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The speaker claims a mock trial was run to determine if a jury would believe her. The speaker states the jury believed two people could be in a dressing room if something sexual happened, but that she was seen as too old for anyone to believe she wasn't begging for it. According to the other speaker, during jury exercises, women jurors disliked when the speaker suggested she wasn't a victim, supposedly because they or women they knew had similar experiences. The speaker had difficulty admitting weakness or how Donald Trump had irreparably damaged her life; she was never able to date again. An expert witness, a psychologist and trauma theory developer, spent 26 hours with the speaker, who learned she had given up everything erotic and romantic in her life because of the attack. It was important for the speaker to say it in a believable way, which required her to believe it.

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There was an ant that challenged us, but we dismissed it as just one ant. We compared their size to a tiny brain and realized they couldn't harm us. However, if one ant can stand up to us, then others might follow. The truth is, these small ants outnumber us 100 to 1, and if they realize their strength in numbers, our way of life could be in jeopardy.

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Many people suppress their potential due to fear of others' opinions, something the speaker identifies with from personal experience. The speaker advises that overcoming this fear is crucial, because people are generally less concerned with you than you imagine. Furthermore, the speaker claims that some people will only show affection if you suppress your true self.

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Today, I noticed a stark contrast in the behavior of certain individuals. On social media, they seemed brave and outspoken, but when faced with real-life situations, they remained silent. I believe this is because they fear being near us, as they know deep down that we possess the truth. It's quite humiliating for them to believe in reincarnation and be reincarnated as weak and cowardly people. In Leicester, some individuals associated with Hindutva are trying to act tough, but they are not truly about that life. I challenge them to come forward, and we will see if they have the courage to face us.

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At Pride, someone was being homophobic and laughing at a liberation fight. I confronted him, telling him he shouldn't be there. I mentioned that he's not on the right side, and then they started hating on me. I only said a few words before they attacked him. My name is Sonny. Did you see that? They snuck up on him.

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The fight with Lewis Bacon weakened Nygard's power and encouraged others to speak out about their experiences. Victims were brought forward to share their stories, revealing that Nygard surrounded himself with young women who were kept under his control through threats, intimidation, and money. Many of these women came from difficult backgrounds and were brought into his circle at a young age. Despite their fear, they bravely spoke to the FBI, police, and journalists, even though they knew that influential figures, including politicians and police officers, supported Nygard. Despite the risks, they continued to come forward, creating a snowball effect of momentum against Nygard.

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Speaker 0 describes how, despite preparing for defeat and despondency amid trauma from a campaign of terror, their heart would break and then be restored. They leave spaces feeling full, abundant, hopeful, joyful, and strong, noting “there’s something in the water in Minnesota” and that “you all are truly built different.” The message is that Minnesota is not the poster child for chaos and terror, but rather “the blueprint for the power of radical love,” and for “true solidarity and the linking of arms.”

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The speaker knew the suspect and said he was bullied almost every day and was an outcast who sat alone at lunch. Kids would target him because they thought it was funny. The speaker didn't want to say this provoked the suspect, but stated that you never know. The speaker said the suspect was a loner because he was quiet, but he was bullied so much. He was made fun of for the way he dressed or his appearance. The suspect would regularly wear hunting gear and always have a mask, even well after COVID.

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There was an ant that challenged us, but we dismissed it as just one ant. We considered ants to be insignificant and weak. To illustrate this, we compared our power to a tiny ant and showed that it couldn't harm us. However, we realized that if one ant could stand up to us, others might follow suit. The sheer number of ants greatly outnumbered us, posing a threat to our way of life. It's crucial for us to prevent them from realizing their collective strength.

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The fight with Lewis Bacon weakened Nygard's power and encouraged others to speak out about their experiences. Victims were brought forward to share their stories, revealing that Nygard surrounded himself with young women who were kept under his control through threats, intimidation, and money. Many of these women came from difficult backgrounds and were brought into his circle at a young age. Despite their fear, they bravely spoke to the FBI, police, and journalists, even though they knew that influential figures, including politicians and police officers, supported Nygard. Despite the risks, they continued to come forward, creating a momentum that grew stronger against all odds.

