PODCAST · news
Stone Creek Republican Club Radio
by Team SCRC
Updates from the Stone Creek Republican Club - Ocala, Florida
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April 4, 2026
STONE CREEK REPUBLICAN RADIONews Briefing — Saturday, April four, twenty twenty-sixPrepared by The Truesdell CompaniesWelcome to Stone Creek Radio, the News Briefing for Saturday, April four, twenty twenty-six. This is a production of the Truesdell Companies. Let's begin with Military Leadership Renewed — Hegseth Moves to Align Army Command with Trump's Vision.Secretary of War Pete Hegseth made one of his boldest moves yet this week, removing Army Chief of Staff General Randy George and two other senior Army officers — effective immediately. General David Hodne, who led the Army's Transformation and Training Command, and Major General William Green, the Army's chief of chaplains, were also removed. General Christopher LaNeve, a battle-tested officer who previously served as Hegseth's own military aide, steps in as acting Army chief of staff. The Pentagon made clear the intent: to install leaders who will carry out President Trump's vision for the Army without hesitation. The Department of War expressed gratitude for General George's thirty-eight years of service, and with that chapter closed, the focus now turns to building the command structure this moment in history demands.Moving along to Strong Jobs Report Defies the Doubters — America Added One Hundred Seventy-Eight Thousand Jobs in March.The March payrolls report came in Friday morning, and it blew past every forecast on Wall Street. Economists had predicted gains of around fifty-nine thousand jobs. The actual number came in at one hundred seventy-eight thousand — three times expectations. The unemployment rate ticked down to four point three percent. Healthcare led the way with over seventy-six thousand new positions, joined by gains in warehousing, construction, and transportation. Manufacturing added fifteen thousand jobs, beating expectations that the sector would shed positions. This is a labor market that is holding its ground despite real global pressures, and it reflects an economy that, under American leadership, continues to find its footing even in a demanding environment.Our next story is Iran Stonewalls — Tehran Rejects American Ceasefire Proposal and Walks Away from Talks.Iran has officially rejected a United States proposal for a forty-eight-hour ceasefire, delivered through a third-country intermediary on Wednesday. Tehran's response was not given in writing — it came in the form of continued battlefield attacks. The Wall Street Journal further reported that Iran refused to meet American officials in Islamabad, where regional mediators led by Pakistan had been working to find a path forward. Turkey and Egypt are now exploring alternative venues, including Doha and Istanbul. The administration has been clear-eyed about Iran from the beginning: this is a regime that responds to strength, not appeals for accommodation. America's diplomatic effort was genuine, and Iran's answer tells the world exactly what kind of government it is dealing with.Next up, Tariff Strategy and Domestic Medicine Production — Securing America's Pharmaceutical Supply Chain. But First.Support for Stone Creek Radio comes from our Presidential Sponsors — individuals and organizations committed to this community and the conversations that connect us.Truesdell Wealth, Inc. — founded by Paul Grant Truesdell, J.D., and Accredited Investment Fiduciary, providing trusted and transparent wealth and investment advice and management to retirees for over 40 years.Mike Crimi, a candidate for District 2, Marion County Commission.Stan Hanson, an outstanding Marion County Republican.Arviv Aesthetics Med Spa. Dr. Tali Arviv, M.D., serving the health and wellness of our community.Ryan Chamberlin — Florida House Representative.Stan McClain — Florida State Senator.Their generous support makes independent, community-centered broadcasting possible. We are grateful. This is Stone Creek Radio.Let's continue. As part of the administration's broader effort to bring essential industries back to American soil, the Department of War is working directly with domestic pharmaceutical manufacturers — including major producers — to establish defense-priority production lines for medicines critical to hospital operations. The move follows the administration's decision to place significant tariffs on foreign-produced essential pharmaceuticals, a policy designed to end America's dangerous dependence on overseas drug supply chains. The approach is straightforward: if a medicine matters to the health of the American people, it should be made in America. Working with domestic producers to guarantee that supply is not a disruption — it is the whole point. This is what an America First industrial policy looks like in practice.Let's turn to Intelligence Community Releases Twenty Twenty-Six Annual Threat Assessment — China Leads the Challenge List.The Office of the Director of National Intelligence, led by Director Tulsi Gabbard, released the twenty twenty-six Annual Threat Assessment this past month, and it is a document that rewards careful reading. Strategic competition with China is identified