ProLife Coin, ProLife Movement, and Politics

Speaker: [00:00:00] Pro-Life Radio is a

Speaker: prerecorded program

Speaker: paid for by Pro-Life

Speaker: Radio. Preserving the sanctity of life in Florida, A loud voice for the unborn. This is Pro-Life Radio. With your hosts, Vicky and Bruce Cherry,

Speaker: and welcome again to another edition of Pro-Life Radio on a Sunday night. I’m Bruce Cherry, across from me, my lovely wife, Vicky Cherry.

Vicky Cherry: Hello,

Speaker: and we have a great guest with us tonight, longtime friend and uh, creator of the Pro-Life Silver Coin that we’ll be talking about. Chris Casler, political activist artist, um, photographer. Oh, abolitionist.

Vicky Cherry: Abolitionist.

Speaker: Actually, yes. Not just pro. Good afternoon. Not just pro, not just pro-life, uh, activists, but abolitionists.

Speaker: So, and

Vicky Cherry: we were talking about the difference between somebody that says they’re pro-life and somebody that’s actually an abolitionist.

Speaker: Yeah. Yeah. Because we know pro-choice means pro death. So, but before we get started, we always start things off with Jeremiah [00:01:00] one, five and prayer.

Vicky Cherry: Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you before you were born.

Vicky Cherry: I sanctified you. I ordained you a prophet to the nations.

Speaker: Dear Heavenly Father, we ask for your blessings once again upon this show, upon our guest, Chris, upon his household, upon his ministry, his business, and uh, God, we ask for blessings upon all who hear this show tonight, that we touch hearts and change minds, and that we can save just one baby.

Speaker: If we can do that, we know we’ve been effective and God, we just, we we pray that, uh, you be at work and all that we do. And that all that we do is pleasing to you. Heavenly Father, thank you. In the name of your precious son, Jesus Christ, we pray. Amen. Amen. So, Chris, welcome to the show. Thank you for joining us tonight.

Speaker: We, uh, we appreciate it. Tell us about, let, let’s go ahead and jump into the, the, uh, pro-life silver coin. Now we’re, we’re, uh, we’re videoing for, um, for streaming on the [00:02:00] web. So I’m holding up the coin, so for, for folks to see, and we’ll get a picture of it on our website as well. But, uh, it’s a sterling silver coin, but tell us about it.

Speaker 4: 200 years ago, the inhumane transatlantic slave trade thrived on human misery. Hundreds of thousands of people were forcibly transported across the ocean and ships to the new world. Most of them went to South America, and a great many others came to North America and the Caribbean. At the time, a campaign to stop slave trade, not to stop slave trade in itself initially, but to stop the transportation of these poor people.

Speaker 4: Uh, was begun by William Wilberforce and he enrolled a British Potter, famous for his name today, Josiah Wedgewood, uh, to design an iconic medallion that features a kneeling African slave in chains, and it is inscribed. Am I not a man and a [00:03:00] brother? These coins can be found today on eBay. They’ll for sale.

Speaker 4: Uh, they’re beautiful mementos of this horrible time and of the effort that was made successfully to stop the slave trade, which ultimately led to the passage of legislation in Parliament in 1807. Now, this, this coin was originally created or. Minted in 1787. So it took 20 years from the beginning of that coin’s existence to the passage of the Historic Slave Trade Act.

Speaker 4: That stopped the trade. Now, the trade itself continued. It had to be enforced. The British Navy gets high marks for the efforts that they made over dozens of years to stop it, and they were instrumental in preventing the trade abortion, or not abortion in this case. Slavery, of course, continued. And that’s ultimately what led to our American Civil War, as we know.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Um, so today, while we’re [00:04:00] wrestling with the evils of abortion, not slavery, we are doing everything we can to champion the people who courageously fight against it and who work to protect the inalienable right to life. And so our coin, which is also. One ounce sterling silver. Nine nine 9%. Actually, it’s not sterling.

Speaker 4: It’s 0.999. Pure silver sterling is 92%. Silver is a coin that has a description on it. Am I not a child to you? My brothers and sisters, and I admit this was inspired by Wedgewood coin and why not? So ours is a one ounce 9 9 9 fine silver coin. It’s the size of a silver dollar. It was minted at the prestigious Highland Mint, which is in Melbourne, Florida, and we expect it to continue to have the impact that Wilber forces did in his day.

Speaker 4: And it represents a personal message of [00:05:00] solidarity and commitment against abortion for anyone who has one. We’re using part of the proceeds to support ministries such as this radio program going into the years ahead.

Speaker: Amen. Absolutely. And, and Chris has already written us a check, uh, for, uh, uh, the sale of some of these coins.

Speaker: And we urge you to, uh, if you’re pro-life, if you are an abolitionist, you consider yourself an abolitionist. Get this coin. It is beautiful. And, uh, it’s, it, there’s a, on one side is a child in the womb sucking its thumb, and, uh, on the other side. A cross with the inscription for you. Created my inmost being you knit me together in my mother’s womb, Psalm 1 39, 13.

Speaker: It is beautiful. It is a beautiful, and, and Vicky and I, we purchased one of these coins. We have one in our collection and um, we are very pleased and blessed to have it. So, [00:06:00] uh, Chris, thank you for that. Um, the only, the only way I could possibly see that this coin could be better is if you could figure out a way.

Speaker: To take a, a child’s image from their, um,

Speaker: ultrasound,

Speaker: ultrasound and, and superimpose it on the face of the child. That’s the only way you could do that any better. And, and knowing Chris because he’s an artist, um, he’s thinking about that right now. It’s going through his head. I know he is.

Speaker 4: So, so you’re quite correct.

Speaker 4: We had, we, we made 500 of these coins initially. Um, and they’re available and they either come in. In a clear plastic capsule, protect them. Mm-hmm. Because this, this pure silver is very easily scratched. Uh, we also present them in presentation boxes.

Speaker 5: Mm.

Speaker 4: And we had 500 of them minted. They’re numbered. Um, and I’m already, as you pointed out, I’m already considering considering, uh, a, a new design for the next edition, so to speak.

Speaker: Hmm. Well they are, they are beautiful. That’s for [00:07:00] sure. Uh, how can people get one, how can they get in touch with you and order one?

Speaker 4: They’re online available@wwwchristiancoins.net, which will take you straight to a page where there’s a photograph of the coin, both front and back, and in a place where you can fill in your order form.

Speaker 4: Um, I, if you’re in nearby here in Orlando, I’d be happy to deliver them in person. Otherwise, the delivery charge is $10 a piece by Federal Express, and, um, that’s working very well. They come to you, um, to the doorstep by FedEx.

Speaker: Very nice.

Speaker 4: And that website again, Christian Coins net.

