The White House

Daily Call In Show w/ Royce White

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Episodes

Tuesday May 19, 2026

Professor Penn hosts solo and breaks down the escalating fight inside Minnesota Republican politics ahead of the state convention, focusing on Michelle Tafoya, Adam Schwarze, the “SEAL brand,” and what he sees as establishment theater disguised as grassroots leadership. He argues that both major candidate lanes are tied to the same political machine, with polished messaging, military branding, and opposition research being used to distract voters from deeper questions of truth, loyalty, and who these candidates actually serve. The episode expands into a broader critique of Republican voters, Christian Zionism, red flag laws, family court, sexual scandal politics, and the way personal morality is often weaponized while larger systems of corruption go untouched. Penn also reflects on faith, Christ, Passover, suffering, and self-governance, arguing that America has drifted from spiritual responsibility into a culture built around pleasure, death, debt, and manipulation. He warns that the country’s medical, military, political, and digital systems are monetizing human weakness while ordinary citizens keep electing actors instead of true representatives. Ultimately, the episode calls for people to reject political theater, tell the truth, organize locally, protect freedom from central bank digital control, and rebuild the country through faith, discernment, and real civic action.

Tuesday May 19, 2026

Professor Penn hosts solo and reflects on his guest appearance on the Alex Jones Network, using it to frame a broader discussion about independent media, persecution, and the pressure that comes with telling the truth. He contrasts grassroots media and citizen-led organizing with the institutional power of universities, government agencies, NGOs, and globalist policy networks that he argues write the plans in plain sight while ordinary people are too distracted to read them. The episode moves into foreign policy, Trump’s attempt to shift away from the post–World War II global order, Taiwan, chip manufacturing, NATO, China, and what Penn sees as America’s need to stop defending the remains of the British imperial system. Penn also focuses heavily on ritual, Passover, the Last Supper, Christian Zionism, July 4th, and the need for Americans to recover sacred memory instead of living through shallow national holidays and political slogans. He argues that artificial intelligence, digital ID, and the coming technocratic order make intellect alone a losing strategy, leaving faith, self-governance, and spiritual discipline as the real path forward. Ultimately, the episode calls listeners to reject political theater, rebuild local political power through the precinct strategy, recover faith-based rituals, and organize around truth before America loses both its freedom and its soul.

Tuesday May 19, 2026

Professor Penn hosts solo and opens the episode by challenging the media’s framing of Trump’s meeting with Xi Jinping, arguing that Trump is not “soft” on China but strategically rebalancing a relationship that was distorted by decades of globalism, cheap imports, and American leaders failing to guard the country’s door. He uses China, Taiwan, manufacturing, green cards, immigration policy, and U.S. deficits to argue that America has allowed sovereignty, citizenship, and self-governance to be weakened by both parties. The episode also focuses on the cost of big government, entitlement spending, debt, and what Penn sees as a political class that expands bureaucracy while pretending to solve the problems it created. Penn criticizes Minnesota politics, digital ID, AI data centers, and the rise of technocracy, warning that artificial intelligence and centralized digital systems could strip ordinary citizens of freedom. He also connects faith, ritual, the Last Supper, sickness, suffering, and personal discipline to the need for Americans to turn rage into faith instead of being consumed by grievance. Ultimately, the episode calls listeners to reject political lies, rebuild local power through the precinct strategy, guard American citizenship, and recover faith-based self-governance before the country is absorbed by debt, digital control, and managed decline.

Thursday May 14, 2026

Professor Penn hosts solo and opens the episode with a personal prayer for healing, using sickness, suffering, and faith to frame a larger reflection on human pain, trauma, and the need to “let go and let God.” He connects personal illness and intergenerational wounds to broader questions of survival, spiritual balance, and how people medicate pain through addiction, fear, and materialism. The episode then shifts into President Trump’s meeting in Beijing, using The Godfather as a metaphor for global power, backroom deals, and the way ordinary citizens are excluded from decisions made by political, financial, and tech elites. Penn draws on his own experience doing business in China to discuss Chinese history, Western imperialism, communism, trade, manufacturing, and the long-term consequences of America’s dependence on Chinese supply chains. He warns that digital technocracy, AI, corporate power, and centralized government are becoming a new business model of control, similar to how drugs functioned in organized crime. Ultimately, the episode calls listeners to pursue faith, self-governance, political organizing, and the precinct strategy as the only real path to preserving freedom for “we the people.”

