The nonpartisan “Igniting Change Radio Show with Barbara Arnwine, Esq. and Daryl Jones, Esq.” program will be aired from 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) on Radio One’s WOL 1450 AM in the Washington, DC metropolitan area as well as nationwide on WOLDCNEWS.COM and Barbaraarnwine.com.
Please note, during the show there are 3 hard stop commercial breaks at 12:13 PM Eastern Time, 12:28 PM ET and 12:43 PM ET.
Cameron Barnes: 12:00 PM – 12:57 PM Eastern Time
National Young Adult Policy Advocate; National Youth Director of Rainbow PUSH; TJC Fellow and Freedom Rider; Director of Youth & Young Adult Engagement, New Faith MB Church Chicago
Marcus Arbery: 12:00 PM – 12:25 PM Eastern Time
Father of Ahmaud Arbery and Glynn County Activist
Kimberly Cummings: 12:00 PM – 12:25 PM Eastern Time
Aunt of Ahmaud Arbery and Glynn County Activist
Porsché “Queen” Mitchell-Miller: 12:00 PM – 12:25 PM Eastern Time
CEO, Embracing Ahmaud’s Pace
Dr. Karen McRae: 12:30 PM – 12:57 PM Eastern Time
President & CEO, Concerned Black Men of America
INTRODUCTION:
Part one of our show will feature guests Porsché “Queen” Mitchell-Miller, and Kimberly Cummings, and Marcus Arbery who will be recording live from Brunswick with Co-Hosts Jones and Arnwine at the jury selection for the Jackie Johnson trial. Cameron Barnes will also join this portion and the second part of the show. Jackie Johnson, the former Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney, is set to stand trial for allegedly obstructing the investigation into Ahmaud Arbery’s killing. Johnson faces charges of violating her oath of office and hindering law enforcement officers. The trial comes more than four years after Arbery’s death, which sparked nationwide protests over racial injustice. Johnson is accused of interfering with the investigation to protect Gregory McMichael, a former investigator in her office, and his son, Travis McMichael, who were involved in Arbery’s death. Jury selection for the trial is scheduled to begin soon, with a larger-than-usual pool of 200 potential jurors due to the case’s notoriety. Read more here: https://www.cnn.com/2025/01/21/us/ahmaud-arbery-jackie-johnson-da/index.html
Karen McRae will join as a Guest for Part 2. Part 2 will feature a discussion of the Biden Pardons, the Trump Inauguration, and the response to the threat of Mass Deportations in several states.
PRESIDENT TRUMP’S DAY ONE
On Day One of his presidency, President Trump signed executive orders freezing federal hiring and mandating a return to in-office work for government employees. The orders also reinstated Schedule F, stripping some civil servants of employment protections. A new Department of Government Efficiency, led by Elon Musk, aims to reduce government spending and fire “rogue bureaucrats.” The hiring freeze applies to all executive branch positions except military, national security, public safety, and immigration enforcement. Remote work arrangements are to end “as soon as practicable.” The freeze will not affect Social Security, Medicare, or Veterans’ benefits, but remains for the IRS until deemed in the national interest to lift it. Additionally, Trump dismantled some of Biden’s diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives within the federal government. (source: https://www.axios.com/local/washington-dc/2025/01/21/trump-executive-orders-federal-hiring-freeze-remote-work?stream=top&utm_source=alert&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=alerts_dc )
See the latest updates of President Trump’s executive orders here https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/01/20/us/trump-executive-orders and here , which include but are not limited to:
Pardoning nearly all of the 1,600 Jan. 6th Rioters and commuting the sentences of several others, including people accused of low-level, non-violent offenses that day and those who committed violence. Just hours after Trump’s sweeping Jan. 6 pardons were issued, his new U.S. attorney in Washington, Ed Martin, started dismissing some cases stemming from the Capitol attack, court papers show. One of the cases that Martin has moved to dismiss is the trial of Jared Wise, a former F.B.I. agent charged with felony civil disorder and assault. Prosecutors say that Wise confronted officers at the Capitol, calling them Nazis and encouraging a mob of Trump supporters to kill them. “Republicans cannot claim to be the party of law and order while pardoning and commuting the sentences of individuals who brutally assaulted law enforcement officers in service of a violent insurrection,” said Representative Jerrold Nadler, Democrat of New York, adding: “These defendants were convicted by a jury of their peers for participating in an attack that included direct assaults on law enforcement, vandalism, trespassing, and an attempt to overturn a free and fair election through the use of force.” By including Enrique Tarrio, the former leader of the Proud Boys, in his extraordinary pardons for the events of Jan. 6, 2021, President Trump granted clemency on Monday to a man whom prosecutors have described as a savvy, street-fighting extremist who helped his compatriots in “Trump’s army” initiate an assault on the Capitol. Even before Jan. 6, Mr. Tarrio was among the best-known far-right figures in the country, having been involved in violent protests going back to the deadly neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, Va., in August 2017.
