Archive FM

I Came With Fire

"Homie Don't Play Dat" with Aaron Love

Duration:
1h 57m
Broadcast on:
26 Jun 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

What's up everybody, welcome back to I Came with Fire podcast. Happy Juneteenth, my fellow podcasters. I know Aaron is really excited about it. This is your boy Aaron Love. We all know who that is. He's been here once or twice before, host of the ones ready and also his new podcast, which we'll let him talk about too. But we'll kick it over to Chris and let him give his little intro real fast before we jump in. What is up guys, Chris here from the channel, comment, freakin' sense. Greenberry medic, master purveyor of misinformation, and lately, a destroyer of safe spaces. I'm adding that to my resume. I've been making a lot of people angry online. Is it hard to destroy safe spaces? It is so much fun. It's really fun. It's fun and easy. So there you go. You need an opinion and like these nuts and then like that's all it takes. I'm telling you right now. That's it. It's like taking candy from a clump of cells, you know? A clump of cells, exactly. Not actually a baby yet. Not actually a baby. Is that what they do in Planned Parenthood? They just take candy from clumps of cells all day. When they're not throwing pro-lifers in jail, yeah. Right. Yeah. This is it. This is the one. All right, everybody. It's been a good run. I'd like to say thanks for my last time that I'm going to be featured on a podcast and we will talk to you later. All right. You were always welcome. You were always welcome. Ah, my dude. Hell yeah. So tell us about the War Room real quick, man. Let's plug it. Man, it was just a crazy thing that happened. We were all in the space. So my friend, Jake Zwig, so he's a Navy SEAL that was in and he's done a whole lot of coaching for, I mean, everything for business school. He's got students that are in Harvard. It's basically anything you want to achieve, Jake Zwig is the dude. He goes about it. He's an officer that is the least officer, officer I've ever seen in my entire life. Like this dude does not lie. He will not lie to you to the point of like he, he even says stuff that makes me like blush. Like you can see on the podcast when we talk, he loads up and when he takes a big deep breath in and goes for a big one, you just don't know what's going to happen. So race to self. Well, it's actually like, it's kind of nice to be like not the guy that's the polarizing dude on the podcast for once, right? Like because like the peaches and Trent, like I'm always the one that's kind of like pushing the limit of doing stuff because I talk too much. And my mouth out runs my brain, right? So when I say things, like I'll catch up to a layer be like, Oh, that wasn't very smart. But Jake just goes hard in the paint hilarious. And then like, if I went to the other end of the spectrum has been Ben, Ben Papa. So Ben, coach, business dude extraordinaire. And oh, by the way, he was like one of the first commanders of the marsock Raiders. So he's a force recon dude and a raider and a commander. So he brings that strategic level look, which is what I love about him. We disagree on on everything, by the way, like the last time. Like, yeah, I legit looked at him and I was just like, Hey, man, like, I'd love you. But how did the fuck do you sleep at night? You piece of shit? Like literally. And then we just talked about it. And by the way, we laughed about it. Like, when we were done, it just it's how that place works. But Ben was a raider. He does a lot of stuff. He's we were talking about plane trips this week. And and Ben is on a trip to Dubai or like Bali or some shit. And I went to Pittsburgh. I was like, I was in Pittsburgh. That's exactly the same. Don't you ever ever talk about Pittsburgh like that. Did they bring in, you know, attractive young women who put on them in Pittsburgh too? What a layered what a layered like level three joke that first of all, first of all, $50,000. That's $50,000 Brandon pop a pop. First of all, keep your voice down. Yeah, first of all, don't give away the secrets. The NSA has this group chat. We're gonna talk about that later. And then not to leave out. I'm not leaving high today to the AFT and the FBI. What's up, Frank? AFT is gay. I do want to like talk about Jay Dorley is too. So Jay is awesome. Green Bray Chronicles. So he's an 18 delta dude. Awesome story. You know, comes over here, like barely new English as he was going through the teams and stuff. And like now he just helps people out in the same space. So it was just kind of funny. You know, it happens organically, right? Like somebody gives you a call and is like, Hey, I got an interesting idea. That's all for services, special operators. It'd be kind of cool if we got on and we just addressed stuff. Like we don't just, we don't agree with each other on everything. We like, it's literally the most diverse thing that you could imagine from the like backgrounds of the dudes and where they are now. And we all have that same thread of being in the special operations community. It just, man, it seemed right. And we just, it was, it's funny too. Like this is the plug. We just decided to build the plane in flight. Like we could have waited like other podcasts that had all our imagery done and had like a couple episodes in the can and figured out editing and all that other stuff. And we kind of just looked at us. We're like, no, fuck it. Like we want people, we want people to hear that and we want people to be like in from the ground and go, dude, man, when you guys first started, you know, the first episode, dude, it was rough. Like our audio was kind of fucked up. Like my mic was bad. Like there was just stuff. We didn't, you know, the handoffs were weird. Well, we got better between episode one and episode two. Like if you think we got better in that time period, wait till you see where we go in a hundred episodes in 500 episodes. So we're over there hanging out with you, man. And I'm really glad that you came in to give them a little touch of like high society. If I had to put my finger on what you bring to the table, like you're the little smiley face piece of whipped cream on top of the of the dirty coffee that all those. That's what Aaron is. Dude, I, I, you know what I, I think that's humbling. I don't know if I'm that good. I don't know if people like me as much as they like rock, but I'll tell you that. Man, that it's awesome. Like I'm excited to see where it goes. And you know, this is just one of the, it's, it's a weird thing too. Like, and you guys get it. You guys are, you guys are great. I do want to start with the graduates who have a compliment to give you here in a second. It's probably the best and worst compliment I've ever heard once. But, uh, yes, it's just weird. Like you kind of got to look at yourself and go, okay, well, I mean, I, it's weird to say that I'm a digital content creator. It's weird to say that I'm a podcast. It's weird to say that people value enough of what we do. People are going to listen to this and hopefully somebody gets something out of it. You know, I, who know, well, who knows what that might be. It might be a conversation we had. It might be something that I said wrong that they'll are like, Hey, wait a second. I don't ever want to do that. Or it might be something that you said and they're right and they're just like, man, that's a, that's a valuable optic. It's, it's a crazy thing. But man, here we are, you know, hitting record and, and just seeing the, if we can provide value, but it feels good. The team at the war room, you know, to button everything up, man, they're, they're awesome dudes. Can't wait to see where we are. And we're just chasing you. And now I'm going to give you the best comment, or the best compliment that is also an insult at the same time, without, without context, I'm just going to say the compliment to you. And then I'm going to tell you where I found it. You guys are so good, like at podcasting and the stuff that you provide, I can't believe you're more popular. It's like, you do this podcast for nobody. It's true. The fucking, the fucking, how are you this small? I do, when I talk about you guys, I'm like, I can't be too. I'm like, I can't believe when I tell people, I'm like, no, they just passed like seven, you know, Chris passed like 750 followers. And they were like, are you fucking joking? His shit is amazing. I was like, dude, I don't know what's happened. But anyway, I will, I will now be vulnerable and transparent. That was somebody said that on our channel, right when we were like starting to, you know, pick up, but we were starting to feel good about momentum and engagement, like all those other markers that you look for, we were starting to feel good. And somebody in the comment section was like, Oh man, how do you guys not have more followers? You're a fucking small account. But man, you guys are great. We were just like, Oh, I see it. You know, I see somebody to bring it back down to earth. Oh my God. It's like, right now we're talking about this the other day though. And it's kind of like that. I liken it to that band. You guys know the fray, right? Remember the fray? Yeah, they still slap it. But, um, come on. He said it. I was like, I saw a scrubs episode with it in there. How to save a lot. That show. Favorite show? F dude. But no, it's like, um, those guys, a lot of people don't know came out of like the Denver circuit and they were completely and totally independent when they started and they got the the rarest of all record deals, which was like a one album, one tour at 5050 with the record label because the label came in and they were like, Hey, we want to give you guys the standard three albums, five tours, 8515, which is a total screw over to the artists. But that that's how the the record label used to be the industry. Why are you casually dropping insider info into the music industry? Like, why? Like, you just you just very super casually sped past a very complex contract. Like, like, I was there. You think I'm just you think I'm just like, speed past how you just hit Lee Lee's on me. You didn't even breathe. You almost passed out with a fuck. What's wrong with you? You're an interesting human. He was a great groupie. What's Yeah, I was there actually when they were signed when the when the deal went down. So I just listened. So what was what was really funny is they they looked at the A&R guy and they were basically like, nugged, like get bent. Like, we're already doing this. We're completely independent. We own all of the equipment. We write all the songs. They all belong to us. We can play any club here in Denver and bring in like 2000 people a show on like a Tuesday night. I'm not giving you 60% of my shit and 30% of my merch. We're making half the house. Yeah. So eventually the the record label came back and they were like, dude, no, these guys are good. Like, we need to get them on. It would be better to make half of what they make than none because they're cashing in right now. Yeah. So they they got the the sweetheart deal and then look what they went on to do, you know, how to save a life like that massive album and they're you know, they're they're still doing okay. But my my reason for launching into that story is because it's like playing that club circuit, right? Like a honky-tonk circuit and like coming up and cutting your teeth and figuring out how to make the memes and how to make the videos and doing all that. It's like, you got to do it. You got to pay your dues. Right. It doesn't matter like what industry you get into or like what thing that you're you're trying to be good at, whether it's like even welding or plumbing or whatever. It's like, you got to get there and start working on sinks, dude. And you got to you got to do a bunch of them and you're going to do a bunch of them for not a lot of money before people are like, no, he's a good one. I was going to take it to I was going to take it a slightly different direction. He was going to take it a dick further. That's what he was going to say. Right. One more one more day. I was going to go one dig higher. I was I joke or I this is a side a little side quest, but I always joke around like with my wife. I was like, I have a one-dick rule. Okay. I'd like to only see one dick a day and that's mine. Right now, my son, he's small. I'm going to change his diapers. I have to go to two. Anytime you see any more dicks in that, it's a terrible day. That's all I'm saying. That's all I'm saying. But my favorite one of my days where I saw more than one dick. So yeah, I know. I don't like that. My book, but that reminds me of like, you know, they're just made through a blizzard of Dick's blizzard of Dick's cab scouts. We actually marked that in our podcast. I can't wait till we did the blizzard of Dick's comment. Yeah. No, that got straight up marked that. It's in Chris would get hit by a dick still. Holy shit. We had a serious talk in a group chat about if we were going to pose like the phrase blizzard of Dick's was set about eight times in the course of that one. Anyway, but it's the reason, the reason that we go on all those tangents. It's experience is a hard. It's not. Yeah, it's come. Well, well, exactly. But it was, it was something like people will find our podcast and they'll just be like, oh, you know, friends will, you know, there's a bunch of people in the community that listen to our stuff, like ones ready specifically, listen to it and you know, chill out like they'll see memes and whatever, but they don't really engage your support. They're just kind of like your P3 listeners, right? Like they're there, like they're aware of us every once in a while, we'll get a text message or a message and they'll be like, oh my God, you guys are blowing up. Like you guys, you guys really doing it. We're it likens, or it's that's akin to saying, you know, we're an overnight success that only took five years to get going because that's exactly where we are right now. Like for five years we have been recording and editing and doing all our own stuff and figuring out social media and make it those mistakes and trying to be better and just trying to be technically and tactically better at talking on a microphone and trying to make content. And people see it and they're just like, oh yeah, man, you guys just went viral and that's awesome. And how'd you get 100,000 people to see this? And you're like, dude, do you know how many posts I've posted that only 1,000 people saw or less? Like 10 people? Like, and you can't, again, like I am who I am, dude. When I post something that absolutely flops and you have to, you do it all the time in social media, you got to figure it out until you get better and better and better. But wow, dude, does that hurt? You're like, wow, what a piece of shit. You can't even figure this out. Little kids on TikTok making 10 million a year. You can't, you can't figure out how to get 100,000 followers on this page. You're kidding me? I mean, we all have toys on camera and making millions of dollars. Yeah. My kids watch that stuff, dude. They got this channel that they like to watch where people just put Legos in a box and then like send what the box with water and just watch the sand sink and the lego is toppling and they'll get like 100 million views. And I'm like, first of all, turn that shit off. Your brain is melting. Put on something. We gotta go. That's a, everybody's going outside. Yeah, that's it. Okay. That's it. That's enough internet for today. Everybody got here. You're gone. Okay. I think I didn't grow up in the age of the internet like that, man. I was outside all the fucking time. Yeah. Same sir. So you had a great idea where obviously we were having you on anyway, just because you're handsome. But you were like, hey, let's talk about this and pretty much why you shouldn't trust the government. And if