Wednesday May 13, 2026

Professor Penn hosts solo and opens the episode with prayer, using the Beatitudes to frame a broader reflection on faith, suffering, healing, and the need for spiritual discipline in public life. He connects Christian teaching with ideas of self-governance, humility, and human consciousness, arguing that America has lost touch with the foundations that once shaped its republic. The episode then shifts into a critique of Minnesota Republican politics, the recent debate, Michelle Tafoya, Adam Schwarze, and what Penn sees as establishment candidates using polished messaging while avoiding deeper truth. Penn also warns about militarizing politics through veteran branding, arguing that electing warriors and defending the military-industrial system will not lead the country toward peace or prosperity. He expands the discussion into Israel, Zionism, the British Empire, Ukraine, Afghanistan, drug trafficking, and the global power structures he believes are hidden behind patriotic narratives. Ultimately, the episode calls for digital freedom, political organizing, spiritual clarity, and a return to real republican principles before America is further absorbed into technocracy, war, and controlled opposition.

Wednesday May 13, 2026

Royce White and Professor Penn discuss inflation, food prices, fertilizer shortages, oil instability, and the larger “affordability” crisis, arguing that debt-based money and endless government spending are driving the country toward a breaking point. They frame the Middle East, Ukraine, China, and global supply chains as connected pressure points in a larger fight over sovereignty, trade, and America’s dependence on foreign systems. The conversation turns toward faith, sickness, patience, and personal responsibility, contrasting real spiritual grounding with institutions that study religion without teaching belief. Royce and Professor Penn also criticize the Republican Party, Michelle Tafoya, establishment candidates, and what they see as controlled opposition that protects power while pretending to offer solutions. They argue that America is being pushed away from reality, truth, and freedom through political theater, debt, cultural confusion, and a willingness to surrender self-governance. Ultimately, the episode calls for citizens to reject deception, rebuild independence, and take political action before the country is pulled deeper into financial, cultural, and spiritual submission.

Monday May 11, 2026

Royce White and Professor Penn open the episode with prayer before turning to the Middle East, oil prices, inflation, and what they call the scam of “affordability” in a country buried under debt. Royce uses his weekend coaching experience to explain discipline, body language, accountability, and how sports reveal character in ways politics often avoids. The conversation connects youth basketball to a larger critique of American softness, arguing that young men need standards, pressure, gratitude, and real-world consequences to develop strength. They also criticize the Republican Party, especially its convention culture, establishment candidates, and what they see as a lack of seriousness about winning, election integrity, and civic responsibility. Royce and Professor Penn frame many political failures as a refusal to face reality, comparing bad team culture to a broader national habit of blaming others instead of correcting weakness. Ultimately, the episode argues that faith, discipline, truth, and self-governance are necessary if Americans want to resist debt, soft leadership, digital control, and cultural decline.

Monday May 11, 2026

Professor Penn opens the show with prayer and frames the episode around faith, civic duty, and the need for people to organize around shared interests instead of shallow political agreement. He connects the conflict in the Middle East to a larger critique of the forever-war business model, arguing that defense contractors and political insiders profit while ordinary citizens carry the cost. The discussion shifts into inflation, medical and military spending, wedge issues, and how fear is used to keep people distracted from deeper systems of control. Penn also warns about data centers, digital ID, implantable technology, and technocracy, tying them to a broader threat against freedom, commerce, and human sovereignty. He then focuses on Minnesota politics, criticizing Amy Klobuchar, automatic voter registration, illegal immigration, government fraud, and what he sees as the coming use of digital ID to “solve” corruption while expanding control. The episode ultimately calls for citizens to wake up, support independent media, and get directly involved before freedom is replaced by a managed digital system.

Monday May 11, 2026

Royce White and Professor Penn open the episode by reacting to Minnesota being described as a transgender capital, using it to frame a broader discussion about cultural collapse, technology, and the loss of natural order. They compare older generations’ connection to toughness, family, music, faith, and self-governance with today’s culture of digital dependence, identity politics, and ideological confusion. The conversation moves into how transgenderism, transhumanism, AI, and massive data centers may be connected to a larger push toward technological control. They also reflect on music, Prince, Chris Cornell, and the role of art in shaping culture and memory. Royce and Professor Penn argue that politics, media, and culture are being used to pull people away from reality, faith, and human freedom. Ultimately, the episode frames the moment as a fight between natural life, spiritual grounding, and human identity versus a system pushing society toward artificial control.

Wednesday May 06, 2026

Royce White and Professor Penn discuss President Trump’s efforts to end hostilities with Iran, using the media backlash as a sign that the post–World War II liberal order may be losing control. They argue that war functions as both a business model and a form of coercive mind control, where defense contractors profit while ordinary Americans carry the cost. The conversation expands into media propaganda, political manipulation, and what they see as a broader disconnect from reality in American culture. They also criticize modern ideological movements, especially around gender, identity, and public morality, framing them as signs of deeper spiritual and psychological decay. Throughout the episode, Royce and Professor Penn contrast scripted establishment politics with a need for truth, discernment, and real citizen action. Ultimately, the discussion frames the current moment as a battle between peace, reality, and faith on one side, and war, illusion, and institutional control on the other.

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