Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:11):
We will prove that there is no problem too large for government
to solve and no concern too small for it to care about.
Take a look behind the curtain with a real whistle blower, an
American patriot. Prepare to embrace the
uncomfortable truth because thisprogram has no time for
comforting lies. Here is civil liberties
(00:32):
enthusiast, Second Amendment defender, and recovering FBI
agent Kyle Seraphin. Well, hello my friends and
welcome to the Cal Seraphin show.
Phones in the Faraday bag. It must be Wednesday, November
(00:53):
the 5th, the day after Election Day.
Some of you are in a real sad mood for some reason.
I'm very gleeful. I think that the results last
night were really obvious. Did you guys not see that
coming? Was that confusing to somebody?
People are upset because New York is now going to need to be
walled off. We're going to need Snake
Plissken. We're going to need to go out
(01:14):
there and rescue the people who are behind enemy lines.
Communism for all government will solve all your problems.
What did you think these guys were talking about?
Who did you think lived in New York?
Who did you think lived in Virginia?
I lived there for five years. I'm not an expert on Virginia,
(01:35):
but I'm just telling you, I lived in Virginia.
And in 2020, as things moved along, sort of the COVID
insanity, and I watched everybody staying home to stop
the spread. And they were like the prequel
to the zombie movie where I saw signs flashing on the roadway
saying turn around, stay at home, protect your neighbors.
(01:57):
I was like, oh boy, we got to get the hell out of here.
These people will kill us and our family.
No doubt in my mind they will eat our corpses.
I'm not saying that figuratively, I'm saying it
literally. That was pretty clear.
So my wife and I made plans and we left in early 20/21.
It was on purpose. That wasn't an accident.
I took the furthest flung post Icould find.
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My two options were Shelby, Montana, which you don't know
where that is and nobody else does either.
But it's pretty cool. A really neat town, actually,
for a tiny little place. And the other option was Las
Cruces, NM, which people didn't even know was in America.
When I moved there, my friends were like, is that a Ocona's
post? No, bro, New Mexico is America.
It's just like the blue part of America at the bottom.
Yeah, I got the hell out. This was pretty clear.
(02:40):
You guys are shocked that Jay Jones got elected attorney
general after saying that he would shoot his political
opponents and text messages to his buddies or that he would,
like, laugh at their dying children.
Who did you think was running for office?
So we got ACIA lady who's going to be the governor of Virginia,
Everybody who thought that therewas a sea change that happened
on the East Coast. Did you guys lose your freaking
(03:01):
minds? That was just low tide.
The ocean rolls back in. It always does.
Wow. OK, so anyways, we're gonna have
some fun. For those of you that are still
behind the enemy lines, you guysknow where you are.
You're north of the Potomac, Basically all of you.
North of the Potomac, you're behind enemy lines.
If you want to escape from New York or the equivalent thereof,
Yeah, it's time. Virginia will still remain
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purplish. You know why?
Because there's these mountains and these hillbilly types out
there that are my folks that still own guns and have
property. It will be OK for those of you
that are out there. But man, you're near an urban
area on the East Coast, New England area.
What a day to wake up. OK, so I'm laughing.
That's not very fun. We're going to talk about a
bunch of serious topics today because I've got a bunch of them
in and they're kind of a grab bag in some ways.
(03:44):
We're going to talk about the election thing that happened.
The government shutdown has now officially reached the longest
shutdown in U.S. government history.
Thank God you know honestly cause all it keeps proving is
that the lights keep turning on.My kids keep waking up and
giving me kisses. We made coffee this morning and
the the taps worked. I was able to filter my water no
problem. The gas turned on and we heated
up our our our kettle. My life is the same but not for
(04:08):
everybody. If you're traveling, air travel
sucks. Terrible disaster yesterday with
a U PS (04:12):
plane.
I have a video that actually
shows two things. One, it shows a horrific
explosion of a U PS (04:18):
plane that
was bound for Hawaii and it had
something like 280,000 gallons of fuel on it and it is
unbelievable how how horrifically crazy that looks
when you see it. The other thing is, is the video
that I have shot has a woman screaming in Spanish in the
middle of America and that itself is a thing.
(04:40):
If you wondered why the elections went the way they did
is because somebody may have imported like 1,000,000 of
people here and hundreds of thousands of them have access to
our voting rolls. So since we haven't seen any
clean up by any of the so-calledred states or any of the blue
states or anything else, like nobody has fixed the problems
that existed in 2020 and could have reared their head in 2024
if they thought they could get away with it.
(05:01):
Yeah. What do you expect?
What did you expect was going tohappen?
Elections are going to keep going the way they did.
America's basically divided on arazor's edge and it's going to
flip one side or the other. All right, What else do we got
here? Politico assessing the absolute.
What do they call it? You have to get the word right.
Domination by Democrats in the the election.
Americans are blaming Trump for the shutdown.
(05:21):
I told you this would happen. I told you they should just own
it. They still have an opportunity
to do that. We're going to get the New York
Times reflection on a communist socialist mayor CN NS reflection
as well. Kind of funny young people,
idealistic. And then we're going to talk a
little bit because I promised ityesterday about the FBI screw up
in Michigan, which is really significant in so much as it
(05:41):
shows you a flailing FBI. How are you going to root out
corruption when you have the clown that's running it cheering
on finding handwritten garbage notes from Jim Comedy, Like he
somehow, you know, was able to translate the Dead Sea Scrolls
with it. Like, oh, look what we found.
It's the secret. It's the Rosetta Stone.
No, it's his garbage throwaway notes and it proves nothing.
(06:02):
So we got Cash Patel that's still out in in Japan.
We had this goofy firing situation where multiple agents,
it could be as little as four, it could be as many as 15 were
fired in what my buddy referred to as a slaughter at the
Washington field office. And then some of them were
rehired. And then immediately when Cash
Patel landed in Japan, they fired some of them again.
So just shenanigans and chaos and then a couple attempts, just
(06:25):
like the Michigan thing, to talkabout the great work that this
agency is doing. Is it solving the, the crisis
of, of all the people here that are, that are doing things
illegally? No.
Is it solving the, the, the problems of a corrupt agency
that does whatever the hell it wants?
No, it's cheering on finding twokids who set off Roman candles
in Boston. I'm not exaggerating.
Literally a Roman candle inside of a locker at Harvard was
(06:50):
enough to get a JTTF call out and a major.
Like, good job, FBI. From the Fox News clowns who
have just basically outrun theircoverage and are so irrelevant
at this point that you might as well just, you might as well
just be going to like a tarot card reader if you want to get
news from them. And lastly and not least, I will
save the end of the show. We are going to talk about the
(07:10):
story that I alluded to just a little bit.
The first piece of the timeline showed up yesterday just after
our show ended, and my friend Steve Baker revealed something
that is going to be, I think, useful to you guys to hear from
a law enforcement guy as a priorlaw enforcement person, as
somebody who could explain to you a little bit about deadly
force. And so if you're not familiar
(07:32):
with deadly force and the way itworks and why things may have
gone down on January 6th the waythey did, this is really the
big, craziest story. This is the coup that keeps
going on and why we haven't seenan FBI die full headlongingly
into it. They've been out there claiming
that they're fighting things, but they're not.
There was a subversion that happened in this country in 2020
(07:53):
and multiple agencies of government were involved in it.
And I'm going to make a case that Steve Baker just pulled the
first part of the thread, which is going to get real wild.
And I think this week is going to continue to get crazy.
So that's a pretty big intro to talk about.
Can I talk about my friends overat Silent?
But before we do, can I just show you guys some gear 'cause
you guys know if you're listening right now, you're
missing out. Watch us on Spotify, Kyle
(08:13):
serifandshow.com. I am prepared for whatever Riot
situation is coming our way. I got the helmet, I got the
cameras. Like we're ready for this part
of my gear. Excuse me as I lean off camera
here. Part of my gear is like for the
spicy air when they start shooting CS or tear gas or
whatever is going to go out our our way.
(08:34):
The pepper balls and so on. You got to make sure you protect
your face, But lastly, I may need to be able to hold on to my
phone and and maybe have one that doesn't get hit with an EMP
or something crazy. And so I've got my silent bag
ready to go. This is really neat.
This is the silent bag that I actually have set up for my riot
gear. You can see it says right here
SLNT OK, same same people. It's got a little rigging that
(08:55):
I've got because it's got a Daisy chain on the outside of
it. This holds a pole, which can
extend and carry a 360 camera for me and the front of it is
already rigged up so that I can put my 360 camera right here up
on the arm. So we're ready to go.
It's going to be with silent equipment if things pop off and
I decide to go do some riot coverage, which is kind of dumb
when you're 43 and you've got kids.
But you know what? I, I like to do dumb stuff
(09:16):
sometimes. I'm still kind of a big kid.
OK, so we got to face it. There's the E3 everyday Faraday
bag. You're seeing it on the screen
there with Aaron. He's the founder of the company
slnt.com slash Kyle. You can save 15% with my name.
Your phone is a tracking device if you're worried about that
sort of thing. Government agencies and big tech
and corporate data brokers and cyber criminals and other a
holes, assorted a holes could befighting for a piece of your
(09:37):
digital footprint that they don't have to ask for.
They can take it. The FBI could just buy it.
By the way, they don't even haveto subpoena that thing which
we're going to hear about. How did they get our
information? They can literally buy it
because you sign off on it. When you carry your phone around
and you put out those signals, what are the signals?
Cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPSRFIDNFC, all of these things
are are wireless radio frequencies coming out of your
(09:59):
device that allow you to be tracked.
If you don't want to remote access, if you don't want
someone tracking, if you don't want bread crumbs,
silentitsslnt.com slash Kyle is the place to go.
It's the same technology specialoperations and
counterintelligence and intelligence professionals
around the world use to avoid surveillance to to cure their
calms, to make sure that you've got a burner that stays safe.
If you want to hold on to that, it's available to you.
(10:21):
You can protect your kids, your family, your freedom.
You can stop your digital footprint in its tracks and you
can pick it up. When you choose to control your
digital footprint, it's yours ifyou make it yours.
Otherwise it's everybody's and you're just putting that data
out into the world. Drop your phone into a silence
Faraday sleeve like we do at thebeginning of every one of these
shows and you 2 can go off grid,become completely silent,
invisible to the outside world. It's slnt.com slash Kyle save
(10:43):
15%. Make sure you're using my name
at check out. There is a link in the show
description all of the stuff that I've touched and I've got
waterproof backpack, waterproof Faraday roll up bag.
I've got the two different sleeves here.
I've got the the everyday Faraday backpack here, which is
used for travel and so on. I'm a gear nut from what they
call a gear queer or a gearedo. I don't I don't shy away from
that label. And I don't care if you guys
want really good gear, you can kind of trust me.
(11:05):
All the people in the FBI that Iknew used to too, including
helmets and everything else. So all right, let's get into
today's program. That's some fun.
I really am gleeful right now and I can't help it.
I'm just laughing and I'm havinga good time.
(11:25):
And I already sent a message over to my buddy Tracy Beans and
I said, you know what? This stuff makes me laugh.
It makes me smile. You know what also makes me
smile? Like if you're watching on the
screen right now, if you're listening to our, our, our audio
and you can switch over to video, you've got the, the, the,
the chat running through on the left and the right.
And my mother, I'm 43 and my momtunes into my program, which is
(11:47):
great. Thanks, Diane.
It's cool. She's like, Kyle's a big kid.
He just likes his gear. It's true.
My wife knows. Can I share with you guys a
story that has nothing to do with any of these things just
because it's kind of positive? When my wife met me, the day she
actually met me, she tells me that the first thing that that
caught her eye about me was my incredible positivity about none
other than gear, equipment. I was in her apartment.
(12:10):
We were supposed to help her move, but she and her friend had
already moved in. My best friend from high school
and one of our other buddies from high school were standing
there. I just gotten out of being in
basic training and a hard selection and I'm driving off a
military base. I'm super excited to be out in
the world and the first thing I do is I'm showing my buddies
these freaking polarized sunglasses that I have and I'm
amped up and I still remember doing it.
I was standing at this countertop that we had in in our
(12:32):
little condo on Cesar Chavez, which is like downtown east side
of Austin, TX. I'm standing there.
I'm just like. Dude, these sunglasses blah blah
blah blah blah. And she came in and she was
like, this dude is so excited about sunglasses.
Anyway, it's a funny little story in our sort of romantic
relationship. I'm always like that.
I'm a big kid. I love the gear.
I also sort of love the chaos. And maybe that's why gear is the
(12:55):
solution to some chaos sometimes, right?
Or it can at least make you prepared for it.
I don't know. This is some chaos that we've
got going on right now for some people.
Sorry. The government's closed, folks.
Yeah. How many of you knew, how many
of you woke up this morning and were like, oh, no, the
government is closed again? Here's where my sympathy goes
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away because I'm in a unique situation.
I've been through government shutdowns where I've gone, you
know, one day shorter than today's shutdown is.
And I miss whatever number of paychecks they got.
So I've done that. I've also missed a lot more
paychecks than that. When I went initially in in
November of 2021, I got told on the 23rd of November 2021, you
(13:41):
can't come back into this officeanymore.
And I showed back up after Thanksgiving.
I was actually hanging out with my parents.
I was hanging out with my mom, my dad, my kids, my wife.
We're all doing Thanksgiving. We come back in and it's like
November 26th or something, or 27th, whatever it was that
Monday after Thanksgiving and I go in there and my boss is like,
dude, you can't be here, you gotto go.
And so from then on, they stopped paying.
(14:02):
OK, But I was like, what can I use my leave?
And they said sure. So I burned my own dollars, my
own leave. I got paid for a little bit.
But in January, at the beginningof January, they stopped paying
me all the way through January, all the way through February.
