Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hey, good morning. You're welcome to break Through Walls. I'm
Ken Walls and I'm your host, and today I have
a real life hero on the show. Like I've gotten
to know this guy over the last I don't know, year,
ten months or so on X. His name on ex
is Steve loves Ammo. And you're gonna find out why
(00:26):
he loves Ammo. But do me a favor and share
this out to everybody that you know, like and love.
Share it out to those you don't like. Just share
it to everybody. Get a bunch of people on here
and stay with us. We will be right back with
Steve loves Ammo. Okay, we're back. Let me bring Steve on. Steve,
(01:20):
welcome to the show.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
Brother gone on.
Speaker 3 (01:22):
Man, Hey, this is my first ever podcast. I'm like
extremely nervous, right.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
You're so oh my god, Steve's got his own badass
podcast and dude, listen, I'm I really am grateful that
you're here. I know it's taken a while to convince
you to do the show. But should I share this
(01:49):
to you? Probably not.
Speaker 2 (01:52):
Hey, I'm professional. I do not get on my phone
during a podcast.
Speaker 1 (01:55):
I'm not on my phone. I'm on my computer, I'm
sure to have sass and Queenie and everybody. But so,
so you know this this I started this show about
six years ago, and it was literally to have a
Oh my god, I I really shouldn't even put her
(02:18):
stuff up to be real, she's so ash. I love you.
You're ridiculous though, But anyway, you know, it was I
was stuck in life. I had just given my wife's
car back to the bank because we couldn't afford it.
Things were really not good for us, and I was like,
you know, I feel like if I just start interviewing
(02:41):
people and asking them how they got unstuck, maybe I'll
figure it out. So, dude, I appreciate you coming on.
Why don't you start with maybe telling everybody where it
all began for you, like where you were born and raised?
Speaker 3 (02:54):
Ish Okay, yeah, so I was born in a small
town in South Louisiana. Probably you've never heard of the
town in general, and I'm not gonna doxs myself even further,
but anyways, all towns South Louisiana. My mom actually knows
some of the cast members of the show Swamp People,
so Altra Country right, Wow, graduated high school, actually went
(03:16):
to trade school, became an electrician.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
I did well.
Speaker 3 (03:20):
I was a marine electrician, so I didn't do any
residential commercial and I worked on like a lot of
shipyards and offshore and things like that. Didn't have a
lot of direction in my life. So I was like,
you know what, something for that was actually really stable.
I decided to join the army. I really wanted to
serve my country. I actually wanted to join the army
(03:41):
after nine to eleven, but my dad was like, why
don't you go and see your options out there, and
I'll pay for trade school and all that stuff, and so.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
I was like, Okay.
Speaker 3 (03:51):
I took his advice, which at the end of the day,
I was like, Eh, maybe I should have joined earlier.
But you know, things happened for a reason, right, So yeah.
I joined active duty in two thousand and six. And
I can say this because this public record. My MS
was a human intelligence collector, so I did source operations
(04:13):
and interrogations of detainees, lawful unlawful enemy combatants overseas and Iraq.
In Afghanistan, I was stationed out in Germany. I went
to Octoberfest twice and I remember approximately about an hour
and a half total because the Germans, you know, they
see the Americans with the high and tight haircuts or
whatever you want to call them, you know, really short
(04:33):
hair and they're always like, drink moins, drink moins because
they just want to get us drunk. And they can
speak really good English, which is really good. So it
was really hard in Germany. I was trying to speak German,
learn German, but they were speaking back to me in
English and I'm like, shit, guys, come on, I'm trying
to learn German, but they want to practice thearing. It's
because they learn in school, right right. So the second
(04:53):
time I went to octoberfests, the last thing I remember
is guy was really drunk over there and he was
getting in the fight with a pollet's eye and they
took out the baton and their baton has like a
recoil on it, so like you hit them once and
then I'll just like continuously hit him. And I was like,
oh man, that dude, that dude's really bad, really bad
off and then I blacked out. But anyways, I won't
(05:14):
talk about bene drinking anymore. So left left the military.
I went to the University of Louisiana to be an
athletic trainer. I don't know if you guys know what
an athletic trainer is, but an athletic trainer essentially is
a sports medicine. So if someone gets injured on any
kind of field, they are the people that run out
(05:36):
with the fanny packs and water bottles.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
And I know Brett loves fanny packs, but.
Speaker 3 (05:41):
Inside Joe, guys subscribe to me, you understand who Brett is.
So I did that, and then I really didn't. It
wasn't really a high paying job, but I became a
nationally registered paramedic after that. My first nine one one
shift was actually on Marty Girl Day in Lafay at Louisiana,
(06:04):
and I was like, wow, didn't really learn this in
the schoolhouse. I got called every single name in the
back of the bus that you can imagine what brought
me out here at texas As, I got promoted to
operation supervisor.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
And yeah, I kind of. I was an operation supervisor
for a while.
Speaker 3 (06:20):
I got an opportunity to work out in West Texas
to be a safety representative slash remote paramedic. I ended
up finishing my bachelor's degree and occupational health and safety,
so I'm actually one of the few veterans that actually
used the gi baling actually accomplish getting their bachelor's degree.
I don't know if you guys know, but a lot yeah,
(06:41):
they they actually they for some reason, I don't know
what it is, they don't finish out their degree.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
But so, so you're so listen, you're going too fast.
Speaker 3 (06:53):
Why that's what she said, you need to slow it down.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
No, I want to. I want to talk about a
little bit about your your military experience because I know, listen,
you're and you know, I don't want to brag for you,
but I will. I mean, you're a purple heart veteran.
You've you've which you know, by my understanding, that means
you were injured, yes, and and and uh while you
(07:21):
were on in the military. I don't let me get
this right. But so so you, I mean talk about
when you were in the military, because you were in
for how long?
Speaker 3 (07:36):
I was five years active duty, then I went to
uh in active reserves, which is essentially a show up
to a reserve post once a year. Hey I'm still alive,
and then you go about your business.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
But can they pay you for that?
Speaker 2 (07:49):
No?
Speaker 3 (07:50):
Oh, it's just part of my contract. My contract, contractual obligation,
got it, got it?
Speaker 2 (07:56):
Yeah, the entire time active duty.
Speaker 3 (07:59):
Besides my combat deployments, I was stationed in Germany. Yeah.