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Ejean, a lawyer, discusses her experience in a trial against Donald Trump. Despite feeling nervous due to the conduct of the trial, she expresses her willingness to sue Trump again if advised by her lawyers. The interviewer acknowledges the toll this has taken on Ejean and praises her bravery. Ejean acknowledges that others have endured worse and states that she is ready to go through it again because they achieved the seemingly impossible by defeating Trump in a 7-day trial.

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People reacted strongly, demanding action, but the speaker says they have sacrificed for two years, facing ostracization, harassment, and threats. The speaker states that while others lived normal lives, they risked everything. The speaker emphasizes that nobody got hurt on their watch, and the allegation concerns something from six years ago that was hidden from them. The speaker also claims the alleged victim wasn't even harmed.

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In a small, dark room that resembled a cleaning cupboard, the speaker was alone with someone. The person touched their leg, leaving them confused and unable to speak up. The encounter lasted only a couple of minutes, during which the person reassured the speaker. However, after it ended, the person threatened the speaker, warning them not to tell anyone because they wouldn't be believed. This intimidation forced the speaker into silence.

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He recounts a sequence in which five children testified about an incident involving Jamal. He references Judge Nicklin, who he says stated that “the five kids just made up that they were attacked by Jamal.” He emphasizes that these five children had previously spoken about the matter before his involvement. He explains that, as a journalist, he interviewed them and “repeated it,” and then asserts that the group used bankruptcy through the legal system to try to intimidate him. When bankruptcy leverage did not achieve the desired effect, he says they targeted his family’s home. He describes the home being boxed in, live streamed, and people sent to the residence, with threats to kill his kids. He notes that the fallout over those years left him bitter about what happened and that he remained “all in anyway,” framing this as something he did in response to the situation. He says he carried that weapon, calling it a weapon, while he sat there for three years thinking he had a film that “absolutely annihilates them.” He claims the film reached 53,000,000 views, arguing that the public had an interest in knowing the truth about the story. He asserts that the courts did not allow him to fight public interest through legal channels. He states that he has been through the court system and claims to have been imprisoned unjustly, unlawfully, and that he watched people celebrate it. He acknowledges personal flaws by saying, “And I’m not perfect,” and notes that if one follows his life, he has been in some bad places over those three years.

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The speaker recounts watching their small, 12-year-old daughter spar with much larger teenage boys over several days. The daughter's sensei approached her and said, "sweetheart, get your butterflies flying in formation." The speaker was impressed by this advice, noting that it was superior to simply telling her to calm down. The speaker emphasizes that arousal is necessary and useful, not something to be suppressed. The sensei's advice was interpreted as a way to harness and redirect that arousal, finding a different meaning for it.

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It's just one ant, but if you let one ant stand up to us, then they all might stand up. Those puny little ants outnumber us a hundred to one, and if they ever figure that out, there goes our way of life. It's not about food; it's about keeping those ants in line. You let one ant stand up to them, and they might all stand up. Individually, we feel helpless, lonely, often frightened. Together, nothing can stop us. No tyrant can rule us. No dictator can demand from us subservience. Together, we're powerful.

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Speaker 0: When did you realize that someone finally understood the injustice done to you? Speaker 1: It was Remske Leijten, when she came to Rotterdam. She looked us in the eyes and there was a connection. I told her it would work out, but she said she wasn't sure. Then we felt a bond. We didn't know what we were getting into, but we had each other. Pieter assured us he wouldn't abandon us. I felt relieved. I gained strength, not just from them, but from God. In 2008, I collapsed from stress, but when I woke up, I felt I had a chance to live. I believed God was with me. Renske Leijten said we had a bond. I thought of it as a trinity. We started living, and there was strength. We saw light again, and that's how we moved forward.

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Speaker 0 contemplates asserting themselves toward men, noting they are bigger and could "body you." They admit a fear of the police and a reluctance to get in trouble, but as they get older, they wonder, "do you know what? I could catch a charge."

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Speaker 0 describes a situation where some individuals “gum felt empowered and emboldened enough to put this picture of me up to try to threaten and intimidate me,” adding that they didn’t succeed because “I signed up for this.” The person who posted the picture “said a bunch of terrible things, not just against me, but against a lot of groups and individuals who, by the way, was arrested today in Wisconsin.” The speaker’s point is that if this person feels empowered or safe enough to threaten them, what would they do to “a kid” or “a Jewish family walking down the street?” The speaker attributes this behavior to the “normalization of this,” describing how people watch such acts on television and feel empowered to imitate them. They argue that while the aggressor may think they can act, they cannot: “a, you can't.” They extend the concern to someone in law enforcement, asking, “if you think you can do it to somebody that's in law enforcement, again, what are you gonna do in an alley or in a street to a Jewish family or a kid walking down the street?” The message is a firm prohibition: “We say no. We're drawing the line.”