you do, you're a fucking idiot, basically. How could you? How could you trust the government? How could you? Yeah. How could you? It's pretty much impossible at this point. If you're not paying attention, I don't know, I don't even know what to do for you because you're fucking probably should walk around with a plant to replace the oxygen you're wasting. So as, as the guests, though, Aaron, if you would like to go first and jump in on this, I know you're fired up like you said and full of meat. And the actual actual ribeye meat and nothing else. That's it. Now, and you can, you can go, you can go first if you want, man, because we have a lot to talk about, bro. And I have notes. I have notes. Let's let's just top it to it. Put me on the clock. I'm going to try to. Yeah, we're going all the way back. So in the beginning, yeah, in the beginning, there was more door, right? And it was a volcano. Anyway, so here's the thing, man, like at this point in life, like there's so much misinformation out there and there's so many things out there that you have to wade through to get to the facts. I don't try to convince anybody anymore. There's the rules of the Ronin, which I really like. There were 36, like rules of the Ronin masterless warriors, but they could, you could really like boil it down because a lot of them were kind of redundant. You can boil it down to about six, right? I'm not going to list them out for you. If you want to, you can go read them. It's a good philosophical model for how to approach day to day life. The rules of the Ronin, essentially are like, listen, I'm not going to defend anybody that I don't personally know. Even if I personally know them, if they made a decision that I wasn't personally involved in, I'm not going to defend it. I wasn't there. I don't know what they did. I don't know what their intention is. They could be malicious. They couldn't be. There's going to be no way for me to tell. So if you come to me and they're like, Oh, your friend did this. How do you feel? I'm going to be like, keep my friend's name out your mouth. I don't know what you're talking about. We'll spend you swill Smith. That shit. Thank you. And I don't know what happened. So I'm not going to weigh in on it. And you apply that to just basically everything. You're like, Hey, you know, I don't know these politicians personally. I don't know if they're good. Also, but I tell you what, all of them are objectively terrible. So I hate them fucking all there's no exceptions. Politicians are tools. No one has their favorite hammer. No one defends their favorite hammer by blowing themselves up. That's ridiculous. That doesn't happen. Okay. So that's how I feel kind of about the entire area where we kind of like start off to get footing here and we and we're we're just basically talking about how it is we feel about these institutions in general, but it's important to lay like a groundwork. Yeah. So I don't one of those other rules of the of the Ronin is that I don't give people knowledge that I'm not ready for. And then I don't defend that. There's no reason the knowledge is like a lion. Just set it free. There is no reason to defend it. It'll defend itself. It's if it's true. And if it's big true, it's going to defend itself, right? Man, that's where I'm at now. So I'm not going to sit here and I credit you. I was like, Hey, man, give me a topic. I want to deep dive on it. I want to provide some some good back and forth. So give me a topic and we'll deep dive it and immediately you were like, man, let's talk about why is Americans trust and the institutions failing. And I was like, Oh, that's juicy shit. Let's go. I was like, wait a second. But then as I thought, I was like, there's no way for me. There's going to be no way for me to convince you what this is. Because again, I'm not going to give you knowledge. I'm not going to defend anybody or anything that I wasn't a part of making. If I don't agree with the policies of the thing, even though I align with that person, I'm going to discard that because I do policy. I don't do people. Right. And I go in with the baseline. Again, to be very, very clear, all poll any person that seeks domain over another human for an extended period of time is a piece of trash. You should not be there is nobody that should rule another human. I'm sorry. I love. Yeah. I have politician friends and people that are running for office by that I support, by the way. But we have to get past that first issue is you automatically, I disagree with the entire thing. So you made the decision a long time ago at the United States would not have a king. So thank you. And the king, the Senate of God and whatever else I don't, not a single man divine, divine right is not a thing. I do not worship anything that's not a man. So anyway, what you said about that, because people are not going to change their minds unless they're truly interested in changing their minds. People don't change their mind just because you're yelling at them or talking at them. The best way to do that is just to present people with information and let them change their mind and let them believe it's their idea, essentially, right? It's their idea that they're changing their mind. And so the best way to do that is presentation of facts, which is kind of what we did and piece together. And I like that because it's up to you as a listener. What do you want to do about the information you're going to hear? If it's if it's the lion, it's the truth walking around, it'll defend itself. If not, fucking fact check the shit out of us, let us know how stupid and wrong we are. And then we'll either address it or not, probably move on about our day. But Chris is looked like he's having some tech English is I'm going to address that real fast, just because if you're watching this, all four people who do watch our podcast is Aaron affectionately pointed out earlier. You know, you'll wonder what's going on. I don't know what's up with Chris, but he's going to be right. We can flounder or we can jump right in. I'll see just press. Yeah, he'll come back in a second. There he is. Yeah. There's going on guys, but I guess I'm having some internet problems. But if that keeps happening, don't wait on me. Just keep rolling. Yeah, I got your brother. I see when we thought you were dead, I was like, he would have wanted us to press. And then now that you come back, I was proven true. It was the voice going off. What are you guys still doing? Pick up the damn apparatus and keep going. What a bunch of pussies. Just going to put a bull in your head like a horse, bro. Just stop. I'm going. So the facts we're going to present. Yes. I don't even know where to start because there's so much shit. There really isn't. Well, I think we were going to do this amendment by amendment. Aren't we? Isn't that the plan? Yeah. Mm. Something everybody knows, right? Okay. Where did it all go wrong? Where did it all go wrong? So I and it brings up a good point because I do actually want to provide a little bit of context to people out there that maybe aren't as smart on American history as they should be, which is every single one of us, especially if you're a voting age. But that is like the United States Constitution gets passed, right? Like 1789, 1787, shortly after we become a nation, right? And so we become a nation, you have the Articles of Confederation that go in first. They're not so good. So then we have to take it back to the drawing board. We're like, hey, we need to come up with a new way of doing things. A couple of the founding fathers, a few of them, Alexander Hamilton being one, James Madison, which is the actual writer of it. And John Jay draft the original United States Constitution. It goes in Congress doesn't like it. They have to figure out how to get the votes to pass it. So these guys basically because they all have newspapers of their own that they own, which is kind of funny because Brandon, you and I were talking about this about how back in like the 1800s, 1700s, it was like, if you wanted a social media, like you had to start your own newspaper and it was basic. Those are like the Twitter stats of the revolutionary era. It's just like the Reynolds pamphlet. He was just like, I'll just, I'll just publish it in my paper. Like you can't censor me there. Yeah. I'm going to buy a printing press, which is basically a lot of people say that you shouldn't compare Donald Trump to the founding fathers. But when Donald Trump got shut off of Twitter, what did he do? He just made a social media. I'll just I'll just, I'll just make my, you know what? I'm going to make my own press. It's going to be the best social media. We're going to have streaming service. They are coming up with streaming though. They're going to fix streaming service. Yeah. Dude, crazy. But the funniest thing to me was everybody goes, Oh, that isn't going to go anywhere. Nobody's on truth, social, like it doesn't matter. Look at the following that he has. No, no, it's even one better. The site goes so deep. Donald Trump truths anything. And it gets grabbed and screenshot it by a million other accounts and goes on Twitter anyway. Anyway, from all 100 million accounts and just winds up there. So he's like, I still matter. It's still there. If you look at it like the like the Ponzi scheme that it is, he just has more accounts working for him now. Well, Instagram's the same way. I sit on Instagram all the time. Yeah, all the time. Any social media there's Donald Trump in your face. Get it. So they write, they write the federalist papers. They publish them right, like 51 papers, anonymously talking about how great the Constitution is, how we need this federalist system. They eventually get it passed through. The Constitution is ratified by the Congress. Right? How air there is a problem. There are some rights that are not enumerated, enumerated, specifically by the Constitution in a way that everybody could agree on. They go, well, you agree on all this stuff that you said and how the government should work, but how air when we say people should be free and we're talking about these things, what do you mean by that? So then they had to come back a third time. And this is what I love about what you were saying earlier, Aaron, about building your your podcast in flight. Like this country was literally built in flight. Yes, they were like, they were like, okay, by young men. Right. Right. And they were like, well, we know we don't like kings. We're done with that shit. Right. That shit's lame. Well, and if you look at it, it's funny is like, you know, people get it fucked up and I want to lay this out. You I am so fucking happy that you were doing this because you're you're a fucking subject matter enthusiast, which is what I love about you. Two things. It's, you know, when we talk about the Constitution, Bill writes a picture of silver framing and apple of gold. Those are the things that we strive for. That's how beautiful they thought those two things were the founding documents. So when we're talking, I don't need to talk about like the underlying, well, this is what they bad at legal stuff. I mean, from an ideological standpoint, that's gorgeous. Imagine that that is what we can strive to is something so beautiful as a as a golden apple in a silver frame. That's fantastic. That's that's number one, like, holy cow, I can't believe the gravitas of how they how it is they even decided to do that. Sweeney's bosom. Yeah, beautiful. It really brings a tear to the eye. What's hilarious to me is that we go from like 1776 to 1787, because a lot of people, they think about the founding of our government as if it was like, and then we won the war of independence. And then we're America, and it's like fits and starts and then we couldn't figure it like. Well, that's the problem is like professionals playing for logistics, right? Amateurs playing for execution. I'm sorry. We only had we only had time for execution. Like we just had to go, we had to go fight the world's number one superpower with a ragtag group of farmers that we use guerrilla warfare for the first time and somehow fucking beat them with the help of a bunch of other people that are going to play into this story later. But like, sorry, we didn't have a chance to figure out that, Oh, well, we live here and we go by horse carriage to DC. So we have to like make these weird rules for when we vote and all this other stuff. Like we had to figure that out in the wash and that took a long time, right? And some of it's built in like the government as we built it is meant to be laborious. It's meant to have gridlock. It's meant to have checks and balances where you're like, not so fast, everybody, but they had to figure that out on the fly. They were building it as they go because they're like, okay, well, we wrote this thing. We thought it was going to work. The idea is good. The logistics aren't working. Right. No, and to put an exclamation point on that, what do you say? Like how much time actually passed before we have what was considered right? The 10 bill of rights. And now we have a functioning government with our with our political documents and everything in place. 15 years it's 1791 now, right? Many of our some of our founding fathers have already died as 15 years have passed. Children that were born when the country became a country are almost already ready to vote in the first round of voting in that country. They're 15 years old at this point. Many of them are taking over their family farms for the first time. They're men back then in this time. And so it's like they're growing up as the country is like quite literally forming around them. And they're getting papers that are like, Oh, Congress is getting ready to pass a new document that says like these are the enumerated bill of rights and we get the first 10. And so I know that's what we wanted to focus on tonight was like the first 10. Why we have them and then to a further point, like I'm actually being the responsible one tonight, like keeping it on point. But that's cool. I'm cool. I'm in. But tell me who it is. Like I'll listen to you. I naturally fall in line. You're like, I'm leaving. I'm like, God, we're good. So, so we're going to talk about the first 10, right? Or at least the first six, I know we're going to go through. And we're going to talk about like why we're there, why they're there. And then how far we've strayed from and like the original intent and how it's been violated. And then we're going to leave leave the question up at the end. I'm not going to come down. None of us are going to come down on any like this is what you should, you know, take away from this. We're just going to present some evidence as we as we move forward through the rest of this. And we're going to let you come to your own, uh, uh, your own decisions. Yeah, your own conclusions about what we're presenting you. So without further ado, we're going to launch into the first amendment, right? What is it? What are the, what are the six things, right? That the first amendment actually covers because a lot of people don't realize like how much it covers. And, uh, and then we're going to get into like just how the government is not abiding by its own amendments. Well, here we go without further ado. So I want to, I want to frame this conversation. Keep in mind the second thing that we talk about, we talked about the first one, silver apple and the golden frame, right? Right. The second thing that we're going to talk about here is that this is a list of things. Put yourself in the context of the founding fathers. This is a list of things that limits government. These things do not give you rights. This is, you are backwards. If you think of it like this, your individual rights given to you by a higher authority, by any man are inalienable life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, the right to