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October 9, 2025 99 mins

Episode #245 of the @professorpennpodcast. David outlines a hard-nosed playbook for strategy and tactics: diagnose Minnesota’s “belly of the beast” politics, rising crime, and economic decay; expose the push toward digital ID and centralized control; and reject waiting for top-down fixes. He revisits Precarious State, critiques uni-party governance, and contrasts “air game” headlines with the ground game of precinct organization, fundraising, and culture change. Core tactics: build personal health and resilience, map your precinct, assemble neighbors, and prepare for a record 2026 caucus. The episode closes with a mandate—organize locally or be organized by others. [Join The Precinct Strategy X Community and Get Involved!] https://x.com/i/communities/1761722073481633911 Live Chats on Tuesdays @2pm EST and Fridays @9pm EST.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Tonight, what's happening to Minnesota.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
We are losing jobs, we are losing value, we are
becoming poorror We.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
Have never had this massive amount of migration, so much
so quickly leaving the state of Minnesota.

Speaker 1 (00:17):
This has been bloody awful. Businesses are packing up, all
the investors. They're all wiped out.

Speaker 4 (00:23):
It's been a cataclysmic really.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
Hot spots once teeming with restaurants and stores now empty
and dangerous. People are done.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
They are closing shop and things are being boarded up,
and they have lost hope.

Speaker 5 (00:36):
They said, if you are going to get shot in
downtown Minneapolis, it is going to.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
Be in this three block radius.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
There's open warfare on the streets.

Speaker 3 (00:48):
I feel like this city is run by gangs.

Speaker 5 (00:51):
There was this vision that we're going to get rid of.

Speaker 6 (00:52):
The police department.

Speaker 4 (00:53):
We've lost forty deportment.

Speaker 7 (00:55):
People are going to get killed.

Speaker 1 (00:56):
I assure you, our education systems ranked six in the nation,
now fall into seventeenth thirteen years ago.

Speaker 6 (01:05):
We would have left if we had ever thought that.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
We would be like Louisiana and Mississippi when it comes
to education. A state government in chaos. This is a
horrible way to govern.

Speaker 8 (01:18):
President for the state of Minnesota.

Speaker 1 (01:21):
A city government that's anti growth.

Speaker 3 (01:24):
It is surprising what a few bad city council members
can you do.

Speaker 7 (01:29):
A city business has become sought up an enemy.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
We're killing the goose that laid the golden egg.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
So we basically now have a socialist city council, not
just a majority, but a veto proof majority.

Speaker 9 (01:40):
This is Wyoma Marxis.

Speaker 10 (01:41):
This is why I'm a socialist.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
Our city is dying and they don't seem to take
it seriously.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
Have you ever read the DSA platform I have?

Speaker 8 (01:49):
It's frightening.

Speaker 1 (01:51):
What can we learn from others who face similar crises?

Speaker 11 (01:55):
Hi drop a nightmail.

Speaker 6 (01:56):
Are hidden Me?

Speaker 7 (01:59):
Cost US fifty thousand dollars to train someone, but it
cost five million dollars if something happens.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
And where will we choose to go from here?

Speaker 3 (02:08):
The city can't survive another four years of this. We
cannot survive the.

Speaker 12 (02:16):
Prop awesome put to by by these countries that brings
so much in race and in language and put.

Speaker 1 (02:27):
It is a big idea, a new world order.

Speaker 4 (02:30):
Well, I know they're lying. They tricked me once, but
they're not going to trick me twice. The time is
now Welcome back. To the Professor Penn Podcast. David Pen,
your host, glad to be with you as always. For

(02:53):
episode number two forty five on Strategy and Tactics, we
had a cold open there from the widely distributed informational
special that was put together by Rick Copchella Precarious State.

(03:14):
I have watched it, and I think there's something for
us to gain from going back over some of the
things that they said in that that's special I was watching.
Every time I watch it, I get something more out
of it. You know what I got this time a

(03:35):
great sense of enjoyment watching these people who created the
chaos we're living in now throw their hands up and
ask for your help. You know, I saw Pat Garofolo
on there, consummate loser, collaborationist. All the rest of these
people are Democrats, including Pat and you know Republican name only.

(03:59):
You know, they believe in the progressive ideas that have
brought us to this moment where the constabulary. You know,
this was a broadcast on a you know, a major
network here in Minnesota, KSTP. I think Home of Tom Hauser.
I think Stanley Hubbard's media empire billionaire you know, has

(04:25):
taking the time to promote this. Why, well, that's because
they're losing control of the monster they created. And we
we the people, We the citizens of Minnesota. And let's
remember what Minnesota is. As Royce White said, this is
the belly of the beast, the belly of the beast.

(04:45):
And when we say the belly of the beast, what
does that mean. It means we are the ideological center
of United States leftism right here at the University of Minnesota,
right here in Minneapolis St. Paul. This is the Petri dish.
This is where leftism is refined. So we're on the

(05:07):
cutting edge of it. And we have a state, a state,
a beautiful state. The natural beauty of Minnesota is unparalleled.
The four seasons, the green, the blue, the blue skies,
the endless fields of grain. We have so much natural

(05:27):
beauty that if you don't live right in the heart
of this disaster, you don't recognize really what's coming until
it hits you right in the face. We have this
now right where I live. And I grew up in
the Core Cities and lived there for probably forty years.

(05:51):
I left the belly, the belly of the belly of
the beast, in two thousand and I moved out to
the western suburbs. Why did I do that? Well, I
wasn't really running away from the core city. I'm just
going to be frank. I got divorced, and every place
I went I saw my ex wife and my little kids,
and I was so sad about it. I said, I

(06:11):
need a change. Could have moved to Florida. Wouldn't do that.
I just moved out to the western suburbs. And you know,
I was not used to that. It was a completely
different world for me. But I made a home out
in the western suburbs in Minnetonka. Right now, I live
on the border of Wyzetta and Plymouth. You walk across

(06:31):
my street, You're in Plymouth, Minnesota. And if you're listening
to me in Somalia or England or Australia, around the world,
around the country. I live on the border between the
wealthiest spot in Minnesota, which is why Zetta. But I'm
not in the rich part of Wysetta. And you cross

(06:52):
the street, you go into Plymouth, and Plymouth becomes a
very mixed economic environment. And what is happening in my neighborhood?
Have crime in my neighborhood? Crime? I woke up just
last week to squads parked right in front of my
house in the middle of the night looking for somebody,
and they were there for hours with their lights on,

(07:12):
with their microphones blaring. No sleep. Of course, my family
was quite disrupted, scared. I told them, don't be scared,
no reason to be scared. Doesn't help, as it says,
be careful for nothing. But this crime, this degradation from
a from a public safety standpoint, is spreading throughout the state,

(07:35):
and the economic collapse is spreading throughout the state. I'm
a small businessman here in Minnesota. I'm going to tell
you part of strategy and tactics. We're going to talk
about strategy and tactics tonight. Here's a tactic fund the movement,
and how do you do that. You go to tireget
dot com. Tireget dot com. You're buying tires. Your famili's

(07:57):
buy and tires. Your friends are buy entires. I have
people coming there every day that know me on acts,
know me on YouTube, you know they know me. They're
saying they're going to buy tires. Thank you, thank you,
thank you, thank you to WASP Society who just bought
a set of tires for me. For his daughter. He
didn't have to. He did it to fund what I'm doing,

(08:17):
and I appreciate that tremendously, and you all can do that,
because what we're going to do with the money is
expand the programming of Free People Radio, which I now
am going to say is going to be, I hope,
the center of political action and tax strategy and tactics
of organizing the state of Minnesota. Why do we have

(08:39):
to organize, Well, guess what, It's already been organized. And
I said many times during this podcast that I actually
come from a leftist family and grew up in the
university environment, and I happened to be in the room
back in nineteen sixty nine when a group of university intellectuals,

(09:03):
professors there laid out a plan to take the state leftist,
because that's what they believed. They believed that the power
structure of the time, the power structure that had brought
us into the Vietnam War, needed to be overturned, and

(09:25):
they were using Marxism leftism to oppose the prevailing power
structure of the time. So I've been watching this for
a very, very, very long time, and I've come to
the conclusion that this is a battle between good and evil.

(09:46):
You can see it many different ways. I'm entitled to
see it my way. You can see it your way.
I see it in spiritual theological terms. And what I
see is that forces of darkness of evil want me
to choose my own imprisonment. It's very important to them

(10:07):
that we vote for our own digital prison tannor good
morning morning, Could you please play number one?

Speaker 10 (10:18):
Yes, they are and why because everything that nature gives
us is underpriced. Nature is underpriced itself and the services
that it gives to us, The water supply that we
have is underprised. And we don't look at over extraction
from nature and what and therefore that risk exists. We're

(10:38):
not looking at land degradation loss and what that does
to our economies, and so therefore the entire system of
nature and climate is part of that obviously is underprised.
And that is part and parcel of the conversation that
we from UNIP are having with the broader world because
we cannot continue to extract from nature or emit into nature,

(11:00):
whichever way we look at it. The resources that nature
provides to us, and our toxic sludge from our existence
into nature and assume that nature will continue on being
in balance. So yes, it is absolutely underprised.

Speaker 11 (11:15):
So we simply have not valued key aspects of things
that are now coming back for us.

