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February 2, 2022

Beijing Can't Hold a Torch to Olympic Standards
by Tony Perkins
The world's best athletes are already skiing their way down China's Genting Snow Park, but the slipperiest slope is that they're there at all. Two days away from the official kick-off to the 2022 Beijing Games, the international uproar is deafening. While hockey and curling get underway in China's state-of-the-art facilities, millions of innocent people are locked away in cells, waiting for their next beating, their next rape, or final breath. A six-hour plane ride away from the greatest sports spectacle of the last two years, the host is hiding the biggest torture network of the modern age. And the International Olympic Committee knew it.
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China: More Than Meets the Spy
by Tony Perkins
Whenever the U.S. goes head-to-head with China at the Olympics, there's always an intense competitiveness between the two sports superpowers. But that rivalry extends to a lot more than the Games, as FBI Director Christopher Wray spelled out in terrifying detail. China is determined to win where it matters -- in global supremacy -- and they'll infiltrate any American institution to do it. In most cases, he warns, they already have.
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From Smash and Grab to Catch and Nab
by Joshua Arnold
How the famous outlaws of the Wild West would love today's California. Back in the day, they had to deal with sheriffs slinging six-shooters, possés of angry townsfolk, and private security literally "riding shotgun" on armed convoys. Today all it takes is a hammer and a backpack -- hoods are optional -- because the police won't apprehend criminals; there's just no point in catching them. The state changed the rules of "cops and robbers" so that "robbers" get to bolt as soon as they are taken to "jail."
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On today's show: Chuck Grassley, U.S. Senator from Iowa, discusses his meeting with President Biden regarding the Supreme Court vacancy. Justin Butterfield, Deputy General Counsel at First Liberty Institute, details how the U.S. Navy is violating a court order on COVID vaccine exemptions. Matt Heffron, Senior Counsel for Thomas More Society, shares that Louisville, KY has paid $75,000 to settle a police officer's lawsuit after he was suspended for off-duty prayer. Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, Professor of Medicine at Stanford University, comments on a study showing lockdowns had little impact on COVID deaths and Pfizer asking the F.D.A. to authorize its COVID vaccine for children under five.

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