Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Welcome to igh going Rogue.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Today's Thursday, February thirteenth, Tomorrow's Valentine's Day. Boys and girls,
make sure you don't forget to get your special someone
something special, or you're gonna end up in the doghouse
or worse, on the couch and not sleeping next to
that person. Anyways, lots going on. RFK JR. Got confirmed.
(00:51):
We have massive arrests in that hour all over the place,
Ice Dea. And like I said yesterday, you know, we
were bringing back law Enforcement Fridays, but we scheduled it
for today because I thought today was Friday.
Speaker 1 (01:05):
But anyways, we'll work that out.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
But we have our host of law Enforcement Fridays, Jeffrey Queen,
former law enforcement officer. Jeffrey, It's always a pleasure to
have you. You are an encyclopedia of knowledge, and we'll
talk about that as well, not just on the ground
as a cop, but also I know you have like
I don't know, seventeen degrees and homeland security criminals and
(01:31):
who knows what else, So why don't you walk us
through that? And thanks for coming on the show, Bud.
Speaker 3 (01:37):
Yeah, thanks thanks for having me. I having always a
pleasure to be with you, and we go back a
long way, don't we, my friend?
Speaker 2 (01:43):
Oh man, oh yeah, oh yeah. So talk to us
about your background real quick. I know you've added a
lot of academics to that as well.
Speaker 3 (01:54):
I did it backwards a little bit. Started my career
first twenty years in law enforcement, and went back to
school to get smart and got a degree in Homeland
security and intelligence studies, and then went back and got
a master's of Business administration and operational crisis management. So
(02:15):
you know, I've got some tentacles, if you will, in
a lot of different things related law enforcement, security, business,
continuity of operations, that kind of thing. So hopefully I
know a little bit about averting crises.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:31):
Yeah, No, crisis crisis management is important as well, because
that's what we're going to talk about. Mister producer, whyn't
you show us that first slide real quick so we
can start talking about them and we'll slide through them.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Obviously, RFK got confirmed. I think that's a big win.
Speaker 2 (02:46):
I don't know what the final count is yet, but
I saw it was fifty one forty eight at one point,
so he got majority.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
So he's done.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
And I know there was attack another of these attacks,
but in Germany this time, I think it was a
van or a car.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
Do you have that slide there you go, want you
hit that?
Speaker 4 (03:05):
Now, we have a developing story out of Munich, Germany.
This morning a car was driven through a group of
people that were gathered for a protest Injuring at least
twenty eight and some say seriously. Scripts International correspondent Trent
Murray is in Munich now with the latest in Trent,
what happened?
Speaker 5 (03:29):
Hey there, Holly, that's right. Let me step out of
frame to show you what we are seeing here. That
is the car and the aftermath of this incident. Now
we know that at ten thirty am local time, that
car drove at speed into a crowd of people. There
was around one thousand protesters on this street here as
part of a union protest. Now eyewitnesses say that the
(03:52):
driver accelerated towards them at speed, hitting a number of
them Injuring. As you say, twenty eight in including a
mother and a small child. You might not be able
to say it in short there, but is part of.
Speaker 1 (04:04):
The man that's crazy. That is some crazy stuff.
Speaker 2 (04:09):
Let's see some more sides so we can have the
professor over here, break all this stuff down for us.
What do you got next, mister producer? DA and Ice
arrest ninety right in Colorado in a series of raids,
and they're all connected to Tandaaua, which is that horrible, horrible.
Speaker 1 (04:36):
Gang out of.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
Venezuela, out of the Venezuela in prisons, which is crazy.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
What else do you have there? You go?
Speaker 2 (04:43):
So Ice in San Antonio also targeting Trendadaua. So homan
Is is obviously look at that crack down eight Venezuela
and Grand members in Nashville. So homan Is went exactly
what he said he was going to do, which was
gonna go target these gangs, these criminal illegals.
Speaker 1 (05:05):
Is there anything else you got it there? Or are
you good? Look at that shit?
Speaker 2 (05:12):
Top Ice officials resigned or reassigned? Right, reassigned. I'm in
pressure to increase arrest, so they didn't want to fucking
arrest people. I just fucking discuss and they should fire them,
not not reassignment.
Speaker 1 (05:24):
Man.
Speaker 3 (05:24):
Well, that that's exactly right. You don't reassign somebody that's
not doing their job. You get rid of them and
bring somebody in that's going to do the job.
Speaker 1 (05:30):
So the ice, ICE, So don't you tell us what
ice is and what their job is and if they
refuse to arrest and what the fuck are they doing?
Speaker 3 (05:39):
Right, there's no there's no purpose to them, you know.
And and again, you know, this goes back to you know,
we've seen all the dose stuff that's coming out right
in the in the US, the USA spending, and the
bottom line is that so much of that stuff that
we saw, you know, hundreds of millions of dollars being
spent on doesn't do a thing to make any safer.
(06:01):
It has nothing to do with protecting people. And you know,
if I'm not mistaken, the whole bottom line of why
we put that money out there for other countries in
the first place is to give them some structure of
stability to become self sufficient. And nobody is becoming more
self sufficient with twenty million dollars in Iraqi, Sesame Street Aid, right,
(06:26):
that doesn't do anything to make anybody safer.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
No, it's pathetic. So a Homan is doing what he
said he was going to do. He's doing a good job.
Speaker 2 (06:36):
Everybody that we've had on just praises home and as
just an awesome cop, a cops cop, you know, I
mean that guy man he's got he's got a pair
of brass ones, you know.
Speaker 3 (06:49):
Well, and that's what it takes. And you know, I
saw a you know, last year, I saw a job
description for one of these aid agents these and it
was for emergency Response director, and the entirety of the
job description talked about saving lives, operational planning, you know,
(07:11):
risk assessments, threat detection, all of these things. And at
the very end of the job description it said, if
you don't feel like you've checked all these boxes, don't
worry about that, go ahead and apply anyway. Because our
diversity of workforce, you know programs here. We want to
give you the opportunity to expand your skills. When lives
(07:31):
are on the line. You do not bring in DEI
people to try and make your workforce more diverse, all right.
DEI does have a place. If you're in corporate America,
you know, and you're trying to reach certain audiences for
certain things, then then you take the opinion of people
who represent those different groups. When lives are on the
(07:52):
line and you need somebody to respond in a time
of criticality, you don't care what their affiliations are. You
want somebody who is going to make a decisive, take
decisive action to protect people. And that is not the
time to be doing this kind of kind of crap.
And if we have this in our government, if we've
(08:13):
got ice people that are sympathetic, you know, to immigrants
over the safety of American criminals, and you're not reassign them.
You get them out of there, and you bring in
somebody whose sole goal is protection.
Speaker 1 (08:25):
Period, right, agree with you. And we've seen these lone.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
Wolf attacks, Yeah, like the one that happened in Germany,
several have happened here in the.
Speaker 3 (08:39):
US, New Orleans Year's Day.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
Yeah, yeah, shit, dude, I mean there are reports out
there that there are thousands of terrorists inside the country today. Yeah,
so let's put the gangs on the side for a minute,
you know, let's put them on the side of you know,
(09:02):
let's keep them warm, you know, mister producer, keep keep
training the rag a warm for us over on the
back burner. We're gonna we're gonna deep dive into safety
against these lone wolves, against Harris. Because they might not
bring a van. They might show up in them all.