And the first week of March, I remember it was my wife's 40th
birthday that they started paying me again.
I went back to work, I went for two solid months without getting
any check whatsoever, did not affect me even a little bit.
(14:25):
And then I lost my job. All right, I lost my job as of
June 1st of 22. They stopped paying me and I
didn't start making money again until sometime in the middle of
2023, probably like April or May.
I started actually making money.That's a long time to go without
a check. How many of you have gone six
months, nine months, 12 months without a paycheck?
Or how many of you gone 14 months out of 16 months and not
(14:46):
gotten paid for it? That's a lot.
Now, some of you have done it and you know exactly what I'm
talking about. So we can feel sympathetic for
people that are not getting a government paycheck.
It sucks to go to work and not get paid.
It really does. And yet, welcome to government
service. You're supposed to be serving.
In theory, you would know this. And if you stop voting for
people that didn't want to actually get the job done, their
(15:06):
entire job in the legislature isto write a budget.
It's a predictable thing that happens every single year.
So acting like this is an emergency, it's nonsense.
I made the analogy previously, Iworked in EMS.
We would go to these calls wherepeople were hypertensive and
morbidly obese and they would have chronic heart failure and
COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disorders or diseases.
(15:27):
They'd be all messed up. Their whole life was a disaster
physically. Then you'd go into their the
place where they lived and it was dirty and it was not well
taken care of and they're smoking cigarettes and they're
eating junk food and you're like, you can't have an
emergency because your existenceis an emergency.
That is our federal government. That is the United States
(15:47):
federal government right now. We live in an emergency.
We are $38 trillion in debt, andin my lifetime, we've tripled
the amount of debt that we had. And I kid you not, you can walk
back to when I was in high school and they were getting
this doomsdaying, like we're going to hit $10 trillion in
debt. We've done that since I left the
(16:09):
FBI. Guys, do you know how nuts it is
to say that we are beyond, like,being able to call 911 for an
emergency? So acting like a government
shutdown is somehow an emergent condition is absurd.
We are living in an emergency. Our life as a federal as a
nation is is is emergency. So we can't pick up the phone
(16:32):
and call 911 and and to act likewe're going to somehow solve the
problem by getting rid of the filibuster, which has been
floated by Donald Trump or some 36 days without a government
opening do despair me. And since I've moved on into the
new life where I work here behind a podcast desk and as you
guys know, I'm telling you aboutproducts and so on.
I get paid 3060, sometimes 90 days in arrears, and that's not
(16:52):
on a regular schedule. I get paid basically once a
month if I'm lucky and I'm having a budget based on not
knowing when that's going to come in.
It might come in in 30 days, it might come in in three months.
So there's no idea when I'm going to get paid.
Or maybe they don't pay me at all.
Maybe they just decide not to. Maybe the company goes belly up.
That's a possibility too. We all live in times of
uncertainty. So this crying about this stuff
(17:13):
is kind of crazy. But I do understand getting not
paid. It does suck.
And so this just happened in Houston, TX.
I guess the folks that were thatwere working for TSA has had
enough. And you can imagine TSA workers
are probably some of the lower paid government workers.
They probably have some of the lower, you know, experience and
training. Some of them are veterans, some
(17:34):
of them have some, you know, they couldn't make it as a cop
somewhere or they're not going to get hired or maybe there
wasn't an opportunity. So here we are with them just
walking off on the job. Imagine you spent whatever it is
6 hundred $800 on the ticket you're trying to fly somewhere
and then you're just wrapped around the building.
All right, we're seeing the the driving the drive up area.
(17:54):
There are a lot of people on theground there T is right.
I'm going to turn this down TSA just left.
I mean this would be a real way to actually show what government
shutdown is and you'd find out where the government touches
you. I don't I really like the idea
of essential not essential. Like most of it's not essential.
So OK, fine. Wouldn't this incentivize people
(18:14):
to not have a federal service dowhatever it is?
TSA does tickle you. What do you call that?
What what do you call it? What, what TSA does?
The the the touchy feely molestyin in the military, we used to
call it slappy tickle. Look how long these lines are.
I mean, it goes outside the building.
(18:36):
Now, if you guys have listened to this program for any period
of time, you know that TSA is basically what I would call it's
like security theater. They're not actually doing
capture catching. They're not really screening you
in any meaningful way. They're just, they're like the
guy with the wand. There's a meme of this.
I've seen it. He's just kind of like, he's
(18:57):
just kind of moving his hands near where your body is.
That's it. The TSA was missing 95 plus
percent of bomb and bomb components and weapon and weapon
components when they were doing these red team audits.
A red team is when you send somebody in that's going to
basically pretend to be the bad guy and they will do whatever
devious means they can. So they have a weapon system,
they break it up into multiple components.
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They send it in with through a couple of guys.
Can we get guns, ammunition? Can we get knives, box cutters,
axes, hatchets, Tomahawks? Can we get components?
That would be a bomb. That should set off the sensors.
They basically always could. TSA essentially does almost
nothing. I went and told the TSA people
the last time I was out in Dulles because I spent a lot of
(19:39):
time behind the security condom in Dulles when I was doing
counterintelligence, when I was doing surveillance, we could
badge in on the back end. We would sit behind the security
without having gone through security.
So I'm still armed, I still haveall my equipment, surveillance
equipment and so on radio, you name it.
And I would sit there for an hour on the back end, never
leaving, watching people come through the security checkpoint.
(20:01):
Not once did ATSA officer recognize that some dude is
sitting here for way longer thanit would take for a normal
person to sit there and get his shoes on and leave.
No one ever looked backward and said, hey, what are you doing
back here, man? Never.
For three years I would intermittently do that.
And I went and told them that and they laughed and they were
like, yeah, yeah. It's like they seem like nice
(20:23):
people, but they had no idea. They have no idea that FBI
agents, that DHS agents from HSI, from from, from DEA are
sitting there doing surveillanceon on targets coming through the
security check while they have no idea.
They don't know who's coming through.
It's just, it's sort of funny tome, not in a ha ha way, but like
in a quirky way, like, why do wepay for this?
(20:45):
What are we doing? So government shutdown, you're
not going to hear me cry. Let me read a little bit from
ABC News. The government shutdown on
Wednesday, that's this morning, entered the 36th day, officially
becoming the longest shutdown inU.S. history.
That means that the two longest shutdowns in American politics
have occurred under Donald Trump.
Well, I think that actually doesn't say as much about Donald
Trump as it does about the dysfunctionality of our time.
(21:05):
That's like saying that people are the fittest and most capable
athletes, that we have the highest level of performance
today and it's under like fill in the blank.
Well, it's because we have better knowledge.
We have better training, we havemore scientific access to, you
know, university studies and Physiology.
So we have the fastest and the hardest hitting sports that
we've ever had, right? They would act like, well, if
(21:26):
you took a Babe Ruth and you puthim out there today, like the
fastballs are all go blowing past him, well, maybe he would
have adapted and trained at a higher level and he wouldn't
have been chain smoking or eating cheeseburgers or
whatever. And maybe he'd be a stud athlete
still. You got to imagine you can only
compare it to the time. It's very interesting that they
want to pin it on Donald Trump because that's actually very
effective and it's working. There's been little movement on
Capitol Hill over the past past five weeks as Republicans always
(21:47):
lead with that and Democrats blame each other for the
stalemate. The Democrats are keeping up the
demand for an extension of the Affordable Care Act and
subsidies, while Trump and the Republicans say they will not
negotiate or open the governmentin this way.
Well, it kind of tells you what happened in New York.
It kind of explains an election that we just saw where people
are aghast, where Donald Trump threw his hat and his his
(22:09):
weight, not behind the other guywho has a Red Hat, not the
actual Republican who's running,who is, you know, like a New
York Republican. No, he threw his weight behind
Andrew Cuomo because we don't have any principles.
You're not going to have any principles, but you are going to
hold the hard line. You might as well just own the
freaking shutdown. Nobody listens to what I have to
say on that end. But I don't think I'm wrong.
(22:32):
And they told you what they think.
There is no problem too small that the government should not
care about. Do you know how crazy?
I mean, obviously the guy is an avowed socialist, so that makes
sense. But do you know crazy?
That sounds to those of us who don't want the government
touching any of the problems. We will.
Prove that there is no problem too large for government to
solve and no concern too small for it to care about.
(22:56):
Yikes. There it is.
I mean, that's explicit, and that's why I led the show with
it. It's very clear where these
people stand on this. How about some old lady who's
not going to get the she's not going to get the Atreyu and the
Neverending Story treatment fromme just yet?
I don't have an impression of this one.
This is Zoe Lofgren. She's looking for Republicans.
Why aren't they ready to shut that?
(23:17):
Like, let it go. Wouldn't it be amazing if we
just stopped having this? I mean, honest to God, I know
air travel is great. I'm going to show you some video
that's pretty horrific when it goes wrong.
But hey, what if we stopped flying so frequently?
What if we just were using it for, you know, cargo and stuff?
People drove places. I don't hate it.
(23:37):
I don't really have to go anywhere that far maybe.
And again, I think most Americans probably fit into
that. But when we do want to go
somewhere, it is really nice to be able to fly off on a plane.
So you got to ask yourself, that's a pretty small problem,
occasionally wanting to go somewhere.
Why do you need the government to like do the slappy tickle
game with you? Why don't we have our local
airports handle that? Wouldn't you be willing to pay
(24:00):
some sort of like fee on your ticket out of whatever airport
you're out of if we took off a bunch of the federal fees and
you just paid whatever the localis to be able to fund these
fees? And it would be based on the
amount of actual traffic that came out of your airport.
Have you guys ever seen TSA juststanding around where there's
like dozens of them? And have you ever seen when
there's not enough of them? Shouldn't it be volume dependent
instead of like staffed by the federal government who doesn't
(24:20):
care? That's just me.
Hey, Zoe Lofgren here. I'm back in DC waiting for the
Republicans to come back to work.
This is the 29th day of this unnecessary government shutdown.
And as I'm here in DCI, haven't been able to find any
Republicans here. Not only the House of
(24:41):
Representatives, which has been out of session for over a month.
The president's also missing in action.
They need to get their act together.
They need to come back to work while they're out.
Who knows where people are missing their paychecks.
They're getting notices that their healthcare premiums are
going through the roof. It's time for the Republicans
(25:04):
come back to work. Let's get this job done.
We will prove that there is no problem too large for government
to solve and no concern too small for it to care about.
That's a really troubling statement. that Lady thinks that
healthcare, that the federal government should be the ones
(25:25):
handling your healthcare and making sure that your premiums
cost whatever they cost. I'm going to argue to you that
if you are already weak and sickand you have these problems,
then yeah, you should probably negotiate out a deal with
somebody that's going to help you mitigate that.
But should it be the federal government?
I have no assistance from the federal government.
I have no healthcare coverage, period.
The end. If something happens, I'm going
to go pay out of my pocket. So I got to make sure that I'm
financially solvent if somethinghappens.
(25:46):
The other day, one of my kiddos,you know, ran into a door and
something stabbed into her knee.And it was a real bummer.
It's like a little puncture wound.
And she was upset. So we cleaned it out.
You know, we applied a bandage. That was it.
That's what most of my kids need.
My wife and I had a baby in the house we used to live in.
Midwife and me, that was it. The only government we had that
(26:07):
was involved in any way, shape or form is when my kid decided
to stop breathing, which, God bless her, they've all decided
to do that. At some point in time, she
aspirated on something, probablyamniotic fluid, and I had to go
and resuscitate her, which was terrifying in some ways, but
luckily I've built my life so that I'm able to prepare for
that. My baby stopped breathing.
She was completely blue. She was 18 hours old, maybe 20
hours old. She might have been less than
(26:28):
that. I think she was.
Yeah, I think she was less than 18 hours old and the only
government that that was involved was our fire department
showed up with some blow by oxygen and I already had her
breathing by the time they showed up.
That's it. You can have a baby, you can
raise your children, you can live your life eating decent
foods and you can PT and work out and injure yourself or not
injure yourself. Right now I'm dealing with
injuries because I keep running because I'm dumb and I weigh too
(26:51):
much for a guy who runs like theway I want to.
So I had to call Steve Friend upour almond eating buddy.
I said, Steve, what's the solution?
My legs always hurt. I have pain in my calves.
And he was like, you need to do myofascial releases and roll
them out. You know what?
It cost me $9. No government involved.
It turns out I'm going to solve my problem.
I'm going to just punish my legslike they're the at the Hanoi
(27:12):
Hilton. I'm going to roll them out and
I'm going to fix it. You know what's crazy?
When I did need to lean on government, because I do
remember my baby not breathing and being blue.
If I had waited for the government to show up, she would
be dead or brain dead, no question in my mind about it.
They showed up about 4 minutes after I got her breathing again.
So that's it for me. It's proved to me over the last
(27:34):
several years that there is no reason why I should be relying
on a government to solve my problems.
There's no problem too small forthe government to care about.
Yeah, every problem should be too small, with the exception of
the ones that are only so big that there's nothing else we can
do. Like our border.
That's pretty big. That seems like a governmental
problem, like our military for an invasion.
(27:55):
If we had to call a military outto go do something, that seems
like a that sounds like a big problem that that that's where I
would sort of lean towards government.
I don't need the government to be involved in like what my
health care costs are. You got to you got to be out of
your mind. They can't do like I always tell
this to people who are on the left and this is a reasonable
question that and if you have ananswer, please what are your
favorite government programs andand, and are they being run at
(28:18):
optimal levels in your experience?
Like, try to call the IRS today.Well, we're in the middle of a
shutdown. Call them when they're open.
See how that goes for you. Seriously.
