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Jon Hunter joins Chris Clements for one of the most personal and reflective conversations ever recorded on Light Beer Dark Money. Chris lost his father, Bill Clements, unexpectedly in 1995 when he was just 58 years old. What began as a lung cancer diagnosis became a two-month journey that forever changed the course of his life. Jon also reflects on the loss of his larger-than-life father, Dan Hunter, who passed away from congestive heart failure in 2005, and the lessons that continue to shape him more than two decades later. Together, Chris and Jon explore fatherhood, loss, legacy, faith, resilience, perseverance, and the enduring influence of the men who raised them. They discuss the values their fathers instilled, the wisdom that only becomes clearer with age, and the responsibility of passing those lessons on to their own sons as they navigate adulthood. Thoughtful, emotional, and deeply human, this is a conversation about grief, gratitude, and the realization that even after they're gone, our fathers never really stop teaching us. A poignant and memorable episode of Light Beer Dark Money you won't want to miss. Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/ #PrattPodcasting
Photo: The international boundary between Mexico and the Tohono O'odham Nation in June 2026. (Gabriel Pietrorazio) An Arizona tribe along the Southern border has filed a lawsuit in federal court against the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). KJZZ's Gabriel Pietrorazio has details. The Tohono O'odham Nation has submitted an injunction to halt the Trump administration from looking to build a wall along its 62-mile boundary with Mexico. According to the complaint, the administration plans to solicit contracts for construction on sovereign lands – without the tribe's consent. Tohono O'odham Chairman Verlon Jose in a social media message. “We would prefer not to file this lawsuit, and instead use these resources for our people. And it is our hope DHS will reconsider their plans once they see the strength of our arguments, however, at this point we have been left with no other choice.” Carla Johnson is Tohono O'odham Vice Chairwoman. “The wall is a wasteful political gimmick. It will separate our families, desecrate our sacred sites and waters and harm our natural environment, while doing nothing to actually make us safer.” In response to the legal filings, DHS cites Mullin's Cherokee citizenship and commitment to tribal sovereignty, telling KJZZ the agency “values its relationship with the Tohono O'odham Nation and remains focused on open communication and minimizing impacts.” Sheep graze in the Coppermine Community near Page, Ariz. (Courtesy Loren Thomas) A Navajo Nation community near Page voted Sunday to oppose a controversial copper mine proposal, as KNAU's Chris Clements reports. The Coppermine Chapter voted 45-12 to adopt a resolution opposing Essential Minerals' exploration of a possible copper mine. The resolution also rescinded a policy put forward by the chapter back in 2005 that supported exploration of a separate copper mine. The resolution adopted on Sunday says back in 2005, the company looking into mining failed to fulfill its commitments. It adds that no mining company – like Essential Minerals – can use the 2005 policy to justify exploring a copper mine now. Tribal members say they are worried a copper mine would cause health and environmental issues in the community. Representatives of Essential Minerals previously told KNAU they want to build trust about the project, which they say is just being explored right now. Community members enjoy a meal at the 2026 Return of the Salmon Celebration at Riverview Park in Bethel on June 13, 2026. (Photo: MaryCait Dolan / KYUK) The day after the season's first drift gillnet fishing opener, salmon remained top of mind for fishers of the Kuskokwim River, as KYUK's Samantha Watson reports. At Riverview Park in Bethel, Alaska, community members gathered and filled plates of dried whitefish and grilled, fresh-caught fillets of king salmon. The second annual Return of the Salmon event was put on by Mother Kuskokwim Tribal Coalition, a grassroots organization opposing the proposed Donlin gold mine. Supporters of the mine point to the job prospects it would bring to locals in the region. Calista Corporation, the regional Native corporation who owns the subsurface rights to the proposed mine site, says that responsible development and subsistence can coexist. Others, like Mother Kuskokwim, say it is too risky. They argue that potential contamination from the mine could pose dire environmental impacts, namely for the region's salmon populations. The celebration is, at its core, an anti-Donlin demonstration, but it feels like a fish camp cookout. Organizer Gloria Simeon says on the Kuskokwim, salmon is a mechanism for something bigger. “Fish camp is not an activity. Fish camp is the time, the single most important time of families coming together with one purpose, and that’s to get prepared for the winter, catch our salmon, take care of it, to have it for the winter, and it’s not just only about that, it’s about sharing your genealogy, your oral traditions, our cultural values, who we are as a people, our history.” She talks about how it is sustained her family, and people like her granddaughter, Ashlynn Simeon, who is the Deputy Director of Mother Kuskokwim organization. She says the moments on display in a community event like this — children playing, babies having their first bites of fresh salmon of the season — that is what the Mother Kuskokwim advocates are trying to protect. Get National Native News delivered to your inbox daily. Sign up for our daily newsletter today. Download our NV1 Android or iOs App for breaking news alerts. Check out today’s Native America Calling episode Thursday, June 18, 2026 — Native Bookshelf: ‘The Home of the Drowned’ by Elin Anna Labba
Former Arizona Governor Doug Ducey joins Chris and Sean for a wide-ranging conversation that feels more like three old friends sharing a beer than a political interview. Ducey takes listeners back to the beginning, from building Cold Stone Creamery into a nationally recognized brand to his first foray into public service as Arizona State Treasurer and ultimately his two terms as Governor of Arizona. Chris and Sean explore the importance of understanding why you're running for office, the personal and professional challenges that come with public service, and the lessons learned from years spent navigating politics, policy, and leadership. Ducey shares insights on preparing for elected office and staying focused on principles in an increasingly polarized political environment. The conversation also dives into some of Arizona's most important policy successes, including charter schools, Education Savings Accounts (ESAs), school choice, and the critical role civic education plays in preparing the next generation of Americans. Finally, the trio examines the future of conservative ideas, political engagement, and where the country may be headed as new leaders emerge. It's an honest, thoughtful, and often humorous discussion about leadership, public service, education, and the enduring importance of faith, freedom, and free enterprise. Three Arizona conservatives. Three friends. One great conversation. Grab a cold one and join us—you won't want to miss this episode.
Sean Noble and Chris Clements are back for another episode of Light Beer Dark Money, covering politics, culture, media, and a little classic rock. Chris opens the show with a firsthand recap of Rush's return to the stage in Los Angeles, including the band's tribute to Neil Peart, the debut of new drummer Anika Nilles, and why the first show back felt like a major moment for longtime Rush fans. From there, Sean and Chris turn to Los Angeles politics and the fallout from Spencer Pratt's campaign. Sean explains why Pratt never had a realistic path to victory in a city where Republicans make up such a small share of the electorate, but also why the campaign may still have mattered if it forces Karen Bass and city leadership to move toward his message on homelessness, public safety, and making Los Angeles livable again. They also react to Marco Rubio's latest congressional hearing moments, including his response to Democrats trying to push a new narrative about Donald Trump's health and cognitive ability. Sean and Chris argue that Democrats are the last people who should be raising that issue after years of defending Joe Biden. The conversation then turns to Trump's NBC interview on Iran, his “no new wars” promise, and why Sean believes preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon is one of the clearest and most consequential decisions of Trump's presidency. Later, Sean and Chris discuss the shakeup at CBS News, Scott Pelley's firing from 60 Minutes, Barry Weiss, The Free Press, and the broader problem of liberal bias in legacy media. They also talk about why conservatives should still read and listen outside their own bubble, and why fair journalism still matters. The episode wraps with a look at the future of the Republican Party, including Marco Rubio, JD Vance, Donald Trump's work ethic, and what leadership after Trump may look like. Faith, freedom, free enterprise — and the weekly conversation you expect from Light Beer Dark Money. #MarcoRubio #DonaldTrump #MediaBias #CaliforniaPolitics #Rush #FreeEnterprise Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/ #PrattPodcasting
The University of Washington’s WWAMI medical school program just received a new $25 million endowment for scholarships and rural education support, as Alaska Public Media's Rachel Cassandra reports. The program gets its name from the five states it serves – Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana, and Idaho – and educates emerging physicians in those rural states. Dr. Nick Phelps, WWAMI's assistant dean at the University of Alaska Anchorage, says the gift will go to scholarships for 30 eligible students across the five-state class. “For the students who are accepted to receive this scholarship, it covers half of their tuition.” Phelps says those eligible to apply for the scholarships are students in two specific programs: one, a rural track, and the other, a tribal and traditional medicine track. Medical school tuition – and the debt students take on to pay it – can run in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. Phelps says the scholarships change the financial equation. “Primary care practices and primary care physicians… are the bedrock of medicine, for lack of a better term. They’re also some of the lowest paid specialties for students to go into, so for somebody who really is strongly interested in family medicine, pediatrics, internal medicine, some of those other primary care specialties, they have to do a bit of an internal calculus.” Many medical students choose specialties that pay better, which has helped create a shortage of primary care practitioners, both in Alaska and across the U.S. Phelps notes that the U.S. Department of Education will soon start limiting student loan amounts that Americans can take out for higher education, including medical school. Philanthropists William and Carolyn Franke and their family gave the WWAMI program the $25 million endowment to create the Franke Medical Student Scholars Program. Phelps says he hopes that the resulting scholarships encourage more Alaska students to focus on medicine that serves rural, remote and Indigenous Alaskans. The cliffs of Black Mesa on the Navajo Nation on September 1, 2023. (Photo: Chris Clements / KNAU) An energy company is asking for preliminary approval from the feds to look into building a hydropower project on the Navajo Nation. KNAU's Chris Clements has more. The company Nature and People First is asking for a preliminary permit from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to investigate building a pumped storage project near Chilchinbeto, Ariz. It would include two reservoirs holding a total of 20,000 acre-feet of water. Pumped storage projects generate energy by letting water flow downhill and then pumping it back up. Nature and People First tried to get federal approval for three pumped storage projects in 2021, but the Navajo Nation and the feds later said no. Critics cited concerns about overuse of aquifers and damage to the environment of nearby Black Mesa, which is considered sacred by the Navajo and Hopi tribes. If it is granted, the permit would not allow the company to disturb any land or give them permission to enter private property. Grand Exit at Celebration 2026. (Courtesy Sealaska Heritage Institute) Thousands of Alaska Natives and visitors gathered in Juneau, Alaska last week for Celebration 2026, one of the largest Indigenous cultural events in the state. The four-day gathering, organized by Sealaska Heritage Institute, brought together Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian dancers, artists, and culture bearers from across Southeast Alaska, Canada, and beyond. The event featured traditional song and dance performances, Native art, language activities, and cultural workshops. This year’s theme was “Enduring Strength”. Celebration began more than 40 years ago as a way to preserve Native cultures and pass traditional knowledge to younger generations. Organizers say the event continues to showcase the survival and persistence of Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian traditions while strengthening connections among Indigenous communities throughout the region. Get National Native News delivered to your inbox daily. Sign up for our daily newsletter today. Download our NV1 Android or iOs App for breaking news alerts. Check out today’s Native America Calling episode Monday, June 8, 2026 — Confronting division with Pride
