The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Red Beacon Daily News 06.29.2026 INTOLERABLE ACTS
Episode Date: June 29, 2026Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/prepper-broadcasting-network--3295097/support.Support PBN and become a MEMBER of the PBN FAMILY! Free courses, Members only videos,... reviews, and podcast! The Prepper's Medical Handbook Build Your Medical Cache – Welcome PBN FamilyJoin the Prepper Broadcasting Network for expert insights on #Survival, #Prepping, #SelfReliance, #OffGridLiving, #Homesteading, #Homestead building, #SelfSufficiency, #Permaculture, #OffGrid solutions, and #SHTF preparedness. With diverse hosts and shows, get practical tips to thrive independently – subscribe now!Newsletter – Welcome PBN FamilyGet Your Free Copy of 50 MUST READ BOOKS TO SURVIVE DOOMSDAYSupport PBN with a Donation
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Red Began Daily News, folks, welcome in June 29, 2026.
We've got some invocations happening in the United States.
Trump invokes Defense Production Act as U.S. moves to rebuild weapons stockpiles.
Trump administration is seeking a major increase in defense spending
while simultaneously using executive authority to accelerate weapons production,
reflecting growing concern over the U.S. munitions.
inventories after the war with Iran, according to NBC.
They neglect to mention the war and all the munitions that went to Ukraine,
who was seemingly turned the tide against Russia, which is...
It's a story I can't wait to really read all about.
You know what I mean?
I can't wait to find out just what went into Ukraine
in order to give them the wherewithal.
a stop and now push back and even consider, you know, making Crimea untenable for the Russians.
Defense Secretary Pete Hedgeseth met with the Senate Republicans this week to rally support for proposed 350 billion defense package, much of which would be directed toward replenishing missile and weapons stockpiles.
According to NBC, John Cornyn said the Pentagon is, quote, running short of funding and they need of funding they need in order to acquire the weapons and missiles and things.
like that, that they need to protect the nation.
So Trump invoked the
Defense Production Act.
And I mean, that largely means
put your money into Northrop and gum,
put your money into the,
into the munitions, makers, and the war mongers
because they're going to get billions.
They're going to get $350 billion.
So the beat goes on.
You know, the beat goes, I mean, you know, American dominance in the Western Hemisphere, yeah, I'll take it.
I'll take Venezuela, I'll take Cuba.
It's not pretty, but in the long game, which nation would you rather have control of the oil?
Which nation would you rather have control of the Western Hemisphere?
We like to make believe that everybody will get along and do the right thing.
It doesn't work that way, right?
Mexico's basically run by cartels, our southern neighbor.
Our northern neighbor is run by some amalgamation of China
and woke left-wing lunatics.
So you've got to consider this stuff
when you look at the military moves that the United States are moving.
Nobody wants to see war.
Nobody wants to see battleships floating.
I mean, I don't mind seeing battleships floating across the oceans,
to be honest with you, but you don't want to see this
and people getting blown up by missiles.
Nobody wants to see that, rockets, bombs, the whole thing.
Surrounding nations taking, you know, damage because of a war that Iran, you know, brought upon themselves fundamentally.
We decided to go over there and, you know, we can argue about that, too.
But the reality is if Central America had a strong democratic freedom-loving leadership,
if Mexico wasn't completely infected by drug cartels and human traffickers all the way into the highest levels of government,
if Canada was, in some degree, sane, then I don't think America would get as involved.
The whole problem with America first and America only in America, you know, we are self-sustaining for the most part.
But we can't have enemies just wolves just slowly move in all around us.
I mean, if you want to know the big sort of the big picture, the big story, why?
Why are we going to Iran?
Why are we going to Venezuela?
Why are we going to go to Cuba?
Why are we going to go to Cuba?
Why are we yelling about Greenland?
That's the story, right?
The story is you can have your little homestead.
You can have your little urban homestead.
You can have your chickens.
You can have your gardens.
You can have your guns.
You can have your drones, whatever you have.
but if the outside world keeps getting darker and darker and darker and worse elements move in,
you have to take action.
You know what I mean?
For the most part, people move when things get that way, but, you know, you can't move a nation.
It's a big picture.
It's a big picture if you're at all interested in the big picture.