Revoking roughly 78 executive orders issued by President Biden, including capping prescription drug prices. On the first day of his presidency in 2021, Mr. Biden took an essentially opposite position than Trump did yesterday, directing agencies to include sexual orientation and gender identity in any regulations and policies covering workplace discrimination, formalizing protections for L.G.B.T.Q. workers. He extended those directions to schools and students last year. Elements of Mr. Trump’s orders were written to explicitly target education institutions, rolling back actions taken during the Biden administration that extended protections under the Civil Rights Act of 1964, incoming officials told reporters on Monday. The Biden administration had instructed schools that Title IX of the Civil Rights Act, which protects students against discrimination based on sex, afforded the same protections to transgender students against discrimination based on their gender identity. On his first day of office, Mr. Biden unveiled a racial equity agenda after vowing during his inauguration speech to defeat “white supremacy.” Mr. Biden ordered agencies to take sweeping steps to address inequity in housing, criminal justice, voting rights, health care, education and economic mobility. His administration also created new offices, like one dedicated to civil rights and environmental justice at the Environmental Protection Agency. Mr. Trump’s order specifically targets Mr. Biden’s “environmental justice” office and personnel for review. Mr. Trump’s first act in office was to rescind executive orders issued by Mr. Biden included ones he signed on his first day in office in 2021, “advancing racial equity and supporting underserved communities” and “preventing discrimination on the basis of gender identity and sexual orientation.” The Trump official said that it was fitting that the administration was taking measures on the King holiday to reinstitute equal treatment by eliminating racial “preferences” and diversity programming. See the list of Biden’s Executive Orders that President Trump rescinded here: https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/initial-rescissions-of-harmful-executive-orders-and-actions/
Renaming the “Gulf of Mexico” to the “Gulf of America”; undid President Obama’s renaming of Mount McKinley; formed a “U.S. Board of Geographic Names”, including circumventing Congressional approval by stating: “Where Congressional action is required to establish a renaming in public law, following Board approval on renaming, the Board shall provide guidance to all relevant Federal agencies to use the Board-approved name in the interim in federal documents and achieve consistency across the federal government.” https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/restoring-names-that-honor-american-greatness/
Withdrawing from the Paris Climate Agreement and the World Health Organization
Stalling the ban of Tik Tok for 75 days
Federal officials shutting down a government app that allows migrants to schedule appointments to use ports of entry, an option that almost a million immigrants used while it was active, during Trump’s inaugural speech
An executive order defining birthright citizenship. The president cannot change the Constitution on his own, but he has made it clear he wants to deny birthright citizenship, which is guaranteed by the 14th Amendment, to the children of noncitizens. The American Civil Liberties Union and other immigrant rights groups sued the Trump administration over its hours-old executive order to stop conferring citizenship to anyone born in the United States. The lawsuit was filed in New Hampshire.
Ordering the head of the Department of Homeland Security to end a Biden-era program that allowed migrants fleeing from Cuba, Nicaragua, Haiti and Venezuela to fly into the United States and remain in the country temporarily, part of a sweeping first-day crackdown on immigration. The program, known as humanitarian parole and introduced by the Biden administration in early 2023, allowed migrants from to fly into the United States if they had a financial sponsor and passed security checks.