Speaker 4 (11:20):
In other words, that's a World Economic Forum seminar. Nature
is underpriced. In other words, what we have inherited as
human beings, this beautiful natural environment that many of us
believe God created is under priced. Somebody is going to
occupy it and monetize it. And why are they doing that?

(11:43):
Their rent seeking oligarchs, kleptocrats that are going to convince
us that we have to pay more and more and
more for the food we eat, the air we breathe,
and the water we drink. That's what we're dealing with.
Before we talk about strategy and tactics, we have to

(12:05):
know why why are we creating a strategy and tactic.
I've had the cold open. We see the problems in
the state of Minnesota. That's a cover story too. See,
you know there's the problem. You create the problem, like
you create a system where the state breaks done, then
you have to have a solution. And the solution, well,

(12:25):
let me just show you what the solution is. Because
as this crime spreads in this economic collapse widens and
social chaos deepens. We're going to scream for help me
government because we're no longer self governing. Let's play number two.

Speaker 13 (12:43):
We know the government is looking at digital ID cards
at the moment. How would that help prevent the situation
that we're in now? Well, kirstmer our Primester said, we
are looking at what other countries have done to bring
in a sort of digital credit take. I think there's
real actually benefits right across here from obviously dealing with

(13:05):
illegal working, but also actually imagine if your viewers imagined
that they had one credential that would allow them to
access all the different government services and public services. Do
I'm sure many of your viewers often tear their hair
out with all the different numbers and passwords of the
different bits of government that they have to deal with.

(13:27):
And I do think this could be a real benefit
here for people who are here and working legally and
accessing public services if there was there was one route in,
as well as the benefits it could have with illegal migration,
we're looking at that. I think it is an interesting
idea that other countries have taken forward, and we want

(13:48):
to learn from what they've done.

Speaker 4 (13:50):
Oh, isn't that great. We have this tremendous problem with
the illegal immigration Britain has it, and what's the solution?
A digital ID? Play number three?

Speaker 6 (14:00):
Please, we're developing through technology and ability for consumers to
measure their own carbon footprint.

Speaker 4 (14:09):
What does that mean?

Speaker 6 (14:10):
That's where are they traveling, how are they traveling, what.

Speaker 12 (14:14):
Are they eating?

Speaker 6 (14:15):
What are they consuming?

Speaker 10 (14:16):
On the platform?

Speaker 6 (14:18):
So individual carbon footprint tracker they tuned. We don't have
it operational yet, but this is something that we're working on.

Speaker 4 (14:26):
This is great. So we have an illegal immigration problem
which was manufactured. There's a solution. It's called the digital ID.
We have a climate crisis dew we President Trump says,
we donly calls it the green Noon scam, the greatest
scam in world history. But these people are marching right along,

(14:46):
getting ready to come up with digital solutions to track
my personal decisions. Oh really, isn't that great? Well? Uh,
let's listen to number four.

Speaker 14 (15:00):
Seeing today that my administration will lead an international effort
to enforce Biological Weapons Convention, which is going to be
meeting with the top leaders of the world. By pioneering
an AI verification system that everyone can trust. Hopefully the
UN can play a constructive role and it will also

(15:20):
go be one of the early projects under AI. Let's
see how good it is, because a lot of people
are saying it could be one of the great things ever.
But there also can be dangerous, but it could be
put to tremendous use and tremendous good.

Speaker 4 (15:35):
And this would be an example of that. Well, hey,
guess what President Trump just today? As we wake up today,
we see that President Trump has used American power to
bring about a change in the Middle East. President Trump
has got a lot of pressure on him from a
lot different a lot of different institutions, and here he

(15:56):
is at the UN talking about digital AI technologies. It
could be very dangerous, very dangerous, but it could be
very good. Well, isn't that the way it is with
all technology? And I do not want to trust powerful
technologies in the hands of kleptocrats, bureaucrats, technocrats and professional politicians.

(16:21):
That's just me and I hope it's you too. What
I'm laying out here is a case about why we
need strategy and tactics to rest back control of our precinct,
our districts in our state from the professionals who are
here to govern us and make a better life for us. Yes,

(16:41):
that's who they are. Let's listen to number five. Please.

Speaker 11 (16:45):
Hi, everyone, this is doctor Sherry Tenpenny, and I want
to do a quick update about a document that got
passed by the United Nations this weekend called the Pact
of the Future document. It's two parts, one on science
and technology and one about the youth and future generations.
It is quite egregious and it was done by a

(17:06):
procedure called the silence procedure, which makes it a packed
and if no one objected, it is automatically adopted and
put into the record as being completely adopted. This is
the World Health Organization's run around since our end around.
Since they were not able to get the World Health
Organization Treaty passed, they decided to take it to the

(17:29):
General Assembly, and it is even more egregious than what
the World Health Organization was wanting to get passed. Let
me just read you something really quickly about what is
inside of this pact that is now being accepted by
one hundred and ninety three nations around the world and
equally open armed accepted by our current administration. Everyone. It

(17:54):
says that this is the power structure, fully digital and
maximized for the control of the masses. Everyone will be
expected to have a biometric digital ID that marks them
not just as citizens of an individual country, but as
a global citizen. So anytime you hear global citizen, or
anytime you hear sustainability, think that this is an egregious

(18:17):
thing that's happening at the level of the World Health
Organization and the United Nations. Anyone that has a dissonant
opinion will be labeled as misinformation, disinformation or malinformation and
memory hold. Perpetators for unimproved information will be fact checked
and punished by the system, which will be operated and

(18:37):
enforced by artificial intelligence. Punishments will include being locked out
of one's bank account, being unable to make certain purchases,
unable to get on an airplane, on a subway, drive
on public roads. This is the future according to the
world's self appointed overlords at the United Nations. These are
unelected bureaucrats that are making decisions about our country, our

(19:01):
sovereignty around the world. Nothing could be more important at
this point in time than to get prepared, have water, food,
digital access, flashlights, a way to communicate with family, and friends.
Now is really the time to get involved and get
prepared because this is what's coming. Our Congress is sitting

(19:24):
on its hands. There was a press conference on the
seventeenth about this, and no further action has been taken.
So it's up to us to mobilize and end to
go forward, particularly with your local sheriffs, to get your
constitutional sheriffs to say this isn't going to be allowed
in my county. Thank you very much, take action. We've

(19:46):
been talking about the onset of one world order, one
world government, one world religion, one world money for a
long time. Well it's no longer coming. It's here.

Speaker 4 (19:58):
Wow. Okay, now this is the why Tanner. Could you
go up to script a little bit and there's a
graphic on digital identity and put that up for the
viewers and for the listeners. This is a graphic that
talks about the influence that us having a digital ID

(20:19):
is going to have in our lives. And this is
right now. I'm just going to read the countries that
have recently enacted digital ID strategies and laws. That would
be Australia, Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Pakistan, Singapore,
South Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, Europe, Australia, Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany,

(20:43):
Iceland and Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine
and United Kingdom, Canada, Costa Rica, Mexico and Uruguay. In Africa, Ethiopia, Morocca,
Morocco and Nigeria. This is right now, this is happening
right as we speak. This is why we need to organize.

(21:05):
This is why we're going to have a strategy and tactic.
Now you know it's and this this I have to
could you leave that graphic up there? Police Tanner, thank you.
This is why I have to give some props to
Dan Schultz. Dan has been coming into my chats and
saying what does this have to do with winning politically?
And I really resisted it. But you know what, Dan,

(21:26):
you were correct. We know what the issue is. And
if you don't know this is the issue, please rewatch
the beginning of this podcast. Look at what digital identity
is going to mean to you. It's going to mean
that the access healthcare, you're gonna have to have a
digital ID to access financial services. Are having a bank

(21:46):
account or a checking account or a credit card. You're
gonna need a digital ID to get food. You're gonna
need a digital ID to travel and have mobility. You're
going to need a digital ID to do ECMM business.
You're gonna need a digital ID to get on a
social platform like X. You're going to need a digital
ID to access government services. You're going to need your

(22:10):
digital ID to use a cell phone. You're going to
need a digital ID. Do you realize the power that
this digital ID is going to give to the overlords
that do not care about you. They see you as
inventory to be monetized. That's all you are to the

(22:31):
professional politicians. And if you take a look at this,
these professionals, and I don't care what state you're in,
If these politicians that we elect do not emerge from
the people and do not stand on the constitution and
preserving our freedom, Hey, this digital ID, you're voting to
close the prison door shut on your own digital prison.

(22:53):
And when you do that, hey, it's over. This republic
is over, Your freedom is over, and your health and
well being is over. And of course, how they're going
to pitch this to the liberals. We have to fight misinformation.
Oh my god, we have to fight the misf We

(23:13):
have to end cyber harassment.

Speaker 15 (23:17):
Oh, we got to We've got to protect the people
from from who, I guess from Professor Pan.

Speaker 4 (23:24):
That's what they're going to I'm putting out misinformation. See,
this is going to be a come time very soon
that we won't be able to broadcast like this. In fact,
as I do this, I wonder if this is going
to get up on YouTube. I wonder it. Yeah, this
is heavy. It's very heavy.

Speaker 14 (23:40):
Heavy.

