question government messaging and resist what he views as efforts to manipulate public behavior and undermine liberty. He encourages listeners to ask what they are willing to do to preserve their freedom, whether they told the truth, kept their word, and honored their agreements. Brent closes by promoting Freedom Bound International resources, previewing a future discussion with Alan Gottlieb of the Second Amendment Foundation, and reminding listeners that he regards freedom as a gift from God that must be protected.

The Good Fortune Show, May 22, 2026

Sat, 23 May 2026
The Good Fortune Show with Iyer

Vibrational Memory, Manifestation, and Recognizing the Energy of Good Fortune

Returning Home to Stored Memories and Familiar Energy

In this episode of The Good Fortune Show, host Sugandhi Iyer reflects on staying in an apartment overlooking a golf course, landscaped hills, swimming pools, and scenic greenery. She describes the setting as beautiful and carefully designed, but her central observation is spiritual: she believes places retain energetic records of the experiences people have had there. After returning to a city associated with her earlier life, she begins noticing unexpected reminders of the past, especially through music playing on the apartment television.

Music Channels and a “Blast from the Past”

Sugandhi explains that the furnished apartment came with a television and preset music channels, several of which begin playing English-language songs she listened to while growing up in that city. She remembers learning classical music and dance as part of her upbringing, while independently enjoying English popular songs and imitating the vocal styles of singers she heard. The familiar songs bring back memories of family, neighbors, powerful sound systems, music shared between apartments, terrace parties, and a time when people seemed more tolerant of one another’s enjoyment. She describes the experience as a “blast from the past” and wonders whether the universe is recreating memories held in her energy field.

The Law of Attraction as a Manager of Expansion

The program then turns to cards from Getting into the Vortex, which Sugandhi uses to explore the law of attraction. One card states that the universal law of attraction is managing expansion, while another describes people as vibrational beings continually emanating desires. Sugandhi interprets these ideas through the music appearing in her current environment, suggesting that the universe may be responding not only to conscious thoughts but also to stored inner energy, past experience, and emotional vibration. She distinguishes this inner energy from the soul itself, saying she views the soul as divine while emotional or subconscious material may influence manifested experience.

Las Vegas, Fun, and the Energy of Desired Experience

Sugandhi connects the recurring music to another important part of her life: Las Vegas and her personal association with the song “Girls Just Want to Have Fun.” She explains that she attended Cyndi Lauper’s concert and regards the song as expressing a guiding attitude of wanting enjoyment, happiness, and a lively experience of life. She clarifies that this does not mean women cannot be responsible in marriage, family, or other commitments; rather, she sees the desire for fun as an authentic energetic preference. Because the song begins appearing repeatedly in her current setting, she interprets it as another example of past energy, memory, and desire resurfacing in present experience.

Choosing Lunch with Jay-Z Over $500,000

A major portion of the episode considers the popular question: would a person rather receive $500,000 or have lunch with Jay-Z? Sugandhi says that despite not being a fan of his music, appearance, or personal choices, her immediate response was that she would choose the lunch. She reflects on why her mind assigned more value to the experience of meeting a highly successful person than to the money itself. Using another card about desire and alignment, she suggests that the choice may reveal an absence of perceived financial shortage in her energy field: her mind did not urgently grasp for the money because it did not automatically operate from a feeling of lack.

Attention, Shortage, and Creating One’s Reality

Toward the end, Sugandhi expands the discussion into a broader teaching about attention and manifestation. She argues that people’s automatic thoughts reveal whether they are operating from abundance, desire, enjoyment, competition, or perceived shortage. She also connects this principle to her recent focus on laborers and service workers, observing that a delivery person rang the doorbell during the broadcast after she had spent considerable energy thinking and talking about that subject. For Sugandhi, this becomes an example of how concentrated attention may draw corresponding experiences into one’s reality. She closes by encouraging listeners to observe what they are focusing on, notice whether their energy reflects good fortune or lack, and move intentionally toward the experiences they truly want.

All Learning Reimagined, May 22, 2026

Sat, 23 May 2026
All Learning Reimagined with Teresa Songbird

Reimagining money, value and energetic exchange (Part 1)

Reimagining Money, Value and Energetic Exchange, Part 1: What Does It Mean to Be Wealthy?