Declaring a national emergency at the U.S.-Mexico border on Monday, invoking special presidential powers that allow him to unilaterally unlock federal funding for border wall construction and potentially to deploy the military and National Guard to the border. Mr. Trump took a similar step during his first term as a way to circumvent Congress and access billions of dollars that lawmakers refused to approve to build a wall along the border with Mexico. He once again empowered the military to support the Border Patrol with logistical planning, drone support and help procuring detention space. But in a separate order, Mr. Trump appeared to go further by giving the military a specific responsibility over immigration enforcement. During Mr. Trump’s first term, the military only supported immigration authorities but did not apprehend migrants. Mr. Trump now directed the Defense Department to come up with a plan in 30 days “to seal the borders and maintain the sovereignty, territorial integrity, and security of the United States by repelling forms of invasion, including unlawful mass migration, narcotics trafficking, human smuggling and trafficking, and other criminal activities.” Congress is limited in what it can do to stop a president from using his emergency powers. Under the National Emergencies Act, the House and the Senate can pass a joint resolution to end the emergency status if they believe that the president is acting irresponsibly or the threat has dissipated. The law says that if one chamber passes such a measure, the other must bring it up in 18 days. But Republicans control both chambers of Congress, making it extremely unlikely that Mr. Trump would face pushback from the legislative branch. He could also veto any joint congressional resolution terminating the national emergency.
Being in the process of removing “over a thousand” Biden administration appointees who had not already resigned, President Trump stated in the first late-night social media post of his second term, stating “YOU’RE FIRED”.
Paul Ingrassia, the newly appointed White House liaison to the Justice Department, was outside the D.C. jail in a tuxedo and spoke to the crowd that had gathered in anticipation that Jan. 6 detainees could be released.
Ordering his administration to gut policies instituted under the Biden administration to prevent sex discrimination and protect transgender Americans, and dismantle federal programs that promote diversity, equity and inclusion. Mr. Trump’s actions, part of a blitz of orders that he signed on his first day in office, assert that the government will now defend women against “gender ideology extremism” by reversing “efforts to eradicate the biological reality of sex.” They also call for ending D.E.I. programs and the “termination of all discriminatory programs” in the government, including in federal employment practices. The executive orders included a mix of administrative measures, such as changing government forms to include only two genders, as well as assertions dismissing the validity of gender identity entirely. A gender identity other than the one assigned at birth, an order said, “reflects a fully internal and subjective sense of self” and “does not provide a meaningful basis for identification.” Under the orders, the Office of Management and Budget and the Office of Performance and Personnel Management will coordinate on changing hiring practices, ending equity-focused programs and grants and terminating “chief diversity officer” positions designated during the Biden administration. The orders deliver on Mr. Trump’s promise to eradicate what his allies consider to be “wokeism” in the federal government, a term that conservatives use to describe racial justice and civil rights advocacy. They are part of an effort that he took up in his first term by rolling back policies boosting affirmative action and transgender rights. He acknowledged that he was being inaugurated on Martin Luther King Jr.’s Birthday and said he would “not forget” that he had gained support among Hispanic and Black voters in the November election. “We will forge a society that is colorblind and merit-based,” Mr. Trump said. Mr. Trump ordered federal agencies to recognize a biological, binary definition of sex — male or female and not interchangeable. The government will also eliminate references to gender identity in policy documents, and will order that government-issued documents, including passports and visas, accurately reflect one’s biological sex. The order also prohibits the use of federal funds for any use promoting gender ideology through grants or other government programming, as well as the use of public funding for transition-related medical procedures in prisons. Perhaps the most pointed part of the directive instructs agencies to protect “intimate single-sex spaces,” such as prisons and rape shelters, by denying access to transgender women. The Biden administration had instructed schools that Title IX of the Civil Rights Act, which protects students against discrimination based on sex, afforded the same protections to transgender students against discrimination based on their gender identity. Mr. Trump’s executive actions will undo that policy. The order directs his attorney general to release guidance stating that a Supreme Court decision in 2020 that cemented stronger civil rights protections to transgender workers does not apply to schools and their students, echoing a ruling by a federal judge earlier this month.
At a rally on Sunday, Mr. Trump reiterated his intent to minimize the role of the federal government in steering education policy, saying that he instructed his pick for education secretary, Linda McMahon, to return much authority over the nation’s schools to state legislatures. In his previous administration, Mr. Trump railed against efforts to teach children about slavery and his conservative allies supported the movement to remove books about race and gender from school libraries. He indicated on Monday that the enforcement power of the Education Department would be critical to bringing change to the nation’s schools.