They might you know, walk into a school, a library
(09:23):
at the movies, which has happened in the past. So,
mister Green, walk us through scenarios, tell us what to
look for. What should people be doing? I mean, I
don't know. Take us through one on one, take us
through kindergarten.
Speaker 3 (09:36):
Well, let's let's let's let's start with a foundational principle
here that often gets mistaken, and that is that the
police have no mandate, uh to protect you individually. It's
not what they're there for.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
Say it, Say that again, Please say that again.
Speaker 3 (09:53):
The police have no mandate to protect you individually. Right,
Their mandate is about general public safety. If it was
about protecting you individually, everyone's gonna have a cop outside
our door at night, right, you know. And so to today,
in the environment that we all live in today that
(10:14):
we all, every single one of us, each individual citizen,
is dealing with a threat not only to public safety,
but to national security and to economic stability. Right, all
of it plays in right, every single aspect of that
requires us to protect ourselves, our family, and our community.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
Right.
Speaker 3 (10:35):
I mean, the police don't do it, They're not there,
they can't do it. And then you've got these these
woke cities that are trying to still you know, even
after it's been proven time and time again that it,
you know, increases crime rates. Are trying to defund the police, right,
and you see, we're having this debate about defunding police
versus funding all of this USAID crap, where all of
(10:56):
this money that we've wasted could have been used to
protect people, families, communities. I mean, how much money did
we waste that could have gone to Appalachia after Hurricane Helen?
You know, I mean you still got people in North
Carolina sleeping in tents.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
Dude.
Speaker 2 (11:13):
We spent FEMA cent fifty nine million dollars or eighty
nine I can't remember it.
Speaker 3 (11:19):
It was fifty fifty nine million, uh, you know, to
USA crap after they were told not to, after they
were going he had.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
To pay for luxury Pakistani owned the hotels in New
York for illegals, dude.
Speaker 3 (11:33):
Yeah, So we're you know, we're facing we're facing rising
crime rates in our cities. We've got international threats from
from China and Russia that uh, you know again affect
American stability right globally, and so when when global stability
starts breaking down, then we see that trickle down effect
(11:54):
that comes back into our communities and into our homes.
We see it, you know, we because it may not
be a direct uh uh self defense issue, but it
does take away from our ability to fund our own
self defense when prices are going up and things in
the supply chain become less availablem O guns, you know,
(12:16):
all of those things. All of that is a public
safety issue, every single last bit of it. And so
you know, we're looking at all of these these hundreds
of millions of dollars that are being thrown away that
have nothing to do with protecting American interests abroad, protecting
American citizens abroad, and creating a more stable global environment
(12:40):
where we can all thrive. And it's taking it's taking
safety right out of our streets. And then when you
when you follow that up with you know, these woke
cities wanting to defund the police, right, then you're forcing
you're forcing civilians to take matters into their own hands.
And yet you still want to have the gun control debate,
(13:01):
and you want to force them to defend themselves while
taking that means of defending themselves out of their hands.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
That's right, that's right.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
Well, I mean, you know, I take my defense very
seriously as you can see. You know, I'm not waiting
for anybody to show up at my house, you know,
I this is this is one of my favorites, you know,
and we're ready.
Speaker 6 (13:24):
Man.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
I love this bullpump right here.
Speaker 2 (13:27):
It holds eleven in each and each barrel and one up.
Speaker 1 (13:31):
So well, you know I'm pretty good with that.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
Brother, right, I'm old school, right, yeah, So we're going
with the nineteen eleven A one from nineteen forty three.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
That's beautiful. It is.
Speaker 3 (13:46):
It is a a Remington Rand frame with an Ithaca
slide nineteen eleven and forty five caliber, and I don't
go anywhere without it or one of its.
Speaker 2 (13:58):
Well, this is my every day. This is my every day.
This is my g twenty five uh ten milimeter. Love
that thing and you know what, it's got some takedown
power like that forty five. So love my love my stuff,
and take my security seriously. So for those that don't carry,
because there are a lot of people that don't carry,
(14:19):
especially the woke. You know, the wok are dreaming and
living in some fucking fantasy land where they're gonna go
hold hands, skip down the road, singing Kumbai Ya with
terrorists and bad guys and then they get decapitated and
the fucking sand somewhere, and then they don't understand why, well,
(14:39):
those motherfuckers are here now. So you know, most guys
like me and you are pretty self aware. I would
imagine you a lot, a lot more than probably most
being former law enforcement.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
But for the woke and the people that are not woke,
but you know have obviously always lived, you know, without
any fear understanding. You know, America is a pretty safe place.
You can go to the mall, you can go to
a store, you can go to the movies, you can
take your kids wherever, to the park, and you know,
it's it's always been safe, right.
Speaker 3 (15:11):
And you you bring up a really important point there.
You know that, uh, this country was founded by bold
people who weren't concerned with their own safety. They were
concerned with making a better life for themselves. So they
came over here to a completely unknown land, and they
did what they had to do to protect themselves and survive,
(15:33):
and and and they didn't have any fear, right and
but here's the other thing. They also banded together as
communities that's right, right, and said we're gonna protect each other. Right.
I got your back. You got my back right right there. Yeah.
And so you know what we've done in this last generation.
(15:53):
I just recently read a book called national uh uh
Insecurity UH American Leadership in an Age of Fear. And
what we've done since nine to eleven is we've cultivated
this age of fear. We have a culture of fear.
Everybody's afraid of everything. Words shut up upset us now, right,
and I mean shut us down. You hear somebody say
(16:15):
something and it upsets you, and all of a sudden
you're incapable of functioning. It's ridiculous. We are the United
States of America. We are bold, we are brash, We're
not afraid. And we've got to turn our mindset from
that culture of fear back into that culture of self
sufficiency that we can take care of ourselves and our
(16:35):
families and our communities.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
You know.
Speaker 3 (16:37):
And we're not talking about vigilantism here. We're talking about
grown men being able to have the skill set to
protect people when it's necessary. And again, there's a difference.
We always hear the difference between peaceful and harmless. Right,
if you're harmless, you can't do anything. If you're peaceful,
you're capable of great violence that is under strict control.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
That's right.
Speaker 3 (16:58):
You and I are both peaceful men, yeah right, and
we're but we're all capable of out violence, you know, right,
defending the entire block if we have to, you know,
by ourselves, because that's what we know how to do.
And we built that skill set. And it's an easy
skill set to cultivate. People say, oh, I could never
do that. Yes you can, Yes you can. All it
(17:22):
takes is to go out and get a little bit
of training, learn a little bit of something, you know,
with with with whatever implement you want to use. You
don't carry a gun. Don't carry a gun. Learn how
to use numb chucks or a baseball bat or whatever whatever.
Speaker 2 (17:33):
Brother. You know, I told you a story, you know,
when I when I was living in Peru for for
for a couple of years. You know, I was you know,
I was packing. I was always strapped, and you know,
one day I had to you know, shoot and kill
some people and they ended up being terrorists from Shining Path,
and you know, and I was twenty five years old,
and you know what, nothing wakes you up like that shit,
(17:56):
you know, and says, holy fuck, dude, you know what,
you can be a victim at any point in life.