Speaker 4 (23:40):
Yes, it's very heavy. So if there's no broadcast tonight,
we get a strike, I guess I won't be surprised.
But the point is this. We live in a democracy,
a democratic republic. When I say a democracy, I don't
mean it like fifty percent plus one. I mean we
have a voice. The people have a voice. If you

(24:04):
want a digital ID in digital currency, like I talk
to people. Oh and I tell people all the time,
don't pay your bills online, write checks, gum up their system.
Go get cash. I went to the bank yesterday and
got some cash. I pay my bills in cash. Oh what,
it's very inconvenient, Yes, it is, it's very inconvenient. That's

(24:25):
exactly what they want to take away from me, my cash.
How are they going to take it away? The next
financial crisis will be the end of green backs. They
will replace it with the digital ID and digital currency.
And when that happens, hey, you know, I guess eating
food will strongly incentivize preferred behavioral outcomes. I mean, Tanner,

(24:50):
think about it. If you can't feed your daughter, Yeah,
are you gonna work here? Interesting, isn't it.

Speaker 15 (24:58):
Yeah, it's a conundrum.

Speaker 4 (25:01):
But of course they're going to tell you it's all good.
We can trust these people. We can trust these people
with our freedom. No, we live in a republic. It's
not a democracy, you know. I use the word democracy
about having a vote. We live in a republic where
you are a citizen sovereign. Under the philosophy of republicanism,

(25:24):
you are the king or queen of your own life.
You can pursue your own liberty and your own happiness.
Our republican philosophy protects the rights of citizen minorities, not
illegal immigrants. No, and I see all this thing on

(25:46):
X about the you know, the people that don't believe
in the Bible. They're using the Bible to talk about
how in Leviticus. You know, the Bible says, you know,
Israel treat the foreigners in your land as if they're
just like you, you know what, not if they're invaders.
You know, take a look at the texts on invasion.

(26:07):
Then it's kill them to the last woman man, you know,
in child, which I do not advocate. So selective reading
of any text is very dangerous. You have to read
it in its original language to understand it. So those
of you who read Hebrew have at it the translation. Hey,
something gets lost in translation, right Tanner? Just a little bit,

(26:29):
just a little bit, sometimes just a lot. My point
is this, we have to have a reason to have
strategy and tactics and the region. The reason is we're
losing everything now right now today now. Is Donald Trump

(26:52):
doing things to preserve the Republic of the United States? Yes,
or other things happening for reasons I don't understand that
I find deeply disturbing. Yes, do I have any influence
over Donald Trump? Do you have any influence over Donald Trump?
And the answer is no, I do not. Do you know,

(27:18):
Donald Trump, on top of it, is going to be
a lame duck in just thirteen months. What does a
lame duck. It means someone whose political capital is drained out.
We're gonna be onto the next chapter. That chapter will
be written by these technological overlords, or will be written

(27:39):
by we the people. It's a binary choice, and we're
gonna have to get off our couches and get in
the game. Now, what is the world like today? Could
you please play number six?

Speaker 9 (27:55):
Charlie Kirk did not deserve to be assassinated, But.

Speaker 4 (28:00):
I'm overwhelmed.

Speaker 9 (28:03):
Seeing the flags of the United States of America at
half staff, calling this nation to honor and venerate a
man who was an unapologetic racist and spent all of
his life sowing seeds of division.

Speaker 4 (28:23):
And hate into this land.

Speaker 9 (28:31):
And hearing people with selective rage who were mad about
Charlie Kirk but didn't give a damn about Melissa Hortman
and her husband when they were shot down.

Speaker 4 (28:44):
In their home. Tell me how to.

Speaker 9 (28:47):
Have compassion for the death of a man who had
no respect for my own life. I am sorry. There's
nowhere in Bible where we are taught to honor evil.

(29:07):
And how you die does not redeem how you lived.
You do not become a hero in your death when
you are a weapon of the enemy in your life.

(29:28):
I I can abhor the violence that took your life,
but I don't have.

Speaker 4 (29:37):
To celebrate how you chose to live.

Speaker 9 (29:42):
I am overwhelmed.

Speaker 4 (29:47):
Okay. So this is where we're at. This is a
congregation of African Americans. The preacher is a preaching the
ministry of division. And as long as we keep this
division going, as long as we bite on the apple

(30:09):
of disharmony, there's no way we're going to unify to
protect ourselves from what's coming. And that's the whole point
of this, right. The people that are in control of
this society are sowing the seeds of civil war so
that we beg for the digital id that's going to

(30:31):
be the outcome. And it's clear to me, and I
hope it's clear to you, And what is not clear
to me is if you you personally, are willing to
a fund the movement, because this is a movement. We
need money to make this work, not a lot, just enough.
Are you willing to organize your precinct. Are you willing

(30:53):
to do the hard work that's going to be required
to peacefully and constitutionetionally resolve this in a way that's
good for my children and for your children. That's the question.
Are we going to be able to stay on a
peaceful path of constitutional governance, that is the question, because

(31:15):
we're already in a soft civil war. Let's play number seven.

Speaker 16 (31:19):
It's a dark, dark time. I mean, I think it's
very scary there. It's going to it's happening very quickly,
and we are seeing the results of electing a fascist
and living what it feels like to be living under
a fascist regime. And I am sure Jimmy will be okay,
but it's very scary. And uh, it's absolutely state sponsored censorship.

(31:43):
So we'll see what happens next. I mean, the guy
from the FCC said we can do this the easy
way or the hard way. That's you know, that's like
mob stuff. So I'm very upset by it. And I'm
not not that you know, I've late night TV is
not my thing, but that's okay. I think he should
be able to say what he wants within reason. What
he said didn't seem that crazy, So yeah, it's it's

(32:06):
spooky there.

Speaker 4 (32:07):
You go, it's fascist. This is a Hollywood dude. You
know who he is if you know, and if you don't,
he's probably insignificant, So not going to go into who
he is. He's well known. So I'm laying out why
we have to have strategy and tactics, and I'm laying
out that there's an endgame here, that there's a crisis

(32:28):
and a solution matrix that's put together where you know,
the the government of the overlords creates a problem like
illegal immigration, and then there is a crisis that comes
from it that needs a solution, and a solution is
leading us towards the outcome that's preferred, which is us

(32:49):
begging for the government to protect us. And of course
digital idea is going to be part of that protection.
And you can see the polarization in our society now.
We're in a soft civil war right now. You know,
we have the deployment of military into our major cities,

(33:09):
we have assassinations. It's just very clear to me how
unsafe and unsteady things are right now today. President Trump
just declared armed conflict with the drug card tales, Well,
who funds the drug cartels? How they get going, how's

(33:30):
little drugs get in the country? What a big business?
Who are all the people on that payroll? You think
it's really just down in Mexico. Give me a break,
it's drugs. You're in a major city. You got people
in your city on the take, on the payroll so
that these drugs can flow. Drugs have been a weapon

(33:51):
of war for hundreds of years. The British Empire created
this as a weapon of war. How do you mess
up a society you get it hooked on drugs? Well,
wait a second, what about the legal drugs were all
hooked on? Oops? Oops, So we got a war now

(34:13):
in the Western hemisphere on the drug cartels. President Trump
issued an executive order last week naming Antifa as a
domestic terror group. Yesterday he announced it was an international
terror group, which it is well funded, well organized, but
if you read the newspaper, it's not centralized. It can't

(34:35):
be a terror group. You know what this reminds me
of talking to people that are liberals, and a lot
of them I like, I'm not I'm you know, people
in the Republican Party see me as being divisive. That's
just because I know you're democrats. Well let's not call

(34:56):
you a democrat because you got an R after your name.
You're progressive. You're progressive, very progressive. Isn't that a nice
sounding word. Progressive. Yeah, doesn't sound great because the opposite
is regressive. Like I'm some kind of knuckle, you know, dragger,
I'm a regressive Yeah. Are you just stuck in the past. Yeah,
stuck in the past. Stuck in the past where there's

(35:18):
no digital ideas, uh, where there's no digital currency. Uh,
where people lived in harmony with nature and they believed
in God. You know, I'm a knuckle. I understand my
liberal friends. They don't believe in God, and they think
they're right and they're entitled not to believe in God

(35:39):
under our republican system. But what they're telling me is, oh, look, look, look,
President Trump is destroying the rule of law, the rule
of law where we're not following procedures. Well, first of all,
up till now, President Trump is not violated in the
court orders that I'm aware of. He's testing the limits
of executive authority because rule of law has been perverted,

(36:04):
in my opinion, through one hundred years of progressive education.
The lawyers and the judges don't believe in God, don't
believe in the they're progressive, and what they believe is
what we got. And look at what we got if
we have rule of law. Why are our streets unsafe?

(36:26):
Why is our country coming apart at the seams? So
President Trump is pushing it, He's pushing it hard. Antifa
now a domestic and international terror group. The FBI cut
all of its ties with the Anti Defamation League this
past week in the Southern Poverty Law Center. Why was

(36:49):
the FBI involved with the ADL in the Southern Poverty
Law Center. Well, I'm going to leave that for you
to research and think about. But these were idealized organizations
that we're giving meaning and policy to the FBI's activities.

(37:11):
What progressive came up with that idea? Well there, if
that's no more. And what I'm saying is, I got
a lot of things that are concerning me now about
President Trump, but there is an effort, an effort to
I hope it's to maintain the republic. The dark side
of me wonders if we're just being dragged into a
civil war so that the outcome is digital ID. So

(37:35):
the way to avoid the digital ID is let's find
some things we can all agree on. We're going to
talk about that. We're going to get the strategy and
tactics very quickly here and I'm going to tell you,
and this is something that gets lost in this and
I want to comment on it because to me, it's
very apparent. I got to go back here find my

(37:57):
note on this. You know, we fought a civil war
in this country once before, in eighteen sixty one. The
Democrat Party was the party of the Confederacy. I think
most of you know that. In other words, the Democrat
Party was the party that was defending the international slave trade,
which is free trade. And it's the ultimate free trade. Boy.