Speaker: Christian Coin Christian

Speaker 4: Coins.

Speaker 4: Dot net coins. So plural, p

Speaker: plural Christian coins, yes. Dot net. Got it. Alright, so, correct. We are, we’re entering a, a kind of a precarious time as we saw a couple of weeks ago with the, uh, the elections in, um, in Virginia and in New York City [00:08:00] and California and some other places around the country, um, which we’re, we’re seeing that the left is surging.

Speaker: And that can have really, really dire consequences for pro-life.

Vicky Cherry: You know, though, um. It made it sound like they’re taking over and that in the next big election we’re gonna, the conservative group is gonna fail miserably. But I think that’s just a scare tactic. ’cause you think about it, those states are blue.

Vicky Cherry: Mm-hmm. Now, to me, the miracle is how close the conservative was. Mm-hmm. Not in New York so much, but in the other races I was, I was encouraged by that. So I think a lot of it is fearmongering, you know, they’re trying to make you fearful. Mm-hmm. That hey. You guys are on a down slope here. You conservative Christian nationalists?

Speaker: Mm. Yeah. You, you may be right. I

Speaker 4: would, I would agree with you, Vicky. Uh, I think most of these, if not all of these elections took places, [00:09:00] took place in, in jurisdictions that were already solidly blew. Mm-hmm. They were at upsets. It’s not like we had somebody running as a staunch Republican pro-Trump. A candidate who was defeated, that wasn’t the case.

Vicky Cherry: Right. And, and I think that’s what we’re seeing. We don’t, unfortunately not

Speaker 4: what I, what I will add to that. And, you know, I have a lot of experience in this area. What I will add to that isn’t, the Republicans failed to put up candidates that were sufficiently viable to win.

Vicky Cherry: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: And I do think that is something worth considering and needs to be looked, looked at.

Vicky Cherry: And that’s what I was just gonna say. Yes, I totally agree, Chris. I think that is what we’re seeing. We, we didn’t have any good, strong Republican candidates. We just didn’t, you look at the people that were out there, and I, I’m not saying anything bad about Sil I, how do you say his name? Silva

Speaker: Sliva. Curtis Sli.

Speaker: It’s.

Vicky Cherry: Uh, we needed somebody that was more popular, that was, uh, out already people knew about him or her.

Speaker: Mm-hmm.

Vicky Cherry: And we just, now, I’m, I’m hopeful for the governor race

Speaker: Well, that [00:10:00] Yes, I am too. But if the Republican party and, and because I used to be the chairman, we’re we’re still members of the Republican Party of Seminole County, Florida.

Speaker: We signed an oath, and I don’t understand, I mean, I, I get it. Why Donald Trump supported Cuomo. Instead of Sliwa. But I think the Republican party as a whole should have thrown their support behind Sliwa. Mm-hmm. Even though they felt okay, it’s, it’s a long shot. If he wins, well, you gotta, you gotta go all in.

Speaker: We

Vicky Cherry: see it all time in Orlando. It’s like, you gotta

Speaker: go all in. And I think they should have gone all in. There was so much at stake there.

Vicky Cherry: Absolutely. We see it all the time in Orlando. We’re letting all these very disturbing Democrats getting these offices in, in Orlando all over the place. And, and, but.

Vicky Cherry: With no good strong Republican option.

Speaker: But the oath that we signed is that we will not support anyone else but a Republican in a race. And there the Republican party supported [00:11:00] Cuomo because they felt he was the lesser of, of, to now, I don’t think it was, they thought he was lesser, two evils. ’cause the guy is evil, that’s for sure.

Speaker: But they thought he had a better chance at winning.

Vicky Cherry: Mm-hmm.

Speaker: And than

Vicky Cherry: the, the horrible.

Speaker 4: So in, in a city of eight and a half million people, the largest in the country.

Speaker: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: The Republican party couldn’t come up with somebody sooner and better than Cuomo.

Speaker: Yeah. Amen. Yeah, it’s

Speaker 4: horrifying.

Speaker: Hey, we’ve gotta take a break.

Speaker: We’re up against a heartbreak right here. We’ll be right back and we’re gonna continue this train of thought. What do the elections mean for the pro-life movement? It is scary. It is scary. We’ll be right back with more Pro-Life Radio on a Sunday night on AM nine 50 FM 94.9. The answer.

Speaker: Okay, so when we come back, let’s talk about the candidates that are running in the [00:12:00] Governor’s race. Okay. Uh,

Speaker 4: if you like. Or we can set the stage by discussing the, um, candidates in the state who support abortion rights.

Speaker: Well, that’s, yeah, that’s what I mean. That, that’s what I mean when I say, when I say that.

Speaker: Let’s talk about the pro-life, uh, or, or talk about the pro-choice, um, candidates first, and then we will

Speaker 4: You wanna go to pro, pro-choice first? Uh, you know what, I’ll let

Speaker: you, I’ll let you lead it. We’re just gonna come back.

Speaker 4: No, you, well, you, when you say pro-choice, let me be dead. Sure. I remember what you mean.

Speaker 4: You, you’re talking about. Um,

Speaker: pro-choice or pro abortionist?

Speaker 4: Pro Pro-abortion. Yeah. Pro death. Yeah. Okay. Gotcha. Yeah.

Speaker: Yeah. So we can talk about those, those first, or we’ll just talk about the races coming up. And I, I’m gonna, I’m gonna leave it to you. You’ve got the, the details there in front of you, so, okay.

Speaker 4: Well, where would you think we should start? We can start with the abortion advocates, or we can start with the, with the, the life advocates.

Speaker: Let’s start with the, uh, the death advocates first, and then give the. [00:13:00] Okay. The light side of it.

Speaker 4: Okay. I got a lot.

Speaker: Okay. You’d

Speaker 4: be surprised at how many there are.

Speaker: It’ll be edited.

Speaker: Alright, we are ready Pete. Let’s go back in 3, 2, 1.

Speaker: And we are back on a Sunday night, Pro-Life Radio in the studio. Vicky Cherry, across from me. I’m Bruce Cherry. Good evening. And, and we have our guest, Chris Kassler on with us. Chris, the designer of the pro-life silver coin that I’m holding up on camera and. And you can get your coin@www.christiancoins.net.

Speaker: It is 99.9% pure silver, and part of the proceeds go to support pro-life ministries and efforts. So, mm-hmm. Chris, thanks for being on the show tonight. Um, we were talking earlier about the, the elections and what they could possibly mean for the pro-life movement, [00:14:00] um, because there’s so many pro-choice.

Speaker: Advocates out there on both sides of the fence. And so it’s, it’s hard to know who we should be supporting in the races coming up.