And I remember when I came back to the US,
I didn't go back to DC immediately. I did a
stop in Miami. It was gonna be five years, ended
up being twenty. But I remember, you know, that first year,
I was like, fuck it, you know, we don't need
(18:16):
guns or anything any of that bullshit. And I was
on Cypress Creek in ninety five. There's a gas station there,
I'm getting gas and I get held up with a
gun to the back of my head, you know, and
I'm like, motherfucker.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
You know I don't need a gun in America, motherfucker.
You're damn right, you fucking do.
Speaker 3 (18:34):
And let me ask you a question. In Peru or
at that gas station, did you ever ask their political affiliation,
talking to their ideals or any of that. You know, No,
you were just in a situation where you had to act.
And you know, one time you acted, the next time
you turned into a statistic Why because you weren't ready
(18:55):
to defend yourself.
Speaker 2 (18:55):
That's right, that's right, which sucks, right, So that's why
that's that's never happened. I mean, you know, my wife,
my kids, they're all carry they're all strapped, they all
have multiple mags, you know, in addition to to the
one the one that's in the gun.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
But what do people need to look out for when
they when they go out? I mean, because people just
kind of they're they're not self aware. Man, they're in
lallah land and you know, dude, how do you not
see a big fucking vehicle come running in your direction?
Speaker 3 (19:23):
I mean, well, you asked, you're asking a great question.
Let's let's unpack that for a minute. Yea, right, So, yeah,
you're dealing with the you know, you know, vehicle attack,
But what was the immediate thing that happened after the
vehicle stopped. Dude gets out and starts popping rounds. So
(19:44):
it's not only a vehicle attack, it's a firearms attack
as well. So you're you're dealing with a single actor,
lone wolf attack who had multiple attack methods ready to go.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
You're talking about New Orleans.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
Yeah, you have to understand that if you're in that situation,
if you're down on Bourbon Street and and and dude
plows into a crowd, and you're not in the crowd
that he's plowed into, you still have to be ready
for him to jump out of that vehicle and start
trying to engage you at distance, which means you may
have to engage him at distance. Again, it's mindset, it's training,
(20:19):
it's being well equipped. Now, if you if you've got
a family and you there's a lot of things going on,
then maybe engaging the suspect is not your best option.
Maybe you know, you get behind cover and and and
you uh yeah, you just just just you know, it's
like sheltering in place, except there's gunfire going on around you, right,
instead of a instead of a you know, biological attack
(20:41):
or chemical attack or a severe weather. So you have
to have the mindset to evaluate what's going on and
then choose what's your best option. And and I hate
you know, the government did run hide fight, right, And
and in theory it's good, but words matter. And so
(21:03):
when I hear run, hide fight, I'm thinking of somebody
that's in a complete panic, that's in chaos, that's fleeing,
you know, you know, And so we have to change
that mindset. You don't want to have a fleeing mindset.
You don't want to have a fearful mindset. You want
to have a mindset of confidence that says, I know
what I can do. You know, I know how well
(21:24):
trained I am. I know what my equipment is and
how it works. And you know, early in my law
enforcement career, I went to a seminar called Street Survival
and it was actually in New Orleans and it was about,
you know, amping up your confidence. And they gave us
a little card when we were leaving, and on one
(21:45):
side the card had the Miranda warning you know, you
have the right remain silent, et cetera. On the other
side it had what they call positive self talk, and
it said, you know, read this if you're going to
a hot call. Okay, well, I can handle this because
I've been with trained. I can handle this because I'm
physically fit. I can handle this because I have the
right equipment. I can handle this because I've handled this before,
(22:09):
you know. And so that helps you to remember to
build on that mindset and you take those little talking
points and all that is is training. Anybody can do that.
Anybody can take that card or those those principles and say, look,
I'm well trained, I'm well equipped. You know I can
do this. I'm not afraid, right, and so you know,
(22:35):
you have to get rid of that fear mindset. This
is not expensive, it's not you know, being situationally aware
doesn't cost you a dime.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
Well, so, okay, so that's why I'm asking what does
that mean? What does situational awareness mean? What do people
need to do when they walk out of their house,
when they walk into a mall, they go into an office,
they go to church. What does that mean? What a
situation awareness mean? Is it just looking around looking for
fucking ghosts?
Speaker 1 (23:03):
You know?
Speaker 3 (23:04):
No, No, I mean to you know in it's in
its simplest form. Yes, it's looking around and seeing what's
around you, but it's also understanding what the cascading impacts
of what you see could be. Right, So, if I
walk out of my house in the morning and there's
a bus coming down the street, I'm not generally concerned
about that, except that if I go to walk out
(23:25):
in the street and I don't look both ways right,
and so it's an easy fix. Oh there's a bus coming,
I'll just wait right here till it goes by same
same principle. If you're if you walk outside and we
all talk about you know, gut instinct, that gut feeling, right,
all right. So if you walk outside you see somebody outside,
(23:46):
and it's not somebody that you've ever seen before. They
don't hang out in your neighborhood, but they're there, right,
They're they're in your visible space. So now you you
may not feel threatened, right, but at the very least
you've triggered some sense of alertness in yourself that says,
I got to look at that guy a little closer. Now.
For me, personally, I can do it in the blink
(24:07):
of an eye. I've evaluated so many people, you know,
for for threats that it doesn't take me anytime at all.
If it takes you longer, great, spend a little extra
time looking at that guy and go all right, well,
what's what's he actually doing? Oh, oh, he's he's reading
the meter for the water company. You know, Okay, he's
not a threat, all right, you know, but if he's
(24:27):
over there peeping in the windows of your neighbor's house,
you know, take a little more time, all right. Maybe
he's the contractor and he's getting ready to replace the windows.
Maybe he's a burglar and he's going to break in,
you don't know, take a little bit of extra time.
Don't don't see him and go, oh gosh, I don't
want to I got to run back inside because there's
a strange guy out no look at him. And and
(24:48):
that's really important too to understand in uh in in
in being out in public, walking around, you want to
minimize how much of a target you look like. And
criminals don't target people who are aware, who are looking around.
Speaker 7 (25:05):
Right, they flee from that and sometimes right and and
you can you can fend off being magnant just by
looking at identify.
Speaker 1 (25:16):
Oh yeah, and how you.
Speaker 3 (25:19):
Walk down the street. You know, if you look, if
you walk down the street like you don't want anybody
to see you, and your timid, you know, then then
you elevate your target status. But if you walk down
that street like George Jefferson moving on up to the
east side, you know that that confident walk, that that
that you know, uh message that you're conveying the people
(25:41):
that says I know who I am, I know what
I can do, and and I'm in control of my environment.
Then they're gonna go look for somebody else that's easier
to hit, you know.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
Criminals, Criminals are not looking for hard targets. They're looking
for easy targets.
Speaker 3 (25:56):
Right, that's right, that's right. And so you know this
in in this uh, this age of you know, post
defund the police and budget cuts and all of these things,
criminals are thriving in what's known as a weak law
enforcement environment. You know, if the police aren't there, there's
no police presence, then they've got more targets. Right, So
(26:19):
you want to eliminate yourself as being one of those targets.
And uh, you know, uh, the the the goal is
that you've got to become a hardened target.
