Listen

Description

Albany is the perfect metaphor: polished power, dirty streets, and a political class that demands applause while families do the math in the dark. Peter Vazquez throws a hard rule on the table: “If you cannot explain what you believe without insulting people or hiding behind slogans, you do not understand it.” Then the show stops being theoretical.

 

Paul calls in at 72, living on Social Security, saying New York stripped Medicaid because he “makes too much.” No victim badge. Just grit: grow food, store food, hunt, fish, survive. That is not nostalgia. That is what people do when government “help” becomes a trapdoor.

 

Now put numbers to the ache. In 2022, 18.2% of adults reported recent anxiety symptoms and 21.4% reported recent depression symptoms. In 2023, 49,316 Americans died by suicide, including 27,300 firearm suicides. That is not a talking point. That is a body count.

 

So, when faith gets flattened into bumper-sticker unity, the hour refuses. Pastor Ken Todd draws the line between religion and relationship, adoption and servitude, and Septimus Scott steps in to argue for common ground without pretending truth has no edges. Romans 8:15 is the stake in the ground: family, not fear.

 

This is the Vanbōōlzalness Crisis: slogans as currency, nuance as a liability, and confusion sold as compassion. Listen sharp. Then speak up, because silence is how the rot wins.