📄 Transcript [show]
Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther Teksting av Nicolai Winther us on youtube this guy is a dead ringer for tom cruise in top gun so you want to watch the program you don't have to look at me please don't but this guy is really beyond handsome okay i think i'm reevaluating my own sexuality right now well you know it's amazing i've never seen anything like hey hey listen can you get a toupee like that oh gosh okay um tell me if you will play your piece and talk about it all right thank you buddy all right this is a song that i wrote for a man named tick kwan duke who during the vietnam war uh he was a buddhist monk and the south vietnamese regime was persecuting buddhists pretty cruelly and this brave man was an advocate for peace who on a very uh world-changing day in 1963 caught himself on fire in the middle of the street and that was to bring light to the plight of the buddhists that was currently happening so this is a song in honor of him called edge he had caps a sin racing through his veins beneath his skin as the flames ate away his carbon chains and oxygen his mind above the heat he sat and burned so peacefully for us in love and light and peace he set himself ablaze in the middle of the street all our reflections shown in the eyes of all who watched him smoke were pivotal to changing up the ebb and flow of all of time and all our minds were changed that day for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for for them up or the last words spoke by Taekwondo before he caught the spark that caused so many people's hearts he prayed for life infinite life for you and I so you and I could follow what we felt was right to lead us right over the edge let's reach the edge where we've had enough and turn our bodies into dust and tune our minds into one love God take these blackened hearts from us God take these blackened hearts from us God take these blackened hearts from us God take these blackened hearts from us and raise them up and raise them up in the middle of the street in 1963 to end corrupt oppression and to spread equality a martyr for the cause was bathed in gas and gas and gasoline as he sat low to style and the people came to see he knew he was nobody or rather nobody was he he lived his life to reunite the pieces of eternity in one life in one love in one soul in one soul!
Tavim, you.
If you could look into my eyes, you would see tears.
The first thing I saw in combat as a young Marine, 19 years old, I had just come fresh from the United States, and I saw a body without limbs, without legs, burned, blackened.
I saw a body burned and blackened without limbs.
Then the next thing I saw on down the line were planes flying in with napalm and hitting bunkers and men flying in the air, blackened, burning to death.
So that touches my heart.
It's unreal, unbelievably what happens in war, simply because this monk personified all of that to a team.
Jeff, I think we have a few problems here regarding things coming up.
When is our break coming up?
At about a couple of minutes.
I think we're okay.
I'm not sure what you mean.
I'm feeling like it's great.
Can you talk to Jeff?
Okay, talk to Jeff.
Yeah, let him know what's going on.
So that's okay.
This is a show that we just talk about what we're doing.
And, you know, Stephen, could you relate to this song?
Because I'm watching you listening and so forth, and you have an enormous experience in music and poetry and so forth.
I wonder if you could share with Tommy your feelings.
Well, it just brings back memories of those days.
And the country was torn apart by the Vietnam War.
And we were able to see on television for really the first time what was going on.
Okay.
And the napalm, the body bags, and the self-emulations.
And it raised the hackles.
And it raised the hackles.
And it raised the hackles.
Of a young generation that realized that the government was pulling the wool over our eyes.
And that this war was based on lies.
And that these young people were dying for what?
Were being called up to serve for what they thought was the righteousness of this country.
But what in fact was...
Really what?
We didn't know what.
And so it caused a tremendous turmoil.
And was just part of the revolution that happened in the 1960s.
It was the deepest, deepest part of a painful time.
And for me, it was a very painful time because I was in school.
I had my student deferment.
I had my scholarship.
But I was opposed to the war.
And when I was out of school, I had to decide what I was going to do because then I was eligible for the draft.
And things like that, that were described in the song, were indelible imprints in our consciousness, in our memory.
And something was terribly wrong.
Something was terribly wrong.
And I did not want...
I did not want to participate in it.
I felt a conscience rising, which was born out of the civil rights movement really.
When Dr. Martin Luther King led the march, the great march on Washington in 1963.
And then later on spoke so strongly against the Vietnam War.
But it showed...
The civil rights movement showed that...
