Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Peace and love, peace
and love.
It's your boy, don Kalam, alsoknown as Malik Kalam, and you're
now tuned in to Dream Keepersradio podcast, and I'm in the
building in Las Vegas with MonteMillionaire.
What's good bro?
What's the deal, monteMillionaire?
Speaker 2 (00:14):
the cut.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
How you feeling man.
Feeling good feeling good,let's, let's, let's.
We just kicked it for a wholeweek in Atlanta.
Yep, I feel like we bonded.
I met a brother man.
When I first met you, it wasthrough your wife, sincere, yep,
shout out to Sincere, shout outto Sincere.
(00:35):
Shout out to the tribe, but Isaid she was in the DMs and the
Instagram and I missed it.
I don't know.
You know, yeah, but I did seey'all are doing like major
credit moves and credit hacks,yep.
But the first person shementioned was you, mm-hmm, and I
admired that.
(00:56):
You dig what I'm saying.
And then, just like I said, youalways talking about your
parents and her parents yeah, sothat's law, that's real law.
You always talking about yourparents and her parents yeah, so
that's law.
That's real law.
That's not consumer law, codesand statutes, that's real law.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
That's a trick of
mammoths.
Yes, sir.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
Yeah.
So I mean, just tell us alittle bit about what you do,
man.
And then I want to talk about,you know, when we met, when we
first met.
Because when we first met I didnot plan this shit, we planned
lunch, just planned it with you,and then I had three.
It was three millionairespulled up, my homies, you know,
chief.
Ken, yeah, yeah yeah, Bags, itwas all there.
You got to sit down with partof my private tribe and hear
(01:38):
some big business moves.
I mean.
So how'd that make you feel,man?
Man, that shit was great.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
And your kids was
there your children.
Man, the whole family, meSincere and both the kids.
But we had fun.
We had fun.
It was a cool little time.
Got the network Built, a coollittle relationship with y'all,
Good little time.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
How old are you?
Speaker 2 (02:01):
22.
And how old was she, is she?
Speaker 1 (02:06):
21.
Y'all young, you forgot her age.
That's crazy.
So y'all young, doing it, yougot your own business.
Yep, now, the main thing thatstuck out to me when we was on
the ride.
Now I know other people thatgraduated early too.
But tell us your reason, tellus your reason.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
We got to tell them
first.
So, look, I graduated at 16years old.
Reason being I hated school nocap, no bullshit, no nothing.
I hated school and my mamawasn't trying to let me drop out
and I wasn't going to drop outanyway because shit, I done made
it halfway through, ain't nopoint in dropping out.
But yep, I took summer schoolto get ahead because I wasn't
(02:48):
feeling it.
I took summer school to getahead and shit, I graduated at
16.
You?
Speaker 1 (02:53):
took summer school to
get ahead.
You was already making A's andyou was already passing.
I graduated with a 4.0.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
At 16?
, at 16.
With a 4.0.
At 16?
, at 16.
With a scholarship, wow, wow.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
I know 21-year-olds
that can't do that.
They still in high school man.
Speaker 2 (03:10):
I know people that
ain't even got their diploma Go
get your GED y'all.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Are you going?
Did you go to college or planto go to college?
Speaker 2 (03:18):
I was in college for
a little bit, but school not for
me.
I hate that shit.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
I'm going to be
honest and I like that.
You know, I did go to collegeAt first.
I got kicked out.
Well, I stopped school.
I was getting that fast foodcheck.
I don't know if you know aboutthat.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I
didn't pay that.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
They tried to make me
pay that shit back.
But I was at community college,I went to nursing school.
But I was a community college,I went to nursing school, I did.
Then I went back got law.
Then I got my honorarydoctorate degree.
That's right, you know.
So I get to stunt with thosethings.
But I didn't learn anything incollege, didn't learn anything
in high school Me either.
And that's why I tell people Isay look how far they got,
(04:01):
that's how far they can take.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
You, man, I done
learned about Martin Luther King
fifth grade, eighth grade andfucking 12th grade, 11th grade,
you feel me?
Speaker 1 (04:09):
Martin Luther King.
Speaker 2 (04:11):
Every year they
taught us that shit every year.
We wasn't learning shit.
That's why I graduated with a4.0.
And, matter of fact, I went toschool for like 12 years, 12
plus years, 12 plus years justto work at McDonald's.
Speaker 1 (04:23):
So you did have a job
.
You worked at McDonald's.
Speaker 2 (04:25):
First job ever.
You worked anywhere else.
I had a couple jobs.
I had a lot of jobs, but Inever stayed on the job for no
longer than a year.
Speaker 1 (04:33):
I hate.
Jobs, I hate jobs.
Just over broke.
Speaker 2 (04:37):
Exactly Just over
broke.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
I was just telling my
friend today she was like I
lost my job or whatever.
And I she was like I lost myjob or whatever.
And I said you, you are yourjob.
Yeah, that's a fact.
People don't understand that.
I hope that don't go overy'all's heads.
When you learn why you're here,your life purpose, that's your
job and discovering your purpose, then you'll figure out what
(05:02):
your true job is.
So what do you think your jobis right now?
Speaker 2 (05:07):
Mine yeah, Credit
repair bro Shit.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
It's bigger than that
, though.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
Yeah, it's bigger
than that.
All in all, just say I'm anentrepreneur, you know, there
you go.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
I like that.
When we was in Atlanta shoutout to Duran, mm-hmm, shout out
to Duran we met a lot of people.
Ham 500 was in the building,smitty Trapper's Way Out.
David from Power Talk.
There was a bunch of them.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
It was a lot of
people, yeah, major, a lot of
millionaires.
Speaker 1 (05:36):
Major Brandon,
jackson Brandon, the Provider,
flame, all these people and theyget funding for you.
Um, take you from zero to heronow, no, really, truthfully.
Truthfully, now, everythinglooks, people look at everything
differently.
Um, that we, we, we get results.
(05:57):
So we, it was like a consumerconsumer law, wasn't it
something like that consumer law?
That's what it was talkingabout so do you use consumer law
.
I do what.
What is consumer law to you?
Speaker 2 (06:08):
shit, just laws that
they have for the consumers,
which is us depends on who youask.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
Yeah, so the reason
why I bring that up is because,
um, a consumer consumes, right?
Um, but you?