self-defense, all these other things that we're going to talk about. We had to spell it out in these papers. This is a limiter on the government. That is it. You were looking at the government. People read this from the government down and they're like, Oh, this is what the government says you can do. That's a status viewpoint. That's not an individual viewpoint. The individual viewpoint is these things, the first amendment, which reads, Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, prohibiting the free exercise thereof, or abridging the freedom of speech or the press or the right of people to peacefully assemble and a petition against the government for a redress of grievances. The reason I want to say six is because it's freedom of religion and in practice of religion. And a lot of people, they specifically said too, because, and the reason they did, and I want to make this very, very clear, and I want to say this too, they came across freedom of religion first as part of the first amendment because it was the most important thing to them. The Anglican church in England was a co-church in government that ruled with the king and basically told them, yeah, but it was the government. Like I, you're doing a great, I'll be the one that says that you're being the facilitator. I appreciate you. I'll be the one that gets a misinformation tag. It was the fucking government. They called it the church, and then they found a way to rule over everybody. They found a way to rule over the left and the right, the religious and the non-religious, they couldn't say it out there. It was the church of England. They ran everything. Right. So you have early American, the Puritans that leave, right, for a settlement of Jamestown. Guys, the whole reason they came here is because they were saying, well, this is how the Bible says that we're supposed to practice Christianity. And the Anglican church says we can't worship that way. So if it's going to be illegal and they're going to persecute us here into the government, then let's just go somewhere where we can practice religion the way that we want to. Right. And like, I don't care if you don't believe in Christianity or if you do or like how you feel about it, but your entire nation was founded on the idea that people should be free to do the thing that they ought to do. Like this is what God says that I'm supposed to do and I want to be free to do it. Not the freedom to do whatever they wanted to do because people get liberty twisted all the time. Well, and equally as important, the freedom from religion, that's the freedom from religion really highlights your point because they were saying because again, they everything was done because these people had, I'm going to speak in Gen Z terms. Oh my God, Bestie, they had so much trauma from an ex that when they got here, they were like, no, no, no, you're not going to push your religion on me. You're not going to push your feelings on me. No cap. Fucking stupid. But that's literally what they did. So it's freedom of religion. I can practice whatever I want and then freedom from religion. Again, it's a limiter on the government. They're telling us, if I don't want to, if I don't want to, if I don't want to have to believe it, if you try to tell me that you're going to enact Sharia law, I get to go, no, no, no, not just because stupid, because fucking illegal in the Constitution, because that's freedom of religion. You're not allowed to impose your religious beliefs upon me. Freedom of religion, freedom from religion. It's it's if you put into the context of people that just fled a religiously oppressive state, it was near a theocracy. At that point, that's what that's why the first one was like, all right, first things first, I get to worship who I want. And then you can't tell me who to worship and whatever else. I don't want to deal with your shit. 100%, right? So then we also have assembly, freedom of the press, freedom of speech, speech comes after religion, which is very interesting. It's religion first, then speech, right, then we have assembly, then we have freedom of the press, right? But all those things, it's important because it's like, when people go, oh, freedom of speech, first amendment, no, no, no, your first amendment is actually like the biggest one. And it has them, you can go where you want, you can hang out with who you want, you can say what you want, you can worship God, how you want free speech is the is the eternal lubricant that holds all of civilization together. Everything that we've come to, these conclusions we've come to about ideology, thought, architecture, anything has to do with the fact that you can communicate with somebody without being limited to what you're able to say. That's literally a foundation of civilization, especially Western civilization. Right. But then I think the big rub comes in, especially in more recent times with the whole, well, you know, Facebook belongs to Mark Zuckerberg, and that's a private business. You're riling me up. You're pushing me, bro. I'm doing it on purpose, dude. And here, here, oh, the other way, here it comes, dude. But that, but that was the rub because it's like, as a corrupt system, how can we get around these pesky, enumerated rights that these citizens have, and still censor them and tell them who they can and can't, you know, hang out with. And by the way, I hope you're paying attention, because it's like everything that I just said, if you lived through 2020, every single one of your first amendment rights was completely broken. Oh my god. And we're, we're going to talk about it. We have like, I have a million things. I'm going to pull a, I'm going to pull a you, Chris. So the first fact that we're going to present, right? Because that's what we're going to present some facts. Okay. So I want to, I want you to talk about Operation Mockingbird. And here's what we're going to talk about, right? So you can Google it, follow along, don't take what I'm saying for anything. Again, I'm just giving you knowledge. If you're not ready for it, you don't have to take it. I'm not going to seek you out. I'm not going to DM you, but you came here, right? And then if you want to continue to talk about it, let me know, and we'll go, we'll go deeper. Operation Mockingbird, allegedly. Allegedly. The CIA, yes, I say allegedly for some folks out there. But the CIA actually issued a statement acknowledging the program and accepting responsibility. It was a large scale United States Central Intelligence Agency, CIA operation, began in the early years of the Cold War and attempted to manipulate domestic American news media organizations for propaganda purposes, according to another Deborah Davis, to author Deborah Davis, Operation Mockingbird recruited leading American journalists into a propaganda campaign. They influenced the operations in front groups. CIA support of the front groups was exposed in April of 1967, a ramparts article that noted the National Student Association actually received money directly from a CIA and the cutout. They were so bold that the CIA paid them directly. There was a cutout that actually also paid them as well. They were double dipping through the cutout. They were. Yeah, they were like, like, why would you imagine? Could you imagine me the cutout? He's like, wait, the hubris. Yeah, the hubris of the CIA just just not even bothered to use the cutout, but no kidding. That was one of the things that brought this entire thing down. Operation Mockingbird was a real thing. It was wholesale and straight up propaganda to censor voices to put out propaganda that they did have. State side and try to influence operations everywhere. So again, this is a really easy one. The CIA is not supposed to be able to work inside of America. We're going to have to say this a couple more times, but the Central Intelligence Agency is not supposed to be able to do something in South America. It's it's a law. The CIA made Operation Mockingbird, which was legalized propaganda in order to sway public opinion on social and cultural issues. That's right. It's worth saying to I don't want to leave. I don't want to leave people behind when we were talking about cutouts, but sorry, just to just to pull pull the the sled, a cutout is when like if I wanted to give a message to Brandon, right, but it's like, I cannot in any way be connected to Brandon. Brandon's a bad dude. He, you know, I don't know. It's true. He likes to pop little kids balloons in the park on Sundays. He's just a bad guy, right? And so it's like, I can't have anything to do with him. So what I would do is I'd be like, Hey, Aaron, you don't mind getting your hands a little bit dirty. Here's a message. I'm not going to sign my name to it, but I just need you to give it to you know who and he'll know who it's coming from. And then I pass my message from one guy to the other. In this case, Aaron's the cutout. Dear Brandon, I love you. I miss you and I can't wait to see you round the I'll tie yellow ribbon round the old oak tree. Like these are the type of messages that I'm passing. What was the movie that the other guys were that he had to read the messages. Thanks for the F check. So cutout. Yeah, thanks for the F check. Dirty Mike and the boys. Okay, so cutout company. Right. So but the thing is in the in the 60s, when this was going down, because the CIA does not have the jurisdiction or authority to work inside the borders of the United States, what they would do is they would work with foreign context, foreign business leaders as their cutouts and they would smuggle information into the mainstream media by giving it to people outside of the country. And then those people would be talking to journalists inside the country. But then as Aaron just read for you, eventually they got so bold that they were just like, you know what? And they just would take off their government suit and put on their everyday clothes and just walk into MSNBC of the day, whatever. I don't know. New York Times was open back then, right? And they would just walk in there and they'd be like, Hey, here's the headlines to print. Here's the big stories that happened. Yeah. But yeah, that really happened. And they testified before Congress that was really going on. Do you think they've stopped? You're getting too close. Let's not let's not let's not blow our wad, my friend. So I would like to bring you up. So back in 1948, okay, there was the United States Information and Educational Exchange Act. Back in 1948, we basically came up with a law. Remember, this is right after World War II. What was one of the biggest things that we did in World War II that wasn't kinetic, that affected the way that we won Europe. It was cyops, the dropping of leaflets and pamphlets and those radio broadcasts that we would take over. It was a tank brigade. Look at it. Yeah, exactly. Like, Hey, you know, we're closing in on your area. Like we had people that would whatever. Well, we realized the dangers of this in 1948, whatever. I'm saying. So we realized the danger of this in 1948. And we come up with the United States Information, excuse me, an Education Act of 1948. Basically that that made it so that you were unable to publish those we were making straight up propaganda, like make no mistake about it. We wanted to propagandize against the people that lived in those places that could hear those transmissions. Well, we were like, Hey, 1948, super dangerous. That shouldn't happen on American soil. You ever you ever wonder why you see completely different weird, cringy commercials on USN while you're deployed in a foreign country as opposed to this? You can thank the Smith Mund Act because you're not allowed to publish that in America because American Congress people that were civilians were like, Hey, this is too dangerous to put out to the American public because you guys are obviously manipulating people via misinformation. They just didn't have the word for it. So let's fast forward. So let's say that the government had a rule that you weren't allowed to put out propaganda and you needed to come up with some sort of amendment, some sort of way to figure out how to get away from this sort of thing. And by this sort of thing, I mean, being accused of being a traitor, a traitorous bastard and getting thrown in prison for the rest of your life. What would you have to do? Well, you'd sneak it into the NDAA in 2012, which is what Barack Obama did. It allows for government produced and sponsored content to be played to Americans think overseas psyops campaigns. The way that you can tell that this was immediately fucked up is the way the fact checkers came after it right away. Everybody was like, because every like all of us truths, all of us independent analysts, all of us folks, we looked at it, we were like, Hey, hold on, hold on. This this legalizes propaganda. Like you're not calling it propaganda, but you're saying the things that we made in order to influence win hearts and minds and change public opinion about an issue that we know, we 100% bias paid for and influence people with a whole bunch of nefarious shit going on. We did that to other people. We do it all the time. This act stopped it. So then when Barack Obama was like, Well, listen, I think we're just going to put an amendment in it. We're going to put it in a minute. Well, well, well, well, well, well, well, hey, it'll take an amendment. We looked at it and we thought about it. And we just thought that some people were getting too smart. And those people that were getting too smart. We decided we had to stop them. So the amendment comes in. Pretty good. And that's what we're going to do. Thanks, Mike. I mean, Michelle. So the issue you can tell if that was Barack Obama or if that was Freddie Flintstone, but it was good. You were like, you were right in there. You're really appreciate it. So the way that's all that it's always how you can tell shout out to Dan Bonjino and everybody like he does the dips, he knew Fliparoo, but it's whatever they're saying to you, it's it's due the actual opposite. So when the fact checkers came after this claim, they were like, hold on, that that sort of makes propaganda legal because now the devil is in the details. Not only can you like play those things, those things that you would play overseas, but all you have to do is classify a little piece of something as one of those videos. Like who's to say that an organization can't flow in and out of that protection and that non protection be like, Oh, well, hey, well, this was just really a part of one of those videos we were paid by the army to make it. Yeah, it's not our normal, you know, Fox News platform, but this like two minute segment was funded by somebody else. So whatever. So how does that one? One more piece of I just don't want to lose anybody. The NDAA is the National Defense Authorization Act. It's passed by Congress. It is technically a budgetary issue that's passed every few years under it's passed at least once an administration, correct me if I'm wrong, once every administration it's passed, and it gives the titles and authorities to the Department of Defense, specifically National Defense, it gives them their titles and authorities about what they're allowed and not allowed to do overseas. So that is to us veterans, when we're deployed, right? The rules of war is under the NDAA. Like what partners we're allowed to work with, who is classified as terrorists or who's classified as partners who are what we're spending money on with. All of that stuff is in there. But the reason, and I just want to point out because I don't want to I don't want to lose anybody, the reason it's so sneaky to put it inside of the NDAA is because that is not a thing that it goes before Congress, but there are parts of the NDAA that are considered classified that most of Congress can't even actually see unless you're on the correct committees