Victor Riches, President and CEO of the Goldwater Institute, joins Chris Clements and Sean Noble for a timely discussion on the growing battle over water policy, economic development, and the future of Arizona. With state budget negotiations still stalled and critical policy decisions hanging in the balance, the conversation turns to Governor Katie Hobbs' ongoing opposition to budget proposals that would maintain conformity with the federal tax code—potentially impacting more than 700,000 Arizona small businesses, workers benefiting from the elimination of taxes on tips, and Social Security recipients. Chris, Sean, and Victor also examine how water policy is increasingly being used as a tool to restrict development across the state, including major economic opportunities such as data centers, advanced manufacturing, and other job-creating investments. They discuss the rise of NIMBY politics, the challenges facing Arizona's long-term growth, and what policymakers should be doing to balance responsible water stewardship with economic prosperity. As one of Arizona's leading advocates for limited government, individual liberty, and free enterprise, Victor provides a thoughtful and fact-based perspective on the policy choices that will shape the state's future. We are proud to have Goldwater as a Primary Partner of our efforts at LBDM. A must-listen conversation for anyone interested in Arizona politics, economic development, water policy, and the principles of Faith, Freedom, and Free Enterprise. #Arizona #GoldwaterInstitute #VictorRiches #WaterPolicy #EconomicDevelopment #SmallBusiness #FaithFreedomFreeEnterprise Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/ #PrattPodcasting
Sean Noble and Chris Clements are back for another episode of Light Beer Dark Money, covering a mix of politics, policy, culture, and a few personal stories from the week. They start with Texas politics and a look at James Talarico, whose repeated campaign story raises questions about authenticity, faith, and how Democrats are trying to appeal to more conservative voters. Sean and Chris also discuss Ken Paxton, the Texas Senate race, and how voters may weigh personal baggage against policy and party control. From there, they react to Bernie Sanders' proposal for the public to take a 50% stake in AI companies. The conversation turns to free enterprise, innovation, and why government ownership of emerging technology would be a dangerous mistake. They also discuss Jill Biden's new book tour and the ongoing fallout from questions about Joe Biden's health and who was really making decisions during his presidency. Later, Sean and Chris react to Marco Rubio's Senate hearing exchanges on Iran sanctions, national security, and political grandstanding. The episode wraps with a California election preview, Sean's reflections from a Hyrox race in New York, and a pop culture discussion after seeing Six on Broadway during Dylan Mulvaney's final performance. Faith, freedom, free enterprise — and the weekly conversation you expect from Light Beer Dark Money. Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/ #StarWorldwideNetworks #PrattMarketingAgency #PrattPodcasting
John Trobough, Republican candidate for Congress in Arizona's 1st Congressional District, joins Chris and Sean for a wide-ranging conversation about one of the most competitive House seats in the country — and one of the biggest policy fights of the next decade: artificial intelligence. Trobough brings an unusual background to the race. He is a technology business executive, former defense tech CEO, White House Presidential Innovation Fellow, and managing partner at JLA Advisors — with experience spanning software, cybersecurity, defense, telecom, enterprise technology, and AI. That gives him a front-row view of how emerging technology is reshaping national security, the economy, privacy, Big Tech power, and America's competition with China. Chris and Sean dig into what lessons policymakers should learn from the early days of the internet — what Washington got right, what it got wrong, and how those lessons should guide the coming AI revolution. Should government regulate AI more aggressively, or get out of the way so America can innovate faster than its adversaries? How should Arizona position itself in the future of AI, data centers, energy, defense manufacturing, and next-generation infrastructure? The conversation also turns to the race for AZ-01, an open seat after Congressman David Schweikert's decision to run for governor. Trobough discusses what he is hearing from voters across the Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, Phoenix, and Fountain Hills, including concerns about border security, affordability, economic growth, national security, and whether Washington understands the pace of technological change. This is a timely conversation about Arizona politics, the future of AI, and what kind of leadership voters in Congressional District 1 are looking for in 2026. Learn more about John Trobough and his campaign at troboughforaz.com. #AZ01 #ArizonaPolitics #AI #BigTech #2026Election Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/ #StarWorldwideNetworks #PrattMarketingAgency #PrattPodcasting
What does it mean to be young, faithful, and unafraid to lead in today's culture? New Notre Dame Prep graduate Camille Kayyem — daughter of frequent LBDM guest Luke Kayyem — joins Chris and Sean for an inspiring and insightful conversation about faith, leadership, identity, and the growing spiritual hunger emerging among younger generations. Camille shares her experience challenging the status quo at Notre Dame Prep, why faith has become central to how she approaches leadership and life, and how many young people today are searching for something deeper than what culture is offering them. As she prepares to head to the University of Tampa to play soccer and begin her next chapter, Camille talks candidly about the pressures facing graduates today, the importance of conviction and courage, and why young men and women are increasingly turning back toward faith, purpose, and community. An encouraging and hopeful episode for parents, students, and anyone wondering where the next generation is headed. #LightBeerDarkMoney #FaithGeneration #NextGeneration #Faith #Leadership #GenZ #ChristianLeadership #NotreDamePrep #UniversityOfTampa #Family #Culture #FreeEnterprise #Freedom #FaithAndFreedom #YoungLeaders #Podcast #ConservativePodcast #LeadershipMatters #Parenting #Soccer #ChrisAndSean #StarWorldwideNetworks #PrattMarketingAgency Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Photo: Alex Osif is a former coal miner who worked at the Kayenta and Black Mesa mines. (Chris Clements / KNAU) A congressional watchdog office found some miners with black lung disease face barriers in getting federal payments for their disabilities. As KNAU's Chris Clements reports, that rings true to a former coal miner and advocate on the Navajo Nation. Alex Osif (Navajo, Hopi, and Pima) was a coal miner at the Black Mesa and Kayenta mines. He says the coal companies that are on the hook for paying miners' benefits can slow the process down by not providing employment histories. “That’s the kinda complications I’m having, proving that the miner did work at a mine for so many years.” The lengthy process of applying for benefits is one issue identified by the US. Government Accountability Office in a new report. It also found many coal miners have trouble using the health benefits they are entitled to, like when they need money for transportation to doctors' appointments. “The program needs to view these operators and continue to make sure that they stand up to their promise to the miner.” To help with that issue, the report says the feds need to keep track of the medical coverage coal companies give disabled miners. Tracy Day has been missing since February 14, 2019. (Courtesy Juneau Police Department) The daughter of missing Juneau, Alaska woman Tracy Day wants people to know who her mother was beyond an MMIW rallying cry. It has been seven years since Day disappeared, and the family is still searching for answers. KTOO's Yvonne Krumrey has more. Kaelyn Schnieder says her mom was always finding new adventures for the family to go on. The house she grew up in in Sitka, Alaska was spotless and Day was taking night classes to be a nurse. Her struggles with mental health came later. “But I feel like, when she went missing, everybody was like, ‘Oh, she's living in St Vincent. And like, she's a mentally ill addict.' It was just not the way I wanted people to see her, because my mom was a wonderful parent, and she wasn't always sick.” Schneider says when she was a young child, she was the victim of child sex abuse by her friend's father. After Day found out what had happened, she blamed herself for trusting the family. Schneider believes it triggered Day's mental health issues. “It changed her brain chemistry, you know. So that's, like, the best way I could explain it.” Schneider thinks that changed the trajectory of her mother's life. Day struggled with mental illness and substance abuse, but Schneider wants people to know her mom the way she remembers her, as a dignified, even glamorous woman. “She was kind of like a diva. Like back in the day, she always had her hair done, lipstick done, nails, everything. She was always dressed so beautifully.” She was also a devoted parent and she was fun. “When she wasn't at work, we were never bored. We would go ride our bike and we would get curly fries with cheese and milkshakes, and then we would go to the duck pond and feed the ducks. And, like, she was a good, like, playful parent.” Schneider says that even through Dayʼs later mental health crises, she always stuck around and checked in with her family. “She would not take off. She's the opposite. She's like, the parent that annoys you, because they're showing up so much.” Schneider's son was born after Day went missing. He is five years old now and she is finding herself having to explain the absence. “My son, he's at that age where he's starting to question, like, ‘what happened to grandma?' And like, ‘Why is she not in your life?' And you know, like, he always asks — it's so horrible — He always asks, like, ‘Are you gonna disappear?' And like, as a mom, that is just horrible. You know that knowing that my son, like, has that thought in his head, because he knows it's a possibility.” So Schneider says, for him and for her newborn son, she will keep looking for the truth of what happened to her mom. “I really want to keep searching and talking about her case, not only for me, but also for my sons. I want them to know that people are still interested and care.” Get National Native News delivered to your inbox daily. Sign up for our daily newsletter today. Download our NV1 Android or iOs App for breaking news alerts. Check out today’s Native America Calling episode Friday, May 22, 2026 — A conversation with Native wellness advocates Chelsea Luger and Thosh Collins