It showed that a unified consciousness united around a people's movement could change history.
And that's what happened.
Well, you know, during that time, I was back from Korea.
And I was all over New Mexico.
And we had the peace, what people called the peaceniks.
Now, I never thought anything about them.
I never thought anything about them.
Except they were just people who didn't want to go to war.
And so we had the hog farm.
We had all kinds of things in New Mexico going on at that particular time.
So, and I was doing a lot of television.
So I was so busy, engrossed in television, doing what I'm doing.
But back to...
I very seriously thought about when they activated our Marine Corps Reserve outfit.
I went to my pastor, Ralph, and I said, Ralph, I don't really want to kill anybody.
And so he said, well, the Hebrew says, thou shall not kill.
He said, that's interpreted, that shall not commit premeditated murder.
Well, I bought into that.
I wish I hadn't for a lot of reasons because I've killed way too many people.
And war is just that it because right now, the pope is pleading with what's going on.
In Palestine and Gaza, please just stop fighting.
He's pleading for everybody.
Just please stop it.
And I don't know why we're not able to stop this cycle of war.
Scotty, how do you think we do that?
Well, one thing that I know is that the current reiteration of war is the fact that we're fighting against the same people.
And that's the only thing that I know.
And when there was this Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin to korea where you were at every time there is um the rattle of sabers is justified with whatever reason that's needed at that time some of them valid some of them not but the bottom line is it is a failure of humanity when we choose war we have said that whatever logic whatever communication whatever humanity that we use to be part of each other that that has failed and so the only thing left at that point is the death of the people of the world decision to kill and at that point uh we have failed so i have and i don't i never say that what we have at peace now are the solutions all i know is that what we're doing isn't working because if the korean war had the solution then we wouldn't have been in vietnam and if the vietnam war was the solution then we wouldn't have been in the middle east so if the definition of stupidity is doing the same thing over and over again that doesn't work then war is the ultimate stupidity because if it worked the previous one would have fixed everything well there are a lot of bumper stickers going around for years and one of them actually says war is not the answer rose you're very quiet over there no i i war is not the answer in fact i'll just come right out and say it that's why i voted for obama because i didn't want war that was one of the main reasons okay um i i've said it many times i certain classes that I've taken all throughout history.
And history can repeat itself, unfortunately.
But war is not the answer.
Separating and dividing and conquer isn't the answer either.
People have got to learn to somewhat coexist.
We all have our boundaries.
But peace is so much in need right now.
And that's such a great organization named Peace Now because it's very true.
And we are in need of that.
And choosing that direction when we are faced with choices, it isn't easy to choose.
All right, so we do have the video that you can play whenever you want.
Just want to let you know.
Okay, well, listen, let's take a little break, okay?
Okay.
Can we do that?
Let's take a break.
Let's take a little break, all right?
All right.
Take your phones off.
Break time.
It'll be about 30 seconds, okay?
Well, we've been on this road For a long, long time And what I hear is You are watching and or listening to OccupySkid Row.us A weekly VeteransNewsNet.us feature Presented every Tuesday evening From 8 to 9 p.m.
Pacific Time Live at SkidRowStudios.com We invite you to join our discussion now Call us at 1-800-893-9562 Or text us at 310-266-9465 And now, here's your host Chaplain Willis Buddy Clark Jr. Oh, say can we see By the one light In all Our earth To embrace At the call Of all nations Where our children Can play In a world Without war Where we stand Hand in hand In the fight In the fight In the fight In the fight In the grace of creation Where the rivers run clean Through the forests of green Where the cities stand tall In the clear skies of freedom Oh, say do our hearts Sing out For harmony and love Forever On the planet of our birth Blessed with peace On earth Oh, say can you see And when Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin long history of war, after war, after war, and violence only begets more violence.
And, you know, the Star Spangled Banner as a song, it's interesting in the folk music history of it, because the melody itself comes from an old English drinking song that was sung in taverns throughout colonial America.
And so when Francis Scott Key wrote those words that we know as the Star Spangled Banner, it was written to the melody of that old English drinking song, and it was descriptive of the Battle of Fort McHenry at the harbor of Baltimore during the War of 1812 when the British were trying to bomb the smithereens out of Fort McHenry after they had already burned Washington, D.C.
