Next Steps Show

Peter Vazquez

This is a gathering forged to awaken conviction and stir resolve, where Faith, Politics, and Entrepreneurship converge as pillars shaping the destiny of We the People. We educate with purpose, challenge with clarity, and equip individuals to reclaim stewardship over their lives and communities. Through fearless truth and real solutions, we restore balance in belief, governance, and enterprise. This is more than conversation. It is a summons. Juntos, podemos restaurar el equilibrio y trazar el camino hacia un futuro próspero.

  1. God, Country, Family Still Matters

    3 DAYS AGO

    God, Country, Family Still Matters

    Friday did not start with outrage. It started with Spanish, rock and roll, and the kind of laughter that reminds you America is still worth fighting for. Peter Vazquez opened the mic, Gary Stout joined the conversation, Bob Savage was at the table, and Bob D’Angelo held it all together in the control room, keeping the signal steady while the focus locked in: God, Country, Family is not a slogan. It is the order that keeps a free people from collapsing into managed chaos.   The discussion moved from “National Escape Day” and unrelenting stress to a culture that burns people out while calling it progress. Then came the harder truths: shutdown calls dressed up as solidarity, fear-driven compliance, and propaganda that turns small businesses into props. When people are pressured to perform instead of speak, truth becomes the first casualty.   From violent crime and family collapse to schools hijacked by so-called restorative excuses, the question stayed blunt: Who is school for, the disruptor or the kids who actually want to learn? No hedging. Structure matters. Discipline matters. Fathers matter.   The warning was unmistakable: faith diluted into a government-approved blend, borders treated like suggestions, and long-game influence operations betting that Americans stay distracted. With clarity and conviction, the line was drawn. A nation that forgets God, Country, Family will be sold a replacement story.   Take a breath. Then take a stand.

    49 min
  2. War on the West: Truth, Media, and the Fight Ahead

    31 JAN

    War on the West: Truth, Media, and the Fight Ahead

    Snow fell hard in Rochester, the kind of cold that makes you respect gravity and good boots. With Peter Vazquez on assignment, Luis Martinez stepped into the studio and turned a January 27 broadcast into a warning bell, ringing in two languages and one clear message: the West is being tested, and truth is being rationed.   He dedicated the hour to Iranian American dissident Elica Le Bon, borrowing her framing of a “war on the West,” where legacy media does not merely miss stories, it curates reality. The target is not a party, but a civilization: reason over myth, the rule of law over rulers, individual dignity under God, and the free-market engine that built more prosperity than any planner ever did.   Luis traced the old fight from communist regimes to Islamist tyrannies, and then to the strange modern alliance of ideological extremes that thrive on grievance and confusion. He argued that propaganda works by inversion: the West is recast as the villain, and jihadists are polished into “oppressed freedom fighters,” while Iran’s brutality fades off the screen.   Then the phones lit up. A caller raised allegations about election integrity and machine vulnerabilities; Luis countered with on-the-ground concerns about New York’s registration safeguards, and the need for citizens to verify, document, and vote. Minneapolis surfaced as a symbol of institutional rot and online claims of deep corruption, alongside a reluctant truth: independent journalists now break what corporate media buries.   The station celebrated 150,000 podcast downloads. A reminder that people still want unfiltered reality. Offensive truth hurts. Comfortable lies rot. Choose wisely.

    49 min
  3. Left, Right, and the Cost of Bad Policy

    31 JAN

    Left, Right, and the Cost of Bad Policy

    A city at a crossroads does not whisper. It argues. It grinds. It forces uncomfortable conversations at street level and kitchen tables alike.   This conversation crossed ideological lines without flinching. Peter Vazquez ‘sat across’ from Alex White, small business owner, Green Party activist, and former Rochester mayoral candidate, to do something rare in modern America: disagree honestly without dehumanizing.   Poverty, policing, housing, energy, transportation, public trust, Israel and Palestine, body cameras, minimum wage, cars versus communities, and the moral weight of policy decisions were all placed on the table, not as talking points, but as lived realities.   Listeners heard how decades of one-party control shaped Rochester’s outcomes, why good intentions still produce broken systems, and how ideology often collapses when confronted by math, incentives, and human nature.   From the cost of electricity to the limits of public housing, from crime driven by no consequences to compassion distorted into chaos, this was not a debate for applause lines. It was a test of whether adults can still talk.   Callers challenged assumptions. Scripture anchored values. Experience exposed gaps between theory and reality. No one walked away crowned a hero, but truth surfaced where slogans failed.   This episode is a reminder that a nation does not heal through silence or screaming, but through courageous dialogue grounded in accountability, humility, and a refusal to lie to ourselves.   If the country is going to find its footing again, these are the conversations that must happen.

    49 min

About

This is a gathering forged to awaken conviction and stir resolve, where Faith, Politics, and Entrepreneurship converge as pillars shaping the destiny of We the People. We educate with purpose, challenge with clarity, and equip individuals to reclaim stewardship over their lives and communities. Through fearless truth and real solutions, we restore balance in belief, governance, and enterprise. This is more than conversation. It is a summons. Juntos, podemos restaurar el equilibrio y trazar el camino hacia un futuro próspero.