Speaker 2 (26:32):
So when you go to church, what should you do? Now,
when you go to church, what should you do besides
pray praying?
Speaker 3 (26:41):
When you go to church, start start praying that nothing's
going to happen that day.
Speaker 1 (26:44):
That's right, that's right. But once you're in there, you know,
you're no, you've prayed, you're you know, waiting for the
pastor the priests to come out. What should you be doing?
Speaker 3 (26:57):
Scanning? Scan you know, don't get your heads so far
into the hymnal or the prayer book or whatever it is,
you know, I mean you can still worship God and
look around the room.
Speaker 1 (27:11):
Right.
Speaker 3 (27:12):
Also, when when you're in church, you generally know the
people you're in church with, right you You tend to
sit in the same place every time.
Speaker 2 (27:21):
And the reason I bring that up, Jeff, is because
there have been church shootings, you know, and and I
think the recent one was that Joel Olstein's, you know,
which is huge, and you know their security guards, you know,
were all packed and they took down the shooter.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
Right.
Speaker 3 (27:35):
But and I've done I've done church security consulting, you know.
Speaker 2 (27:41):
But in regular churches are not going to have security,
you know. More than likely, you know, it's gonna be
a civilian or a volunteer or somebody maybe like you, right.
Speaker 1 (27:50):
Yeah, but in the majority, you know.
Speaker 3 (27:52):
What what what I try to teach him is to
to you know again change this mindset, uh and and
to have and train a group of your own volunteers.
What better way to implement you know, community uh safety
than at your church by bringing in and hosting a
training seminar, bring somebody like me or you know, another
(28:15):
security professional in that will help train your your volunteer
security force. Right and and and you know, teach this
situational awareness, teach you know, scanning and work in the room,
teach de escalation, you know, everything doesn't have to resort
to a gunfight, right, So what you do is that
(28:36):
you you and I tell everybody, don't call it a
security team, call it a safety team. And bring in
people in your congregation like nurses and doctors, you know,
who can be in there to render aid even if
it's just a medical emergency and not a security risk.
And and you know you need to remember church wise,
uh church security is biblical.
Speaker 1 (28:58):
You know.
Speaker 3 (28:58):
Go back to NMI where they're trying to rebuild the
walls of the temple and one of them is working
while the other one is standing over him with a
sword watching his back.
Speaker 1 (29:07):
Right.
Speaker 3 (29:08):
I mean protecting your flock. Pastors, if you're listening here
and you're worried about that, it's your duty. You have
a duty to protect your flock, and you need to
put in some form of security uh to, uh to
to make sure that you're doing that.
Speaker 1 (29:30):
You know. But as you look at you know you
should you should scan.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
You know there's going to be people you you know,
other people you probably won't know, right, you want to
take a look at you know, what are they doing?
Are they vigil are weird?
Speaker 1 (29:42):
Are they you know?
Speaker 3 (29:43):
Yeah, give them a little assessment, you know, and you
can even do that as part of the security team
and act like you're part of the welcoming committee. You
see somebody you don't know, walk up, give him a
hearty handshake, and at the same time you can kind
of pat him on the shoulder or the side or something.
And you know what you've done. You just gave him
a little frisk. You just gave him a little frisk
(30:04):
and it looked like the friendliest thing in the world.
And and and now you've you've kind of eased your
mind a little bit. Okay, well, maybe he's a little unusual,
somebody different, somebody knew, but at least it doesn't seem
like he's got a weapon on you.
Speaker 2 (30:19):
Right, And you want to identify where your exit routes are,
et cetera, etcetera.
Speaker 1 (30:25):
What do you do if you're you're you're at the mall, Jeff,
and uh, something happens, Yeah, what do you do?
Speaker 3 (30:35):
It's the same thing. You're always scanning, You're always looking.
You got to know, you know what your what your
capabilities are, and you know, are you with your kids
or you a mom with a you know, with your stroller?
All right, then find your quickest way out, get get
to cover, and get out. You know, if you're a
mom with your kid in the stroller and you've got
your gun, there's no way to get out. Then make
sure you know how to use your gun and engage.
(30:56):
I mean, there's nothing more terrifying than a mama bear
protecting her you know.
Speaker 5 (31:00):
Young.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
Yeah, so you do that. But but the bottom line,
security is always the same, right, It's always the same.
We had this discussion before when we had somebody from
the company that was going to uh sit in a
congressional hearing, right and wanted to know how do I
How am I going to get safe in a crowd. Well,
the best way to be safe in a crowd is
(31:22):
to create time and distance. You know, you want concentric
layers is really what it is. Right, So you always
want to know what's on your inner perimeter, your outer perimeter,
and your far perimeter. And the further you can be
from danger, the better off you are. Same thing at
the mall, you're scanning, you're looking around, all right, now
(31:42):
I'm getting ready to go in this store. All right,
what's going on in here? Is there's somebody in Oh
maybe something looks bad. So I'm not going to go
in right now. I'm gonna go down to the food
court and get a bite to eat. You know, whatever
it is. You've got to exercise, you gotta scan, but
you've also got to exercise good judgment.
Speaker 2 (31:58):
Yeah, because these terrorists they're gonna just hit out of
the blue, right they're not. Yeah, we're not talking about
criminals that are trying to mug you, or talking about
these terrorists that are already in the country and they're either.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
Going to drive a van or a car through a crowd.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
Or they're gonna start shooting people. And you gotta be
aware of what the fuck is going on around you
at all times, right.
Speaker 3 (32:18):
All times, all times. Situational awareness is the number one
thing that you can do to keep yourself secure. Know
what's going on around you. If it feels funny to you,
it's funny. There's no reason to say, oh, this feels funny,
but I'm gonna go on in here anyway, No, stop and
take a minute to evaluate. Really, one of the biggest
(32:41):
things that one of the biggest problems we have in
this country is that everybody's in a hurry and nobody's
paying attention. They're all running as fast as they can
with their phone in front of their face, so.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
They have no idea who's around them, who's behind them,
who's in front of them. They they're coolist due. Yeah,
I mean, I think.
Speaker 3 (33:00):
That's It's the simplest thing I can tell you. You know,
if you want to be a hardened target, look around.
The first step to hardening yourself as a target is
to look around and understand what's around you, and.
Speaker 1 (33:12):
Who's around you, and what are they doing. Right.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
Hey, mister producer, we rate to tea that commercial up
from our friend Mike Lindell.
Speaker 1 (33:22):
Let us know when you're ready, or just roll it
whenever you're ready, There we go.
Speaker 6 (33:27):
I'm excited to announce that we're having our first st
ever megasale on overstock clearance and brand new products. For example,
save over fifty percent on this season's flanl sheets. Queensize
is only fifty nine ninety eight, King's only sixty nine
ninety eight. They sell out fast.
Speaker 1 (33:43):
Every year, so order now.
Speaker 6 (33:45):
Save twenty percent on our brand new microsses. They're designing
the likeness of the one I've worn every day for
over twenty years. They come in men's and women's and
they're made right here in the USA. Get our twenty
twenty five six piece my towel sets for.
Speaker 1 (34:00):
Only twenty nine ninety eight.