Speaker 4: Well, I I, I appreciate that. I, I have a, a list of a few here. We should always remind people that this notion of pro-choice is actually choosing death. It’s not about life.

Speaker 4: It’s quite the opposite. This is, of course, the way they mangle the language to their advantage. Mm-hmm. So, um, on my list of, of. Representatives, congressional representatives. We have Lois Frankel, Florida 22. Mm-hmm. Federica Wilson, Florida 24. Sheila, Shelia, McCormick, Florida 20, which is way South Florida.

Speaker 4: Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Florida 25. Maxwell Frost, our own local type, Florida 10. Jared Moscowitz, Florida 23. [00:15:00] Kathy Castor Dental, which I think this list is a little misleading because she is now the supervisor of elections in the city of, uh, Orlando in Orange County,

Speaker: and, and now we mentioned that she, that these people are pro-choice.

Speaker: Are they all Democrats or some Republicans? Are they independents?

Speaker 4: Okay, let me clarify. Every democratic member of Florida’s Congressional delegation Pro-choice,

Speaker: okay,

Speaker 4: and opposes Florida’s abortion bans. So I listed them by name, but if is there a Democrat and they’re a congressman, they’re pro-choice period,

Speaker: that, that’s pretty much a given.

Speaker: But I just wanted to make sure we clarified that for, for the listeners. You

Speaker 4: know, and again, lay it out earlier is an exception. Go

Vicky Cherry: earlier we talked about how we are not putting any good, uh, choices up there against these people. Maxwell Frost is a perfect choice. We are not supporting those republicans that do take it.

Vicky Cherry: Perfect example.

Speaker: Perfect example. Yes.

Vicky Cherry: Yeah. Yes.

Speaker: Sorry. Not a perfect choice, perfect example. No,

Vicky Cherry: no. [00:16:00] Um, so we had, we had some other Republicans or some Republicans up against like Maxwell Frost, but he got no, or did not get any. Backing from our, the party. No, I mean, you cannot go up against these people that are backed by the Democratic party by money and votes and encouragement.

Vicky Cherry: All of they’re back. They totally back their candidates. So we had some people that stepped up that wanted to run against them and, and take these positions back to conservative positions. Mm-hmm. And they, they can’t win because they don’t have any backing. So

Speaker: Chris, you,

Speaker 4: you know, some of those folks that’s part of it.

Speaker 4: I, I mean. If I may, yes, I, I don’t wanna get too far off the track, but if I may, last year’s election, the ballot in Orange County, Florida,

Speaker 5: mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Had 12 races without a single Republican.

Speaker 5: Oh my.

Speaker 4: And I would put that straight on the party. I mean, the parties may be saying, well, you know, nobody volunteered, nobody stepped forward.

Speaker 4: You [00:17:00] know what, these people should be out beating the bushes, looking for candidates, which is what I’ve done. That’s why Steve Dixon ran, because I went out and persuaded him to try. You need to find people that are at least up to it, but they need to be encouraged and found no effort was made. They’re more excited about having a pretty office building down on Orange Avenue, okay?

Speaker 4: And the chairman of the county party wants to run for the house herself, but she hasn’t done the darn thing about finding candidates run for these other offices. And six of those 12 offices all paid $200,000 more. Six figures. And there’s still nobody running for them. How can you explain that? Well, it,

Speaker: you know, for someone who really wants the wants, the someone who really wants to serve, the money’s not the, not an issue.

Speaker: I mean, it’s not about the money, if it is about, I understand, but still, well, no, no, no. I’m, I’m just saying that ’cause I don’t want people listening and hearing and thinking, oh, it’s also, it’s about the $200,000 salary because trust me, okay, when you get into that and, and [00:18:00] you are working hard for the people.

Speaker: That $200,000 is not nearly enough for the time and, and the effort that goes into really genuinely serving the people. And that’s why we find ourselves with some, sometimes with corrupt politicians. And, and, and I don’t wanna get off on that track. So it’s really about

Speaker 4: nobody running.

Speaker: Yeah. We just, we’ve gotta, it’s money or

Speaker 4: no money.

Speaker: Mm-hmm. We’ve gotta find. And, and Chris, right? We’ve gotta find people who genuinely want to serve the people and, and want to affect positive change for our society,

Vicky Cherry: which is why it’s so important to go into the churches and find those strong no

Speaker 4: effort.

Vicky Cherry: Right?

Speaker 4: No effort was made.

Vicky Cherry: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: None. None. You know, the REC was a fairly substantial organization, met every month.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Meets every month.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Did the leadership in that wreck go out and have conversations with other [00:19:00] members and say, Hey, we need you to run for this. We need you to run for that. I can tell you from experience that with our previous regime, two regimes back in the wreck in Orange County.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: I was tapped to run for county tax assessor, I don’t know, squat about accessing taxes.

Speaker 4: Or real estate for that matter. Mm-hmm. But I was on the ballot and they wanted to make sure that there was somebody

Speaker 5: mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: On every slot from the Republican party. Mm-hmm. At least to show the flag.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: We’re not doing that anymore. We’re just letting them go. What could happen to, we, we let go, uh, you know, state 17, we just let, uh, Carlos Guillermo Smith just walk into it.

Speaker 4: He didn’t have to do a thing, and, and there was nobody to run against him.

Speaker: And the point we’re making with these ridiculous, with these elections is the more pro-choice. Elected officials you have in power in, in races where it seems like it, you know, ’cause I’ve, I’ve heard people say before, why do you care if the person who’s running for tax collector cares about pro-life or pro pro-choice?

Speaker: [00:20:00] Because it all is part of a movement. And if you get a whole. Order of government, you know, from the tax collector, heck from the dog catcher all the way up to your congressman. If, if that area is all pro-choice, that’s what’s gonna happen. Babies will continue to be slaughtered whole in wholesale. They will,

Vicky Cherry: and a lot of times they start earlier in their.

Vicky Cherry: A dog catcher, whatever it is. Yeah. They eventually worked their way up to something. They’re working their way up and they’re starting in the smaller. Mm-hmm. And that’s what the Democrats have been doing with Maxwell Frost. Mm-hmm. And several others. Yeah. So if you can start at a smaller, then it’s a little bit easier to get elected or there’s nobody running that.

Vicky Cherry: It creates familiar

Speaker: of the name and that sort of thing, and Yes. And they move forward with a radical left agenda, which. Unborn babies wind up paying a severe price for, uh, now Chris, you made a term, you used a term earlier and I want to enlighten everyone. Uh, when you said the REC, and you mentioned it two or three [00:21:00] times.

Speaker: Mm-hmm. REC is the acronym for Republican Executive Committee. The Republicans have an executive committee. The Democrats have an executive committee. I think the only ones that don’t have an executive committee are the independents and the socialists. Thank goodness. Um, but the executive committees are made up of all the precincts, the voting precincts.

