All Episodes

July 10, 2025 32 mins
Bubba Startz introduces Tyler Calkins-Stoeser, who shares his mother's legal struggles and her untimely death, highlighting investigative failures and case irregularities. The discussion covers official turnover and the emotional toll on Tyler, alongside transparency issues and barriers in the legal system. Tyler delves into shadow government influence and misconceptions about legal rights, discussing his excessive bond and the "Bad River Mafia." The episode concludes with closing remarks, plans for future episodes. https://www.scribd.com/document/882731843/Memorandum-of-Law-Flp https://www.scribd.com/document/885574140/Decree-and-Testimony-of-Status-Jurisdictional-Rebuttal-And-Commercial-Claim-for-Lawful-Remedy-Jones https://www.scribd.com/document/882731712/South-Dakota-Bar-Association-Calkins https://www.scribd.com/document/882731718/Certified-UCC-1-Financial-Statement-Optimized https://www.scribd.com/document/882731708/Banking-Memorandum-of-Law-and-Authority
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:02):
Welcome into this very special edition of thePatriot Broadcasting Project.
I am your host, Bubba Starts.
With me today is Aaron Prince and Tyler CulkinStoser.
They are part of a ongoing federal trial thatis very important to not just them and the
Calkins family, but to all of us out here whohave rights.

(00:24):
Boys, welcome back to the show.
Hey.
Thanks, Bella.
Well Morning.
Yeah.
The last time we talked, it was not that longago.
And since then, a a lot has happened.
We're gonna talk about a lot of that maybelater as we lead into it.
But, I don't think the last time we had spokenthat we really got into the work that your

(00:49):
mother was doing before her passing anduntimely passing at that.
So I I wanna kind of allow you to to kind ofbacktrack a little bit and and, you know, kind
of after your grandfather's death, your motherwas pursuing this exact same path that you are

(01:10):
pursuing, against some of these playersinvolved.
So kinda pick it up, I guess, from there andwhat your mom was doing, and then, obviously,
we'll we'll get into her untimely passing aswell.
Yeah.
You know, she was a she was the rock of thefamily on that.
You know?

(01:31):
Calling attorneys and attorneys and attorneysand trying to find somebody and and just nobody
would pick up.
You know?
Nobody would respond.
And it just seemed off that all of themdifferent attorneys through the state and
getting in contact with the State BarAssociation to help you find an attorney, no
answers back.

(01:51):
She finally did get an attorney out of Philip,and that attorney, she found altering of the
will.
You know, that's kind of a big deal.
And after that first court hearing, she gotpulled her attorney got pulled out to the side
by the the other attorney acting in mygrandfather's behalf.

(02:12):
And I say acting because I don't even believehe had any power to do so.
All of a sudden, she quit fighting.
It's like, what do you mean?
You you you found something that significantand you just quit fighting, and then later she
ends up becoming the state's attorney?
It's just like, this doesn't seem right at all.
You know?

(02:32):
She ended up going down kinda the same paththat we ended up going down.
She was looking into bond and the case.
And, you know, when she passed, she still had apending lawsuit.
You know, the state of South Dakota is supposedto notify not only the the heirs of that
because she was the plaintiff in the deal.

(02:53):
She repositioned herself as the plaintiff.
And and that that makes it to where the thefamily members can pick up where she left off.
Well, not only did the state not recognize thatand tell us, but her own attorney didn't even
bother looking in.
She had an she had another attorney after thatone because that attorney quit fighting for

(03:16):
her, so she let her go and, you know, callingafter attorney after attorney after attorney
and then having to represent herself there forjust a minute because she couldn't get nobody.
She she attempted, but we got the transcripts,and you could see where the judge was steering
the the the trial or the well, it wasn't even atrial.

(03:38):
It's a hearing.
A hearing.
Yeah.
You know, the evidence was brought up.
You know, the judges and stuff, they'resupposed to have a due diligence.
If they if they hear something being wrong,they they're supposed to look into that, not
just let it get swept underneath the rug.
So the judges failed us.
The attorneys failed us.
The you know, mom tried to reach out to thegovernor.

(04:00):
She, silent, fell on deaf ears.
And But,
you know, what was her comment?
Oh,
she said that my mom went in there and tried tobring this up.
And, well, what do you want me to do?
Fight your battles for you, Barb?
And it's like, well, right there, we knew thatthere's something off with her.
Figured that she come from a ranch family, andshe'd be probably your strongest advocate.

