Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Well, good evening, everyone, Welcome to Stinchfield. One thing that
has become clear to me with all these mass shootings
that we've seen over the last few months is that
the devil takes advantage of people's kindness. And the devil
went into this church of Latter day Saints' church over
the weekend in Michigan, and he walked in there, and
(00:40):
he took advantage of the parishioner's kindness. You know, when
he crashed his truck into the church, people went up
to him and started asking him for help, and instead
the shooter opened fire on them and then ultimately setting
the entire church ablaze.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Now, what would make someone do this?
Speaker 1 (01:02):
Obviously everything goes back to politics in today's day and age,
and I can't tell you that politics had anything to do.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
With this shooting. What I can tell you was it
certainly appears he had a deep hatred for Mormons. Why.
I have no idea, but.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
This is a city council candidate who was canvassing the
neighborhood and just a week or so ago ended up
speaking with the shooter.
Speaker 2 (01:33):
And it puts some light.
Speaker 3 (01:34):
On what happened Wednesday or Thursday. I'm running for city
council and I'm canvassing, and I had an address on
my map that I went to and I came across
the gentleman. He was very friendly and he had interacted
positive with me, and we got out of the vehicle.
We started just to talk and after a short while
the conversation went to the Church of Latter day Saints Mormonism,
(01:56):
and he just made the position multiple times that Mormons
are the Antichrist, and he, in not so many terms,
said that several times.
Speaker 1 (02:06):
Nobody on the right is pushing for the killing of anybody,
not Mormons, not Christians, not Jews, not Muslims, nobody. Okay,
So again everything becomes political. And because the shooter, who
was a marine veteran, crashed into the church with two
(02:26):
American flags in his truck, he's got pictures all over
wearing Camo. Well, of course the left pounced on all
of this, but I think the end result of this
comes down to the fact that this guy was a
deranged lunatic and there's very little coming out about him,
which is odd to say the least.
Speaker 2 (02:48):
Here's that city council candidate again.
Speaker 3 (02:50):
I think I want to reinforce that this is not
a blue or red issue. This is one percent personally
held beliefs. And again, this gentleman can me about his
past and about the ups and the downs.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
Oh did he go into his military background at all
or no?
Speaker 3 (03:06):
Well, he said he was a Marine and that he
was deployed overseas. I don't know if he was a
Rack or Afghanis, but he was of that age where
it was in the probably early two thousands. And again
he spoke about just some experiences with drug use.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
Was again he's been out of the Marines for almost
twenty years. Those around him say he suffered from PTSD.
But I hate bringing up PTSD in situations like this
because I know plenty of veterans that have PTSD that
are not violent individuals and don't go do something like
this that is not a symptom of PTSD. Now what
(03:40):
drugs he was hyped up on, One never knows that
could play a role in all of this. And let
me reiterate again, it is not our side that is
calling on people to go out there and attack ICE
agents and create violent situations. That's not where we are
our side. There are some interesting things that have surfaced.
(04:03):
His mother appears to be a Trump supporter, But you
can't connect somebody's mother to them.
Speaker 2 (04:08):
My mother's a liberal.
Speaker 1 (04:09):
If you read her Facebook post, you'd think I was crazy.
So this is a Facebook post from the shooter's mother.
Okay quote people lack accountability, then say you could have
talked to me.
Speaker 2 (04:22):
No, I couldn't.
Speaker 1 (04:23):
You don't listen, You deflect, You twist everything into an attack,
and then you play the victim conversations with you aren't healing.
They're exhausting, draining and emotionally suffocating. Now it's not clear
who that message was too. Was that to her son?
Did that set her son off in some way? Couldn't
have been a catalyst.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
We don't know.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
But the investigation continues, which is the most important part
of all of this. Here's Caroline Levitt.
Speaker 4 (04:52):
From what I understand based on my conversations with the
FBI director. All they know right now is this was
an individual who hated people of the Mormon face, and
they are trying to understand more about this, how premeditated
it was, how much planning went into it, whether he
left a note, All of those questions have yet to
be answered, but certainly will be answered.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
All right, So police were there fairly quickly. I believe
police saved lives that day, certainly engaging him and ultimately
taking him out. So I'm about solutions to this problem.
Taking Away guns is not the solution to this problem.
You will never take away all the guns. The bad
people will always have the upper hand. But putting more
(05:36):
good guys around the innocent, the people we need to protect,
will save lives. The more good guys you have, the
quicker you take out a bad actor. That to me
is common sense that the left doesn't see. Case in point,
this is a Michigan Democrat candidate for the United States Senate.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
That enough is enough.
Speaker 5 (05:57):
We need to have a conversation about gun violence.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
Right.
Speaker 5 (06:00):
The Second Amendment doesn't mean any gun for anyone, anywhere, anytime.
It means that we understand that there was of space
for this, but not this, not that people walk into
their church on a Sunday and get gunned down.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
And so we need to have that conversation. We need
to have it urgently. No we don't.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
And you've been trying to have that conversation for a
long time, Democrats, and you've lost over and over again.
