Episodes

Monday May 11, 2026
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
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
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.

Wednesday May 06, 2026
Wednesday May 06, 2026
Professor Penn hosts solo from Free People Radio, reflecting on war, political deception, and what he sees as America being pushed deeper into a digital prison. He questions the official narrative around conflict in the Middle East, arguing that war functions as coercive mind control while the military-industrial complex continues steering the country toward debt and control. The episode also critiques Republican candidates and party delegates, especially those tied to military branding, establishment politics, and what Penn views as scripted or dishonest leadership. He frames Republicanism as a philosophy of giving, civic duty, faith, and self-governance, contrasting it with political movements built on fear, taking, and manipulation. Penn also warns that surveillance, digital IDs, AI, and technocracy are becoming larger threats than ordinary partisan fights. Ultimately, the episode calls for truth, discernment, and citizen action before America loses both its freedom and its spiritual foundation.

Monday May 04, 2026
Monday May 04, 2026
Royce White and Professor Penn open the episode by breaking down internal conflicts within Minnesota Republican politics, focusing on gun rights, weak leadership, campaign grifting, and what they see as establishment figures protecting the status quo. They criticize media narratives and party insiders, arguing that outlets like the Star Tribune and GOP operatives frame outsider candidates as unstable while ignoring deeper corruption inside the political system. The conversation expands into the “global dollar empire,” war, debt, military influence, and how both parties contribute to the same cycle of spending, conflict, and public control. They also question the authenticity of cable news politics, arguing that figures like Michelle Tafoya represent scripted media culture rather than real political leadership. Throughout the episode, Royce and Professor Penn contrast surface-level Republican talking points with deeper issues like technocracy, monetary control, military power, and spiritual accountability. The episode ultimately frames the current political moment as a fight between real citizen-led reform and a managed establishment system built on money, media, and institutional control.

Friday May 01, 2026
Friday May 01, 2026
Professor Penn and Royce White use May Day as a launching point for a deeper conversation about communism, digital control, and the spiritual condition of America. They argue that digital ID, AI regulation, surveillance, and smartphone tracking are signs that society is already living inside a growing digital prison. The discussion connects media distractions, Fox News-style politics, and cultural wedge issues to a broader failure to confront the real systems of control. They also explore parenting, discipline, and the collapse of boundaries, arguing that weak social structures have produced a generation disconnected from reality and faith. Royce and Professor Penn frame the battle as spiritual as much as political, emphasizing courage, truth, fatherhood, and the need to resist self-doubt. Ultimately, the episode calls for people to wake up, reject distraction, and recognize the deeper fight over freedom, faith, and the future of the country.

Thursday Apr 30, 2026
Thursday Apr 30, 2026
Royce White and Professor Penn break down rising global instability, focusing on OPEC fractures, oil markets, and how conflict in the Middle East could trigger widespread economic ripple effects like rising costs across everyday goods. They connect these shifts to broader concerns about global power structures, war economics, and how profits are concentrated while costs are pushed onto citizens. The conversation moves into domestic politics, highlighting distrust in party establishments, debates over sovereignty, and frustrations with performative leadership versus substantive policy. They also explore deeper philosophical and theological themes, including morality, sin, and the role of faith in shaping individual and national direction. The episode closes with a call for awareness, discipline, and action, emphasizing personal responsibility and the need to confront cultural and political decline head-on.

Wednesday Apr 29, 2026
Wednesday Apr 29, 2026
Royce White and Professor Penn react strongly to King Charles addressing Congress, framing it as evidence of U.S. alignment with British/global influence and criticizing bipartisan support for Ukraine funding and foreign policy priorities. They discuss concerns about American sovereignty, arguing that political leaders are disconnected from citizens and complicit in broader ideological control tied to historical empires and modern institutions. The conversation shifts to cultural and domestic issues, including debates over constitutional limits, banning certain ideologies, and what they view as a decline in national identity and values. They also highlight economic pressures like rising oil and tire costs, linking them to global conflict and energy policy. The episode closes with a broader call for political action and grassroots engagement, emphasizing urgency and dissatisfaction with current leadership.

Tuesday Apr 28, 2026
Tuesday Apr 28, 2026
Royce White and Professor Penn open with a sharp critique of political divisions in Minnesota, arguing that both parties are driven by a status quo that has led to endless war, rising debt, and public complacency. They focus heavily on internal fractures within the Republican Party, calling out weak leadership, “chameleon” candidates, and a culture that prioritizes electability over principle. The discussion expands into concerns about growing government control, including legislation around biometric tracking and vehicle “kill switches,” which they frame as part of a broader push toward technocracy. Royce reflects on his past activism and argues that real change requires confronting systems at their core, not just reacting to surface-level narratives pushed by media and institutions. Throughout the episode, they emphasize the importance of courage, truth, and rejecting political convenience in favor of deeper structural reform. The conversation ultimately frames the moment as a critical choice point, urging listeners to recognize the underlying power structures and take a stand.

Monday Apr 27, 2026
Monday Apr 27, 2026
Royce White and Professor Penn open the discussion reacting to a reported assassination attempt on Donald Trump, using it to frame a broader conversation about instability, security failures, and the state of the country. They shift into a sharp critique of the Republican Party, arguing that internal leadership, weak candidates, and “never-Trump” influence are actively undermining the movement from within. The conversation expands into concerns about judicial power and corruption, with a detailed breakdown of how courts and legal systems can shape outcomes regardless of evidence. They also explore cultural issues around accountability, self-deception, and societal norms, tying these into both politics and personal experience. Throughout the episode, they emphasize that the real battle is happening inside institutions—political parties, courts, and cultural systems—rather than just between opposing sides. The episode ultimately frames this moment as a critical inflection point, calling for awareness, organization, and a willingness to confront entrenched systems directly.