And so as he observed this bombardment and saw the rockets, flying through the air, and the American flag standing over the fort, and every rocket burst showed the American flag, he was inspired to write the words we know as the Star Spangled Banner, which celebrated victory.
Today, I think we need to really question, most deeply, whether war is, in fact, a way to resolve any differences of any kind in the 21st century.
And where we don't need bombs bursting in air anymore, let us embrace a world where we embrace peace and where we embrace a sustainable future and where our children can grow up without the fear of drive-by shootings or their house being bulldozed or bombs being dropped in the street or face the horrors of, you know, death and destruction through war.
That must be obsolete.
Violence must be obsolete.
We must embrace a new vision.
We must rethink, reinvent the way in which we live on this planet.
The current economic reality, the current reality of military spending and economic disparity, and corporatocracy rather than true democracy, is not sustainable.
This is not sustainable.
And so we have to rethink.
We have to re-evaluate where we are.
And we have to convert.
The process of conversion is not easy because we've got an economy that's based upon fossil fuel addiction and war building.
So it's a little bit like an insane asylum on this planet right now.
And where are the peacemakers?
Where are the people who are in power?
Where are the ones who really know what it means to be free?
Free from tyranny, free from destruction, free from the annihilation of our beautiful planet, which is only here to support life.
So that's the inspiration that comes behind a verse like that.
Well, thank you for sharing that with us now.
While you're getting ready for your guitar to play something for us, play whatever you like.
And Scotty, why don't you talk while he's getting his guitar ready?
Well.
Everything that Stephen just said, I would agree with totally.
And in specific, just one thing that he mentioned about the war economies.
At Peace Now, one of our programs is to encourage peace economies.
In fact, our petition has as a second aspect of it the economic context.
So one of our goals is to encourage peace economies to be able to make a conversion from military to civilian production and more generally, create economies of peace so as to beat our swords into plowshares and spears into pruning hooks.
So I applaud what you're doing and your wisdom, Stephen.
So take it away with your music.
Thank you.
Thank you.
It's heavy on our hearts these days, of course, as what's going on in Israel and Palestine.
But there's so many hot spots in the world right now.
It's very overwhelming.
When I started to write songs back in the 1960s, I was really inspired by Martin Luther King, as I mentioned before, and his nonviolent tactics for social change.
And it impacted me deeply.
And being part of that movement, I was just a young man, 15, 16 years old in 1963, but I went down to Washington, D.C.
I saw the Great March.
I heard the speech by Martin Luther King.
I sang the songs of freedom, the songs of that movement.
And I was forever impressed at how people, not just the politicians, but people can gather together and make a difference for a cause.
And that's what I'm going to do.
And I'm going to sing a song that I wrote about that experience, the Great March in 1963.
One fine summer day, 1963.
The Great March for civil rights took on Washington, D.C.
They marched for freedom, they marched for jobs, they marched for dignity.
They marched for the conscience of a nation, for justice and equality.
They marched for freedom, they marched for jobs, for liberty for bodies, ¶¶ ¶¶ ¶¶ ¶¶ ¶¶ ¶¶ We gather together to grant strength and unity And we carry the dream All people shall be free From the streets of Birmingham To that Nobel Prize he won Reverend King let freedom ring Shine as a light for everyone Now people anywhere Have been denied their right To find vision, strength, and inspiration To carry on the fight So we're singing We carry the dream Of the way this world could be We carry the dream Of justice and equality When we gather together To find strength and unity And we carry the dream All people shall be free Can't keep a baby From needing to be touched and loved Can't keep the trees From reaching for the sky above And you can't stop the river From rolling to the sea And you can't keep the people From the hunger to be free So we're singing We carry the dream Of the way this world could be We carry the dream Of justice and equality When we gather together To find strength and unity We carry the dream All people shall be free All people shall be free And when this world goes to Shin Shin Stephen, you took me through history, okay?
And I was reliving it the way you were reliving it.
So, but let's not relive it again.
Let's live in freedom and peace through that.