Speaker 2 (06:22):
We need to.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
See churches places of worship, our schools have volunteer programs
where people trained for this. I know many churches here
in Texas that do just that, and I know examples
where that has saved lives because you had a volunteer parishioner,
an armed guard acting as an armed guard save.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
Lives right here in Texas.
Speaker 1 (06:44):
I want to bring in now to discuss this former
Secret Service agent.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
My good friend CJ. Joroff is back with us. CJ.
Welcome to the program.
Speaker 6 (06:52):
Good, even great. How you doing tonight?
Speaker 2 (06:55):
I'm good, CJ. So you live just down the road
for me.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
I'm in Dallas. You're in Rockwall, Texas. I know you're
a good Christian. You go to church, you are working
with your local church on how do we best protect
the parishioners. Can you lay on me exactly how you
see it? As a Secret Service agent, the best way
for any place of worship to protect themselves.
Speaker 6 (07:18):
So utilizing the skills that I acquired in the Secret Service,
call it a protective advance. I know how to safeguard
houses of worship, so the same way that I would
safeguard a venue that the President of the United States
was coming to or anyone else. We look at the
whole picture, from the inside out, from the outside in.
(07:39):
The big thing about that is and you hit the
hammer on the nail, hammer on the nail is It
comes down to training. You can't sit down and wait
for somebody else to do something for you. A lot
of churches have come and said, hey, help us safeguard
our parishioners. What do we need to do. Who do
we need to train? How do we need to train them?
(08:01):
To put them in places where God forbid is something
bad does happen, they can take the necessary actions. You
talked about the law enforcement, the response. That's the bottom line.
It's so hard to get people into law enforcement nowadays.
But the training that we're providing or is being provided
(08:22):
that I've also taken the alert training, Advanced law Enforcement
rapid Response. That's what saved lives on Sunday morning. That's
what made the difference.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
Do you think a program where you have parishioners that
are basically stationed as sentinels around the church would help.
Speaker 6 (08:45):
It's the physical deterrence. If someone sees someone watching them
or looking around constantly, being aware of everything that's going on,
it makes them more leary to do something. Unfortunately, I
don't know the rest of the story whether this individual
had conducted an advance beforehand to know the saut theories
(09:06):
within the Latter day Saints' church. But in doing so,
you put people to greet, You put people in certain
places around the actual sanctuary so that they're watching. They're
not just engaged, they're watching. It's a tough it's a
tough task to do, but it's very easily accomplished. It's
(09:28):
something I do every Sunday.
Speaker 1 (09:30):
I had heard rumblings that the Church of Latter day
Saints does not want guns in their church. Now I've
got to get that confirmed. That would make this a
gun free zone. We know people that are evil exploit
gun free zones. You can talk about this in a
way that when you protect the president. The NRA used
to get criticized all the time because they claimed it
(09:51):
was a gun free zone at an NRA annual meeting
when President Trump or another president would come in and speak.
In reality, it wasn't a gun free zone. There were
hundreds of guns in that room. They were in the
hands of law enforcement, plenty of guns there. We just
knew that those unknown could not carry a firearm. We
don't have the luxury of doing that at a church.
(10:11):
And I don't think you're going to be able to
put metal detectors up at a church all over the place.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
But if you train.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
Parishioners, how hard is it to put a program like
that in place?
Speaker 2 (10:21):
CJ.
Speaker 6 (10:22):
It's very very simple. In my personal business, I have
churches that come to me, they train at the range.
I help them with their skills and their fundamentals, and
I've even gone out and done advances at the church,
starting with each one of the security team and working
with the security team, we put them through a rigorous
(10:43):
firearms training program. Unfortunately, some weren't too happy with me
because their gun hand and skills weren't that good. So
I made the necessary advisement of Look, I wouldn't have
that person inside an area where you had to take
a shot. Put them outside all put them in another
area where their presence would be helped, would be seen,
(11:04):
and they can help. But you need people that can
put I call it point of a point of impact
rounds on target without hurting anyone.
Speaker 2 (11:13):
All right, last question for you.
Speaker 1 (11:15):
I'm sure you've had to question people have made threats
against the president. When you look at what little information
we have of this marine veteran and why he quite.
Speaker 2 (11:26):
May have gone in there. Do you make any assessments?
Speaker 1 (11:29):
Have you been able to break it down on what
you think was behind this guy's motives?
Speaker 6 (11:35):
Unfortunately, Grant, we have a lot of unstable individuals in
our society. For one reason or another. They have a
bone to pick with someone a excuse me, a governmental organization,
a individual party, and they use that as Okay, well
this is what I did, why I did. It boils
(11:57):
down to the motivation of the person. You can cast
and say, hey, it's any one thing, but in many
cases you'll never know. You'll never know, because what it
boils down to is if they have the desire to
want to hurt or harm someone, they can. But in
a case where you have armed individuals like we have
here in Texas, and you know it very well, a
(12:20):
lot of these churches have playing clothes security officers doing
exactly that. They are the watchdogs that are looking out
for the sheep. And we need more watch dogs out there,
properly trained.