that you can actually see other way through it because there are, let me just say high side sections of the NDAA that go deep, and it'll just say like line items redacted, you have to have like another level of clearance to see these, right? And so the reason why that it that's so sneaky is because when you bury it deep in the NDAA, and it's a thing that just comes up once every administration we're saying, "Hey, this is what we're going to do with the Department of Defense as part of my policies downrange." Most of Congress goes, "Okay, especially during the GWI." That thing was just like rinsed and repeated during GWI and wasn't even looked at, and that's one of the reasons that they use it to just put stuff in because it's passed as law by Congress, but they're putting stuff in the NDAA that has nothing to do with national defense and it seems around it and goes to other things. Well, two examples of that, and I had a huge issue with it last year when the NDAA got held up and Adam Dorito, like shout out Adam Dorito, he did a great job on talking about the general's promotions that got held up, that was part of the NDAA because they wasn't in one item, but there were two other issues. So one was the high amendment issue is they wanted to pay for service members to go on leave to go get an abortion, and I had a serious issue with it, and I was like, "Fuck you, you're on leave, you're still being paid by the government, that violates the high amendment." They just like tried to ram this through and that got caught up. The other issue that I'm blanking on now that the NDAA, now that I was thinking about it, but there was another hot button issue that they essentially tried to sneak in there, but it highlights, and I'll think of it in a second, but it highlights the cynicism of this thing too because there's a certain manipulative aspect when you can clutch your pearls and go, "How dare you not support the troops?" Oh, that was the other one. It was $900 million to Pakistan for transgender studies, and you were like, "Hold the fuck, hold the fuck on." When you start looking at it, you're like, whatever, and then, but it gives the people that want to leverage this kind of, and this is again, why, and to the left does it, and the fucking right does it, they both do it. They both do it, and I hate it both times, but they'll clutch their pearls and be like, "How dare you not support our boys?" And in uniform, like, throw a homosexual off of, that's the most effective for killing them, that's what they're trying to figure out, guys. It's, and it's ridiculous. Or as a medic, I can tell you, it's any floor that's higher than twice their body height. Nice. You're not supposed to know that. Anyway, it didn't take you $100 million. I will say, Jesus Christ. No, it only took me four kids. So anyway, I have four points, guys. The NBA is passed every year. Yeah, I will say this, too. A lot of people don't have time to read the NDA because it comes in. It's like 1,300 pages deep every single time it comes through, but I will say, if you want to know what's going on in the NDA, you could read the national security strategy. It's called the NSS that also gets published alongside the NDA every year, and it tells you, like, what our number one priorities are of the presidential administration at the time going forward. And it takes you about 10 to 12 pages to get through. But I'll tell you, if you go through that and you can decipher a high-level government speak, you'll understand what's getting ready to come through in the NDA and what they're going to bury in there, because the last national security strategy, I think, said climate change, like 50 some times I had to read it. It was the number one that came out like three years ago, it was like the number one threat. Like, they actually put climate change as a number one threat. Like, yes, like, are you fucking in me? So the NDA just got released and ratified, approved, and they voted it all the way through. Some things that have happened, there was supposed to be a pay raise this year. Sorry. So there was supposed to be a pay raise, they took it away, they gave them a lesser pay raise, whatever. So that's why F the troops, because F the troops, shadow disaster, F the troops. But the other things that came out is they're going to automatically register all males. That was never an automatic thing before. And I'm not correct. I'm not saying that I always resist pressure of anybody. But what I will say is that if you don't register yourself, you'd get away with not getting drafted in selective service. We had so many people that were volunteering during GWOT the last 20 years, the United States government got sensitized, be like, well, if we get a card with your social on it, saying you're ready to be ready to the army, we'll take it. But they're not tracking you down, they're not putting you on a list. Well, now they're going to put you on a list. Every single male that turns 21 or it turns 18 is now eligible, 18 to 26 is now eligible for selected service. People freaked out because they were like, oh, this is part of the draft. I mean, yes, tan, generally, but really what it is, would you rather be on a list and fight to get taken off? Or would you rather never be on a list? That's a pretty, that's a pretty simple fucking question. Everybody out there. Would you rather come back up? Let's say it's on the second amendment. Let's say there's a grocery store. And that grocery store is like, Hey, you know what, we're going to put you on our list. And we're going to give you all the coupons every email that you want every single day. Or you're not going to be on a list at all. I'd be like, don't put me on that fucking list. I don't want here's a better one. But this is government, but the grocery store can't put me in jail. It's true. I was going to say, but you'll never know about the FRG events, if you don't. But anyway, so that's like the big thing there is that all these things have sort of like, oh my god, rear their ugly head, you know, talking about like, that's where you find it in the NDA or in the NDA. But the other thing they snuck in there is that now women are going to do the same thing that the men did at 18 to 26 is that they're eligible and they're directed to go sign up. They're not going to put them on a list right away. But now like, there is no country that is moral that sends its daughters to fight its fucking wars. I'm sorry, women do not like fuck that. There is no moral. It is a moral and an ethical question for me. I'm not saying women shouldn't be there. I'm not saying they're like, I know savages. Kim Casey Campbell was an 1810 pilot that fucking slaughtered humans and almost died doing it, risked her life to do it and should have died doing it, but didn't. She is a fucking warrior. There are people out there that fucking kill people for us. I will never say that women don't belong in certain aspects of the military. What I will say is that no country worth its fucking salt sends its daughters to fight its wars. That's what I'm saying. That is not the move. It's just kind of a morally upside down society. I do want to put some context on that, though. So the NDA passed the House as stated before. It was the Senate because both, you know, bicarmory legislature, the Senate also has to approve their side of the NDA. They added an amendment to add women to the Selective Service, which I thought was very interesting. And I know that you understand the context of that. Why is the Senate going to add that? Why do they think that they can sneak it in from that side, whereas like the House of Representatives let it go? It's a very interesting question, but it's like between the two sides, like, yeah, it got funneled in and now it's up for vote now. So if it goes through as stated now, then ladies, you're going to have to register for Selective Service at 18. Right. But so now let's wrap this up and everything that we're just talking about. I'm going to put a bow on it so that we can press on to the second. If you don't have rules or regulations or if you don't have protections on the First Amendment, you're going to get fed a line of information that you can't possibly make the right call. And we've seen this with people that eat the COVID narrative, hook, line, and sinker. People like Chris Cuomo, you little bitch get out of my DMs, dog, people like that, that now can't go back because they believe a thing so much that they believe that it's an ideology to them, right? That's the danger of when we have a restriction of information. There's going to be information in the first that you don't like. Think people are going to say things that you do not like. People are going to say things that you fucking violently resist. Guess what? That's the point of the First Amendment. Those viewpoints have to get out there. That's why the amendment is first, along with all the other things, right to peacefully assemble in protest, right to petition your government, the right for freedom of religion and freedom from religion. Those are equally important and granted like, man, I'm not an atheist. I think they should have the right to be free from religion if they want to. You shouldn't have it shoved in your face now. There's nuance and there's a conversation that we should have. And I'll say what? That's not my personal feeling. I always try to get people to think in two spaces at once. There's how I feel morally and ethically. And there's how I would legislate. If I was legislating, if I want to talk to common sense people where I'm trying to get the most people over to my side, here's how I feel. There are some parts of this Venn diagram, Alaa Kamala Harris, the girl that blew Montel Jordan. There's some parts of it that don't cross over, right? There are some things like I am unapologetically pro-life with no exceptions. Fuck you. Come on. Fuck you. Like there are some things that don't cross over. I'm not willing to legislate that. Like I wouldn't be I wouldn't be electable on this on this issue because no exceptions. Fuck you. Fuck you. No, sorry. That's where I'm at. So that's how I feel morally and ethically and then how I would legislate in those two things live. But there's a bunch of other things about, you know, commutation for sentences or whatever, that morally or ethically, I feel one way, but I would legislate another way. When you divorce that, when you have a singular viewpoint, when you feed people misinformation, it degrades the trust in the institutions in such a way that you can't trust anything. And then you have a group of people that have no idea how to actually like navigate this life and make the right choice. So I would ask you, if we look at the Smith Mund Act, if we look at the things that are happening, if you look at cringe, John Pierre telling you, don't leave your lying eyes of what I say is a deep fake. It's not a deep fake. We can see plainly the things that are going on in front of us. And right now, the First Amendment is being hampered in such a way. Like, look at it right now, the Hunter Biden laptop, it was fake. And then it was Russian disinformation. And then it was entered into evidence without a blink of an eye. So do we know now that it's verified? It's, it's super tight that Hunter Biden is getting hit with tax evasion. It's super tight that he's going to jail for his little gun thing. No, he's not going to go to jail. I doubt it. Well, wishful thinking. So, however, like he is getting hit with all of these things, which we know to be true, there are bigger things coming like the, you know, foreign agent, registration act fair and all the others. But all of that to say, these are, I'll leave that for another day. But I, those the statute of limitations ran out on this. Oh, really? So did the the statute of limitations ran out on President Trump and those 34 instances of a single misdemeanor in a lower New York court too. But we can get a conviction there. So maybe it's time to take the gloves off. Maybe it's time. So he can do that. Right. Oh, right. I agree. Yeah. But anyway, I think I think it starts with last point. I'll just ask you yes or no. Did you hear that a memo was drafted to Mike Johnson, the Speaker of the House to use the Capitol Police to go take Mary Garland into custody and take him into jail on charges of Contemptive Congress? Because he was found guilty of Contemptive Congress. He was. Yeah, I have not heard that. Just like Steve Bannon. Right. Oh my God, he's going to jail. And rep Anna Paulina Luna put out a great thing. She was like, yeah, we try to get him on actual contempt. He basically was like, no, I just don't respect that shit. Steve Bannon is going to jail. He's not. And Anna Paulina was like, fine, there's another way to charge contempt. So I'm going to try that. So she's going to try it. Hopefully it works. I think I think that was her that she's the one that she is. She's talking to Mike Johnson. I did not hear about the actual like go arrest him. But man, I fucking hope so at this point again, like, and this is my overarching thing. Just a quick side quest while we tee up the second row. The fact that the GOP will not go after and do the same things that the Democrats do to them all the time for some other for some moral win. Yeah. Oh my fucking God, get the fuck Oh, well, guys, we're better than that. We have to take that. No, you don't. They're sexualizing your kids are taking America, but my road. It's the worst way to get in the fucking face all the time and nothing. All the time. All the time. Nothing happens. It's them. It's that show in idiocracy. Ow my balls. Do you remember that? The Republicans are my balls. Every time. And they line up every time. They're like, every time you're just like, how can I step on a rake and hit myself in the face? Yeah, yeah, exactly. Okay, last thing I want to say, there is only free speech. There is no such thing. But there is no such thing as hate speech. All speeches free speech or none. What do you have on the on the first before we jump off? I just want to say that where where is the largest free market of ideas in our modern society? And it's on social media, right? And so you sit here and talking about the first amendment and all these things that they're doing to manipulate the way we view things propaganda, Operation Mockingbird, all that stuff. Why do you think that there's such an effort to minimize and censor people on social media? Because it is the biggest and largest free flowing apparatus for information ever, right? And the fact that anybody, like you said earlier, Aaron, the truth is a line let it out of defend itself, right? I get in, right, there's a lot of people out there and anybody can, like me, like my stupid ass can have a microphone on a camera and I get on online and say whatever the fuck I want. But there's enough people out there who can sit there and say something against it, improve the point and all these other things. You know, to me, that's the biggest evidence that your rights and your first amendment right is under attack. If you can't see that, you know, I get shadow banned all the fucking time. Aaron's been shadow banned into the shadow realm, all you know, fucking Yu-Gi-Oh style. But I'm I'm like, yeah, we're I've been shadow banned forever, man. That's probably why, you know, I want to put so good that you're small. That's right. You just adapted to it. Yeah, Mark Zuckerberg is over to like the shadows betray you because they belong to me. I should have done that in a robot voice. That would have been more appropriate. Hello fellow humans. Hello fellow humans design Mark Zuckerberg. I hear you like fisticuffs. Hey boys, mark this part right here. I got to take a bathroom break and then I'll be right back to jumping in a second. Perfect. Marked it. Oh man. I enjoy talking to other humans and eating meat like other humans. Yeah, that I is that meme. Oh man. I want to say it's AI, but somebody got a picture of him at the screen door and he's like looking in the screen door. You see that? Yeah, that's yeah. I don't know where the fuck that picture is from, but that is all over the fucking place. I know, but did somebody like somebody nab that? I don't know. Because if that's one of the original AI picks, that is hilarious. It's been I've seen that around for a long time. That's not an AI photo. And it's just like what are you guys doing in there? Right. Are you are you free speaking? Like you guys are just teaching on the other side of the screen. Right. Actually, what he's fucking doing. Dude, Aaron came in loaded for bear. I love it. He's just he's appropriately tested. Did he's one of those people that left? I've hung up with him like this once before. Yeah. He's you wind him up, bro. And he just is the non-stop monkey with the symbols, dude. Just going to. Yeah, but I love the energy that he brings over here, because he fits in just perfectly. And by the way, when he said that to us earlier, and he was like, dude, you guys are so good. How are you so small? And I was like, bro, we're working on it. But I'm like, but also also, I took that as the compliment it was. It is it is a compliment, man. We're being held down somewhere, bro. I don't know what that is. And then the man's keeping us down. So it is. It is the man. No, that's it. We're just talking about how handsome you are before you and wondering what pomade you use and it's five. It is true. Yeah, it's five. It's like a natural beef tellow kind of guy. And I'm getting there. I'm getting there. It's a fiber. All right. So we're talking about these amendments and we're trying to present a case, right? So let's I promise that I'll keep it more concise. We have to keep focused because we're already in an hour and I want to keep this, you know, for, you know, for people that don't listen to five-hour podcast. So the second amendment focus, let's talk about the second. So I will feel free to read this one up. You know why? Because it's only 27 words. It's the clearest amendment that we have. It's the easiest to understand the second amendment states while we're a well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall, not be infringed. 