I mean, I guess since we're both out of uh,
both theater of operations, I can kind of discuss a
little bit more what I did overseas. So when I
was in Afghanistan, I had two areas that are really
(08:19):
operated in. One was in the Bogram Internment Facility, which
is in Bagram, Afghanistan, and it's a huge, uh, the
collection of detainees. They're in cages, so the children in
cageous thing over here in the United States just.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
It's it's laughable.
Speaker 3 (08:33):
But it was Barack Obama, by the way. But anyways,
and then I worked out in Bob Salerno, which is
r C East, and that's more out in the sticks,
I guess, for lack of better terms, I worked with
a lot of three letter organizations. I met a lot
of people, you know, a lot of people that aren't
actual mainstream films. Now, I don't know if anybody has
(08:58):
watched Oh my gosh, it's zero dark thirty. There was
a redheaded CIA agent that actually was killed overseas, and
what had happened was and they depicted it correctly in
the film. Is that a Taliban member was supposed to
be a source but he stuffed his prosthetic leg with
explosives and killed her. But I had met her about
(09:19):
a month or so before that actually happened. I was
out there when I think it's cop keating, I'm drawing
a blank right now, but it's a movie with Orlando Bloom.
That a base essentially our combat outpost. I was in
a lower valley area and it was completely surrounded by
high territory, which is the most ridiculous thing ever, because
(09:40):
if you're in the military, you know you always get
high ground, right. But a few hundred Taliban completely surrounded
the cop and they started launching RPGs and machine gun
fire into the base. A guy that I served with overseas,
because we I was kind of spread out. We were
spread throughout the region, and it was so bad out
there that some of the mortar cachet was starting to
(10:03):
catch on fire and they had to actually throw a
stand on it to put it out. Because of all
those orders and went off at once, it would have
been really bad. But yeah, man, so I wreck was
a little different.
Speaker 1 (10:14):
Yeah, so you you you definitely saw some some serious combat.
It sounds like that's just a lot.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
I want to address something to the audience. I know
a lot of people, because I am a Purple Heart recipient,
they consider me a hero. I do appreciate the gesture,
but in my opinion, I signed up for what I
wanted to do. I wanted to serve my country, and
uh that that's just a hazard of the occupation.
Speaker 2 (10:41):
Right.
Speaker 3 (10:41):
Some people call the Purple Heart the enemy marksmanship badge.
A lot of veterans would really understand what that is.
But in my opinion, I'm no hero. I serve my
country and I did it with dignity and respect to
my nation and the constitution. The people that are actual
heroes are the ones that didn't make it back. So
those are the people that I really respect and myern
their eternal heroes in my opinion.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
Amen, dude, I agree with I mean, I yeah, they
definitely are. I think, you know, I'm like, I'm buddies
with Buckster. Who's on here. He corrected me, he said, wounded.
Can it means you're he was wounded. But the you know,
I think that there's I mean, I can't imagine what
(11:26):
was the what was the thing inside of you when
you decided I'm joining, I'm joining, like no matter what
I'm going in And was did you have that patriotic
thing that you have now? I mean, you have it now,
but when you're eighteen years old or whatever, you're like,
you know, I'm just gonna go do this thing.
Speaker 3 (11:48):
In all seriousness. When I was born, I was hatched, right,
I was holding an American flag, and I was saying,
we'll be key right away, dude, So let's us get
that straight.
Speaker 2 (11:58):
All right, I've my entire life. I'm just kidding.
Speaker 3 (12:02):
So it was it was a bunch of different things, right,
So I felt like I had when nine to eleven happened,
I really wanted to serve in the military, and you
know kind of life happened. I went to trade school
and things like that, but I still had that sense
of wanting to serve my country along with you know,
(12:23):
life factors. I guess like I didn't feel like I
had any direction or real discipline in my life. So
I really wanted structure. And so it's it's multiple reasons, right,
but ultimately, yes, one of I did want to serve
my country.
Speaker 1 (12:38):
That's freaking awesome, dude. So, so you got out of
the military and you said you were in for five years.
You know, I remember my brother. Don't make fun of him.
He's he's six six so dude, I'm only six foot tall. Man,
I'm like, what the hell, mom? It was you ps guy.
Speaker 3 (13:02):
I make fun of Yao Ming because I think his
name is funny. He's tall as shit, so whatever.
Speaker 1 (13:07):
But no, he was in the Navy for ten years,
and I remember he went for I think it. I
forget how they did it, five or six years. Then
he got out. He came back to went back to
Ohio and he's he was out as a civilian for
a year and he's like, you know what, screw this ship.
I can't do this anymore. I'm going back in. He
(13:28):
went back in the Navy for like another.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
Four years, so he just re enlisted.
Speaker 1 (13:33):
Yeah. So the talk about the adjustment when you got
out of the military, you went through all the shit
you went through in the military, when you came back
to the States or wherever you were at the time,
how was it adjusting to civilian life.
Speaker 3 (13:52):
I still struggle with it, man, really, Yeah, it's because
I'm so like really matter of fact and rigid when
it whenever I speak sometimes, I know, I joke around
a lot, but when it comes.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
Now, you're matter of fact and rigid. Let's just leave
it there.
Speaker 3 (14:06):
I do like to go around, but I mean it
just I know the window you're trying to give out
their Yeah, man, I'm going to say, I guess the
adjustment is a lot easier than other veterans with like
Korean War and Vietnam. The public perception but behind everything
(14:27):
is a lot different now than it is back then,
which is really good as far as that goes. But
there is has been an increase on veterans affairs and
like taking care of veterans post deployment. I know when
I went through to a lot of group therapy sessions
with combat bets from the Vietnam era, some were twenty
(14:48):
thirty years of trauma related things and they've never gone
to the VA, so I was meeting a lot of
guys that had experienced it for decades. There is still
a gigantic issue in our country when we have homeless
veterans that are here in this country and we're cater
(15:08):
into illegals, which pisces me off.
Speaker 2 (15:10):
Beyond belief.
Speaker 3 (15:12):
The VA system itself is in my opinion, it's a
socialist construct and it's just really gigant. There are so
many issues with the VA still, and I honestly I
do not believe that there's going to be a solution
to it other than giving all veterans private access to healthcare,
(15:34):
some sort of like Trcare subscription that they can go
to any doctor that they choose. I know President Trump
did give veterans an opportunity to go to like if
the VA is backlogged or whatever, they can go to
a doctor they're choosing and the VA will pay for it.