Speaker 2 (12:34):
We sure do. And that is a great detern CJ. Jorff.
I so appreciate your insight on all of these things.
Thank you. So much for coming on tonight.
Speaker 6 (12:42):
Appreciate you, Grant, look forward to seeing you again soon.
Speaker 1 (12:45):
Absolutely, my friend. It's always a pleasure to hang out
with the great CJ. Jorffe. Okay, folks, I want to
turn now to the goal. Whether it's at a church
or whether it's on a city street, the goal should
be to stop violence.
Speaker 2 (12:58):
The goal should be to stop chaos and destruction.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
That is what President Trump is trying to do in
cities across America, including Portland. Now, so, folks, that's the
scene in Portland, Oregon. President Trump is going to said
about two hundred National Guard members to start to protect
(13:21):
that ice facility. You know, I have a confession to make.
I was not focused enough on Portland. This has been
going on for months there. They surround this place. They're
well funded, they're well organized, and quite frankly, they are
a danger to the complete city, the citizens of Portland,
and it's gotten real bad.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
Yet the mayor doesn't want any help.
Speaker 7 (13:46):
Let me repeat that this is an American city. We
do not need any intervention. This is not a military target.
The President will not find lawless us or violence here.
I've been so deeply disappointed to see the footage from
a half decade ago, recycled and then recycled again.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
I'm sure some outlets use it as an example, but
I can tell you this, mister Mayer, you do need
to help. Your city is dangerous and this video isn't
from a half a decade ago. That folks is a
violent goom pretending to shoot ICE agents. First off, who
(14:34):
in the world is that person's mom or dad shooting
at ICE agents with your fingers. That's not from twenty twenty.
This isn't from twenty twenty either. This is a post
millennial reporter trying to escape the mob.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
These people are awful folks.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
They're dangerous, and they are motivated to create chaos in
these cities because they get publicity over it.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
And in the end they have the room to riot.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
That's supposed to be a someplace called a protest zone,
but the world is a protest zone. To me, it's
a no go zone and it's anarchy because the police
have lost control. Well, I want to bring in now,
host of the Undivided podcast, Brandy Cruz is with us.
(15:38):
She is out in.
Speaker 2 (15:39):
Portland and is a great pleasure to have her on
the program.
Speaker 8 (15:42):
Brandy, welcome, yeah, I'm just shaking my head as you
were doing that introduction. You know, I was a TV
reporter in Seattle half a decade ago when Antifa took
over six blocks of the city and you know, downtown
was burning, and the same stuff was happening in Portland,
and they didn't say anything about it then either. So
well they're acting is if it were that bad today,
(16:03):
they would say something about it, but when it was
that bad half a decade ago, they didn't say anything
about it at all.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
All right, Brandon, what is your assessment on the street there?
The mayor wants to tell us everything's fine here. Portland's
a nice, safe city. We don't need the National Guard.
Speaker 8 (16:16):
Your assessment, well, look, you know, I've covered Antifa for
fifteen years and I've seen Antifa at its worst. I
don't think that we're seeing anything here that near's twenty twenty.
But I think what's severe about what's happening in Portland
is the longevity of it. This has been happening for
more than one hundred days. I was here last night.
At this time yesterday, there are about three hundred people
(16:36):
blocking the street. So if you look right behind me,
this is the ice facility, and this is the Sally
Port where all of the conflicts happened between Antifa other
demonstrators and federal agents and things got tents last night repeatedly.
I mean, federal agents would have to come out, they'd
be met with anger and rage and pushing and shoving.
(16:57):
It'd have to deploy less than lethal tactics. So the
reality is the City of Portland has shown that they've
abdicated their responsibility to keep this area of the city safe.
It should be their job to make sure that ICE
agents aren't harassed as they're coming and going. They're not
going to do that. So what's the alternative nothing? They
just do nothing. Trump should do anything. The Trump administration
(17:19):
has a right, as you know, to protect federal assets
and federal agents. So if the City of Portland isn't
going to do that, and they've made that pretty clear
of the last one hundred days, then there has to
be some sort of effort from the federal government to
do it. I almost think in my assessment is based
on the very small Portland police presence we saw yesterday
and that we've seen of the last one hundred days.
(17:40):
My assessment is Portland wants the responsibility to fall on
federal agents and the Trump administration to clear this because
they want to conflict. They want there to be violence,
and they want to use that to distract from the
many crises that they're failing to address right here in
their own cities.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
You know, it is amazing because because I think that's
exactly what Antifa wants. They want the conflict in the crisis,
and I think leadership, I think you're onto something.
Speaker 2 (18:06):
Leadership in Portland and Oregon.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
Want this chaos to take away from their failure, certainly
as a state. I'll ask you, the left wants to
pretend that Antifa doesn't exist, that it's an ideology, that
there's no such thing as a group of Antifa, even
though President Trump has dubbed this now a terror organization.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
Is it highly organized?