Trump's grip on the Republican Party is no longer theoretical—it's playing out in primaries across the country. Chris and Sean break down a wild week in 2026 politics, from Rep. Thomas Massie's Kentucky primary loss to Brad Raffensperger getting knocked out in Georgia, Trump-backed wins in Indiana state Senate races, and Sen. Bill Cassidy's collapse in Louisiana. What do these races tell us about the modern GOP? Is this just Trump loyalty—or a deeper Republican realignment driven by populism, MAHA, foreign policy, and grassroots frustration with establishment Republicans? Then the guys turn to Texas, where Trump's endorsement of Ken Paxton in the U.S. Senate race against John Cornyn could either seal a MAGA victory—or make the general election much more expensive and unpredictable for Republicans. Meanwhile, Democrats finally released their long-delayed 2024 election autopsy—and immediately tried to distance themselves from it. The report warns that Democrats lost ground with men, non-college voters, rural voters, and irregular voters, but the DNC's reaction may say even more than the report itself. Are Democrats serious about learning from 2024, or are they still avoiding the hard truths? Plus, Chris and Sean bring it home to Arizona with the increasingly nasty AZ-01 GOP primary, where Joseph Chaplik's attack on Jay Feely over Feely's work helping Haitian men come to the U.S. sparked a major firestorm in one of the most competitive congressional districts in America. From Trump endorsements and GOP primary wars to the DNC's messaging crisis and Arizona's toss-up House battleground, this episode of Light Beer Dark Money covers the fights shaping 2026—and the bigger political realignment heading into 2028. #LightBeerDarkMoney #Trump #GOPPrimary #DNC #2026Midterms #KenPaxton #JohnCornyn #ThomasMassie #BillCassidy #BradRaffensperger #MAHA #ArizonaPolitics #AZ01 #JayFeely #RepublicanPrimary #Democrats #StarWorldwideNetworks #PrattMarketingAgency Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Photos: Anchorage police Chief Sean Case, left, and Kelly Hunt. (Rhonda McBride / Courtesy Melvin Hunt) Anchorage Police say they are in the final stages of their investigation into the death of Kelly Hunt, the 19-year-old Shaktoolik student who disappeared in January on her way to college in Soldotna, as Rhonda McBride from our flagship station KNBA reports. Hunt's remains were found last month in a ravine in same Anchorage neighborhood where she had been staying with a friend. Anchorage Police Chief Sean Case says the Medical Examiner's preliminary report determined Hunt died from hypothermia and exposure, with alcohol in her system. “There's no indication that there's physical trauma. There's no indication that an assault has occurred. So, most of those questions — on whether-or-not there was a homicide — those questions have been answered through the Medical Examiner's process.” Case says Hunt was missing for more than 100 days, and due to prolonged exposure to the elements, he says it is nearly impossible to determine Hunt's exact time of death. Before closing out the investigation, Case says police will conduct follow-up interviews to learn more about the circumstances leading up to her death. Based on the outcome of those interviews, Case says the investigation could shift back towards a criminal case. He calls Hunt's death a tragedy, but says there is no evidence of a crime. Hunt was supposed to catch a bus from Anchorage to attend the Alaska Christian College in Soldotna, Alaska. Her friends told police she left on the morning of January 7 to meet with someone to buy alcohol and had left her purse and suitcase behind. Case says the investigation was further complicated, because her disappearance was not reported until four days later, but despite that, Case believes his police officers and detectives did a thorough job. But advocates for Missing and Murdered Indigenous People, including Antonia Commack, question police handling of the case. She says investigators are drawing conclusions too soon, without first questioning the people who last saw Hunt.” “How are you going to make that determination before you speak to those people. Because the bottom line is, she is not old enough to drink herself. Somebody furnished her alcohol and she wound up dead. That should be a crime.” The Anchorage Police Department timed their report on the Kelly Hunt case with the launch of a new online dashboard that tracks missing persons iAnchorage and the department's homicide clearance rate. Case says the report confirms that Alaska Natives make up a disproportionate share of both missing persons and homicides, but says cases involving both Native and non-Native victims are solved at about the same rate. The Pinyon Plain Mine, as seen from the air in November 2019, is located on the Kaibab National Forest less than 10 miles from the South Rim of Grand Canyon National Park. (Photo: Ryan Heinsius / KNAU) The company that owns a uranium mine near the Grand Canyon wants Arizona state regulators to approve a higher arsenic level in nearby groundwater. KNAU's Chris Clements reports at least two scientists oppose the idea. Brad Esser used to work for Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. He was asked by a nonprofit that opposes Energy Fuels' Pinyon Plain Mine mine to look into the request. “It sets the wrong incentive. You know, the response to high levels … is to try to understand what’s going on, not just simply raise the permit levels.” But Energy Fuels says the higher arsenic levels are naturally occurring in groundwater near the mine, and are not because of mining activity. Curtis Moore is a company executive. “It’s not surprising that there are elevated levels of arsenic next to this ore body. That’s why we put a mine there, because there’s an ore body there.” But Esser and another scientist argue it is more likely the mine is contributing to the high levels. “They think the mine's ventilation shafts could be creating oxygen-rich groundwater, causing arsenic minerals to dissolve. If that's true, Esser worries arsenic could one day reach the Havasuapi Tribe's key source of drinking water.” Get National Native News delivered to your inbox daily. Sign up for our daily newsletter today. Download our NV1 Android or iOs App for breaking news alerts. Check out today’s Native America Calling episode Wednesday, May 20, 2026 – Native Playlist: Joy Harjo and Julia Keefe Indigenous Big Band
Sean Noble and Chris Clements are back with a classic rant episode that jumps from Arizona governor polling to congressional staffing, redistricting warfare, Kamala Harris fantasy-land reforms, and a closing reflection on why faith is still the foundation of the American experiment. They start in Arizona, where new polling from Mike Noble shows Andy Biggs absolutely dominating the Republican primary for governor while David Schweikert trails badly. Sean and Chris do not sugarcoat it: if those numbers are real, Schweikert's campaign is over in all but name. They argue the signs are in the wrong places, the math was never there, and the whole effort now risks damaging the legacy of a congressman they otherwise respect on policy. That leads to a broader conversation about what a chief of staff is actually supposed to do, why staffing matters more than most people realize, and how much a strong operation can make or break a member of Congress. From there, they pivot to Arizona's 1st Congressional District and the Democrats' quiet primary drama. Sean breaks down why the DCCC appears to be putting its thumb on the scale for Marlene Galán-Woods over Amish Shah, and speculates that the national Democrats may be trying to manage internal identity-politics tensions as much as they are trying to win a seat. At the same time, the national redistricting picture is shifting fast. With Virginia's maps struck down, Florida already moving, and Alabama and Louisiana in play, Sean and Chris argue the House picture is no longer the lock Democrats thought it was even a couple weeks ago. Then comes a quick but telling detour through Kamala Harris and the latest round of left-wing procedural fantasies: court packing, statehood pushes, and even multi-member congressional districts. Sean uses that to make a bigger point about Congress itself — that the House is too small, too reliant on bureaucrats, and too disconnected from the actual constitutional job of legislating. It becomes one of the more thoughtful stretches of the episode: less about partisan theater and more about how the system stopped functioning the way it was designed to. The final act is the strongest. Sean and Chris talk about Michael Auslin's National Treasure, the Declaration of Independence, the founders' imperfections, and the central role of faith in the country's creation. That sets up a powerful closing clip from Marco Rubio marking the 250th anniversary of the Continental Congress's call to fasting and prayer before independence. Rubio's point — and Sean and Chris clearly agree — is that America's exceptional story cannot be understood apart from its spiritual roots. The founders were not perfect men, but they built a system grounded in providence, liberty, and the belief that a free people under God could build something history had never seen before. It is a fitting end to an episode about politics, power, and the deeper things that still hold the country together. #MarcoRubio #AndyBiggs #ArizonaPolitics #Redistricting #FaithAndFreedom #StarWorldwideNetworks #PrattMarketingAgency Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
President Trump just handed Democrats a made-for-TV attack line — but did he also show the kind of political courage presidents are supposed to have? Chris and Sean kick off this episode with Trump's explosive comments about not weighing Americans' financial pain the same way when deciding how to stop Iran from getting a nuclear weapon. It is exactly the kind of quote Democrats will hammer from now through the midterms. But Sean argues there is another side to the story: presidents do not get to make national security decisions based only on polls, gas prices, or the next election. Sometimes the job is to protect the country now — and for decades to come — even when the politics are brutal. Then the guys turn to Trump's high-stakes visit to China and his meeting with Xi Jinping, where Iran, Taiwan, oil, trade, and American leverage all collided. With tensions rising over Taiwan, energy markets under pressure, and China looking for every advantage, the Trump-Xi summit may tell us a lot about where the world is headed — and how much room Trump really has to maneuver. Finally, Chris and Sean break down George Will's column imagining a Doug Ducey presidential run. Would the former Arizona governor be a serious national candidate? Absolutely. Is it likely to happen? The guys are far more skeptical — especially if Angela Ducey gets a vote. From Iran and China to the midterms and 2028 speculation, this episode is all about political risk, presidential judgment, and the difference between campaign talking points and governing in the real world. #Trump #Iran #China #XiJinping #Taiwan #Midterms #ForeignPolicy #NationalSecurity #DougDucey #GeorgeWill #ArizonaPolitics #LightBeerDarkMoney Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down a packed rant episode that starts with a rough family road-trip disaster and quickly turns into a broader conversation about collapse, credibility, and the political future of the country. What begins with Sean getting stranded in Blythe after the family truckster dies on the way back from Southern California turns into a bigger reflection on California dysfunction, the decline of Los Angeles, and why people are finally getting fed up. They spend real time on the surprising mayoral buzz around Spencer Pratt, who is tapping into the very real frustration Angelenos feel about homelessness, crime, failed leadership, and a city that has visibly deteriorated over the last several years. Sean and Chris agree that while he is saying a lot of the right things, Los Angeles is still Los Angeles, and the math is probably not there for him to win. Still, they argue he is exposing real pain in the city and could parlay that momentum into something bigger. From there, they pivot to Tucker Carlson's latest unraveling, reacting to a clip that they say perfectly captures the problem with Tucker's recent style: throwing out sweeping allegations, hinting at conspiracies, and then collapsing when pressed for even basic evidence. Sean and Chris frame it as part of the broader online sideshow around 2028, with supporters of JD Vance and Marco Rubio increasingly circling each other even though the real question is still much simpler: what shape is the country in when Trump leaves office? They also get into the real electoral stakes ahead, including redistricting shifts in Virginia, Florida, Alabama, and Louisiana, and what those changes could mean for the House map. Their argument is that Republicans still have a path to limit losses or even outperform expectations, but only if they stop the infighting and actually deliver on the agenda they were elected to pass. Then comes a classic AOC segment. Sean and Chris react to Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez claiming that billionaires cannot “earn” a billion dollars, using it as an example of how the hard left fundamentally misunderstands free enterprise, value creation, and the American system itself. For them, it is not just bad economics. It is a worldview that sees success as theft and treats prosperity as something government should confiscate. They wrap with Arizona news on Kari Lake's nomination for ambassador to Jamaica, a little skepticism about what that means politically, and then close on what Chris sees as the real headline of the future: Marco Rubio. Rubio's answer about America, its imperfect but exceptional history, and its story of continuous improvement leaves both hosts convinced he is the most compelling Republican voice for 2028. It is a strong finish to an episode about political competence, cultural decline, and why the country still needs leaders who can articulate what makes America worth defending. #MarcoRubio #AOC #LosAngeles #TuckerCarlson #KariLake Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Distinguished Hoover Institution scholar Michael Auslin joins Chris and Sean to discuss his powerful new book, National Treasure, which explores the turbulent and uncertain beginnings of the United States. Far from a guaranteed success story, America's founding was marked by division, sacrifice, risk, and extraordinary courage. Auslin unpacks the personalities, principles, and perilous moments that shaped the Declaration of Independence and the birth of the Republic — reminding us that the American experiment was never inevitable. Chris, Sean, and Michael also dive into the modern misperceptions and misunderstandings surrounding America's history and why attempting to erase or ignore the travesties of the past also ignores the extraordinary strides the nation made in continuing to form “a more perfect Union” — a mission that remains unfinished and essential today. This is a timely discussion about Faith, Freedom, and Free Enterprise — the founding principles that shaped the American experiment and continue to define the nation's civic and cultural identity nearly 250 years later. As America approaches its semi-quincentennial, this conversation examines not only where the country began, but what it must preserve moving forward. #LightBeerDarkMoney #MichaelAuslin #NationalTreasure #AmericanHistory #DeclarationOfIndependence #FoundingFathers #FaithFreedomFreeEnterprise #Patriotism #Constitution #AmericanExperiment #Freedom #Liberty #CivicEducation #HistoryMatters #HooverInstitution #TheAmericanMind #Faith #FreeEnterprise #Politics #Culture #UnitedStates #1776 #America250 #Podcast #PoliticalPodcast #ChrisAndSean #FoundingPrinciples #MorePerfectUnion #AmericanExceptionalism Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