(04:23):
You know?
And she wasn't.
And then getting ahold of the state's attorneygeneral, and he he didn't didn't do his job
either.
That's that's their job.
They're supposed to pick up and make surepeople don't get taken advantage of.
And my mom, she tried her damnedest to to tryto fight for us.
And Well and you just hit on something therethat I think I've never because I've always

(04:47):
been on the wrong side of the law and and ofmine, well, obviously
So you think.
You think.
Well well, right.
Well, at least in their eyes.
Right?
That I never thought of these these publicofficials as representing me.
The state's attorney is representing thecitizens of South Dakota or at least they
should be.
Right?

(05:07):
They are representing the people.
And for them to kind of turn a blind eyetowards all of this speaks to a much deeper
corruption and corrosive nature of the politicsof our laws, of our lawmakers, and and the
control that's been given to these people andthat has been wrested away from the citizens of

(05:30):
this country, and most of all, you and yourfamily right now.
Yeah.
You know, everything around mom just justscreams foul play.
You know?
They they said she went out the road sidewaysfor 250 yards, but, you know, the tire tracks,

(05:52):
there's four sets of tracks.
You know, if if she was going sideways out ofthe front wheel drive car because she was in
the process of retrieving her other pickup, itwould have been constantly pulling back to the
gravel road, not going forward.
There's four spots or maybe five where the oilpan dug in.
And then the main impact, you know, is perfectshape like the front end of a Ford Taurus, and

(06:16):
then there's some gas standing in the centerand then another impact.
You know?
I'm no expert, but if a car hit sideways, therewouldn't be gas standing up in between two main
impacts.
And, you know, there's a bunch of legaldocuments in the trunk of that car because we
were just at our attorney's office the daybefore.

(06:37):
I know because I put the damn documents inthere.
You know, right off the bat, I was kinda shellshocked because those documents, you know, were
in in there and seeing the car on the towtruck.
There's cars, all sorts of vehicles parked upand down the gravel road where, you know, tire
tracks were kinda disrupted.

(06:58):
I I consider it a damn crime scene.
You know?
The very least, it's the scene of an accident.
I mean, shouldn't we be, you know, protectingthese?
I mean, we protect those on the hitter statesfor for at least an investigation to take
place.
We have to do a 40 request on that specificspecific event to go through the the catalog,

(07:19):
the images, and everything else that hasn'tbeen done.
But I'm sure there's there's violations of dueprocess and inappropriate, standard operating
procedures that they failed to do, and thatwill actually highlight the the aspect of
what's been going on.
So And that's really what and not to cut youoff, Tyler, but that's really what has been,

(07:42):
most noticeable for me is that the the standardoperating procedures of how they would how they
would handle any other case in in the historyof the law, right, has just been completely
pushed to the side, and they're just operatingunder their own set of rules, and that's not
the way that the system is supposed to work.

(08:04):
And it can't help you can't help but questioneverything because the case that's open against
these counties and against these people incharge opened by your mother, and then she, you
know, dies under suspicious circumstances atthe very least.
Yeah.
You know what?

(08:24):
So there's legal documents in the trunk of thatcar.
I know because I put them in there.
There's a lot of them.
You know?
I didn't take them out.
They're still in there.
But after the shell shock kinda wore off, I Iremembered what we were going through, and it's
like, oh, shit.
I I made kind of a big deal.
I said, I need those legal documents.

(08:45):
I need them legal documents.
You know?
They're they're potentially worth millions, youknow, making it seem like they're the only
ones, but mama was already concerned and andsuspicious about what was going on.
You know, her her military background preparedher for something like that.
You know?
And they said, oh, you can't have nothing outof the car.
You can't have nothing out of the car.

(09:06):
And they turned around, but they they gave meher purse.
It's like, wait.
I I thought I couldn't have anything out of thecar.
You know?
And I knew those documents are in the trunk.
And then later down the road, you know, theythey said that they weren't in there.
Highway patrol officers called me and wanted todo kind of a follow-up.