Jeff, I want to hear from you.
Man, that is a rockin' good tune.
How old is that song?
Well, I actually wrote it about five years ago or so.
So what is something like you do nowadays to connect with an audience?
I mean, do you, to what extent do you kind of interweave it with your advocacy versus just doing concerts and whatnot?
Well, I think my advocacy is always there.
And as far as, you know, just connecting with audiences, it's just like this.
To me, it's just like talking to somebody.
You just go up and say what you want.
You don't have to say and sing what you have to sing.
You don't have a big rider with a certain kind of vodka and pretzels and M&Ms that you require.
You just need a couple of people in front of you, and that's enough.
Generally, that's right.
It doesn't matter to me whether it's one-on-one or one-on-thousands.
What's important is showing up and standing true in the integrity of what you believe in.
And just trying to live that, as Gandhi said, be the change you want to be.
Be the change you want to see in the world.
And there was a quote on the wall, that wall when you come in here and you sit down on that couch and you look at this wall with all these words written on it.
And the quote said something like, when you change the way you think, you'll change the things that you think about.
Something like that.
That's not directly it, but that's the way it is.
We have to change the way we think.
You mentioned Gandhi.
Did Buddy tell you about the mural that Jules Monk, I will right now.
Is that a perfect segue or what?
I knew that coming up.
Thank you for the segue.
Well, on the corner of 7th and Gladys is a mural.
And that mural is just above a body shop.
Now, Jules Monk is becoming a world-class, if she already isn't, muralist.
You see her murals all over Venice.
She paints in green.
She looks around the corner from me.
Well, you know who she is.
There we go.
So, we asked her if she could do that.
And all of a sudden, lo and behold, within less than 24 hours, she had it up and running and finished and time to come here for a program last week.
Jules is phenomenal.
Now, we have other places coming up.
We're going to have, let's see, Scotty, we're going to have coming up next will be, see, we have Gandhi.
Next will be John Lennon.
Okay.
And then we kind of go back and forth on who we want to have next.
So, who do you think we should have next?
Let's talk about it.
Scotty, you're not in.
Okay.
Rose, who should be next?
Well, I think we should bring on a very good friend of mine who is an artist.
Okay.
Her name is Hilah.
Oh, you're talking about the program.
We're talking about the wall.
Oh, excuse me.
Okay.
She's not ready for the wall yet, but she could be.
Okay.
So, who should be up on the wall next?
Well, I think in this location, you could start with Cesar Chavez.
Yes.
Okay.
Go ahead.
That would be a good one to have.
And he was also an advocate of nonviolence and used those same tactics that Martin Luther King championed.
I was with Cesar Chavez when he broke the fast.
I was there at that particular time, and Jesse Jackson was there.
And we were there in Monteleno.
Yeah.
Doing that.
And he had just broken the fast.
And the most interesting thing is Jesse Jackson can kind of come and go, but I felt he really related to what Cesar was doing.
And ABC lost the plug, and they couldn't go in the air without that plug.
I had that particular connection.
So, they came to me and says, what do you want for that connection?
I said, I don't know, about $5,000.
I was kidding.
Of course, I said, put him on the air right now.
Here's the connection.
So, but to watch what happened in there, the interchange of people and the realness, because this man came up from nowhere and became a leader.
So, anyone can come up from nowhere.
Quote, nowhere, and be a leader.
Just stand up and speak out.
So, I'm lobbying for Johnny Cash.
Okay.
Okay, that's good.
You know, Gandhi and Cesar Chavez, Martin Luther King, you know, no arguing with that.
These are icons.
But we've heard it before.
You know, I'm not so sure that everybody always remembers Johnny Cash in that way.
So, I sort of like the uniqueness of that.
And I like how he appeals to a broad cross-section of the population, including.
You know, people who have really rough lives.
Prisoners love him.
Veterans.
He is a veteran.
Veterans love him.
Well, I financed a movie, put together financing for Johnny Cash.
It's called The Gunfight.
Now, the most interesting thing on the set, he was married, of course, to John.
To John.
June Carter.
To June Carter.
June Carter Cash.