Terminating, to the maximum extent allowed by law, all DEI, DEIA, and “environmental justice” offices and positions (including but not limited to “Chief Diversity Officer” positions); all “equity action plans,” “equity” actions, initiatives, or programs, “equity-related” grants or contracts; and all DEI or DEIA performance requirements for employees, contractors, or grantees. This Order also requires an investigative report to see if any of these programs and positions become renamed “to preserve their pre-November 4th, 2024 function”; all training materials; federal grantees who received Federal funding to provide or advance DEI, DEIA, or “environmental justice” programs, services, or activities since January 20, 2021. Trump also seeks to keep informed and hear reports on the prevalence and the economic and social costs of DEI, DEIA, and “environmental justice” in agency or department programs, activities, policies, regulations, guidance, employment practices, enforcement activities, contracts (including set-asides), grants, consent orders, and litigating positions. https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/ending-radical-and-wasteful-government-dei-programs-and-preferencing/
Restored the federal death penalty — although President Biden commuted the death sentences of all but three of the prisoners who were on the federal death row. Trump’s order also mandates the use of the death penalty in any case where someone is convicted of murdering a law enforcement officer or if an undocumented migrant is convicted of a crime that is eligible for the death penalty.
Canada’s finance minister responded late Monday to President Trump’s statement that he was still planning to impose tariffs of 25 percent on Canadian goods on Feb. 1, even though the new president did not immediately sign a tariff executive order after taking office earlier in the day. “Our country is absolutely ready to respond to any one of these scenarios,” Dominic LeBlanc said. “We still continue to believe that it would be a mistake.”
Signing an executive order to make border security a priority for the military, a directive that could allow U.S. troops to assume a direct role in immigration enforcement and test longstanding legal limits on deploying armed forces on American soil. By declaring border security to be a priority for the military as a whole, the president’s directive could put his administration on a collision course with laws intended to prevent presidents from using their power as commander in chief to turn the military against U.S. civilians. Mr. Trump’s order directs the defense secretary to make border security part of the mission of U.S. Northern Command, sealing U.S. borders and “repelling forms of invasion including unlawful mass migration, narcotics trafficking, human smuggling and tracking, and other criminal activities.” The order gives the defense secretary 30 days to come up with a plan for how to execute the mission. The directive does not specify exactly which branches of the armed forces ought to be deployed to aid in such a mission, leaving those determinations to military leaders. The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 forbids the use of armed forces for law enforcement purposes on U.S. soil, unless Congress or the Constitution expressly authorizes it. While the prohibition is seemingly straightforward, some have argued that its limits would not apply if service members were deployed inside the country for military purposes, as opposed to law enforcement ones. The main exception to the Posse Comitatus Act is the Insurrection Act. The more than 200-year-old law grants the president power to deploy the military domestically when faced with “unlawful obstructions, combinations, or assemblages, or rebellion” that prevent the execution of federal or state laws. That broad power has been invoked about 30 times in U.S. history, including by President Abraham Lincoln when seven Confederate states seceded, and President Dwight D. Eisenhower to enforce the desegregation of schools in Little Rock, Ark. Most recently, President George H.W. Bush used it in 1992 to send troops into Los Angeles at the request of California’s governor in an effort to quell race riots that followed the police beating of Rodney King. Mr. Trump threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act during his first term to put down racial justice riots that broke out across the country after the killing of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, by white police officers. The president also declared a national emergency on Monday to fund and outfit the military’s involvement in his deportation effort, and augment the Department of Homeland Security’s efforts to obtain “complete operational control of the southern border of the United States.” The effort to prosecute the violent mob that ransacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and the leaders of far-right groups who egged them on, represented the biggest and most logistically complex investigation in the history of the Justice Department. President Donald J. Trump erased it in an instant on Inauguration Day.
Signed an executive order suspending refugee resettlement in the United States, picking up where he left off in his first term with his efforts to kill a program that offers safe harbor to people around the world facing threats and persecution. The order directs top leaders in the Department of Homeland Security and the State Department to issue a report to him every 90 days thereafter to allow him to assess whether the refugee program “would be in the interests of the United States,” according to the order. Presidents have the power to single-handedly determine the number of refugees allowed into the country. Every year, the president, in consultation with Congress, sets a numerical cap for refugee admissions that year. Since the refugee program began in earnest in 1980, the annual cap has been high, regardless of the party holding the White House. For example, in his final year as president, George W. Bush admitted around 60,000 refugees in 2008 after setting a cap of 80,000. President Joseph R. Biden Jr. slowly restored the refugee resettlement operation during his four years in office, hiring more officers and prompting the opening of offices across the country to serve them. Around 150 offices opened as of last year. By 2024, the United States had allowed more than 100,000 refugees to enter the country, the highest total in three decades.