as the primary long-term challenge facing the United States. Russia is characterized as the most immediate military threat. Iran and North Korea are assessed as asymmetric risk sources — meaning they rely on missiles, cyber operations, and proxy networks rather than conventional confrontation. The assessment also warns that the combined missile threat to the American homeland could expand to more than sixteen thousand weapons by twenty thirty-five. The intelligence community under this administration is calling things what they are, naming adversaries plainly, and giving American leadership the clear-eyed picture it needs to act.The next story is Space Force Steps Up — Guardians Tracking Iranian Missile Launches in Real Time.The United States Space Force is playing a direct and active role in current operations, integrating its personnel — known as Guardians — into the operational picture alongside forces engaged with Iran. New small-satellite constellations are providing real-time tracking of Iranian missile launches, giving commanders across the theater a decisive informational advantage. This is what American investment in space superiority looks like when it matters. Decades of building the most advanced space architecture on earth is paying dividends right now, in this conflict, on this watch. The Space Force was created to meet exactly this kind of moment.Continuing on, EU Growth Headwinds — European Economy Feels the Weight of New Trade Reality.A new report from the consulting firm EY warns that American tariff policies could reduce European Union economic growth by half a percentage point in twenty twenty-six, with the euro-area economy now forecast to expand at just one point three percent. Middle East energy disruptions are adding to the pressure. It is worth noting what this reflects: for decades, European nations built economic models that depended on free access to American markets while contributing little to their own defense or to the partnerships that made that access possible. The current trade environment is a direct consequence of that imbalance being corrected. America First trade policy is not designed to harm allies — it is designed to produce allies who carry their weight.Moving right along to Ecuador and America Team Up — Joint Operations Deal a Blow to Cartel Networks.President Daniel Noboa of Ecuador has deepened his country's security partnership with the United States in a significant way. Joint operations involving Ecuadorian special forces and American advisory support, intelligence, and logistics — launched earlier in March — have struck cartel infrastructure...
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April 2, 2026
Welcome to Stone Creek Republican Radio for Thursday, April second, Twenty Twenty-Six. Here are the stories you may want to know about as a republican member of the Stone Creek Republican Club. Let's begin with America Reaches for the Moon Again.NASA launched the Artemis Two mission on Wednesday evening from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, sending four astronauts on a nearly ten-day journey around the Moon for the first time in over fifty years. Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen lifted off at six thirty-five in the evening Eastern time aboard the Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft. The mission marks the first time humans have traveled beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo Seventeen in December of nineteen seventy-two. The crew will loop around the far side of the Moon and return to Earth for splashdown on April tenth — a test flight laying the groundwork for an actual lunar landing mission targeted for twenty twenty-eight. America is going back to the Moon, and we are going back to win.Moving along to President Trump Puts NATO Allies on Notice.President Trump used an Easter address to send a direct message to America's European allies — carry your weight or America will reconsider the relationship. The President singled out France and the United Kingdom for refusing to commit naval assets to address the ongoing Strait of Hormuz crisis, calling their posture unacceptable. He raised the possibility of a reassessment of United States participation in NATO, making clear that decades of American patience with under-performing allies have limits. NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte is scheduled to visit Washington in the coming days. For years, Republican leaders have demanded that European nations contribute meaningfully to their own defense rather than freeloading on American strength. President Trump is not asking — he is requiring it.Our next story is Trump Vows Decisive Action Against Iran.President Trump delivered a clear and unambiguous warning this week: the United States will continue to strike Iran hard for the next two to three weeks. With the American and Israeli campaign against Iranian military infrastructure now more than a month into its operation, the President is signaling that the mission is not finished and that the pressure will intensify before it relents. This is the posture of a commander in chief who means what he says. The days of telegraphing retreats and rewarding adversaries with concessions are over. Iran