And so half of Americans say theTrump administration is not
committed to protecting Americanrights and freedoms.
Do these people even know what the freedoms and the rights are?
Do they? This is a poll comes from ABC.
(28:41):
Trump's not committed to freedomof the press.
Well, how do we have all these dissident press?
I do it every single day. That's what I do for a living
now. I do analysis and I do polls of
all of the left wing press. We go to ABCNBCCBS.
Whether you like them or not, they lean left.
I know that because I tell them favorable stories and they still
slant a little bit to the left. Not mad at them.
That's just how they see the world.
And then you got the MSNBC and the New York Times and the CNNS.
(29:04):
There's no freedom of the press.They can't criticize the
president and he's not protecting that.
What is happening to these people?
Is he sending the IRS after them, the having the FBI go and
knock down their doors and pull their phones?
We've seen a crackdown on the freedom of the press.
It just didn't happen under Donald Trump.
(29:25):
So it's interesting to see that.What is that 61% of the people
polled, almost 2/3 of people think that Donald Trump is a
problem for freedom of the press.
Really. And freedom of speech, 57%.
They just told us they had millions of people in the
streets protesting against kings.
How on earth does this, does this poll make any sense?
(29:46):
And again, this is the reason why I think when, when folks
have bad and silly ideas and they're allowed to have those
ideas, like it's like it's really important for America.
When you have really dumb ideas that don't make sense, they
should be in conflict with one another.
The evidence in front of your eyes should actually debunk your
own thoughts. This is why I enjoy talking to
my father-in-law occasionally about these things because he
always does something like this.So he'd be like, there's no
(30:08):
freedom of the press. That's why we have to go out and
and we have to go out and and protest.
It's like, but if you could protest, is there really not
freedom of press and assembly? I think there is free and fair
elections seems like a thing 56%of people think he's not
committed to. I actually tend to agree with
that. We kind of should jump on that a
fair criminal justice system. What does that have to do with
the with the president of the United States people?
(30:30):
How many people are dealing withstate and local prosecution
compared to federal prosecution?I can tell you that the number
of federal agents doing any of this stuff is so low.
There's like a million sworn officers in this country of law
enforcement, and less than 10%, less than 10% of them are
federal. So if you're mad about the
(30:52):
criminal justice system, nebulously speaking, you're mad
about your state, why are you mad at the Trump administration?
Because you don't understand howthings work.
Protection and the freedom of religion.
Notice less people care about that and that fun.
Only 49% are worried about the freedom of religion because
we're not a country that's serious about these kind of
things. And lastly, 25% think that
they're not committed to protecting our rights to own
(31:13):
firearms, which might be one of the single biggest things.
And this Trump administration has been C plus on it at best.
So there's that. I just find these polls to be
funny because all they really reveal is not like what people
think. It's just how illogically people
think to me. All right, I'm going to show you
something horrific, and then we're going to do some Momdami
(31:33):
stuff. We're going to keep moving
forward. This is actually like one of the
craziest videos you'll probably ever see.
The story goes is that there wasa crash.
Again, the UPS. We're talking about aviation.
We're talking about where the federal government comes into
play. I don't know what the federal
government's role would be in something like this, but I do
know that this woman doesn't speak English in this video
clip. And that does seem kind of
interesting and problematic to people like me.
(31:55):
Why is it that the first clip that I was able to find, I found
somebody that was sitting in a truck.
He spoke English. I found another guy who was in
the truck. But of the three like clips that
have commentary or someone tapedwith their own phone, this is
the one that I decided because if a third of the people that I
could find, it's very unscientific.
Obviously, this is this is in where?
Where, where, where was this crash happening, folks?
(32:17):
It's in the Muhammad Ali Louisville airport.
This is in the middle of Kentucky.
Take that for what it's worth. Good morning.
(32:54):
For whatever it's worth, does anyone do like, shock and
outrage better than Hispanic women?
No, I don't think so. For my money it's as good as it
gets. But like, look at this.
This is horrific. This is crazy and wild.
But again, I cannot get over thefact that nobody in that car
spoke English as their first language.
Let. Me read a little bit here I'm
just going to leave this in the background.
The the video of it is is insane.
(33:16):
Seven people are dead after a U PS: truck crashes.
By the way, this was pinned on Trump.
I saw this on social media. People like the first the first
casualties of this government shutdown 0 proof of that this is
a private business. UPS flight 2973 or 76 rather 3
crew members aboard crashed 1015departing from the Louisville
Muhammad Ali International Airport.
Federal Aviation Administration said seven people are dead.
(33:39):
They expect the number to rise. At least eleven others were
injured. Jet fuel spread across a huge
space. Super, super insane,
catastrophic crashes is like almost an understatement, which
you guys can see right there. The fireball went forever.
And what I saw, which is crazy, and this could have to do with
tired aviation professionals. The thing that blew my mind was
(34:00):
this plane was running down the runway with an engine that was
on fire. And one of the things that would
normally happen in ATC is that you're visually giving
clearance. You give clearance for the for
the person to to do the take off.
But if you actually see smoke, fire, visible flames coming out
of the engine, you'd imagine that they're going to to go
(34:23):
ahead and and notify the pilot that that happens.
And if you're tired or you're ifyou're frustrated or you're,
you're phoning it in on the job,that's a possibility.
I don't know why this this pilotcouldn't shut it down or didn't
shut it down, and I'm sure we'llfind out at some point in the
near future. But truly catastrophic it it
crashed into the buildings adjacent to the airport.
There was a petroleum recycling business next door, auto parts
(34:43):
business that was hit. It sounds really, really awful.
And what's the saddest thing is that people immediately want to
go and punch this out like this was the fault of the Trump
administration. And I don't think that's fair.
But again, it tells you just howpeople do not think logically
and they're immediately going togo to the biggest possible
thing. You know, it's it why why are we
(35:03):
doing that? Let me let me actually show you.
I think I actually have a video here and I maybe have to resize
this thing, but let's see if I can show you the video of the of
the engine on fire going down the line.
Yeah, let's do this here we go bro.
Get the fuck away from here. Like turn around.
(35:24):
Bro, hold on hold. On.
Hold on. I think it's going to crash.
Bro holy shit, holy shit, holy bro get the fuck away from here
like all right, so I looped it so you guys can see it.
So I had to resize it on the fly, but you guys can see that
it's running down the runway andthe the engine was visibly on
fire and it looks like it still took off went up a few feet in
(35:47):
the air, maybe got 15 or 20 feetin the air and then it ended up
just just belly flopping anyway.Horrific super sad.
All this stuff kind of tells me that people we're going to
immediately look for blame when in the reality is you go, yeah,
this is really sad. This is just a sad tragedy.
And sometimes in our modern world, like really bad things
happen. They don't always have to be a
thing where we just go, Oh my, it must be this one person's
(36:09):
fault. If you immediately, like I said,
there was this song that I used to listen to when I was a kid,
Bad Religion song called The Answer.
If somebody just has the answer and the answer is always it's
like Donald Trump's fault or anybody else's fault for that
matter. It's Greg Abbott's fault, Kyle,
Sarah's fault in the case of like making fun of the Kash
Patel, that's my fault. But outside of that, people make
(36:29):
mistakes. They make horrific mistakes.
You know, good people die every day and really sad things.
This polling tells me that we are not logical, rational human
operators. What we are is emotional and
often times completely illogicalactors in this world.
We do it on feelings and that's I think how you end up with
(36:50):
these elections that go on because that's what people do
when they pull the lever. They don't actually know
anything and they can't see the the consequences.
Let's quickly break over to my buddies over at Patriot Coolers.
Nothing to do with nothing, although they do ship using UPS
Patriot Coolers. It's the website
itspatriotcoolers.com. The promo code Kyle.
Right now I have on the desk a 20 oz.
It's a Gray one, looks very nice.
(37:11):
It matches the interior of my truck and the interior of my
wife's minivan because we're Gray type people.
You guys want one of their fantastic cooler products.
They're vacuum sealed. Vacuum sealed tumblers that keep
ice for days. Same as their their their roto
molded, you know, hard coolers. They make soft coolers, they
make backpacks, they make all kinds of good gear.
Again, more and more gear. I always have one on the desk.
(37:32):
It's hard to get as excited about it 'cause I have fielded
this thing every single day for literally years now.
Whenever I travel it always comes with me.
Patriot coolers.com is the website again, link in the show
description if you want one that's engraved or looks like
the one we have on the wall behind me flag suspendable
stuff. Use promo code Kyle KYLEKYLEKYLE
10% off whenever you use my name.
(37:52):
If you spend 50 bucks then you'll get free shipping.
Good, good Christmas gifts for people that have everything.
You can always update them. They look really nice.
By the way, I'll just go broadershot right here.
That's the packaging. It's got an American flag on one
side. It'll have like a like a, a look
of like whatever it is you ordered.
It's very, very nicely put out there.
So it makes great gifts as we start moving into that season.
And you know, nobody's ever mad about getting like a cool new
(38:14):
coffee mug. It's nice to have something to
be excited about when you go to work if your day is dreary and
then you're like, oh, well, I got this new thing and this
shows that somebody loves me. That's kind of nice too.
All right, let's talk about who loves who the government loved
by these people. Predictable results.
Polls closed at 9:00 PM The New York mayoral race.
(38:34):
I've got clips now. Yesterday I told you the thing
about the Red Hat problem, whichis that this issue and the loss
or the win, let's call it, of ofMondami Zoran Mondami, this this
socialist dude, this loss was sopredictable because it happened
all the way upstream. It happened when Republicans
didn't send the person that theythought could actually win.
(38:55):
And you ended up with courteously, well, who they
think could not win. And then you got no support from
the party. And then you're in New York,
which it means that you're Republicans already going to
have kind of an uphill battle. And I remember some guy used to
say this all the time. It's not bad enough yet.
Well, I'll tell you what, you elected a guy where it might get
bad enough pretty soon. This was an absolute domination
by the political left in multiple different election
(39:18):
cycles. So New York mayoral race, the
New Jersey gubernatorial race, the Virginia gubernatorial race,
the attorney general race there,the Lieutenant governor, all of
this stuff went blue, which, by the way, is what happened in
2017. That's not actually surprising.
This is a backlash, whether you like it or not.
It's a backlash against Donald Trump because they've been
demonizing this guy for a long time.
But I will point out to this that if you took the combined
(39:41):
totals of Eric Adams, who dropped off but still got votes,
he got 6300 something votes, maybe, maybe 7000 votes.
You took Curtis Lee, well, 146,000 votes and change.
You took Andrew Cuomo's votes, which was 100 and let's call it
100 and or 855,000 votes. If you added all of them up
together, you'd still be more than 30,000 shy of what Mandami
has on this screen. I know it's going to end up
(40:02):
being about that at the end. So everybody got their butt
kicked by this guy. And it's predictable.
And I also think it's probably time to build that wall that
Donald Trump was talking about. But maybe we just wall in New
York. We had a really great movie
about this with Snake Plissken. We had a movie called Escape
from New York. So you guys going to go back and
(40:23):
watch the John Carpenter stuff? They were, they were funny
dystopian images of what would happen if you walled off New
York and let it just go to itself.
We may be getting there sooner than not.
It's always funny when fiction ends up becoming sort of like a
quasi reality. I think it'll be a lot uglier
and less fun. And there probably won't be Kurt
Russell going in to save the daywith an eye patch.
(40:45):
Here's the man speaking at his own victory rally that happened
last night. The sun may have set over our
city this evening, but as EugeneDebs once said, I can see the
dawn of a better day for humanity.
(41:09):
For as long as we can remember, the working people of New York
have been told by the wealthy and the well connected that
power does not belong in their hands.
Fingers bruised from lifting boxes on the warehouse floor.
Palms callus from delivery bike handlebars.
(41:30):
Knuckles scarred with kitchen burns.
These are not hands that have been allowed to hold power.
And yet, over the last 12 months, you have dared to reach
for something great. Was it just me or is it weird
when somebody who doesn't have calluses on his hand, who hasn't
done hard work, who's never doneanything physical, physical in
(41:53):
his life, who did some like mediocre rap and his parents
were academics, who came here and has been a citizen for seven
years, is out there talking about the toil of the working
class, inciting Eugene Debs and getting a big cheer.
Is that weird? Anybody else?
How dumb are these people? Like, they not know that this
guy also doesn't represent anything that he's talking
about. Like, maybe it's just me, but
(42:13):
I'd be like, OK, dude, this is the same thing that I did when I
went to the FBI, by the way. Maybe it's just life experience.
Maybe it's just 'cause I'm, I'm a contrarian, but when people
tell me something, I want to know what's your experience with
that under, under what authorityare you giving me this
information? Under what experience are you
citing that I should listen to what you have to say?
How many fingers have you had bruised from carrying boxes, by
(42:36):
the way? Is that a real thing?
I've carried a lot of boxes in my life.
A lot. I've moved more times than
almost anybody that I know. I've never had my hands bruised
from boxes. I've had paper cuts on them, you
know, I've had some knuckles scrape up.
I don't remember getting my hands bruised.
So he's talking and it sounds great bruised from boxes.
That's alliteration. For those of you that are
(42:56):
listening for the, the literary device that's in there.
That's when you repeat the firstconsonant sound.
Sounds good and it flows nicely.And you cited Eugene Debs, who
is the chairman, the founder of the Socialist Party of America.
So he's like a folk hero for a bunch of commies from from 100
years ago. What is this man done that is
(43:19):
anything like what he's talking about?
Has he ever worked a line as a as a line cook?
Here's the crazy thing about where I live in the world and
where I come from. I started waiting tables and
working in like an ice cream parlor when I was 15 years old.
I was waiting tables by the timeI was 16 and 17.