But I think, in my opinion, the VA is just
(15:55):
it's literally a broken system.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
Man.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
Anything that the government gets their hands on usually it
goes down the tubes. But anyways, I spent about a
decade in therapy post deployment deal with a lot of
struggles alcohol abuse, depression, anxiety, a lot of things like
I still deal with at times. But I am much
(16:21):
more in a position now to where I understand and
I've developed a lot of communication skills and gained a
little bit of I guess maybe emotional intelligence understanding. Like
the things that I do go through. So that's why
I like my focus now is to reach out to
veterans that are struggling, because I do understand how the
VA does operate, and some people that do work in
(16:44):
the VA system are civilians, and for veterans themselves, it's
really difficult to express what they're going through to somebody
that doesn't understand or hasn't been there. That's right, you
know what I mean. So reaching out to your peers
I think is a good solution. But ultimately, like veterans
do need like physician help, potentially the VA system to me,
(17:10):
they do focus a lot on medications rather than figuring
out what the solution to the problem or like the
the root cause or the problem and like really working
through that, like with cognitive behavioral therapy. Rather they would
just like to push like SSR eys and dopamine inhibitors.
And I really disagree with that.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
Oh my god, so do I dude. So you know
I think that that, like I have, We'll just let's
just let's talk about this man, because it's a serious problem.
You know, a friend of mine, her son was I
believe he's served in Afghanistan as well and was in
(17:52):
combat and he came back here and he couldn't deal
with it, and he was you know, he did, he
did the deal, and she's just she'll be crushed for
the rest of her life. It was her only child.
And you know, they say there's twenty two a day.
(18:16):
I'm a recovered alcoholic with coming up on twenty three
years sober, and I you know, I hear these statistics
about how many people die in d UI accidents or
die of alcoholism they call it alcohol. It's not that
many on paper, but when you go a wait a minute,
they yeah, you listed the death as rhosis or you
(18:37):
you know, or whatever. So with the twenty two a
day that they talk about, I think that numbers probably
significantly higher. They're just not marking it. As you know.
And I saw you a couple of weeks ago, like
you were. You heard that somebody was struggling and ah,
(19:02):
I can't even talk about it at getting choked up.
But you you heard about a veteran struggling with wanting
to stay alive, and dude, you went like you went
right into it. Man, you you were you were using
your reach, which you do. You have a huge account
(19:22):
on X with four hundred and whatever a thousand followers.
It's insane, and I want to talk about that too,
how like, because I know you haven't even been on
that long on X like hal a freak, did you?
But anyway, so, like you know, you used your reach
though to really get this guy some help and get
(19:44):
in contact with him. And I see you do that
quite often. Talk about that and what that means to
you helping these guys and gals that are going through it.
Speaker 3 (19:55):
Man, I don't know if it's I don't know how
I can categorize it, but I just feel that it
needs to be addressed and there needs to be a
lot more highlight on it, and I will use my
platform to, I guess, make sure that if veterans do
need help that I am available or a resource. When
that individual made that post, I stayed up till I
(20:18):
think about four o'clock in the morning trying to figure
out where this person was a lot of people send
me messages, you know, saying okay, maybe we figured him out,
figured out who this was, and all this stuff, And
I do believe PD ended up showing up early that
next morning and he was all right, and he made
a follow up post, you know, thanking everybody and things
(20:40):
like that. But what what I've found out through life
is when people care, or when people make a considerable effort,
big things can happen.
Speaker 2 (20:52):
Right.
Speaker 3 (20:53):
That's why I don't rely on the government for everything,
for anything. I think people that go too far and
think too much that the government is there to help you,
you lose sight of what's most important to your circle.
And it's the people that actually do care. And I
think there's a gigantic problem in this country that you
know that we're seeing it now with tribalism between both
(21:14):
parties and the wins we're trying to stack up against
each other. And I think the country is a lot
more united than it's put off on social media because
I don't go out in public and I'm not like,
oh my god, they're definitely Democrat or definitely Republican or
any of that stuff, you.
Speaker 2 (21:28):
Know what I mean. But I mean, you can't tell.
Speaker 3 (21:30):
But I'm not like, okay, you know, because looks can
be deceiving and you can't judge people like you can't
judge a book by its cover, so you don't understand
who these people are. And I just really feel that
I will use my outreach and my platform veterans is
my thing, Like if I see someone struggling, I'm going
(21:51):
to care and I'm going to do everything in my.
Speaker 2 (21:53):
Power to make sure they are right.
Speaker 3 (21:55):
Because I don't know if you know, Ken, but one
of my friends that I deploy with Afghanistan, his name
is Kenneth Rittenhouse, and he committed suicide a few years back.
We live actually in the same area, so I try
(22:15):
to not have like a survivor's guilt type thing, because
I do realize. I mean, there are some days where
I'm like, man, if i'd just reached out to him.
We live literally about an hour apart from each other,
but it's it's really hard to you can't put that
on yourself, you know, things like that. So yeah, man,
(22:38):
I'm just out right now.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
I know I went to Idea, no Idea, So you know,
I know that you're I don't know when you got
When did you get on acts? Wasn't it like twenty
one or something that you I thought.
Speaker 2 (22:55):
I heard you say or March of twenty three?
Speaker 1 (22:58):
Shut up? All right, Hey, great interview, Thanks for being here.
I'll see you guys later. What the hell twenty three? Dude?
What the he okay, So, so Steve has a massive account.
Like listen, guys, those of you on Facebook or LinkedIn
or YouTube or wherever. Building an account to four hundred
(23:20):
plus thousand followers is actually not easy, and Steve has
done that, and I see you growing every day. Man,
It's it's insane. So how what is it just because
you're like, I.
Speaker 2 (23:38):
Want, let's just get it out there.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
No, man, it's so funny.
Speaker 2 (23:47):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (23:48):
Some people tell me that they feel that I'm authentic.
My message is really really good and it relates to
a lot of people. I just like, man, I don't know.
I just I put messages out there. And this was, like,
so the largest growth that I had with my account,
obviously was pre twenty twenty four election.
Speaker 2 (24:10):
Right.
Speaker 3 (24:12):
I've had Elon Musk comment on about three of my
post I believe it was a lot of a lot
of a lot of traffic to my account.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
But hey, there's my wife by the way, Steve, she's
you got a new fan. You got a new fan, Jill.
He's he's taken already, so and so are you?
Speaker 3 (24:34):
But yeah, like so, I mean, I just I think
I'm just I'm maybe honest with my audience.
Speaker 2 (24:41):
I don't.
Speaker 3 (24:42):
I don't put put myself on this pedestal that I'm
like better than anybody else. I tried to promote as
many people as I can, and it's it's becoming increasingly difficult.