(09:28):
They're like, what do you do you think yourmother might have been sleepy or or maybe
drinking?
I'm like, fuck.
My mom didn't really drink at all.
You know?
Special occasion here or there, but she wasn'tno drinker.
You know?
And sleepy?
I was like, well, didn't you get the finalvoicemail that I got from my mom?
I said, does that sound like a sleepy woman toyou?
She was on her way to go get a protectionrestraining order in Hawking County, which

(09:52):
that's not protocol either.
You know, the sheriff put her on the road thatday.
Normally, from my understanding is is that youwould you would get it to the victim, you mail
it, or you hand deliver it to them.
You don't put them on the road.
They come get it.
You know?
So that that's concerning.
And then later when I got that deathcertificate, I had to I had to use that for

(10:19):
banks and and life insurance policies and andwhatnot.
You know?
Then I got a call for or I had to call thecoroner because I needed a toxicology report.
Well, I said that to the the the highway patrolofficer before, I guess, getting to the next
person.

(10:41):
Yeah.
Well, once I I said, well, wouldn't you know ifyou did your job and did the toxicology report?
You know, if she was sleepy or drinking, and hedidn't wanna talk to me much more after that.
Well, then calling these life insurancepolicies, they they needed that, you know, to
to start doing anything.
So I had to call and try to figure out wherethe heck to even get one because I didn't know.

(11:05):
Well, I got ahold of the coroner, and the firstthing the coroner says to me is, well, how did
how did you get that death certificate?
I never signed off on that.
I said, well, what do you mean?
I got it from the funeral home.
Well, I never signed that.
And
I said, well, so you're telling me that I'vebeen going around calling these places and get

(11:27):
getting a hold of all these people and and youdon't even have the the proper documentations?
Like, where did this come from?
And he said, well, you you just come see me,and we'll see if we can get that taken care of.
I said, well, that's that's kinda odd if youask me.
That was about five months down the road whenthat took place.

(11:51):
Sorry.
I had to plug the computer in.
The But, yeah, that saga is suspicious.
Yeah.
It's it's just the the fact
hear that that that coroner no longer isworking.
Like, same thing with that that sheriff thatput her on the road in Hawken County.
That deputy, he was he just became sheriff, andI heard that there is some suspicious stuff

(12:17):
with the sheriff before that.
And then he becomes sheriff.
And then shortly after mom's death, he he'sgone.
I don't know where the heck he went, but hestepped down.
Now there's another new sheriff.
It's like, one thing after another afteranother after another.
It's like, woah.
There's gotta be something going on.

(12:37):
There's something that, you know, I've heardthrough it, and then it's probably from Steve
Bannon, but there are no coincidences.
Right?
There there and to have this many stacked up,you can't help but ask questions.
And any sane and logical person and I kind ofalluded to it off camera that, you know, when I
had first heard about your mom's passing, thatwas kind of my first introduction to to what

(13:01):
was going on.
And, obviously, you're emotional after that,and and a lot of people are gonna take what you
have to say with a grain of salt at that point.
Right?
But all you've done since then, and I know wejust passed the one year anniversary.
Correct?
You know?
And and my heart goes out to you, Tyler, as afriend.

(13:22):
Right?
I feel I can't even imagine.
And to lose her under such questionablecircumstances, you have no closure.
You have no you've been lied to repeatedly.
You've been given the runaround, and and itdidn't end with your mother's death.
It really just began because you have nowpicked up the torch that she lit after the

(13:48):
passing of her father.
Now you are the third generation now fightingfor the rights to exist on your family's land,
And I think that gets lost in this, especiallywhen people start to only think of ranches as
as money.
Right?
When we start to think of property as only a aa business, as only, it is legacy.

(14:14):
It is it is everything.
We we know what it meant to your grandfather
from our last episode.
Sir.
We we saw we know what it means to your familyand what that meant.
And, unfortunately, as a society, I think thisspeaks to the to the issue is that we have lost
that as as Americans.
Right?
We have lost that, that, well, the abilityreally to even leave a legacy between the the

(14:41):
theft of property taxes and, you know, all theother the taxation till death and beyond.
You shouldn't be getting taxed in debt.
Your loved one shouldn't be getting punishedfor losing someone.
And I don't wanna get down a rabbit hole onthat.
We can save that for another episode, but I Iwanna kind of flash forward.
Having just passed the the year anniversary ofyour mother's suspicious death, And and now,

(15:06):
again, the the legal troubles for you have havecontinued.
Right?
They have taken this well beyond a civilmatter.
They are using every avenue available to themto to try to get to you, to silence you, even
as far as to trying to serve a warrant againwhile you're you're having documents notarized.