I've worked and sweat my ass offand been yelled at by customers
for things that were not my fault.
(43:40):
And it makes you a better person.
At the end of the day, you're making money based on their
experience. So you learn that other people's
experience matters. It's called service industry for
a reason. Your job is to serve.
It does seem to be the thing that's lacking from Americans
these days. When I go into restaurants,
nobody realizes that their job is my happiness, which means you
have to step outside of yourself.
Does that guy know anything about that?
(44:02):
Has he ever stood behind the line?
Has he ever been an Expo and just been like sweating heat off
the grill, like for hours on endwhile people are screaming at
you from the kitchen about what they don't have, People are
screaming at you from the front of the house.
Has he had that experience? How many ditches has that man
dug? I once carried the entire dirt
that was pulled out when my friend excavated a pool by
(44:23):
myself with a wheelbarrow and a piece of shit old Toyota truck
that I borrowed from a friend. I manually picked up the
entirety of a pool in Oklahoma and took it to a waste dump in
about 8 pickup loads. We we worked it out.
It was something like 5 tons of dirt that I personally carried
myself in a day. I was sick as a dog the next day
afterwards. How many people has like this
(44:44):
guy gone out there and helped with his hands?
Has he put on the gloves and done compressions on and sweat
on them as they died or came back to life or whatever?
Or wipe the asses of old ladies who were, who were incontinent
and in their last moments on earth.
Like, what is that man done ever?
That's my question. And what's funny is a bunch of
pussies in New York City, excusemy language, who have never done
(45:05):
anything hard, whose hardest thing is that they work at a job
where they stand around and theythink the purpose of their job
is them getting paid. They think they're entitled to
like a bunch of happiness and that they should just get it
because that's what the world owes them.
I saw this clip and it is so indicative of the broader
problem that exists in these places.
(45:25):
And I saw it in Virginia and I saw it in Washington, DC and
I've seen it in Philadelphia andI've seen it when I went through
New Jersey. And of course I I spent time in
Connecticut and I spent time allup and down that area and I
despise everything in that area.I despise it, not because the
people are horrible, but becauseyou have a bunch of folks that
are disconnected and the hard working people are not
represented by these grifty clowns that get out there and
(45:47):
talk a really good game. And how many of them can say
that their hands are scarred at their knuckles have have cuts in
them that have healed? Like how many of these people
have done anything hard in theirlife?
I've heat stroked out on a military base and I've just
about heat stroke out digging ditches in my own backyard.
Like, I've done some things thatare hard, and there are many
people that have done a lot harder things.
(46:09):
I sat up all night on a freakingpole barn where it was 20° and
the windshield was like down near 0 because my friend was
getting his cattle killed by a bunch of coyotes.
And we sat there for 12 hours and shot coyotes in the dark
drinking coffee and freezing ourasses off.
You know, it's just stuff you do.
That's just what men do. Is Mondami a man in that sense?
(46:30):
Are any of these people that we see that are leading us like men
in that sense, hard men who are willing to put on the line?
No, they're not. So that's what I'm going to show
you this clip, which is really kind of amazing.
This comes from Nick Friedman. He does a really good job of
these St. interviews. He's a little kid in New York.
He's also not hard, but he's asking good questions.
Good for him. And here's what I want you to
recognize about this discussion.This is St. discussion and it's
(46:52):
very, very insightful. One, it's polite, and I'm for
that. Good for them.
Two, the man who's standing there reminds me of the guy from
The Hangover, the brother who never launched, who's in his
40s. I can't think of what his name
is. Zach Galifianakis.
He looks like Zach Galifianakis.If you're listening and you're
not on Spotify, which, hey, let's just do that.
Let's do a Spotify ad real quick.
(47:12):
If you're listening and you're not on Spotify, you should have
Spotify so you can flip over andsee this person.
Rumble X YouTube. Yes, Spotify is Kyle
seraphinshow.com. You may hear a Spotify ad right
now. OK, this guy, this Zach
Galifianakis looking character, which nothing against his looks.
All I know is is he's soft. I can tell by looking at him.
(47:32):
You can tell by looking at him that he's weak.
He's not like a masculine equivalent.
And he's complaining about how he has two jobs and he's in his
20s and he doesn't remember a time when it was great in the
90s or the 80s. It's like, welcome to the world,
bro. Sometimes life is hard.
Oh, OK, that's it. He's complaining about foreign
(47:53):
wars. I want you to tune into this.
He's complaining about foreign wars that were fought by not
him. How many friends does he have
who lost the limb, Annie? How many friends has he
celebrated who died for this country, Annie?
Does he know a single person whosacrificed their life for our
nation for whatever reason? Does he know anybody who's been
(48:13):
shot in the line of duty? Does he know anybody who's
broken their kneecap trying to bring a felon into into custody?
I'm speaking about real concreteexamples.
Does he have any of those? And he's going to cite
victimhood based on foreign warsfrom his childhood that he did
not participate in. In the meantime, the woman who
is straightening him out, I wantyou to also notice, one, it's a
(48:35):
woman who's engaging with him. Two, she has a freaking child
and she's holding a baby. She's doing something.
That baby looks like she's, she's probably maybe like 4
years old. Three or four, she's holding on
to a child in this in this clip and she's talking in a measured
tone because she's used to doingthings that are really hard
raising children and she's not complaining.
(48:58):
So the white lady carrying a baby and and procreating and
doing something that's probably really hard to do in New York
City, which is have a child and raise a child, is talking to
this clown show. This poor little boy who has a
beard, which means he's a man, but he doesn't know how to act
like 1 and he's crying about victimhood that he can't even
claim. That's the setup.
(49:19):
I've given you a lot of my perspective on this, but then
you listen to it. You tell me I'm wrong.
You drop in the comments after you listen.
We've seen the failings of the system.
We I don't have a positive 80s Reagan era, positive 90s Clinton
era to look back on. All I've seen since I was born
is war, death, destruction overseas and an increasing
increasing increasing wealth gaphere at home.
(49:40):
I don't know why, and no offense, I don't know why the
youth are so sad. And so I've said you came to New
York with a dream. You worked for Lincoln Center,
which is one of the most incredible organizations in the
world. You have rent stabilized
housing. You're safe.
You came to New York with a dream.
I get it, everybody. Dream didn't involve living
paycheck to paycheck on two jobs.
It's everywhere. We should all please God, make
(50:03):
tons of money and live well, butnot everybody's entitled to what
they think they are. I.
Believe everyone's entitled to adignified life.
Exactly. And So what?
And I think Zoron will provide adignified life for more New
Yorkers. That's.
At the end of the day. It is when you know, you're
entitled to safety, you're entitled, you know, people here,
there's so many incredible services that are currently
(50:25):
offered. And I just feel like the
bleakness of the youth is is is just, it's oversold.
It's look at the positive. There's so many great things.
That they're offered, they're such a good.
Life things can be better. New York already spends more per
capita on public services, on welfare, on education than any
other city in in the United States.
(50:47):
There's no more money to keep paying that and if the people.
Who pay the taxes? Are not believe they're going to
be safe, they're going to leave and the city will get worse.
We've seen this in many, many other cities around the world.
And so you you can't have unlessyou believe in pure socialism,
which has failed everywhere thatit's been implemented.
(51:09):
Pure socialism means former Soviet Union or Cuba, where you
have free supermarkets but the shelves are empty and that is
not going to make anybody happy.Yeah.
But I don't think Zoran has proposed anything.
He has. There's the government.
The government run grocery stores, one in each borough.
Well, not to put the private sector outs.
Are going to work well. We'll see.
It's a proposal. It's a pilot program.
(51:30):
It's a pilot program. Minneapolis is a different city.
Then that's all. Let's all.
Agree that we hope for the best,Yes, OK, hope for, hope for a
New York everyone can live in and be happy.
We will prove that there is no no problem too large for
government to solve and no concern too small for it to care
about. They dominated with that message
(51:52):
and that little boy who's masquerading as an adult male,
just he, he can't even admit. Do you notice the only people
that are pushing back against him?
There's two people. 1 is a man who's standing there with a
daughter. The other is a woman who's
standing there with a daughter. It's almost like that people
become grown-ups when they have kids.
That's not to go out there and smash on people who do not have
(52:14):
kids. There are plenty of you that
have acted like grown-ups. You've served our nation.
I have nothing to say about that, but let me just say that
broadly speaking, if we were to generalize, it is a universal
experience among human beings that most of us get our shit
together when we have to look out for another life.
That's just how it works. It starts sometimes with
(52:35):
marriage. It often times really, really
gets started with kids. When you have kids, when you are
responsible for a small person in the world, your life becomes
forfeit to their future. In a lot of ways, that is a
discriminating thing. I can break my life apart from
the time that I was married. I don't remember the time before
(52:56):
it, and it was dumb. A lot of the things I did dumb.
A lot of my attitudes, my ideas,dumb.
Not developed, not matured. I watched my friend who was 20
years old, his fiancee was pregnant.
They had kind of a shotgun marriage.
They were planning on getting married anyway, but they had a,
you know, they announced their pregnancy a little bit early,
snuck in before the before the the ceremony happens, the
nuptials. They had to get on a rush
(53:17):
schedule. He was 20 years old.
He dropped out of college, he worked his ass off.
He was one of my heroes. I was like, this man knows
what's up. I still am a moron.
I'm 25, my friend has a 5 year old.
He dropped out of college, he took care of his family, he went
to work every single day, he built up a career, he went back
(53:38):
to night school, he got his degree, he lost a full academic
scholarship because he was a grown up.
He was a man with responsibilities.
And I looked at that at 20 and I'm still trying to figure that
out at 30. There's a big gap there.
My friend has a 10 year, maybe 12 year head start on me because
my first baby didn't come until I was 35.
I had a 15 year gap between children and his kids are
(54:00):
already out and they're in college.
He's ready to do empty. He's an empty nester and he's
43. He's my age.
He only had two. It's not blaming people who
didn't, but there is a big distinction and is really
important for young men. That guy's out there crying.
What has he done to better his situation and does he even have
any concept of what's going on? He wants free programs, handouts
(54:20):
in a government run grocery store.
That is an absolute dip shitted position to hold because it's
never been successful and he admitted it.
Well, Minneapolis is not the same as New York.
Real communism has never been tried.
Democrats dominated with that. How is it?
It's because people are stupid and they don't make rational,
logical decisions based on the actual evidence out there.
They go on emotions and feelings, including men who like
(54:41):
to think that they're rational. I will tell you this though,
there's a lot more like white ladies that went out there and
voted for, for Zoran Mandami. And if they weren't voting in
New York, it would have been a real different ball game.
Just saying if it was married men and single men and it was
just like dads against that guy,I think the I think he doesn't
have a chance. I'm going to read you this
article from Politico because itactually is pretty wild.
(55:01):
And it also gives you some perspective as you should have.
Democrats didn't just rebound, they dominated.
It's a foreshadowing of what we're going to see next year,
said one strategist. That's probably true.
The midterms are probably going to be ridiculous.
And then, because they only had a short time clock and we've
been talking about it since the election, there was a short
fuse. Trump will be impeached again,
there will be nothing but obstructionism again, and we'll
(55:24):
have two years of shenanigans where minor things will get
accomplished. This was the period which they
could get something done. They've got a few months of it
left, and they're squandering itwith stupid people in charge of
the thing that's going to end upgetting us killed.
Just remember, food riots. That's a bummer, right?
(55:45):
Bad government policy and like, looking to the First Amendment
and doing things that are, you know, censorship.
That sucks. Kicking down your door with a
SWAT team in the morning to go out there and find the people
that said the bad things. That's what's lethal and we
haven't fixed that problem. I'm going to cover that at the
end here. So we're going to keep going.
For Democrats, Tuesday night felt like 2017 all over again.
Across the country, Democrats won big from marquee races to
(56:06):
down ballot contest. The counties shifted one year
ago. They veered right back onto the
left, away from the right, the suburbs that power the
Democrats. Massive wins in the first Trump
Trump administration came roaring back.
Exit polls even showed the Democrats improved their margins
with non college educated voters.
The strength of these wins hit aDemocrat appetite to take on
(56:27):
Trump as he ends his first year in office.
And the voters are concerned about cost of living.
That has not been solved. Inflation has not been solved.
The costs have not gone down. They continue to be inflated.
They continue to go up. It is more expensive to buy most
things in a grocery store today than it was when Trump was
elected. That doesn't mean it's Donald
Trump's fault. That's also illogical and
stupid. But he did campaign on that and
people are going to go and do a referendum.
(56:48):
So maybe free food is the answerif you don't understand anything
about finance. And this guy went out and ran a
populist type message and he ranout and pushed things that made
people feel good. It may be dumb, but it felt good
for some. And it's going to lead to a
massive splintering in this country because a lot of people
are doomsaying right now. I'm going to play you Brett
(57:09):
Weinstein's prediction from 2019because the other side of this
is ugly. And it looks like not just like
cultural crusade, it looks like actual crusade.
Just saying, anybody who's not tucked in with a helmet ready to
go with night vision, now's yourtime.
You got a small window. Make good decisions and invest
in good technology that's going to be able to carry you through
dark hours. Here's Madami saying more stuff.
(57:31):
I speak of Yemeni bodega owners and Mexican abuelas, Senegalese
taxi drivers and Uzbek nurses, Trinidadian line cooks and
Ethiopian aunties. Yes, aunties.
(57:56):
Why are you naming ethnicities? Are we not in America?
Is it not America that we were supposed to be talking about?
Weren't you meant to be? Weren't you meant to be a
representative for New Yorkers? That's supposed to be the
biggest melting pot, the Big Apple.
Everybody comes here. You got the freaking Statue of
Liberty. No, you want to divide.
