Where
      truth

              Matters

RADIO is more than a music mix. Although, in most cases it is just that, something to listen to in the car. But in a broader sense, it is a place to share useful information. Radio is a place to learn, exchange ideas, and engage in thought. Radio is a place for imagination. Radio is a place to engage "the Little Grey Cells". The really great thing about Radio is that you can listen and learn while doing something else.     Welcome to the Crew !

Now Playing Link
Hercule_Poirot_theLittleGreyCells

top topic Playlist

About
the Station

FM - SCA & Online      Broadcaster
Metrosonix
For SCA radios: send an email to

contact@plan-z-radio.org

97.3-FM Anchorage 67Khz.

On-Air Coverage area map

This Months Theme:

      Constitution of the United States            and the Bill of Rights

A Seven part Series that explains the actual meanings of words used in the US Constitution and why you need to know them.

the Class begins on March 10, 2025 at 10:00am daily,

and  repeats at 4:30pm

Presented by Michael Badnarik, Author, Software Engineer, Talk Show Host, Libertarian Party Presidential Nominee 2004

Leonard_Peltier_is_Released
Peltier_Released
LP-Release-Photo-by-Angel-White-Eyes
Leonard Peltier, center, a Native American activist released from a Florida prison where he had been serving a life sentence in the 1975 killings of two FBI agents, listens during a welcome event, Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2025, at the Sky Dancer Casino Resort near Belcourt, N.D., on the Turtle Mountain Reservation. (AP Photo/Jack Dura)
LeonardP_artby_ernestoyerena-Justice
The-Life-Of-Leonard-Peltier

Source: WalletHub

 Red states and blue states may like to point to one another as the source of all that is wrong with the U.S., but the truth is that each of the 50 states has its own virtues and vices. For example, New Mexico has the worst drug problem, and it certainly comes as no surprise that Nevada is the most gambling-addicted. The cost of state sins is something we have to share as a nation, though. Gambling alone costs the U.S. about $5 billion per year. That’s nothing compared to the amount of money we lose from smoking, though – over $600 billion per year. Harmful behavior on the individual level can add up to staggering economic costs on a national scale. Some states are more well-behaved than others, though. In order to determine the states that most give in to their desires, WalletHub compared the 50 states across 54 key indicators of immoral or illicit behavior. Our data set ranges from violent crimes per capita to excessive drinking to the share of the population with gambling disorders.