So I just want to stress to everybody that when
your account grows and grows fast and you try to
help out as many patriots that want to push a message,
(25:02):
because I believe, no matter if you have one follower
or a million followers.
Speaker 2 (25:06):
Every voice is important.
Speaker 3 (25:07):
Correct, Yeah, it becomes increasingly difficult the larger year account grows,
because unfortunately, whenever you gain subscribers, and you gain people
that you know share post with you and you've shared
in the past, it just dms become really inundated with
a lot of material and a lot of people wanting
(25:28):
to to get you to help them out. But unfortunately,
like there's only so much you can do in a day.
You can only share so much, and you can only
because your time is limited to because you're trying to
also produce and put out content, and when you start
up a podcast and do all these other things, it
just becomes increasingly difficult. So I guess with the message
(25:49):
I want to share to everybody. If I don't get
to your messages or don't I'm not able to share.
It's nothing personal, it just it just it just it's
just difficult, and there's only so many hours in the day.
Speaker 1 (25:59):
I'm you know you You've been very, very helpful to me.
I don't know why You've got so many freaking followers.
It's insane. I'm at twenty thousand and I can't keep
up with twenty I was. I'm like, I literally have
an account that's five percent the size of Steve's and
(26:21):
and I can't keep up with the DM sometimes, and
You're like on it, dude, Like you're constantly like in
the group chats and and I'm like, how's he freaking
do it? Like, it's insane. I'm serious. The same with
sas Sassafras does the same. I'm like, geez, oh man,
it's crazy.
Speaker 3 (26:40):
Well, there's there's a specific shirt that I'm wearing today
that can explain it a lot.
Speaker 1 (26:45):
Yeah, what is what is it?
Speaker 2 (26:47):
Oh man? I might have to stand hang on. Can
you see it?
Speaker 1 (26:50):
Rism with.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
God? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (26:59):
Maybe maybe just a brushstroke with the tism. I don't know,
but yeah, I'm sure it actually was a gift Queen Anti,
Kami and some other subscribers they put in together and
they got this for my birthday.
Speaker 1 (27:12):
So that's awesome just because of like an.
Speaker 3 (27:18):
Appreciation, I guess for what I've done and helped a
lot of accounts here on XT.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
You have, dude, I like, you know, when Queenie was
at she wasn't very far from from one hundred thousand followers,
and you kept doing it. You were sharing her and
boosting her up and really trying to help her, and
it worked. It helped her. And you know, I think
(27:43):
that people need to need to know that too, because,
like you know, I've I've heard I've had people actually
say to me and d MS, why doesn't Steve ever
share any of my stuff? And I'm like, I don't know.
I like, you know, like I can't help you, bro,
how much of his stuff are you sharing?
Speaker 2 (28:04):
Like?
Speaker 1 (28:04):
How much are you know? Like it's just crazy how
people get It's like, dude.
Speaker 3 (28:09):
I can't even keep on pull notifications too, man. So
like people are like, why don't you ever comment back
to me? Well, I'm sorry, bro, I get like fifty
thousand comments a week, Like I just it's impossible. Maybe
just hire people and make a team out of it
or something.
Speaker 2 (28:26):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
Yeah, look, man, you do a great job for I mean,
it's insane. Like you know, I think about like gunther
Or I've sometimes I think, why hasn't Cat turned ever
commented on now I go, oh, wait a minute, he's
got three point eight million followers. Never you know, but
like and and again, it's it's a matter. It's a
(28:50):
give and take thing. So that's one of the things
that I watch you do. And I've I've watched Queenie
do and and SaaS dudes, you guys, and I see it.
You're helping so many other people grow their accounts and
and become better at the X game, and I think
it's amazing. So so talk about when so when you
(29:14):
came back from from the US or the military, you
were here in the from the U, when you came
back from the US, when you came back to the
US and you were getting out of the military, talk
a little bit about what you started doing then you
were is that when you moved to Texas.
Speaker 3 (29:33):
Well, I moved back home to Louisiana. That was a thing,
University of Louisiana. That's right, that's right then, Yeah, and
then became a National Register paramedic just because like so
man like, I'm so like sporadic when it comes to
careers because initially I thought, Okay, well I'm gonna get
my athletic trainer and then and then become a physical therapist,
(29:59):
start an occupational thing therapist, but that it really wasn't
for me, And to be honest, you know, looking back
on it, I think I missed the rush and the
adrenaline and being a paramedic and going into people's homes
and someone maybe in carniac arrest or in a hYP
hypoglycemic shock. It's it takes a special breed of people
to be a first responder. And so that kind of
(30:22):
I'm kind of a little segue a little bit that
the first responders that are out here in Texas that
are doing all the work and you know, rescuing people,
My heart goes out because I can I can just
about imagine how terrible of the situation that is over there,
and you know, those people need a lot of help.
Speaker 2 (30:37):
So but yeah, so.
Speaker 3 (30:41):
Yeah, that the para para medicine was was really good,
and uh, the reason I got moved out here to
Texas with the company I worked for, I got promoted
to operations supervisors, so I actually was on my six
hundred pound life. Not me, I not a bariatric patient,
but the company I worked for had a contract with
(31:03):
my six hundred pound life. And I have to go
look up the episode because there was one call that
I went to here in Houston. It came across as
a chest pain and it was obviously on the cad
notes it said in my six hundred pound life contract
or whatever. And I showed up to the scene. I
didn't know how serious it was. I thought it was
just a generic call, right. And for the company I
(31:24):
worked for, the PPE, it was mandatory down on each scene.
We had to work gloves and eye protection, you know
when walking into a scene, and they're like huge sticklers
about it.
Speaker 2 (31:36):
Right.
Speaker 3 (31:37):
So I get there and man, there's like fifty HFD
there and I'm like, what is going on? And my
eyeglasses were on my head, right, So I walk in
and I'm about to cross the archway of the door
and they said they're filming, and I'm like, oh no.
So I took my EyePro and I put it right
over my face as I was walking in So I
got staved by that because there there were filming, right,
(32:00):
So I went there and I talked to the guy.
He was laying in his bed, and you know, I
did did the EKG on Everything is fine. I called
doctor now, uh, spoke with him over the phone and
he was he talked to the patient and all that.
But man, it was uh yeah, that was an incredible experience.
By the way, I need to look up the episode
(32:22):
so I can show you.
Speaker 1 (32:23):
Yeah, holy crap, I would have known that. I might
have actually played it while we were on the air. Yeah, yeah,
that would have been good. But so so was the
guy really six hundred pounds?