You want to make sure people remember where they came from
and all that stuff. That's not assimilation.
(58:17):
That's not America. Everybody came here that didn't
assimilate, used to face significant push back.
Oh, you're Irish and you only want to be Irish and you only
want to live around Irish people.
You're going to get the crap kicked out of you by this
country. You want to become a part of the
country, Go do something. Go out and put the railroads in
and die trying. And guess what?
Nobody looks at Irish people. Irish descent, red hair.
(58:39):
And they go like, you're not American.
They just like you're American. Yeah.
Because you speak the way that Ido, because you have the same
cultural values the way that I do.
What the hell was he just talking about?
Of course it's on purpose. We know that.
We know it because we've watchedit for the last couple years.
Did we fix this problem? Did we go out there and do the
mass deportations we talk about?Did we revoke parole?
(59:01):
Did we pull back the refugee status, the TPS?
Did they do all the stuff, ignore the judges and just do
it? No, they did not.
And they did have a chance to doit.
And it probably would have been the end of like, what, everyone.
It would have been catastrophic meltdowns on the left.
But you might have saved this country.
But I don't think we voted our way out of this, people.
Stephen Miller is telling you the craziest part of all this.
I'm going to play this clip fromhim.
I think he was talking on Hannity, which is not my
favorite. The craziest part about all this
(59:23):
is just like what they did in Arctic Frost at the FBI, just
like what they did at DHS, bringing in illegal aliens
through TPS, the temporary protected status through the
parolee program where we had quote UN quote, refugees and so
on and so forth. All of these things were ready
for this. Strictly speaking, legal.
They were legal. That's what you forget to say.
(59:44):
Was it, was it criminal in like their intent in their heart?
Would we look at them and say, oh, these are really problematic
and damaging and destructive to our nation for sure.
But by the letter of the law, they played the game as it's
played. And the best part of it is
Congress who's bitching about itand complaining about it and
acting like they have a funding emergency right now and they're
doing the theater. They all signed off on the
(01:00:07):
budgets every damn time. No one can pass a budget without
the other side side showing up. And every time enough of the
other side shows up, and it doesn't matter whether it's a
Lindsey Graham or a Ted Cruz or whoever your favorite is a Tom
Massey or not a Tom Massey, It doesn't matter who shows up.
Murkowski, she's a, she's a rhino.
It's like, you know what? They all just take turns wearing
the hat of the person that goes in and is the side with the
(01:00:30):
other team. And I told you guys this the
other day. And once you see it, you can
never Unsee it. Remember that the person that
goes in and crosses the aisle and votes with the other side,
they say, I'm bipartisan. I'm willing to get things done.
I'm willing to go and compromisein, in Washington, DC to make
sure that you get what you want.And then the other half is when
they stand and they say, I'm fighting for you and I won't
side with the evil doers and I won't do the thing.
(01:00:51):
The problem is, is that there's this like negotiation that goes
on. Who's going to, who's going to
roll over and who's not? And the only person who has to
suffer and get paid, you know, get destroyed is us as the
people watching. So as long as you see that, you
know, the answer is not federal,that's what I'm getting to.
The answer is going to be local.Did you guys vote in your local
elections? How many you did in the vote
yesterday? I made my wife go out and vote.
She's like, I thought I wasn't supposed to vote.
(01:01:12):
We don't believe in women voting.
I'm like, whatever, until the rules change, go vote.
Here's what I think the the answers are.
Go knock yourself out. We talked about it.
We did a bunch of constitutionalamendments in Texas.
That's what we voted on. We didn't even, we don't even
live in a city. So I don't even have a City
Council to vote on. Here's Stephen Miller telling
you what they did was legal. It was authorized.
They can act like they're outraged all they want, but they
(01:01:35):
were allowed to do it. That's it for your audience
perfectly, Sean. This was not a loophole.
The Biden administration Secretary of Homeland Security,
Alejandro Mayorkas, devised a scheme to fly illegal aliens
into the country and then to escort them en masse across the
border by the millions and to give them something known as
(01:01:56):
parole, which gives them a work permit, which gives them a
social, which gives them a Social Security number, which
gives them access to the voting booth.
This was the plan all along to get them here illegally so they
can get free government benefits, get hooked to welfare,
and be able to participate in American elections.
This was an attack on democracy by the Democrat Party.
(01:02:18):
It's the same attack that we see, Sean, when you have
California, a sanctuary state that is refusing to turn over
even illegal alien criminals andgang members to ICE.
So these are illegal aliens in California who've been arrested
by California police, by California law enforcement for
serious crimes, for crimes against children, for felonies,
(01:02:41):
for crimes that threaten public safety.
And they are refused losing to hand these criminal illegal
aliens over to ICE. Instead, they're freeing them
back into the cities to offend and offend again.
By any definition, what California is doing is criminal.
It is a violation of our laws. It is one of the most heinous
things that I have seen in my entire.
(01:03:03):
OK, so who's going to jail? What criminal case have you put
together? Who's got handcuffs on and who
is going to be indicted in the federal grand jury?
Who's going to face consequencesin front of a federal judge?
Who is going to go to jail and then prison?
What's that sentence going to look like?
What's the charge? I would like Stephen Miller to
speak very specifically about what violated, what laws are
(01:03:23):
violated. He was getting pretty good about
that in the beginning. I saw him do it and he has the
ability to say that. So go out there and tell me what
law was violated specifically, and then go out there and have
your person who's supposed to berunning the solution go execute
the solution. Or we could just do more
theater. Let me give you 7 takeaways from
(01:03:44):
the New York Times, 7 takeaways from New York Time because
Mandami is symptomatic of the bigger the bigger problem.
Here we go. He's 34 years old.
He was a state lawmaker and he was just elected as the eleven
111th mayor of New York City riding historic wave enthusiasm.
This is coming from, again, The New York Times.
They called the race just 35 minutes after the polls closed.
(01:04:05):
It was a blowout. It wasn't even close.
First of all, point #1 Mondami got more votes since the than
anybody has since the 1960s. Even in an era of low nationwide
turn out, participation in Tuesday's mayoral election was
nothing short of electric. People were amped up about it.
He tapped into that. More than 2 million people cast
their ballots. That's a lot, OK?
(01:04:26):
He built his own Democratic coalition.
He found a bunch of people, white liberals in Manhattan and
Brooklyn, black and Latino voters, ultra Orthodox Jewish
communities, no idea what's going on there, Smattering of
immigrant communities. He went out there and he built a
coalition of people and they went out and they voted for him.
He was running up Marges 40 and 50 points in Brooklyn's most
affluent neighborhoods. Rich people voted him because
(01:04:46):
rich people apparently in New York are not actually that rich.
They're affluent neighborhoods. But these people are voting
against their own. Like, how are they going to
survive? They're going to get taxed out
of their asses. But what do they know?
I guess it's not bad enough yet.They're they're voting on
virtue. Cuomo squeezed a Republican
rival, but not enough. And guess what?
The Republican establishment, including Donald Trump, the
president actually sided with him and they tried to help him.
(01:05:09):
The Democrat, the one that we were saying was a murderer and
people were claiming killed off the old folks that were in in
New York State when he was the governor.
The guy who had to step down because of his sexual
improprieties. That guy, that's who you went
backed. Doesn't mean Nestle was like
much better at his life that way.
But just said, OK, despite spending $40 million, super
(01:05:29):
PAC's could not pull Cuomo to victory.
Billionaires like Bill Ackman, the Mayor Bloomberg pumped
millions of dollars into super backs that were supposed to
support Cuomo, but it ended up being for naughty Mondami called
it naked bigotry and Islamophobia.
Because those things still work on people in New York.
If they don't work on me, they probably don't work on you.
(01:05:49):
You can call me a bigot or a racist and I'll just say that's
fine. Think what you like.
The evidence doesn't actually prove that I don't believe that
there is such a thing as Islamophobia.
What I do is recognize that certain ideologies and some
religions are not compatible with the rest of us.
And I can see patterns, so I do.But sure, it works.
In New York, Mandami made progress in working class blacks
(01:06:10):
and Latino neighborhoods. Why?
Because he went out there and hetalked about victimization and
everything is everybody else's fault.
It's not your fault. It's not your fault that you're
working hard and you're not successful even though you're
dumb enough to live in the most expensive place in freaking
America. That's you.
You can live cheaper places. You can make your money go a lot
farther. You can make less money by a lot
less in a lot of places across this country and still live at a
(01:06:32):
much higher standard of living than you would in New York City.
I would be impoverished if I lived in New York City, but I
don't. I live in the suburbs outside of
Austin, TX, and it's much more affordable here, and it's not
even that affordable compared tomany places in this country.
It's a simple fact. There are places that are super
expensive and people want to be there.
If you want to go where it's less crowded, it will be less
(01:06:53):
expensive. You chose to live in New York
City. You chose to pursue the dream of
being a useless actor. And also you're really sad that
you have to take tickets at the door for the shows that somebody
else is selling out. It's your choice.
Nobody ever wants to own their own agency.
You are responsible for your ownsuccess or not.
That's what America's about. This is not a bootstraps
message. This is about be a grown up.
(01:07:14):
Stop complaining about wars thatyou didn't fight in like that.
Poor man with the soft beard andthe hands that have never done
any hard work. How do you know that, Kyle?
I'm just guessing. Andrew Cuomo reached his
expiration date. That's what they learned.
Yeah. He's 67 years old.
He already really. He he he already expired because
he was removed from his own office when he was the when he
was the governor of New York. How the hell do they think he
(01:07:34):
was going to run for mayor and win?
I like that. Seemed really dumb to me too.
The rich could not make up theirmind.
People from the haves and the have nots could not side on one
side or the other. Cuomo is a rich guy.
Didn't work. That's their claim.
That's what they say. OK, here's The funny thing.
He, he told you what you needed to know.
(01:07:56):
And what The funny thing is for me is that he was saying the
same thing. And I heard it loud and clear.
And many of you guys knew it. And all these people were going,
Oh my God, he's going to be a communist and he's going to go
hard to the left. He's already like the hardest
leftist person ever to run for for mayor of New York.
And apparently CNN didn't take him at his word.
They thought he was like soft and he was like a TikTok guy.
Here's Van Jones. How do you get paid to be an
(01:08:17):
analyst if this is what you cameup with?
I think he missed an opportunity.
I think the mom Donny that we saw in the campaign trail who
was a lot more calm, who was a lot warmer, who was a lot more
embracing, was not present in that speech.
And I think that Mom Donny is the one you need to hear from
tonight. There are a lot of people trying
(01:08:38):
to figure out can I get on this train with him or not?
Is he going to include me? Is he going or is he is he going
to to be more of a class warrioreven in office?
I think he missed a chance tonight to to open up and bring
more people into the tent. I think his tone was sharp.
I think he was using the microphone in a way that he was
(01:09:01):
almost yelling. And that's not the mom that
we've seen on TikTok and the great interviews and stuff like
that. So I felt like there's a little
bit of a character switch here where the, the warm, open
embracing guy that's close to working people was not on stage
tonight. There was some, some other voice
on stage that said he's very young and he just pulled off
something that's very, very difficult.
(01:09:22):
And I, I, I, I wouldn't write him off, but I think he missed
an opportunity to open himself up tonight.
And I think that that will probably cost him going.
I'm going to I'm going to teach Van Jones something since
apparently he doesn't know this.You can vote your way into
communism and socialism, but youhave to shoot your way out of
it. The guy does not care.
There's enough people in New York City that are going to
(01:09:43):
support this. If you promise them free
everything that they will do there, they'll be like, my life
sucks now. It's not incrementally better,
but he's promising better. I'll go for the person that
promises better rather than the person that says it's your
fault. Do better yourself.
That's not a good message. It turns out.
That's the message of most of Western culture.
Go out there through your works and your character and take your
(01:10:05):
suffering and offer it up and keep doing it and assign meaning
to it because it's permanent. It was.
It's the condition of humanity that you will suffer.
So go out there and make it meansomething.
Go out and have kids, you know, Go raise something.
Go build something in the world.Make a mark.
Or you can get free buses and free lunch.
That sounds nice. Pizza parties for all ice cream
(01:10:26):
social. It's a social right.
Like that's the how did he not see that?
How does Van Jones, who gets paid by by CNN?
Like I get it, like they're playing a role.
These people are are cartoons. But how did he not know that?
Because everybody should know that.
Like he told us who he was. Oh, he was so much nicer before.
Then he then he pivoted on on election night.
He should have gone out there. He didn't need a coalition.
(01:10:47):
He just got elected. His coalition is I'm now the
mayor of the of, of New York City.
See what happens next. It'll be really exciting and
fun. I think he's also going to find
out that the, the executive office in even a big city like
that is not nearly as powerful as he thinks it is.
But it's not going to be good. And we can watch from the
outside. And the best part of it is, as I
told you when I started, I don'tlive in New York and many of you
don't live in New York. So it doesn't matter to us.
(01:11:08):
We don't care. We don't have a big audience in
New York. Shocker.
It doesn't matter. It doesn't affect me here in
Texas. It doesn't affect you in Kansas
City, doesn't affect you in North Dakota where you're just a
regular person, but if you were to take your household goods the
same as me. I just saw this in our chat.
If I moved to New York City, I have 150 felonies.
I probably have more than that. I have a box of 150 magazines
that are felonies. Boop, I won't go there.
(01:11:32):
I only go where It's America. If you're living in a place and
you're like, hey, Seraphin, I'd like to have the freedoms that
you have. But I live in Washington state
or I live in California, or I live in New York or I live in.
Yeah, dude, you made that choice.
Do not steal agency from yourself.
It's the reason why we had the interview the other day with
Garrett, with Marty Combs. You can just do things.