27 words. Second amendment. Oh, stop. Period. End of sentence. So I have a question for you because I want to break this down since it is so short. I want to break it down like section of sentence by section of sentence. Well, that means it's only for a well-regulated militia. Yep. No, no. So let me start off with. Yeah, I totally agree. I 100% agree. I want you to go back to the beginning of the podcast. What do we talk about at the beginning of the section? Push yourself at the context of the Founding Fathers. Make sure you understand what it is. And then we limit the government. You're right. You should have a well-regulated militia militia. And that time and context means a group of people, your neighbors that you live with, you barter with, you train with, and you have a plan for if the government becomes tyrannical. That's the point of having small communities. It's the why it's why we're federalists. It's the entire reason, everybody. It's find a tribe. Love the tribe. Find the goal to the end of America and move your tribe towards it. And if that tribe is Florida or Texas or the small enclave of Southern California, Huntington Beach, where everybody's read that everybody else is around him as blue, you find that tribe and you make sure that you're ready to go. You should be well-trained. You think I don't have to. Well, the NSA has all my tax messages. We'll talk about that in the fourth, but you think I don't talk to my friends. You think I don't have a blowout plan? You think I don't. Hey, man, if something happens up here, we're coming to you. If something happens down to you, you're coming to us and here's what you need to bring. We're good. That is a militia. That's what it is. You're an American citizen of your own free will and independent rights. God given big R rights, there is no person that should be able to come and attack you. And you know what? I got a squad in this neighborhood right now. I know where the long guns are. I know where we're moving. That's what a militia is, right? And put yourself in the context, the government disarmed you. They owned you. They held you under your thumb and they were like, no, first things first in the second. The first thing that we're going to do is yeah, you should train. You should know how to procure water. You should know how to do all these other things. And I know we've lost sight with it. However, that's where their context was. So that's what they mean by it. I'm really glad that you made that point because I'm going to I'm going to make the point from like an English standpoint, because like one of the things that people like to do is it's legalese. They like to twist the language, twist the language. And then if you say a lie enough times and you say it confidently enough, then people start to believe you even though it's got it's got no base in truth, right? And we'll get to this when we start talking about separation of church and state, but like if you say it enough times and you say it confidently enough people. So it's like, well, a well regulated militia, right? In the context of the time in the 17th century, 18th century, when they were writing this, they didn't need to write for a well regulated militia because in the context of the time in English, they understood they were more eloquent people. It's us that are actually the retards today that can't read English and understand it. So you have a well regulated militia, then a parenthetical phrase being necessary to the security of a free state set that one aside, because that's the reason what I'm talking about that's supporting facts for the first one, right? This is how English works. The right of the people, because to keep in bear arms, Sean, be in French, because what he's saying is it's the people that make up the well regulated militia, because back then it was who ended up making up the Revolutionary Army where the militias of the individual town. And they all joined together. And there's one famous example, and I can't remember the name of the Reverend, but there's one militia that ended up becoming like a raider unit in the Revolutionary Army. And their drill instructor, their main drill guy at the time, was the local reverend of the town. And they stored all the weapons in the church. And then this pastor was the drill commander and they would go out and they would do drills after church on Sundays, you know, or like on Saturdays before evening church out in front of the church. And like he was the guy that we want to run drill because he was the community leader, right? And so it's like the time that you're talking about is so different from the time now, where it's like we're all doom scrolling Instagram all the time. It's like these people were practicing with their muskets. They were setting up targets. They were practicing loading and unloading procedures. They're going through the stuff. And so what they're saying here is they're like, you know what, what was the first thing that the British did to us when they came in and they marched through Boston? Oh, that's right. They rounded up all the muskets. They melted them down for iron. And they took away our guns. And so they were like, you know what, you know what population for a well regulated militia, never have a roof. Yeah, being necessary to the security of a free state, the rights of the people to keep them bare arms shall not be infringed. Wait, wait, wait, wait, I am from the standpoint, I got a question for you. I got a question for I'm going to hit you with the close mic talk Joe Biden. Hey, buddy, I got a question for you say shout out being friends, but you couldn't you couldn't own cannons. Could you? Well, that's one of my favorites. You couldn't own cannons. It is it restricted because because of the enough 15 because if I had a nickel, yeah, if I had a nickel for every time, well, I had yeah, but that's a weird thing to have 25 fucking cents for. But that that's the thing. No, you 100% could they wrote it specifically for that again, you have to put yourself in it. If the first applies to Instagram, the second applies to modern arms, just get that out of the way right now. And then number two, no, that's again, put yourself in the framing. A bunch of people that thought you had individual God, give it rights free from the religious oppression of a theocracy, you could make your own decisions for your own life. They wrote a list of things that government isn't allowed to do. They're not allowed to make you worship somebody else. They're not allowed to make that you are allowed to tell them when they're wrong. They can't retaliate for you. You can you can say whatever you want. And then they took the time in the second amendment to be like, you have the inherent right to self defense self defense. And anything that the government has, you should have as well. You know why they didn't they were specific at everything else? You know why this thing? And I love the pontification on this. You know why this is so short? Because it's specific and it doesn't have any nuance. This was the easiest one they wrote. They were like, Oh, no, check it out. In order for us to be free, you guys got to train because the government may come and try to take your guns. And you're allowed to have whatever the fuck you want. They just had to put all of them politician. And that's it. Yeah. Now 100%. And just to, you know, bring the receipts for that, like the very first naval warships that ever sailed under the flag of the United States as the United States Navy were privateers. They were pirates. Like they were merchant ships that were all basically the government went to them and said, Hey, you guys that have all these cannons on the side of your ships and your boats are all decked out ready to sail the high seas and protect yourselves. Would you consider sailing for the United States as United States sailors Navy men? And that's how we got our first Navy ever. And they were all, like I said, privateers, private pirates and brigands, basically, but they all had enough cannon fire on their boats that they could protect themselves. And so it was easier to pay for a mercenary force. And I'm not going to get into the whole into bill one from scratch. Yeah. Yeah. You better straight away from this one. Yeah. Stay away from this one. G chief. Watch out gorilla guy. Hey, Mr. bag of cash in a fucking land far away. Take it to easy cred lightly dickhead. I boxes a pizza. Hey, those, those are the echoes boxes of pizza dog. Don't you touch those? But, you know, 100%. So when they when people say, like, Oh, well, it doesn't mean that you should have weapons of war. That's exactly what it means. Okay. So only weapons of the day were muskets, which is what they fought with. I have a question about that too. Like, so you're telling me those are weapons of war, then why do you arm the police with them? Are they meant to do war on the populace then? That's exactly the point of the second, right? And then you have a slingshot? I mean, well, hey, I'll tell you what, in the right hands, not too bad. I'll tell you what a handgun ain't that bad reference? Yeah, thank you. But it just leads like there's a bunch of misinformation that follows. I'm going to try to speed through the second like some things they'll say like kids die from guns more than anything else. That's a completely and totally fucked up stat. Basically, they're including one to 19 years old. This is again from Congress.gov is where I got this like we can show you the links where we got all these receipts. But if you take it down to like one to 16, you know what happens is you get rid of the gang violence in Chicago, in Baltimore, in Memphis, Tennessee, in Los Angeles, Seattle, all of these other plays, Memphis, you know, whatever, all of these places have the most gun violence. Well, oddly enough, if you delete 16, 17, 18 from those, and you say that that's accidents, it's not it's gang violence. It's people. As we're talking right now, it's June 19th, you're not supposed to do that on the podcast. You know how many people got shot in Chicago this weekend? 41. You know how many died? Fucking nine. You know how many of those were mass shootings? Two of them of 10 or more people happen within an hour of each other. That's a really good. That's a really good point that you part of because you just you just define a mass shooting as 10 or more. Like, do you know what the government typically defines a mass shooting? Year four, three or four or more. Yeah, which that's another thing. Well, no, I'm people are harmed by gun violence than any other thing that ever happens. And then you're like, when you look into what is what is gun violence? What do they define as a mass shooting? Well, I look at it and you I like to clarify because I think I said something wrong. I want to go. I'll have to watch the tape, but I didn't say they consisted of 10 or more. I said, 41 got killed or 41 shot nine got killed and then two happened within an hour each other and then 10 got killed and whatever. But they yes, that was probably strike counter strike. That's what that sounds like to me. I would do that. I was I was so excited. But no, like you didn't hear about that at all. Two mass shootings back to back. If those were straight white dudes, I'll tell you what, if that was in a fucking red state straight white dudes, are you kidding me? And Cole tour when I'm Bill Maher, and she said one of the most eloquent things that it pissed people off and I loved it. He was like, Oh yeah, the Kansas City Super Bowl shooting, which by the way, everybody memory hold. Like, as I said, the Kansas City Super Bowl grade shooting, you don't even remember that. Okay. So first of all, memory hole, second of all, there's a crazy. Yeah, yeah, remember, second of all, we heard about it and then it immediately dropped off. You know why? It was a it was a fucking person from the BIPOC community and Ann Cole tour was on that night on Bill Maher, which I'll find the thing and send it to you for purposes of social media. But Ann Cole tour was like, Oh no, we know who did it. He was like, well, we don't know. He she was like, well, we know who didn't do it. It wasn't a white guy because if it was a Nashville school shooter, bro, if it was a straight white guy that shot those people in Kansas City, she was like, we would have heard about it right away. She was like the fact that they're not saying who did it. She's like, that's how you know. And Bill Maher was like, come on. Bill Maher was like, come on. He was like, so we don't know. And then two days later, no shit. They were like, yeah, I was too. I want to say it was a legal immigrant that might not have been, but it was definitely people from the BIPOC community. So it's one of those things like they create these narratives. Kids die the most and, you know, mass shootings are only like perpetrated by AR 15s. And they think AR stands for a assault rifle and all this other fucking dumb shit. Like, that's not the case. Like we can point over and over and over again. All you have to do is look at this weekend. Yeah, this weekend in gun free Chicago, two mass shootings within an hour, nine people dead, 41 people shot. The problem is not the guns. The problem is not the gun laws. The problem is the policing in those areas. And if you deleted the top five areas in America for gun violence, which are all Democrat controlled, we would shoot down as to one of the more peaceful countries. But whatever it's like, anyway, I want to see up. I want to tee up one more on the second and then and then we're off. And this one's for you, Brandon. I love