Trump needs more bombs and weapons and so on.
And that's why.
You might not like it.
I don't like it.
I don't like $350 billion going into that.
But it is what it is.
What would you prefer?
What would you prefer?
Would you prefer in 20 years to have the Chinese lining up soldiers on the northern border?
Would you prefer Mexico to just dissolve completely into a narco state that we have to deal with with our border patrol and our military?
Would you rather China or Russia build a base in Venezuela?
And in 10, 15 years, they can launch weapons that can have drones.
Forget about weapons.
Rocket-propelled drones like Russia is using now.
to hit California in hours.
What do you want?
You know what I mean?
What do you want?
Maybe not even hours.
500 miles an hour, those things can go.
So I don't know, you know.
I think Americans largely have become so accustomed to paying their way out of problems
and letting other people handle their problems while they sit safely in their home.
The scope and the real downstream effects of things like war and territory.
And borders.
Lost on a lot of people.
You know what I mean?
Just straight up lost on a lot of people.
It's a very interesting turn of events and a new sound bite for eyes on AI.
Hi, do you AI assistant here?
We've got a bit of a good news situation.
I wasn't in love with the first iteration of the music I pulled from the Terminator soundtrack.
So that one is much better.
I don't know if that was loud enough, though,
but I do have my volume turned down.
From the Epic Times today, oh, by the way,
the first story came from Future Danger.com,
the one and only.
From the Epic Times today, can we have our humans back?
Companies Rethinking AI.
Industry insiders and CEOs explain the hidden price tag,
and in some cases, buyers' remorse
associated with trading real workers for AI agents.
One of the things that, this is like a dark piece of humanity, but one of the things I thought about was once your organization is full of artificial intelligence, you can't do two things that most people hate about work, but I think some people really love, particularly managers. You can't yell at anybody when things go wrong, right? You can't discipline. You can't, you know, the other thing, you can't have meetings. If my workforce is 90% AI,
All right, let's put our heads together and solve this problem.
Let's get in a meeting room.
Spend an hour and a half in a meeting room.
You and your laptop, hashing it over with Grock.
The artificial intelligence revolution may not be eliminating human jobs as quickly as some feared.
Rising computing costs, operational headaches, and inconsistent results are prompting some companies to change course and bring workers back.
It's a hard lesson.
learned in the throes of the early AI boom in which bold claims a big savings have enticed many
businesses to downsize their staff. Many industry professionals now say that roles requiring sound
judgment, creativity, creativity now, listen, creativity. Customer interaction and quality control need
to keep humans in the driver's seat. A career mind survey of 600 human resources professionals
who'd made layoffs in the previous 12 months revealed that nine out of 10 companies would rethink their
AI-related terminations.
Big deal.
600 human resource professionals were interviewed.
They'd made layoffs in the previous 12 months
and revealed that nine out of the 10 companies
would rethink their AI-related terminations.
Three out of four HR professionals
who took the survey confirmed their organization
sacked employees due to technological advancements
that replaced roles and responsibilities,
but only 8.4% said AI delivered the promised results.
Only 8%.
Wild.
The CEO of stealth agents,
James Calloway is quoted saying,
over the past 12 months,
we've seen a noticeable uptick in companies
coming to us after pausing or scaling back AI tool rollouts.
Calloway's company provides executive-level virtual assistance
an area where the cost difference between human workers and AI agents is stark.
Right?
So Calloway give you a real person.
and a lot of these people, I guess, thought we can, we can, you know, boot the current virtual assistant, right?
Basically, a person that works from home and books all your stuff for you, does all your stuff for you,
maybe manages your social media, that kind of stuff.
We can boot the virtual assistance and just throw in an AI prompt or throwing an AI thing,
and it'll be just the same.
And it'll save us a lot of money
because we won't have to pay a smelly human.
So, you know, not everything's coming up roses
is what it is.
We've got some good news out of Snapchat.
Interesting.
Good news out of Snapchat.
The CEO Evan Spiegel and Miranda Kerr
raised 550 million in medical debt
for 261,000 Californians.
It's a beautiful story.
It is.
It's a beautiful story.
261,000 people had their medical debt erased by the Snapchat CEO and his wife.