One of those things is I like tothink of my family kind of like
(01:11:53):
Little House on the Prairie. I don't know.
And this is not like preaching to any money, but just for
seriously, they empathize with the position of the Little House
in the Prairie family with the Wilders.
Because what did they do when things were hard?
They packed up and went somewhere better and they
scratched a living out of nothing.
And then they did it again. And then they did it again.
And God love them, they did it again.
They tried to survive whatever it took so that they could stay
(01:12:16):
alive because of their children.And then their daughter became
one of the most famous authors in the history of America
because of her hardship, becauseof her stories, because it's a
traditional classic American struggle.
And she sugar coated it. It was way harder, the Wilder
story than what you read way harder and uglier and nastier
(01:12:37):
lot harder than anything Mondami's ever gone through in
his life. So do things make that move if
you got to all right. So at least the, the good news
is that the other side quote UN quote, our side like the
Republicans are, they're, they're fighting back like an
intelligent force that is meant to go and steer the ship and
write it correct. You know, the good ones like Ron
(01:12:57):
Johnson, they're doing a good job, right?
I think so. And so I, I am calling on and I
appreciate all the members of the Judiciary Committee.
We need to get to the bottom of this.
We need to do everything we can to assist Director Patel and AG
Bondi in in making sure that they have the staff to take
(01:13:18):
control of these agencies, that they're the heads of them.
I don't think they have the control.
I think they're being sabotaged within.
But the American people need to understand exactly what
happened. And again, I'm calling on
members of Judiciary Committee to help Cinder Grassi and myself
get to the bottom of this so we can expose this so this doesn't
happen again in America. This has to end.
(01:13:40):
They are going to fund the FBI at the full level that the FBI
needs for funding. And it's going to continue to do
exactly what it is because theseunserious clowns that continue
to represent us and Senator Johnson falls in the same
category as all the rest of them.
If you vote to fund an agency that spied on you, that you say
spied on you, and they still legally have the ability to do
(01:14:02):
that, then you should not be surprised when the result, this
is the same thing as voting intofreaking socialism.
What do you think the result is going to be?
What do you think happens when you give them the money and the
agency? He just said the exact opposite
of what Patel has been saying. Like we've taken over, we have
full leadership. We're in control.
Patriots run it now. Baby, baby, babe.
(01:14:22):
We've rooted out all the bad actors.
By the way, here's this story. This comes from this last couple
days. And I've been getting unlimited
pings from journalists going like, hey, do you know what the
hell is going on? I go no, and neither.
No one else does either, including Cash Patel.
The FBI fires, unfires, then refires agents linked to the
Jack Smith probe. Guys, this story is hysterical.
(01:14:42):
It's written by Ryan Riley, Michael Costner, Zoe Richards,
at least two FBI agents who've been involved in past
investigations into Donald Trump.
We're told Monday that they've been fired only to learn later
that day that those terminationshave been reversed or put on
hold, according to six people familiar with the decisions.
And then on Tuesday morning, thetwo agents learned that they had
indeed been fired and they were re fired.
And the story goes is that Cash Patel went in after the the the
(01:15:04):
plane scenario that I've been pointing out and what a doofus
he is and he decided to actuallywatch.
I'm OK here. I'm speculating a little bit,
but for those of you that are inthe 7th floor that are watching
this, I think I know what you guys did.
I think I know that you were trolled by our Thursday show.
I know, I know that some of them, some of you were and you
watched it and I'm sorry that that that caught you off guard,
(01:15:26):
but it was funny for me. So just so you know, I thought
it was really funny. The audience thought it was
really funny that you were watching.
And when I did the big reveal ofwho my 7th floor source was,
it's Cash Patel's public social media.
That's really funny, whether youlike it or not.
If you guys had a sense of humor, you'd know it's funny.
But what you also happen to do because you were watching the
show is you realize that the Arctic Frost documents that I
went over for about 10 or 12 minutes has all these redacted
(01:15:47):
names and all those redacted people still work for the FBI.
So then you guys went out there and started firing those people,
and you fired the SAC out in SanAntonio because his name was on
the list and it was exposed by Heritage Foundation, the
oversight project, and you firedsome of the other guys, you
know, like David Geist. Yeah, we know.
(01:16:08):
That's why I said their names, so that you could know that I
know that you don't know what the hell you're doing.
You people are flying blind whenthis meme keeps popping up, it's
because you idiots should realize that this guy is a
failure. He can't do the job, and he
could have. By the way, if you wanted to
hire me on remotely as a specialgovernmental employee, my rate
is really, really high because Idon't like the government.
But, yeah, you could pay me to help you out, and I would have.
(01:16:30):
I would have done it for almost nothing back then.
But you ghosted me and the otherguys.
You didn't bring on Steve Friendwhen he needed a job.
You didn't hire him to help out Dan Bongino.
Find out who the bad actors werewho could help you understand
what it is that's going on in the agency that you think that
you're running. They're running you.
You're dumb. And you keep making these
missteps so you get headlines like fires on fires and refires
agents. Do you know how stupid you look
(01:16:51):
when you do that? And do you know what that does
to the FBI personnel who actually want to support you?
I found this out the other day. The FBI Agents Association has
now found themselves on the wrong side, Cash Patel, and they
do not support the man. So the most important job in the
FBI and the people who are representing that group, they
are now anti Cash Patel. Every agent is, do you know who
doesn't have a problem with CashPatel today?
(01:17:12):
Who knows that they're safe? The Intel analysts, the
analytical personnel, the exact people that he called out on the
Sean Ryan show as being the problem, the Intel component
that he was going to break out and send them away and he didn't
do it because he's dumb or he compromised.
I don't know what his problem is, but this is really, really
foolish because you can't say something and then me be able to
(01:17:33):
go on my podcast and do Patel versus Patel where Patel, the
old Patel wins hands down because he said the right answer
and he knew what the answer was.You've lost support from guys
like Sean Ryan. You've lost support from the
people that you've gone out there and spoken to, and you
lied to Baba. I mean that in a really nice
way. Patel, you blew it.
(01:17:54):
It's time to walk away. Take your millions from China,
take whatever else's you got, take your freaking challenge
coins with the dildos on them, and just get out because you're
going to be done. And you're going to be
unhireable for any other reason.No one's going to look at you
and be like, yeah. And then the next thing is
you're going to be in depositions for the next five
years or longer from all of these unlawful terminations.
You did because you did them wrong.
(01:18:15):
Because you didn't ask people who understood how the FBI works
and how federal employment works, you'd think a guy who was
around government as long as youdid understand that.
But you don't because you're kind of a dummy.
And and like, it's really embarrassing because I, I
actually supported you for a while.
As you guys know, the names, thenames of these people that they
were all tied to the special counsel.
What happened apparently was they were fired because they
were part of Arctic Frost. They were unfired because
(01:18:37):
Jeanine Pirro, who's the United States Attorney in the District
of DC, went like, hey, these guys are working on important
stuff for me, can you please unfire them?
And so the people around were like, oh, OK, yeah, sure, we'll
unfire them. And then he landed in Japan, as
I told you yesterday, last night, night before or last
rather, he got down in Japan, got the update and was like no,
they are actually fired. Fire them again.
(01:19:00):
The FBI Agents Association whichis run by basically Marxists.
They are pro government forces who love everything.
Leftism. That's not an exaggeration.
I've broken ways with them long before I ever became a public
figure. The FBI Agents Association went
out and criticized, they said. The actions yesterday in which
the special agents of the FBI were terminated, then reinstated
shortly after, only then to be fired again today highlights the
(01:19:21):
chaos that occurs when long standing policies and processes
are ignored. An agent simply assigned to an
investigation and conducting it appropriately within the law
should never be grounds for termination.
Kind of, except they probably shouldn't have done some of
these things because they were obviously political.
But here's the real problem. They were well documented.
They were clearly lawful. And as I pointed out, Stephen
Miller saying that there was not, it wasn't a loophole.
(01:19:42):
It was by design. The things they did were legal,
which means the agency itself needs reform and you're not
doing it. You're not cutting it, buddy.
I'm going to tell you what they did the other day.
So this is a little bit longer. We're going to do a little bit
of a breakdown of a, a court document here.
This is the the criminal complaint.
I told you I would share this with you yesterday.
So here we go. Actually, let's do a quick
(01:20:03):
Spotify ad. Spotify can be found at
kyleseraphinshow.com. If you're listening on audio
only, you may hear an ad from them right now.
You can also support us overall locals.
Had some of you join that. Very cool.
I appreciate it. Free or paid member Kyle
seraphin.com. That's where our little
community gathers and has discussions.
Let's talk about this. Criminal complaint.
(01:20:24):
Criminal complaint is something that is done in exigent
circumstances when you are in federal law enforcement.
What happens is, is they say we don't have time to go to a grand
jury, which is very uncommon forthe for the federal law
enforcement end. We're talking about not cops,
not reactive, like you were drunk driving and we saw you
driving drunk, so we arrested you and then we go out there
afterwards and we either indict you or we file a criminal
(01:20:45):
complaint. No, we're talking about people
who we've been looking at for a long time, have an open case on,
been gathering information, havebeen doing analysis, have been
doing phone records and subpoenas, who've been doing
interviews with the people around you.
And then we know when it's time to take you down.
We do a grand jury indictment, and then we come and arrest you.
That's what the FBI does. Criminal complaint is something
(01:21:06):
to do with J Sixers. They did it with J Sixers
because it automatically gives you a quick arrest warrant and
there's no such thing as a summons.
The criminal complaint goes to aMagistrate Judge.
You swear that the facts that are in the affidavit are true
and complete to the best of yourknowledge.
You're not giving them all of the information rather, but
you're giving them enough to establish what's called probable
cause. And there's probable cause to
believe that this person committed a federal crime.
Boom. And you can go get them and then
(01:21:27):
you bring it later and you can, you usually indict.
That's usually how it does afterthe criminal complaint.
And then you bring it out in front and you actually prosecute
or they or they plea, which is more common.
This is quite interesting, this story that happened in Michigan.
OK, The criminal complaint is not for terrorism per SE.
It's a it's a part of terrorism because they owned a gun.
(01:21:51):
OK, The Afghan goes through and swears out a violation of 18 USC
924, receiving, transferring, attempting to conspire, transfer
firearms ammunition, knowing or having reasonable cause to
believe that the firearms ammunition will be used to
commit a federal crime of terrorism.
That's pretty interesting. They got a juvenile and they've
got this person called Ali Muhammad.
(01:22:12):
Ali Mohmed. Sorry, Mohmed.
Ali. Not Muhammad.
My bad. What we find by reading this
executive summary is that in August and September of 2025,
they were discussing a attack that was never solidified.
There was no target, which is the big problem, and they were
(01:22:32):
talking about some overseas involvement and they bought
weapons. Most of the how many 73 pages of
this criminal complaint, which is very long by the way.
That means it was a running affidavit that they had and they
were prepared to eventually do something with it.
But the running affidavit that they were building, it's mostly
descriptions of the guns that they have, the accessories.
(01:22:55):
There's an entire page talking about having actually, we should
just roll to it. Let me just find it here real
quick. There's an entire page talking
about weapon mounted flashlights.
I kid you not, the site on this weapon is is is built for close
quarter engagements with fast moving targets.
An online description from a different retail sells this
specific site that gives the shooter an undeniable tactical
(01:23:16):
advantage over your target. They're quoting marketing.
I I like it's a Daniel defense rifle for whatever it is like
really it gives them a tactical advantage there.
This is marketing from Eotech guys.
Eotech is the site that they hadon there.
Based on my training and experience and consultation with
other FBI agents, research into historical mass shootings and
(01:23:39):
terrorist attacks, I know attackers often seek to gain
tactical advantages over targetsand victims.
They've got a APSA rifle in here, one of the Saber series.
They're talking about magazine pockets and pouches.
This is what's in this indictment.
Primary Arms, which is a discount retailer online.
I bought from them before too. There's an entire page here
(01:24:01):
about the stock that they boughtfrom Brownells.
OK, This is almost exclusively about how they went back and got
access to this guy's financial records and what he spent his
money on to build out a rifle that's like halfway decent.
Huge chunks of this. There's the ammunition he
bought, also PSA. That's a good deal, by the way.
Usually PSA bulk ammo. Not a bad place to go and buy it
(01:24:25):
in my experience. There's a whole thing here about
the the weapon light. He purchased an O light Odin S
1500 lumens. This is the part that I found
hilarious. Check this out, I highlighted it
for you. Based on my training and
experience in consultation with other FBI agents, I know that a
flashlight while shooting at night or in low light conditions
can increase the shooters overall situational awareness.
(01:24:45):
An enhanced target identification.
From my firearms training while employed as an FBI agent, I like
I know keeping both hands on a weapon improves the shooter's
accuracy. Mounting the flashlight to a
weapons rail system removes the need for the shooter to hold a
flashlight and the and the firearm in separate hands.
But it still requires momentarily removing the hand
from the weapon to turn the lighting on or off.
(01:25:07):
So a weapon mounted light pressure switch like the one
that Muhammed or Move Med purchased, he's spelling it
differently, increases the shooter's efficiency by allowing
the shooter to function the light and the weapon at the same
time without moving hands from the firearm.
I mean, that's true. That's the dumbest paragraph
I've ever seen in an indictment.That's 27 pages in and it just
keeps going. He bought a hollow sun, an
optic. Like folks, if you're a gun
(01:25:28):
person and you're and you're listening to this, you know what
I'm talking about. He bought a Chinese made optic,
which do really good work. He bought himself an O light,
which is a Chinese knock off of like the Streamlight or the
surefire lights. It's not bad.
I have O lights. I've got EO techs, I have hollow
sons, I have all these accessories.
This is most of it. And there he is.