Speaker: In every county there are committee, uh, precinct men and women, and their job is to get out and help get people galvanized to help drive votes, to support, uh, candidates of their party for election and to make sure that people are educated about the. Issues that are out there now. I was, I was a chairman and now Vicky and I are both, uh, precinct committee men and woman men, men and woman for precinct four in Seminole County.

Speaker: And so we spend time talking with folks about the issues that are out there and the candidates that are out there. So let’s get back to really quick here before we, we get into another [00:22:00] break here. We, we talked about the pro-choice candidates. Who are the pro-life candidates that are out there, Chris?

Speaker 4: Let me give you a list.

Speaker 4: I’ve got, uh, more pro choice leaders. We can leave the pro-choice people alone for now, excuse me. Um, to go to the, the people who are on our side of the issue and support abortion rights, do not, not do not support abortion rights. Who, who oppose abortion. We have people such as Anthony Sini.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Um.

Speaker 4: Formerly in this Florida house now in Lake County.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Uh, John Micah, also formerly a congressman. Mm-hmm. Um, and currently we have other, other candidates who oppose abortion and, and, uh, restrictions but support restrictions. And those include Cory Mills, who is in Florida, seven. And you know him.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Dan Webster, Florida 11, Michael Waltz, Florida six. Uh, now in the, uh, Trump [00:23:00] administration. Uh, Scott Franklin, Florida 18. Bill Posey, Florida. Eight. Jason Broder. Okay. Florida Senate. Mm-hmm. Semi and Volusia. Tom Leak, Florida Senate. Volusia. Rachel, Florida House. Seminole.

Speaker: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Carolina Amnesty. I think she’s still in office.

Speaker 4: Is she not? Yes, she

Speaker: is. Yes, she is. Oh, no, no, no, no, no. I take that back. No, she is not in office anymore.

Speaker 4: She, she’s out, right? She’s

Speaker: out. She’s out.

Speaker 4: Webster Barnaby in Volusia.

Speaker: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Doug Bankston.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Chase Remont.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Tyler. Mm-hmm. In Brevard.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: And Keith. Ow.

Speaker 5: In Lake,

Speaker 4: those are all people who are opposing abortion.

Speaker 4: Mm-hmm. Um, uh, voting yes on that really critical piece of legislation, which was, uh, Senate Bill 300 in 2023. Uh, reduced the, the period during which an abortion could be [00:24:00] performed to six weeks. You remember how controversial that was?

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: Um, ended up getting resolved in the state Supreme Court. So now we have a six week, um, window.

Speaker 4: Mm-hmm. So to speak. And there are a number of other provisions that are very interesting and important. I think one is that you can’t simply go and buy a pill through the mail and use it. You have to be. Supervised, interviewed and supervised by an abortion practitioner. Um, and I believe that medicated abortion is illegal in the state of Florida altogether.

Speaker 4: Is that true, Vicky?

Vicky Cherry: You know, I really, I I am un unsure. I would hate to say yes. And then it, it is. So I’m not gonna, I’m not gonna say either way on that,

Speaker: but we’ll find out. But we will find out. We’ll find out and get the answer for you. Uh, now you, you didn’t mention any of the ones who are running for the Governor’s mansion because we’ve got that race coming up.

Speaker: That’s a big one. And a few weeks ago we had the opportunity to hear Paul Renner speak and he, he claims to be [00:25:00] pro-life, but he seemed to be a little bit weak on. If a law crossed his desk to end abortion as to whether or not he would sign it. And so to me that says, eh, little, little wishy-washy. Now we’ve had, uh, Congressman Byron Donalds on this show, and he and his wife.

Speaker: Both come off as very pro-life Christians. Um, so, but to be fair, I did not, I did not ask the question would he sign a law if it crossed his desk. But, uh, the next time we talk, I will, Hey, we’ve got a quick break that we’re gonna take, and then we’ll be right back with more Pro-Life Radio on a Sunday night.

Speaker: If you like this show, you like this ministry, you wanna protect the unborn, you want to keep education out there about the truth of abortion, help us keep this show on the air. Details are coming up on how you can do just that. Coming up next on AM nine 50 FM 94.9. The answer streaming on the answer orlando.com.[00:26:00]

Speaker: Chris? Yeah, I’m here. Hang on just a second. I’m making a note. Okay, let’s, I, I rushed that on the Byron Donald’s thing, so let’s, um. I wanna go back to that a bit. And I want to, I want, I’m sorry, go ahead.

Speaker 4: Yeah, I have No, no, I have your list in front of me. Oh,

Speaker: okay.

Speaker 4: Um, you’ve got, what, eight people running as Republicans and six running as Democrats?

Speaker: Uh, which ones

Speaker 4: are viable? I would,

Speaker: Donalds Donalds, um, Paul Renner are about the only two viable ones I see on there. Um, okay. What about no idea. Is it Juda? Juah was supposed to be running, but I don’t see Judah’s name on there anywhere.

Vicky Cherry: And of course you got, is it Demings now running too? Uh,

Speaker: Demings. Well, he’s a Democrat.

Speaker: Well, I know Demmings is running.

Vicky Cherry: Yes.

Speaker: Uh, Jerry Demings is running. I’d say he’s, I’d say he’s viable because he’s got severe name [00:27:00] recognition and the, the Democrats are gonna, are gonna get behind him big time. And I think they have to, I think the, I I, and I’ll, I’ll be happy to say this on the air. I believe he’s running because his job is to try and give them an option.

Speaker: For the black community because they’re worried that Byron Donalds might, you know, get a large amount of the black vote and win. And so they want to try and siphon off some of the black vote by having Jerry Dimmings on.

Vicky Cherry: And I would like to come back with the, about the abortion pills.

Speaker: Okay. Abortion pills.

Speaker: So we’ll start with the abortion. Well, let’s start with, okay,

Vicky Cherry: so I’ll start. I looked it up. Lemme read what I’ve got here. What? Because I looked it up and, sorry. The chemical abortions.

Speaker: The chemical abortion pills about Medicaid? Is that what you were saying, Chris? What was the, no, we were

Vicky Cherry: talking about it if it was legal or not.

Vicky Cherry: In Florida.

Speaker 4: This here medication abortion counts as abortion procedure Under the law statute defines abortion broadly. So physicians must [00:28:00] establish distal age provided form consent.

Speaker: Okay.

Speaker 4: Dispense the medication in person. Okay. Okay. Document in compliance.

Speaker: Okay, well let, let’s hold off till we get live here or till we go back to recording.