So I look at things differenton the private side, because
you're using your social to getthis credit, yeah, and they're
giving credit based on thatsocial kingdom, which is a trust
, correct?
And people don't talk aboutthis.
So if they're getting creditfrom your own trust, that you
(06:38):
manage or whatever it's yoursocial, correct, mm-hmm?
Then you're a private investor,holy shit, you're not a
consumer.
That's deep.
Does that make sense?
That do so the laws.
When you understand this, thelaws are different and that's
why I bring up G-A-A-P GeneralAccounting, accepted or General
Accepted Accounting Principles,g-a-a-p for everybody out there,
(07:00):
g-a-a-p.
And that makes sense, mm-hmm.
So laws are created to protectinvestors.
You dig, but that's just how Imove.
I didn't talk about that at thesummit at all.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
Yeah they didn't want
that.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
Yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, I didn't talk about that I
went with what they was going,with the flow, and consumer law
is just federal codes andstatutes.
Does that make sense?
That's a fact.
So, with the federal codes andstatutes, that's part of the
public sector, that's not partof the private sector.
(07:37):
And then when you understand,like I said, with credit, these
are credit accounts, so that isaccounting law.
And then when you understandthat the United States is on a
bankruptcy you're operating as apublic company you can also
bring in bankruptcy law.
Because if we're under abankruptcy system, how can you
force somebody to pay you back?
Right, because there's no money.
(07:57):
But it's contract.
That's it.
Consumer law is contract law.
And what I wanted I didn'tmention it when I gave my little
speech but one thing I wantedthe people to understand is
there's no such thing as fiat,there's no such thing as money.
There's only fiat, currency andcredit that make sense.
(08:17):
That's deep, bro.
I'm just want to make sure I'mgetting with you Showing you
where I'm at with it.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
I think that went
over a lot of people's heads.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
Well, I mean, the
system's based on full faith and
credit.
That's how the governmentoperates, but there's no such
thing as money, fiat currencyand credit.
We're in a bank mercy.
There's no silver and gold, nomore.
You are the bag, you are themoney, your signatures are a
(08:46):
sign of nature, so that givesthem the credit, that gives them
the authorization.
That's crazy.
This is crazy, is it?
Do you be studying private law?
I do a little bit, but Iunderstand what you're saying.
Yeah, I know your wife on thatshit.
Yeah, she, yeah.
Is she adept with it?
Because I ain't really sittingdown and talking to her.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
She not adept like
you or like Equity.
Shout out to my nigga Equity,shout out to Equity.
Speaker 1 (09:11):
But she know she know
what you think Equity know, I
didn't even know.
Y'all chopped it up like that.
Speaker 2 (09:18):
I fuck with Equity,
bro.
I fuck.
See he know a lot, bro, he intune no cap what he in tune with
, though let me know the privatelife.
Yeah, he is in tune, he knowabout the private life.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
I know what he know
and you know who his mentor was
exactly you, darren Kalam.
Yeah, and Darren Kalam, a lotof people's mentors out there.
They just don't be giving theproper credit.
I don't know, it was justfucked up.
They'll be like scam and theytake your sauce.
That's crazy.
That's the public, though.
That's the public life.
That's how it go, but I'mhelping the right people.
(09:50):
It led me all rosily back toDon Kalam.
I mean, before they shut downthe Instagram, but I still got
people's numbers.
You see everybody I'm connectedto and I can't even keep up
with it.
I showed you Sugar, shea Evansor whatever from the UFC.
I don't even know who that is.
That's crazy.
Straight up NFL, nba, hollywood, hollyweird I know them all.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
That's crazy, how you
know.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
Andrew Tate?
I don't know.
Andrew Tate, that's crazy.
Seas, put me on him, thoughthat's the cameraman, me on them
, though that's the cameraman.
That's yeah, yeah, shout out toseize.
I'm not gonna get too deep, buthe did say he said man, um, the
cameraman, I want to get money,like y'all you can't get money
as a cameraman, and I just wanty'all to understand this.
(10:37):
I got cameraman that aremulti-millionaires.
Yeah, you ever heard of kinggriffin jr?
He's a, he's a baseball player.
No, I never heard of him.
Look him up.
He's a cameraman.
He only do it for certainpeople.
Same way with, like, barbersand shit.
I know most of them ain't butcameraman can get in any room,
yeah, any room.
They hate on Don Kalon.
So you know, I get people in asthe cameraman, for sure, or
(11:00):
press.
I just need y'all to understandthat.
And then you just movedifferently.
That's that private life,that's how we move.
But I just want to know about alittle about you, man, this,
this podcast for you.
I had to bring you in becauseyou're just now getting like
tapped into to a different typeof lifestyle yeah, so let me
start.
Speaker 2 (11:21):
Y'all already know
who I am monte millionaire.
If you don't now, you you do.
I do credit repair.
You feel me 22 years old?
I started doing this shit whenI was like 20, I believe, or
like 20.
21, maybe, but I'm just, youknow, getting big, starting to
build my name, doing it like afamily-based type shit.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
You funny, I got you,
I got you, I got to get you.
I just got to make sure I'mgetting you talking on the mic.
Man, this your first podcast,first podcast ever.
And I know I've seen one videoyou did.
Do you got any more videos?
Like what video?
The video where you explainyour process?
Oh, yeah, no, that's it.
(12:07):
That's it, yeah.
So you're new to publicspeaking.
Speaker 2 (12:10):
Yeah, this is my
first time putting my face on
the media for real.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
Tell the world how
much you make off the video.
It's 13 minutes long.
I'm just going to throw thatout there.
Speaker 2 (12:18):
Oh yeah, All right.
So look, I got a credit repairvideo 14, 13 minutes 13 minutes
long 13 minutes long.
Couple extra seconds on top ofthat.
I sell that motherfucker for500.
500.
500 for a video.
I don't have to do shit butpress, click and send.
That's it.
Speaker 1 (12:35):
And people buying it
Mm-hmm 500 for a 13 minute video
, mm-hmm and you feel confidentthat it's worth $500?
And you feel?
Speaker 2 (12:44):
confident that it's
worth $500?
I feel like it's worth moreBecause that shit powerful.
You could have $100,000 worthof debt.
You watch that video and copyeverything.
The shit could be gone.
That's facts.
It's worth more than $500.
I mean.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
I agree.
I agree, it's only 13 minuteslong, though.
So me on my school, on myprivate school I don't sell no
videos for $500 at all At all.