The fight for control of the U.S. House is no longer just about candidates, fundraising, or the national mood. It is increasingly about the maps. In this episode of Light Beer Dark Money, Chris and Sean break down the fast-moving redistricting war reshaping American politics in real time. Florida has signed a new congressional map that could net Republicans four additional House seats, while Virginia voters approved a mid-decade redistricting plan that could help Democrats pick up as many as four seats—if it survives ongoing legal challenges. The stakes got even bigger after the Supreme Court's decision in Louisiana v. Callais, a major Voting Rights Act case that narrowed how states can use race when drawing congressional districts. The Court held that Louisiana's second majority-Black district was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander and said Section 2 compliance, as properly understood, did not justify that map. That ruling could unlock a new wave of redistricting fights across the South and beyond. Then there's Indiana, where the primary results sent a national message: Trump-backed challengers defeated most of the Republican state senators who blocked a congressional redistricting push. AP reported that at least five of seven Trump-endorsed challengers won, with one incumbent surviving and one race still too close to call at the time of reporting—turning a state legislative primary into a referendum on redistricting, party discipline, and control of Congress. And all of this may be just the opening act. After the 2030 census, reapportionment could shift more House seats and Electoral College votes toward fast-growing Sun Belt states. Current projections show major potential gains in the South, with Texas, Florida, and North Carolina especially important to watch, while states such as California, New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania, and others could lose representation. If today's partisan coalitions hold, that could reshape the 2032 presidential map and the congressional battlefield for the decade that follows. This episode connects the dots between the Supreme Court, state legislatures, primary elections, the 2030 census, and the future of the House majority. The redistricting wars are here—and they may define American politics through 2032 and beyond. Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Former Arizona Congressman John Shadegg joins Chris and Sean for the first episode in a new Light Beer Dark Money series: “How to Win an Election.” Shadegg brings a rare perspective: he served eight terms in Congress representing Arizona, grew up inside one of the most influential political families in the state, and is now working to update his father Stephen C. Shadegg's classic 1964 campaign book, How to Win an Election: The Art of Political Victory. This conversation is about something too many candidates never really learn: running for office is not the same thing as wanting to hold office. John Shadegg explains why candidates must understand the mechanics, discipline, message, voter contact, and emotional grind of actually winning a campaign. Chris and Sean dig into Stephen Shadegg's original campaign philosophy, written long before social media, text messaging, microtargeting, and cable news — but still surprisingly relevant today. The 1964 book treated campaigns as a craft: candidate preparation, voter psychology, message clarity, organization, persuasion, and relentless execution. In many ways, Shadegg's old-school lessons are even more important in a political era where too many campaigns outsource the hard work to consultants, analytics, and paid media. John argues that consultants have, in some ways, weakened the art of campaigning by letting candidates believe the “experts” can win it for them. But the candidate still has to carry the message, understand the voters, make the ask, and do the work. If you care about politics, campaign strategy, Arizona elections, conservative politics, or what it actually takes to win public office, this is a must-listen. #LightBeerDarkMoney #HowToWinAnElection #JohnShadegg #StephenShadegg #CampaignStrategy #ArizonaPolitics #PoliticalCampaigns #ElectionStrategy #ConservativePolitics #GOPPolitics #CampaignConsultants #PoliticalPodcast #GrassrootsPolitics #CandidateTraining #WinningElections Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Luke Kayyem joins Chris and Sean for a forward-looking conversation on Fathers of the Future—what it means to lead, provide, and model strength in a rapidly changing world. They explore the evolving role of fatherhood, the cultural pressures facing families today, and why intentional leadership at home has never mattered more. The conversation also goes deeper—into the reality that much of the mental health crisis facing men today is not just emotional or psychological, but spiritual. Luke, along with Chris and Sean, recognizes the importance of addressing the spiritual battle within. They discuss how many men are fighting struggles that can't be solved by surface-level fixes alone, and how confession, accountability, and a renewed commitment to faith can play a critical role in true restoration and clarity of purpose. Luke is also sponsoring a powerful Walk & Talk for Men's Mental Health this Sunday, May 3rd, beginning at Chaparral Christian Church on Shea Boulevard in Scottsdale. From there, men of all ages will walk approximately 10 miles to Optimize Fitness in Old Town Scottsdale—sharing stories, building brotherhood, and encouraging one another along the way. This is a must-listen for anyone concerned about the crisis of fatherhood and the role of men in our society—a conversation rooted in purpose, responsibility, brotherhood, and the importance of showing up for the next generation. Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down one of the most disturbing political weekends in recent memory: an armed suspect storming the White House Correspondents' Dinner security perimeter with a shotgun, handgun, and knives — and the bigger question of how America got to a place where political violence feels like it's always one step away. They walk through what happened at the Washington Hilton, why the suspect's manifesto and background matter, and how rhetoric from the media, activists, comedians, and political operatives can become a permission structure for unstable people to justify violence. Sean and Chris argue this is not random — it's part of a broader climate where calling political opponents fascists, pedophiles, or existential threats can push broken people over the edge. Then the episode pivots to another bombshell: the federal indictment of the Southern Poverty Law Center. Sean and Chris react to the allegations that the SPLC wasn't dismantling extremism — it was allegedly helping manufacture it, funding and fueling racial hatred to keep the grift alive. If true, they argue, that means one of the country's most influential “anti-hate” groups was actually helping create the very chaos it claimed to fight. They also zoom out to the 2028 political picture: Trump won't be on the ballot again, so what happens to the political temperature after he's gone? Sean and Chris game out the Republican bench — Marco Rubio, JD Vance, Ted Cruz — and talk through what kind of Democrat might emerge depending on how 2026 plays out. Their core point: the future of both parties may depend on whether voters reward radicalism or reject it. The episode closes on a very different but much-needed note: reflections from the Arizona Leadership Summit, where Brad Geary's message on faith, suffering, and leadership clearly hit deeper than any polished business talk. Sean and Chris make the case that real leadership is not just strategy or success — it's moral clarity, humility, and putting faith first when everything else in the culture is telling you not to. #Politics #SPLC #Trump #WhiteHouseCorrespondentsDinner #PoliticalViolence #FaithAndFreedom Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Captain Brad Geary joins Sean Noble and Chris Clements for one of the most powerful conversations Light Beer Dark Money has had to date — a discussion about SEAL culture, leadership, faith, suffering, and what happens when telling the truth costs you everything. Brad Geary, a retired Navy SEAL captain and former commander at the SEAL training command in Coronado, walks through his path from competitive swimmer to the Naval Academy to a 25-year career in the Teams. What began as a “five years and out” plan turned into a lifetime of service after 9/11 changed everything. Along the way, Brad and his wife Amy built a family, navigated the extraordinary pressure of the SEAL lifestyle, and kept making the decision to serve two years at a time. But this episode goes way beyond military biography. Brad explains why so many people misunderstand what the SEALs are really selecting for. It's not just physical toughness — it's what suffering reveals. Character. Selflessness. Team loyalty. The willingness to get back up after failure. The ability to endure without becoming selfish or bitter. He makes the case that the real value of BUD/S is not the mythology around pain, but the way pain strips away ego and exposes who a person really is. That leads into one of the deepest parts of the conversation: suffering itself. Brad draws a direct line between SEAL training and the Christian understanding of suffering — that it is not merely something happening to us, but often something happening for us. He talks about Romans, the Book of James, the growth that comes through hardship, and why leadership, parenting, marriage, and faith all demand the humility to say the five most powerful words in the world: “I'm sorry. Please forgive me.” Then comes the story that made Brad's name known far beyond the military: the death of a BUD/S candidate under his command, the controversy that followed, and the political and institutional pressure to bury the truth. Brad explains how evidence pointed to performance-enhancing drugs as a major factor, how investigations were steered away from that reality, and how the blame shifted onto him, his instructors, and his medical teams. What followed was not just a career-ending battle — it was a test of moral courage. Would he protect himself? Would he stay quiet? Or would he stand up for truth, even against the institution he still loved? Brad's answer is the heart of this episode. He talks candidly about leadership, hypocrisy, institutional ego, the fear leaders have of admitting fault, and the damage done when organizations refuse to apologize. He also makes clear that this is not a revenge story. It's a story about reconciliation, learning, and a desire to help institutions get better by telling the truth about where they failed. The episode closes with Brad's next chapter: keynote speaking, leadership consulting, his forthcoming memoir Hard Mind, Soft Heart, and a mission to help leaders, families, and organizations learn the lessons he paid dearly to understand. This is an episode about faith, freedom, free enterprise — and the character it takes to live them when the cost is real. Follow Brad Geary + related orgs IG: @bradleyandamy X: @bradleydgeary LinkedIn: Bradley Geary Civilian Military Defense Fund: cmdf-inc.org Stand With Warriors: standwithwarriors.org #NavySEAL #Leadership #Faith #Suffering #MoralCourage #BradGeary Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements.