So, if you got within 30 feet of that woman, you could feel her.
I mean, she had such charisma and love in her heart.
You could just feel that woman's love.
So, that really changed Johnny Cash a lot.
A whole lot.
See that?
So, and then I'll tell you this one thing.
I got all the takeouts, okay?
So, they shot it in New Mexico.
And in the scene where Johnny Cash has got a team of horses, and he got these traces in his hands, traces where you control all the horses.
The horses wouldn't move.
So, Johnny's going to say, get up.
Yow.
Ha.
Ha.
Wa.
Wa.
Wa.
Wa.
Wa.
And all of a sudden, I'm not going to use the swear words he used, but man, they laid their ears back and they moved.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
So, those kind of things happen, but it's a small, small world on what's going on.
Rose, who do you think now you should have?
Have you come to that yet?
Well, I, I, somebody did cross my mind.
I think her story is very interesting, and I'm sure everybody's heard it.
Rosa Parks?
Rosa Parks.
Okay.
I thought you were going to say Donald Sterling.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
Ha.
I think Albert Einstein would be a great hero.
Yes.
I agree.
That's a good one.
Great.
Great mind, a great voice for love and peace and understanding.
Just a beautiful man.
By the way, you folks can call in at 800-893-9562 and vote, because we're going to be having voting coming down on what you would like to see, who you'd like to see on these peace walls.
It's coming up through that.
So, anyone else have a favorite they'd like to put up?
I don't want to have a...
A favorite, but I do...
You said that the Jules Muck mural was at Gladys and 7th.
It's actually at Circe's and 7th.
Oh, thank you.
It's one block east of Gladys, between 6th and 7th.
We have a very nice photo of it.
You want to see if we can get Jenny to bring that up for us?
And the very handsome host of this show, Marine veteran, shoplin, Buddy Clark, is in the photo.
Well, there we go.
There we are.
Jenny's on the phone right now.
There it is.
Yeah.
Okay.
I think we should have Buddy and Scotty on there.
Well, our fingerprints will be all over it, I guarantee you.
And God's fingerprints are over those.
Oh, absolutely.
His imprint is everything that we do.
There.
That's...
Coming through on that.
Well...
All you need.
How many more people do you think we should have?
Well, what we'd like to do...
Is maybe do these peace walls all over the world.
I think that's a great idea.
And it can happen.
Yes.
It can happen.
And I would like to see Pope Francis up there.
And then...
Well, who else?
Well, it just actually depends on the culture and the country where we're coming from.
Sure.
You know that we're going to Seoul, South Korea in September to speak at an international...
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then...
peace and your and I goal is to have a mural in Seoul and we're in the process of researching that now and then I also have a gentleman that does a lot of business in Thailand and oh yes they're in the process of trying to get us a wall in Bangkok and then the King who's still alive there is revered by the people of Thailand and has been an advocate for peace is so depends on where we're at I am in the Thailand and the King indeed is oh well he's worshipped you there now as related to that I'm coming through Thailand and so forth now you know we come up with some really interesting stuff when we're talking together Scott in me so tell them about the volleyball game oh no yeah please well this would be only for Venice walk you put me on the spot we came up with an idea of a mural where Christ and Mohammed and Buddha and the all the relevant and ultimate religious icons would be playing volleyball against a team of evil demons or aspects of evil and we thought that that the Christ could be setting the ball and Mohammed would be going up for a spike to spike the ball of love right into the demons on the other side.
Rose, you just gotta say something.
Go for it, okay?
Me?
Yeah, I thought you had something to say.
Oh, earlier I was just gonna say I don't think we should ever forget Princess Diana.
Okay.
Well, in Rose's regards, excuse me.
Go ahead.
Let's not forget, I think the walls of peace is a fabulous idea, great idea.
And let's not forget women.
Absolutely.
Mother Teresa.
Mother Teresa or Harriet Tubman or Rosa Parks as you had mentioned.
I would love to see.
Eleanor Roosevelt on and on.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Abigail Adams.
Okay, absolutely.
Yeah.
Any other women that want to speak up?
I would love to see Yalta Menuhin up there.