But I thought that shit was litBecause that takes confidence
To sell a $500 video.
Speaker 2 (13:23):
For 13 minutes.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
It's a powerful video
.
Yeah, I did a video like that,um, but I I helped them set up
their, their non-profit andstuff and then I gave them a
video showing them how theycould do it, but that was a that
was like a thousand orsomething like that.
It was like 13 minutes as wellbut that's a thousand dollars, a
hell yeah.
And it was a Google Ad Grant.
That's crazy.
(13:45):
You can get $10,000 a month onGoogle Ads, but it's credits,
it's not cash.
Speaker 2 (13:51):
Oh yeah, I know about
that, If you got a nonprofit.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
Yeah, you set it up.
Speaker 2 (13:53):
Google Ad Grant.
Yeah, I heard about that.
I think you told me about it.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
A hell of
motherfuckers did that shit.
We met and another thing inAtlanta too, so I did a podcast.
You know you was handling yourbusiness there.
When I did a podcast, I waswith somebody who does grants.
Oh yeah, I met everybody.
Grants, funding.
You can get funding too, right?
I don't want you to give awaythe trade secrets, but tell us
(14:18):
how like your process with whatyou're doing right now.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Cause you're making
money bro?
Speaker 1 (14:23):
Yeah, I'm making
money.
And hella testimonials.
Yeah, hella, motherfuckers,just grab the bands.
Speaker 2 (14:28):
Yep, brand new bands,
no money down.
So I'm helping people, I'mreally helping people For $500,
that's a minimum price.
But that's the whole littleprocess.
I break it down.
So what I do is I like repairsomebody's credit.
If you got fucked up, credityour shit like 350, 400, 500,
600, I repair your credit.
(14:49):
And then I add a couple tradelines to that shit and I do
funding.
I set you up an LLC in abusiness or whatever the proper
way and I get you funded.
50k minimum, that's lit.
Speaker 1 (15:02):
So first, of all, you
clear the debt, clear all the
debt.
Hard inquiries, inquiriesthat's lit.
So, first of all, you're not.
You cleared the debt, clearedall the debt Hard inquiries,
inquiries.
Speaker 2 (15:07):
Derogatories Well
only inquiries I'm not going to
delete is the ones that'sattached to the account.
Right, right, because it mightclose the account.
Collections, repos, shit,anything, literally anything.
Speaker 1 (15:19):
And you've been doing
it a couple years, correct?
Has there ever been one thatdidn't work?
Speaker 2 (15:24):
Well, it's been times
.
I'm going to be honest.
I'm going to be honest,transparent here.
It's been times where I had tosend in like one or two extra
letters, but after the thirdround it's guaranteed to be off.
I've never been past threerounds of disputes, okay.
Speaker 1 (15:42):
And it came out every
client, every client, every
100% client, every client, ifyou're watching this, vouch for
me, right, let us know.
Speaker 2 (15:53):
Let us know If I'm
lying.
Comment, I swear.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
That's crazy.
So by the third round.
Speaker 2 (16:01):
By the third round,
but that's rare, you feel me.
Most of the time everythingcome off round one and then it
don't take that long.
It usually take like 14 days atmax.
You freezing it, the bureaus,the secondary bureaus, yeah, you
don't do no curfew freezenothing, Uh-uh.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
Next then you add
trade lines.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
Yep, I add trade
lines.
I add like two or three tradelines.
It depends on what they scoreis after.
Speaker 1 (16:28):
I dispute, they shit.
Can you tell us what a tradeline for people that don't know?
Speaker 2 (16:35):
Trade line could be
some shit like Kickoff.
That's like a little creditbuilder app that they got.
It reports like a $3,000 loanon your credit report, but then
they got authorized users too,and it reports like a $30,000
credit card on your creditreport.
But then they got authorizedusers too and it reported like a
$30,000 credit card on yourcredit report and it says it's
been open for like four yearsand add some history to your
account.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
You did this on your
credit, mm-hmm, and it helped
you.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
Hell yeah.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
What did it help you
do?
Speaker 2 (16:58):
Build history and my
score went up.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
Did you acquire
anything from that?
Speaker 2 (17:04):
Hell yeah, I got $25,
000 credit cards.
Okay, let's go.
Let's go from trade lines, fromtrade lines, that's lit.
Without those trade lines, themcredit cards would have been
like a thousand at most what'sthe homegirl's name that uh be
doing the funding?
Oh, they had the homegirlsamara.
Shout out to samara fuck withher.
I don't know her instagram,that shit.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
Weird that's all good
, can come holler at you yeah
tap in, tap in.
Speaker 2 (17:27):
That's how it got to
be.
They got to come holler atMonta and Millionaire.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
So what's her name?
Again?
Samara, samara.
So Samara's getting, she hasdifferent lenders, or?
Speaker 2 (17:37):
Yeah, she got
different lenders.
Multiples, yeah, but most ofthe time we stick with same
lenders and we get all ourclients funded.
Well, all our clients who wantfunding fund it Right, right,
right.
Speaker 1 (17:48):
And every client that
wanted funding was that 100%
too.
Yeah, that's for sure.
100%, Real shit.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
Real shit, that's lit
.
I believe the minimum forfunding you need to have like a
680 personal credit score to getbusiness funding.
That's all they look at.
Yeah, pretty much.
Well, like when you got like abrand new LLC, you have to
personal guarantee it.
Without that they're not goingto let you get shit.
So you need to have a decentlittle credit score.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
I'm already hip, but
they do look at cash flows.
Speaker 2 (18:18):
Oh yeah, that's a
fact.
They do look at cash flows.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
But a brand new LLC
wouldn't have one one no so.
Speaker 2 (18:23):
But they ask for um
estimated cash flow.
Like what?
What do you think your businesswill make?
Speaker 1 (18:28):
that's lit, and they
put that in a report that you
can make up numbers though now,I'm not saying make.
Speaker 2 (18:33):
I'm not saying lie,
wishful thinking.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
That's what you do
though 2.3 million.
Speaker 2 (18:39):
no, don't do that.
Why that?
Keep it, like I heard, like agood rule of thumb is like a
cool, like 120,000 around thereA year.
Yeah, like for, like a like fora fresh business, though Like
an estimated revenue.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
I get that.
So the first time I got actualfunding, I got it from a private
lender and let me let me thinkSeas was with me too I had the
lowest.
