Send us Fan Mail
This week on The Truth Today with T & A, the hosts tackle two major issues impacting Americans right now: public safety and the growing crisis surrounding the modern food supply.
The episode opens with a discussion about two disturbing criminal justice cases that have sparked outrage across the country — including a convicted child sex offender who disappeared while awaiting sentencing and another case involving a repeat offender with an extensive criminal history accused of violently assaulting a teenage girl. T and A examine the broader public questions these cases raise about bail, repeat offenders, due process, community safety, and whether the justice system is still fulfilling its most fundamental responsibility: protecting innocent people.
The conversation then pivots into a completely different — but equally important — national issue: America’s food and health crisis.
Joining the show is their first guest, Treasure Hance, regenerative farmer and co-founder of The Farm at Bald Hill in East Texas. Treasure explains how she and her husband built a regenerative farming operation focused on grass-fed and pasture-raised livestock, soil health, rotational grazing, and producing nutrient-dense food without the pesticides, herbicides, hormones, or chemical-heavy practices commonly associated with industrial agriculture.
Together, the hosts and Treasure unpack some of the biggest questions consumers are asking today:
•Why are chronic illnesses, inflammation, obesity, diabetes, and autoimmune disorders increasing so dramatically?
•What role do ultra-processed foods and industrial farming practices play in public health?
•Why are certain food additives banned in other countries but still allowed in the United States?
•Are Americans being properly educated about nutrition and long-term health?
•And why are more consumers turning toward local farmers, regenerative agriculture, and cleaner food sources?
The discussion dives into everything from seed oils and glyphosate to food industry influence, pharmaceutical funding, FDA and USDA regulation, hospital nutrition programs, and the growing disconnect between healthcare and preventative wellness. Treasure also shares her perspective on how regenerative farming not only affects human health, but also strengthens local communities, improves soil ecosystems, and restores biodiversity.
Blending hard conversations, public policy, wellness, and cultural commentary, this episode asks listeners to think critically about the systems shaping modern American life — from the justice system to the food system — and whether those systems are truly serving the public the way they were intended to.