(15:29):
Right?
I mean, obviously Yeah.
They have they have eyes on you, no doubt, andand they have eyes on you for good reason.
And I don't know how much, Aaron, that you guyscan talk about the, you know, the paperwork
that you were filing and are filing currently,but it really extends the scope of this case

(15:49):
beyond a small county in South Dakota now andto a much larger platform.
So can you kind of update us on the progress ofthat?
Well, it's coming along with the problem thatwe're having as exposure.
Okay?
You've got pacemaker.
You've got e courts.
They're all private corporations, so no one isable to actually freely see this on the public

(16:12):
record.
So everybody needs to actually start going on.
We've been posting our case on Scribe and otherdifferent avenues.
So the general public can see these documentsbecause you have to be an attorney to license
because it's private, and then they have tocharge them for the download of these
documents.
So they're operating in a private capacityunder commercial capacity.

(16:37):
They have no immunity, but they they're they'rebeen blinded because whether they went to a
liberal law school or whatever, they don't knowthe context and how they're operating.
That's all been lost.
So we freely share our documentation openly ifanybody wants to ask because that information
is not being made available through the courtsystem because

(17:00):
Not convenient anyway.
You know, that it says Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
You should be able to Google search it and thenboom.
There it is.
Not have to pay a hidden fee or go to a hiddenserver, you know, San Lea County, you know, you
type it in to look up your court case and youcan't even find it on the South Dakota deal.

(17:20):
You gotta go to a specific deal just for thatcounty.
It's like, well, that's not public.
And then you had to have a password and make anemail.
It's like, well, that that doesn't seem likeright like, very public records.
Right.
Well and they do the layers.
Right?
Layers upon layers of things to to just wearyou out.

(17:41):
Right?
That they may be operating in some legalcapacity to do that, but the, you know, the
mission of that is the same.
It is to keep you from getting to theinformation.
Now we can't just lock it behind a closed door,but we can put it behind paywall after paywall
after paywall after paywall and charging youmean, a dollar per page for a 10,000 page, you

(18:05):
know, case
like this.
On $30, but still, you shouldn't be profitingoff that.
Well and you shouldn't have to pay for publicdocuments.
I can understand the paying for, for printingof them, right, a physical thing, but to see
digital copies of something is our tax dollarsare paying for those servers that these

(18:26):
documents are housed on.
And and this is coming to the larger issue,and, Aaron, I know this is where, you know, you
really start to dig in, is there is notransparency in our government anymore.
There, we cannot see what is going on.
They have hidden everything.
We have a shadow government that is runninginside of our government that is stealing and

(18:48):
is abusing our rights.
They are taking away the legacy of goodstanding Americans, and this is the greater
mission.
Outside of the Culkin Spaniel, this is thegreatest mission.
Well, what they do is they take they take yourprivate property, they bring it into the
public, and then they administrate it into theprivate, Basically, if you wanna really

(19:11):
summarize it.
So you're being administrated or a magistratethrough a foreign entity that represents
foreign interest.
Whether people wanna believe it or not, it'sabsolutely fact.
There's no ifs, buts about it, and people needto understand that these people don't have
their best interests.

(19:31):
Well, they only have they only have their owninterests at heart.
Exactly.
And it's evidenced across all sectors of ourlives at this point.
It it is it is in the open now.
It is no longer as they've coined us, you know,conspiracy theory.
No.
These are facts that are being presented.
And now because of the age of information andand having access

(19:55):
Oh, yeah.
They don't like that.
Well, no.
And having to well, that's why the now you havethe paywalls.
Right?
They they had to find some other barriers toput up, and, unfortunately, it's very few
people like the two of you who are willing toswim through the swamp and to fight through the
barbed wire and to to cross every singlebarrier.

(20:15):
I mean, if you think of it as a battlefield,they're just throwing, I mean, minefield after
minefield that they put out there assuming thatyou nobody's gonna make it through, and the few
that do can be silenced.
And now we're coming to the point where that'sexactly what they're trying to do to you in any
way imaginable.
It's absolutely disgusting what is beingperpetrated against you, Tyler, now in a in a

(20:39):
criminal fashion.
I I'm just so appreciative for the the theoutput of public support, you know, is starting
to gain some traction.
And thanks for you and and just us having our,our our big followings, you know, and the
careers that we've been in because, you know,not everybody has that.