Signing an executive order stripping the security clearances of former intelligence officials who in 2020 signed a letter that said the spread of emails from Hunter Biden’s laptop had “the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.” The order also revoked any security clearances held by John Bolton, who served as a national security adviser in the first Trump administration, but earned the president’s ire for publishing a book about his time in office. The executive order said Mr. Bolton wrote a “reckless” book that included sensitive information that should not have been published. The executive order, first reported by Axios, was the brainchild of John Ratcliffe, Mr. Trump’s nominee to lead the Central Intelligence Agency, according to two Trump administration officials.
Invoking emergency power and national security, Trump has issued an order barring asylum for people newly arriving at the Southern border. As a seemingly overlapping move, it also says undocumented migrants are ineligible for asylum if they do not provide federal officials, before entering the United States, “with sufficient medical information and reliable criminal history and background information” for vetting.
Directing both the Department of Homeland Security secretary and the attorney general to make sure sanctuary jurisdictions are not given federal funds. The order also directs his leaders to encourage undocumented immigrants to leave the country and directs the Homeland Security Department to increase partnerships with local law enforcement on immigration enforcement.
Signing an executive order challenging an international agreement the Biden administration had negotiated to try and stop large multinational corporations from booking profits in countries with low taxes.
Trying to dramatically expand the use of expedited removal, which does not afford full due-process hearings to undocumented migrants if they cannot prove they have been living in the United States for more than two years. Until now the government has used that authority only for people who were caught just after crossing the border, and it is not clear if courts will deem it constitutional to use it much more extensively.
Department of Government Efficiency has officially been established by executive order. The order changes the name of the United States Digital Service, which was created in 2014 by former President Barack Obama to change the government’s approach to technology, to the “United States DOGE Service.” The unit will have an administrator established in the executive office who will report to the White House chief of staff. In its first cuts, Elon Musk’s non-governmental advisory group, the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, posted a screenshot on X of a deleted page for the Office of Personnel Management’s inter-agency council for chief diversity officers. The council advised agencies on diversity, equity and inclusion programs. Trump on Monday promised the end of DEI practices in federal government and said hiring would be based on merit. “It begins,” Musk said, sharing the post by @DOGE on X.
Setting in motion what is likely to be an eventual restoration of his first term ban on travel to the United States of citizens from several predominantly Muslim countries. He issued an order directing a 60-day study to come up with a list “identifying countries throughout the world for which vetting and screening information is so deficient as to warrant a partial or full suspension on the admission of nationals from those countries.”
Issuing an order short-circuiting the security clearance vetting process for his White House staffers. Anyone on a list submitted by his White House counsel is to “immediately” be granted a Top Secret/Secure Compartmented Information-level clearance good for six months.
Fulfilling his promise to rescind former President Biden’s 2023 executive order on A.I. safety. The Biden order set safety standards for the use of artificial intelligence across the federal government. Trump’s executive order leaves a vacuum on federal A.I. regulations, while some states and European nations have enacted laws to regulate the fast-growing technology that poses risks to national security and jobs.
Issuing an executive order decrying the “weaponization” of the Justice Department instructs his attorney general to scour federal law enforcement agencies, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Federal Trade Commission for any indications of political bias in work conducted under the Biden administration. The same executive order instructs the director of national intelligence to conduct a similar review of intelligence agencies. Both reviews will culminate in a report to the White House and recommendations for “remedial action.” The executive order does not give a time frame for the reviews or reports. The order also makes unclear what type of review will be conducted — an ethics investigation like the kind often undertaken by the Justice Department’s inspector general, or a criminal inquiry mounted by prosecutors. It also leaves vague what it means by the stated goal to “ensure accountability for the previous administration’s weaponization of the Federal government against the American people.” The executive order, titled “ending the weaponization of the federal government,” begins with a list of misleading accusations against the Biden administration for what Mr. Trump has long claimed to be unfair use of the criminal justice system against him, his supporters and conservatives generally. The language of the document suggests — but does not explicitly state — that the Trump administration review will examine the actions of local district attorneys or state officials, such as the district attorneys in Manhattan or Fulton County, Ga., or the New York attorney general, all of whom filed cases against President Trump.