One of them was like 60,000.
They look at the last sixmonths and they gave me like
55,000 or some shit like that.
And I got approved by like fourlenders Like bam bam, bam, ooh
(19:21):
yes, and they went off thecashflow.
They didn't even look at mycredit Private lender.
Yeah, yeah.
Private lenders Don't even lookat your credit In the same way
with land Private lenders whenyou get land.
They're not looking at yourcredit score.
They're not even going to askyou for your social.
They're going to ask you if yougot LLC.
They'll take that information.
They will check that out.
Make sure it's in.
Secretary of State, though.
(19:42):
As long as you got the bread,you're good.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, well, my landthat I got.
They shutting the site down.
I'm just going to get a sitedown.
The guy died.
His name's BarryLanddiscountscom, and that's
game right there,landdiscountscom.
And you can just do simpleGoogle searches and you'll find
(20:03):
similar websites and alsoMustang Land or Land Mustang
sites like and also mustang landor land mustang I'm not sure
which one it is, but those arecheap land.
You can get like a acre or twoacres for like five, six
thousand and make payments, andas soon as you, as soon as you
put the down payment first downpayment down, you can build on
the land right away that's hard.
Speaker 2 (20:19):
Yeah, my brother just
got uh four acres in arizona
for 1500.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
Oh, let's go 1500
that's all he paid, all he paid.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
That's what he told
me $1,500.
I don't know how true that is,but he for sure got the land.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
I've seen cheap land.
I've definitely seen cheap landin Arizona, but I don't know
about four acres.
I don't know, I don't knowabout that that's a little
far-fetched.
Yeah, I was going to buy someland in Colorado but I had to
buy water rights.
I had to get water rightsbecause there was a big-ass lake
or something on there and theysaid I had to buy rights to the
(20:54):
water, which I don't know how todo any of that yet.
So if you know, reach out, Letme know how you get water rights
.
I know somebody that bought thewater rights and they sold it
to Coca-Cola or something likethat yeah.
Then they got more land andthen again that's hard, yeah.
And then I know somebody inMississippi that bought some old
slave land.
There was a lake underneath it.
It was like naturally alkalinewater.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:16):
And yeah, he's rich
now he's in all like yeah he's,
he's he's in, like the collegefootball stadiums and shit.
He got deals with certain peoplewhich I didn't even know they
was like.
You know they sell bullshit.
You know I'm not going to sayno names out there but yeah, but
it's not alkaline water, that'scrazy.
No, it's just like you trust inyour process, trust in yourself
(21:42):
when you live in your purpose,when you know who you are, and
you trust in your process andknow your worth, you're gonna
always bump into prosperity,always, like a fact, there was a
lot, of, a lot of shit wentdown with the Atlanta event,
where I almost didn't, wouldn'thave been able to make it, and
then you was there so and thenyou got to come.
You know what I'm saying hellyeah, I got.
(22:02):
I'm pretty sure C's didn'tthink I was gonna take, take
care of him because you wascovering, but nah.
Speaker 2 (22:07):
I don't switch up
plans.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
That was a good time.
Even if we didn't?
I didn't even.
I went by faith because shitwas fucked up.
I was like let's go, you know,if it's meant, it's meant, but
you know, then the bad came.
So we were straight Walk why?
By faith, not by sight?
(22:28):
That's it.
When you choose prosperity, itwill always choose you.
But I say I built my credit inthe streets so even if you
didn't have good credit, youwould still make money, correct,
because you are the credit yesand how many clients are you
saying new clients?
you're getting a month.
Speaker 2 (22:44):
I I don't even keep
up with numbers, I just get
clients.
What time is it?
I got like three clients today,oh, you still got to handle it.
Yeah, I took care of two ofthem, I feel you.
I got three clients today.
Speaker 1 (23:00):
I already did shit,
that shit don't be bugging you,
though you like it.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
It's starting to
become too much.
I need an assistant.
Speaker 1 (23:09):
Well, yeah, I get it
so like and that's one of my
problems that I don't I still doit all myself.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, you know, you got a wife.
Speaker 2 (23:21):
But she got her own
business, you feel me, she do
her own she probably got moreclients than me today.
Speaker 1 (23:25):
That's lit.
That's lit, though it's like.
It's like y'all don't be havinglike friendly wagers and shit.
Like what you mean?
Like I'm going to sell morethan you this week, oh, yeah,
hell yeah.
Speaker 2 (23:38):
Like we just had a
challenge, like I'm going to
make 3000 before you you, I'mlike bad, let's do it who won me
.
Okay, all right, all right, butshe usually be having more
clients to you.
Um, yeah, she, sometimes she.
Well, yeah, she do, I ain'tnever go, I ain't go front she
do.
Why.
You think that is she a female?
(24:02):
that's eye candy, you know no II worked with a lot of females
and then on top of that she dobe having like little deals too,
so she'll still.
She know how to market.
Yeah, she better at marketingway better.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
I peeped that out the
gate.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
Yeah, I'm not too
good with social media.
I'm just now.
I'm putting my face out there.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
You feel me and
that's a must you gotta put your
face on social media, but lookwhat happened when you did.
Speaker 2 (24:23):
Mm-hmm, I done made
way more brand now.
Speaker 1 (24:27):
Like and you're
bumping into powerful, powerful
people.
Hell yeah, like I said, I likethe way you move, mm-hmm, like
I've tried to help grown peopleplenty of times I'm not going to
say too much I even tried tohelp a grown-ass man in this
same location right here, hadhim in this same location right
(24:48):
here, had him in this but uh,you can't help everybody.
And then and then make sure youdo have some type of agreements
down like um, but my main thingis fair exchanges and robbery,
so you shouldn't pour intosomebody that's not gonna pour
into you yeah like no doubt.
but I do feel the assistant shit, but I feel like I don't know.
Maybe you can find somebody onFiverr to do it for you.
Speaker 2 (25:10):
I don't trust nobody
bro, I'm the same way, I don't
trust nobody man Like I need anassistant with everything, even
social media, but I ain't tryingto get nobody.
My password, that's out.
Speaker 1 (25:20):
Yeah, we both got to
figure that one out.
Speaker 2 (25:21):
Yeah, that's going to
be hard right there.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
You know they shut my
Instagram down 300,000.
Yeah, it's all good, though.
I got other Instagrams, but Ihave 50,000, 60,000 followers.