Speaker 1 (18:27):
Is it a group that we could put our hands around,
maybe put handcuffs on. Your assessment of Antifa as.
Speaker 8 (18:35):
A group, Yeah, My honest answer is it's difficult. Right,
There are some I mean this idea that it's a
figment of our imagination. I've been assaulted by Antifa more
times than I can count, most recently in Seattle outside
in ice facility. These are people who claim Antifa, they
call themselves Antifa. I mean they're chanting this is Antifa Land.
There are no police here, so there's a segment that
(18:56):
really does have organization and they absolutely plan, plot and terrorize.
That is what they're all about. And you know, identifying
them being able to prove that in any sort of
way where you can, I don't know, form some sort
of racketeering case or use a domestic terror label against them.
I do think it's a challenge to the federal government.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
You know.
Speaker 8 (19:18):
They're not like the motorcycle gangs where they're riding around
with their patches on them, although some do wear you know,
an Antifa insignia, you know. And then there are people
I can't characterize a whole swath of people Matt at
Donald Trump as Antifa. You know, there are a lot
of more elderly people, if I'm going to put it delicately,
who have come out to this facility who aren't Antifa obviously,
(19:38):
but might be engaged in some of these same movies here.
So what do you do about them? You know, if
you've got an elderly sort of Portland resident who's out
here coming face to face with ice and blocking them.
And then you've got somebody all dressed in black who's
coming face to face with ICE and blocking them. Do
you charge them differently?
Speaker 9 (19:54):
I don't know if the answer to that.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
Yeah, it's a good question. Here's what I do know.
You charge them both, and you come up with something.
Whether one gets charged with domestic terror and another one
gets charged with.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
Obstruction of justice.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
I don't care what it is, but they all need
to be arrested if they're blocking ICE agents from doing
their job. Brandy Cruz, I know I don't need to
tell you this, but you're a very brave woman to
be out there amongst these animals, and really that's what
they are. When the sun goes down, it gets even worse.
God bless you, and thank you for coming on tonight.
Please stay safe.
Speaker 9 (20:27):
Brandy, Yeah, thank you very much. I appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (20:31):
I appreciate you when your insight is fascinating for someone
who's been in around these people for a very, very
long time. All right on to President Trump quickly, it
looks like Israel and Hamas could we have a peace.
Speaker 2 (20:43):
Deal in place.
Speaker 1 (20:44):
President Trump says that the talks are both inspired and proactive,
and that he believes a peace deal is close to happening.
How would it look release all the hostages within seventy
two hours, there would be the demilitarization of Hamas. All
military action on both sides would be suspended.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
That will happen within the next forty eight hours.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
If Hamas agrees to this, Israel has agreed to it,
Israel would in stages pull out of Gaza. That is
a first in history, folks. They're willing to do this
in the name of peace. The Arab nations would play
a role in demilitarizing Hamas and getting them under control.
(21:33):
But if all fails, guess what President Trump says, you
know what, we will back Israel one hundred percent cut
twenty eight.
Speaker 10 (21:44):
If they were unable to do so, then Israel would
have the absolute right and actually er full.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
Back in the US.
Speaker 10 (21:51):
Full banking back in Israel would have my fall back
into finish the job of destroying the threat of Hamas.
But I hope that we're gonna have a deal for peace.
Speaker 2 (22:07):
Me too, mister President.
Speaker 1 (22:09):
I am not hopeful because I don't place any trust
in Hamas or these.
Speaker 2 (22:15):
Arab nations they're going to try to work a deal.
Speaker 1 (22:17):
I really don't I don't think Hamas is going to
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(23:00):
to the number nine eight nine eight nine eight. All right, up, next,
James call me has already gotten his indictment.
Speaker 2 (23:06):
Who is next? We will discuss next.
Speaker 11 (23:14):
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Speaker 1 (25:10):
All right, welcome back, everybody. I'll tell you what we
are as. I've called it the season of retribution, and
I want more people than just James call me charged.
Top of that list would be Clapper, the Intelligence Crew,
John Brennan. John Brannan was asked about this. You want
to hear his response. This is rich, folks.
Speaker 14 (25:32):
I don't see any case against me. I have looked
back on all of my actions and decisions, and with
John Durham, the Special Counsel, and others that have looked
at what we did that was certainly consistent with our
legal authorities and with the laws.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
So I don't know what you know.
Speaker 14 (25:47):
They're referring to their individuals who used to work in
the goverment.
Speaker 2 (25:51):
Even if their security clearances were.
Speaker 14 (25:53):
Revoked, they could be subpoenas, they could be, you know,
called to provide testimony in support of whatever allegations they have.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
All right.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
Look, that's the guy, by the way, who testified that
they didn't spy on Senate staffers during a torture investigation
and then later admitted they did. He's behind the whole
Russia collusion scam, the laptop from Hell letter from fifty
two Intel what the list goes on.
Speaker 2 (26:19):
And on and on with him.