(38:17):
If you can trade human beings, that's free right, that's freedom.
Well for me, if I can make you my slave, hey,
that's free trade, baby. And that was their business model.
And this crazy group of religious people looked at the
political dynamics of our country in the eighteen fifties, which
was called the Whig Party, and they had Nantifa called

(38:38):
the know Nothings. And I'm going to urge you all
to please go watch The Gangs of New York, a
great film by Martin Scorsese. You put it on your
list of all the movies that I'm suggesting that are
not watching. It's done with the Godfather. Tanners, not with
the Godfather anyhow. You know, we've had this problem of
immigration and what it is to be an American since

(39:00):
the very first time there was an American seventeen seventy six.
There are more laws about immigration than you can shake
sticks at. This has been a political football all the
way to the way back eighteen sixty one. We fought
a war these enslavers. The Democrats went to war to

(39:21):
defend their right to keep and hold slaves. And who
fought them, Eh, this crazy group of Christians. They looked
at the political dynamic and they said, man, there's a
Uni Party here. It's the Democrats and the Whigs. They're
all good with this. The Whigs are saying, through their Antifa,
the know nothings, Let's keep the Jews and the Catholics

(39:41):
out of this country. Let's keep the popery out of
this country. Let's keep the Irish out, the Italians out,
Let's keep the Catholics out. And if you'll help us
do that, mister Democrat, you can keep your slaves. That's
called the Uni Party. See, we've had the Uni Party before,
corrupt to the core. And this dude come up here.

(40:06):
You know, Abraham Lincoln Tanner just visited his birthplace and
this guy, honest ape, honest, abe, honest ad jumped up
out of nowhere and said, hey, I'm not buying this
Uni Party thing. And he was able to coalesce a
movement because enough citizens had had enough of the corruption
that they were willing to die to preserve what's good

(40:30):
and true about life. We fought, but you know what,
we're fighting the same war today and it's the same
Democrat party. And what do they have now, Well, they're
not really slaves. They're immigrants, newcomers, people that have no resources,
no history in the country, dependent on the government. They'll
do what the government says. An army, an army of

(40:51):
tens of millions of people that have been brought here.
And then we're told all their poor sufferers and they're
brought here just like the Africans. They're inventory to these people.
They don't mean well by them, They just say they do.
And then they look at me and call me a
fascist because I know what their game is. And here

(41:14):
we have the same dynamic. People are emerging from the
Republican Party that look at the UNI Party, the Uni Party,
ours and d's together that have created this system and
are profiting from this system, and we're saying, no, this
isn't going to work for us. So if you're a
professional politician and you're not sincere in what you're doing,

(41:35):
I'm calling you out. That's a tactic. You don't like
it too bad. I talked to a guy on the
phone yesterday from my own district. I didn't know them.
He wanted to let me know him and what the

(41:55):
words that came out of his mouth. Andrew Myers is
a weasel. I said, well, that's rather strange thing to
say to somebody you don't know. Maybe I'm a supporter
Andrew Myers. You see. So people are starting to wake
up out there, and that's just the way it is.
So I'm going to say that this civil war, this

(42:16):
soft civil war that we're in, is just a repeat
eighteen sixty one. But the outcome of this war is
just as uncertain as it was in eighteen sixty one.
And it's only going to work if you please take
this as the political action community that it is. Come

(42:37):
to the Royce White Dot you Ask website and put
your information into Caucus counterattack. Let us be organized, let
us create lists of people, let's get together. We're going
to talk about that in just a minute. But what
is happening here in the country is happening all over
the world, all over the world. This is not a

(43:00):
you know, Minnesota thing, or a CD three thing, or
a Kentucky thing or an Oregon thing. This is going
on everywhere, all the time. This is a worldwide confrontation
between the forces of tyranny and the handful of citizens
that don't want to be enslaved. And there's way more

(43:21):
of us than there are of the enslavers. If we
could just take this seriously and organize ourselves, we could
solve this problem constitutionally at the ballot box. If we
just keep working. And we've made a lot of progress.
But let us not look to President Trump to solve

(43:41):
these problems. I have to solve it. You have to
solve it. Let's play number two. Please clip number two
under economy.

Speaker 7 (43:53):
It's kind of like a perfect storm.

Speaker 1 (43:55):
Jim Freytag is an executive with CBRE, a global commercial
real estate investment firm. He's a go to for major
corporations here trying to sell off buildings they no longer need.
His team put together this quick look assessment of the
vacancy rates among some of the city's most iconic buildings.
The dark shades and the windows here represent occupied spaces,

(44:18):
the green light indicating what's vacant, and available blue lights
show sub leased spaces where leaseholders want out. Look at
the city center. The data shows we didn't have vacancy
like this in the years before twenty twenty. All of
this happened on the backside of COVID and the rioting

(44:41):
and the increased safety concerns downtown as the city council
has continued to cut police funding. If you look at
all those buildings, the tallest ones in town pre pandemic,
if you will, we're probably in around them. It's all
worth about three hundred million dollars apiece. Fright Tag says
the drop in value of those same buildings today is shocking.

Speaker 6 (45:03):
Sixty seventy percent, in some cases eighty or ninety percent
discount from previous valuations or previous sales.

Speaker 1 (45:10):
Sixty to ninety percent.

Speaker 4 (45:12):
It's big number.

Speaker 1 (45:13):
It's a big humper. In fairness, vacancies are up in
many parts of the US, but this year MSP logged
the highest level of financial distress in the country. Data
analysis reveals nearly half forty nine point seven percent of
the building loans and MSP are in distress, meaning behind

(45:34):
on payments, requiring new financing. Several investors here have backed
out of the cities at substantial losses, including the stunning
exit of the Americ Prize building. It sold last about
ten years ago for two hundred million dollars. It sold
earlier this year for a little over six million. That's

(45:55):
about three cents on the dollar.

Speaker 4 (45:58):
You know, we're killing the ghosts the Golden Egg tenner.
Do you remember when we covered the Amrror Prize sale. Yeah,
that was not too long ago, not too long ago. See,
you know you can come here to Free People Radio
to hear it first, because I like to keep my
finger on the pulse of what's happening. What you're looking
at is economic collapse, and to say it's by accident

(46:20):
would be quite naive. It's not by accident. This is
a collapse of a major city. And then you know,
Rick Copchelli said, to be fair, this is happening all
around the country. Oh yeah, it's happening in every major
city because all the major cities are controlled by guess who,
the enslavers. Oh no, they call democrats. Excuse me, got

(46:43):
it wrong. Excuse me, Democrats. So you're going to take
a credit now for the collapse of all the major cities,
along with your collaborationist progressive Republicans who like to get
along with you, because you know, we got to govern together.
So collapses on the backs of all the people that

(47:04):
are in office today. Your job was to be the
sheep dog and protect me. You know you'd lay down
on the job. You weren't a sheep dog. You collaborated.
And that's why I say we need a whole new
crew of people to emerge from the neighborhoods, organizing their
neighborhoods and then getting into the political process. It's going

(47:26):
to be very messy. We're not professionals. We're gonna make
a lot of mistakes. But as I've said for many,
many years, I believed that you can't let the inmates
run the asylum. Because I was, you know, a voter
for George Bush in two thousand. I did. I'd admit it.
Raise your hand if you voted for George Bush. Nobody
can see you. You're at home alone, but in your

(47:49):
heart taking inventory. And now what I believe is you
can't let the inmates run the asylum unless the doctors
are a bunch of mass murdering kids. And that's what
we got right now. So you know, this is what's happening. Economically,
all the jobs that were created under the Biden administration

(48:10):
we found out were fit of They've revised the job
creation numbers of the last year. And I watched the
leftist blame it on Trump when the years that were
revised was ten months for Biden, two months for Trump.
They were off so far it couldn't have been an accident.

(48:31):
It was corruption. That would be the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
President Trump replaced the leftist who was in charge of
that data. How can you fly an airplane if none
of your if you can't figure out what your altitude is,
how do you fly the plane? How do you make

(48:51):
decisions if you're the Fed if your data is faulty?
Oh great, isn't that interesting? So we're making a bunch
of policy decisions based on faulty data, and we're supposed
to think it was an accident. Just happened. Mistakes happened.
That's why we revise the numbers. Mistakes happened. Great. You

(49:12):
see they've been setting up this scam for a very,
very long time. Let's play clip number three.

Speaker 2 (49:18):
Groups of like, well, we must protect our unhoused neighbors.
There's no group saying these are basically places for drug
dealers to sell drugs. No, they're not good. They're not
good for the homeless, and they're not good for our community.
They are places where people die.

Speaker 1 (49:32):
Doctor Carol Becker is editor of the Minneapolis Times. She
worked for Democratic mayor Share and Sales Belton spent sixteen
years on the Board of Estimate and Taxation. She's also
a college professor. Becker cites a litany of city council
proposals she considers hostile to business and growth.

