Episodes
Monday Jun 06, 2022
2022 June 6 The Bryan Hyde Show hour one
Monday Jun 06, 2022
Monday Jun 06, 2022
As much as we're all ready for a return to normalcy, there are some stubborn facts that remain to be faced. Jeffrey A. Tucker explains how elections won't fix our current battle with entrenched bureaucracy.
I've been leaning heavily on The Good Citizen for informative commentary on issues that matter. Pt. 2 of Shoot first, think never is too good not to pass along for your consideration.
When reality itself is under siege, maintaining one's perspective takes conscious effort. Many of us find ourselves wondering, "Why is everything broken?" Edward Curtin has a great slant on this.
Some of us believe that our current challenges are as much spiritual as they are political. Dr. Igor Shepherd asks some deeply probing questions, starting with, "Whose footsteps are we following?"
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Friday Jun 03, 2022
2022 June 3 The Bryan Hyde Show hour two
Friday Jun 03, 2022
Friday Jun 03, 2022
How broken would the system have to get for most people to stop believing in it? Before you answer, check out Charles Hugh Smith's essay "Who's Going to Fix What's Broken."
This one is for anybody who like to zoom out for the big picture view of what's happening in our world. Thomas Luongo provides the big questions we should all be asking geopolitically.
Lax gun laws are not the reason we see killing sprees. As Stephen Baskerville explains, the real reason why mass shooters kill is something so controversial that few people dare say it out loud.
The ruling class and media calls for gun control are supposedly based in a desire to "protect" us from harm. Brandon Smith says, recent events only reinforce our need for gun rights and community militias.
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Friday Jun 03, 2022
2022 June 3 The Bryan Hyde Show hour one
Friday Jun 03, 2022
Friday Jun 03, 2022
One of the best things you'll read this week is El Gato Malo's take on why public health "experts" never want to fight "the amateurs" on public health policy. As Will Grigg would say, they know they'd be whipped as thoroughly as a pint of heavy cream at a French bakery.
Federal overreach has become as predictable as the sun coming up each day. Mike Maharrey reminds us of Lysander Spooner's strategy to stop unconstitutional acts in their tracks: resist.
What would you do differently if you knew that you were in the early stages of a food crisis? Kit Knightly has the low down on the real agenda behind the food crisis that's currently under construction.
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Thursday Jun 02, 2022
2022 June 2 The Bryan Hyde Show hour two
Thursday Jun 02, 2022
Thursday Jun 02, 2022
It's hard to overstate how powerful humor can be in helping us keep things in perspective. Annie Holmquist describes why laughter is the bane of tyrants and a legit tool to free us from mental tyranny.
If our willingness to stand by as another person is abused or victimized is a test of our character, American society is flunking that test badly. Breason Jacak wonders, where are all the men?
If you aren't familiar with the story of Sophie Scholl, it's one worth knowing. Jacob Hornberger recounts her heroism and asks whether the White Rose was right or wrong on patriotism.
When you question the narrative, it really upsets some folks. Not because they're stupid and evil. Instead, as Caitlin Johnstone explains, it upsets them because they're not ready to hear the truth.
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Thursday Jun 02, 2022
2022 June 2 The Bryan Hyde Show hour one
Thursday Jun 02, 2022
Thursday Jun 02, 2022
It sure would be nice if all the mask mandates were truly behind us. But it's clearly not. Jon Miltimore explains how the mask wars are back and the folks who pushed them before aren't letting it go.
The calls for gun control always intensify following a high profile murderous crime like the Uvalde school shootings. Thomas L. Knapp has some highly relevant thoughts on car keys and gun control that perfectly illustrate the problem.
Even when things go disastrously wrong, we can take comfort in the fact that it's only a temporary thing. But that hasn't happened with the covid response. Megan Mansell asks, when will our sense of security return?
Memorial Day has come and gone but the significance of what cemeteries can teach us doesn't depend upon a holiday. Grace Bydalek says cemeteries remind us of the importance of religion.
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Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
2022 June 1 The Bryan Hyde Show hour one
Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
While politicians blindly swat at guns as a symptom of school shootings, it's rare to find someone who can zero in on the root causes. John Daniel Davidson says school shootings are caused not by faulty gun laws but by the collapse of the family.