You know one of my pages got70,000 followers, like 75.
Don Kalam Legacy yeah, withthat, I mean, that's enough to
make a bag.
Yeah, hell yeah, you get adollar from everybody.
(25:47):
Cause my shit's real, I don'tdo that fake shit.
You get a dollar.
Sell something for a dollar,hell yeah.
Not everybody gonna see it,though, but you'll come up.
I made.
I sold something for $33 that'susually the book.
I was selling the course andthe book for $200.
I did it live and just left itall night for a whole 24 hours
(26:07):
and so, and did a deal $33,333.
And I promise you, I made like$50,000 off that $33,333.
Speaker 2 (26:16):
Numerology is
powerful man.
Speaker 1 (26:17):
The numbers play the
role, man.
That's when I first bought, myland was off a $33,333 package.
First Bought, my Land was off a3333 package.
That's your number, you thinkso?
That's your number, bro.
I'm going to have to dosomething again.
That's your number.
I'm going to have to dosomething again.
I like my online school, thoughI do like that.
A lot of people are giving mepartnership deals right now, but
(26:41):
I like partnering up with you.
We're going to work on trustand stuff next.
I I did like that you.
You said the llc.
I would love to teach you mymethods with the llc.
There's certain ways to set itup.
That's why I'm actually innevada, because it's a charging
order protection state.
Yeah, you're talking to meabout that.
Yeah, um, this is where a lotof people do their holding
companies.
You can remain anonymous, likewhen you set up the holding
(27:02):
company in nevada.
You make it manager managed,because you got member managed
and manager managed with LLCs.
So you make it manager managed,you're the manager, and then
that holding company will be thesingle member of your new LLC.
And I'd say, make your name anLLC as well and your holding
company will be the singlemember, or even a record label,
(27:27):
or a church, or a church or atribe or your own private
government.
That's hard.
You gotta own the intellectualproperty.
Yeah, a lot of people don'tunderstand that.
That's what I'm lining with.
Credit 28, usc 2002, subsection15A means United States is a
federal corporation.
Are you familiar with that?
(27:48):
No, not at all, not at all.
But so what?
So what, how, why are youattracted to Don Kalama?
I know you learned a lot, soyou, everything was a lot of new
shit for you.
Yeah, because you didn't actlike it.
That's all I'm gonna say.
Speaker 2 (28:03):
well, you absorbed
the information pretty well yeah
, I just catch on to thingspretty fast.
But shit, some of it I'm, someof it I done heard before, you
know.
But like you break it down, youknow you go into detail.
So I'm like this is crazy, thisshit is new.
But I did pick up on a lot, youknow.
I learned a lot.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
I don't know.
I thought you already knewcertain things because you know
sincere following me and thenyou was rocking with me.
So I don't know, I justautomatically assumed you
already knew certain things.
Nah, certain things I do know.
Speaker 2 (28:39):
All right, so is your
name an LLC.
No, I need to hop on that ASAP.
Speaker 1 (28:44):
Alright, and then
also like with the offspring.
I make that so say your name is, you know, your government name
, llc, and then your children'sname would be the DBAs, or
fictitious names owned by yourgovernment Does that make sense.
Yeah, so you can control thatname, but at the end of the day,
(29:04):
all this would be under yourfamily trust.
Speaker 2 (29:07):
Damn, that's hard I
need to hop on that.
Speaker 1 (29:10):
Yeah, the family
trust is the beneficiary owner
of your holding company.
Or you can have an offshoreholding company as well and,
like Cameron Islands, cookIslands, I'm doing another
country, the country of Georgia.
I'm teaching people how to dothat as well.
I got people there.
That's probably the cheapestplace.
I go thousand dollars for atrust, thousand dollars for an
offshore holding company there,liaison.
(29:33):
They'll even open up a bankaccount there.
And you already seen how I rockon my IDs.
Yep, what you think about theID.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
That shit hard.
I need to get me one too.
Speaker 1 (29:45):
I'll show, yeah, show
, I want everybody to get one,
you gotta move like the Amishmove.
Do the Amish go to jail?
Nope, the Amish don't getcredit.
They get four and eight.
No, I'm playing, I'm playing,I'm playing.
I doubt they get it.
This is a Paloo ID and I canshow you.
If you hit me up, man, you getthe website and shit.
But another place that does thesame thing is Estonia.
(30:11):
And then I got my chief that Irock with.
He talks to the countries andshit, shit, I'm not going to do.
I don't like talking to theguys For real.
Shout out to chief.
Yeah, shout out to chief.
I'm not gonna do.
I don't like talking to the guyfor real.
Shout out to Chief.
Yeah, shout out to Chief.
I'd be.
I'm not scared with him, butChief Barbarian, hack Barbarian,
h-a-k on Instagram.
But he doesn't talk to Hawaii,cause Hawaii is a kingdom.
(30:37):
A lot of people don't know herocks with the kingdom of Hawaii
.
Yeah, I knew that I'm settingup Salvador.
A lot of people don't know herocks with the kingdom of Hawaii
.
Yeah, I knew that I'm settingup a Salvador because that's
where.
Speaker 2 (30:46):
C's from.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
Jamaica and then
Estonia I think he's talking to
somebody else that I don't haveno clue about, but that's for me
and he sits down with tribesthat are federally recognized
Because he don't take federalfunding, so their, their tribe
is meets all the criteria ontheir IDs.
(31:08):
You seen his ID?
Uh-uh, he keeps it on his neckso he don't pull, he don't get
shot, and so you know, you know,when they you reach for
something, they keep their ID.
They just tuck it in.
Okay, their ID, they just tuckit in.
Okay, yeah, you didn't get achance to see that.
It's all good, yeah, but I likehow they move that way.
I still put mine in my wallet.
I look white.
Yeah, yeah, they're not goingto shoot.
(31:29):
Uh-uh, hands up, don't shoot.
But let's get back to you, man.
We got like 15, 20 minutes left.
I don't want to talk too muchabout the private life because
you're not there yet.
Not all the way, not all theway.
But you have a family business.
I do.
That's where you start reallywith the private life.
(31:51):
You know, donald Trump, that'sa business.
Speaker 2 (31:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (31:54):
Yeah, and it's all
family business.
You hand down wealth to thetribe, the family, the clan.
The name that you're protectingis your last name.
Speaker 2 (32:04):
That's a perfect
example, donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (32:07):
Michael Jordan too.