is facing the consequences of decades of aggression, proxy terror, and threats to American interests in the region — and the Trump administration is not blinking.Next up, Global Airfares Surge as Hormuz Closure Bites.The ripple effects of the Strait of Hormuz disruption are now being felt by travelers worldwide. The extended closure has tightened jet fuel supplies across the Middle East and Asia, pushing international airfares sharply higher. Carriers including Kuwait Airways are rerouting major long-haul flights through alternative hubs to maintain service to India and Southeast Asia, adding cost and distance to routes that would otherwise pass through the Gulf. This is what happens when adversarial regimes are allowed to control critical maritime chokepoints — and it is precisely why the Trump administration's decision to confront Iranian aggression directly, rather than negotiate from weakness, represents the right long-term strategy for energy security and global commerce.The next story is U.S. Embassy Issues Baghdad Security Alert.The United States Embassy in Baghdad has issued an urgent warning to all American citizens in Iraq, advising immediate departure from central Baghdad in response to a credible threat window of twenty-four to forty-eight hours from pro-Iran militia groups. The Embassy is taking no chances with the safety of American lives. This kind of direct, no-nonsense protective action reflects the seriousness with which the Trump administration treats threats to Americans abroad. Iran's network of proxy militias across Iraq remains one of the most destabilizing forces in the region — and the administration's ongoing pressure campaign against Tehran is aimed at dismantling exactly that infrastructure at its source.Turning now to Trump and Xi Hold Summit in Beijing.President Trump is in Beijing through today, April second, for a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping. The meeting covers a full range of bilateral concerns, including trade, regional stability, and the ongoing situation in the Middle East, where China has placed blame on the United States and Israel for the Strait of Hormuz disruption. The Trump administration has consistently demonstrated that engaging rivals from a position of economic and military strength produces better outcomes than the engagement-without-accountability approach of previous administrations. The President also expressed interest in meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un during the trip, though American officials indicate any such meeting would require meaningful movement from Pyongyang on denuclearization first.Our seventh story is China Blames America — The World Is Not Buying It.Beijing's Foreign Ministry this week officially declared that United States and Israeli military operations are the root cause of the Strait of Hormuz crisis. This is a talking point, not an analysis. China has deep economic interests in cheap Gulf oil and deeply prefers an Iran that is unchecked and capable of threatening American allies in the region. Beijing calling for a ceasefire while simultaneously pointing the finger at the country doing the fighting is a transparent diplomatic maneuver — and the Trump administration is not about to let Chinese framing set the terms of debate. America acted. America is protecting the free flow of commerce. That is not the root cause of instability. It is the answer to it.Next, we have European Defense Ministers Scramble After Trump's Warning.Following President Trump's pointed remarks about European allies acting as paper tigers on Gulf security, defense ministers across the European Union reportedly held emergency consultations to discuss the possibility of independent maritime security operations in the Gulf without United States coordination. This is exactly the outcome that Republican foreign policy has sought for decades — European nations taking their own defense seriously, spending their own money, and committing their own assets rather than assuming America will always be there to cover the gap. Whether European governments follow through with action or retreat to the usual statements and delay will determine whether they are genuine partners or continued passengers.Let's turn to EU Divided Over Middle East Response.High-level divisions inside the European Union are stalling any coordinated response to the ongoing Middle East conflict. Irish Member of the European Parliament Barry Andrews, returning from Beirut, has called for immediate sanctions against Israel in response to strikes in Lebanon. The rest of the bloc cannot agree. This paralysis is not surprising. The EU has long struggled to present a unified foreign policy position on anything that requires actual commitment. What matters for American interests is that the Trump administration is not waiting for European consensus to define its own approach. The United States, alongside Israel, is acting in accordance with its own national security interests — and that clarity of purpose is what multilateral dithering never produces.Moving right along to North Korea Studies Ukraine Lessons for New Tank Doctrine.North Korea is reportedly incorporating battlefield lessons from the war in Ukraine into the development...