Speaker 2 (49:51):
We have this proposal for our labor Standards board that
will dictate how businesses run in Minneapolis. We have a
vote to close Eye ninety four downtown Many Episodes, downtown
Saint Paul because somehow we don't need to go to
the suburbs anymore. And we have a vote to close
the garbage burner because we're going to become zero garbage,
zero waste in a year. We are one hundred and

(50:13):
twenty eight thought of one hundred and twenty eight Midwest
cities in new housing starts. People are not coming here,
and so you have to start stepping back and saying,
what is it that's driving this, Who are the people
leading our city, and what are they implementing that is
keeping these people from investing in the city.

Speaker 5 (50:34):
I agree businesses here are are struggling.

Speaker 1 (50:37):
Council vice president and budget chair. I should chug Ti
overseas nearly two billion dollars of your taxpayer money. She says,
her constituents don't share the same concerns that business has.

Speaker 5 (50:49):
And just hearing them talk about the challenges with the
retention of businesses and all the things that we can
actually do to stimulate economic development, we're not interested in that.

Speaker 1 (50:59):
Remember where we started this story in Uptown, where Jim
Rubin showed us all the boarded up buildings and empty streets.
This is chug Ty's war. Here's what she sees.

Speaker 5 (51:10):
I think Uptown has always been and always will be
the comeback ween, and she's in the middle of a
comeback right now.

Speaker 1 (51:15):
She envisions a comeback no longer intended to attract outsiders
to the area.

Speaker 5 (51:22):
Was built for people who live in the suburbs and
choose to visit Minneapolis, and I think that when we
build a major economic hub around people who don't actually
go here, than it is at the whims of whether
they feel like coming here or not.

Speaker 7 (51:41):
One of the things that I guess younger por far
left people do not examine is the role of business
and the prosperity of a region and the availability of
jobs and the trajectory of the community. And so business

(52:02):
has become sort of an enemy, and you start to.

Speaker 2 (52:05):
Get to this question of these extremists bringing in policies
that are anti job, anti wealth building, against small business,
making it hard to get around the city.

Speaker 1 (52:16):
Where does this go?

Speaker 2 (52:17):
Number One, we have to decide whether or not moderates
are going to come back into the discussion space.

Speaker 1 (52:24):
Chud Ti and Chavez are both members of the Democratic
Socialists of America or DSA. There are two others as well,
or In Chowdry, who no longer makes reference to the
DSA endorsement she promoted last election, and Robin Wansley, who's
an avowed Marxist.

Speaker 5 (52:42):
Is Wyoman marxisamathosis like it's about have an opportunity for
working class people, convening opportunities for working class people to
flex their power.

Speaker 2 (52:50):
Robin wants. Isn't just the leader. She is the one
that is introducing the most legislation and the most influential.
She's the one that everybody votes with the most. And
she does not believe in capitalism. She does not believe
in private ownership or property. She wants the government to
own it all. That's how extreme we are talking about
for our city council.

Speaker 4 (53:11):
We just talked about this on the last podcast with
Mark Mitchell of Erasmusen Polling Tanner. I think Tanner and
I enjoyed that podcast very very much, and I urge
you to go back and watch it if you haven't.
Mark covered the youth, the youth cohort and dispelled a

(53:34):
myth that has been popping up in the Republican Party
ranks that there's some great resurgence of traditional faith and
conservatism amongst the youth. And Mark dispelled that beautifully because
he has the polling data and he talked about and
you know, I really I've learned so much just talking
to Tanner about this. You know, people Tanner's age, they've

(53:57):
never enjoyed any of the fruits of free market capitalism
because there have been no fruits to consume, because the
boomers stole all the money. Corrupt assholes that run the parties,
both of them. Do I sound angry about it, And

(54:18):
I am angry because freedom is such a beautiful thing.
When you see communism pop up, it is a sledgehammer
to break apart an oligarchy which oppresses the people. It
is a politics of rage and revolution. So I'm not
surprised that people in Minneapolis, young people look at the

(54:41):
age of those council members, and this is happening everywhere
in the country. This is not happening here in Minneapolis.
It's happening in Saint Paul, It's happening in New York City,
it's happening in Los Angeles. It's happening everywhere. Young people
are not getting any benefits from being an American sea citizens.
They're going to use Marxism as a sledgehammer to break

(55:04):
this corruption. Well, why can't we deal with it ourselves
as believers in the philosophy of republicanism, Because you know,
the truth is, these liberals, if they really understood the
philosophy of republicanism, they'd realize that republicanism, Republicanism and Marxism
are both twin children of the effort to overthrow feudalism

(55:31):
in Europe. They're so close. They both have the same
diagnosis of the problem. Corruption and oligarchy. Kleptocracy must be overthrown.
It is unwell for me to live in a society
where a small group of people rule over me. It

(55:52):
doesn't make me feel well. What a Republican believes is
we're all citizens, sovereigns. What the Marxist believes is, you know,
people are defective. We're going to have to govern them
with a digital id. Look at the outcome that is
right around the corner for us here in the United States.
This is spreading throughout the world because the oligarchy, the

(56:14):
kleptocracy is worldwide, a worldwide confederation of rent seeking international
globalist corporations who have no interest in sharing the gains
of our work with our young people. And if they
can rob me of everything I have, they're fine with

(56:36):
that too. And we have to oppose this through political organization.
Is it any surprise that US companies are going bankrupt
at the fastest pace since two thousand and eight because
all over the country this problem is going on. Our
farmers are in dire straits, and they blame it on tariffs. Hey,

(57:00):
maybe the whole farming industry went awry when it sought
global markets. Maybe that was Maybe there's an unbalanced to globalism.
And when President Trump tries to reverse that polarity, of
course there's going to be casualties. We are deeply down
the rabbit hole in the wrong direction. Tanneer, could you

(57:22):
please play number eight MM Strategy and Tactics. Why do

(59:52):
I play the Great Muhammad Ali timing speed spirit? It's
just inspiring to me personally. The health and well being
that it's required to be in this fight at this

(01:00:14):
time in world history. That's the first tactic. The first
tactic is to improve your well being. The first tactic
is to look at anything you're doing which detracts from
your well being and pray or seek or study for
a way to reverse that unhealthy process. Wherever I am,

(01:00:38):
I can get better, At whatever age I am, I
can get better, And we know how to get better.
I mean, the truth is, none of this is a
secret anymore. We know how to eat, we know how
to breathe, we know how to walk, and if you
don't know, you can learn. And if you want to
be in this game, you're going to have to have

(01:00:59):
this strength to play. So if you're underweight, gain some muscle.
If your old overweight, lose some fat. If you're not breathing, well,
figure it out. You know, Mark Mitchell, I think that
was such a great podcast. He talked about his own
effort to deal with his own sleep apnea, and he
dealt with it naturally. You know, there's so much health

(01:01:24):
and well being that is associated with the philosophy of Republicanism.
Let's start their first tactic, let's improve our personal well being.
And I'm sure I'll be talking a lot about that
in podcasts to come. We have to have the strength
to go the distance. We have to have the strength
to win. We have to have the will to overcome

(01:01:47):
to prevail. Politics is a battle of the human will.
And they say, well, there's mind and body. That is
a scam. We all it mind, body and spirit to
study mind, body and spirit. But in actuality there's just me.

(01:02:08):
There is no mind, body, in spirit. In David pen
there's just me. My body is not stupid because I've
studied it and I know how intelligent it is. You
know what I really like watching I love watching all
these nature videos on X because it shows me how
brilliant these animals are. And what was I taught? They're stupid?

Speaker 15 (01:02:32):
Yeah, yeah, no, true, it's such a scam. We're living
in a constructed scam. And all we gotta do is
study until we see the hidden truth. And that's exactly
what they don't want us to see, because as soon
as we see the truth, Hey, that's called taking a
red pill, isn't it Take the red pail, baby, take

(01:02:54):
the red pill or live in the pod.

Speaker 4 (01:02:56):
It's up to you. Whatever you prefer. We're going to
find out. Please play clip number four.

Speaker 1 (01:03:03):
We wanted to understand how these DSA endorse members have
so much influence on city Council when there are only
four of them. They're not even close to a majority.
Over the past four months, we've made several requests for
sit down interviews with each of them. Two initially agreed
and then canceled, the other simply never responded. But the
question remains, how has the DSA managed to push through

(01:03:24):
so many extremist proposals. So we brought in a mathematician
to analyze how every member voted on every issue last year,
and what we found is startling. Take a look at
the numbers. It takes seven out of thirteen votes to
pass a resolution by majority. Last year, mainstream Democrats the
DFL aligned with the Socialist DSA as a majority eighty

(01:03:49):
five percent of the time or more. A supermajority which
overrides mayoral vetos requires nine out of thirteen votes. Mainstream
Democrats align with Socialists sixty nine percent of the time
or more. And get this, the council president, Elliott Payne,
who ran as a mainstream Democrat, voted with the Socialists

(01:04:13):
ninety three to ninety eight percent of the time.

Speaker 8 (01:04:16):
And that's yeah, that's amazing. That's a powerful visuo of
is that one party? Is that two parties? What is
their true affiliation? Or are they saying what they need
to say to get in the door. And maybe there's
a different agenda.

Speaker 1 (01:04:31):
Stuart Ackerberg is a lifelong Democrat from a second generation
family that's been doing business in Uptown more than sixty years.

Speaker 8 (01:04:38):
The council member that controls the core of the commercial
space in Uptown, the tenth ward, in my opinion, has
not been really pro business, has not been pro safety
and security.