Speaker 2 (32:08):
Yeah, Michael Jordan.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
Yeah, All these, I
learned this from you're too
young, you probably don't knowthis.
Speaker 2 (32:20):
His name is Jason.
Speaker 1 (32:20):
Weaver, oh yeah, I'm
too young.
You ever seen this show onDisney called Smart Guy?
Uh-uh, you seen ATL?
I seen ATL you seen the dudewho did the grills.
Speaker 2 (32:31):
I can't remember ATL
too much right now.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
Well, he learned it
early.
He sung in Lion King Uh-uh.
Speaker 2 (32:37):
Yeah, that's crazy.
Speaker 1 (32:39):
Yeah, and he was a
kid, but look him up, jason
Weaver.
So when you watch his podcast,look up Jason Weaver.
His mama made sure his name wasa business.
Speaker 2 (32:54):
That's a smart move.
Speaker 1 (32:55):
I got hip to him
because my homie I'm from St
Louis, my homie Chingy did asong with him called One Call
Away.
I don't know if you ever heardthat.
I know Chingy though, chingy, Ilike the way you do that right
there right there, Shout out toChingy man.
Speaker 2 (33:08):
If you don't know,
Chingy I?
Speaker 1 (33:10):
don't know what to
say.
Chingy pulled up on me inAtlanta before I even blew up.
Chingy, jay Kwan, fresco Kane,nikki Natural and this porn star
named Eve Madison they was thefirst celebs to really pull up
on me, and I flaunted it too.
I didn't give a fuck.
It's a private life.
I know porn stars Fuck it.
(33:31):
Yeah, I thought that shit waslit, but I didn't know who she
was until she showed up.
And they're like you know, eve,like she.
She showed up and they're likeyou know, like she had fans.
Speaker 2 (33:42):
I thought that was
kind of creepy.
Speaker 1 (33:43):
But that is yeah,
yeah, yeah, they was waiting on
her with roses and all types ofshit they had flowers and
everything.
Yeah, that shit was lit but,like I told you, every, every
event I had in Atlanta was soldout this nigga famous in Atlanta
sold out.
Oh yeah, I'm famous everywhere.
You see me.
Yeah, we're everywhere.
Speaker 2 (34:03):
We went hell estates,
stopping everywhere.
Everybody knew him.
Speaker 1 (34:08):
So can I get
spiritual with you?
Mm-hmm.
You believe in energy?
Yeah, hell, yeah.
Do you think that happens witheverybody I'm with?
I got haters too.
Did you ever see a hater on me?
Uh-uh Because.
Did you ever see a hater on me?
Uh-uh, because that's yourenergy.
Yeah, so I'll pay attention tothe people I'm around and the
things I attract.
When these haters pull up, I'llquit fucking with that
(34:28):
motherfucker.
Like your mom said, you keephanging out with a person,
you're going to jail.
That's a fact, yeah.
So when I was in Chicago, myhomie he is fucking hella famous
but I got noticed more than him.
But I got noticed more than himand it just blew my mind.
I'm like I'm fucking with himand he loved it too.
He loved it too because henever really got to witness that
.
He don't even because he's noton social media and shit.
(34:49):
He fuck with me, if that makessense.
Somebody told him what I do.
I helped him in a situation andhe fuck with me.
We was in a club they playing,playing my song, and he didn't
even know it was me.
I'm like, nigga, this my song.
He's like, bro, I fuck with you.
That's crazy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But he started bumping his headand shit, though he paid for
the motherfucking song.
Like nigga, you didn't listento it.
That's funny.
(35:09):
Yeah, yeah, nothing, but areknown money bag, yo future young
thug.
He helped all these peopleshout out to kid wonder he
rocked with, kid wonder he.
He got like 30 fuckingplacements, little dirt roddy,
(35:31):
rich, fucking hell of people.
I think he got one with drakeand I was like can we put these
up in our studio?
His platinum packs, I'll orderall of them.
He said, yeah, let's go hop onit.
Yeah, people don't understandman.
So, like the in the privatelife, the people I rock with
they, they, they help people getin rooms and positions like
(35:57):
you've seen, some of the peopleI rock with Hell yeah Bags.
I brought bags to speak oncredit and he got a record deal
or you know.
Hell yeah he came up Music deal.
Yeah, yeah, yeah Came up.
Speaker 2 (36:08):
That was a cool event
, bro.
That shit brought Money.
Speaker 1 (36:11):
And good energy.
You was only there one day, butyou no, you went to the I went
to the the first day.
Was like a.
What was that?
What would you?
Call it Like a networking event, I don't know what to call it.
I guess networking the secondday you slept in.
Speaker 2 (36:24):
Yeah, I was tired.
Speaker 1 (36:26):
My ass didn't get no
sleep and went.
Speaker 2 (36:28):
Yeah, he did, I ain't
going to lie.
Speaker 1 (36:31):
Yeah, I went with no
sleep y'all.
That's what I went there forand I wasn't even supposed to
speak.
But I just went in and theytried to put me back there with
the speaker.
I said no, I want to be here asa student.
And then the third day that'swhen you was there.
So first tell us about that.
(36:51):
Friday the networking event.
Speaker 2 (36:53):
That shit was lit.
They treated us like we weresuperstars, which we are.
Yeah, it was lit.
I think I really do bring a lotof good energy, because some
random guy just stopped us waslike man y'all.
He pointed to me and darren,it's a big group of us.
He was like man y'all too.
Bring me a lot of likesomething, something calling and
making me want to pray fory'all.
So that's just crazy.
(37:14):
I remember that he stopped.
Speaker 1 (37:17):
I see them every day
of the of the uh, I see them
every day at the seminar.
I remember.
So when we first went, youremember somebody was waiting on
me.
They said I just came here.
I paid for the ticket for you,Don Kalam.
Speaker 2 (37:33):
Oh yeah, that's lit.
I remember that.
Speaker 1 (37:34):
He said I don't give
a fuck about nothing else, I'm
here for you, I just wanted tosee you and we went in early.
It wasn't that many peoplethere.
Yeah, something would happenwhere they sent the date, they
sent the location late to people, but we got it early for some
reason.
But then we left at the righttime.
So, listen, I like showing uplate, I just want you to know I
show up late.
(37:55):
That's how I was trained.
Ok, and we did leave when itstarted filling up.