Speaker 3 (32:35):
He was like eight hundred and seventy five or something
like that. What gigantic individual. I'll just say that, how.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
Does the human heart even? Wow?
Speaker 2 (32:46):
It will only last for so long and it will
eventually give out?
Speaker 1 (32:49):
Oh my god. So, so you, I know you're involved
with the rhino removal project, right, Maybe touch on on
the rhino removal project and why it's important to you
to be involved in that because you're the president I believe, right, Yeah, yes, yeah,
(33:12):
So so talk about the rhino removal project. Dude, Okay,
I'm gonna give you full screen for that too.
Speaker 2 (33:20):
Oh my god, I'm nervous. I'm just kidding now. That's so.
Speaker 3 (33:27):
I joined the Rhino Removal Project about six, yeah, five
or six months ago, and whenever I left the military,
there was a huge sense of belonging that I didn't
have our camaraderie, our service to my country. And I
believe that joining the Rhino Removal Project has been one
of the best things I've done in a while because
(33:47):
I get to serve my country again. And we understand
what we are as conservatives, right, we want to hold
our own party accountable. The left won't do that. They'll
just vote Blue all the way down and they don't
even care. They just want essential power.
Speaker 2 (34:00):
Right.
Speaker 3 (34:01):
So for us at the Rhine of Rhino Removal Project,
we believe in accountability of our politicians, the politicians that
are sending our money overseas, the politicians that are not.
They're voting alongside with the Democrats for a good majority
of the bills that come across and border security and
respect and defense of the Constitution. We're seeing a lot
(34:22):
of issues with our politicians that are that do not
care about their constituents at all.
Speaker 2 (34:28):
They all have a personal agenda that they are.
Speaker 3 (34:30):
They're self serving leeches, and in my opinion, I know
we're going after rhinos, but my personal opinion is all
five hundred and thirty five representatives representatives of this country
need to be removed and they need to be replaced
with people that actually care about this country, actual patriots
of this nation.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
But that's the time I can't say I disagree. I
completely agree.
Speaker 2 (34:51):
Yeah, I understand.
Speaker 3 (34:52):
But what we're doing at RP is we're triaging, right,
We're triaging our party, and we have on our website
at ryn remove a Project dot org. There is a
tool called Renald Scores, and it's it's it's a bunch
of it's a compilation of data from like Liberty and
their endorsement from Trump and all kinds of different things
(35:15):
that we compile together and we vet them against other
politicians president past. So you can go on there and
see how I don't know, Lindsey Graham matches up with
someone like Nancy Pelosi, right, or you know, representatives of
way back yond her, and you can really gauge on
how how how much they care about this country. For
(35:39):
lack of better terms, I couldn't really piece that that
verbiage correctly. But and I see in the commons, Buster said, Steve,
how do you feel about President's photo with Lindsay Graham?
I really hate it. I'm gonna be too. Is the
worst politician probably in American history. I I personally want
him deported to Ukraine because he loves that country so much.
Speaker 2 (36:01):
I just I can't.
Speaker 3 (36:03):
I just don't understand what is going on with President
Trump right now. But there are a lot of things
that we see right now that are on the surface,
and you have to take everything at face value, right
but I do understand there are things that are going
on behind the scene, and there there's a lot of
things that we do not understand yet. And I'm just
(36:23):
I'm praying to God right now that something changes. It's
it's it's it's the face value things that really damage us.
And I President Trump ran underdraining the swamp, right we
see what the swamp is now, and I don't I
don't want anybody to believe that I don't support President
(36:47):
Trump all right, because a lot of people right now
they're like, Okay, what he's doing right now, They're they're
taking everything and they're trying to further divide the conservative movement.
But people have to understand what he's done for us
in the past. In twenty sixteen, or let me take
that back twenty fourteen. Have you ever heard of the
term fake news? Nobody had, nobody has. President Trump was
(37:10):
the first one to bring up the terminology fake news,
and that opened the eyes to a lot of people.
So now you have all of these things where like,
so fake news is one of the first things, and
then you have a lot of what they so called
conspiracy theorists that came to the forefront and they started
exposing a lot of things that have been harming people,
like the food, water supply, air supply, just literal demons
(37:33):
that are in Hollywood, the mainstream media, all of that combined.
So without President Trump, we wouldn't be where we are today.
So let's get that clear. But unfortunately, some people are
really they're kind of black peeled, and they're really frustrated
about what's going on. And I mean that's very understandable
because of the expectation or the illusion what they promised
(37:56):
on during the campaigns, like with cash Hotel stating I'm
going to release deb stain client list on day one.
Now there was no Epstein client list. So there's a
lot of mixed messages and people are kind of running
with some of these some of these individual things, but
at the same time they're not understanding that, Okay, we
have arrested, you know, four hundred plus child traffickers in
(38:17):
the United States since Dan Bongenio and Cash Hotel. I've
taken over the FBI. So it's a lot of information
at once, and I do not want to get stuck
in like this tribalistic type ideal because you have to
think a lot. You have to be way more analytical
on everything that is going on.
Speaker 1 (38:32):
Right well, I think, and I was saying this on
a space last night. I'm like, look, we don't you know,
we don't know what it's going to be six months,
a year, two years from now. I mean, there's still
forty he's been in five and a half months, Like
(38:52):
let the dude cook. Like again, I understand, it's not
I remember thinking, oh my god, he won. That means
on January twenty first, they're all going to jail, like
Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, all Lindsey Graham, all of them there.
But it just doesn't work that way, and I wish
(39:14):
it did, but it doesn't. And I think that we
got to let him cook.
Speaker 3 (39:20):
Yeah, and and me and Maurice talked about this on
a podcast earlier. The deep State, Okay, they're continuing, They're
continuing to fight. They didn't give up because Trump won, right, Right,
then I brought up, like, I guess, I guess a timeframe.
So I'm like, okay, I asked Maurice. I was like,
(39:40):
what is one of the biggest pieces of legislation that
really came down on us as far as like individual
privacy and things like that, And he stated the Patriot
Act in two thousand and one. I'm like, okay, so
you have since two thousand and one. Do you think
the Deep States stopp stopped infringing on your rights in
(40:02):
two thousand and one. No, they did not, So they
continued on from two thousand and one until now. That's
twenty four years of infringing on people's rights and even
before that. So I just used two thousand and one
as a reference point, right, So twenty four years. I'm
just going to start at the Patriot Act. I won't
even go back to when the Federal Reserve was created.