1. A Cash Transaction Sparks a Larger Inquiry
Theresa begins with a recent drive-through experience in Australia, where a young worker appeared unable to calculate cash change without a phone. Rather than placing blame on the worker, she presents the moment as a prompt to consider how cash use, digital payments and practical learning are changing. She asks listeners to examine what money represents and whether education is keeping pace with shifting forms of exchange.

2. Currency, Value and Discernment
The host distinguishes money from broader ideas of prosperity, abundance and wealth. She discusses claims she has encountered about fiat money, digital currencies such as XRP and XLM, and possible changes to currency systems, while acknowledging that she does not have conclusive evidence to teach those claims as established fact. Her emphasis is on inquiry and discernment rather than fear or outright rejection of money.

3. Exchange Before Modern Money
Theresa reflects on earlier forms of exchange, including food, labor, tools, seeds, craftsmanship, knowledge and community support. She recognizes that barter is difficult to scale in larger societies yet argues that historical models can remind listeners of the importance of relationships, skills and contribution. The discussion uses community-based exchange as a lens for thinking about how value is created and recognized.

4. Questions About Financial Change and Education
The episode turns to the host's concern that children may not be learning enough about changing economic systems, inflation, digital currencies and the social meaning of money. She raises opinions circulating in her communities about asset-backed currencies, central banking and digital financial systems, presenting them as matters for investigation and conversation. She encourages parents, homeschoolers and others who influence young people to explore these questions thoughtfully.

5. Money Language, Beliefs and Energetic Exchange
Theresa connects familiar financial language—such as currency, cash flow, liquidity, banks and frozen accounts—with imagery of water and flow and says this can be an engaging topic for discussion with teenagers. She then moves toward the episode's energetic theme, suggesting that beliefs, discomfort or emotional triggers around money can affect how people relate to giving, receiving and abundance. The host invites listeners to approach the topic without fear or judgement.

6. Wealth Beyond a Bank Balance
The host concludes that wealth can include health, time, freedom, creativity, practical skills, meaningful relationships, community support, emotional well-being, spirituality, inner peace and purpose. She warns against losing creativity through overdependence on artificial intelligence and argues that human skills and authentic relationships carry substantial value. She closes by announcing a future second part focused on scarcity programming, abundance and practices intended to help listeners examine their beliefs about energetic flow.

Sons of Liberty Radio, May 22, 2026

Sat, 23 May 2026
Sons of Liberty Radio with Bradlee Dean

It's Friday, Friends...

It’s Friday, Friends: Bradley Dean on Media Priorities, Grace Under Pressure, Simpler American Living, and a Lighter Friday Reflection

Raising Disciples, Not Spectators
The episode begins with a prerecorded ministry message arguing that too many pastors refuse to preach against the sins of the nation even though they know Scripture addresses those issues. The speaker cites George Barna, George Whitefield, and older Christian leaders to argue that the church has become passive, deadened, and unwilling to call people to repentance. The introduction insists that the church should be aggressive in discipleship and public witness rather than defensive or silent.

A Friday Opening and a Complaint About Misunderstanding
When Bradley Dean begins the live portion, he first addresses someone who has been emailing the ministry office and, in his view, assuming he said something he did not say. He uses that exchange to encourage direct communication rather than accusation, reminds listeners that the program is a place where people are expected to think for themselves, and reintroduces the show’s broader mission of confronting cultural and political corruption.

Media Priorities and the Value of Human Life
Dean’s first major topic is a media story about a tourist accused of throwing a rock at an endangered Hawaiian monk seal. He says the story illustrates how major media organizations intensely spotlight harm to animals while minimizing or excusing abortion and crimes against unborn children. His central point is that public institutions and media outlets reveal their moral priorities by what they choose to emphasize, condemn, and protect.

Grace, Resistance, and the Donkey in the Well
After a commercial break, Dean shifts to a more devotional and motivational tone, describing grace as the empowering force that enables believers to overcome sin, trials, and discouragement. He tells a parable about a donkey buried alive with shovelfuls of dirt, only to shake the dirt off and use it as a step upward. Dean applies the story to Christian perseverance, saying believers should use trials and attacks as steppingstones rather than allowing them to bury or defeat them.