Oh my God, look at this evil picture.
This guy, he's at a gun range. He's like a tubby dude in what
(01:25:52):
is my friend Steve friend call it a a non restrictive
waistband. There he is holding on to a
weapon system. Gosh, super incriminating Muslim
while buying firearms is essentially it.
Now the crazy thing about all this, I'm going to scan to the
top again because there's no reason not to.
The real crazy piece of this is that the main problem with
(01:26:14):
taking down this group, which they did, was that it was too
early and they were not able to establish who the hell the
overseas connections were. And as far as I can tell, the
major issue that Patel had whilehe went out there and took these
folks down, and he did so prematurely, was that he upset
the overseas equities who are trying to establish was there an
ISIS cell? They make reference to people in
France and in Syria. You would want to know are there
(01:26:36):
real ISIS cells operating in America or are these people
talking BS online and you I can't substantiate it.
And as far as I can tell and everything I hear from the
people in the Intel world, it sounds like they launched this
too soon because he needed APR win because Kyle Seraphin was
hammering about using that jet. I'll awfully or like in a bad
optics way. He tried to distract from jet
gate or plane gate and fired Steve Palmer, whose name is on
(01:26:59):
the screen here along with a bunch of other people.
And he did so without actually identifying the ISIS US link,
which would have been the thing you really wanted to do with
this case. And you imagine that the, the
agent who was working this case actually probably knew that too.
He'd been a special agent for 13years.
So this is not a newbie. And he's been doing, oh, sorry,
(01:27:21):
he has 13 years worth of experience in investigations.
I did wonder about that. That's always I, I blew that.
So let me just let me show you guys what this is an
introduction and background. This is kind of misleading.
I am a special agent with the FBI and I've 13 years of
experience in investigations andapprehensions, prosecutions of
individuals involved in criminaloffenses.
I've been employed with the FBI since December of 2022.
(01:27:44):
That's a new agent now previously a cop.
Interesting that he made his wayto the JTTF right away.
What were they doing in Decemberof 2022 in the Toledo or the OR
the other JTT FS? Oh, they were exclusively going
after J Sixers. The same people that were happy
to grab the MAGA grandmas, the same ones, the JTTF.
(01:28:04):
That's who did all these cases. The same people who did the MAGA
grandma cases are also now doingthe Muslim terrorist cases
because we know we switched focus.
Remember Ron Johnson says that we need people inside.
They're being subverted. No, they're not.
The FBI is doing what the FBI does.
They're doing whatever the hell they want like they always have.
And in the meantime, have they ever done really, really good
(01:28:27):
work on the JTTF? Maybe, But more often they do
this. This is one that that our our
fearless leader who's now in Japan or he's at the massage
parlors in Korea, whatever, he'sdoing his thing.
The FBI arrested two men in connection with a Harvard
Medical School explosion. That sounds like a big deal,
doesn't it? I, I read this yesterday because
Patel actually retweeted it. And as you guys probably can get
(01:28:48):
guess I follow a lot of FBI stuff.
I'm interested. I had an FBI agent reach out to
me and say, hey, you got to lookinto the Harvard explosion
thing. It's complete bullshit.
And so allow me to tell you about the bullshit Fox News
touted it. FBI arrests men in connection
with Harvard Medical School explosion.
The arrests were made by the Boston J Joint Terrorism Task
Force, the JTTF, with assistancefrom the Harvard University
(01:29:09):
police. That sounds like a real big
deal, doesn't it? Allow me to tell you what Cash
Patel said. Since he was quoted in there,
President Trump's administrationhas given federal law
enforcement A mandate to engage with partners at every level to
find bad actors and bring them to justice.
And that's exactly what we're going to do, he said in his best
Valhalla voice. Do you know what the real story
here is, folks? Do you know what's really
(01:29:30):
embarrassing? These are your bad guys.
Officials said that the pair that you see on the screen
caused the explosion by setting off a Roman candle firework.
I'll say it one more time, a singular Roman candle firework.
The firework went off inside of a wooden locker on the 4th floor
(01:29:52):
Research laboratory, which is part of the Department of
Neurobiology, according to the affidavit.
Allow me to just tell you. No one was injured in the
explosion, officials said, because the building was empty.
They set off a firework in a freaking closed locker.
And the JTTF responded. Do you remember a better time?
(01:30:12):
You remember we played that softbearded guy.
That's never. He doesn't remember the Reagan
era. He doesn't remember the Clinton
era. I remember a time when kids
would put cherry bombs and toilets or something, or they
put them in trash cans, or maybethey put them in somebody's
locker and you'd set off a firework and you'd get suspended
because you were a dumbass. Because that's an illegal thing
to do and it's stupid and has the potential of being dangerous
(01:30:34):
even though you're a stupid kid.And the FB is Joint Terrorism
Task Force didn't show up. But then again, there was no
Joint Terrorism Task force because that's a 9/11 construct.
Why do we still have a JTTF if they're going to run down Roman
candles that were set off insideof lockers?
I'm not. I'm not over my skis on this
one. This is truly dumb.
(01:30:57):
But luckily, there's the specialagent in charge of the Boston
Field office, and he's a diversity hire.
How do I know? Because he was the diversity,
equity and inclusion coordinatorfor a little while, like so many
of the others. Now, maybe he's a great guy, but
the odds are this is the kind ofperson that's in management.
I can universally say that thereare people in FBI management and
(01:31:17):
they pretty much suck. He is the special agent in
charge. He's been there for six months
since June of 2025, which means cash per Tel promoted him.
Who promoted him before that into the Senior Executive
Service? Chris Wray, November 23, he was
the he was promoted to special agent charge of the Los Angeles
Field office, the criminal division.
He was there for one year and eight months.
That's about right, 1 1/2 years,18 months, 20 months.
(01:31:38):
That's how long you spend. Long enough to figure out what's
going on in the division and getyour next move forward.
Never actually making change, never actually do anything of
value. He was previously at ASAC in
Houston. I'll have to ask some folks who
worked for him there. He was there doing the COVID
stuff August to 20. He was there from May till
August 2020 to 2022 in Washington, DC.
He was the acting chief diversity officer.
(01:32:01):
You know what that looks like. Hey, we need a black guy to be
in charge of the Office of Diversity and Inclusion.
Will you be our chief diversity officer in an acting role for a
little while? Yeah, no problem.
I'm happy with being a token dude.
There he is. And he was a special agent
before that and he was a supervisory senior supervisory
resident agent or SSRA in Lansing and Traverse City and
(01:32:22):
Marquette. So anyway, that's who's in
charge now, hard charger that's going out and willing to do a
press conference about a no shitfirework, a Roman candle, not
even a cherry bomb that explodedand shot fireworks inside of a
locker and, and, and caused no structural damage to the
building. They go on and act like this was
a real thing, but I kid you not,the FBI announced that it
(01:32:45):
arrested two men who used a Roman candle.
Firework caused an explosion. The explosion was the firework.
The people who were arrested wasa guy named Logan Patterson, 18,
and Dominic Cardoza, 20, who were there from a neighboring,
from a rival school, and they were there doing a prank.
(01:33:05):
Are we cooked? What do you think, guys?
We're going to be OK. I don't think it's going to
work. I think this might be a real
problem because there were real issues that happened before and
you're going to have like a socialist run.
New York City and Boston's no better off.
They're in the same same boat. But luckily we got this going
on. Since we're talking about
(01:33:26):
explosions and FBI investigations, can we talk
about the last little bit here, which I teased out yesterday?
And for those of you that are still with me, thanks so much.
Make sure you guys have liked this video.
You're not going to see this anywhere else, I don't think, at
least not this type of coverage of it.
Capitol Police repeatedly used lethal force on protesters early
on January 6th, the video shows.Reported by my friend Steve
(01:33:48):
Baker and Joe Hanneman, who previously had been guest of
this program. They are with Blaze Media.
This was released yesterday. This is what I was looking for.
You guys ready? The Capitol Police used lethal
force and that lethal force was what is mostly known as less
than lethal tactics or less thanlethal tools.
(01:34:11):
So you need to understand that you can use something that is
referred to as often times in the law enforcement parlance,
you hear it called less lethal. It's not less lethal.
It's supposed to be less than lethal, but that actually means
that you have to use it in the very specific way that it is
less than lethal. And here's the example for those
of you who don't know. If I were to have a baton and I
(01:34:32):
was trained on this and many of you who are law enforcement know
that if you have a baton, it is generally considered less than
lethal as long as you strike below the shoulders.
That means I'm making body shotsto your belly and to your back
to make you stop doing something.
I'm hitting you in the hands or the elbows.
These are pressure points like my my grandma used to shoot at
or my grandfather used to shoot at the deers with ABB gun right
(01:34:54):
in the elbows. That really hurts.
You get hit with one of those things.
It's not going to be life changing for you, but it might
change your life for a few minutes and make you change your
mind about what you're doing. Legs, hands, non genital
strikes, not head and not shoulders.
The minute you take that pain compliance tool where I am now
doing like temporary damage to you with my with my baton and I
take it above the shoulders, I can now inflict what's called
(01:35:16):
deadly force. I can hit you in the neck and
kill you. I can hit you in the temple and
kill you. I can hit you in the back of the
head and turn your lights out. So that becomes a less than
lethal tactic or tool used in a lethal manner.
And so there's a discrimination point there.
And what Baker has discovered here and is showing because of
the way that these things were done, is that not only were the
kinetic projectiles being used from these 40mm launchers, not
(01:35:39):
only were they being deployed, they were being deployed in a
way that was specifically targeting and used in a lethal
manner. They are using what is generally
less than lethal force in a lethal way.
In a span of less than 10 minutes, a huge crowd of
protesters filled the United States Capitol West Plaza
beneath the inauguration stage of January 6th.
(01:36:01):
Capitol Police repeatedly use lethal force in the crowd,
targeting people in the head, inthe neck, in the face, and the
upper body, actions that a use of force expert referred to as
criminally negligent. During that brief period and
span of time, at least 16 peoplewere shot with kinetic impact
projectiles, including nine who took shots to the top of the
(01:36:23):
head, the face, and the base of the neck.
This is not foreign to you. For those of you who have
followed this story, there are people who took it to the face.
There's a famous picture of Joshua Black who has like a hole
in his cheek because he had a rubber ammunition, what is
generally referred to as less than lethal, but it was deployed
in a lethal manner and that's where it gets really sketchy.
These rounds are denied to be shot below the waist or skipped
(01:36:45):
off the payment to strike legs and cause trauma and pain
compliance as I just described with a baton.
None of the rounds observable inthe surveillance footage struck
below the belt. All of them were in the
observably dangerous and potentially lethal category,
which means that they were usingdeadly force.
That's a big deal. What is a bigger deal is that
they were actually trained specifically to not do that.
(01:37:08):
And the person that you're seeing on the screen is one of
the people who did that training.
Deputy Police Chief Eric Waldo claimed that the US Capitol
Police dispatch at 1:11 PM that the officers were using indirect
fire. But surveillance video from the
department itself contradicts that claim.
He also gave repeated warnings to the crowd to disperse or face
chemical munitions. But the video, that's what he
claimed. The video shows that he did not
(01:37:30):
have a bullhorn. And no warnings could be audibly
heard at the ground level video or on the United States Capitol
Police surveillance video. They lied about what they did
and how they did it. And this is really important and
it's going to go to a much bigger story.
He ordered Capitol Police grenadiers to open fire on the
Capitol crowd or the January 6thcrowd at one O 6:00 PM.
This is not news to many of you.The part that's news is that
(01:37:51):
they were specifically trained against it.
And this is Part 1 of the story.This is only the thread, he
said. I've got a crowd fighting with
officers, pushing, throwing projectiles.
I've given warnings and chemicalmunitions.
I need less than lethal teams positions there.
It is less than lethal. That's the way you say it.
Positioned above me to identify agitators and start deploying.
Launch, launch, launch. Typically when you start giving
(01:38:14):
them the order three times is how you do it.
Fire in the hole, fire in the hole, fire in the hole, execute,
execute, execute. Take your pick.
Launch, launch, launch is what he says.
Stan Kephart is an expert. Use of force.
Police expert witness reviewed the footage on January 6th
surveillance and said that firing into the crowd with these
crowd control munitions from an elevated position into a dense
crowd like that and striking targets above the shoulders is
(01:38:36):
both criminally negligent and potentially A lethal act.
There's a wealth of clear and convincing evidence here that
the police are either not trained or equipped to move,
disperse or arrest stragglers. Instead, they adopted A
punishment tactic, inflaming thecrown and resulting in injury
that they are going to be responsible for.
Have they ever had justice? Is our justice system doing
this? Is the FBI doing this and doing
(01:38:57):
this investigation? No, no Steve Baker and the
blazar and that's about it. The grenadiers who fired on the
crowd from the crow's nest during the first hour included
training Officer Shaney Kerkhoff, KERKHOFF, Sergeant
Adam Deskham, DESCAMP and Gary Spiceriff.
(01:39:18):
That's a hard 1S PRIF fke. Blaze News learned there was
another officer named Brett Sorrell who was in there and
holding a riot shield, the videoshowed.
They asked for comment and they got no reply.
So they had training officers that were actually teaching
these people how to do it, and they were the ones who are
actually executing this less than lethal stuff.
(01:39:39):
All right. That's really interesting.
What's more interesting as you read down is that it amped the
crowd up. Steve Baker showed this to
people who actually train on this as well, and special
operators who use them overseas when they're doing things like
embassy protection. When you look at the actual
information produced by FN America, which is one of the
munitions manufacturers, a lot of you guys know FN.
(01:40:02):
They make what's called the three O 3.
It's a 300 or a 3000 PSA poweredcompressed air sending rounds at
over 300 feet per second. It's got tipman 98.
