The Audio Signal

Clinton Grubb

A news-commentary companion podcast to our weekly video series The Signal

Episodes

  1. May 25

    Episode 2: When Commanders Preach - March 9th, 2026

    Hey — thanks for tuning in again. In this episode we clear up a few corrections (it’s the Strait of Hormuz, not the Gulf; Congress is 435 reps and 100 senators, not 235; and the munitions dollar estimates are more likely in the $3–$5 billion ballpark), then dive into the week’s big, messy headlines. We unpack Kristi Noem’s shift out of DHS into a bizarrely named role (“Shield of the Americas”) — a change that looks more like a demotion or a sideways move than a clean exit. There are real questions about her time at DHS, including millions funneled to a shell company, and what her new job will actually mean for policy and oversight. We also touch on the incoming figure being floated (a senator with strong Trump ties), and why appointments like this make it reasonable to stay skeptical. One of the creepiest storylines: reports that some commanding officers are framing offensive actions as part of an apocalyptic, religious war. The Military Religious Freedom Foundation has gotten 200+ reports about commanders tying missions to end‑times prophecy, running Bible studies, and using scripture to rally troops. We talk about how dangerous and divisive that is — especially for service members of different beliefs, and for anyone worried about separation of church and state. We also break down how religious prophecy outlets (yes, even CBN and some pastors) are interpreting regional events through Isaiah, Ezekiel, and Jeremiah — and why weaponizing scripture to justify policy or warfare is both historically familiar and deeply worrying now. Then the Epstein files: the release so far has been partial and heavily redacted, with worrying patterns — in some instances victims appear exposed while perpetrator details get scrubbed. We cover the new documents (including a South Carolina woman who alleges assaults involving Epstein and Trump when she was 13–15 and was interviewed multiple times by the FBI), how the DOJ is explaining missing or mis‑coded files, and why survivors’ voices and empathy need to stay at the center of this story. This episode isn’t just about bad headlines — we swing to practical next steps. If you’re frustrated: register and plan to vote, call the congressional offices that matter (especially representatives whose views differ from yours), and use your wallet — choose where you spend or don’t spend to push corporate behavior. If you want to help troops directly, small stuff like socks, clean underwear, and baby wipes matters. And if survivors want their stories amplified, we can help humanize those voices rather than reduce them to headlines. Bottom line: it’s a lot to take in, and it’s emotionally heavy. We’re trying to hold space for victims, stay skeptical of power, and actually give people small, practical ways to act. Keep sharing, keep questioning, and let’s keep this conversation going.

    43 min

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A news-commentary companion podcast to our weekly video series The Signal