(40:23):
So in Night, you know what I mean, in two
thousand and one, twenty four years of build up and
infringing on your rights and actual just blatant disregard of
the American people for twenty four years straight. Do you
think President Trump can eliminate that in six months. There's
no way dismantle system that enthralled. And we're not even
(40:45):
we're just talking about the United States. We're not even
talking about foreign influence from different countries China, Israel, Taiwan.
There's so many countries that put dump so much money
into these politicians, and that the NGOs and these obvious
are the true problem here in the United States. Congress
is the problem. The executive branch only has so much power,
(41:06):
the judicial branches, sorry excuse me, the legislative branches where
it's at Congress all the way. And then you can
even consider gotus up there because they have they have
done some good things recently, but let's let's be real
what they have done in the past.
Speaker 2 (41:20):
Hasn't amy call me Barrett.
Speaker 1 (41:23):
That was a bad pick, that was, But you know,
I think about you know, I went down the QAnon
hole for a while for a minute, and I was like, WHOA,
I don't know about some of this stuff, but you know,
I think that that people are, especially a lot of patriots.
Speaker 2 (41:44):
Are.
Speaker 1 (41:47):
Just just fed up. Man. You know. I think about
like the guy that was wanting Sas to block me
and then blocked Sas because she wouldn't block me. And
I'm like why, I don't even know this, dude. But
there's so many There's so many people that are like
way out there like that, that are like you, you
can't explain it, But I do want to bring that
(42:08):
up because there are there are people and I know
people who are dear friends that are not on our
on the same side, that are you know, maybe more
in the middle and and and not not When I
say that, I mean, they're not like far right conservative,
but they're more maybe in the middle, you know, like
(42:31):
and but I don't understand, Like, how do you reconcile
in your head that somebody could be a way left
wing liberal that that thinks Trump is a piece of
crap and and and that we need socialism in the US.
I don't even get that, Like, I can't make sense
(42:53):
of it.
Speaker 2 (42:54):
Are you trying to get me to make sense of it?
Speaker 1 (42:57):
Now? I'm trying to Yeah, I mean, is there. Do
you have any theories on it, Like, well, I don't
get it.
Speaker 3 (43:04):
I would say, well, I mean a communist is a communist, right,
And I do believe like there is a lot of
infiltration in the right side, people that are posing as
MAGA or America First, but they're they're not, and they
try to infiltrate and break up conservative movements. And that
was the same thing that happened in the first Trump presidency, right,
(43:26):
and you can you can kind of see it now
with some of these people. And with all of this, understandably,
you have to follow the money. Are they getting paid?
Are these people getting propped up by these foreign political agents?
You know, there are a lot of people that have
been exposed that have been given money by foreign individuals
and influencing I guess organizations. So you have to be
(43:49):
wary of you have to use discernment, especially nowadays. So
but people are like, so they'll have I'll get haters
all the time, right, I'm actually getting a lot of
hate on takee talk. But whatever, they're growing my account.
But if we have time, I might tell the whole story.
But we have time, dude, Okay, So yeah, you just
(44:12):
have to just pay attention to what message people are
doing and how they're doing it, and the timing of everything.
So that's about all I can say. Man, I think
I can paint people because of my background, I can
really profile people and understand who they are. So I
just kind of use my background and my general knowledge
(44:34):
of people and and what I've learned since Trump one
point zero and kind of put that all together.
Speaker 1 (44:40):
Yeah. So in what months of twenty three? August of
twenty three is when you started on X Is that
what you said?
Speaker 2 (44:50):
March?
Speaker 1 (44:51):
March? Okay, So I'm just going dollars a month. That's
crazy to me. So I've seen the hate you get,
some of it and because you sometimes you'll repost it
and make fun of them, which I think is hilarious.
Speaker 3 (45:11):
But I usually don't like to give that people too
much clout. No, no, nothing that people tell, nothing that
anyone says to me online. I never lose sleep, dude, never.
I actually sleep better when people talk stuff about me.
Speaker 1 (45:27):
You can say ship, I can say shit, okay, yeah,
say whatever you want.
Speaker 2 (45:31):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (45:32):
You know when when people when people talk bad about me,
I don't know, it just it makes me feel like
I'm doing something right and that, you know, just it
motivates me to be quite honest, So bring it on, haters.
Speaker 2 (45:45):
I don't care.
Speaker 1 (45:47):
It doesn't bout see. I woke up this morning thinking
about that dude that that wanted sas to block me,
and I'm like.
Speaker 2 (45:55):
I.
Speaker 1 (45:56):
Don't know it was I've never had that happen, man,
I'm like, what the hell I don't I've never had
that happen. So I was like, what the hell is
this dude's problem? I don't even know the guy like exactly,
You're like, and I was in the chat and You're like, dude,
just don't pay it any attention, Like, yeah, you know.
Speaker 2 (46:17):
Do they put food on your table? Do they affect
your daily life?
Speaker 1 (46:20):
No?
Speaker 2 (46:20):
No, No, their internet trolls and they're pieces of ship.
I don't care.
Speaker 1 (46:28):
Seriously, bro, I know I know you're serious, man, So
so so talk about what's next for you? Man? What
what I know you're very involved in? Well, you went
to the was it Sea pac that you went to
talk about that because you got like press passes and everything?
Speaker 2 (46:48):
Man?
Speaker 1 (46:48):
That was crazy.
Speaker 2 (46:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (46:50):
So the podcast network I'm part of is the Patriot
Prayer Network. There are six or seven different podcasts that
are part of the network and we were lucky enough
to get press passes and we live stream from Seapac.
Actually met Shelle to Molly, she was on our podcast
last night. I met her for the first time, and
(47:12):
I didn't get to tell the story, but I didn't
realize how short Shelle was, so that that h that
I gave her because I've been knowing her for like
four years. We go way back back to like our
Getter days. I don't know if you know what get
Her is, but get Her is a It was a
media platform created by Jason Miller, and we kind of
(47:35):
we met each other there and then we moved over
to a true social and then we all migrated to x eventually.
Speaker 2 (47:43):
But yeah, Seapack was awesome.
Speaker 3 (47:44):
Man, got to meet she took a picture with almost
said Chuck Ladell, which I actually met Chuck Ladell, but
oh my god, I can't think of his name. The
my pillow guy. Why am I drawing a blank.
Speaker 2 (47:59):
Mindell?
Speaker 3 (48:00):
Oh yes, So met Laura Lumer all those people out there,
and it was actually a really good experience. And then
being part of the Patriot Parer Network actually went to
brndon Herrera's range day at the Desperado.
Speaker 2 (48:14):
That was really cool. We tried to live.