you, buddy. So it's easier to buy a gun than it is to vote. And this this shows you that our morals are all off. Because I hear that I hear that a lot too. It's easier to buy a gun than it is to vote. So what do you have on that? No, I mean, I'll just say that I can go to any school or courthouse or civic building and I can pick up a gun at any point. I don't even have to show a driver's license or any form of state state issued or government issued ID and it just gets handed to me at will. I do this. I get my friends to do this. I go down to Home Depot and I pick up the guys that aren't registered and they do this. We do it all the time. Okay. And that's my regulated militia. That's my well regulated militia. And it's why I run this fucking neighborhood. Okay. So my god, this is why I follow you guys. Oh my god. This is why I follow you guys. What a great brand and then Brandon brings them all home and they polish his F 15 and speed us. So good. Get in there. Get in there. Get in there. Real nice and deep like I just finger my belly button while they do it. You know, real nice and deep. Like what movie is that? Oh fucking damn it. VCU baby. We're Jeremy Piven. Yeah, man. I'll get in there real nice and deep like they had the car wash for PCU. What's I did? Yeah. Shit was it? No, it was fucking shit. University. What about the college? Yeah. Yeah. PCU. Was it PCU? Yeah. Just in long. Now I got to know. Yeah, it was just in long. Oh my god. The internet will correct us. It is. It's going to. Accepted. Accepted. That's what it's called. It is the movie. Yeah. Oh, accepted. Oh, did they go to? Oh, they didn't go to PCU technology. Ask me about my winner. What a great movie. What it was. I think the PCU was with Jeremy Piven, but that was a different one in the same sort of genre as a college man. Exactly. It was also good. What was the song from that one? All right, I'll figure it out. I'll figure it out. I'll figure it out. You're listening. Yeah. Well, I thought you could move on to the third. But yeah, you're no, no, you're good Brandon. You're riffing for a little bit. You got to look. So you go out, you pick up all these kinds wherever you can get on. You bring all your your Mexican friends. I do. And here's the other thing that's really cool about this because it is easier is it is easier is I mail them out to people. And I take no, there's no accountability for it. Right. And it's kind of like a pyramid scheme. I will mail them out and then to five of my friends and then five of my friends mailed them out to five more friends. And if I, and that's it's kind of how I arm my community. It's really bad. And if I don't think they got them, I'll actually go door to door and hand them the gun and be like here. All you have to do is figure out a registration card. All you have to do is fill out this one card for me and give it back to me and I'll take care of it. It's registered. Nope. You got it. Actually, if you're from a school, I'm over there all the time just leaving them on the swings, the slides. I just, you know, maybe near the trash cans stuff like that. Yeah. Wow. I do. You don't you don't have to show a driver's license or anything. I don't have that boy's racist. That's racist. That's racist. Hope that's what racism is. That's what racism is. Right. The reason why. Okay. That I don't have to do that is because there are kids that go to these schools that are from less fortunate communities that don't know how to use a computer. Okay. They don't even know what a computer is. They don't even know the words. They can't read. Listen, right. I went in there one time and I was like, hey, if you go online and register, they're like, what's online? I'm like, I will make this even easier for you. Just give me your address. I'll mail you their like address address address address. Do you mean the address? The street. Yeah. You said, yeah, it's where your dad lives. And they were like, right. Exactly. I'm just going to quote Dan Holloway real fast. Oh, wow. June teeth is in the same week as Father's Day. It's a Dan Holloway quote. I thought that was pretty good. I love Dan. I don't, I can't take I can't take credit for it. So do I. He's in love with so many guys. By the way, hey, there's no saw. There is no safe spaces here guys. Yeah. If you don't get offended while you're. Everybody's getting everybody's getting it. Yeah. Right. This is a free fire zone. My favorite place to go. Back in the comments, as much as you get, like the guys, you know, like to go there too. Because those guys find it really hard for them to to vote to, you know, the gay guys in the lives community. Mm hmm. They know how to use computers because there's porn on computers, but. Fantastic. Yeah. All right. So, yeah. This is why you got to bring Brandon in from the top, right? Seems like, yeah, you got everyone else away. He doesn't he reigned in. Listen, you got to, you got to leave them. You can't just let them off. Yeah, man. I would say something and ruin all of our lives. So I do, I do want to, I do want to preface this one just a little bit. So the third amendment, a lot of people think is not very important. So I read it. And then I want to tee it up for you guys to talk about why it is very, very necessary and like heading into where we're getting ready to be. This is, it may come back in a big, big way. So the third amendment says no soldier shall in time of peace be quartered in any house without the consent of the owner nor in time of war. So it doesn't, it doesn't matter when no soldier, but I got, I got a, I got a, like a critique for the founding fathers. Like you wrote that. Yeah, you wrote that confusingly. There's no reason to say time of peace or time or like at no time. Yeah, at no time. They could have, it could have been one since I feel like that was James Madison going like, who needs to be a little beefier. Like I can't stretch it across the whole paper, probably. But a big point and Brandon, I want to serve this one up to you like very quickly. It seems to be very interesting what States like Maryland and New York are saying with being able to, you know, there's certain people that shouldn't be here in the United States, but they're saying, oh, well, you should bring these people into your home if you're a good American. Right. So I'm just going to tee that one up. And then I have to take a, a pea break, but you guys, you guys, we have from here. Oh, yeah, we do. Yeah, you know, I don't think the government has a right to tell me who I can have in my home at all, especially people that aren't even fucking citizens of this country, especially when you have situations going on, going on, like Lake and Riley, these people that come into this country from the Southern border from South America or China, wherever the fuck they're coming from, you know, tell me I'm going to house them because they're just quote unquote unhoused people because you can't stay homeless. And you can't say that they're illegal, even though they are illegal and people can be illegal, right? If your country doesn't have a border, then it's not sovereign. Couldn't be can't tell me I have to house anybody, let alone people that aren't even citizens of this country. So the fact that they would even ask or suggest, you know, I would tell you to go fuck yourself, I guess. That's what I would say. So right. Well, I mean, so again, you know, I love being called a conspiracy theorist, I like to think I'm an independent analyst and I follow, you know, the logical steps here, right? So let's talk about the logical steps. So Biden needs new voters. The country is turning like allegedly, let's just follow me for this hypothetical. So the the replacement theory is racist, right? To say that we're bringing people in to replace a large majority of the voting population by giving ethnic or cultural diversity, which hasn't worked in Europe. But that's what it is. We're supposed to like it. That's why it's being crushed down on throats, right? So let's say that that was a thing. You'd open the border, you get as many people in as possible illegal immigrants. And that's what we're talking about here, people that did not follow the process of not talking about a Cailese, there's a certain number of a Cailese every year. That's not who we're talking about that word has been perverted. It's called semantic overload. When I say a Cailese, you think anybody that walks their ass from Guatemala into the thing, no, that's not a Cailese, you have to have an actual reason why you're seeking asylum. Are you a political prisoner or you a prisoner or whatever? All these people are just saying that because the word got out on TikTok that that's what you say to get into America. So I would open the border, I would get as many of those people in, and then I'd start talking about amnesty plans. Well, this is a weird thing, but half a million immigrants could eventually get US citizenship under a new Biden plan. So on June 19th, which is today, President Joe Biden is going to take an executive order to be like, Hey, if you came in here illegally, but you're somehow married to a citizen, you're good. He also is going to give blanket amnesty to like seven or six or seven other protected classes. There's also passed a citizenship for all these other people. So when you start putting the strings together, you're like, all right, so let's back it all the way up for how important that I think this is for the third. Let's go back to COVID. What we do, we kicked out patriots, 8000 service members, because they didn't want to take an experimental medical treatment. It's not a vaccine. They got kicked out over it. 100%. So then you start degrading everybody. The recruiting numbers are way down testosterone is way low. Thanks to your impact on the American diet. We can't recruit enough people. We start that we raised the age recently to 42. We're starting to talk about, Hey, if you want to get in, we don't give a shit. If you smoked weed, right? It's a long time coming out as we're trying to get in. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. But like, that's where you're like, okay, wait, we're starting to move all these things. We set all these things. And now we're trying to get all these people in. Well, what I would do is I would replace them with a willing group of people that were grateful to me. I don't know immigrants. Well, there's no way that they'd be able to serve in the military. You're fucking wrong. Because before this all happened, Biden went in and was like, Hey, immigrants, there's a path to citizenship inside the United States military. You can just go serve in there. So we're going to give you policing people. He's going to give you a pay raise, 19.5%. So, Hey, illegal immigrants. Here's a job. I just gave a 19.5% pay raise to in the NDAA. You can get in there without your papers. When you're done, we'll give you citizenship. Oh, by the way, vote for Joe Biden. And if there's a problem, maybe you look at the people that are talking about being a conservative and you report them. That's how you replace the military. And then, oh, by the way, we don't have places for these people. Biden has already said, fuck you to the Supreme Court. He said, fuck you to the Constitution. You think you wouldn't. They're already asked. Here's my point. They're already asking governed governors and mayors are already asking you to, Hey, please, we have all these immigrants put them in your house. They're asking you to quarter people that may or may not be soldiers because it's an invasion. They're asking you to quarter people. How long does the government ask you? Dude, I'll say, I'll say two things about this, man. Not everybody is made the fucking same at all. You come from another country, you come here and you're expected to assimilate. If I go visit France or I go visit Germany, I'm expected to assimilate, right? Not everybody is made the fucking same. Not everybody is compatible with Western society. The other thing here about people getting the right to vote and replacing us is a very, very old idea, literally fucking Aristotle wrote about it and said that that tyrants prefer the company of non citizens to citizens at their table because they're more easily manipulated and will do what you want. This isn't a new idea. This isn't something that has just happening now in the United States because the border is wide open. This is something people have been noticing and writ down and fucking hammer how dare you notice. You can't notice. The noticing is a problem, dude. Yeah, I've got a fucking, really what I should do is just fucking kill myself. I guess, you know, I don't know. No, no, stop. Hey, I would stop. Hey, stop. Quit it. Yeah. No, let's not. Come on, man. I'm here for it. No, I'm not going to, but I just want to say it, but no, it's, it's, you can get in a Canada. It's super easy to get over there. And then once you get in the region, I'm going to Canada is for the Oilers girl. That's it. Okay. Have you seen those, bro? I might immigrate for that reason and that reason. I am a happily married man dog. Don't hit me with that horny jail. I'm out of here. I'm good dog for legal purposes. I got, I got enough problems in my past. I can't have problems in the future too. I'm trying to do some things, man. I got to try to be a better person. I saw about that and I was like, that's disgusting. What's, what's the link? Right. Listen, the Edmonton Oilers asking for a friend name to the Edmonton milkers. I'm just going to tell people to stay away from it. I'm going to be like, hey, you see this link? Don't look at it, dude. It's only 34 seconds long, dude. Do you like from the description? Right. You can't see, right? No, it's a tale of zodas time, man. People have been talking about this and tyrants replacing citizens with non citizens. Rome did it. Rome started letting people they'd call barbarians into their military and started having a fuckload of issues, right? They started lowering the standard. These are things that you can just paint a picture and look at time after time after time, right? It's not new, bro. And it's all resulted in the same fucking thing, you know, heading on these paths. They're not good. That's all I got to say about it. Did you guys see this headline Seattle is moving to allow non citizens to sign up to be city cops? They're following the vote. So yeah, they're glad that the Gaborhood is finally going to have some real, you know, authority walk around. It's probably going to be surreal, which is okay, you know, Seattle is so bad. Yeah, like, I'm going to tell this story. I was in Seattle the very first night before all the riots happened. So the the preface to Chaz and chop and whatever else. So I was I was on a trip. It's whatever that was. It was either 2019 or 2020. I'd gotten back, right? Uh, my girlfriend at the time, my wife now was like, hey, uh, I'll come up and meet you. I'll come up and grab you from the airport at sea tack. She was like, there's this really cool place downtown. We'll order out because COVID was going on. So we were like, shit. Okay, cool. She's like, but they're doing carry out. So you go, but she's like, it's a high class restaurant. I was like, type. So it's right downtown. So we drive downtown. It's a fucking ghost town. And they look around and this is going to sound gay to everybody else. Sorry. But my spidey sense, my spidey sense started tickling. I look around and I go, bro, this doesn't feel right. We parked. There's nobody in the parking garage. We drive pet like the arctic store, dead bird gang is right downtown Seattle. We drove by it. There was it was boarded up. And I was like, what the fuck is happening, man? We park in this parking garage, not a soul there, except for a tr like a SUV from the police department pulls up and two dudes get out and they're fully kitted up and two dudes have a long gun. I was like, I was like, this