More reading: https://www.whitehouse.gov/news/
This show will be one of many in which we will highlight TJC’s affirmative agenda for 2025 and 2026.
QUESTIONS:
PART 1 OF SHOW- 12:00 – 12:25 PM Eastern Time with guests Porsché “Queen” Mitchell-Miller, Kimberly Cummings, Marcus Arbery, and Cameron Barnes
[The show will begin with a short tribute to Martin Luther King Jr. and by encouraging people to: go to VotingRightsAlliance.org/2025Pledge to sign onto our 2025 Voting Rights Pledge;”]
Part one of our show will feature guests Porsché “Queen” Mitchell-Miller, and Kimberly Cummings, and Marcus Arbery who will be recording live from Brunswick with Co-Hosts Jones and Arnwine at the jury selection for the Jackie Johnson trial. Cameron Barnes will also join this portion and the second part of the show. Jackie Johnson, the former Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney, is set to stand trial for allegedly obstructing the investigation into Ahmaud Arbery’s killing. Johnson faces charges of violating her oath of office and hindering law enforcement officers. The trial comes more than four years after Arbery’s death, which sparked nationwide protests over racial injustice. Johnson is accused of interfering with the investigation to protect Gregory McMichael, a former investigator in her office, and his son, Travis McMichael, who were involved in Arbery’s death. Jury selection for the trial is scheduled to begin soon, with a larger-than-usual pool of 200 potential jurors due to the case’s notoriety.
PART 2 OF SHOW- 12:30 – 12:57 PM Eastern Time with guests Cameron Barnes and Dr. Karen McRae
[Karen McRae will join as a Guest for Part 2. Part 2 will feature a discussion of the Biden Pardons, the Trump Inauguration, and the response to the threat of Mass Deportations in several states. ]
In short summary of the nearly 48 executive orders Trump issues and the near 78 executive orders from President Biden that Trump revoked:
Jan. 6th Pardons and Case Dismissals: President Trump pardoned nearly all Jan. 6th rioters, including Enrique Tarrio, and commuted sentences for others, leading to case dismissals by his new U.S. attorney in Washington.
Revoking Biden’s Executive Orders: Trump revoked 78 executive orders from Biden’s administration, including those related to racial equity, LGBTQ protections, and environmental justice.
Geographic Renaming: Trump renamed the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America and formed a U.S. Board of Geographic Names to manage such changes.
Paris Climate Agreement and WHO Withdrawal: Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Paris Climate Agreement and the World Health Organization.
Immigration Crackdown: Trump ended a Biden-era program allowing migrants from specific countries to temporarily stay in the U.S. and declared a national emergency at the U.S.-Mexico border to fund border wall construction.
Birthright Citizenship and Refugee Resettlement: Trump issued an executive order to redefine birthright citizenship and suspended refugee resettlement in the U.S.
Federal Death Penalty Restoration: Trump restored the federal death penalty, mandating its use for crimes involving the murder of law enforcement officers or certain crimes by undocumented migrants.
Security Clearance Revocations: Trump revoked security clearances of 51 former intelligence officials who signed a letter about Hunter Biden’s laptop and former national security adviser John Bolton.
Ending DEI Programs: Trump terminated DEI, DEIA, and environmental justice programs and positions, and ordered an investigation into their prevalence and costs.
Weaponization of Federal Agencies: Trump issued an executive order to investigate political bias in federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies, targeting actions taken under the Biden administration.
[What’s your number one action that you would recommend that our listeners do to be involved in 2025?
What are your favorite resources that you recommend that people utilize during this time?
Where do people go to get the best information?
What activities are planned in 2025 that you hope our listeners will be engaged in?]
What are your one-minute final thoughts to our listeners?
Thank you for all of your hard work. How do our listeners get in contact with you?
[TJC will continue to vigorously defend the rights of all Americans and will fight the implementation of Project 2025 and our future shows will continue to cover any hate crimes and how we effectively protect ourselves while advancing our agenda for justice.]
[Daryl and Barbara may share their favorite books and encourage people to donate towards TJC’s giveaways of banned and affirming books.]