Speaker 3 (48:16):
Stream there, but we're trying to do it through our
cell phone and we weren't prepared.
Speaker 2 (48:20):
We should have brought a.
Speaker 3 (48:21):
Starlink, like a a portable star link out there. But yeah,
I met some really cool people. I met Chuck Ledell,
Kyle Rittenhouse, all those people. So wow, I've been really
blessed to be quite honest, and I just want to
express my gratitude to all the people that follow me,
support me, subscribe, because I wouldn't be where I am
today without all of them, without everyone and their support.
(48:42):
So I don't like, and I'm gonna kind of reiterate
a little bit, just be if I don't get to
like sharing your posts and things like that, it's nothing personal,
it's just it's just I'm just so inundated with producing
content and things like that. It's just really difficult, and
especially because I'm trying to branch off into different platforms
(49:02):
and try to take this full time.
Speaker 2 (49:04):
It's just absolutely crazy.
Speaker 1 (49:07):
I I have, uh shell wait, which's it's just really tall.
Well that's true too. You're like six three, aren't you. Yeah,
that's that's pretty tall, dude, I'm six foot. That means
(49:27):
i'd have to look up.
Speaker 2 (49:29):
I'm I don't know if regardless, so whatever count.
Speaker 1 (49:35):
So funny. So so you know what what else is
going on? I know you're you're branching off into into TikTok.
I will take credit for for convincing you to get
on TikTok by the way, I know a lot of
people were were saying it, but talk about because geez
(49:58):
oh man, like, I'm like, what, I'm not going to
say that word. But I so Steve gets on tip.
I've been on TikTok for years. I did it first
for my daughter when she was real little. She wanted
to do tiktoks together and all that. And now she's
fifteen and doesn't talk to me much. But but the
(50:18):
you know, I'm I'm at like, I don't know, eighteen
hundred followers or something like that, and and you get
on with zero followers like six months ago. Where are
you at now, Steve? Like six hundred something like that.
Speaker 2 (50:36):
I believe that's crazy. I'm gonna be monetized there hopefully.
Speaker 1 (50:41):
Oh my god, that's insane.
Speaker 2 (50:43):
D Maybe I'm just dropped dead gorgeous. Maybe that's why everything.
Speaker 3 (50:49):
No.
Speaker 1 (50:49):
I think it's your humility. It's that.
Speaker 2 (50:54):
I don't I don't consider myself above anybody.
Speaker 3 (50:57):
So you know what I mean. Only Yeah, I know
you don't rag on you all day.
Speaker 1 (51:01):
You rag on me all the time. I rag right back, though,
I just want to do it here. But the the
you know, and that's one of the things I love
about you, man, is you're just a real dude. You're
you really. You know. I know that you you have
a lot of followers, and you know, when you get
(51:22):
to a million, two million, five million, I can't eat
Like I'm glad I have your cell phone number because
that'll be the only way to get hold of you.
But you know, I mean, because it's hard. I know,
I have twenty thousand, and I can't keep up sometimes.
And you you have posts like you've you've posted some
(51:44):
of your statistics I've seen, and you're getting millions and
millions of views every single day week.
Speaker 2 (51:52):
You got to hot millions and millions. I can't do
a really good Trump voice, all right, yeah, but.
Speaker 1 (52:00):
You get you get so you're getting all of these
views and you get more, just tons of new followers
every day. And and I do want to say that
I'm thinking of somebody in particular. I won't talk about
who it is, but somebody reached out to me, like
and I told you about it, Like, they're going, why
doesn't Steve ever share my stuff? He said he'd share
(52:20):
my stuff? And I'm like, bro, I don't know, Like
have you talked to him? I I you know, like
I don't know, and and and I go, and by
the way, do you share his stuff? Well? I do
once in a while. And I'm like, okay, well there's
problem number one. Number two. Do you subscribe to him?
It's five bucks a month? Do you subscribe? Like, subscribe,
(52:41):
support the guy, help him grow, and and and and
then he'll help you. I promise if you just subscribe
and engage with him. He's a good dude. So you know,
but there are people out here that are just programmed
to hate yep, I mean they just are.
Speaker 3 (53:03):
Yeah, And I guess, so, I guess. So you have
a good size, right, you have a larger platform and
larger voice. But people do have to understand when whenever
you grow to an account of that size, there's also
negative effects that are just as large as the positives.
Speaker 1 (53:19):
Right, Yeah, So.
Speaker 3 (53:20):
You'll have the people that you know, well he doesn't
share anything or any any of this. But also you
gain a lot of traction, so you get more hate.
You have the doxing and the swatting that happened to
me and you before. So there's always a risk with
something with growing a platform of the size, especially if
(53:40):
you're choose like the non an route, and like there's
always a point where there's always a risk, right, and
you have to understand what the risk are. And you know,
like I'm doxing and swatted already, so like I don't
have that.
Speaker 2 (53:56):
To worry about anymore, you know.
Speaker 3 (53:58):
So it's it's kind of like, Okay, now I got
free range to say whatever I want.
Speaker 1 (54:02):
It's well should I tell the So Steve, you got
so you got swatted and you posted about it, and
I was like, oh my god. And just a couple
of weeks earlier, I had made a donation to you
for something and sent and I said I have to
(54:22):
shift this to you, and and and Steve says, I said,
I'm gonna need your address for that, dude, unless you
want me to send it to a local store or
something of that. And he's like, don't e fan swat
me bro. That was his last words, Like, that was
literally his last words. And I'm like, bro, I wouldn't
(54:43):
I like, right, come on. And then two weeks later,
you got swatted and I was like, shut up. And
then Juania Broderick had just been swatted and Gunther and
all these and I'm like, oh my god, and I'm
sitting here the next day and I'm going I pray
to God Steve doesn't think I had anything to do
with him getting swatted, because if I was, if I
(55:04):
were you, and the cops said, well, have you given
your address out to anybody recently? Yeah, this this dickhead,
Ken Wallas, I gave him my address. I'm sitting here
thinking I would have told the cops that, you know,
and then I'm like, all right, I can't take it anymore.
And I did a video calling the swatters out saying
(55:24):
you're gonna be and it was it was colorful, and
Juanita shared it and She's got and that got their attention.
Holy crap, that got their attention. And it was that night.
Speaker 3 (55:37):
What really happened was is Ken got me swatted and
then he called the cops on himself.