looks serious. What is I was going for like three weeks? I was like, what? What the fuck are those two do? And they didn't know how to wear it. And it was obvious. I was just like, what the fuck are you two doing? So we go and we get food and we start walking out. And no shit, we heard explosions. And we heard like screaming and stuff. That's how close to downtown. We were and I was like, we need to leave right now. I was like, we need to do a, we need to get out. That was the first night that was when Seattle got burned to the ground, not to the ground. But they started all of the the Seattle bullshit, like Seattle and Portland started their bullshit. But I literally landed there that night. That was one of the stories we tell in our relationship is, you know, we landed there. But, um, you know, I will tell you, like, Seattle feels like an infiltration. These places feel like an infiltration that feels like an invasion. San Francisco's the same fucking way, dude. Anytime I stop going, but the last time I went, I tell you what, it was enough to make me see, I'm never coming back here ever fucking again. It's not even the streets, dude. It's the poo walking around. Yeah. So just just in case, just in case people think that I'm full of shit, I got it pulled up right here news nation dot com news nation now dot com Seattle police recruiting DACA recipients to become officers. They're just the 61 57 allows dreamers to apply for civil service jobs across Washington. Yeah. You know who DACA recipients are? Non citizens illegal aliens. What, what word do I say to make you mad? Like, that's what they are. They're here illegal. Legal's not real. Okay. We got them. Wow. We got a Jesus Christ. Oh my she, I don't know what else do what is it? What do you want me to say? Like, did you? I mean, it is. I mean, at this point, there are serans and Chinese and Mogadishian and whatever else. The problem is all these countries in South America will let people come in without any sort of vetting and then they just go into these countries like Ecuador or Venezuela and then they just move up north. So those people down there really need to fucking start helping us out too. There needs to be some. I mean, I want to know. I want to know from both of you guys. What do you. Yeah, what incentive do they have? None. Yeah. Right. We're not paying them. No, we're not. Okay. I really want to know. What do you guys think about this whole fucking, you know, trump thing about the direct action teams going in and taking out these these fucking cartels and shit? I verbally do a lot of things. I might I might put in a transfer to seven special forces. I mean, like if we can go and we're going to go after Jose like in his his compound home ground and like put a stop to it, I'll be there to do it. That's not happening. I mean, it's the same as like him saying he's going to execute people on the front lawn of the White House. It's him speaking as a guy like, yeah, of course, I'm going to send kill teams to that. Of course, I'm going to execute dissidents on the front porch. Like he's he's good Trump and he's bad Trump. And did he say that? Did you say something about it? Oh, yeah. I didn't. I didn't see that one. No, it came out. Yeah. So he used to he used to joke about like, Oh, my God, this guy. I'm going to fucking execute him on the front place, the White House. But now everybody has to deal with that everybody's got to fucking deal with like, okay, it's hyperbole. But it's the thing about the the Trump thing is it's so polarizing is guys like us would be like, Oh, you want to send kill teams in Mexico? Fuck. Yeah, dude. Like, okay, yes, we're saying that. But that's not exactly serious, right? The average fucking dumb shit American can't distinguish the fact when he was like, Oh, yeah, women will let you grab him by the pussy, which was a allegory for powerful men and how they affect women. It was locker room, talk, whatever, like, I want to I want to hold you up right there. And then I'll let you consider your with your point, because what he said was, if you go back and listen to the entire context of his quote, he says, when you're this rich, when you're this powerful, he goes, women will let you do anything that you would want to do. You could. He didn't say, yeah, you should or I do or yeah, or I do. He said, you could grab him by the pussy. He said that. Yes. And that was the context of what he was saying, which I'm just adding fire to your furnace right now is because it's like, he didn't say I do this. He was like, no, when you're this powerful, you could do these things like, right? Oh, let's do it. So man, none of us have never met like a person that chases, you know, we've never met a buckle bunny. We've never met a special operations chick that hangs out at Charlie Mike's just looking for a greeper. Oh, you greeper made. Oh, you have my baby. You want to come and then you would take me to America. You have my baby now. Like, yeah, I send money back to my family and then I move back when I get the. I just, I have an internet problem. I got to go. Cool. Now, no, no, no, no. No, you're totally right. But like smooth brains out there can't distinguish between like policy prescriptions and shit that this dude just says because I'd like, I love Donald Trump. I'm voting for him. I'm voting for him. I want him to win for a number of different reasons. But the dude says some dumb shit that you should not, he should not be taken literally. He should be taken seriously because he'll fucking murder you as you drive in your car in a rack. Thank God, cuz he himself, Lamani, you're fucked. Like, I fucking murdered you and then went back to dinner. He should be taking seriously. You should not be taken literally because you take the car. He died. He died. He cried. Right. But he should be taken seriously. He should not be taken literally. Like that that's the thing here. And I can't remember what got us off on the Trump thing. It was you asking me the question, but it was. Yeah. Like to say like, Oh, well, you know, Trump's hilarious. I don't care. He is hilarious. And he always performs. And he's that witty and that smart. But for him to be like in a meeting, like, imagine your boss. I've had a boss look at me before I was in a fucking talk one time where we had like no shit. Jag told us that we couldn't shoot a guy on target. Like it was a fucking no kidding reaper. And we had the control guy right there that could have pushed the button to kill that dude. And Jag was like, listen, we can't justify that. We all knew that it was fucked up. It was a legal issue. And all this. And the guy looked at this was like, I don't know. I could probably fucking kill him though. Like what if I just and he like made it move with his elbow? That's a fucking dark humor joke, but it lightens the situation. You're telling me Trump is in a situation room here and about the worst things in America is like, Oh, this guy is this guy wants to kill me. All right. Well, let's execute him on the lawn. Then that's actually a good part of that meeting. That's actually a funny thing that the guy said. And then we're taking him literally to mean I'm executing dissidents. Oh, really? That's rather ironic considering the number one fucking candidate for president by polling is about to get put in jail by his political opponents. It brings up a really good ironic to that. If you're on the left, they play this inside, outside inside game, they do it with everything they do with politics, they do it with humor to where it's like, they'll say exactly what they want to do. But if they catch somebody using sarcasm, which is the greatest form of sad that's ever existed, then they'll be like, you actually want. Oh my God, this guy said, kill all the gays. And you're like, it was it was a joke, dude. Meanwhile, Kathy Griffin poses online with a severed head, right? And it's like, Oh, but but we understand, right? Because I'm a mature human being that I'm like, okay, she's being hyperbolic, hyperbolic, symbolic, like she's getting clicks and views, whatever, right? Right. I get it. And that it leads to the idea that can we, and this is one of the things that we actually want to do on this channel. And that's why I love having you on here. And it's like, we're absolutely like one of the things that is that we're trying to do is move the needle back to same times, you should be able to shift the over 10 window. Let's just be able to have a conversation around the campfire around beers. And joke and laugh about like, what's a funny thing that I heard one of my dudes say he was like, Oh, actually, I can tell this story, because it's in his Medal of Honor citation. So we have a Medal of Honor recipient from first group that was involved in operation. I know. Oh, I mean, I don't, I don't, oh, I haven't, I haven't brought this up in an hour and a half of talking, but I just happen to work with a fucking Medal of Honor hero. You fucking dickhead. I don't work with him. I said he's in my organization. Here's some shit. So he, so he, he, he was involved in this, uh, this operation and then post operation where he got his Medal of Honor, uh, citation from he was walking around and they were having to collect. He killed a bunch of terrorists. They were having to collect biometric data from the terrorists. So a homeboy was running around and I'll leave this for people to go find without saying names. He was running around and he was taking up severed limbs and hands from these terrorists to collect biometric data from them. He didn't have the, he didn't have the biosled with him and he was putting them in his dump pouch and his pockets so that he could like take them back to that point where he could like biometrically get them all enrolled. And there was like, there was people that were like going into the on base psychiatrist and they were like, I saw this green beret running around with severed hands in his pockets, just hanging out and they were like, they were like, it F it F, it F me up. And then eventually in order for them to put in his Medal of Honor citation, he had to go back and sit down with the psychiatrist. And so he was just telling his story and he was like, yeah, so there we were. And I'm in the 50 cow and I parked the truck outside the breach in the wall and I mowed down a bunch of dudes and for all emotion, you know, like the, the, the, the situation was over and then they were like, Hey, we have to collect biometric data. So he was like, I was walking around and I'm like, I wasn't trying to stay there. So I'm trying to leave. So everybody just stay there. Like, what am I going to do? And I have all these pockets in my fucking cargo pants. So I just put the hands in there, you know, right? So I collected them and he goes to go back to the same thing to do, you know, this, like, hands in my pocket. I sort of do it. It sounds like an E four. If you if you looked at an E four, you're like, I'm trying to get away from here. What do you need me to do 30? What do you need me to do? Put hands in my pockets? Yeah, give me that guy's brain. Okay. Hey, wait, brain. Oh, wait, wait, wait, we gotta label these brain number one, lower pocket, brain number two, upper pocket, hand number one, by the door, hip pocket. Okay, brain number four, other hip pocket. Yeah. So hopefully he goes back and be like, I'm fucking out of here. And the, uh, the psychiatrist looked at it and he was like, Oh my God, you're the guy. And he goes, what do you mean? I'm the guy, you know, because you're the guy that everybody else came here giving secondary drama, secondary a hundred percent. My reason for getting off on that, that story is because it's like, we don't get off on that story. I'm sorry. Go ahead. Heading down that rabbit trail. I mean, don't step around the fact that you said you got off. I mean, I want to know too. I mean, I'm talking about how much you man loves a good handy. I love it. I love it. Gonna call this one the Italian hand job. Hey, I like it. Yeah. It would be closer to like a Bangkok kid job. But yeah, okay. So anyway, so I came in here. You came on the floor. It was beautiful. So anyway, focus. The reason I had it, the reason I headed down that rabbit trail is because it's like, these are, these are the type of stories that we tell each other around the campfire and you have dark humor and we laugh about it. And it's part of like being like the, the male warrior culture, right? But the thing is, it's like you sit around, you have beers, you tell these types of stories, you go into work the next morning, ultimate professional, next mission, next thing. Let's give the con up. Let's give the premission brief. Let's go out. What happened yesterday doesn't buy you any buy-in for tomorrow. Hey, that was a good mission. Hey, you fucked up. Oh, my bad. You know, whatever. And it's like everybody, boom, mission faced. We go back and we do it again tomorrow. Same, you know, like it doesn't change anything. And then it's like, if you were to go back to just even the 90s, construction workers, plumbers, blue collar dudes sitting around, right? Like having some beers after work, tell some stories, laugh. Like, the jokes might turn sexist. They might turn misogynist. You have the conversations, right? It doesn't mean anything that you're saying around the campfire tonight has anything to do with what's going on tomorrow at work. And then you wake up tomorrow, you go in, you clock in, and it's like, right back at work, continent, professional, right? And then we go hands in pocket. We go about our day because it's like, because it's like, one of the things that we have at our disposal as men is that we can compartmentalize that job and go, now I'm not at work. Now I'm here. Now we can laugh and joke and have a good time. We do that. And then we go back tomorrow. And it's like, I don't think that the you know, the exogenous hormone taking, you know, turd cutting, scissoring left can figure this out because everything for they are a humorless culture because everything is it's so it's so bad all the time. The left the left really cannot mean, right? They can't exist. It can't exist. And that's the whole point that I'm trying to make by telling all those stories, because it's like, we consider on and do this. And I have to go into work tomorrow. And I'm going to do it. And I'm going to be a consummate professional. And then it's like, whoop. And then it's like, if you think the person I am on podcast is the person I am in the, well, no, I am the same person in the team room. You think it's the person I am, I am in front of command, like, no, it's not the same person. I'm a professional. Well, and also like, people seem to think like this fucked up thing. And it's an internet thing that I don't understand is like, Hey, man, you understand that literally everybody acts differently at work. They think that because like, people can't understand how I could possibly hate the government, but absolutely want to pour all of my experience into somebody that's trying to go into the military. They're like, Oh, well, shouldn't you fucking hate them? Shouldn't you tell them not to go be like, who the fuck am I to tell this person not to go pursue their dream? That's their dream. Man, I'll give them the information. But again, I'm not going to defend the information. If you take and you're like, Hey, man, I got it. I'm going to internalize this. But I still want to go be a PJ. I'll be like, you know what, I'll fucking kill myself to help you go be a PJ. I will fuck. I'll give you can have my phone number. We can talk about it. I care about you. Go ahead. People cannot rectify those two things in their head at all. Like they can't hold two thoughts inside of their head at all. And it's a perfect explanation of what you just led up to, Chris, which teed me up for this response because you're awesome. And I appreciate you having me on