(21:01):
You know?
And I think that speaks to something larger.
That is the reason we have this network now.
That is the reason that I have spent twentyfive years building a platform is so we can
speak up for the ones who are being silenced.
And maybe I didn't realize that before we spokethe first time, but seeing the traction that it

(21:23):
got, seeing what we even when we had ChadSullivan on our program, another big property
rights and rancher, You know, he he brought andcame on and talked about the Mott family.
And lo and behold, three weeks later, the Mottfamily are getting, you know, you know, I don't
wanna say freed, but the the charges have beendismissed and and because of public outcry.

(21:45):
So They should have never been brought to beginwith.
Neither should yours.
Right?
You shouldn't be dealing with this either andonly through public outcry and through
educating the public on what exactly is goingon and getting some of this, you know, outrage,
to hit the ears of those who are in power thatwe make a change.

(22:06):
So, you know, we
And they really don't like my co counsel here.
They keep screaming, well, he's not a barmember.
He's not a bar member.
It's like, you guys don't even understand yourown damn laws because
Well, I'm not a bar member.
I'm not a bar member, and I am more than in myrights to go and represent myself in court.
So No.
Actually, you know what?

(22:27):
You have the right to represent or to speak onbehalf of somebody else's friend and counsel.
It says in the constitution, there's noconstitution that says that bar members have
the right to monopolize.
Converting a right into a privilege is a crimein itself.
Now you gotta remember, bar members don'tnecessarily know who they represent or or

(22:48):
promote.
But under corpus jurisor condom seven four,attorneys only can represent corporations.
They and they can only represent wards, peoplethat are incompetent, and children.
So as soon as you hire an attorney, period,you've already been bamboozled.
You have It's
legal it's legal entrapment.

(23:10):
Public opinion.
By hiring counsel effectively, you have deemedyourself incompetent.
Exactly.
If you can't afford one, we will appoint onefor you.
Yes.
Yes.
It's legal trust.
Incompetent.
Okay.
Here's another one.
They they called him, what was it?
What was the term?

(23:30):
Indigent?
Yeah.
Indigent.
Okay.
So when you're in jail, okay, and they take youaway from your money supply and they separate
you from everything, they have a saying, well,you're an indigent.
Meanwhile, you have money, but yet they'reholding you from it.
So, again, every single system, the way they'veset things up, legalese, is legal entrapment to

(23:53):
convert a living man into an entity so they canadministrate and steal from you.
When you send them documents, you know, theysaid that I was ignite ignite Indigent.
Indigent.
It's a different word.
It's basically kinda like incompetent.

(24:13):
No money.
And and then no money, no financial resources.
It's like, well, shit.
You guys got me locked up and and away from myfinancial resources.
And then you extort me a large amount of moneyjust to get out so I could continue fighting
you guys.
And, yeah, hell, they I don't think they theythought I didn't even get that done.

(24:34):
And, honestly, you know, I know it's an opencase, but, you know, a can we can we talk about
the number and the bond?
I mean, a $50,000 cash only bond on a nonmurder I mean, you didn't murder anyone.
I understand the charges are, you know, felonycharges that they're trying to levy against

(24:55):
you, but I've done some pretty heinous stuff inmy life, and the my bond was only ever cash or
surety where I was able to use a bail bondsmanand able to do that.
I had charges that were, in fact, even moresevere than the ones you're facing, and I never
faced something like that.
So just
try to bury me.

(25:16):
Exactly.
And they're trying to silence you.
They are trying to and I've been and quiteliterally, Tyler, they may try to bury you the
same as I mean, we're not gonna get intospeculation, but, you know, it it the the signs
continue to stack up.
And if there are no coincidences, then a agruesome and and terrifying story for any any

(25:39):
person, is developing here, that these powerstructures will stop at nothing to protect
themselves and to protect their own and to gainthe things that they want, whether that be
financial or property or whatever it is, theyare going to stop at nothing to get that.

(26:01):
And I think that's exactly why we have to keepshowing up, not just for you, Tyler, but for
for everyone and to be a beacon for others thatare going through this and to continue to push.
Like, this has become my life mission tocontinue to push this and to promote these real

(26:21):
stories that are happening right now.
You know, you've seen that video I posted.
They they they hit they've hit me all differentdirections, and they wanted to say I'm a flight
risk, and it's like, hell, I'm I'm not a flightrisk.
I'm actually the one that's coming after youguys.
We have a
bond on them literally that's factual, legal,and lawful for $405,000,000.