Speaker 1 (01:04:48):
Have you ever read the DSA platform?

Speaker 8 (01:04:50):
I have frightening, frightening I think everyone should read it
because it is astounding.

Speaker 4 (01:04:55):
I was shocked and.

Speaker 8 (01:04:58):
Said, and you know, a little afraid when.

Speaker 4 (01:05:00):
I read it.

Speaker 1 (01:05:01):
Now, this is what Ackerberg is talking about the DSA platform.
That's their goals and objectives. They want to free all
incarcerated people. They want to close local jails, disarm and
defund the police. They want to abolish prisons, end all
misdemeanor offenses, and cut funding for prosecutors. And then they

(01:05:25):
would like social ownership of all major industry and infrastructure.

Speaker 2 (01:05:31):
We're back to communism where government owns the whole economy,
that there is no capitalism and there's no private ownership
of businesses.

Speaker 1 (01:05:40):
How did this happen?

Speaker 2 (01:05:41):
I was an elected official in twenty seventeen when we
first saw social media being this new organizing tool, and
they used it to overthrow the moderates on the city council.

Speaker 1 (01:05:53):
According to Becker, the DSA brought less radical groups into
its fold by sounding more moderate until after the election,
and then.

Speaker 2 (01:06:02):
Comes in with this much much more radical agenda. It
isn't we're going to represent the people who are here.
It was we're going to rebuild the city in our image.

Speaker 6 (01:06:11):
Part of why I think the DSA has been successful,
is that we're looking at elections taking place on off years.

Speaker 1 (01:06:20):
Political scientists doctor David Schultz says, it's no coincidence this
group is ramping up for election in twenty twenty five.
It's an off year election with traditionally very low turnout.
Also unusual this election year, everybody on the city council
is up for reelection. The DSA has endorsed a fifth

(01:06:40):
candidate for city council, a candidate for mayor, and two
more for parks and recreation activists.

Speaker 6 (01:06:49):
This is their only game in town, and they're motivated.
They show up, and what in an electoral democracy, Those
who show up get to move the political agenda. Yes,
there are lots.

Speaker 2 (01:07:02):
And lots of people who have been voting Democrat their
whole lives. They don't understand that they're voting for a
socialist instead of what had been the democratic agenda. I
don't know how many more years we can live with
this extremist agenda.

Speaker 1 (01:07:13):
But it's not working for Becker. This is a fight
to the finish. It's either take back her city or
be forced to leave.

Speaker 2 (01:07:22):
They're talking about a wealth pas. I had double digit
tax increases last year. I've got double digit tax increases
that are probably going to happen this year. I don't
know that I can continue even to afford my home.

Speaker 1 (01:07:33):
So we asked her what's her breaking point.

Speaker 4 (01:07:37):
That's good, Tanner, thank you. And just as she said,
you know, people are voting Democrat and they don't know
what they're voting for. We got Republicans that don't know
what they're voting for. So let's review what we just
saw as we get into the strategy and tactics. The
Democrat party votes with the DSA ninety percent of the
time or eighty to ninety percent of the time. And

(01:07:58):
that Democrat, the State Developer said, is it one party?
Is it two parties? I don't know. So that all
of the collaborator Republicans that vote with the Democrats are
really voted with the socialists.

Speaker 15 (01:08:09):
That's the point. That's why it's progressivism. So we got
to get this straight. So the people like Julia.

Speaker 4 (01:08:16):
Coleman and Andrew Meyers and Jim Abeler and Danny n Dooe,
you guys got to pick a side of the football
now because we can't deal with these people because they
are in league with the Democrats. Socialists. So we're either
going to stand up together. We're either going to hang together,
or we're gonna hang separately. We've heard that one before,

(01:08:36):
haven't we, So we better start hanging together. That's number one.
What is our long term strategy. Our long term strategy
is to change the culture of Minnesota. Politics is just
a thermometer, you know. An election is a thermometer. It
gives us a read of the culture of the state
on a particular day. Our goal is to change change

(01:09:00):
the culture of the state from progressivism and socialism to
the philosophy of republicanism. And how are we going to
do that? Well, those are the strategy and tactics we
need to talk about. Our long term strategy is to
turn this entire world into the philosophy of republicanism so

(01:09:21):
that people can live free because freedom is integral to
human well being. The key to human well being is
freedom of choice. If we want to maximize our well being,
there can be no compromise with evil. Julia Coleman, Danny Nadeaux,
Andrew Meyers. We can't be compromising with these people because

(01:09:45):
when you compromise with the democrat, they're in league with
the socialists. Can't you see it? And I get so
much joy out of watching every person interviewed on this
special precarious state is a progress, and their hairs on
fire because now they realize they've given birth to a

(01:10:06):
monster of Frankenstein that is no longer controllable. As we
talked about with Mark Mitchell, young people have no fruit,
no benefit from the philosophy of Republicanism because it has
been replaced by the post World War two Democrat liberal order,

(01:10:26):
which is a rent seeking corruption of intergalactic proportions. And
that's why Mark said the most important thing politically is
ending corruption and regaining the trust in our institutions. How
are we going to do that? That's called switching out
the people that are involved in the game. Now you

(01:10:47):
heard them, you heard them on that special that the
political science professor. They're talking about off year elections, and
Dan Schultz talks about this all the time. In an
off year primary election, only twenty percent of the Republicans

(01:11:07):
show up to vote. That means who gets the victory
in the primary is determined by one fifth of the
possible electoral pool. Yet we don't have enough America Firsters,

(01:11:27):
or American Nationalists or mega people or what. I don't
think the label is not clear to me yet because
the philosophy is not clarified. But we certainly don't have
enough political action going on in our side of the
football to change our party. And as Mark Mitchell said,
the Republican Party is not coming to the rescue. But

(01:11:49):
over on the Democrat side. Oh hey, those young people, Hey,
they're motivated. They're not with us here with the Republicans. Hey,
our Republican Party. Four hundred and sixty two years old
want to get together for Pinton politics. Have some chicken
wings and complain, but their children and grandchildren are actually
going to caucus and changing the nature of our state

(01:12:11):
from progressive to communists. And that's the natural progression of things,
you know, surprising this, So you know, if you're four
hundred and sixty two years old, please organize with me.
How are we going to do that? Well, whatever our
short term strategies, our short term strategy, our immediate strategy,

(01:12:33):
what we have to do right now is organize your precinct. Now.
That is the job of the traditional Republican Party of
Minnesota led by Alex Plekish. And guess what in SD
forty five, where I live because it's his Senate district.
He's pretty organized because he's been here. He's a political

(01:12:54):
rounder and he's got a lot of friends that go
to caucus and get elected delegates. So he controls his backyard.
I learned it the hard way. But guess what my
precinct is? W three PB, Joshua Coleburn, that's yours too.
Let's see who's going to get the job done in

(01:13:16):
W three PB. That's my Tanner. There is a map
of W three PB just down the script. Can you
put that up? Just that's the josh You know, this
is Tanner's gonna put up a picture, you know, because
you can get your there's my map. That's where I live.
That is my precinct. And guess what I've got I've

(01:13:39):
got for you if you live in Minnesota, and you know,
if you're in Kentucky, or you're in Ohio, or you're
in Florida, you can do the same thing. You got
to find a way, a strategy, and a tactic that
works in your backyard. Here's what I'm doing in my backyard.
Royce White dot Us. Royce White is a charismatic candidate.

(01:13:59):
He has tens of thousands of people that have signed
up to be on his mail list to be a volunteer.
Just at the state fair, I think he signed up
thousands of people, which was just a few weeks ago,
fresh enthusiastic supporters. We have their names, we have their addresses,

(01:14:20):
we have their email addresses, their telephone numbers. You know
what I did. I went out and bought the state
of Minnesota voter record. I got a data guy. He
could work for you too, if you're in Minnesota. He's
going to cross compare our house list of volunteers with
the Minnesota state voter record in guess where W three PB.

(01:14:43):
Maybe there's eight, maybe there's ten, maybe there's twenty. I
don't know how many. But I'm going to call every
one of those people and I'm going to get together
with them, and I'm going to make sure that in
February of twenty twenty six, they come to caucus with
me and we are going to elect each other. I
am going to conquer my backyard. This is the precinct strategy.

(01:15:05):
You know, I've been preaching it, but nobody seems to
want to do it. So guess what, I'm gonna do it?
And anybody that wants to do it with me. If
you go to Roycewhite dot us and put your name
in there, we're going to contact you. If you go
to support at tyreget dot com, that's support at tyreget
dot com. You can say, hey, dear David, I would

(01:15:27):
like to organize my precinct. Hey guess what in your precinct.
I've got all the volunteers for the campaign, and I
got the voter records. We'll supply you with the names
of the people you need to contact. Because what's great
about Royce in addition that he's completely unscripted, unbarnished, and incorruptible.

(01:15:50):
Oh yeah, he's got all kinds of you know, flat spots,
he swears, you know, he's got some ex wives, kids,
all kinds of problems, you know, like me, like you, corruptible.
I don't care what my past was, it's not relevant
to my present. My present is. I've given over to
spreading the philosophy of republicanism. I've dropped my baggage. I'm

(01:16:12):
made new, I'm born again in pursuit of preserving the republic,
maintaining my freedom and really my freedom to worship in
what I believe is the one true God. So well,
you know, I'm born again baby, and you can be too.
You can get in touch with me. We can get
you the names of eight or ten people in your backyard.