Speaker 6 (34:02):
Our initial quantities are extremely low, so get them now
before they go. And our best selling standard my Pillows
just fourteen ninety eight. So go to my Pillow dot
comer call the number on your screen. Use this promo
code to take advantage of our first ever megasale. But wait,
remember that seventy five dollars free shipping rule, Well that
ship is sale because right now every ordership's absolutely free.
Speaker 2 (34:27):
Awesome, that's our friend Mike Lindell. Make sure you use
promo code igh. Promo code Igh. We got to help
Mike out. Isn't that amazing? Jeff is Jeff? So there
there is You know how they try to cancel Mike
and you know what, he just turned around and crushed
to the American people. You know, I'm out a full
support for him, and what a story.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
Man.
Speaker 3 (34:48):
That's great and it's a terrific example you know again
of crisis management. Right, right, he's got he's got a
disruption that comes up, and he's ready to pivot. Right,
He's ready to pivot. You know, we make some adjustments.
We'll make some some changes about what we're doing, and
you know, we just keep driving on.
Speaker 2 (35:08):
Yeah, amazing, mich Lindell, I g H I g H.
Make sure you use that promo code man and get
those big discounts. Tomorrow's Valentine's Day might be a good
chance to buy your wife or your husband day mattress opper.
Speaker 1 (35:20):
How's that?
Speaker 3 (35:21):
Or sometimes situational aware that it's a holiday and you
could be in trouble.
Speaker 1 (35:26):
That's right.
Speaker 2 (35:27):
Like I said at the beginning, the couch of the
doghouse either one or not good on Valentine's and on
Friday night. So let's go back to pin that out
to the gangs, because we've talked about how to prepare
for a terrorist attack that will happen.
Speaker 1 (35:45):
We know that will happen. We're going to have more
of these this year.
Speaker 2 (35:52):
And maybe next year, depends how fast home and can
can go catch these people. Uh right, But going back
to the gangs that we know are just brutally violent there.
They're savages, they're animals. We've seen the attacks all over
the place. I'm thirteen, it's not a terrorist attack.
Speaker 1 (36:15):
These are just thugs, right, They're just criminals criminals? Right,
what's the difference in preparation for that? Oh, I don't
know that.
Speaker 3 (36:24):
You've got a lot of difference in preparation on the.
Speaker 1 (36:26):
Street, maybe not right, but when they come into your house.
Speaker 3 (36:29):
Yeah, so I mean again hard to your target, be ready,
you know, I mean, you know, terrorism is just a
crime writ large, right, I mean with terrorist attack is
nothing but a criminal act. Right, And we give legitimacy
to these organizations, you know, by by claiming it's a
terrorist attack because of their ideology. Well, shooting somebody in
(36:50):
the street is still shooting somebody in the street. You know,
somebody coming and trying to kick in your door, whether
it's you know, a Muslim extremist or it's you know,
one of these panic gangs, or it's the bloods and
the crips or whoever it may be, is still a
crime if they're trying to kick your door in hard
in your house as a target. You know, there's something
called and this is really interesting. It's been around for
(37:13):
a little while. It's called Crime Prevention through Environmental Design
and it's the acronym SEPTEAD, right, and it's about again
we talked a minute ago about concentric layers. Right, So
if I'm at my house and I've got a sidewalk
in front of my house, well that's a delineation that
what's on this side of the sidewalk is mine. You
(37:33):
can walk down the sidewalk and be fine over there,
but don't come on this side of the sidewalk, and
that's a psychological barrier. Then you've got other soft barriers,
like maybe you've got a hedgerow, maybe you've got a
sign that says no trespassing. Maybe you've got a big
fence and you've got a dog in there and a
sign says beware of dog. Maybe you've got security cameras.
(37:54):
Maybe you've got bars on your windows. Maybe you've got
a guy that sits out front with a shotgun. You know,
whatever it is, you have these layers of security that
anybody that wants to get you has to go through.
And you know the psychological ones, the sidewalks, the hedgerow,
you know, those are very minimalist things. A sign that
(38:16):
says no trespassing, very minimalist, right, that's going to do something.
Speaker 2 (38:22):
What does a no trespassing sign do? Because I see
it a lot, and I know law enforcement always says, hey,
if you're worried, put a no trespassing sign on.
Speaker 3 (38:30):
Well, I mean it's a it's a psychological barrier, right,
I mean locks keep honest people out Right. You put
a sign on your door, on a door at work,
it says authorized personnel only. Well, almost nobody is going
to walk through there unless they know they're authorized. So
you're putting up a psychological barrier that says, oh, I
(38:51):
know I'm not supposed to be in there, right, But
then you back that up with the physical barriers. You
put the camera system in, you've got an alarm, set them,
you know, and then uh, you know, I advocate for
everybody to be armed, right, be armed. If you're not
comfortable with that, well there's not a whole lot I
can do for you. You make yourself a bigger target
(39:12):
than me, right, because nobody's coming to my house, right, Yeah,
I mean, nobody with any sense is coming to my
house if they look you know, again, it's it's like
looking at two different people. We talked about the mugger
walking down the you know, looking, you know, hiding in
the alley looking at people walking down the street. And
the guy who walks confidently head up looking around is
(39:33):
going to be much less of a target than the
guy who's got his head buried in his phone is
kind of meandering along.
Speaker 1 (39:38):
You know.
Speaker 3 (39:39):
So do the same thing in your neighborhood, right, Do
the same thing in your neighborhood. Make your house look
like it's the house nobody wants to go into, right,
Make them look like your neighbor's house is the one
they want to go into.
Speaker 1 (39:52):
That's a very good point. That's a very good same thing.
Speaker 2 (39:56):
Like, you know, like I always say, the only way
somebody's getting in my house, dude, if it's a fucking
swat you in it, you know, or or a full
fucking attack team. I mean, we got so much fucking
weapons and AMMO, and everybody's trapped in this fucking house,
I mean fucking ain't, dude, And we got cameras and
everything in every fucking possible direction.
Speaker 1 (40:11):
Right.
Speaker 3 (40:11):
Well, so, and unless unless somebody is your political enemy
and they send the swat team in the middle of
the night, can't get you for you know, having some
documents at your house.
Speaker 1 (40:19):
Here you go.
Speaker 3 (40:20):
You're you're not facing an armed incursion, right, uh, you know,
from from a from a group of of you know,
an army of people, you know what, most you're gonna
have two three, maybe you know guys trying to come
kick your door in, right. I mean, that's the same
thing with these terrorist attacks, right. And the reason for
this is because it doesn't require any kind of uh
(40:41):
support system, any kind of expense to be laid out,
any kind of infrastructure.
Speaker 1 (40:46):
So once somebody breaches your.
Speaker 3 (40:48):
House, to do it with whatever he's got.
Speaker 2 (40:49):
So how do you protect yourself inside your house when
there is a breach?
Speaker 1 (40:55):
What should what? What should the plan be? What should
people plan out? What should they be thinking? Can? What
should think ahead? Right? They got right?
Speaker 3 (41:04):
Ideally you would have what I would call a panic
room or an escape room that you could, you know,
retreat to and hold the fort until help comes. Right,
You've got something that's secured that people can't shoot through,
they can't get in.
Speaker 1 (41:18):
You know.
Speaker 3 (41:19):
And you say, all right, well you on my TV. Okay,
you can, you can have my TV. Go ahead and
take my TV. You can't come in here, though, because
if you come in here, you know we're gonna have
a problem and you're gonna get killed.