the podcast to look good. But it's exactly what you what you just said is like, people can't understand how you can just completely align yourself like to an actual like cause, but not sign on to every part of it. Well, there's that. And then there's the whole, there's the private me and the public me. Right. Because it's like, right nowadays, it's like, we talked about it really like, do I, how do I feel morally and how would I legislate? Those are two separate things. Exactly separate things. They're really good point. Like if you want me to pretend to be, you want me to pretend to like run for Congress, they're going to be some things that I'm morally fucking opposed to. And I try to make it as good as I possibly can. But I realized that I hold a hard line. I'm never getting elected on it. Okay. Well, then you're going to have to do that. And that's why I hate politicians, by the way. Because that's part of the game. I love you. There's friends that I have, but it's just the game. You have to play the game to be successful. And that means you're going to give up part of it. I'm not about that shit. Those people are a tool. Right. Like morally and as a Christian, I want everybody to come to Christ and I want everybody to go to heaven. But I'm not going to morally legislate my Christianity into a theocratic United States. Right. I'm going to, I'm going to legislate a United States where you can follow your false religion. It breaks my heart morally because I don't want to see you go to hell. But I want to see you live in a free United States where you can do whatever you want to do and go that direction, but also put laws into place where it's like your freedoms and your rights don't pick up where somebody else's leaves off. You both have equal rights that protect both of you. And we have to keep them apart. It does not apply to speech because you can say anything you want. Because if you were to say that you're not allowed to proselytize or spread your religion, then you're literally saying like a Muslim can't talk to a Christian, a Christian can't talk to a Muslim and a truney can't talk to anybody. Right. So it's like, we can't say that. But what I what I am saying is like, no, the government will not cram down top down how we are to speak and how you are to live your life and what you're allowed to do to follow whatever God that you have to follow. Right. So I think that catches this up to where we are. I think we're getting ready to go into the fourth, aren't we? Man, we're only on the fourth. We're on the fourth. We are because we were trying to get to the we're trying to get to the six is what we'd said. Yeah. Well, let's do this. One break it up and do a two-parter. Well, we're gonna have to I feel like man, the fourth. That's a lot. Just saying. Yeah, that's gonna be an hour conversation on its own. It is. Let's do a two-parter. I like it. I like it. Okay. Let's talk about the fourth. We'll pause it there. I feel like we've got a good flow. We do. And then from there, we'll come back. So the fourth amendment. Do you have it pulled up, Chris? I do. I can read it right now. So no person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land of naval forces. All right. So we have the the law, the sea coming in there or in the militia. When in actual service and time of war or public danger, nor shall any person be subject for the same events to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb, nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. Jesus put up. Sorry. I had to nor shall private property be taken for public use without just compensation. Okay. We're going to talk about all this. I'm going to start it off with, I found a way. I'm going to tell you a personal anecdote. My son William and I used to ride the jiu-jitsu together. And we used to have a prejits turn up song. Okay. And I like it was a thing for what? It was, I'll tell you what, like sometimes it was like super like lame because I was like, man, this kid as like, you know, eight, nine, 10 year old thinks this song is cool. He wants to get pumped up to this. But as he got older, his music choice got better and he would start like including stuff. And then he'd be like, everyone's a while, he'd be like, dude, I got the prejits turn up song. And I'd be like, all right, fine, play it. And he played it. And I was like, I got the sting face on. I'm like, oh, I took one of these opportunities and I used the Jay Z song to illustrate my point about the Fourth Amendment. I'd like to read you the lyrics because it's exactly how I described to my son, William, how you can love the policeman, the actual person inside that uniform is pulling you over. And you can tell him to fuck off and he's not allowed to search your shit. And here's how Jay Z said it. The year is 94. My trunk is raw. He means he's got coconut in my rear view mirror as a motherfucking law. I got two choices. You've never been raped. It's not, that's not true. Because we all know who Jay Z is with. I got two choices. You all pull over or I bounce on the devil, put the pedal to the floor. Now I, I don't want to see a highway chase with Jay. I got a few dollars I can, I can fight the case. So I pull over to the side of the road. I, he says, son, do you know what I'm, what I'm stopping you for? I said, I don't know, because I'm young and I'm black and my hats real low. Do I look like a mind reader, sir? I don't know. Now this is important. The policeman did not announce himself or why he pulled him over. That's bullshit. Jay Z was right to respond by saying, oh, are you profiling me? Are you being a dickhead? I don't know. State your calls for being here. But that is the classic police approach though to the car. Isn't it? Son, you know why I pulled you over today? Because I'm not here to talk about you. It's the only reason they ever ask you that is, right? We have the Air Force cop here. The only reason to ever ask somebody that as a, as a law enforcement officer is because what? Brandon, I want you to incriminate yourself. God fucking damn it. And that's the threat of the fucking episode. Why would we trust these institutions? So then Jay Z looks at these mother fuckers. Oh, well, I'll bury the lead. Then Jay Z looks and he goes, Hey, um, oh, am I under arrest of side? Guess the moment he goes, well, you were doing 55 and 54 licensed in registration. Step out of the car. Are you carrying a weapon on you? I know a lot of you are. I ain't stepping out of shit. All my papers legit. Oh, would, well, would you mind if I look around your car a little bit? Jay Z was like, Nah, dog. All my papers legit. My trunk is locked in the back. And I know my rights. You're going to need a warrant for that. That is a perfect guy. Like I told my son, I was like, no, no, no. And then the cop says, that's actually released a sink. No, it is. Yeah. Oh, well, then, uh, we'll see how smart you are when the canines come. I got a prop, I 99 problems, but a bitch ain't one. So I love that. I know that song now. I actually know that line. There you go. Yeah. But that I literally like that was a pre-jip pre-jits turn up song that my son was like, Hey, and I was like, Hey, here's the deal. I was like, he's got to tell you why he pulled you over. If he can't tell you, like he said, 50, well, he was like 55 and 50 or I was like, yeah, but what if there is people doing 65 speed and buy and why do you pull you over? And William was like, my 10 year old was like, well, that's not right. And I was like, you're right. And he was like, and then like the cop is asking you, I want to search your car. No, for what? Why? Well, I just want to make sure there's no weapons. Okay. I'm telling you there are none. Right. Okay. You just made me think of these fucking videos that have come out recently, these FBI agents going to people's doors over social media posts or what they have to say about kids getting fucking genital genital surgery and shit. And they're like, yeah, you better fuck around and find out. Show up at my door, dog. Right. Are those level four plates? No, but why are you here? What do you want to talk to me about? And they're like, well, I want to come in sit down and have a conversation. Well, not on your ring camera. And what I'm supposed to say is probably unconstitutional. Every single one of those videos, those guys say some shit like that, bro. Because first off, if that's you going door to door and doing that shit, I just want you to know that you're the you're a modern fucking red coat. You're a brown shirt problem. You're a fucking brown shirt. Literally the Gestapo, bro. Crystal knocked all that shit. That's you, homie. That's that's you. I had asked yourself, would you have been a Nazi back in the day? The answer I would make it real simple for you is yes, if that's you going door to door. There you go. Go ahead, Chris. Everybody everybody throws their their chips in when when things start getting weird and a lot of people, it's easy to come out on the side of the of or come out on the side of things that seems like, well, this is the society that's going to go forward. So I have to go along to get along. And to tie a thread back to the revolution, you guys would have been Tories. Well, the Brits are here where British citizens, you know, what's going on is wrong. But, you know, it's just like, this is the way things are. And I'm just telling you, you have another word for that. It's because because everybody likes to think they would be a patriot. So you go back and you actually like immerse yourself in the history of what it was to be a patriot. And when these guys said I pledge my life, my fortune, and my sacred honor as a man, and they put their names on that document and they mailed it to King George himself. Every single one of them was going, my life, they're going to kill me. And like King George will have me killed in a terrible way. And your and your family, your children, right. My race is from the world. And my sacred honor as a man, I know an all 55 of them said, and my favorite one was not even a voting member of the First Continental Congress. John Hancock, a lot of people don't remember was John Hancock. Yeah, first. It's why it's why he signed it so big. You hurt like, okay, I got, I got, you hurt my soul for a second. He said that I was like, I got a like, I got a pang. But, uh, yeah, if you guys think that's true, then you should just sign off right now. Don't keep listening. But, uh, he was what why I love why I love John Hancock so much is because he's a non voting member of the First Continental Congress. He is gaveling the floor. And when they finally, when, um, I believe it was so Virginia comes in, Virginia votes first, Virginia secedes. Then we go through Massachusetts is already on board. The bulk of the Northeast was already on board. Then we come to North Carolina. Uh, South Carolina was the biggest holdout. North Carolina cucked to South Carolina the whole time. It was a, it was a really hilarious tower, uh, vacuum that was happening back then. Georgia actually flipped first, which then actually turned the South toward the, the thing of revolution. Um, and so as all these states are flipping and they're starting to get them and they're, and they're coming in, um, the final vote comes in, which they were waiting on New York, which a lot of people don't realize. They say July 4th, 1776. Technically the last delegate to come writing in New York is always going to be a problem. It's all you're saying on July 10th. New York finally came in on July 10th, but they got word. I like letter New York. Yeah. The word came in in a letter form and said he was going to vote for independence. So, so they signed it. And then John Hancock, because he was looking at the document in front of him as the gavel swings the gavel and says the vote is in for independence. May God have mercy on our souls and then swings the document around and because he's the one and he, and so this goes back to a thing that we were talking about before Aaron too, about people just being consonant professionals. John Hancock, I'm sure was a man that was absolutely pro independence the whole time, but could you imagine being so for something and winning your heart? Like your heart is so yearning for something and you want to see it, but it's like he, as a non voting member, kept himself completely free of debate during the entire debate for independence and said, if I'm to be a man of integrity and to see the nation go the way the nation should go under God. And that's what he said, then I cannot exert my will on this. I was elected to be the chair of the Congress. And I have to, I have to execute my duties according. Could you imagine that type of man now? He was the president of the Second Continental Congress. When we'd be so lucky, Second Continental Congress, thank you for not first second. Thank you for that. But it's like, could you imagine it's like, just give me a president like that now that's just like so, so above the fray. That's just like, I'm duly elected and I'm here to represent a few times. And lead, lead the United States of a country, right? Save the USA. That's right. But guys, we got to get together for a number two. We do. It's all good. But anyway, I love the, I love the point where he swings the gavel. He turns the document around. And then he goes, if this is to be the will of the Congress, in the dead middle of the document. And then it's famously quoted of him. Let's see if King George can read that. Boom. Puts his pin down, slides it back around, and sends it out. And he goes, let the delegates sign. Just get exactly. Yeah. Because if he didn't go even at the whole sign, he was chairing it. My God. Let King George see this check. Check that out. Back checkers. The word cock is in his name. That's right. Yeah. Take that. Spin that cringe, John Pierre, you piece of shit. That chick is 51. No hate to her fucking skincare routine. Oh, she's 50. One dude. Dude. Dude. Dude. Google it. Google it right now. I'm excited. Black don't crack. Apparently black don't crack. I was gonna say the same thing. Hey, I'm not mad at the skincare routine. Look it up. Although in that less in the speech where she was saying like cheap fake or whatever, she'd be looking like, um, oh, what's his name? Wesley Snipes from the day, but like with an erasure said, that's what I was thinking. I was kind of like blade Wesley Snipes. Are we talking like, Tommy, you got distracted. How old is Korean John here? She's 49. She's 49. I just, she's not 49. She's like, she's a Leo, wop, wop. August 13, you know, that's why she's such a bad deal. 49. That's still pretty good. That's I'm telling you, skincare routine is on point. She's a lesbian. She'd like you, Chris, you little piece of shit. That's why it's all that. It's all that vagina. It is. That doesn't make you know, lesbians get divorced at 76%. Number one, cause abuse. So do you think she beats her wife or do you think her wife beats her? That's why she gets up on that. I'm just here to watch. The way she gets up because I like college. She's one doing the swinging dog. The same. Well, either way. We pulley pulpit for a reason. I said, I said, I'm going to the press briefing today. We're done at the fourth. We get, I got, we got, I'm going to get out of here. I got to get done. I got a whole drive back down thing. Let's do it. Let's do it. Part two. All right. Guys, we're going to do a part two. Talk about the rest of this shit. Aaron will come back looking flies. Fuck with the JZ lyrics again. At some point, you know, we will. There's no shortage of us. 99 problems, but hair palmate one. It's five pounds. That's right. Fiber dickhead. Jesus Christ. I'm where it's at. All right. You guys all love you. Thanks for having me on another installment. Absolutely, bro. You are welcome at any point in time. Another installment. I came with fire podcast. Appreciate y'all and we out.