Keith Kelsch from Local Commonwealth joins me to invite my Southern Utah listeners to a free screening of "2000 Mules" at 6pm tonight at the Electric Theater in St. George, Utah. This film is worth a watch if you have questions about election integrity.
Anytime someone opines that "no one needs an AR15" you can be sure they're not thinking of taking such tools away from government. Paul Rosenberg reminds us that death by government is 20 times more common than death by criminal.
When does another major fire at a food production facility stop looking like coincidence and start looking fishy? Something we may want to ask ourselves as one of the largest egg factories in the U.S. burned down last weekend.
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Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
2022 June 1 The Bryan Hyde Show hour two
Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
Wednesday Jun 01, 2022
If you've ever suspected that you're being treated like a pawn in someone else's game, don't be too quick to dismiss the notion. The Z-man has a solid breakdown of the game our managerial class is playing and how to opt out of it.
Any time you point out how people are trying to use tragedy for political gain, you'll likely get accused of doing the same exact thing. W.R. Wordsworth has some straight talk about how we go from senseless trauma to predictable hackery.
The best thing about trying times is how they open the door to greater understanding than we can gain when everything is going well. Jeffrey A. Tucker has a powerful essay about how the pandemic response changed his thinking. His observations are spot on.
When we hear terms like "self interest" and "common good" it's essential that we have a clear understanding of what they mean. Charles Hugh Smith says the reason America is decaying is because of the tyranny of self interest.
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Tuesday May 31, 2022
2022 May 31 The Bryan Hyde Show hour two
Tuesday May 31, 2022
Tuesday May 31, 2022
If you were awakened from having been in a coma for the past 10 years how much of our world would you even still recognize? Jeffrey Folks warns about the ugliest form of antagonism that has taken hold in our society.
If you've grown weary of the rhetorical incontinence that follows every highly publicized shooting spree, here's a commentary you need to hear. The Good Citizen lays out the shoot first, think never approach favored by the MSM and the political class.
There are many questions that need to be answered regarding the police response during the Uvalde school shootings. Annie Holmquist explains how bureaucracy doesn't allow courage.
Isn't it odd how offended some people become whenever someone questions the official narrative? Caitlin Johnstone offers 10 times that empire managers showed us that they want to control our thoughts.
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Tuesday May 31, 2022
2022 May 31 The Bryan Hyde Show hour one
Tuesday May 31, 2022
Tuesday May 31, 2022
Eric Peters from Eric Peters Autos drops by for our weekly catch-up. Come enjoy an island of sanity in a sea of irrationality.
Will the individuals who inflicted the most harm on the world these past two years succeed in avoiding accountability for their actions? Jordan Schachtel says there is a serious effort to hold the bad guys accountable.
Could part of the dysfunction of our society be a result of too many people seeing the world through dark lenses? Paul Rosenberg has a great solution and explanation that starts with learning how to love.
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Friday May 27, 2022
2022 May 27 The Bryan Hyde Show
Friday May 27, 2022
Friday May 27, 2022
Were you raised to believe that, prior to 1970, women were ruthlessly oppressed in our society? Paul Rosenberg would like to set the record straight with a defense of 1950s housewives.
As much as we'll appreciate the long Memorial Day weekend, this holiday deserves a bit of closer introspection. Caleb Franz of the Profiles in Liberty podcast joins me to provide some historical perspective.
The Texas elementary school shootings have sparked predictable authoritarian responses from the political class. Here's a dissenting point of view from Michael Siegel on mass shootings, rampages and cascades of failure.
The practices that guard human civilization are steadily being forgotten. Max Borders explains how politics is the pathology and morality is the cure in his new book The Decentralist: Mission, Morality and Meaning in the Age of Crypto.
As much as I strive not to be dogmatic, there are few areas where I'm more firmly dug in than on the issue of the right to keep and bear arms. Brandon Smith says gun rights are more important than false security and appeasing leftists.
Getting the right answers generally comes down to being able to ask the right questions. Douglas Young has 12 questions to consider regarding mass shootings.
With the media spotlight having been taken off the World Economic Forum's meeting in Davos, Switzerland, it's important that we don't lose sight of what's happening there. J.B. Shurk lays out the true evil of the WEF.
Are you convinced that a white supremacist takeover is imminent in America? Might want to take a peek at Wilfred Riley's article on Buffalo and the myth of America's race war.
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