Speaker 1 (26:21):
And then there's Christopher Ray, the former director of the FBI,
the last director of the FBI. This is him lying
to Congress now that we know there were two hundred
and seventy four undercover FBI agents on sen January sixth,
totally out of the norm for the FBI, and he's
going to claim he didn't know about it back then.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
This is lying to Congress.
Speaker 7 (26:45):
Those who were there in an undercover capacity on January sixth,
How many were there?
Speaker 9 (26:50):
Again, I'm not sure that I can give you that number.
Speaker 15 (26:52):
As I said here, I'm not sure there were undercover
agents on scene.
Speaker 2 (26:59):
And seven four undercover agents.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
Now, according to Cash Bettel, the director of the FBI,
that would have been one of the largest FBI operations
in FBI history.
Speaker 2 (27:09):
And you're gonna.
Speaker 1 (27:10):
Tell me him, as a high ranking member of the FBI,
didn't know about it bogus. I want to bring in
now January sixth, defendant, founder of J six rebuild dot org.
Speaker 2 (27:23):
You remember him. They threw him in the hole.
Speaker 1 (27:25):
They treated them like garbage for heck, maybe four plus years.
He's a candidate now for Senate in Florida. I'm talking
about Jake Lang. His attorney is with us as well.
They are suing the federal government after this latest revelation
of these undercover FBI agents on scene. Stephen metcalf is
the attorney Jake Lang. Welcome to the program.
Speaker 2 (27:45):
Jake. I'll start with.
Speaker 1 (27:46):
You your response to learning all these undercover agents were
un scene and honestly, not one of them stood up
and said, you know what, Jake Lang's okay. All the
rest of them are okay. Nobody said anything.
Speaker 9 (28:01):
Rand Thanks for having me on.
Speaker 2 (28:02):
It's good to see you again.
Speaker 9 (28:04):
They stole thousands of years of our lives collectively. I
spent over four years and six days in the dcjail, goolag.
Nine hundred of those days were in solitary confinement. And now,
after hiding and obscating the truth, all of the federal prosecutors,
the judges, the FBI, they're all complicit in one of
(28:24):
the biggest cover ups in the DOJ's history, stealing the lifeblood,
the life force out of all these great American patriots.
And President Trump just two days ago took the truth
social and completely laid into these people, saying, just for
the love of our country, we suffered years of political torture.
Speaker 2 (28:43):
And I think it's absolutely ridiculous.
Speaker 9 (28:45):
And if the January six ers are not compensated for
this egregious constitutional violation and human rights violation, we have
no justice.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
Yeah, Stephen, can I ask you what does this lawsuit
look like? Because you know, when I see the vast
majority of j six videos that is never shown by
the mainstream media, you have people walking between the ropes
talking with law enforcement. We thought they were undercover FBI
agents there now we're told they were.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
They didn't stand up for the people that were illegally persecuted.
Speaker 1 (29:16):
What does this lawsuit look like now and what does
it aim to get to?
Speaker 16 (29:24):
For years, not only myself, but Jake has been yelling
from the rooftops about the true story that happened that day.
And Jake just mentioned Donald Trump's social media post, and
there was one critic that actually stood out to me
(29:44):
because he said that Donald Trump is now trying to
rewrite history. What this looks like is history actually being
written correctly as it should have been at least four
years ago. This means that the real story all the
way from what was called the first Breach, had undercover
(30:04):
plane clothsed FBI agents involved in that throughout the entire time,
both sides, and especially on the west side of the Capitol,
each one of the steps and the layers and the
hours that went on there, there was FBI agents who
were either standing right there involved in it. And this
(30:25):
is us telling the correct story that should have been
told four years ago for the American people and for
people like Jake Lang who shouldn't have suffered at the
hands of what was a complete fabrication of what happened
that day.
Speaker 2 (30:40):
Jacobs.
Speaker 1 (30:40):
I can't help but think you tried to save lives
that day, that if one of these undercover FBI agents
would have stood up and say, no, I witnessed what
went down, and certainly one of them would have that
you could have been spared from all of this.
Speaker 2 (30:55):
But nobody stood up and said anything.
Speaker 9 (30:58):
They held us four years, over four years in pre
trial detention, and these FBI agents, you know, were brought
in actually to testify against all my fellow J six brothers.
They lied on the stands. That's why President Trump said,
we need all two hundred and seventy four of them named.
And this twenty five million dollar lawsuit that we are
planning to bring forth. We have already notified the DOJ
(31:22):
letting them know you can't just place and entrap American citizens.
You can't place them in prison after entrapping them and
then not try to give some level of compensation. We
missed birthdays, we had family members die, children grew up
without their fathers. We have Jan sixers who left their
pregnant wives at home and came home to three and
(31:42):
four year old children that did not know their fathers.
This is such an egregious political persecution. And now we're
learning that the FED surrection narrative that they claimed was
bogus has been correct the entire time. The FBI is
going to be hearing from Steven Metcalf and myself very soon,
and we will see you recur.
Speaker 16 (32:01):
Let me tell you one thing to add to that
that I remember specifically, and I'm going back to January,
I mean December of twenty twenty two January twenty three,
when I left my family, I took my own savings.