Speaker: So. Okay, so Vicky, what, what do you have? Let’s make sure we’re on the same page here. I’m saying that

Vicky Cherry: chemical abortions are legal in Florida up to six weeks.

Speaker: Okay.

Vicky Cherry: But you do have to have the in-person visit.

Speaker: Okay. Okay. And no

Vicky Cherry: over email, so what he was saying.

Speaker: Okay. Alright. Yeah. Alright then. And so we’ll hit the abortion pills first, then we’ll talk about the candidates again.

Speaker: Okay.

Vicky Cherry: I don’t think we wanna spend too much time on. Each candidate, I mean, reading too much about it. We’re not,

Speaker: no, we’re not gonna spend too much time on it. We’re just gonna touch on it.

Vicky Cherry: Okay.

Speaker: Okay. Alright, Pete, we’re ready. And, and Vicky, you’ll bring us back. Okay. It’s up to you. Okay. Okay. 3, 2, 1.

Vicky Cherry: And welcome back to Pro-Life Radio on a Sunday evening.

Vicky Cherry: I’m Vicky Cherry, across from me is my handsome husband. I think that’s why he likes me to bring us back in, because I always say how handsome he is. So [00:29:00] anyway,

Speaker: I have to pay her for that. Everybody, it’s, I’m almost broke. Now

Vicky Cherry: we have with us online, Chris Casler. He is the curator. I guess, I dunno what you would call it.

Vicky Cherry: Chris. Creator of the creator Yeah. Of the coin. The pro-life coin. It’s beautiful. And Bruce is holding it up now to the camera. Um, please go on to the, the website and pick up your coin so that you can have that as a memorial that you are, um, supporting all that you can in the pro-life.

Speaker 5: Yeah. ‘

Vicky Cherry: cause we know the other side is pro death.

Vicky Cherry: We say pro-choice. That makes it sound so much better. But it isn’t, it’s pro death. Or death. So we were talking about the legalities of the chemical abortion pill in Florida. And yes, it is legal in Florida up to six weeks, but you have to, like Chris, you had said you have to go into the doctor. You can’t just get it.

Vicky Cherry: And then you also have to have, um, you are not supposed to take [00:30:00] the mail, uh, you cannot mail that to a patient in Florida.

Speaker: It has to be mailed to a doctor. Is that what I’m

Vicky Cherry: just saying? That you can’t, like a, a woman cannot buy, cannot order as herself law legally. Okay. Order it and, and use it.

Speaker: Okay. Alright.

Speaker: Um, we were also talking about the candidates running for governor and who’s pro-life and who’s, who’s not. And, and right now there’s not a real accurate list out there other than Yeah. And just because they have a Republican after their name or before their name does not mean that they are instantly pro-life.

Speaker: Um, as, as we know, politicians tend to be very good about, uh, uh, you know, playing word games, if you will. And so that’s why I, I, I don’t want to, I don’t want to come out and say that Paul Renner is not pro-life, but I was, I was not impressed with his answer to the question. If a law crossed your desk to end abortion in Florida, would you sign it?

Speaker: He says, well, it would [00:31:00] depend on, you know, the legalities of it. I don’t think that the governor has the authority to end abortion, but the governor does have the authority according to the Constitution because the governor has to protect the elements of the constitution, life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

Speaker: So a governor, if they weren’t concerned with having a second term, could today sign a document saying, okay, executive order. No more abortion in the state of Florida. No more abortion pills. No chemical abortion. No medical abortion. No exceptions. They could end it right there, but we just don’t have governors that, uh, around the country that, or we’ve got a few that have that kind of courage, but not many.

Vicky Cherry: Well, and there’s debate between lawyers ’cause mm-hmm. It wasn’t that his, um, renter said he is a lawyer. Mm-hmm. And he does not. Agree that a governor has that power. Now we’ve heard from other lawyers that they do have that power. Yeah, yeah. So it’s, yeah. We’ve heard

Speaker: some from, from some really good lawyers [00:32:00] who argue cases before the Supreme Court on a regular basis, and they’ve said, yeah, the governor does have that, that authority.

Speaker: So, because

Vicky Cherry: if you haven’t seen it, there is a, a palm card, uh, that you can fill out. That’s just basically saying your name and that you want the governor to step up and outlaw abortion in Florida.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Vicky Cherry: Um, I know Tom Vale has those out there. He’s been doing that for a while. A lot of other people are agreeing with it, and that’s what they’re for, is to tell the governor, we want you to do this.

Speaker: And I think if anyone attends any of the club meetings, the Republican club meetings, I think they’ve been available at the tables there. I know we have them available at Liberty Church on Sunday mornings. If you don’t have one, you can get one. And you just put your name on it and say, yes, I, I support this governor.

Speaker: Please sign this document. But, mm, you know. Um, now Chris, we’ve got Chris Kassler on the line. Chris, we were talking about, um, the candidates for governor. There’s only a, a, like a handful it seems like. I know there 27 people have signed up, have put their paperwork in to [00:33:00] run for governor of Florida, but they’re, they’re all at best long shots.

Speaker: The, the ones that seem to be.

Vicky Cherry: Viable,

Speaker: viable candidates, if I may use a word from the, you know, pro-choice movement. Um, Byron Donalds, obviously, he’s got the endorsement of President Trump. Mm-hmm. He’s a congressman. He’s been voting the way that, you know, we want him to vote, uh, in Congress. He’s, he’s done some, some really great work.

Speaker: You’ve got, uh, Paul Renner, former Speaker of the House for Florida. Uh, then looking at the Democrats, I’d say the one that, um. Has the best shot from the Democratic Party is Jerry Demmings. What do you think, Chris?

Speaker 4: Well, sitting here in the middle of Orange County, it would look that way. Um, and so I tend to agree with you.

Speaker 4: Mm-hmm. I don’t have any reason not to. I, I think that David Jolly has a shot, but I don’t know the game in Tallahassee well enough to, to tell you.

Speaker: Mm-hmm. I, I think Jerry Dimmings was [00:34:00] put in by the Democratic Party for a reason. Uh, the Democratic party, I think is scared. Um, in the presidential election, more black men voted Republican than I believe ever before, or I shouldn’t say ever before than since, probably since post Civil War, because for the longest time in this country, most black men were Republicans.

Speaker: So I, I, I should clarify that Sure. Since the Civil War, since blacks were allowed to vote after the Civil War. Um, well, and a lot

Vicky Cherry: of people forget. Yeah. That’s why the Republican Party started

Speaker: was to abolish slavery.

Vicky Cherry: Mm-hmm.

Speaker: And the reason I’m a Republican now is I wanna abolish abortion. And I’m a constitutionalist.