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The speaker met a "larger than life figure" at David's house who spoke for an hour and a half and was also hilarious. The speaker realized they had gotten it totally wrong and had believed superficial mainstream media narratives. After reading the lawsuits, the speaker felt that the contortions people went through to prevent this man from getting into power made the speaker want him in power even more. The speaker believed "they" were afraid of something they wouldn't say out loud, but that "thing" needed to be exercised from the US government. The speaker believes it is a "thing" that "they" want to protect, and it involves disclosure of some kind.

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Darren Carter, a 125-pound uneducated individual, is challenged by a confident speaker who claims that men like him are not afraid. The speaker emphasizes that he and others are physically stronger and more experienced than Carter. He also defends convicts, stating that they are not evil and do not respect Carter. The speaker urges citizens to find courage within themselves and fight against evil. He encourages people to report information about criminals and emphasizes that this is not about race, as leaders from the black community stand with law enforcement. The speaker concludes by inviting those who disagree to confront him and calls on patriots to share the message of American strength.

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The speaker describes a high school student who was bullied almost every day for being an outcast and a loner. The bullying involved being made fun of for his appearance and the way he dressed, including wearing jeans and, sometimes, hunting outfits. He always wore a mask, even after COVID restrictions were lifted. The speaker doesn't want to say the bullying provoked something, but acknowledges it's a possibility.

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Alexis was asked to leave the lecture room for not speaking up against an injustice. The speaker emphasized the importance of standing up for justice, even if it doesn't directly affect us. He urged the students to use their voices to fight for what is right and not rely on others to do so. The speaker highlighted the need to be there for others and speak out against injustice in all aspects of life, teaching critical thinking and empowerment to make a difference.