I went to DC and actually stood trial on the
prow Boys leadership trial. And during the time we were
picking that jury, blasted on the front of every single
(32:24):
newspaper every day. I would pick them up before I
went to court. Read it into the record was the
January sixth Committee's findings about Donald Trump. As we're picking
this jury in front of the Proud Boys, I want
to talk about rewriting history. The correct story has to
be told here because from the second we started picking
those jurors, this plan of attack was already set on us.
(32:49):
And this is years after January sixth, and it just
kept going. Now is finally a day that I could
sit back and say all that work was done for
a reason, and that goes to the significant into this finding.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
Stephen, real quick, will you bring in other j sixers
into this lawsuit? And obviously with the DOJ now run
by Pam Bondi and Cash Betel at the FBI and
Trump and the in the White House, he pardoned all
of the or or reduced sentence whatever it was, for
all these Jay sixers. They may just settle with you,
because obviously they're on your side.
Speaker 16 (33:24):
I can't speak about specifics with regards to other clients.
I am still in contact with this, with the whole
January sixth community. I stay in contact with all my
clients throughout these years on a daily basis, and I
have great respect for what they've overcome, and so I
will be speaking with them and making sure that anything
(33:46):
I could do, and I know that's what Jake stands for.
I know that we will we will be there as well.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
So the both of you, I've watched you fight for
Jay six Ers. Jake, you in a prison, being moved
around all over the place at the times, not even
being able to get access to sunlight. But thank you
for both, to both of you for what you do
on behalf of the J six community. And we'll be
following us lawsuit. Please, gentlemen, keep us posted. And Jake Lang,
(34:17):
Stephen Metcalf, thank you so much for joining me. All right, folks,
as we move on now tonight, I want to talk
about the NFL. It has yet again slapped their fan
base straight in the face.
Speaker 2 (34:29):
Wait to hear the Super Bowl halftime show. Is it's next? Folks?
Speaker 1 (34:44):
You know who Bad Bunny is. He's a Puerto Rican singer.
I don't really listen to this music. I'm sure my
son probably does. Again, it's borderline demonic. You watch his concerts,
they're all like devil colors, his logos creepy, like from
a horror show. He was quoted as saying once, I'm
never gonna perform in the United States again because ice
agents are gonna raid my concert. And who does the
(35:06):
NFL pick to do the halftime show at the Super
Bowl this year?
Speaker 2 (35:13):
Bad Bunny? Here's the announcement the bunga.
Speaker 1 (35:41):
We live in America, speak English, and you're from Puerto Rico,
not from south of the border.
Speaker 2 (35:46):
Speak English. Okay, this this is.
Speaker 1 (35:49):
The worst of the worst pick because the NFL again
turns its back on the base, which is Americans who
just want to enjoy football and be enteredine not given
a political speech.
Speaker 2 (36:03):
But the NFL, I don't know what it is. Can
they not help themselves?
Speaker 1 (36:07):
I want to bring in now real America's voice, Washington
DC correspondent, but that's.
Speaker 2 (36:13):
Not really just who she is. Brittan mcchenery.
Speaker 1 (36:16):
You have a sports background, which is why I said
let's get our sports Chick on the Washington DC Correspondent.
Speaker 17 (36:25):
No when they when I was hit up about this,
I said, I'm actually writing an article as we speak
or as we text about this. So yes, bring me
on the show, and I love this show. You're your last,
all right?
Speaker 1 (36:36):
So what is the problem with Roger Goodell and the NFL?
Speaker 2 (36:40):
Do they really not care?
Speaker 7 (36:42):
You know?
Speaker 17 (36:43):
I think this traces back to twenty nineteen, if we
want to get specific, and that is when the NFL
partnered with Jay Z Yes, when he signed on to
produce the halftime shows. Each and every year there has
been some sort of messaging you mentioned, some political statement,
whether it was Jennifer Lopez who was the weaker of
(37:04):
the duo between she and Shakira and Miami putting kids
in cages. She said in a documentary actually that the
NFL and commissioner Roger Kadell did not want her to
do that, but she sort of bent the rules, had
a big Puerto Rican flag. And then this last Super
Bowl with Kendrick Lamar, a rapper that, yes he's most
famous for a distract towards Drake. A much more prolific
(37:28):
rapper if you're in that genre than Kendrick Lamar. But
everyone afterwards, all of let's say a younger age group,
was saying it was so for the culture, it was
so important. And I kept asking these people, have.
Speaker 9 (37:41):
You not taken a history class?
Speaker 17 (37:43):
Did you not know what forty acres and a mule was? Yes,
a bit of an abomination that African Americans were not
given the property they were promised, you know, back when
one hundred years ago.
Speaker 2 (37:54):
But this is us.
Speaker 17 (37:55):
Currently in twenty twenty five. I can go to the library.
I already knew that to hear a blend of music.
What happened to two thousand and one? We had Aerosmith,
We had Nelly, we had Britney Spears, we had in Sync.