Speaker 1 (41:32):
Right.
Speaker 3 (41:32):
I don't want to kill anybody if I don't have to, right,
and so you want to know where your points of
protection are?
Speaker 1 (41:39):
All right?
Speaker 3 (41:39):
Where do you retreat to?
Speaker 1 (41:41):
All right?
Speaker 3 (41:41):
What's your last line of defense? That you say no
further than this point right here, otherwise we're going to engage.
Speaker 1 (41:51):
So you should not because you're worried about to make.
Speaker 3 (41:54):
Sure you've got if if you're you know, parents, you
have to you know, somebody broke in. Well, now you've
got to worry about where your kids are right in
their room? Did they get up and go to the
kitchen for a drink of water? Where is everybody?
Speaker 1 (42:05):
Right?
Speaker 3 (42:05):
So your first your first thought is, all right, if
I'm not actively engaged, you know, then I got to
get my people and get us all to our place
of safety, and then I can worry about engaging if
it becomes necessary. Right, You've you've you've got to make
sure all your folks are accounted for.
Speaker 2 (42:24):
But you would not at that point engaging, and you
would not engage you were just retreating problem.
Speaker 3 (42:31):
It would it would really it's circumstantial, right, I mean,
you know, if I can get all of my people,
you know, to safety, and I know what I'm dealing
with if I'm dealing with one guy. You know, he
may be some meth head that just broke in, you know,
trying to find, you know, something opportunistic to get. Yeah,
then then then maybe I don't engage.
Speaker 1 (42:49):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (42:49):
If it's an armed attacker who's out to not take
my stuff and leave, but to actually do me harm
before he exits, Yeah, then we're gonna have a problem.
And and and you know they're gonna wish that they
had not Yeah.
Speaker 1 (43:01):
And Gail's a better shot than you are anyway, so
they're they're ups creak.
Speaker 3 (43:05):
If she well with certain with certain weapons, she is.
Speaker 1 (43:08):
Yeah, there you go.
Speaker 3 (43:10):
Yeah, three fifty steven Magnum revolver, she is a dead shot.
Speaker 1 (43:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (43:16):
Now, I will tell you we were on a family vacation,
had the you know, extended family with us, nieces and nephews,
and and my nephew had him a brand new block
nineteen that he thought he knew what he was doing.
I was using my cig P three twenty tack ops
my tack ops three twenty, you know with the twenty
one round magazines.
Speaker 1 (43:34):
Nice.
Speaker 3 (43:35):
Uh and uh so the range put on a little contest,
a competition for us with turning targets and everything. Yeah,
so it was. It was great. And so when we
got done and they're scoring, you know, obviously I was first,
Gail was second, and my nephew was third. Uh So
then we ran it again. And when we scored him
(43:57):
the next time, my nephew was looking to go, oh,
I only lost to you by one point one point.
I was second by one point. And I started laughing.
And I looked at the instructor of the range instructor
and he started laughing, and I said, go ahead and
tell him. And he looked at my nephew and said, yeah,
he shot that entire second string left handed.
Speaker 1 (44:18):
Oh man, that's badass, dude. Are you serious? Yeah, holy shit, dude.
Speaker 3 (44:24):
Yeah. And that's what I'm talking about. Be proficient with
what you got. Learn how to use it, Learn how
to use it. Gun's nothing more than a tool. I mean. Look,
if somebody broke into your house and was attacking you
and all you had was a hammer, you would use
it for Yeah.
Speaker 1 (44:38):
Right, you've never.
Speaker 3 (44:39):
Been trained on a hammer. All you got to do
is swing it. Right, This is a you know, look
we're gonna hold this up again. You know, this is
a precision instrument of defense. You know, you can you
learn how to use that. You can put those rounds
where you want them. I mean, you've got, you know,
all all those high capacity weapons right there. This thing
I've got right here my desk hold seven rounds in
(45:02):
the magazine, one in the chamber, right, and I'm confident
enough with what I've got that i can end anything
that happens here with just those rounds.
Speaker 1 (45:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (45:12):
Oh you hope, right, you hope, you know, unless unless
you run into several folks. Yeah, you know, but you
know you always carry a coup at your mags, right.
Speaker 3 (45:24):
Oh yeah, Well, and it's obviously not the only weapon
I've got in.
Speaker 1 (45:27):
The house, that's right, that's right. You know, you got
an arsehol in there, you know.
Speaker 2 (45:32):
Oh yeah, enough to start and not to start a
gang war, that's for sure.
Speaker 3 (45:36):
Look, look, I'll tell you I got enough here that
if the neighbors showed up, I could issue each one
of them a weapon too, and they could help me out.
Speaker 1 (45:42):
That's right. That's all I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (45:43):
You can start a gang war neighborhoods against neighborhoods.
Speaker 1 (45:46):
Man. Yeah, Tomhoman is doing a kick ass job, dude,
he is.
Speaker 3 (45:52):
You know, But you know what this shouldn't be surprising
to anybody. We're the Republicans. Trump has control now, he's
got to he's got the Senate, and he's not using
the usual suspects to run his administration. He went outside
and he got people that just know how to get
the job done. And when you do that and you
(46:13):
give people a job to do and you get out
of their way, they will do it. You know, it's
the old thing. You can tell me what to do,
you can tell me how to do it, but you
can't do both.
Speaker 2 (46:20):
Hey, and breaking a little bit from law enforcement Fridays,
since it's Thursday, RFK Junior got confirmed.
Speaker 1 (46:30):
I think that's going to be very very good for
health reasons for the country.
Speaker 2 (46:33):
I mean, dude, there was it was so out of
control and so much poison and shit was happening. And
I know this, and the reason I bring it up
is because I know it holds a very special spot
for you and some of the stuff that you know,
you and your wife do as well as as part
of a business. But it happened kind of by accident,
(46:57):
right when you when you retired from law enforcement, you
out of condition, and then how you resolve that through
not traditional medicine right, all right, you want to share
that or or it's well.
Speaker 3 (47:09):
You're you're right on it. I mean, we we went
outside and obviously I'm not gonna you know, go into
any you know, sales pitches or anything like that. That's
for another day. But you know we we did use
some some non traditional medicines and and and you know,
you said, we're deviating a little bit, but we're really not.
What's what is more necessary to your security than your health?
Speaker 1 (47:33):
Right?
Speaker 3 (47:33):
What what is what?
Speaker 1 (47:35):
You know?
Speaker 3 (47:35):
If you don't have your health, then then all of
your uh you know, preparedness and your protections start breaking down, right,
And so you've got to be you know, that's why
that's why law enforcement in the military a physical fitness test. Right,
they have a standard that you have to meet. Right,
Why should their standard be higher than what you hold
(47:57):
yourself to?
Speaker 2 (47:58):
Well, if you go back to jad A JFK, Right,
I mean he had the physical fitness standard in schools. Right,
everybody grew up having to do bush ups, run and
and and and chin ups, right, and.
Speaker 1 (48:09):
Then it went away because everybody got soft, right, right.
Speaker 2 (48:13):
And and and you know, and and all of a
sudden we grew you know, uh, a whole generation of
fucking pussies grew up, right that.