(26:46):
So you think we're gonna go anywhere?
They're worried about $50,000.
Mean that meanwhile, their request is in fernthe ferns, which is Federal Reserve notes.
That's foreign to United States.
It's a debt note.
What makes them an improper trust?
So they're insolvent.
They don't have any money.
So the fact that they're requiring it to bepaid in a firm note or the USD, that's a debt

(27:10):
note, It's not worth anything.
Whether you guys wanna believe it or not inthis broadcast, it actually is true.
It makes them a popper, makes them insolvent.
So they're already acting in as a criminalcartel right off the beginning, forcing you to
use a debt note that's enslaving every singleman and woman in this country.
You know, they they they they I don't know.

(27:33):
They call themselves this, but the the rumoraround the countryside, and I've heard it since
I was little.
Bad River Mafia.
So this may be generational on the side of someof these agents as well.
Yeah.
I mean, their their fathers and grandfatherscould have been fighting your grandfather and

(27:54):
and, obviously, your mother until her untimelypassing last year.
Like it.
Kinda seems like it.
You know?
Well, you know what, boys?
I don't wanna keep up, too much of your timetoday.
I know you're busy.
There's probably more briefs and motions tofile, I'm sure.
Yeah.
But anytime that you're available, I think evenhaving a weekly conversation where we sit down

(28:15):
over a cup of coffee, Aaron, and and we're ableto get a little bit more of this info out,
maybe in a little bit smaller chunks foreveryone so that we can come to understand what
is really at play here while obviously stillfollowing the saga of the Calkins family ranch.
I appreciate both of you guys taking some timefor me today.

(28:36):
Anything that you want to get out before, werelease this episode, and I I promise you,
we're gonna try to get on next week and do thesame thing here.
Thank you.
Thank you, Bubba, and thank you, everybody.
Yeah.
It's it's huge, and thank you everybody fortaking the time to pay attention because when

(28:57):
when you take away somebody else's rights, youeventually lose yours.
And I could never imagine knowing the stuffthat I'm aware of and how it actually affects
everybody and not doing what we're doing.
I mean, it's it's really bad when peopleunderstand and able to comprehend what's taking
place over three, four generations and where weare now.

(29:19):
I thank you, everybody.
And and, Tyler, I I just wanna speak to to youpersonally and to tell you how proud of you I
am as your friend, watching you go throughthis.
You're one of the nicest people I've ever metin my life.
You've never been anything but good to me oranyone else that I've ever seen.
And to see the hell that you have endured forthe last year plus, you know, losing your

(29:48):
mother and and just what it's caused to youpersonally, having to fight back tears on this
podcast with us, I know, the emotion, but alsothat that support from the community around you
and this growing community around the PatriotBroadcasting Project and the Scene Projects as
well.

(30:08):
We're here for you, and we are really, investedin this and looking to become more so invested
in it because of the implications it means fornot just you, but for everyone.
So as your friend, Tyler, thank you for fortrusting me with your story, and I hope that, I
can do right by you and bring some resolutionto your family in a positive manner.

(30:32):
Thank you so much, Bubba.
It means the world to me.
I know it does.
You you don't need to say it because I know itdoes.
And, for everyone listening, these are realpeople.
This is a a real situation that could happen toanyone, and may happen to everyone.

(30:53):
So we are bringing awareness to Tyler's storybecause it's important to us, on a personal
level, but also because it's important on amuch larger and deeper level.
And a a big thank you to Aaron Prince who'sbeen giving us a hell of an education here at
the Patriot Broadcasting Project, even in theshort amount of time we get to to spend

(31:15):
together.
So look for a lot more from us.
Make sure you're following the channel,subscribing.
Go find Tyler.
Can you guys send me the scribed link, andmaybe we can post that in the show notes here
as well if you'd like to get some of thatinformation out?
So keep your eyes in the show notes for thatlink if you wanna, you know, take all these
documents and plug them into ChatGPT and haveit tell you what the heck is actually going on.

(31:40):
It's a lot to digest, and that's why we'regonna do our best to break it up into a little
bit smaller chunks for you guys, to educate notonly on the situation as it's evolving, but
also your rights, as a living man.
And there's there's a lot more to come.
You guys stay tuned, and thank you so much forbeing here.

(32:01):
Thank you, buddy.
Thank you.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January of 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. My Favorite Murder is part of the Exactly Right podcast network that provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics including historic true crime, comedic interviews and news, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.