We had a medley of every kind of genre and
every kind of age group. Because that is what is important.
Right If you are having a halftime show for a
game that is getting a record breaking one hundred and
(38:17):
twenty seven million viewers back in February, that's according to
the NFL, why wouldn't you want to diversify that and
at least have someone whose songs are in.
Speaker 1 (38:25):
English, britt so you have an NFL with a history.
They were kneeling for the national anthem. They started that craziness.
Then they had the end racism and all the stupid
messages in the end zones and on helmets. Some of
the teams were putting up transgender and LGBTQ flags. There
you got the NFL logo in it. I mean, I
just want to get back to playing football. So what
(38:47):
do you recommend? Because I got a lot of viewers
here say boycott the NFL.
Speaker 2 (38:51):
But I love my Dallas Cowboys.
Speaker 1 (38:53):
Even though they stunk it up last night a forty
forty tie, which is not cool. But I don't want
to stop watching the Dallas campoo boy. I really hold
my nose every time I try to buy my son
he's a look Cleveland Brown's fan of Brown's at.
Speaker 2 (39:08):
Or something that that's a rough life.
Speaker 1 (39:10):
I want to be.
Speaker 2 (39:10):
Spending money with them. What do you recommend people do?
Speaker 17 (39:14):
That's tough for me, because, like you said, I'm a
sports girl. Any sports store you can have me on.
I covered the NFL for a decade and still as
we're discussing it, I feel your pain.
Speaker 2 (39:24):
I watch the.
Speaker 17 (39:25):
Commander's game and they had sticks and pebbles in offense
without their starting quarterback and top two of the three
wide receivers, so they lost to one of the worst
teams in the league. Currently, I'm gonna still watch the games.
I'm gonna still support it, but I do think you
can become more vocal. If they're going to put those
types of mantras and sings in the end zone, then
wear your own on your shirt, go out and voice
(39:46):
your opinion on social media, as I know a lot
of the viewers to your program do, and try to
just you know, soften the blow, maybe with some beverages
if you will, if the game doesn't go your way.
But I think the more that there's a pushback and
the more that we speak about this, the more that
they might listen. And I say might because it's very
one sided. It's you know, Colin Kaepernick, kneil. I covered
(40:08):
him when he wasn't talking to the media at all,
when he was the hot flash in the pan quarterback.
So to see him become in what some others on
the left consider this martyr for football and say, oh,
he's training to come back this year. No, he's never
going to play in the NFL again. He settled with them.
That won't happen. So I say, be vocal yourself. There
are some good programs still. There's go Pink for Breast
(40:29):
Cancer Awareness months starting soon in October, and get aligned
with things you believe in. But bad bunny, I'm just
picturing my family, my grandparents, my mom and my dad.
How are they going to sing along to these songs?
I mean, he is a three time Grammy winner, But
like his choice. I mean, what am I supposed to do?
Get my cant coon trip booked. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (40:51):
You don't need to picture them, you can picture me.
I don't know how to save any of this either.
We'll text.
Speaker 17 (40:56):
We'll text during the halftime show about this.
Speaker 2 (41:00):
There you go, Britt.
Speaker 1 (41:01):
Mcaery's so happy to have you bored at Real America's Voice.
Thank you for you're wearing many hats now at this
network and were appreciative of that.
Speaker 2 (41:09):
Thank you. Thanks all right, bad money.
Speaker 1 (41:13):
Really Even my son called, He's like, Dad, you're not
gonna believe this, and he's.
Speaker 2 (41:17):
Like, you're not gonna be happy. No, I'm not all right.
Speaker 1 (41:20):
We get into a solution beyond fad diets.
Speaker 2 (41:23):
That's next.
Speaker 1 (41:35):
Welcome back, anyone, everyone, Anyone who has tried to lose
weight knows that fad diets just don't work.
Speaker 2 (41:42):
They may work for a minute, but you always getting
the weight back.
Speaker 18 (41:45):
Watch this or I started the program and lost twenty
pounds doing like Adkins or the carnivore diet, but I
was crippled, and I feel amazing now I'm running around
come thirty again. My blood pressure went from one hundred
and fifty nine over tinety five to one hundred and
twenty nine over thirty two. Oh, I feel great.
Speaker 15 (42:05):
And Marty, what was this shift that made you decide
to go from doing that carnivore Atkins diet to doing this?
Speaker 18 (42:12):
Because I was losing weight, but I still felt like crap.
It was again in the point where I couldn't get
in on on my truck. Even as I'm losing weight.
I just everything hurt. My knees hurt, my shoulders hurt.
Everything hurt. It's been amazing, you know what.
Speaker 2 (42:26):
Just like him, I did the same thing.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
I did the Keto diet, Salami and cheese every day,
salami and cheese.
Speaker 2 (42:33):
It worked.
Speaker 1 (42:34):
But then as soon as I stopped eating salami and
cheese and all the other stuff, I gained all the
weight back. Then I found the energized health protocol and
I lost fifteen pounds in two weeks, and I continued
the program and I've kept it off and have never
felt more healthy in my life. And quite frankly, it
was pretty damn easy. I want to bring in now
the founder of Energized Health, John Jubilee, is with us.