We left and smoked.
Speaker 2 (38:03):
We smoked some weed
cannabis whatever, shout out to
all the smokers.
Speaker 1 (38:07):
We shared with
everybody too.
I don't smoke after people,though Just know that it's Roy
Young's shit.
Speaker 2 (38:11):
I only smoke when me
and Bags nigga.
Yeah, Roy Young, Me and Bagssmoke good time.
Speaker 1 (38:15):
Especially these
females.
I know what y'all doing, butespecially in Las Vegas I ain't
smoking after no female here.
Speaker 2 (38:21):
That's out of pocket.
Speaker 1 (38:21):
Hell, nah, but that's
when it filled up because we
was getting content outside too.
Yeah, hella, people followed usoutside.
Hell, yeah, we some superstars.
And then we went in and it waspacked Right.
Speaker 2 (38:35):
Hell yeah, we had
like a grand re-entrance.
Speaker 1 (38:38):
It was like it was
yeah, and that's how I like to
be, and it worked out perfect.
When we walked in, all eyes wason us.
Hell, yeah, didn't even try,uh-uh, and they thought I was
dope because I brought my owncameraman.
Speaker 2 (38:52):
Hell yeah, we walked
in with the cameraman and that
shit was lit.
Speaker 1 (38:56):
That's I try to teach
people man like I try to teach
people man.
So he didn't charge for that.
But if I'm at an event,motherfuckers be juking that
camera.
They get paid off that cameraPer picture.
Per picture or even videos.
That's what I'm going to do.
I'm going to hustle thatmotherfucker you can.
Yeah, hell yeah.
(39:16):
I done got hustled before.
I mean, I had to pay him Shit,these motherfuckers.
No, it's all good.
It's all good, but that's how Imove.
Usually, though, but I'm a teamplayer too.
What goes around comes around,and it was great footage, but I
had that shit on my other page,so I don't know.
I'm just using it.
It's all good.
Man, I got Dream Keepers Radio,instagram, don Kalam Legacy and
(39:38):
Don Kalam Legacy and Don KalamUniversity, and I swear to God,
don Kalam University has themost views.
Right now, I'm almost at like100,000 views.
Don Kalam was at 14 millionviews a month, like was doing
numbers, so I'm not tripping.
I know what I'm doing.
I got a little something.
I'd be using some AI and thealgorithm type shit that'd be
building my page with realfollowers, and I know how to
(40:01):
scrape people's pages.
I'm just going to let you knowIf I fuck with you and you do
some similar shit to me, I'mscraping your Instagram.
I'm taking all your followers.
That's how I move.
You know it means all fair gameand love and war.
Learn how to scrape.
That's what it's called.
Go look it up direct thetraffic.
I gave you the info.
Yep, I don't gatekeep from mycrew Right or wrong.
Speaker 2 (40:22):
Nah, that's a fact.
Speaker 1 (40:24):
But everybody can't
sell shit and juke shit like me.
So, Like your, your circleshouldn't be your competition
anyways.
Well, you shouldn't be tryingto.
Speaker 2 (40:34):
I don't know yeah.
I mean, we can compete for sure, for sure, but we can compete,
for sure, for sure, but friendlycompetition, yeah, friendly,
you feel me.
Let's see who can make 10 bandsfirst.
Speaker 1 (40:43):
Yeah, but there is
non-compete agreements and shit.
Yeah, I like that.
Who can make 10 bands first?
If I make it first, you got togive me an extra thousand or
some shit.
Hey, that's lit Stuff like thatand I don't even like being
around people if they can't evencan I get 10,000?
Like, you're my real friend.
If you can't be used, you'reuseless.
Speaker 2 (41:03):
A thousand, let me
hold a thousand.
Hey, that's the best way tomake enemies, bro.
Let somebody you let somebodyborrow some money.
That's the easiest way tocreate an enemy.
Speaker 1 (41:12):
Yeah.
I don't, I don't, I don't wantto be mad at you later Because
you lied.
Speaker 2 (41:20):
Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (41:21):
That's out, because I
got people that are going to
hunt you down.
You're taking from my kids now,uh huh, like anybody I be
helping, I let them know, like,especially people locked up.
I don't help grown men lockedup, I'm just like.
Y'all know Y'all still got topay me.
But, um, I tell them I'mhelping you right now.
You take it from my family.
You get three meals a day.
You're rent free, ain't thatright?
(41:44):
They chose it, I mean, and whenyou learn true private law, you
know that you can sense it.
So, like, if there's no, I knowI'm getting away from credit,
but this is how I learned credit, though, because who's paying
for the court case?
Ain't the judge getting paidwhen he go to court?
(42:04):
Whether you have a bad day oryou win, the judge still got
paid, and it costs you time.
So, how are they getting paid?
Speaker 2 (42:13):
That's the shit I
teach.
I'm learning the same shitthough Social security card,
social security number.
Speaker 1 (42:17):
That's a government
contract.
They have a clerk in thecourtroom right.
What's clerks do?
Speaker 2 (42:23):
Shit.
From what I witnessed, theydon't do too much If.
Speaker 1 (42:25):
I go to a store.
What does a clerk do?
I don't know the store clerk.
You ever heard of a store clerk?
Oh yeah, store clerk, they hadno money.
Yeah, so that's what a clerkdoes.
Speaker 2 (42:37):
Like in a courtroom,
though.
Speaker 1 (42:38):
I mean, what else
does a clerk do?
What's a clerk do, Damn that'scrazy.
Look, you got your phone rightthere.
Look up the word B-A-N-CDefinition.
It's the real word of a bank.
Speaker 2 (42:53):
I'm gonna read it out
loud.
It say it's the real word of abank.
I'm going to read it out loud.
It say hold up, hold up, Bankis a French word that refers to
a bench, especially the benchwhere judges sit in a court of
law.
It can be also spelled as bankor bankus.
Speaker 1 (43:10):
So a bank is a seat
on which a judge sits.
Now let me see your phone.
I'm going to type this in foryou.
I want you to read it tooMm-hmm, when do you bank at?
Speaker 2 (43:29):
I got a couple banks
when at Say Wells Fargo, one of
them Wells.
Speaker 1 (43:37):
Fargo, one of them
Wells Fargo.
Speaker 2 (43:38):
Mm-hmm.
Speaker 1 (43:39):
Tell me who owns
Wells Fargo.
I don't know what's that say.