(01:16:34):
It's not hard to call eight or ten people in
your precinct. Now tactic. The first thing you have to
know in any fight is where are you on the battlefield.
The first thing you need to do. In whatever state
you live in, your Secretary of State will have something
called a precinct Finder. You go to the Secretary of

(01:16:56):
State website, you find their precinct Finder module. You follow
the bouncing ball and guess what it's going to tell you?
Exactly what precinct you're in, Exactly what senate district you're in,
exactly what legislative district you're in, What is your polling place,
who's your commissioners? Everything you need to know about where

(01:17:19):
you are. Now you got a place go online. Artificial
intelligence could be used for good. Say hey, dear groc
can you please give me a map of my precinct?
And whila, the map's going to come out. Tack it
on your wall. That is the only thing you got

(01:17:41):
to be concerned with. Now. If you're on a BPO.
You here in Minnesota basic political operating unit of Senate
District Committee, and that is a functioning committee. Like my
friend Robert who set up these great interviews for me
with Richard Barris and Mark Mitchell. Thank you Robert for

(01:18:03):
doing this for me. He's on a very functional committee
of hardcore constitutional Americans. He needs to work through his
committee to organize his precincts. Every precinct there's forty one
hundred precincts in Minnesota. Every one of them needs one
citizen to do the job. Well, we're going to start

(01:18:26):
with one person. That's me. If you're on a committee
that works, work through your committee. If you're on a
committee like I was, which is all confounded up with
rhinos in a handful of people that care about the
Constitution of the United States, you know, people that are
grifting grifters, like are here in SD forty five grifters.

(01:18:51):
The committee is led by the Queen of the grifters.
I don't want to fight with her. It's a waste
of time. These people are water balloons. They ever had
a water balloon, you can squish it. It'll take any form.
These people will take any form all they want to
do is absorb your energy, so you're not effective. One
could say that the entire Republican Party in the Twin

(01:19:13):
Cities is just there to absorb the energy of political
educators so that they're ineffective. Because what do these committees do? Nothing?
And how do I know that the evidence? Look at Minneapolis,
it's going communist. Where's the Republicans in Minneapolis? The city's
gone communist. There's obviously no Republicanism there. Same thing in

(01:19:34):
Saint Paul, Same thing in CD three where I live.
The committee chair Stan Hamilton. You know, he's a friend
of mine. He's a cool dude, got Rod Kerr and
I go out with them. I don't agree with their
political philosophy. What they think is we got to cater
to the communists through progressive Republicanism. It doesn't work. We've
been sliding to the left forever since I sat in

(01:19:58):
that room with those professors in nineteen sixty nine. Go
back and look at the history of our state. What
was Minnesota in nineteen sixty nine. It was not like
this was a completely different kind of environment. Hey, if
you keep doing something that doesn't work, that would be
called insanity. We have to dig our heels in and

(01:20:22):
not compromise with evil. And that's where I'm at. And
if you don't like it, you can go bite a
hog in the ass. This is a game of the
human will. The immediate strategy. If you are on a
committee that's confounded with conflict, stop fighting with these people.
Find out what your precinct is and organize it. Caucus

(01:20:46):
is in February of twenty twenty six. You got plenty
of time to meet eight or ten people and bring
them to caucus. We got to have the biggest caucus
in Minnesota history in twenty twenty six. If we don't
want to have digital ideas, if we don't want to
have digital currency, if we want to stay free, if
we want to stay well, there's no cavalry coming. We're

(01:21:09):
going to have to do it ourselves. Do you read me?
Do you read me? Can I get it on? Men?
You organize your precinct. If I can help you, you
find me, We'll get your voter data, will help you
organize your precinct. Free People Radio and Free People of

(01:21:30):
America is a center of Minnesota politics. Why because I
say it is, and when you believe it, it will be.
Now there's gonna be people. And I remember this at
the Republican Party. Oh David penzagrifteran you this thing has
only cost me money and time. If it was up
to me, I'd be in a mountainside praying all day,

(01:21:52):
playing the piano and training. This is a pain in
the ass doing this, and the only reason I'm doing
it is because I have to. I was talking to
Royce about this just yesterday and we both agreed what
suffering this is and how dangerous it is. But if
you and I don't do it, who's gonna do it?

(01:22:14):
That's why I played the Muhammada a lea piece, bravery, tenacity,
indomitable will, speed, timing. We got to get this together. Now.
Whatever you got to relate to to develop your own power,
your own personal health, find it and do it. And
if I seem controlling and demanding, it's because it's my ass.

(01:22:38):
These people come back, You soft ass Republicans. You think
these communists take over and they're gonna spare you because
you're a collaborator. Who dies first in the take Tanner?
Who do the Nazis kill first? Who do the Soviets?
Who do the Trotskyites? Who do the Bolsheviks kill first
the collaborators because they knew they couldn't trust them. So

(01:23:01):
you think you're a soft Republican. These people are communists,
don't you get it. Look at the Democrat side, they've
just broken the glass. What do they call it, the
fire alarm. They just pulled the fire alarm. They said,
help help. Our city's going to communist. But you know what,
they also give you the quiet part out loud. The

(01:23:25):
Democrat is voting with the socialist up to ninety percent
of the time. The Democrat land developer said, I can't
tell the difference. Is there one party? Is there are
two parties? He's saying there's a UNI party. They're saying
it on their side. Well, guess what we gotta do.
We got to hold meetings. We got to convert people

(01:23:46):
to Republicanism. I remember I was at a meeting with
Alex Pleckish stood up at the microphone and said, oh,
that person was a Democrat. They can't be a delegate, Alex.
That's just stupid. We're never going to win this state
if we don't go This is another tactic. We got
to go down into CD five and CD four and
start working with those citizens. You don't think that there

(01:24:08):
are tens of thousands of urban residents that are suffering
from this economic collapse, in this urban crime, and they
know that there's no answer from the Democrat. The only
reason they're not Republican is the racism and anti Semitism
and elitism that's in the Republican Party. They prefer the

(01:24:29):
devil they know to the devil they don't know because
they are afraid of us because of the inequity that
is in the Republican Party. And that's why we have
a battle in the party to root that out. But
here's another tactic. We're going to fight that battle till
the day after the primary. On the day after that primary,

(01:24:50):
a soft Republican is better than a communist. The day
after the election, we're going to start fighting the party again.
So guess what we are united with you. We're just
going to unite on our terms. Our terms, which is
the Constitution of the United States. And let me make
that very clear for me personally, the rally point is

(01:25:13):
the Constitution. Why don't you read it? That's a good
place to start. That's a good tactic. If you haven't
read the Constitution, please read it word for word. It's
kind of like Mark and Matthew. You can read it
a thousand times. People devote their lives the constitutional scholarship.

Speaker 8 (01:25:30):
Sure.

Speaker 1 (01:25:30):
The editor of the Minneapolis Times what she's learned about
other pressing needs for change. Her answer, our political system
given the Twin Cities, is mostly democratic. Her focus is
primarily on what's happening with the Democratic Party.

Speaker 2 (01:25:46):
The word endorsements are done by like two hundred people.
There's thirty five thousand people in a ward, and two
hundred people show up and make those choices, and you
just have to find the right two hundred and you
can get a social endorsed, and once they get endorsed,
they usually win. The caucas system in Minneapolis is unfixably broken.

Speaker 1 (01:26:07):
Any other nominations.

Speaker 2 (01:26:09):
Should be done away with.

Speaker 1 (01:26:10):
Nominations are closed, rank choice voting.

Speaker 2 (01:26:13):
Not only is it bad, I teach people how to
game it. We should not have a voting system where
I teach people how to game the system.

Speaker 4 (01:26:21):
That's good. So guess what. Now here's a liberal and
she's preaching for the end of the caucas system, and
that same thing is going on in the Republican Party. Well,
we got to take the educators out of the game,
because see what they want both sides, the Union Party
is they want the grift to continue. What do the

(01:26:45):
progressives want? They want to the communists, they want to
control the grift. What I want is a corruption minimization
strategy and a human well being strategy. And if we
demand it, if we demand the philosophy of republicanism, we'll
have a first turning and will restore some dignity and
some goodness and some humanity to our country. But it's

(01:27:08):
only going to happen if we demand it. Did you
hear what she said. Let's end the caucus system. Let's
end the caucus system. Let's end the opportunity for the
citizens to endorse authentic people. Huh great, great, it's politics, baby,

(01:27:30):
it's rough and tumble. We've got to keep our eye
on the prize. The eye on the prize. That prize
is freedom. Now, any citizen can organize their precinct, anybody.
You don't have to be in the party. How you
do not have to be in a political party to
organize your precinct. All you need is the voter data
and call the people that are like minded and go

(01:27:51):
to caucus and guess what it's like you're running for office.
I say this all the time. You want to do politics,
you got to create your own constituency. I have thousands
and thousands of people that follow me and listen to
me and thank you, and I appreciate it, and please
go to tirage dot com and support the broadcast, so
we could have hundreds of thousands. We need money, that's

(01:28:12):
part of politics, but we don't need the kind of
money that these assholes want. I don't need tens of
millions of dollars. I just need enough to expand the
broadcast and not go broke doing this. So let me
just tell you. Anybody can be a politician in their
own backyard. It's called making friends with your neighbors. It's