Speaker 2 (42:54):
John, Welcome back to the show. Hey, Grant, great to
be here. All right, So, fad diets, what do you
tell people?
Speaker 15 (43:02):
Well, I tell them, hey, look, they already know, they
already know. I just ask them a question, how's that
working for you? Because we've all had the same experience, Grant,
We've all had the same experience that you did. We
go on a diet. Every diet works. They all work
for the minute, right, they all work for the minute
that we're on that diet. But as soon as we
(43:23):
go off of it, we all gained back all the
weight we lost and then some. And it's so frustrating,
you know, to just be like on that hamster wheel
where it's so frustrating. But guys, I got good news,
just like Grant, what your experience is, Grant?
Speaker 2 (43:38):
That was my experience.
Speaker 15 (43:39):
You know, I had ten years of failure, ten years
of failure, tried every diet.
Speaker 2 (43:44):
In the world.
Speaker 15 (43:44):
They every single one of them worked for the minute
I was on it. As soon as I went off,
I had the same thing as you. But the great
news is, you know I did this in nineteen ninety seven.
That's twenty eight years ago, if you're doing the math, guys,
twenty eight years ago, and I've been the same size
now for eight years. I eat all foods in moderation.
I tell people my favorite vegetable is carrot cake, you know,
(44:05):
because guess what you can eat carrot cake and moderation.
So I don't eat the whole cake, but I eat
a piece of cake. I eat a bowl of ice cream.
I don't eat the whole gallon ice cream. Everything in
the world you can eat in moderation. When you get
healthy at the salar level, you reset your metabolism. And
that's unlike what any diet does. Every diet is just
(44:26):
calorie restriction. Our metabolism drops when we're on these crazy diets. Grant,
and by the way, I think I shared this originally
on your show, and this has come to pass just
since we've been friends.
Speaker 2 (44:40):
Is I said, as soon as the golp ones came.
Speaker 15 (44:43):
Out, there will be a class action lawsuit coming. I
said it on TV. I was probably the first one
that ever said it. There will be a class action
lawsuit on the golp ones. The first one is here.
It's a multi billion dollar class action lawsuit because people
have paralyzed their metabolism, they paralyzed their digestive system. They've
(45:06):
lost all their muscle, and they're going blind. And they're
going blind on these golp ones. So will you lose
weight on a golp one, Yes, but you're losing.
Speaker 2 (45:18):
Weight you don't want to lose.
Speaker 15 (45:19):
You're losing your healthy, lean muscle. You're destroying the health
of your body. You will pay a price for the
rest of your life. You may it may work for
three months or six months or a year, but eventually, guys,
just like you see what's happened to this first group
of people. They are suing for billions of dollars because
they went blind. Their digestive system is destroyed and it
(45:42):
will never be the same again. Their metabolism is destroyed.
Speaker 2 (45:46):
There's a right way to do it. Grant.
Speaker 1 (45:48):
I remember, I think it was about a year ago
that you called it, and it was on this program,
and here we go.
Speaker 2 (45:54):
It's coming to fruition, John Jubillie.
Speaker 1 (45:57):
Let me tell people how they can find you and
everybody at Energized Health who's so helpful to me and
my health journey. I mean, folks, when I tell you
pay these guys a visit, you will feel better.
Speaker 2 (46:11):
Your life will literally change.
Speaker 1 (46:12):
You'll have more energy, you'll lose that fat, you'll gain
muscle mash.
Speaker 2 (46:16):
Your testosterone goes up. That's what happened to me, no joke.
I can measure it and.
Speaker 1 (46:20):
Prove it, and blood pressure down everything fabulous, All right,
energizedhealth dot com. Energized health dot com. There's a master
class there at the website you can learn about cellular
hydration and how this helps you tighten it all up. Okay,
reset your metabolism for good. Energized health dot com. You
(46:40):
tell them Grant Stinsfield sent you, all right. Even Rosie
o'donald's therapist questions her Trump derangement syndrome, Well, Trump derangement
syndrome is very real. Someone who really has it or
(47:01):
these two cackling hens, Nicole Wallace and Rosie o'donald.
Speaker 19 (47:06):
And if he's not stopped now, we have lost our
country and I don't know, Nicole, how it is that
some people cannot see it. My therapist said, why are
you so upset? And I said to her, why are
you not?
Speaker 2 (47:24):
Yeah, why are we not?
Speaker 1 (47:28):
Because we're making America great again? And thankfully you moved
out of the country, so we don't have to deal
with you anymore except on the Cole Wallace's failed podcast
that's going to do it for us today. Thank you
so much for watching I'm Grand Stenchfield, Stenchfield's Army rolls.
Don't forget Stinsfield seventeen seventy six on all the social media.
Speaker 2 (47:47):
Platforms right now.
Speaker 1 (47:48):
Go to your phone, follow me okay, Instagram, Twitter, Truth
Stenchfield seven