Speaker 1 (48:19):
That you know, fucked up.
Speaker 2 (48:21):
But I don't know, Man, you can give us this helpitch.
You know that that's fine. I mean, there's nothing wrong
with that. You're here as a guest. You can talk
about your business, but you know, because because I think
it's important, right uh, I mean, especially like that breathing machine.
Speaker 3 (48:35):
You know, there's there's all kinds of things out there
that you can go and do, and and some things
work better for for some people than they do for others.
Speaker 1 (48:45):
You know.
Speaker 3 (48:45):
The the lesson here is go find what works for you,
Find what supplements you can take, Find what what cleans
your air and your home better? What what purifies your
water better?
Speaker 5 (48:55):
What?
Speaker 3 (48:56):
Uh uh you know, know you're putting in your body
all of those things. Yeah, they all matter.
Speaker 2 (49:03):
And I remember we did that, we did that water
test at the house. That was enlightening to say the least.
Speaker 3 (49:09):
Right, Yeah, I mean, it's it's it's it's really it's
really important to know what you're putting in your body. Yeah,
And it's also important to remember that what comes from
a public utility isn't in your best interest, Like the
water the water coming out of your faucet. It's mandated
to come out of the seven point oh pH. But
that's not so that it's better for you. It's so
(49:31):
that it doesn't deteriorate the city's pipes. So find out
what you're putting in your body, damn.
Speaker 2 (49:39):
And and you know, water from water bottles, et cetera.
But I think it's gonna be interesting to see. And
I know a lot of the people on the left
and some on the right, you know, we're we're we're
kind of you know, on on RFK on the whole
vaccine thing. You know, we're going to have doctor Suzanne
Humphreys on I think it's next week, and she uses,
you know, world renowned the phrologists who started questioning vaccines
(50:04):
and became, I guess if you want to call it
an anti vaxer, and how she was almost canceled and
they try to remove her license because she went against
the grain, and you know, and you listen to her book.
I was listening to her audio book, and it's just fascinating, dude.
I mean, when she starts breaking down every vaccine and
what they have and how patients started showing up and
(50:26):
babies and kids with you know, kidney problems, and started
doing more research and it's like, dude, there's like real
injuries that come out of acts, and you know, you
look at statins and you know, it's almost like the
drugs they give you, the side effects are fucking worse
and what they're trying to curre your.
Speaker 3 (50:44):
Well it is. I mean, look at chemo for cancer patients.
I mean, it's killing you just a little bit slower
than cancer's killing you, right Yeah, And it's the same
thing with all these medicines that we're doing. Go you know,
we need to go back to natural remedies. That's why
you know, so many of these you know, societies, these
civilizations lasted so long as because they had natural medicines.
(51:07):
They didn't have all these chemicals and things. You know,
they they they got what they got to heal themselves
right from the land, you know. And and you know,
the purity of of you know, what you're putting in
your body matters.
Speaker 2 (51:20):
Right, Hey, So what do you think is gonna happen,
you know, the rest of this year, next year?
Speaker 1 (51:25):
I mean, do you see a.
Speaker 2 (51:26):
Lot a lot of attacks, A couple maybe one?
Speaker 3 (51:32):
Do you know, I think it's going to be cyclic. Honestly,
I think you know, uh that you'll see some and
and what you'll see is is prevented attacks. I think,
you know, I think you're going to see a lot
of attacks that are planned and they get they get prevented,
(51:52):
you know, uh, just because we're going back to good
old fashioned police legwork. You know, we're we're doing things
that and we're following up with things that that we're
not worried about how they make anybody feel. You know,
obviously you still have to go within the law. You
have to you know, uh uh, you know, maintain civil rights.
(52:14):
But you're you're gonna see a lot of these lone
wolf attacks are gonna get deterred because we hardened targets,
We act on you know, actionable intelligence rather than sitting
around and talking about you know, the theories of these things.
And and so I think there'll be some things. Maybe
(52:35):
you'll see some ramp ups around anniversaries, you know, April nineteenth,
September eleventh, you know, there may be some some increased
activity there.
Speaker 1 (52:43):
See something like a mine to eleven happening again.
Speaker 3 (52:47):
Well, honestly, let's let's let's let's be you know, real here,
the access to weapons of mass destruction is easier now
than it was before because you've lost some some control
over some of those things. Who knows what what's coming
out of Ukraine right now, between Ukraine and Russia and
(53:09):
what's hitting the black market. Uh, you know, so I'm
not gonna say I see one coming, but but I
see the possibility of one coming.
Speaker 1 (53:21):
Stain.
Speaker 2 (53:21):
I had a you know, I had a colonel on here,
a former colonel. He's a specialist in nuclear proliferation and
one of the Iran specialists. And you know, he called
this back in twenty twenty one, back when we had Battleground,
(53:42):
you know, Dave, Dave Jonas, he said, you know there,
he called out what was going to happen. You know,
he said, you know, Russia isn't invade Ukraine. Iran's inn
aesaro war, a proxy war with fucking Israel, and China
is gonna try and take you know, Taiwan. They're gonna
see him as we They're gonna try and test them
(54:02):
and uh, and we're gonna see attacks on.
Speaker 1 (54:04):
The homeland again. And all of them have happened.
Speaker 2 (54:07):
And yesterday we had a million Gonzalez a former colonel
as well Army intelen officer. He served under the Bush
administration as Under Secretary of Homeland Security and head of
Head of Immigration actually, and he was also on the
National Security Council.
Speaker 1 (54:24):
Right, So he broke down some numbers, like how many
Chinese have come.
Speaker 2 (54:31):
Into the country through the border that are military age? Yeah,
military age, right, He goes, enough to I can't remember
what he said, enough enough to like have like a
battalion and a half. He goes, that's a lot of
fucking people.
Speaker 1 (54:47):
It can do us a lot of you know.
Speaker 2 (54:49):
And the Russians we've you know, we've seen We've heard
from customs, you know in sunny Cegio talking about you know,
fifty to one hundred Russians a day coming in.
Speaker 1 (54:58):
What the fuck are they doing? You know?
Speaker 2 (55:01):
And and and and these are just people that were
catching How many people have we not caught?
Speaker 5 (55:06):
Right?
Speaker 2 (55:06):
Yeah, that's that's That's why I keep on going back
to the terrorist thing. I think it's so important. So
many people believe something is gonna happen again, and you know,
and and they've been waiting, you know, just just for Trump,
you know, just to fuck with them, and you know what,
what is that going to spark you know, what is
(55:27):
that what's gonna happen?
Speaker 3 (55:28):
You know, And but I think they're gonna make a
terrible miscalculation about what what Trump is willing to do.
I mean, they, you know, we we see you know,
all of this where Trump is trying to end wars,
He's trying to negotiate peace. You know, he's trying to
reduce the military industrial complex. Uh uh, you know overseas,
(55:53):
you better not perceive that as weakness. Yeah, you know,
you better understand that he's doing what he's doing in
the best interests of America for prosperity, and and and
and that when we're prosperous, it doesn't mean that that
that we forgot how to fight, right and and again.
Speaker 2 (56:15):
I think Trump would I think Trump would have no
bones about nuking somebody.
Speaker 3 (56:20):
Well, we saw him drop the mother of all bombs, right.