Speaker: I believe in our right to religious freedom. I believe in our right to protect ourselves and bear arms. I believe in our right to free speech. And the other side seems to. Be against all those things. So anyway, Jerry Dimmings and I said this, uh, during the commercial break and I will say it on the air, I believe that he was [00:35:00] put in the race by the Democratic party.

Speaker: ’cause one, I think he’s just about termed out for Orange County Mayor. Yes.

Speaker 5: Yeah.

Speaker: And, um, he’s been a, he’s been a civil servant for a long time, collecting a check from government for a long, long time. Mm-hmm. And I think he was put in because so many black men voted Republican the last election. And I think they’re afraid that those same black men are gonna vote Byron Donald, into the governor’s mansion.

Speaker: They want to try and siphon off some black votes, believing that Jerry Dimmings will get those votes. And I can say that without being, well, I say I can say that without being called a racist because I am a black man, but I’ve also been called a racist because I’m a Republican. But I, I will tell you, I I, I’ve spent some time in politics.

Speaker: I think, uh, I think that’s one of the things that was discussed. And I would, I would bet you that Jerry Demings knows that.

Speaker 4: Okay. Let me ask you another question since you’re [00:36:00] closer to this than I am.

Speaker: Yes, sir.

Speaker 4: How important is this issue in that race? In other words, if you rank the 10 issues that are on people’s minds, you know, um, cost of living, cost of groceries, uh, real estate taxes, global warming, war in Ukraine, uh, abortion rights, and so forth.

Speaker 4: Where does abortion stand in this particular race? Not necessarily at the national level or congressional level, but in terms of the state of Florida government.

Speaker: I would, I would say it’s probably one of the important things that’s being discussed in both parties. Um, but right now it hasn’t been brought to the foreground.

Speaker: It, it, the parties only seem to, and, and the left is the party that seems to want to make it an issue in the foreground. We, as, as a ball, as abolitionists, have to be aware that, uh, another amendment four is gonna come our way sometime. And it’s gonna, it’s gonna be very important as to who is [00:37:00] in the governor’s mansion when it does, and we’ve gotta be prepared.

Speaker: Mm-hmm. And if you’ve got somebody in there that’s not all the way in for abolishing abortion, then Florida has stands on the, the precipice of being one of the most. Liberal states when it comes to abortion, if we don’t get the right person in the Governor’s mansion, and I can promise you if anyone with a Democrat after their name gets in there, amendment four will come back sooner than you think, and especially if, if they get control of the House and the Senate here in Florida.

Speaker: It’s just, it’s just a matter of time.

Speaker 4: Did you conduct polling for, for Amendment four or for the opposition of it? Did you come up with any numbers on, on whether it was, how important it was to people?

Speaker: Uh, the, the Republican party did, and we know for, for a fact that in Seminole County, um, if the whole state had to [00:38:00] rely on Seminole County, and I’m not proud of this because I was chairman at the time, but if the whole state had relied on Seminole County abortion would’ve would’ve been.

Speaker: Enshrined into our Constitution. And the reason for that is that you’ve got, it’s abortion is not a Republican and not a Democrat issue, even though the parties have made it. One, it’s not, it’s an issue of right and wrong, of good versus evil. It’s, it’s black and white. And so you’ve got some Republicans that claim to be Republicans, but they’re okay with abortion because they’ve, they’ve got.

Speaker: They’re okay with it. In, in cases of rape or incest or in case of the mother’s life is in danger, there are very few op opportunities or very few instances where the mother’s life is truly in danger if they don’t abort the baby, because the abortion itself can be as taxing on a woman’s body is actually having give birth because anyway, it goes, the baby has to come out of the woman.[00:39:00]

Speaker: Okay. We’re so medically advanced that. Mother’s life and the baby’s life can be saved. So that’s just one of the, the lies that is told to everyone through Planned Parenthood and through the pro-choice movement that they want to, they want to have some options there. Uh, in the case of, in the Cape of Rape, in the case of incest.

Speaker: And so you’ve got people that are on both sides of the coin that will say, okay, I’m okay with it there. And so when you talk about abolishing abortion. It scares them. But these are also people who aren’t strong in their faith. That, you know, God’s in control. God’s got this. We do not have the right to end a life that God has ordained to live

Vicky Cherry: well.

Vicky Cherry: And Bruce, what you’re talking about and there I totally agree with. I also see that, you know, we, it is good and evil. It is. Going with God or with [00:40:00] Satan. And unfortunately it looks like the majority of the people are siding with things that are not of God. And our Constitution is built on belief in God.

Vicky Cherry: And if we cannot get back to that, what happens? Chris,

Speaker 4: who were the major groups, organizations opposing for? Is there, is there a group in particular opposing Catholic church?

Speaker: You talking, you’re talking about opposing amendment for going through or, or rooting for amendment for Yes. Which, which are you saying

Speaker 4: opposing it?

Speaker: Well, there was, uh, Vicky was captain of the Human Life Protection Amendment Group and they were all over the state. Mm-hmm. Um mm-hmm. Seminole County Republican Executive Committee. We were opposing amendment for. The, the Republican Party of Florida was opposing Amendment four, Liberty Council action opposed Amendment four, [00:41:00] Pro-Life Action Ministries opposed Amendment four.

Speaker: There were several large prominent groups that opposed Amendment four.

Vicky Cherry: A lot of it got in too late, I think too though. Mm-hmm. Go ahead Chris.

Speaker 4: So then, okay, so that’s okay. So, and then who was a raid on the other side? On the other team.

Speaker: Oh my goodness. You know what? That’s a good question and I’ll answer it when we come back.

Speaker: We’re up against a break here. More Pro-Life Radio. Coming up our final segment next on AM nine 50 FM 94.9, the answer.

Speaker: Thank. Hey, Pete,

Vicky Cherry: what segment are we going into?

Speaker: Pete. Pete? Aren’t we going into segment four? Yeah, we’re going into segment four. I’m keeping up here. Oh, wow. I was with segment

Vicky Cherry: three. Yeah.

Speaker: Yeah. See? Alright. She’s sitting there shaking her head at me like, no, no, that’s se we got [00:42:00] another one. No, no, no, no, we don’t.

Speaker: No. I was

Vicky Cherry: like, do we? I was asking.

Speaker: Mm-hmm. Alright. Okay, so the answer is who was opposing us? And I will answer that question when we come back. Vicky, you’ll bring us back again and just ask. Yeah. I

Speaker 4: have a couple other questions to go along with it. Okay. To get down that.

Chris Casler: So who opposed,

Chris Casler: ending

Speaker: whatever happened to Val Demings, by the way?

Speaker: Uh, she’s sitting around, uh, uh, probably losing firearms in her boyfriend’s house. I don’t, oh, did I say that on?