(01:28:33):
about making lists of people, so you know you can
have a barbecue. I'll give you the people to contact,
contact them, invite them for a barbecue. Come up, here's
a tactic. Don't say you're a Republican or Democrat. Come
up with something that is not politically polarizing. Come up
with a special interest group, like fixing potholes in SD

(01:28:59):
forty five, are improving my child's test scores? If you
have kids in school, something that's going to bring people together.
What are the unifying issues, Well, Richard Barris told us
what they were. Health freedom, you know, medical freedom, religious freedom,
food freedom, economic freedom, those freedoms everybody. Not everybody, but

(01:29:25):
a vast majority of Americans agree that religious freedom is important.
What does that mean if you're a Catholic or a Jew.
That means if somebody wants to be an atheist, that's cool.
That's called freedom. Then who is in charge of the
politics is determined by who shows up. As we heard
on the show Precarious State from the political professor, who

(01:29:47):
shows up to govern wins the day. We're just not
showing up, and we're showing up more than we did
in the past, but not enough. And if you're in
the party, if you're in mean GOP, a lot of
your times getting wasted. If you're on a political committee
and you're not organizing your precinct, you're wasting your time. Really,

(01:30:09):
you're wasting your time. Because what matters now is grassroots organization,
grassroots mobilization. So one of the things I'm going to
do is I'm going back to the future. I'm bringing
back the master class, and that's where I started, and
those that have you been with me for a long time.
In twenty twenty one, when I started to get organized

(01:30:30):
in the party, I started holding something I called the
master class here in CD three. And that's not Masonic.
It's musical. To anybody who've been a musician, you know
we have master classes, and I know there's a Masonic
overtone that's accidental. Let's not go crazy with the conspiratorial thinking.
I'm telling you, I'm giving my personal testimony. I'm not

(01:30:52):
a Mason. I'm a musician. I play the piano, so
I call it a master class. I went to at
the behest of my political mentor, Dave Kylo, I went
to the chair of the CD three Executive Committee, Randy Sutter,
and I asked him if you would support me holding

(01:31:13):
classes in CD three. He said, why do you want
to do that. I said, I want to increase the
population of Republicans in my backyard. And he said two things.
You can do it if you pay for it and
never talk about election integrity. I said, okay, I agree.

(01:31:33):
So I paid for it out of my own pocket,
and I committed not to talk about election integrity. Now
this is twenty twenty one, so that was quite a sacrifice.
But see, I was a team player at the time.
I was here to serve the party. I didn't realize
the party was full of corrupt assholes. I didn't get
that at the time because I came in with a
childlike heart. And after four or five of these sessions,

(01:31:56):
people started to get pissed because we started to get
more and more people coming in because I've got some charisma,
and we put on a hell of a show and
was getting up to eighty ninety one hundred hundred and
twenty people showing up regular and people started to complain
because they didn't like the politics that I was promoting.
And guess what the politics was? The search for truth.

(01:32:19):
That's all I was doing. The search for truth. I
didn't say I had the answers. I was searching for
truth with the people that were coming. People started saying, oh, Pad,
he's ambitious, he's self serving. Oh few people. I was
there to save my state. And then Randy started to
come because he heard it was, you know, kind of
a hot deal. And guess what he did when he

(01:32:41):
saw that it was working, he shut it down. And
I said, Randy, why are you shutting this down? And
he goes, well, David, remind me why you're doing this.
And I said, Randy, I'm trying to build the party.
I'm trying to get more Republicans going. And he said, David,
we don't need more Republics. We need more work from

(01:33:02):
the Republicans who already have. And I didn't understand what
he meant because I was so childlike. What he was
saying was don't change the balance of power. I might
lose my seat. And then the word came down from
David Hann we don't want people mixing from different districts.
Stay in your lane. In other words, we don't want

(01:33:23):
all the American firsters to meet each other because you
might get organized. Well, guess what, we all know each
other now. Some of us don't like each other. Doesn't
always work. Sometimes there's misfires, But the truth is we
know who each other are and we can organize together.
We can use media. Remember what she said the doctor

(01:33:45):
the college professor. Digital media is important for organizing. Follow
me on x at prof Pen Podcasts, follow me on
Getter at the Professor Penn podcast, be a follower on YouTube.
Here's a tactic that's very important. Repost the links to
the podcast in your socials, spread out the word. There's

(01:34:10):
not going to be any support for this politics from
the algos, but if the citizens band together and spread
the word. Hey, you know there was a resistance in
World War Two. It was called the French underground. Hey,
they didn't have any digital media. Maybe that's why they
were underground. Of course, there's a light in a dark

(01:34:30):
to everything. Everybody's going to know who we are. But
guess what if you're a Republican, they already know who
you are. Every website, you look at, every post, every text,
it's all recorded. The NSSAY has got all of it.
So don't get scared. Now you're already ham, You're already
made marked. We're fighting for our freedom. We want to

(01:34:54):
fight constitutionally and peacefully. We can fight by organizing. The
long term strategy is changing the culture of our precinct,
our congressional district, in our state. The short term strategy
is get ready for caucus. I will help you identify
the people in your backyard you need to talk to

(01:35:15):
repost the links. I am coming to meetings. If you've
got meetings that you're doing in your district, get in
touch with me. We'll get some heavyweight people coming out
there to help you grow your constituency. You're a candidate
in your backyard. This is not very systematized. I'm giving
you a machine gun approach of tactics that you need

(01:35:39):
to use now, as everybody of the ten thousand or
twenty thousand people are going to see this, are you
all going to do this? I really would wish that
you would, but we don't need everybody. We need the
people that are willing to do the work. This is
not fun, this is not glorious. It's hard work, and

(01:35:59):
that's why people aren't doing it. It's a lot less
difficult than going to a gulag eye a shade. Oh no,
that can never happen in Minnesota. Oh, you're just a
conspiratory that I can just hear Julia Coleman. That'll never happen,
That'll never happen. Uh, you know what, I'm sure there

(01:36:20):
was a bunch of people sitting around in nineteen oh
five in Russia saying that'll never happen. That'll never happen,
and in Germany in nineteen thirty two, that'll never happen. Here.
You see, what makes this country free is the philosophy
of republicanism. Other philosophies are not about freedom. Look around

(01:36:43):
the world, the slaughter in the carnage all over the
world where we don't have the philosophy of republicanism. So
we have a lot to fight for. I'm fighting for
my ass and so are you. I'll keep you posted
on when the next masterclass is going to be coming soon.

(01:37:04):
I'm going to do it every month until the breath
comes out of my lungs. I gotta laugh. One of
my ex friends who's Jewish, who got polarized with me
over Israel many other issues, just texted me and he said, Wow,

(01:37:25):
Trump brought an end to the war in Gaza. Yes
he did. He can now turn his attention to the
war in the Ukraine. That's the air game. We don't
have any effect about that at all, President Trump. Our
Justice Department issued the state of Minnesota to get the
voter records. They're suing on immigration fraud. They're suing the

(01:37:47):
state on a whole range of issues. That's the air game.
Wars are won on the ground. Get going right now
on that very directive and uncompromising note. Thank you. If
life was normal, I would never act like this. This

(01:38:11):
is not the way I want to be. I don't
want to be controlling or directive. I don't want to
be judgmental or call people out. That's not who I am.
I get no joy out of it. Thanks for joining.
I wish you a great weekend, a healthy weekend. It's beautiful,
get outside and God will it. I look forward to

(01:38:34):
seeing you again next Tuesday. I have a good night, everybody.

Speaker 15 (01:38:38):
Disclaimer.

Speaker 5 (01:38:38):
The information providing in this pocast is for general information purpose.

Speaker 1 (01:38:40):
It is only all opinion express by the podcast host.

Speaker 5 (01:38:41):
Their guest are solly their opinions and do not reflect
the opinions of any entity they represent or associated with.

Speaker 6 (01:38:44):
This podcast is not intend to provide profesional advice or politicaludnance,
and not you really upon for such.

Speaker 5 (01:38:47):
The content of this pocast is based on a post
andnledge understanding the time of recording to subject to change
anyac presenter offatu statement made by the podcast The host
or guests are generated by availableinsree media orces, social mediautlets,
and artficial intelligence including er okay, the Artifical intellig muchle x.

Speaker 6 (01:38:57):
Although we start to provide your update, commentary opinions, we
make no repsentations or WRANTYESRESTREMPLI about complete acuracy, reliability, stablityor
availability with respect to the podcast or the information, products, services,
or related graphics containing in the podcast for any purpose.

Speaker 5 (01:39:05):
By accessing and using this poast, you anowledge agree that
the host, gests and any afiliated entities are responsible for
any actions you ta based on information provided in this podcast.
You agree that the use of this podcast is your
own risk. The host, guests, and any afiliate entities are
not liable for any direct, indirect, incidental, consequential porcion of
damages are rising out of your access to or use
of this podcast. This includes an damages related to the
lows of use, data profits where or not advised of
the possibility of such damages. In no event salil, the host, guests,
and any affliate entities be liable to you or any
third partyforny claims loses damage a rising out your use
of this podcast or reliance on any information provide ifearing

(01:39:26):
by listening to this poast, you wouldree to release and
hold harmless Host Gests and anyffiliated entities from any in
all liability claims, actions, demands, and extensitizing out of, orlaying
your use of this podcast.

Speaker 2 (01:39:33):
Thank you if you're understanding cooperation
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