Shawn Ryan Show

David Rutherford - Navy SEAL & CIA Contractor | SRS #228
Guests: David Rutherford
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David Rutherford’s story unfolds from a tight-knit Boca Raton upbringing into a life steeped in risk, discipline, faith, and relentless reinvention. He recalls growing up in a beach town that shaped his values: a father who built a small law practice through hard work and integrity, a mother who loved tennis and community, and an older brother, Eric, whose artistic talent and later struggles would anchor Dave’s sense of family and loyalty. Competitive sports and art defined his early years, but the family’s quiet shock when Eric came out as gay in the early 80s—amid a climate of fear around AIDS—forced painful conflicts that fractured trust and forced Dave to confront denial, blame, and guilt. He describes the ensuing chaos: Eric’s withdrawal, addiction, and estrangement; and a teenager’s perspective on responsibility that would haunt him for decades. That era taught him how fragile stability can be, how fast hope can fracture into fear, and how profoundly his identity would be tested as he sought purpose beyond the fear and performance that had defined him as a kid, athlete, and would-be artist. A pivotal shift comes in college, where Dave’s life again teeters on crisis. A relationship leads to pregnancy and a miscarriage; he learns he’s not ready to be a father or a husband in the way his family might expect. The emotional avalanche includes a near-suicide attempt after a devastating breakup, and a faltering sense of self that makes him question everything—athletics, academics, even loyalty to friends. He describes a dramatic turn: he walks away from Penn State, returns home to Florida, and begins to rebuild not by retreating but by leaning into mentors who push him toward a larger vision. His father’s quiet guidance—encouraging him to be a Renaissance man, to own integrity, to pursue a path that would fill the holes left by failure—frames his decision to seek something disciplined, dangerous, and redeeming. The search for identity, he says, ultimately leads him toward the Navy and the SEALs as a chance to confront fear head-on and to test whether he can endure, adapt, and lead under extreme pressure. Budding as a SEAL begins with brutal reality. He signs up for Buds, experiences 205 and then is rolled into 206, where a life-defining moment arrives: a harsh, transformative pool session that nearly breaks him, followed by a slow, painful climb toward 208 and finally 209. He describes the ritual trident pinning as a thunderous, communal moment of belonging that comes after months of doubt, pain, and near-quit moments. The first combat deployment—Southeast Asia and later Afghanistan—pushes him into a brutal, unpredictable theater where vehicles, terrain, and enemy tactics demand improvisation and nerve. He recounts dangerous patrols, joint operations with SF and agency teams, and a mission to snatch Taliban leaders that turns into a harrowing experience of chaos, miscommunication, and near-misses. In the aftermath, he carries a heavy sense of guilt about a weapon discharge that may have wounded colleagues, and a silence from leadership that compounds his self-blame. He wrestlingly questions whether his training, discipline, and moral compass were enough, while compartmentalizing the experience to survive emotionally and physically. The years that follow fracture into a long arc of reinvention. After a stint as an SQT instructor, a Blackwater assignment, and a string of deployments to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Dave confronts the moral ambiguities of the security industry, the limits of “kinetic” missions, and the human cost of constant conflict. A deep dive into his faith—driven by a near-fatal crash, a baptism, sweat lodges, and a community that refused to abandon him—becomes the thread that steadying his life. He builds Frog Logic, a youth-focused organization intended to restore self-confidence and resilience in kids through martial-arts-inspired missions and storytelling. He writes, speaks, and travels to share lessons learned from his failures and his triumphs, while acknowledging the ongoing tension between redemption and accountability. The personal arc includes a difficult divorce, the arrival of a second family, and a relationship with Janna that anchors him and gives him a new sense of purpose, trust, and tenderness. He credits Janna with teaching him to communicate, to be honest about his struggles, and to sustain a life that moves from violence and bravado toward stewardship, mentorship, and faith. In the final stretch, Dave frames a philosophy for living with fear and purpose: embrace vulnerability, seek truth in relationships, and lean into communities that hold you accountable. He emphasizes the importance of conversations, empathy, and service over isolation, urging young people to find a “cornerstone” in faith and in trusted mentors. He reflects on the cost of a career built around being the best at combat and acknowledges a lifelong struggle with guilt, shame, and the fear of letting others down. Yet through Frog Logic, family, and a growing spiritual practice, he argues for a life where resilience is not just about surviving danger but about using experience to uplift others. He closes with a practical, hopeful blueprint: stay curious, be willing to ask for help, build authentic relationships, and pursue a meaningful vocation that aligns with your deepest values. His message to his kids—and to anyone wrestling with purpose—is to embrace the unknown, cultivate self-confidence, and choose teams and missions that elevate the human spirit.

Armchair Expert

Armchair Anonymous: First Day of School | Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard
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First days of school rarely unfold as planned, but on Armchair Anonymous they ricochet from thrill to chaos in real time. One teacher’s commute in Canada ends with a high-speed collision when a biking student is struck at the school entrance, the windshield shattering and a bystander police scene forming in minutes. The rider, wearing a helmet, survives; the driver fears termination, but calm colleagues and a defense attorney friend steer the situation toward a quick, forgiving outcome. She remains in the same school, ready to start again. Katie, a Michigan freshman with a knack for resilience, shares a more chaotic moment: mid-afternoon, she feels sick and asks her friend to hurry to the bathroom. Outside, the chorus stands in a crowded line; inside, she erupts in a relentless vomit, showering her friend’s back, hair, and sweater before they even reach the stall. Her friend shrugs off the chaos, clothes thrown away, and Katie embraces the role of class clown as the incident fades into a funny, infamous school memory. Another episode follows, this time in Ohio, where a choir-room transition from band to drama meets a physical reminder about safety. On the first days as a new choir director, she tries a playful exercise, but a doorway’s slow-closing mechanism slams into her ankle, leaving a deep clean gash and seven stitches after an ER visit. She returns to class in sandals for weeks, navigates the boot-strap doors being replaced, and keeps teaching, grateful that the job endures despite the injury and the chaos of a shared performing arts space. Finally, a Tennessee high school tale threads courage with mischief as a gymnast-turned-cheer recruit recalls Freshman Friday and a notorious bully named Michael. The boy’s plan to trash him backfires when the new student projects bravery, fights back, and is defended by a cousin who intervenes. The episode ends with the bully humiliated, the freshman graduating with warmth from peers, and a reminder that personal resilience and a supportive network can rewrite a rough debut into a turning point.
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