Speaker 5: Sorry.

Speaker: Well, she’s got more, you know, when you talk about, I mean, Demings has got name recognition here in Orange County. Yeah. Really? Nowhere else in the state, so, but she has more name recognition.

Speaker: I just wonder why. They went with him instead of her,

Speaker: because she’s lost two elections. She, uh, she ran for, ran for reelection in Congress, lost that, and then she ran again, I think, and lost that. So I think, I think her political [00:43:00] capital’s gone.

Vicky Cherry: And if we’re talking about males voting for male black males mm-hmm.

Vicky Cherry: They’re gonna probably wanna run a black male.

Speaker: Well,

Vicky Cherry: you,

Speaker: eh,

Vicky Cherry: maybe. Yeah. Yeah. Unless it’s a really beautiful black hole. I just wondered

Speaker: about that. You know, because it got secondary because I’m sure it was so she’ll, she’ll end up being running for something.

Speaker: Oh yeah.

Speaker: It’s all part of that big cabal, democratic cabal of state and national.

Speaker: Yeah, probably. What were you saying? I forget.

Speaker: Nancy

Speaker 4: Pelosi is, is Val Demings major mentor. In the party or has been,

Speaker: oh, and Nancy Pelosi announced this week. She’s not running for reelection.

Speaker 4: Right. So her change in fortunes may have an effect too.

Speaker: Yeah. Maybe so. Mm-hmm. Maybe So. Okay. Let’s go ahead and jump back into segment four here.

Speaker: Here we go in three, two. One

Vicky Cherry: and welcome back to Pro-Life Radio. I’m Vicky Cherry. Across from me is my handsome husband, Bruce. On the line with this, we have Chris Kassler and we are talking about pro-life [00:44:00] Prode and the candidates that are running and the coin that Chris has invented, uh,

Speaker: created, minted

Vicky Cherry: created and minted, and, um, all those kinds of things.

Vicky Cherry: So Chris, um, you had a question before we went to break. Go ahead and ask that again.

Speaker 4: Well, I’m interested in, in which groups are on each side of this, uh, divide. Mm-hmm. I, I mean, I’m picturing it kind of like a soccer team.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: You know, you’ve got, you know, you’ve got forwards and you’ve got all the different players on the field are array against each other.

Speaker 4: So the question then, if it’s a team game, so to speak, with different groups, each of which would be a player in this analogy, how are they organized and how are they led? What’s the, are, are they, are they just sort of on the field headed in the same direction without a apology? Or is there any coordination and is there a coordinated group for us in particular?

Speaker: I will, I will, I will jump in [00:45:00] and, and answer that. First off, there were several groups that were opposing, uh, what we were doing with fighting for Amendment four to not be on the ballot. There were groups that were supporting it. Um, a lot of support came from outside. The state, and a lot of it came from outside the country.

Speaker: Uh, there was a billionaire out of Switzerland or Sweden, someplace like that, that was pumping money into the pro. Amendment four. They were supporting it.

Vicky Cherry: We also have to remember there was a lot of cheating going on. Well, that’s how they were doing that. The cheating was,

Speaker: was being funded by this billionaire from outside the country.

Speaker: So there was a lot of support. Uh, of course, planned Parenthood was all over this. George Soros. Allegedly was all over this. Um, and, and when I say the billionaire outta Sweden, it was not George Soros, it was somebody else. And that’s why one of the things that, uh, governor Ron DeSantis wanted to do was to prevent, he tried to put a, a law in place, um, to prevent [00:46:00] money from outside the country being funneled into, uh, to change the constitution of the state of Florida to being funneled in here.

Speaker: So. The various groups that supported Amendment Four, of course, the Democratic Party, because they had made it a huge political issue. Um, planned Parenthood. Uh, and sadly enough, there were some churches, I don’t think there was an organized effort by churches, but there were some churches who were supporting Amendment four.

Speaker: Vicky, you went to a, um, a rally down at, um, um,

Vicky Cherry: lake Yola,

Speaker: lake Yola. There were busloads of churches coming in with pastors

Vicky Cherry: mm-hmm.

Speaker: That were supporting Amendment four

Vicky Cherry: and they’re still all over the place supporting abortion.

Speaker 4: So Vicky, was your group a coalition, the group you were running?

Vicky Cherry: Uh, no, we started, well we started with the Human Life Protection Amendment and there was not enough support.

Vicky Cherry: We didn’t make the ballot. And [00:47:00] then, you know, later in the race, then the, um, abortion. Group, the Democrats put their, um, spin on it, but, but what I’m referring to is the cheating of the, the petitions. You know, they had people that were dead, that were signing petitions. They had people signing more than one petition, and we have had some.

Vicky Cherry: Help, I guess, with changing those laws. So the outside influence, the, uh, petition gathering, all of that

Speaker: petition takers can no longer, my understanding is they can no longer be from outside the state coming here for work. Petition takers have to be state residents. Yeah, because they were, they were flying them in, busting them in from places like New York and California, and they were, they were just, and they were paying them.

Speaker: And they were pay and, and so they put several laws in place. They can only have X number of petitions in their hand at one time. Uh, they can, they cannot be paid per petition, which is what they were doing. And they [00:48:00] found a way around it. They told them you have to have a minimum of five ti petitions an hour, and if you do, we’ll pay you 50 bucks.

Speaker: Well, that put a $10 per petition of bounty, if you will. On getting signatures. And so that law has changed that they can no longer do that. So, you know, uh, kudos to our governor, Ron DeSantis has, has been a great governor for us, and I truly will miss him.

Speaker 5: Mm-hmm.

Speaker: And I pray that, you know, our next governor, whether it be Byron Donalds or Paul Renner, whoever’s gonna be, will be just as good a governor.

Vicky Cherry: Has there been any talk about what we think DeSantis is gonna do? Oh, Chris, have you heard anything?

Speaker 4: You mean his next go around Uhhuh? What’s he No, I haven’t.

Vicky Cherry: Yeah. I

Speaker 4: mean, is he, no, I have I, well, the hint is he is gonna run for president again.

Speaker: Mm-hmm.

Speaker 4: But nothing that I’ve seen that’s formal.

Speaker: Yeah. Mm-hmm.

Speaker: So he’s been a great governor, that’s for sure. I can tell [00:49:00] you I probably would not be sitting here if it weren’t for some of the things he did, because I had COVID and Pete in the next studio had COVID as well. We had it at the same time. I had it severely and the Ivermectin didn’t touch it, and a friend of mine made me aware of the mono colonial regenerative therapy that our governor had instituted in the state of Florida.

Speaker: And saved lives. And I had that treatment and within 12 hours it was like I’d never been sick.