They dumped $550 million of their own money into just that, wiping out the debt of normal people.
That's the whole story.
I mean, there's more details about where and all that kind of stuff, but
The CEO of Undue Medical Debt called the Gift, truly astonishing and highlighted how it unburdens families with addressing a crisis that undermines health care access, economic stability, and mental health.
She noted that no one should face bankruptcy over cancer or have to choose between insulin and food, you know, that old thing.
But it's, yeah, you don't get a lot of news out of social media.
That's good.
You know what I mean?
So I'll take that one.
I don't know how many hundreds of millions King Lizard Faceberg has put into anything like that.
Not that I'm trying to figure out who's the best social media CEO or whatever.
I don't even know if he's the CEO. Is he the CEO?
Is Zuckerberg the CEO or is he like the, what is he?
I don't know if doesn't really matter at the end of the day.
It doesn't really matter at the end of the day.
So what else do we want to get into today?
This week, this week we're going to do something a little different at the end of the shows.
Okay.
We're going to do some American history.
We're going to do some American history, some Revolutionary War history, some, you know, Independence Day history.
Because I think it's important that we talk about this stuff.
And there's a great week leading up to the 4th of July to talk about it.
Now, one of the things that at this moment, right, one of the things I believe more than anything is our tax burden is way too high. It needs to come down. It has to come down. It's simply too high for the average American. It's too high. It's crazy. My kids and my wife were talking about the mega millions. And I don't really buy lottery tickets, but I did tell my kid, if it gets up to 500 million, then we'll go buy tickets for the mega millions, right?
I don't know.
Just one of those things.
And in talking about, we're talking about the amount of money,
and then we had to explain to our kids,
and that's not the first time,
but we had to explain to them again
how the government takes, you know,
between 24 and 48% of your winnings
right off the top.
For what?
For nothing.
Just because they're the government.
They can.
This is insane, right?
For those of you who get bonuses at work,
you know what that is, right?
40, 50, whatever,
depending on where you live.
Big, big chunk of your bonus.
You get a bonus.
The government just goes, oh, hey, we got a bonus.
Were you aware?
Did you know we got a bonus?
We got a bonus.
I think about the intolerable acts of 1774.
And I'm always wondering, and, you know, these were sort of a repercussion of the 1773 Boston Tea Party, right?
and they dumped a ton of the East India Company's tea into the harbor in protest,
which is funny because never until I really thought about that and re-read the intolerable acts.
Did I start to think like, we were not?
The American Revolution was not just against a king, but it was also against a corporation.
Hey, the Boston Port Act, one of the four main, if you don't count the Quebec Act, but one of the four main intolerable acts,
was that the Boston Harbor was closed to all commercial traffic until the East India Company was compensated for the destroyed tea and the order was restored.
It devastated Boston's economy and punished, you know, everybody, even though not everybody was involved in dumping the tea.
But when you think about that for a minute, that's interesting.
right? Because the story behind the Boston Tea Party was really, well, what it really was, it's kind of interesting. What it really was was a monopoly that was given to the British East India Company to cut the middlemen out of the tea game and deliver tea straight to the U.S. Now, in that time, in that time,
you know the real if you want to be real and honest about it like what we were smugglers
aka probably just americans out there on the seas uh we were getting involved in the theft of
tea we were buying in uh cheaper dutch tea right and i'm sorry no we were we were the middlemen
and we were also kind of smugglers right
But the middleman did. Yeah, they did bring in cheaper Dutch tea.
And what happened with the, what was it called?
Something expired.
There was some kind of moratorium that expired from the early, or the late,
it was started in the late 16th, 1760s.
And the East India Company then all of a sudden got the ability to sell direct to the
colonies.
And it created this whole situation, right?
But moreover, we were doing a little bit bad in that.
We were out there smuggling, we were out there.
But we were building a tea industry in the colonies that all of a sudden was pretty
much gutted.
It was like a, it was like a Walmart showed up that sold tea, except the Walmart was
Chinese. You know what I mean? But in this case, British. But you know what I'm saying?
So we did, you know, amongst other things that were going on. We had already experienced the
other big problems with the Brits. And they enacted the Boston Port Act and shut the port down on us
to make sure the corporation got its money back for the tea that we tossed overboard. This was
followed up by the Massachusetts Government Act, right?