Read the definite, read whatyou.
Yeah, let me see it, let melook at it again.
Speaker 2 (43:53):
Yeah, just that top
paragraph alright, it say um yes
, public banks are owned by thegovernment or a government
entity.
Public banks are often focusedon the um public interest and
the long term needs of thecommunity they serve.
So who owns Wells Fargo?
Shit public bank?
Uh, let me see the government,the government owns Wells Fargo
Shit public bank.
Speaker 1 (44:14):
The government, the
government, the government owns
public banks.
Now let me show you somethingelse.
That's not a private bank.
You think it's your bank, butit's not.
It's not real money.
The government doesn't operatewith full money.
They operate with fiat currencyand credit.
Let's see.
Speaker 2 (44:32):
The public sector is
the part of the economy that
includes government-controlledenterprises at all levels of
government.
Speaker 1 (44:38):
So the public sector
is the part of the economy the
government controls, correct,mm-hmm?
So what is public housing Ownedby the government?
Public assistance, governmentPublic defender Works for the
government.
Speaker 2 (44:52):
So anything in the
public is owned by the
government.
Speaker 1 (44:54):
That's what people
need to understand.
When you deal with the public,you're giving up your rights.
You are an employee of thegovernment.
Now, really, you need to fillout a DD-214 and fucking
discharge?
That's crazy.
No, it's not.
They don't hide it from you.
A lot of people don't thinklike that.
Speaker 2 (45:14):
So where'd you go to
school at?
Speaker 1 (45:16):
Like high school,
what's it called Crenshaw?
You go to private school, sowhat's the opposite of private
school?
Public?
So where'd you go to Publicschool?
And who owns it?
Shit, the government for you,right, right.
So that's why you don't knowwhat's going on out here.
Yeah, that shit crazy.
Speaker 2 (45:37):
No, it's not it makes
sense to me that shit is crazy
you know what a covenant is.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
a covenant, yeah,
elaborate what is a covenant um
agreement between you and yourhigher power?
Oh yeah, yeah, you know, thegovernment can't enter friends
with a private contract.
That's why we set up ouroperating agreements before we
set up an LLC.
So are you setting up operatingagreements for people's LLCs?
Speaker 2 (46:00):
Mm-hmm, you got all
that first, but I kind of do it
through like a website.
Speaker 1 (46:07):
That's cool.
It's called form versussubstance.
So if you're not setting thatup first, the government can't
control your LLC.
Everything I just showed youhow to protect it doesn't even
matter.
So you know you can go to theLLC just with a Secretary of
State paper and the EIN, correct?
Yeah, you need to have acontract that shows that you
have permission to open up theEIN.
That make sense.
(46:28):
Yeah, alright.
I'm just making sure so thegovernment can't interfere with
that private contract in thesame way with, like family
bibles that can be proved foridentity, baby land deeds,
baptismal certificates, approveslife.
So the you, the tencommandments, is real law.
(46:50):
You said that, right.
So it says don't make acovenant outside your god,
correct, right?
So when you sign that birthcertificate, you made a covenant
outside your god.
That birth certificate showswho your maker is.
You're not six pounds, sevenounces.
Who's your maker?
Boom.
Speaker 2 (47:04):
You can only control
what you create that's really
some, that's some knowledge forreal yeah, I hope you can go
back in and and review this.
Speaker 1 (47:12):
Yeah, you're just
getting started, man, but I mean
, I just I mean that shit makessense, though I really do I'm
taking it one day at a.
I hope you can go back in andreview this.
Yeah, you're just gettingstarted, man, but I mean, I just
I mean that shit makes sense,though it really do.
I'm taking it one day at a timewith you.
I'm going to continue buildingwith you.
Ain't nothing but magic.
We're business partners alreadyI've made more money with you
already than other people thatare partners.
Speaker 2 (47:29):
That's why I bring
money and good energy.
Speaker 1 (47:30):
And my high rollers
is fucking with you.
Uh-huh, I'm ready to see what'snext, man.
Hell yeah, let us know how wecan follow you.
You got any ending words, man?
Speaker 2 (47:39):
Tap on me on
Instagram at Montemillionaire
underscore M-O-N-T-E Millionaireunderscore.
Same thing on YouTube Well,pretty much everywhere.
And shit.
Search me up on Google, checkwhere it's shit.
Speaker 1 (47:51):
Search me up on
Google.
Speaker 2 (47:51):
Check me out, let's
go.
Y'all need credit repair.
Tap in One-on-one mentorship.
Tap in Funding everything.
Tap in and I sell trade lines.
So tap the fuck in.
Speaker 1 (47:59):
Let's go, he does it
all.
You got hookups on the lendersfor sure, for sure.
Hell yeah, and I hellaexpensive, yeah, so you're the
second person I met that gotthem for the low.
Yeah, but I'm fucking with you.
I mean, you can text PrivateLife to 702-200-4900.
(48:21):
That's 702-200-4900.
And go to schoolskoolcom slashD-O-N-K-I-L-A-M.
Just search it on Google.
I got my own private school,but text the number.
You can get a hold of me, theInstagram.
I'm not even going to give themout, no more Shit.
Find me, yeah, because I can'tcontrol that shit.
Speaker 2 (48:44):
Hey, tap in with
Sincere too.
What's her name?
Speaker 1 (48:47):
D-Sincere Marie on
Instagram let's go $500 credit
repair let's go change yourwhole fucking life tap in let's
go, me and him have our ownthing.
We're reaching out to peoplethat's getting the credit repair
from us.
We're doing zoom calls yep rockwith us.
And I'm doing a private trusttoo for partnership.
That's for another episode.
But be looking out for Monte.
I had to introduce him to mycommunity, introduce him to the
(49:09):
world.
Let you know he's real, he'slegit, I am legit and he's
impressed me so much.
Just even you and your girls'phone calls.
It's always about money.
Speaker 2 (49:17):
Mm-hmm, that's all we
talk about.
Speaker 1 (49:19):
That's crazy man.
Speaker 2 (49:20):
That's my biggest
turnover.
Speaker 1 (49:21):
Let's go, let's go.
I'm tired.
I'm tired of these hoes I'mpaying for, and these hoes with
one that's going to make somebread.
Liability.
Speaker 2 (49:33):
HOE means heaven on
earth, by the way.
Speaker 1 (49:35):
But with that amount
man, much peace and love.