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March 29, 2026
The Work Is Never Done. Why Republican Fire Must Never Cool Between Elections. Let’s begin with a fact that deserves honest attention from every Republican who cares about what comes next. The Enthusiasm Gap — Why Less-Committed Republicans Must Wake Up Now.Here is something worth understanding before we go any further. Every political party, Republican or Democrat, faces the same human reality after a big win. Enthusiasm drops. It is not a character flaw — it is simply how people are wired. Throwing stones is easy. Complaining is easy. When you are under attack, motivation comes naturally because the threat is visible and the stakes feel immediate. But when your side is winning, when the policies are moving in the right direction and the other party is in retreat, it becomes genuinely difficult to sustain that same fire. Most people are employees and not employers for exactly this reason. Building something, maintaining something, growing something — that takes a different kind of discipline than fighting back does. Politics is no different. The Republican Party today, across its base from the grassroots level all the way up to national leadership, is wrestling with this exact challenge. Victory in twenty twenty four was real. But victory has a way of making people feel like the work is done — and in politics, the work is never done.The Republican National Committee and state party organizations across the country are raising an alarm that does not get enough attention. It is not the die-hard base that worries party strategists. Those voters show up. They knock doors. They vote in primaries. The concern is the broader group of Republicans who lean right on principle but whose commitment has quietly cooled. In off-year and special elections, Democrats have been outperforming expectations by double digits in some races — not because they are right, but because they are showing up. That is a problem every Republican needs to take personally.Moving along to the second part of this picture — what this pattern actually looks like on the ground.Across social media and in private conversations, a familiar pattern keeps repeating. A Republican sees something outrageous in the news, fires off a passionate post, feels the satisfaction of having said something, and then does nothing further. Meanwhile, local races go uncontested, phone banks go unstaffed, and special elections go sideways in districts that should have been safe. Florida is a good example. Despite a Republican voter registration advantage of over one million, early twenty twenty five and twenty twenty six contests have seen pockets where Democratic turnout outpaced Republican turnout and flipped seats that had no business flipping. The RNC and state parties see it clearly. Online passion that does not translate into offline action is not activism. It is theater. Our next segment is about memory — specifically, what happens when Republicans forget the recent past.Too many less-committed Republicans today treat the Obama and Biden administrations as distant history rather than as recent chapters with real consequences that are still being felt. During the Obama years, gross domestic product growth averaged under two percent annually in the later term. Unemployment stayed above eight percent for much of the first term. The Affordable Care Act drove premiums higher for millions of families while expanding government reach into personal health decisions. Foreign policy retreats left allies uncertain and adversaries emboldened. These were not abstract policy debates. They were kitchen-table realities for American families.And speaking of forgetting — consider what the Obama administration did with one point seven billion dollars of American taxpayer money. In twenty sixteen, the Obama White House secretly loaded wooden pallets stacked with foreign currency — Swiss francs, euros, and other bills — onto an unmarked cargo plane and flew it directly to Iran in the dead of night. Four hundred million dollars in that first unmarked flight, with one point three billion more to follow in subsequent shipments. The administration claimed it was settling a decades-old dispute. Critics, including Republican senators and members of Congress, called it what it looked like — ransom. That money went to the world’s foremost state sponsor of terrorism. As Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth stated just days ago, many of the Iranian military factories and bases that American forces are now systematically destroying were built and paid for with those pallets of American cash. Weapons funded by American taxpayers have been used against American servicemen and women. Where is the outrage? Where is the fury that Republicans rightly felt when this happened? That anger was legitimate then. It is still legitimate now. Forgetting it is not a luxury the country can afford.Next up, the Biden years — because those consequences are even more recent and even less remembered than they should be.Inflation peaked near nine percent in twenty twenty two. Groceries, housing, and fuel costs outpaced wages for ordinary working Americans month after month. The southern border saw record crossing numbers, straining communities and enabling fentanyl trafficking that has cost American lives. The withdrawal from Afghanistan in twenty twenty one broadcast weakness to every adversary watching. Energy independence was traded away on the first days of the administration through executive action. These were not partisan talking points. They were lived experiences. The fact that a Republican who went through all of that can now sit on the sidelines because things feel a little better is not just puzzling — it is a failure of civic memory that has real consequences.What is equally stunning is how quickly the genuine disgust with the Biden administration has faded from memory. This was not a close call. This was not a matter of policy disagreement. Joe Biden was never fit to serve as president of the United States, and the people around him knew it. Unelected staffers and political operatives ran the country while the man in the Oval Office stared blankly at cameras, lost his place mid-sentence, and signed documents with an auto pen because those around him had quietly taken the wheel. Nobody talks about that anymore. Instead it has been reduced to memes and name-calling, and in doing so, the real danger of those four years has been scrubbed clean from the conversation. We spent four years at genuine risk — domestically, economically, and on the world stage — because a sitting president was not in command of his own administration. That is not hyperbole. That is what happened. And if Republicans allow that memory to go soft, if the fire that came from watching that play out in real time is allowed to cool into casual jokes, it will happen again. Get fired up. Remember what you saw with your own eyes.Let’s now turn to what may be the most uncomfortable part of this conversation — the role that personal comfort plays in political disengagement.At the heart of the enthusiasm gap is something that deserves to be named plainly. It is a higher degree of selfishness than the times call for. When things feel stable, it becomes tempting to reason that someone else will handle the precinct work or the voter registration drive or the phone-banking shift. The logic goes, I voted in twenty twenty four. The country is moving in the right direction. Why drag myself to a local party meeting on a Tuesday night? That reasoning, however understandable, ignores how American governance actually works. Power is contested at every level, every cycle. A Democratic majority in Congress or a state legislature can reverse tax relief, energy policy, and border security gains in a matter...
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