Sean Noble and Chris Clements are back for a classic rant episode that somehow manages to cover youth soccer, high school theater, Earth Day theology, school choice, socialist economics, the pope, and Trump's latest monument obsession — and it all works. They start with family life and a little humor from the weekend before jumping straight into one of the biggest policy fights brewing in Arizona: school choice. Sean and Chris tear into Senator Mark Kelly for attacking ESAs and claiming they're “gutting” public schools, arguing he's either dishonest or wildly uninformed. Their case is simple: ESA students receive roughly half the funding of a public-school student, which means parents choosing alternatives actually leave more money behind for kids who stay in district schools. They also call out what they see as the deeper hypocrisy — politicians who use private education for their own families while trying to deny other families the same choice. From there, the show turns to New York and Zohran Mamdani's latest economic fantasies. Sean and Chris break down the proposal to tax luxury pied-à-terre properties and use the money to paper over New York City's budget mess, arguing it's the same failed socialist logic every time: punish the people who produce, then act shocked when they leave. They also get into the broader absurdity of government-run grocery stores, universal childcare promises, and whether conservatives should think more seriously about family policy that helps parents without just creating another bloated bureaucracy. The conversation then swings back to Arizona politics, where Ruben Gallego's proximity to Eric Swalwell suddenly looks a lot more toxic. Sean and Chris react to local coverage of Gallego's awkward denial tour and argue the body language, the optics, and the timing all point to a much bigger political problem for Democrats who built careers lecturing everyone else about ethics and accountability. They also spend real time on faith and geopolitics, discussing the public back-and-forth between Trump and Pope Leo. Sean and Chris agree Trump was foolish to go after the pope, while also arguing the Vatican has a real opportunity to speak more forcefully against radical Islam and the persecution of Christians. It becomes one of the more thoughtful parts of the episode — a conversation about just war, moral clarity, and how faith should shape political judgment without becoming partisan idolatry. And then, because this is Light Beer Dark Money, they close with something gloriously ridiculous: Trump's proposed monumental arch in Washington, the White House ballroom project, and whether America should still build beautiful, ambitious things just because it can. #SchoolChoice #ArizonaPolitics #MarkKelly #Trump #PopeLeo #Politics Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
This Thursday on Wake Up with Me: We've got a packed powerhouse lineup! Join us for back-to-back conversations with U.S. Congressmen Juan Ciscomani and David Schweikert. Plus, the duo behind the Light Beer, Dark Money podcast, Chris Clements and Sean Noble, and Oro Valley Councilwoman Mary Murphy.Catch it all on the Live the Dream Media network!
Light Beer | Dark Money is proud to announce a new partnership with the Goldwater Institute, a leading defender of conservative principles nationwide. Chris and Sean have worked alongside Goldwater for over a decade, supporting efforts to push back against overreaching legislation and policies — including right here in Arizona. In this episode, Jenna Bentley joins the show for the first time to represent the Institute and break down its ongoing legal and policy battles across the state. From challenges involving municipalities like and to broader conservative initiatives, Jenna provides a detailed look at how Goldwater continues to shape the fight for limited government and individual liberty. It's an informative, policy-driven conversation — with a lighter detour into Jenna and Sean's shared obsession with HYROX fitness competitions… which Chris still doesn't quite understand. For more information on the efforts of the Goldwater Institute, please visit: www.goldwaterinstitute.org Stay tuned for more informative episodes featuring Goldwater Institute scholars and friends. Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Sean Noble and Chris Clements are back from Easter break with a classic “rant” episode that starts light — White House Easter Egg Roll, Disneyland, USC nostalgia, and a little March-through-the-theme-park therapy — before snapping straight back into politics, foreign policy, faith, and the 2028 chessboard. The biggest political bombshell of the episode is Eric Swalwell. Sean and Chris break down the sexual assault allegations, the speed of his collapse, and why they believe this was not some sudden moral awakening from Democrats — it was a coordinated political hit. Their theory is blunt: Nancy Pelosi pulled the trigger, California Democrats panicked about their jungle primary, and Swalwell got thrown overboard to protect the party from an even bigger disaster. From there, the conversation moves to Artemis, the moon mission, and why America still leads when it decides to act like America. Sean and Chris talk splashdown, lunar ambition, moon bases, Mars, and Elon Musk's role in dragging the space program back toward actual exploration instead of bureaucratic drift. It's one of the more optimistic parts of the episode — a reminder that national greatness still matters. Then the tone shifts hard back to geopolitics. Sean and Chris argue the Iran negotiations were never really about expecting a deal — they were about finding out whether the regime lives in reality at all. They say the answer is no. That opens up a much bigger argument about Europe, NATO, and what they see as an alliance that failed a basic loyalty test. Their view: the U.S. has funded Europe's defense for decades, while countries like Germany, Spain, Italy, and even the UK continue acting like reluctant bystanders when America asks for the slightest cooperation. They also get into whether the U.S. should rethink its military footprint in Europe entirely. Why keep propping up economies and welfare states that won't fully stand with us? Why not move bases east to places like Poland, where America is actually welcomed and strategically better positioned? The final stretch of the episode turns inward — toward religion, politics, and the future of the right. Sean and Chris take on Trump's shot at Pope Leo, explain why attacking the pope is politically foolish and spiritually tone-deaf, and warn that parts of the MAGA movement are slipping into idolatry. They make the case that supporting Trump is one thing; placing him above faith is something else entirely. And then the 2028 speculation starts flying. AOC's maneuvers with the Democratic Socialists, Mark Kelly unexpectedly polling well with Democrats, Rubio's momentum, Ted Cruz's positioning, and Chris making a clear early call: JD Vance will not be the Republican nominee. If the midterms go badly, the whole board could shift — and Sean and Chris think the early signs are already there. #Swalwell #NATO #Iran #MarcoRubio #Trump #2028Election #politics Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
In this powerful Holy Week conversation, Chris and Sean sit down with Tim Jeffries to talk about faith, forgiveness, redemption, and the life-changing power of Jesus Christ. Tim shares his deeply personal story of loss, healing, and what it meant to forgive the men who murdered his older brother — a journey that reflects the grace, mercy, and transforming love of God. His story is a moving reminder that no one is beyond redemption and that real peace can be found through faith in Christ. Tim is also the host and producer of Sinners and Saints, a television series featuring stories of dramatic personal transformation and the role God has played in changing lives. This episode is an honest and inspiring discussion about pain, purpose, forgiveness, and what it means to follow the example of Jesus when it matters most. Don't miss this unforgettable Holy Week episode. Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Sean Noble and Chris Clements open with a lighter detour through USC, campaign communications, Dodger Stadium, and why a simple guest lecture can turn into something much deeper. What starts as campus nostalgia quickly becomes one of the most thoughtful conversations of the episode when Sean describes a student asking how 9/11 impacted him — and why that question still hits hard nearly 25 years later. From there, the episode turns into a bigger reflection on America itself: the unity that followed 9/11, the mistakes that came after, and why this country still stands apart because it was built on enduring foundations rather than fashionable political trends. Sean and Chris argue the founders were imperfect men who created a system designed to become a “more perfect union,” and they make the case that America's commitment to faith, religious liberty, and Judeo-Christian values is not some side note to the story — it's central to it. That leads directly into one of the sharpest rants of the episode: the “No Kings” protests. Sean and Chris point out the irony of Americans freely protesting “kings” in a country that has no king — while people in actual dictatorships are jailed or killed for doing the same. Then they go after the imagery surrounding the protests: communist flags, hammer-and-sickle symbolism, absurd costumes, “silliness” packaged as activism, and what they see as a visual branding problem for Democrats heading into competitive races. They also game out what that means politically in Arizona and beyond. Their argument is simple: maybe the loudest faction of the left is still a minority, but it is the faction everyone sees. And in swing races, being tied to Marxist aesthetics, anti-American symbolism, or performative protest culture is not exactly a winning formula. Then the mood shifts to March Madness. Sean and Chris celebrate Arizona's return to the Final Four for the first time in 25 years, praise Tommy Lloyd for building a true team-basketball machine, and break down the chaos of another instant-classic tournament collapse. It's part sports talk, part Arizona pride, and part appreciation for what a great coach can build when players buy in. They wrap with a music-lover's close: Rush, live performance, the staying power of real talent, and why great music still cuts through all the political noise. It's a classic Light Beer Dark Money episode — part nostalgia, part cultural commentary, part political rant, and all rooted in faith, freedom, and free enterprise. #AmericanPolitics #NoKings #ArizonaWildcats #MarchMadness #FaithAndFreedom #ConservativePodcast Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Light Beer | Dark Money marks its five-year anniversary with a special episode featuring two of the people who helped launch the show from the very beginning: Robert Vera and Dave Pratt, the “Morning Mayor of Palookaville.” Five years ago, Robert Vera encouraged Chris to start a podcast built around the ideas of faith, freedom, and free enterprise. Chris brought the concept to Sean, and together they launched Light Beer | Dark Money at Grand Canyon University, where the early episodes had a very different tone and format than what listeners know today. The show soon transitioned to Star Worldwide Networks, working alongside Dave Pratt, Robin Cote, and the Pratt Marketing team. It was there that Chris and Sean found their voice, sharpened their format, and began building a broader audience across Arizona and beyond. In this episode, Dave Pratt reflects on why he believed in the show early and how it has contributed to the evolving media landscape in the Valley. Robert Vera shares insights into his current work at the University of Silicon Valley and the development of a growing entrepreneurship and technology incubator. This conversation looks back at the origins of Light Beer | Dark Money, the key inflection points along the way, and what lies ahead as the show continues to expand its reach and impact. Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Sean Noble and Chris Clements cover a packed “rant” episode that starts with the travel nightmare Americans are living through right now — endless TSA lines, airport chaos, unpaid agents, and a DHS shutdown they argue is turning inconvenience into a real national-security problem. They break down what's happening at major airports, why some private-screening setups seem to be holding up better, and how ICE agents are now being used to help move people through checkpoints while TSA officers miss paychecks. Sean and Chris argue the whole thing exposes a deeper problem with how airport security was federalized in the first place. From there, they pivot hard to Cuba — and torch the American leftists flying to Havana to “show solidarity” with a communist regime that, by their telling, is collapsing under rolling blackouts, shortages, and decades of authoritarian failure. Their message is blunt: Cuba was once a destination, communism destroyed it, and now some Americans are still trying to prop it up. They also get into 2028 chatter, with Marco Rubio's stock rising inside the GOP establishment while JD Vance still dominates with the MAGA base. Sean and Chris game out Rubio, Vance, Ted Cruz, and what a future Republican ticket could look like. Then the episode shifts back to national security, with a strong defense of the A-10 Warthog and what its deployment in the Strait of Hormuz says about American air superiority. Chris makes the case that the A-10 is still indispensable — and that phasing it out is a mistake. The biggest Arizona policy fight of the episode is over ESAs. Sean and Chris argue that yes, there has been fraud and abuse in the program — but that's exactly why it should be fixed, not killed. They say the teachers-union-backed ballot effort is really about gutting universal school choice in Arizona under the language of “reform,” while a competing measure aims to add guardrails without destroying the program. They close with a broader Arizona rant: Katie Hobbs walking away from budget negotiations, vetoing affordability measures, and failing to lead on issues like grocery taxes, housing, and growth. Then it's back to Texas politics, James Talarico, the Cornyn–Paxton fight, and finally a blistering rebuke of Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly, and Candace Owens for what Sean and Chris describe as incoherent, click-driven opportunism on Iran and beyond. #ArizonaPolitics #SchoolChoice #TSA #Cuba #MarcoRubio #TexasPolitics #Republican #Conservative #Politics Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Light Beer Dark Money Website: lightbeerdarkmoney.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Stephen Shadegg, state director of Americans for Prosperity–Arizona, joins Chris and Sean for a wide-ranging conversation on the DHS shutdown fight, border and national security, and why AFP-AZ is pressuring Arizona's senators to do their jobs and get serious about governing. AFP-AZ has recently been publicly targeting Sen. Mark Kelly over DHS funding, with Shadegg arguing that political games are putting safety and security at risk. From there, the conversation turns to Arizona politics: affordable housing, cost-of-living pressure, and whether Governor Katie Hobbs is showing the kind of leadership voters are looking for. Chris and Sean also dig into the 2026 political map, including Larry Sabato's latest Crystal Ball analysis and why Arizona may be more competitive than the national pundits think. It's a candid conversation about government dysfunction, economic pressure, and the political future of Arizona and the country, with plenty of straight talk about what's actually at stake for voters. Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Spring break travel chaos, a government shutdown, and TSA agents working without pay — Sean Noble and Chris Clements use a viral airport-line clip to make a bigger argument: federalizing airport security was a mistake. They point out that some airports use private screening (or supplement TSA) and argue those airports aren't getting crushed the same way — because the incentives are different when it's not a unionized federal bureaucracy. From there, the rant pivots to the Middle East: the Strait of Hormuz and the UK's posture under Keir Starmer, with Sean and Chris noting the difference between Britain's “credible plan” language versus the reluctance they're seeing from France and Germany. They also argue Trump's message to China is simple: if you want the oil, you don't get to free-ride — you help secure the shipping lanes. Then they have some fun: a Saturday Night Live cold open roasting Trump on gas prices and “no more wars” — and they admit the Trump impression (and the “bing bing bong bong” chaos) is objectively hilarious. The serious close is political: they argue Trump is making a high-stakes national security bet — even if it creates short-term pain — and they hit a grassroots call to action for Republicans. Chris shares what he saw at Turning Point USA: a map of “gettable” Republicans who don't vote, and why the GOP's natural constituency (hunters/fishermen/outdoorsmen) often sits out elections. And yes, they wrap with Arizona: March Madness, the “Cardiac Cats,” and a buzzer-beater finish that felt like the whole tournament in one possession. #TSA #NationalSecurity #Iran #StraitOfHormuz #TurningPointUSA #MarchMadness Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LightBeerDarkMoney/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/lbdmpodcast?lang=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Sean Noble and Chris Clements open with a wild story out of New York: counterprotesters outside the mayor's home, an IED-style incident that (they argue) the public already knows how to “write the script” for. They talk radicalization, how quickly the narrative gets spun, and what this says about the broader cultural moment. Then they pivot overseas: Iran, radical Islam, and why regimes like that view “apostates” and the West through a totally different lens. They highlight a “dirty secret” you never hear discussed: they say the fastest-growing faith inside Iran is Christianity—then react to reporting/questions about whether Iran's new leader has been wounded, plus what U.S. officials are saying publicly. From there, the episode turns to U.S. politics—starting with Texas. Sean and Chris break down Texas Dem Senate candidate James Talarico and his “progressive Christianity” messaging, arguing it's politically insane in the Bible Belt and a gift-wrapped opposition research file for Republicans. They also get into the GOP fight in Texas: the John Cornyn backlash, the “RINO” attacks, and why they think the conservative ecosystem is misreading what Cornyn actually is (and what this primary fight signals). Finally, they bring it home to Arizona with a Tucson-specific rant: taxes with “sunsets,” transit boondoggles, homelessness, and why they argue voters should be skeptical when politicians promise they're “not raising taxes” while extending them. #Iran #TexasPolitics #FaithAndPolitics #Tucson #ArizonaPolitics #Trump Subscribe for weekly conversations on Faith, Freedom & Free Enterprise with Sean Noble and Chris Clements. Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Join the Conversation at 303-477-5600 or text to 307-200-8222 Monday - Friday from 3 pm - 6 pm MT. https://RushToReason.com HOUR 1 Hour 1 of Rush to Reason begins with practical advice before moving into conversations about culture, global politics, and technology. John Rush opens with plumber Mike Jansen of Plumberoos, discussing spring plumbing issues that many homeowners overlook. Why do hose bibs fail even after a mild winter? And what simple maintenance steps—like removing hoses or flushing water heaters—could prevent costly repairs? From home maintenance, the conversation flows into world affairs. John examines the situation in Iran and the lessons from the 1979 revolution that transformed the country. Could historical parallels offer warnings about ideological movements today? He challenges listeners—especially parents—to encourage young people to study history themselves rather than accept modern narratives at face value. Later, Chris Clements and Paul Fisher of Radiant Mobile introduced a Christian-centered mobile phone service designed to help families protect their children online. This raised the question: could network-level filtering prevent harmful internet content from reaching a device? As technology shapes daily life, John further asks how families can reclaim control over the digital tools their children use. Timestamps 1:08 — Mike Jansen — Owner https://plumberoos.com/ 27:29 — Chris Clements & Paul Fisher — Co-founders https://www.radiantmobile.com/ HOUR 2 Hour 2 explores the intersection of global energy markets, politics, consumer scams, sports, and tax policy. John opens with Daniel Turner of Power the Future, discussing volatility in oil prices and the geopolitical tensions surrounding Iran and the Middle East. Are rising prices really about supply, or are markets reacting to political uncertainty? The conversation examines tanker traffic, energy markets, and how American production could influence the global economy. John then shifts to a warning closer to home: a widespread toll-and-court-summons text-message scam circulating across Colorado. Using QR codes and threats of fines, scammers attempt to panic victims into paying fraudulent charges. John urges listeners to verify suspicious messages directly with the appropriate organization before responding. The hour then lightens as Richard Rush joins the program with a quick tour of Denver sports, including March Madness, NFL roster moves, and the Colorado Avalanche pushing for another championship run. The discussion closes with tax policy as California cracks down on wealthy drivers registering luxury vehicles in Montana to avoid high taxes—raising a larger question: when governments increase taxes and regulations, do they push people to find ways around them? Timestamps 1:10 — Daniel Turner https://www.powerthefuture.com/ HOUR 3 Hour 3 opens with a candid political discussion as Colorado gubernatorial candidate Greg Lopez joins John Rush to explain why he is running as an unaffiliated candidate rather than as a Republican. Can an independent candidate realistically win in Colorado's deeply entrenched two-party system? John challenges Lopez on the math behind that strategy, questioning whether an unaffiliated run could split the conservative vote. The conversation expands to key issues facing Colorado voters: the rising cost of living, housing affordability, development regulations, and ranchers' concerns about wolf reintroduction and rural livelihoods. After Lopez exits, John continues the discussion with callers and listeners, analyzing voter behavior, campaign fundraising, and Colorado's shifting political landscape. Looking at the numbers, he delivers a blunt prediction about the upcoming governor's race—raising the question of whether the outcome may already be set long before November. Timestamps 1:10 Greg Lopez — Candidate for Governor of Colorado https://www.greglopez.co/