I really would.
Okay.
That is Lionel's mother.
She was a classical pianist and her brother was Yehudi Menuhin.
And she did so much that people really don't know so much about.
They do, but not quite as much.
Okay, now it's time for our shout-outs.
Uh-oh.
That's a word we talk about people that advertise and so forth.
I'd like to do a shout-out for Jules Muck.
Okay.
What a wonderful artist.
I mean, incredible artist.
I'd like to do a shout-out for Tommy.
Okay.
And I'd like to do a shout-out for Mr. Fisk.
And a shout-out for them.
And then a shout-out for the group.
Last Saturday, we fed over 2,000 people in Gladys Park.
And the name of that group is Help the Home.
And next week, we'll have some people on who will talk about that.
Oh, speaking of next week, I am going to get a massage on the air.
Now, here's two things.
I can either keep my clothes on or take them off.
Now, the only way I'm going to know is for you to call in and vote.
Keep your clothes on or take them off.
So, whatever.
People who vote the most, I'll do it.
Okay?
But I might be undercover.
He's going to bring in a massage table and actually, massage me.
And if you want a massage, he'll come around and massage you.
Okay?
And his name is Robert Jones.
And Robert will be coming.
Any more shout-outs?
Very good.
I'd like to give a shout-out for a new book that I'm reading.
It's called The Things They Carried by Tim O'Brien.
It begins by describing an event that occurred in the middle of his Vietnam experience.
The Things They Carried catalogs the variety of things his fellow citizens had experienced.
The things they carried were the things that the soldiers in the Alpha Company brought on their mission.
Several of these things are intangible, including guilt and fear, while others are specific physical objects, including matches, morphine, M16 rifles, and M&M's candy.
It's quite a read.
It's quite a read.
It really is.
Tommy?
If I could say anything, I would say that I'd like to give a shout-out to A Course in Miracles, which is...
Marianne?
Thank you.
You have to go.
I would...
Okay.
Shout-out to A Course in Miracles, which is a philosophy geared toward love, universal, starting with yourself and extending to your brothers and sisters to encompass the...
the whole...
the whole universal family.
It's a great...
great way to inspire acceptance for where we find ourselves.
And, um...
I don't know what more to say about it, except it's definitely worth looking at.
I have a group with group therapy, and so we always say, stay around for the miracle.
Ha ha ha!
Okay.
We're...
We need to wrap it up.
We need to wrap it up right now, so we're gonna go into a close.
Do that.
Anything...
Just keep talking, but the music will come up, okay?
Can I play my friend's song?
No.
No?
Ha ha ha!
You can?
How much time do we have left?
How much time do we have left?
Two minutes.
Oh.
Okay.
Well, go ahead.
We got a minute.
Go ahead.
I'd like to give a shout-out to...
Go ahead.
Uh...
the International Day of Peace coming up September 20th.
September 21st.
And the, uh, proclamation that has been proposed for the city of Los Angeles to be a city of peace.
And for Peace Sunday, which is an event taking place on September 21st, uh, which was actually started in 1982, which will be taking place at the Iman Center, Iman Cultural Center, on Motor Avenue in West L.A.
And, uh, everyone should come and declare for peace.
I'll second that.
And for Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin Shin A weekly veteransnewsnet.us feature presented every Tuesday evening from 8 to 9 p.m.
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Thank you for joining us.
We need to find a way.
Come on and join the song.
It's time to pray.
It's a brand new day.
Brand new day.
Brand new day.
It's a brand new day.
We need to find a way.
Gotta find a way.
To be better every day.
Come on and join the song.
It's time to pray.
It's a brand new day.
Brand new day.
Brand new day.
Well, we've been on this road for a long, long time.
And what I've heard is we can turn the tide.
There are lots of folks here.
That have heard the call.
To bring about the changes.
And that ain't all.
We got faith, love, and hope.
This is gonna come.
It's inside each one of us.
You gotta sing it.
Sing it.
Shout it.
Shout it.
Ain't no doubt.
It's a brand new day.
Brand new day.
Brand new day.
Come on.
It's a brand new day.
Brand new day.