Speaker 1 (55:43):
Right right right exactly, dude. It freaked me out. I'm serious,
it freaked me out. I was like, oh my god,
and I felt bad for you because of what you
went through you like, and again I think about Juanita
Brodrake and Gunther's a good dude, and Cat turned all
these people that have been that have been swatted and
(56:05):
Sean Sean, Yeah for is it Faresh it's fish Yeah. Anyway,
he's a good dude, and you know all these people
that have been through that, and and now I have
and I'm gonna tell you it's it is really really stressful.
Speaker 2 (56:26):
Yeah, but I don't live in fear all.
Speaker 1 (56:29):
I know. I'm not saying it's I was fearful. It's
my wife, you know, my wife. And anyway, it was.
It was just a lot.
Speaker 3 (56:37):
Of yeah yeah. So and that that's another like so
I have I have a connection, I guess with Den Bongino.
And I'm just really I'm kind of frustrated on that
part just because they could find people that were in
that went to January sixth by an ear lob, but
(56:58):
they can't find out who these people are. So I'm
really frustrated with that portion of it. But I mean,
I'm gonna continue to fight and no one's gonna shut
me up.
Speaker 2 (57:07):
Like, I don't care.
Speaker 3 (57:09):
I'm going to say what I'm going to say because
I love this country too much and it comes with
the risk and I'm willing to take it.
Speaker 2 (57:16):
So swap me. I don't care. I've been through it.
Got the T shirt?
Speaker 1 (57:21):
Do you have a T shirt? Yeah? So what were
you saying if you had time to tell about TikTok?
Was there something else? Oh?
Speaker 2 (57:32):
Oh god? Yeah, so I gotta.
Speaker 3 (57:34):
I had a video that I posted and like, I
baited a lot of people. Okay, so I said, how
come I don't see any illegals going help out with
the Texas flooding?
Speaker 2 (57:46):
Tells you everything? Oh yeah, sold many people. I'm mad.
Speaker 3 (57:49):
I've got so many like notifications, like people like putting
side by side videos of me and all that, and
I'm like, you know what, I did this video on
purpose because I wanted to go out there and say something.
Of course, they're not going to go out there because
Ice would probably go round them up, right, But I
wanted to prove a point that a lot of people
are rushing to defend illegals rather than understand that they
(58:13):
should be out of this country. And it was just
to get a rise out of people, and so many
people were backing illegals and all this other stuff, and
I'm like, yeah, this was the true point behind this,
to get people to recognize that you like that the
whole Morgan Jay Freeman, I hate that guy is like,
no one's illegal. Yes they are, they absolutely are. I agree,
(58:34):
you come into this country illegally, you are a criminal
for life, and you should never be able to get
citizenship in my opinion, never.
Speaker 1 (58:41):
Yeah. Look if you and I said, you know, hey,
let's let's go to Honduras and go fishing off the
coast of Honduras and oh, by the way, we're going
to just take a boat and go ashore without you know,
going through any of the legal I mean, we would
be considered illegals in that country. Yeah, it's you're there illegally.
Speaker 3 (59:08):
I don't I don't understand that. The boggles. It's just
it's just Democrats one votes, That's what it is. They
want to grant mass amnesty and just try to rule
this country. Let's just be real about it.
Speaker 1 (59:18):
I'm not share Yeah, anything else you want to share
with the audience. I mean, I've got the rhino removal
project website across the bottom. Everybody, go make sure that
you're if you're not already following Steve. You know we
have almost one thousand viewers without you sharing it. Steve,
(59:39):
that's not that's not too shabby, dude. So you know,
I'm going to put your your handle on x up
so everybody can go follow you. But is is there
anything else that you would like to share with everybody
about what you're doing now, what's coming up, how people
can support and help you and any way.
Speaker 3 (01:00:03):
Yeah, I think ultimately it it's it's not about me, right,
I've just been blessed with this larger platform. But I
think at the end of the day, we do have
a country to save, and we do need to remove
these rhinos out of office. So please, if you guys,
go visit Rhino Removal Project dot org. Stop complaining about
(01:00:23):
it online, get involved. Grassroots movements are what is going
to change this country. We cannot expect the country to
be fixed from the top down. We have to work
it from the ground up. So join local conservative organizations
or get involved in your RNC and your local chapters.
Do something. Stop complaining about it online and get involved.
(01:00:43):
We do have a country to save. So please, if
you want to do, if you want to get involved
you if you have right, okay, so let me let
me kind of expound a little bit. So just be
maybe you have a state that doesn't have a rhino problem,
like a legit rhinal problem. They do, but it's not
too bad, right, But any rhino in South Carolina, Texas,
(01:01:05):
they affect you every single day of the in this country.
So get go sign up.
Speaker 2 (01:01:12):
If if you're good on social media, if you're good
with accounting or no taking or research of candidates.
Speaker 3 (01:01:19):
There's a job for you, all right. There's a Google
sheet form that you guys can fill out and you
can join and one one member of the executive team
will reach out to you.
Speaker 1 (01:01:29):
It's a it's a great organization. I know Leo the founder,
great great guy. Excuse me, I I think that. And
you're very involved. I know Queen Anti COMMI is very involved.
There's a lot of great people involved in the in
the organization. So I totally agree. You know. That's the
(01:01:55):
thing is there's so many people that will sit around
and complain about their their politicians and not really do anything.
They just complain. And I think we all have the opportunity.
Speaker 2 (01:02:11):
Yeah, absolutely, brother.
Speaker 1 (01:02:13):
To make a difference. So, yes, Steve, thank you for
coming on today, man, and hopefully it went well for you, man.
Speaker 2 (01:02:24):
So it's a good conversation.
Speaker 1 (01:02:26):
Yeah. So everybody watching, please make sure you go follow Steve.
If you're not already, go follow Steve at Steve loves AMO.
If you're on the podcast networks and any of the platforms,
it's at Steve loves a m m O. Go follow Steve.
(01:02:46):
He's he's freaking awesome. And and while you're at it,
invest five bucks a month and subscribe to Steve because
he puts out some amazing content and he really does
genuinely care about and helps all of his subscribers. So
go subscribe. It's five bucks, five dollars. That's it. Go subscribe.
(01:03:08):
So and Shelle, I am telling you what to do. Well, Shelle,
you already subscribe, so just stop it anyway, Steve, thank you, man,
Stay with me. I'm gonna end the live stream, but
if you'll stay with me, we can finish up. Thank
you all for being here, Thank you all for sharing,
(01:03:29):
and Steve, thank you man. I really do appreciate.
Speaker 2 (01:03:31):
It absolutely, brother, anytime, Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:03:34):
All right, we'll see you guys later. Have a great day.