Join the Conversation at 303-477-5600 or text to 307-200-8222 Monday - Friday from 3 pm - 6 pm MT. https://RushToReason.com HOUR 1 Hour 1 of Rush to Reason begins with practical advice before moving into conversations about culture, global politics, and technology. John Rush opens with plumber Mike Jansen of Plumberoos, discussing spring plumbing issues that many homeowners overlook. Why do hose bibs fail even after a mild winter? And what simple maintenance steps—like removing hoses or flushing water heaters—could prevent costly repairs? From home maintenance, the conversation flows into world affairs. John examines the situation in Iran and the lessons from the 1979 revolution that transformed the country. Could historical parallels offer warnings about ideological movements today? He challenges listeners—especially parents—to encourage young people to study history themselves rather than accept modern narratives at face value. Later, Chris Clements and Paul Fisher of Radiant Mobile introduced a Christian-centered mobile phone service designed to help families protect their children online. This raised the question: could network-level filtering prevent harmful internet content from reaching a device? As technology shapes daily life, John further asks how families can reclaim control over the digital tools their children use. Timestamps 1:08 — Mike Jansen — Owner https://plumberoos.com/ 27:29 — Chris Clements & Paul Fisher — Co-founders https://www.radiantmobile.com/ HOUR 2 Hour 2 explores the intersection of global energy markets, politics, consumer scams, sports, and tax policy. John opens with Daniel Turner of Power the Future, discussing volatility in oil prices and the geopolitical tensions surrounding Iran and the Middle East. Are rising prices really about supply, or are markets reacting to political uncertainty? The conversation examines tanker traffic, energy markets, and how American production could influence the global economy. John then shifts to a warning closer to home: a widespread toll-and-court-summons text-message scam circulating across Colorado. Using QR codes and threats of fines, scammers attempt to panic victims into paying fraudulent charges. John urges listeners to verify suspicious messages directly with the appropriate organization before responding. The hour then lightens as Richard Rush joins the program with a quick tour of Denver sports, including March Madness, NFL roster moves, and the Colorado Avalanche pushing for another championship run. The discussion closes with tax policy as California cracks down on wealthy drivers registering luxury vehicles in Montana to avoid high taxes—raising a larger question: when governments increase taxes and regulations, do they push people to find ways around them? Timestamps 1:10 — Daniel Turner https://www.powerthefuture.com/ HOUR 3 Hour 3 opens with a candid political discussion as Colorado gubernatorial candidate Greg Lopez joins John Rush to explain why he is running as an unaffiliated candidate rather than as a Republican. Can an independent candidate realistically win in Colorado's deeply entrenched two-party system? John challenges Lopez on the math behind that strategy, questioning whether an unaffiliated run could split the conservative vote. The conversation expands to key issues facing Colorado voters: the rising cost of living, housing affordability, development regulations, and ranchers' concerns about wolf reintroduction and rural livelihoods. After Lopez exits, John continues the discussion with callers and listeners, analyzing voter behavior, campaign fundraising, and Colorado's shifting political landscape. Looking at the numbers, he delivers a blunt prediction about the upcoming governor's race—raising the question of whether the outcome may already be set long before November. Timestamps 1:10 Greg Lopez — Candidate for Governor of Colorado https://www.greglopez.co/
Join the Conversation at 303-477-5600 or text to 307-200-8222 Monday - Friday from 3 pm - 6 pm MT. https://RushToReason.com HOUR 1 Hour 1 of Rush to Reason begins with practical advice before moving into conversations about culture, global politics, and technology. John Rush opens with plumber Mike Jansen of Plumberoos, discussing spring plumbing issues that many homeowners overlook. Why do hose bibs fail even after a mild winter? And what simple maintenance steps—like removing hoses or flushing water heaters—could prevent costly repairs? From home maintenance, the conversation flows into world affairs. John examines the situation in Iran and the lessons from the 1979 revolution that transformed the country. Could historical parallels offer warnings about ideological movements today? He challenges listeners—especially parents—to encourage young people to study history themselves rather than accept modern narratives at face value. Later, Chris Clements and Paul Fisher of Radiant Mobile introduced a Christian-centered mobile phone service designed to help families protect their children online. This raised the question: could network-level filtering prevent harmful internet content from reaching a device? As technology shapes daily life, John further asks how families can reclaim control over the digital tools their children use. Timestamps 1:08 — Mike Jansen — Owner https://plumberoos.com/ 27:29 — Chris Clements & Paul Fisher — Co-founders https://www.radiantmobile.com/ HOUR 2 Hour 2 explores the intersection of global energy markets, politics, consumer scams, sports, and tax policy. John opens with Daniel Turner of Power the Future, discussing volatility in oil prices and the geopolitical tensions surrounding Iran and the Middle East. Are rising prices really about supply, or are markets reacting to political uncertainty? The conversation examines tanker traffic, energy markets, and how American production could influence the global economy. John then shifts to a warning closer to home: a widespread toll-and-court-summons text-message scam circulating across Colorado. Using QR codes and threats of fines, scammers attempt to panic victims into paying fraudulent charges. John urges listeners to verify suspicious messages directly with the appropriate organization before responding. The hour then lightens as Richard Rush joins the program with a quick tour of Denver sports, including March Madness, NFL roster moves, and the Colorado Avalanche pushing for another championship run. The discussion closes with tax policy as California cracks down on wealthy drivers registering luxury vehicles in Montana to avoid high taxes—raising a larger question: when governments increase taxes and regulations, do they push people to find ways around them? Timestamps 1:10 — Daniel Turner https://www.powerthefuture.com/ HOUR 3 Hour 3 opens with a candid political discussion as Colorado gubernatorial candidate Greg Lopez joins John Rush to explain why he is running as an unaffiliated candidate rather than as a Republican. Can an independent candidate realistically win in Colorado's deeply entrenched two-party system? John challenges Lopez on the math behind that strategy, questioning whether an unaffiliated run could split the conservative vote. The conversation expands to key issues facing Colorado voters: the rising cost of living, housing affordability, development regulations, and ranchers' concerns about wolf reintroduction and rural livelihoods. After Lopez exits, John continues the discussion with callers and listeners, analyzing voter behavior, campaign fundraising, and Colorado's shifting political landscape. Looking at the numbers, he delivers a blunt prediction about the upcoming governor's race—raising the question of whether the outcome may already be set long before November. Timestamps 1:10 Greg Lopez — Candidate for Governor of Colorado https://www.greglopez.co/
Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down what they call one of the most consequential weekends of Donald Trump's presidency—focused on Iran, its decades-long role as the centerpiece of Middle East terrorism, and what happens when a theocracy built on oppression suddenly loses the top of the regime. They walk back through the history Americans remember: the 1979 hostage crisis, the fall of the Shah, and how a once-advanced Persian society became a Shia theocracy that crushed dissent and exported chaos through proxies like Hezbollah and Hamas. From there, they react to a CBS report that (in their view) actually spelled out the stakes: Iranians celebrating, crackdowns in the streets, and the dangerous question of what fills the vacuum—reform, dictatorship, civil war, or something else. Then the episode turns into a media accountability rant: they compare the blunt description of Iran's ruler as a murderous dictator to what they say were shockingly soft “obituaries” and headlines from major papers. They argue the American left routinely parrots Iranian talking points (often through the proxy movements), and they call out Democrats' response—highlighting comments from House Democrat leader Hakeem Jeffries and others as fundamentally detached from the reality of Iran's ongoing terrorist aggression. Sean and Chris also get into the legal/political fight in Washington—why Congress hasn't declared war since WWII, how authorizations of force get used instead, and why they believe the U.S. has effectively been in a hot conflict with Iran for decades. They discuss the immediate geopolitical ripple effects too: the Strait of Hormuz, oil markets, regional retaliation, and how Iran's isolation leaves Russia and China as “friends” who still won't come to the rescue when things go sideways. Finally, they hit the internal MAGA debate—calling out Tucker Carlson and others they say are misreading Israel, misrepresenting the facts, and attacking the strike from the right. Their conclusion: this is what “peace through strength” looks like—use power decisively, solve the problem fast, and don't hand the military-industrial complex a blank check for forever wars. #Iran #Trump #Israel #MiddleEast #ForeignPolicy #Politics Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
In this episode of Light Beer Dark Money, Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down President Donald Trump's 2026 State of the Union — a speech packed with patriotism, emotional tributes, and one unforgettable moment that instantly defined the night. When Trump challenged lawmakers to stand in support of the principle that the first duty of government is to protect American citizens, most Democrats remained seated — creating a striking visual that may prove far more politically damaging than they realize. Sean explains why that moment could resonate well beyond the chamber and shape the battle for control of the U.S. House in November. Chris also spotlights one of the speech's most powerful stories: the long-overdue recognition of retired Navy Capt. Royce Williams, whose heroism during the Korean War finally received the national attention it deserved. From political theater to patriotic storytelling, Sean and Chris unpack why this State of the Union landed so forcefully — and why Democrats may come to regret the image they gave the country. Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Former Arizona Supreme Court Justice Andrew Gould joins Sean Noble and Chris Clements for a wide-ranging conversation on the courts, national politics, and one of Arizona's most disturbing active investigations. Gould explains why judges must interpret the law—not “save the world”—and why politicized district court rulings are eroding public trust in the judiciary. The conversation then shifts to the Supreme Court's recent tariffs decision and why it was far narrower than the headlines suggested, including how emergency powers can become a “loaded gun” for future administrations. Finally, they dive into the Nancy Guthrie case in Pima County. Gould argues this is the type of crime the FBI should lead and critiques key decisions that can jeopardize prosecutions later—crime scene handling, contamination risk, and sending DNA to a private lab rather than the FBI. #AndrewGould #Arizona #SupremeCourt #Tariffs #Judiciary #ElectionLaw #FreeSpeech #TrueCrime #NancyGuthrie #Politics Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
In this episode of Light Beer Dark Money, Sean Noble and Chris Clements go “live from the cave” for a quick hit—but it turns into a full-on America-first celebration of an incredible Winter Olympics showing. They start with Team USA's historic medal haul (including Alysa Liu's gold and her family's powerful story escaping communism), then break down the moment everyone will remember: the USA–Canada hockey gold medal game going to sudden-death overtime and the U.S. burying the winner. The guys compare the feeling to the “Miracle on Ice” era—right down to the nostalgia of watching the 1980 call and remembering where they were when it happened. From there, they hit the politics that always shadows international sports: Canada's rivalry, Trudeau's old comments, the White House trolling, and the reality that beating the best matters (including the complicated fact Russia isn't in the Olympics). They close with love for the women's team, appreciation for athletes leaning into patriotism, and a look ahead to the LA Summer Olympics—plus what it will take for California to clean up in time. #USA #Olympics #Hockey #Canada #MiracleOnIce #TeamUSA #WinterOlympics #Patriotism Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