Simpler Times, Work, and the Cost of Living
The longest later section of the program is a reflective tour through wages, housing prices, telephones, cigarettes, cars, taxes, and household economics from the late 1800s through the 2010s. Dean argues that earlier Americans often lived with less material abundance but greater peace of mind and less government intrusion. He contrasts earlier patterns of work, home life, and local responsibility with what he sees as today’s inflation, dependency, surveillance, debt, and federal overreach.

A Lighter Ending With a BBS-Created Song
To close the Friday show on a lighter note, Dean plays an AI-generated song created by Don from BBS using information about his ministry and persona. The song portrays him in dramatic and heroic terms, blending biblical, constitutional, and patriotic imagery. Dean laughs, praises the effort, invites listeners to church on Sunday, and ends the program with appreciation for the creative support coming from BBS.

LEO Round Table, May 22, 2026

Fri, 22 May 2026
LEO Round Table with Chip DeBlock

S11E100, New Details Emerge Of The San Diego Mosque Shooting That Left Three Dead

New details emerge of the San Diego Mosque shooting that left three dead. Officer charged in the fatal shooting of a suspect who approached him with a knife.

New Details Emerge in Deadly San Diego Mosque Shooting; Officers Debate Knife-Threat Shooting Charge

SAN DIEGO SHOOTING DISCUSSED
The host opens the episode by introducing Chief Ralph and outlining several law-enforcement stories planned for discussion. The principal first topic is the deadly attack at the Islamic Center of San Diego, where the host says two teenage suspects killed three men before apparently dying by suicide. The program treats the attack as a developing investigation, discussing reported extremist material, possible hate-crime motivation, and investigators’ efforts to determine how the suspects acquired weapons and tactical gear.

SECURITY GUARD REMEMBERED AS A HERO
A central focus of the San Diego discussion is an armed security guard identified in the transcript as Abdullah. The host and Chief Ralph describe him as a hero who engaged the attackers, continued responding after being struck, and initiated a lockdown that protected people inside the mosque, including many children. They also mention a fundraiser for his surviving family and emphasize their belief that his actions kept the attack from becoming even more devastating.

TRAINING, PREPAREDNESS, AND FAMILY ACCOUNTABILITY
The host and Chief Ralph reflect on officer-survival training and the lesson that a person who has been wounded may still be able to fight back and protect others. Chief Ralph raises questions about whether the suspects had surveilled the mosque and whether parents should be held accountable when minors gain access to firearms. Both speakers present the attack as a reminder that houses of worship must be alert to security threats and prepared to respond.

CONNECTICUT OFFICER FACES MANSLAUGHTER CHARGE
The second major subject concerns a former Hartford, Connecticut, police officer charged with first-degree manslaughter after fatally shooting Steven Jones, who the speakers describe as advancing with a knife. The host reviews reported criticisms of the officer, including that other officers had been on scene longer without firing, that less-lethal options were not used, and that the officer allegedly failed to adequately de-escalate the encounter before using deadly force.

DEBATE OVER COMMAND, DE-ESCALATION, AND DEADLY FORCE
Chief Ralph criticizes the handling of the Connecticut incident before the shooting, saying he saw too many officers issuing commands, inadequate containment, ineffective scene control, and missed opportunities for alternative tactics. The host agrees that the earlier response lacked command presence but argues that an officer facing an advancing knife-armed subject should not be required to repeat failed de-escalation efforts or retreat in a way that increases his vulnerability. Their disagreement illustrates differing law-enforcement philosophies concerning lethal threats and de-escalation standards.

POLICY, POLITICS, AND OFFICER DECISION-MAKING
The speakers broaden the discussion to California use-of-force review standards and what Chief Ralph characterizes as political influence on officer-involved-shooting decisions. Both say agencies should use incidents like the Hartford shooting for training, especially concerning command presence, less-lethal resources, crossfire risks, and containment. The show closes with sponsor acknowledgments and a promise to continue following developments in the Connecticut officer’s case.

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