Speaker 2 (56:23):
No, But I what I'm saying is I don't see
him having a problem lobbing a over Iran.
Speaker 3 (56:30):
You know, he does what he has to do based
on the circumstances. I mean, you know, in his first term,
you saw that he dropped the biggest bomb we've ever
dropped on anybody, you know. And and that was to
not escalate a war, but to end it, right and
and so he's going to do what he has to
(56:51):
do to put a stop to it. Yeah, and and
I think you know we're about to and and hopefully,
you know, this next four years leads us into twelve
years of of JD vance. I mean eight years of
JD vance. So twelve years of this, you know, this
brand policy decision making. And what you see is people
(57:15):
finally saying, we better stop messing with them. Yeah, Milia
said something, because they will.
Speaker 2 (57:22):
Yeah, Millia said something yesterday because I asked some point blank,
you know about the story that cartels were thinking about
or considering, using drones to attack you US troops, and
he said that would be the biggest miscalculation in history,
because this president would go and decimate them. He wouldn't
give a shit about fucking crossing borders. He would go
in there and extra and made them like the fucking
(57:44):
rats and cockroaches that they are.
Speaker 1 (57:46):
Right.
Speaker 2 (57:47):
I think I don't think he's gonna go nuke releast
school or a lot of hot or something like that.
But you know, Bryce sending a bunch of sealed teams
and just go and fucking destroy them. But they in
case of a terrorist attack that state sponsored like Iran.
I think he knew some dude.
Speaker 1 (58:04):
I think.
Speaker 3 (58:06):
It wouldn't surprise me. And you know, we were close
to that before. You know, I stood on the mall
in nineteen January twentieth, nineteen eighty one, when Ronald Reagan
was sworn in, and you know, the minute he said,
I do you know, so help me God, the loud
speaker came out and made the announcement that the Iranian
hostages had just cleared Iranian airspace, you know, on their
(58:29):
way to Ramstein in Germany and then back home. And
the reason was because if they hadn't when he stepped
off those capital steps, I think he was going to
go in there and order the bombing of Iran and
without any mercy whatsoever. And they knew that. And that's
the key to strength and leadership. If you know what
(58:53):
somebody's going to do, if you don't comply, you just
don't have to worry about what mike ye might work
out and might not work.
Speaker 1 (59:01):
Yeah. I think he gave Amasa.
Speaker 2 (59:03):
I think he gave Hams on noon on Saturday to
release everybody not just trickle them out or there's gonna
be hell to pay. And you know, I want to
see all the hostages back. You know that that's that's obvious,
but you know there's a little part of me that
that would love to see what hell the pay means, you.
Speaker 3 (59:25):
Know, right, I mean, you know somebody needs to be
made the example.
Speaker 2 (59:30):
Yes, exactly, exactly, you need to show an example of
what the fuck that means. And you know what, that'll
fucking put everybody in check for the next fucking four years,
you know, So we'll see. Hey, jeff Man, it's always
a pleasure to have you. We see your ex handle
Jeffrey Queen on on the screen. Where else can people
follow you? What are you up to?
Speaker 1 (59:51):
How how do they contract you, how do they hire you?
And what for?
Speaker 3 (59:56):
Well, we do crisis management, business continuity, security, manag risk assessment,
UH you know and uh and you can find us
at www. Dot Fortis Resilience dot com. Fortisresilience dot com.
UH and uh we uh we're happy to help you
make a plan, whether it be to secure your home,
(01:00:17):
to secure your business, to create uh continuity of operations
UH plans for when disruptive events strike, and these don't
just have to be security can be supply chain, it
can be severe weather, it can be uh, you know,
system shutdowns, you know, any of those things. Look at Fukushima, right, Fukushima,
who who had? Who had that super efective earthquake, tsunami,
(01:00:41):
flood and release of nuclear materials all in the same day, right,
So you know, let us let us help you, UH
and your business figure out a plan for what comes next.
Speaker 1 (01:00:53):
Yeah, And what we.
Speaker 2 (01:00:54):
Didn't talk about is that part is business. When you're
at work, how do you keep your employees safe? How
you keep yourself safe as an employee. So we'll leave
that for next week.
Speaker 1 (01:01:03):
Pale. You know, I appreciate you.
Speaker 2 (01:01:06):
It's always fun having Jeffrey Queen on the UH on
the show, and UH look forward to I don't know
if we're gonna do law Enforce on Fridays, if you
want to pick a different day, but we gotta we
gotta put them back on.
Speaker 1 (01:01:17):
Man that the public is demanding it. Your fans out
there are screaming for for jeff Queen to get back on.
So we appreciate you.
Speaker 3 (01:01:28):
Pal, well, I appreciate you having me, and you know,
I'm always willing to come on whatever you need me.
Speaker 1 (01:01:32):
Awesome brother, Love you man, take care of it.
Speaker 3 (01:01:34):
I love you too, buddy.
Speaker 2 (01:01:35):
See you right, Awesome guys. So I hope you guys
got a lot out of today. Uh, Like we talked
about it, you know, very long form. You know, there
are a lot of threats right now in in in
society and across the world really, but you know locally
in your communities, you know, from these criminals, these thugs, these.
Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
Gangs, and et cetera.
Speaker 2 (01:01:57):
We know Tom Home and his people are doing a
great job with ice and law enforcement and trying to
capture all these folks that are out there. You know,
the number's been out there for a while. It's about
six hundred and eighty thousand criminal illegals that are in
the country. So just think about those staggering numbers. If
we're popping a thousand a day, is going to take
(01:02:20):
us over two years to get to capture every single
one of them. So it's it's dangerous out there. Pay attention,
be aware of your surroundings, be aware of what's going on,
recognize threats. And also, you know, we know there are
thousands of lone wolf terrasts inside the country, So anything
can happen and you should be aware of that. Did
somebody leave a fucking bag that's not supposed to be there?
(01:02:43):
Unattended bags? You see a car running, you know, towards you,
don't just stand there and you know, think what do
I do? Get out of the way. Warn people right,
Just don't be a victim.
Speaker 1 (01:02:56):
Guys. And if you carry, you should carry all the time.
Speaker 2 (01:03:00):
You know, don't just have it, you know, I don't
know in a bag or in a book you know,
a book bag, or in your glove box or in
the trunk of your car.
Speaker 1 (01:03:09):
Have it on. You have it on.
Speaker 2 (01:03:11):
You make sure it's make sure it's loaded, and make
sure it's chambered.
Speaker 1 (01:03:15):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:03:15):
The last thing you want to do is pull out
a gun and have to chamber it, you know, because
you lose time, and time could depend if you live
or die. So anyways, guys, we'll see you tomorrow.
Speaker 1 (01:03:27):
Hopefully.
Speaker 2 (01:03:28):
You guys fucking enjoyed the show today. I think we're
going to bring it back on Fridays. I'm gonna talk
to Jeff about that. And you can follow us as
always on Roku, on Amazon Music, Audible, Apple, Spotify. We're
on iHeart. We're on Pandora, we're on Streaker, We're on
every single major podcast platform and probably every other podcast platform,
(01:03:52):
so you can find us. As long as you have Internet,
you can be anywhere in the world. We'll see you
guys tomorrow. IJ going Rogue.
Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
We're out.