On today's episode of Light Beer • Dark Money, Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down the week's biggest headlines—starting with cultural icons and political legacies, then moving straight into the fights shaping the country right now. We react to the passing of Jesse Jackson, the latest cultural insanity (yes, even Sesame Street), and why America's institutions keep rewarding nonsense. Then we get into the legal and political storm clouds: Justice Alito, elections, and what happens when courts and politics collide. From there, Marco Rubio's comments at Munich set off a broader conversation about Europe, defense, and the reality behind America's alliances. We also hit the Epstein-file saga—why it keeps coming back, who's getting mentioned, and why the media class keeps trying to memory-hole the uncomfortable parts. Finally, we close on TikTok, ByteDance, and the CCP question—why “just post there” isn't as simple as people pretend it is. #LightBeerDarkMoney #Politics #MarcoRubio #SupremeCourt #ElectionIntegrity #EpsteinFiles #NewsCommentary #ConservativePodcast #CurrentEvents #Geopolitics #TikTok #FreeSpeech Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Super Bowl Sunday turns into a full-on culture and politics conversation as Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down the biggest moments, the commercials, the halftime chatter, and how quickly pop culture gets pulled into the immigration/ICE debate. They also dig into the Bad Bunny controversy and why people keep melting down over Trump's style vs. substance, plus a deeper conversation on Puerto Rico, identity, and what “American” actually means. To close it out, Sean and Chris hit the growing gambling influence in sports—refs, questionable calls, and why betting being everywhere changes the game. #SuperBowl #NFL #Politics #Immigration #ICE #Trump #CurrentEvents #CultureWar #PuertoRico #SportsBetting #Podcast Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
In this full episode of Light Beer Dark Money, Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down the growing tension around immigration enforcement, the role of coordinated protests, and the moment a bad situation escalates into tragedy. They talk through why carrying a firearm comes with serious responsibility, why enforcement agencies can “jump the shark” when they drift from stated priorities, and how expectations vs. execution can inflame the public—even among people who are pro-ICE and pro border security. The conversation also digs into the blurred line between protest, paid agitation, and interference with law enforcement operations, plus the obvious question: why wasn't a vandalism arrest made before things spiraled? They also hit the media narrative machine—AI “makeovers,” selective framing, and the lingering post-COVID information wars (including the still-repeated “horse dewormer” smear), and end with what's coming next for the show. #ICE #BorderSecurity #Immigration #Minnesota #Politics #LawEnforcement #MediaBias #CovidPolicy #FreeSpeech #ConservativePodcast #USPolitics Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
In this full episode of Light Beer, Dark Money, Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down the Minneapolis shooting tied to anti-ICE unrest, the political fallout, and what it says about the moment we're in. We start with the Minneapolis incident and the broader narrative war around immigration enforcement, then dig into reports of activists allegedly monitoring ICE operations, plus the controversy around “signal chat” coordination and how state and local leadership responds. From there, we talk DHS leadership and the internal tension swirling around Kristi Noem and Tom Homan—and what “law and order” looks like when the optics go nuclear. In the back half, we bring it home to Arizona politics: the new AZ GOP leadership, what the latest voter registration numbers signal, how turnout changes everything, and what a three-way governor's race could do to the map. We wrap with Tucson business and political philanthropy news, including the announcement involving Jim Klick and the legacy ties that shaped modern conservative politics. Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
One year in. Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down the first 12 months of Donald Trump's presidency—what mattered, what changed, and what the media still refuses to admit. They start with the biggest early shock to the system: DOGE—not just for what it cut, but for what it exposed. From the expanding Minnesota fraud story to the broader NGO/nonprofit pipeline, they unpack why the riots and outrage aren't really about “ICE”… they're about protecting a long-running money stream. From there, they hit the economic and governance wins: the Big Beautiful Bill, deregulation, and why many of the benefits won't fully hit until taxpayers start seeing the impact directly. Then the conversation shifts to foreign policy and leverage—Gaza hostage progress, movement in Ukraine, and the newest international freakout: Greenland. Sean and Chris explain why the “Europe is terrified” narrative is nonsense, why Greenland has been strategic for 200 years, and why Trump's trolling is usually attached to an endgame. Finally, they bring it home to Arizona: the legislature passes a major tax conformity package—and Gov. Katie Hobbs vetoes a $1.1B tax cut. They break down why it matters, what it signals about her governance, and what really decides elections in Arizona (hint: authenticity and turnout beat vibes and headlines). (Yes, there's also a quick sports rant at the end—because it's Light Beer Dark Money.) Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Sean Noble and Chris Clements unpack the Minneapolis ICE shooting of Renee Good and the media frenzy that followed. We break down what's known vs. what was assumed, how local sanctuary-city policies complicate enforcement, and why body-cam transparency matters. We also react to Tom Homan's no-nonsense case for immigration enforcement and examine Rep. Ilhan Omar's defense through a real-world lens—detainers, warrants, and what ICE can and cannot do. Then we pivot to Arizona. Gov. Katie Hobbs rolled out her “Arizona Promise” State of the State—ambitious rhetoric, thin delivery. We talk through why even sympathetic outlets weren't sold, what Arizonans actually want (affordability, border security, water, infrastructure), and the difference between headline goals and executable plans. If Arizona's going to lead, it needs credible timelines, coalitions, and basic blocking and tackling. Finally, we game out what a Trump-era immigration deal could look like if the politics line up: interior enforcement with due-process clarity, asylum fixes, E-Verify with real teeth, targeted legal-immigration reforms, and a trade for tech or infrastructure priorities. We also touch Iran/Cuba pressure, Starlink as a sanctions-era communications tool, and why a Reagan-style realism—peace through strength plus practical deals—still wins when the cameras turn off. If you want a clean, grounded take without the performative shouting, this one's for you. Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Trump orders a surprise strike on Venezuela and Nicolás Maduro is reportedly captured. Sean Noble and Chris Clements break down why this operation happened, what it means for American interests in our own hemisphere, and why the media and EU are suddenly clutching pearls about “international law” after years of looking the other way on socialist dictators. From there, they zoom out to the wider ideological fight: how Venezuela became yet another case study in socialism's collapse, and how figures like New York's socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani sell the “warmth of collectivism” while ignoring the real-world misery it produces. Sean and Chris contrast that with America's tradition of faith, freedom, free enterprise and personal responsibility. Finally, they turn back to the home front with the exploding Minnesota fraud scandal under Gov. Tim Walz, where COVID and welfare funds were allegedly siphoned through nonprofits and NGOs instead of reaching the vulnerable people they were meant to help. They connect the dots between big-government promises, corrupt political machines, and why voters have to start demanding accountability instead of slogans. Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lightbeerdarkmoney/ Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBDMshow Follow Light Beer Dark Money on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/light-beer-dark-money/ Link to the Light Beer Dark Money Blog: https://lightbeerdarkmoney.com/hypocrisy-and-the-aoc-oh-sandy/
Guest Include: - Mike McFeely, Forum of Fargo-Moorhead Columnist - Chris Clements, Bismarck Legacy Head Football Coach - Steve Laqua, MSU Moorhead Head Football Coach
Today, we look ahead to the unprecedented meeting between Xi Jinping, Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un happening on Wednesday, the first time the three of them have ever met in public.It's happening off the back of a summit in China, where Beijing hosted leaders from over 20 non-Western countries. Why are they meeting and what does it mean for the West? James speaks to BBC diplomatic correspondent James Landale, and geopolitical analyst Sophie Gaston from King's College.James also speaks to BBC Scotland social affairs correspondent Chris Clements about the number of drug deaths in Scotland remaining highest in Europe, despite falling in comparison to last year.You can now listen to Newscast on a smart speaker. If you want to listen, just say "Ask BBC Sounds to play Newscast”. It works on most smart speakers. You can join our Newscast online community here: https://tinyurl.com/newscastcommunityhereGet in touch with Newscast by emailing newscast@bbc.co.uk or send us a whatsapp on +44 0330 123 9480.New episodes released every day. If you're in the UK, for more News and Current Affairs podcasts from the BBC, listen on BBC Sounds: https://bit.ly/3ENLcS1 Newscast brings you daily analysis of the latest political news stories from the BBC. It was presented by James Cook. It was made by Jack Maclaren with Anna Harris and Shiler Mahmoudi. The social producers were Sophie Millward and Joe Wilkinson. The technical producer was Rohan Madison. The assistant editor is Chris Gray. The senior news editor is Sam Bonham.
In this heartfelt episode of The Fathers Of The Future Podcast, host Luke Kayyem welcomes Chris Clements, a friend, brother, and father, whose son Preston has been a client of Luke's for the past year. Chris is the co-host of Light Beer, Dark Money, a podcast exploring faith, freedom, and free enterprise, now thriving on the Star Worldwide Networks. The episode delves into Chris's journey as a legacy business owner, taking over Golden Eagle Distributors, a major Anheuser-Busch wholesaler, after his father's sudden passing from lung cancer in 1995. At just 25, Chris was thrust into a leadership role amidst personal grief, family dynamics, and a toxic company environment, forcing him to grow up quickly while navigating challenges in the beer industry and his own identity.Chris shares how his faith became a cornerstone after hitting a spiritual rock bottom, particularly after a wake-up call from his wife about his drinking and its impact on his son. This led to a transformative period of sobriety, prayer, and realigning his identity with his faith, ultimately influencing his decision to sell the business in 2015. The conversation explores themes of legacy, fatherhood, and balancing professional success with personal growth. Chris reflects on lessons from his father's mentorship under August Busch III and the importance of truth, excellence, and time with family. Luke and Chris discuss the rarity of successful men prioritizing faith without hitting rock bottom, emphasizing Chris's unique journey of integrating faith, freedom, and family into his life's work.Light Beer, Dark Money Podcast go to:lightbeerdarkmoney.comAre you stuck? Need awakened? Contact Luke Kayyem here:Website: lukekayyem.comFacebook: facebook.com/lukekayyemInstagram: instagram.com/lukekayyem
Hey everyone! Jordan and I talk about the importance of vulnerability, transparency, and the power of love. We discuss the courage and bravery required to open up to the world at one's own pace, and how being loving and spiritual is a key part of our identity. We acknowledge the difficulties of showing up vulnerably when the world has hurt people in various ways, but emphasize that true love involves acknowledging those hurtful moments and still choosing to show up with love. Lastly, we emphasize the critical role of self-awareness and emotional intelligence, and how pride can prevent people from being truly self-aware.