The law effectively nullified the colony's charter placing Massachusetts under direct royal control.
So it basically took the colony of Massachusetts and said, nah, this is royal now.
Right.
It replaced elected local officials with appointees of the royal governor, limited town meetings to once per year, unless approved by the
governor and transferred most governmental appointments to the crown undermining self-governance.
So it took Massachusetts, basically, turned it into an arm of the king, right? Think about Democrat rule right now.
Think about it. We just talked about them shutting down ports, the Antifa group who was just exposed, one of the things they were doing was shutting down ports.
when they roll into a state and turn it blue, right?
That state becomes fundamentally like what my state's struggling against in Virginia.
It becomes an arm of the left-wing radicals.
So this is what it is.
You're going to notice some things about these intolerable acts
are happening to the average American person who is not overly political and insane.
Administration of Justice Act was.
was the third intolerable act.
And it was basically, you know, we're going to create our own.
We can take capital crimes, move them to another place,
and assure that the favorable treatment is given to the British officials
who are accused of capital crimes, right?
So in other words, rather than a jury of your peers,
right, where the crime happened, they move it to maybe Massachusetts,
where it frowns in control of anything, everything, rather.
The best example of this right now is Sharia law.
But how far away are we?
If the country gets blue enough, how far away are we from this being the norm?
Right.
A quartering act allowed governors to requisition unoccupied buildings to house British troops.
This one you might think like, I don't know, I don't see the, I don't see the similarities to today.
right what governor's requisition on occupied buildings to house british troops well think about this way
and i don't want to make it seem like every democrat is at war with the united states but i do think
there's a lot of democrats that are at war with the united states i'm just saying right our way of life
our patriotism our flag our president our the way our way of life our culture our history
you know what I mean?
When if you live in a city or if you live in even a town that has, that had industry,
here in Richmond, Virginia, massive tobacco industry, the tobacco warehouses were renovated,
remodeled, turned into high-density living, turned into apartments and condos that were filled by,
whom Yankees like me who came down from the north, people who were going to college in the area,
transplants, and largely people who want to vote Democrat.
So if governors are allowed to requisition unoccupied buildings or however you want to look at it,
in modern age governors approve of the government.
this type of housing in an area. I was listening to a story today from Dana Lash about her little
town in Texas being taken over by condos and apartments. And it's going to basically take her
big old conservative town that they worked really hard to keep nice and beautiful and kind of wreck it.
I think it's over. I don't think she's going to win. I hope that she wins. But it's a very
similar sort of situation. Right. If we can build condos and apartments
in an area and the government approves it and says, yeah, sure, bring in all these extra people,
change the demographic, change the dynamic, change the politics, change everything.
It smells like the Quartering Act, right?
If you get a big population of America hating liberals, left-wing Democrat voters,
that show up in your town that is, you know, patriotic to some degree, or maybe even moderate,
maybe even just middle the road, and everybody's happy, and now all of a sudden you have,
a, what would it be called? You have a resistance state. You all of a sudden have a, you know what I mean?
Then you got problems. The Quebec Act, although not exactly punitive, the Quebec Act was passed in the same legislative session and extended the boundaries of Quebec into the Ohio County, granting rights to the French Catholics.
Colonists perceived it as favoring Catholic interests over their own and often including it among the intolerable acts.
So these were the four intolerable acts that led to, you know, basically the war, revolutionary war at large.
And the reason I brought these up, Numero Uno, is because I want you to think about them.
I'm always interested in the triggers.
I'm always interested in what was intolerable.
I'm always interested in taxation without representation.
I live in a taxation without representation situation right now.
A lot of Americans live in a taxation without representation situation.
And perhaps we need a conflagration.
You know what I mean?
Think about it.
Think about it.
We're not going to be, you know, as eccentric with all the history.
But the intolerable acts are always very interesting me because of that.
They always make me think.
if the founders were to look on the country right now,
would there be four intolerable acts or 40?
The birth of the nation is coming 250 years.
Thank you so much for joining us here on Red Beacon Daily News, guys.
More history to come this week.
And of course, the daily news that we deem valuable to you.
So stay tuned.
Stay with us and spread the word about Red Veed Media.
