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