Vicky Cherry: And then Joe Biden figured out that, well, not him, but his auto pen.

Speaker: Yeah.

Vicky Cherry: Figured out we were doing well Uhhuh with that. And so he took that away from our state. He, he stopped the shipments

Speaker: of the therapy to Florida.

Vicky Cherry: But you know, Chris, I, I would like to hear what your thoughts are on. This fight. This fight for the unborn, the preborn. They’re human beings now.

Speaker 4: Yes.

Vicky Cherry: How much of it do you think is, is [00:50:00] God and Satan? How much of it do you think is moral immoral? What are your thoughts on the whole movement, so to speak?

Speaker 4: Movement. I can’t say particularly ’cause that that verges into politics, but I would say that. The effort to kill the unborn, to destroy the family, to, uh, ruin the lives of our young people with all kinds of transgendered nonsense. Homosexuality is definitely demonic and satanic, I don’t have any doubt about it.

Speaker 4: Yep. Um, particularly when you see how these people get caught up in it, they become completely overwhelmed and have no, no longer have a sense of judgment. I, I think it’s really demonic. And it’s manifest politically perhaps, but that’s not where it starts.

Speaker: Now, Vicky, you were telling me she finds material all the time online during the course of the week.

Speaker: You found that now something else that’s being done is [00:51:00] frozen embryos are being turned into jewelry.

Vicky Cherry: Oh my gosh, yes. You know. Oh, I saw that. These are human beings. And to have the idea that we can take something that God ordained and it’s sacred, it’s life, it’s beautiful, and turn it into jewelry. I, you know, I just, it scares me what we, what we’re doing, what we’re doing with our children, how it, our children are not our first thought that it’s us, it’s adults.

Vicky Cherry: It’s, it’s everything is so self-centered. And it, it’s just, it’s horrible. And, you know, there are some things that are trying to combat that. You know, IVFI kind of have a, I I can understand people wanting to have a child. I, I get that. I have children. I understand, but when you’re taking, and you’re storing 8, 10, 20 children, ’cause that’s what they are, because a lot of people I don’t think understand that IVF it is not the egg and the sperm separate, they’re combined because they [00:52:00] can’t survive separate.

Vicky Cherry: So you’ve already created a life. And to let that baby sit in a frozen suspended nature for, I mean, like 24 years or more. You know, they, they do have what they call snowflakes. Snowflake babies, which is it? It’s, it’s really the only moral thing to do. I mean, what do you do if you’ve created eight embryos and you only use two?

Vicky Cherry: What about those other four? Now, some of them may not be viable and they wouldn’t survive, but what about the ones that will. You know, and so there are, you know, ministries that are putting on those babies like Nightlight Christian adoption, they’re, they call it snowflakes, and they’re taking those embryos and, and, um, finding homes and letting people adopt these babies, but their life is just not valued.

Vicky Cherry: I, it’s scary.

Speaker: Hmm. Wow. It’s. [00:53:00] What did we come to? Well, you mentioned

Speaker 4: life is not valued. That same principle applies to people being sent to the gulag or mm-hmm. The death camps. So the work camps life is not valued. Mm-hmm. They’re just a number of commodity and, uh, we’ll either work, death, death, and let’s turn into

Vicky Cherry: jewelry.

Vicky Cherry: Now I’d have a ring with my baby embryo in it.

Speaker 4: Well, you know, the, the, the Nazis famously made lampshades out of human skin after the death outta the death camps. They’re hideous.

Speaker: Mm. That’s, that’s, that’s not idiocy. That’s, that’s just pure evil. It’s just evil. Yeah.

Speaker 4: I mean,

Speaker: yeah. Yeah. Just pure evil. Wow.

Vicky Cherry: Chris, we only have about two minutes. Well, we walked away

Speaker 5: in some ways.

Vicky Cherry: Yes. Oh yeah. Yeah. Yes, we have. So, Chris, what do you want us to end us on? A good note here. We have about two minutes.

Speaker 4: Oh, well, actually I’m encouraged. I, I know that we were, uh, [00:54:00] somewhat mildly disappointed at the outcome with four election, but the bottom line was we prevented it becoming enshrined in the constitution.

Vicky Cherry: Amen. All one. Uh, the numbers

Speaker 4: were not, not as good as we would’ve liked, but at least we dodged that bullet. Um, and I think that, that our new president, our current president, he’s not all that new. Mm-hmm. Um, has a good grasp on this business. I think he does value life. I think it’s not just his abortion stance, but also his eagerness to prevent warfare.

Speaker 4: He comes up the Ukraine thing as saying he just wants the killing to stop. Mm-hmm. And I, I, I personally feel the same way. How he’s gonna do it. I don’t know. But that’s a motivation. I think that’s the right kind of thinking that’s what we need. Mm-hmm. We’re going to need more than more and more. We’re going to need young, healthy children in this country.

Speaker 4: And I think all the effort we’re making to curb or prevent abortion is a part of that. And I’m encouraged that we’re gonna be successful.

Vicky Cherry: It’s all in God’s hands and we know he [00:55:00] wins.

Speaker: Yep. Always. Chris, thank you so much for joining us. Chris Kassler. He’s an artist. Uh, he’s an abolitionist. He is a active citizen in our community.

Speaker: He is the creator of the pro-life Silver coin. Am I not a child to you? My brothers and sisters. And again, you can get it@christiancoins.net. That’s christian coins.net. Chris, thank you so much for joining us tonight. Pro-Life Radio will be back again next week with another show, and we thank you for. For listening.

Speaker: We thank you for your support and uh, prayers for all of you and your household. Good night,

Speaker: [00:56:00] Chris. Thank you very much. Pete if you want. Okay, welcome.

Speaker 5: Uh,

Speaker: uh, just a note, Pete, uh, I think about three minutes into the first segment there is where that edit takes, uh, needs to take place. Okay? Yes. Thank you sir.

Speaker 4: Please.

Speaker: Yeah,

Speaker 4: I’m glad I got really off to a poor start there, but I’m glad we got to redo it.

Speaker: That’s okay. That’s the benefit of recording the show.

Speaker 4: Yes, yes.

Speaker: And sir, I guess we will see you at church tomorrow.

Vicky Cherry: Yeah, I look forward to it. Be all right. Thank you. Alright,

Chris Casler: thanks Chris. God bless you all. You too. Take care, byebye. Bye-bye.

Chris Casler: Shive

Vicky Cherry: Shive. S-H-I-R-V-S-H,

Chris Casler: Sher. SH. Shoot. S-H-I-R-V-E-L? [00:57:00]

Vicky Cherry: Yeah.

Chris Casler: V-E-V-E-L-I.

Vicky Cherry: Lve. Shelve.

Chris Casler: VEIL.

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