These are paintball guns essentially firing pepper balls.
I actually remember using tip in90 eights when I was a kid.
They can be fired from less than50 feet away.
These things are meant to to strike below the head.
(01:40:25):
In fact, they stress that their patent does not allow people to
aim at the head because it actually changed it from a less
than lethal munition, A retired Army Special Force operative who
has used the FN 3O3 launcher andother less than lethal munitions
overseas said. Firing at the heads from an
elevated perch will cause such rage afterwards that if you were
trying to incite a riot, this ishow you would go about doing it.
(01:40:47):
If you really want to start a riot, shoot them in the head, he
told the Blaze News. You guys seeing this?
Because what Steve is proving, even though he says that the
crowd struck first, is that there were some very specific
attempts to make this worse. And so pain compliance and so on
(01:41:07):
was not being done. They unloaded, unload all of
them, take them out is one of the stuff that was said over the
radios. This gets really interesting
until we read down to the end here, because I'm not, I'm not
quite sure that everybody understands what's happening.
They actually have used these munitions, by the way, in the
past and they've actually killedpeople.
If you got shot in the eye socket, you could die.
You guys saw people had their face penetrated as we talked
(01:41:29):
about Joshua Black, etcetera. I want to keep scanning down to
the bottom of this page. I typically aim for the ground
is what people who are professional said.
People who have been in the CDU position, that's their other
crowd disbursement unit, I think.
But the person that's on the screen right there.
US Capitol Police Officer ShannyKirkhoff shows a rubber bullet
to soldiers at the the Maryland Army National Guard Barracks,
(01:41:50):
115th Military Police Battalion in Salisbury, MD, during a joint
training event that took place in January of 2021.
This gal who has kind of a managed build, as you can tell,
does an awful lot of training and has spent time, is actually
considered to be like someone who is an expert.
(01:42:11):
Shawnee SHAUNI. The thing that's quite
interesting that Steve dropped in the end here, which I'm
interested in is while UnderoathKirkoff said I typically aim for
the ground and that was not the case, was actually one of the
people who testified in some of the trials.
(01:42:34):
A former Civil Disturbance Unit officer told Blaze that this
woman left the US Capitol Policeabout six months after January
6th and he's been unable to reach her ever since.
Her colleagues heard she went togo work for a three letter
federal agency. He said she immediately wiped
all of her social media, her phone numbers and her e-mail
accounts and no one was able to reach her after that.
(01:42:56):
It sounds like she committed perjury.
So that seems kind of problematic.
And it sounds like these things were actually stirred up.
I'm concerned. I'm concerned that nobody at the
FBI is actually going out after this stuff.
I'm concerned that the federal law enforcement that we've been
told is actually getting straightened up is too busy,
(01:43:17):
like hiring and firing people who did legal cases and they're
not doing the thing they're supposed to be doing.
So where's that Dan Bongino who said he was going to be able to
solve the the mysteries of January 6th and solve these
problems? Where is the the answers that
these people that 2000 plus family, you know, got destroyed
over this stuff? If you think that they're not
going to turn around and come right back at you.
(01:43:39):
And if you think that what's going on in New York City is not
sort of a bellwether sort of event that kind of tells you
where this country sits and how foolish we are, You guys
remember that They went out and they patently lied about someone
being president of the United States for a very long time and
they had no problem doing it. And then when they get put
underoath, they just tell you like, yeah, I said things that
are false and I don't care. This is Ian Sam's Speaking of
(01:44:02):
soft men who don't even grow beards.
This guy was a kind of a glow worm looking dude.
If you guys recall. If you.
It's easy to remember what he looked like.
I don't need to pick on a map, but that's what he looks like.
He's a glow worm looking guy that served under Biden.
He was one of the spokespeople that apparently was like really
confident that Joe Biden was awesome and did a great job and
was totally tuned in. I think our country was running
on autopilot. Most of you think the same.
(01:44:23):
It's really scary when they actually tell you and they don't
even feel remorse. It's the same thing as like CNN
being worried about Mandami changing his tune.
We can already see what it is. How often would you say that you
interacted with the president inperson?
I interacted with him pretty infrequently.
So weekly? Monthly what?
(01:44:44):
What are we talking? About very infrequent.
I think I met with the presidenta handful of times during my
tenure in the white. House, I want to introduce
Exhibit 2 as it's being passed around.
It's a tweet from Alex Thompson at Ezio summarizing.
Pulled a couple quotes of as theinterview, did it on MSNBC and
(01:45:09):
one of the quotes says when I deal with him, he is sharp, him
being President Biden and he is asking tough questions.
Do you recall this? I've got to say, that doesn't
look anything like the presidentthat I know When I deal with
him, he's sharp. He's asking tough questions.
That's the President Biden that so many of us experience every
single day. So this statement, the basis for
(01:45:29):
this statement was your interactions somewhere between
one and five times. Yes, OK.
Do you think that's a bit misleading?
I, I think it was pretty direct and honest and said that when I
do deal with him, he's, you know, sharp and he was asking
incisive questions during my meetings with him.
(01:45:50):
But dealt with him five times in24 months.
That's not exactly a large scopeof knowledge on how he interacts
with staff. You know, I think it's missing
some context. I don't.
Do you think that statement suggests that you deal with it
more than you did? I don't think so.
(01:46:12):
I mean I. Spoke about.
My own interactions with them, that's the President Biden that
we experience every day. But to the best of your
recollection, for meetings, two were in person.
Two that were the two that I described to you that I at the
very onset in the Oval. One was a Zoom where he was at
(01:46:32):
Camp David and I was a participant in the meeting, the
phone call. I think there was another
meeting but I or another engagement but I I.
Don't want to belabor you with the boring lies and
recollections of someone who dealt with the president 5 * /
24 months and said that he sees him every day on television.
All these guys got up there and they just straight lied.
(01:46:54):
They had no problem with it and they still have no problem with
it because it accomplishes theiragenda, which is the same thing
that we saw Mandami do. He was this nice guy on TikTok.
Oh, how could he be like this guys?
This is who they are. They've never lied to you about
it. They've told you what's
important and they've also told you that you're a bad person if
you recognize it. I do think that this is where
(01:47:15):
the backswing is going to go. This is Brett Weinstein from
2019. This is this whole problem of
people on the right are now telling you what the purity test
is. Again, I told you guys have a
big tent. You let in a bunch of freaking
clowns. That's what the circus has.
Clowns and freaks and people whocan dance and, and, and people
who are doing trapeze artistry and animal trainers and all the
other weird stuff, right? Big tent.
(01:47:36):
You should think of circus. You've got people now like like
Mark Levin and apparently Ben Shapiro's going on this wagon as
well and Brandon Tatum and all the people that are part of the
Turning Point organization and abunch of other stuff too.
And they're telling you what is and what is not acceptable for
you to believe. So you're going to see not a
huge backswing, you're just going to see some backswing of
exactly what Brett Weinstein is talking about.
(01:47:57):
When you start putting like Zoram Mandami, that's one of the
possibilities. And the other possibility is
like a bunch of really aggressive, high testosterone
angry men. Because there are still some of
those in this country and it's not going to look good.
And they do not care if you callthem a bigot.
If you force them into a againstthe wall with claims of bigotry,
you wear out the ability to use that as anything.
(01:48:19):
As men today, I certainly am notare not shamed by you saying
things when people who are saying them are obviously liars
and disingenuous and will lie toyour face to get their outcomes.
Weinstein warned about this. I think this is probably what's
happening next, for whatever it's worth.
So the concern that I have is that the intersection list may
end up creating the very enemy they claim they are fighting.
(01:48:43):
They're going to back straight white males against the wall and
speak of the devil. White nationalism will emerge
from that cohort and when it does, those people will feel
empowered and they will feel self-righteous because they have
been accused of things that are frankly a form of bigotry.
(01:49:05):
They have been accused by bigotsof oppressing others, and they
have been told that they are notentitled to well-being no matter
how they individually have behaved.
And So what do they have to loseby cooperating together against
the intersectionalists and essentially creating the world
that the intersection list claimalready exists?
(01:49:28):
Now, what we should do about this is not entirely clear, but
one thing that must happen is wemust level up our thinking.
And we must understand that backing people against the wall
who have a genetic basis for cooperation is very dangerous.
Because history tells us that movements created by such people
can be very destructive and thatultimately they may turn into a
(01:49:54):
genocidal menace game. Theoretically, it is terrible
mistake, was a terrible mistake for the DI crowd to go after the
straight white males because it created this very same impulse
like, well, if I can't win because all of the things that I
am are declared no good, then what exactly is my incentive to
(01:50:18):
play along with the civilizationthat's doing that to me?
And my point here that I wasn't talking specifically about
anti-Semitism in that clip, but the logic is the same.
What a terrible error it is to go after anybody who has
legitimate questions about the interaction between the United
(01:50:41):
States and not only a foreign state, but a particular
administration that has a very hard line bent within that
foreign state. You're allowed to have
questions, you're in America. That's one of the great things
that pisses me off, that people who have not walked in my shoes,
who have no idea who really I amas a person, get to tell me how
I get to identify myself. So.
It's like I was like, you can't tell.
(01:51:03):
Me. How I get to identify myself.
You can't tell me how I get to call myself.
Like, screw you. Like who?
That's not OK. Like that is not OK.
You have no right to tell anybody how they should identify
themselves and how they see themselves in the world.
Like you have not walked throughmy battles.
You have not walked through my life.
(01:51:25):
You don't even know my personal story.
So that's how I really I that just, that just boils me up.
Let me just say that was CorrineJean Pierre Sideshow Bob, the
liar who stood up at the podium and claimed all kinds of false
things about our previous president.
We don't even know the struggle she's been to.
Allow me to say that the struggle she's been to are
(01:51:46):
nothing compared to the friends that I have who have gone
through real struggles, who havegone out there and taken life,
who have gone out and destroyed things on behalf of this country
so that she can live and be a millionaire and complain about
her sexual identity that you aresupposed to recognize or be
really empathetic to. I got to tell you, I do not
care. And there's a lot of capability
for violence that still exists in my age bracket and below.
(01:52:10):
And you've told everybody there that we're all bad people and we
don't care about it anymore. The wolf crying is gone.
And so you're going to end up with something really, really
ugly here. And that's not threatening.
That's just all like a recognition of biological
reality. You've painted a number of
people who have been fringed. And I don't think we're going to
do it in New York because I don't, I don't have any interest
in going to New York. But I'll tell you, wherever I
end up in the next couple years,better stay the hell away from
(01:52:32):
me. Better keep your freaking
government away from me. You better not act like I care
about whatever it is that you want.
You better stay away from my children.
We just had that on the ballot for Texas last night.
I voted that Texas has to have aconstitutional amendment to
affirm that a parent is the primary decision maker of their
child because we are living in an unserious time.
But you're going to find that there are still some serious men
that are out there. We don't have soft beards.
(01:52:56):
We don't wear denim shirts, having never had canned
calluses. So whether I get threats because
I'm calling Cash Patel a clown or where I'm calling out Korean
John Beer a clown, they're all clowns.
These are all soft actors. Not everybody's a soft actor.
I think Brett Weinstein honed inthat that exists.
I'll put that clip over at kyleseraphin.com.
(01:53:16):
I know a lot of you guys feel the same way.
Don't push us because it's already there.
I think most of us are primed. When I send, my mood is is
Crusader. I think there's a fair number of
us that are having that sensibility.
That's why I played John Lovell the other day.
He has a light hearted sense on it, which is that you can just
go do things. Don't make us do things folks
you shouldn't because most of ushave been like, I think a
(01:53:38):
handful of folks that I know have been preparing their whole
life. We just don't have to do it.
But as my buddy Steve friend once told me, the first round in
your in your weapon that's meantto defend your family has
already been fired. It's just a question of whether
or not the target presents itself or you die first.
If you end up expiring and your life goes all the way to the
end, then lucky you. And if not, then the round's
already been fired. So there's no, there's no,
(01:54:00):
there's no decision. It's just a matter of target
presentation. I think that's what we're
looking at here. I do have something funny for
you guys. Let me just go ahead and
encourage you again, like the video, like the program?
Follow us over on Spotify more and more of you finding us on
Spotify is really cool because Ithink it's the best way to watch
it and nobody has told me otherwise.
So check it out Kyle seraphinshow.com you guys can
also watch over here. If you're watching on rumble
thumbs up put us on the leaderboard same story YouTube
(01:54:22):
boost the algo drop me a commenttell me what you agree with tell
me what you don't agree with tell me what you love tell me
who your favorite character was and escape from New York or if
you think we should build that wall around it, I don't care
subscribe to the channel there XYou guys know what to do go
watch us on one of the other channels.
We don't get monetized that wellon X.
So if you guys want to watch us and help the show, that's how
you do it. Locals, Kyle seraphin.com those
through all the places. That's it.
(01:54:42):
Let's do something funny. I like Tyler Fisher.
I don't think he's getting enough play these days.
Tyler Fisher's a comedian. He's apparently in Austin.
He's going to move back to New York because he's just had
enough of this good life. Here.
Hi guys, comedian, actor, Tyler Fisher here and I just made the
decision I am moving back to NewYork City.
I've been in Texas for a year and I'm I have to be there for
(01:55:06):
mum Donnie. I just do.
I know a lot of people will be surprised by this but like dude
I'm so sick of living in Texas where I don't even pay state
income tax. Think about that.
So I have to like find things todo with my money.
Like I this is my third coffee of the day.
I'm going to buy a paddle board.I'm hiking new shoes and it's
like I'm just done with it. I have to give up 52% of my
(01:55:28):
income. I have a car which is like, it's
so toxic sis, white male of me, you know what I mean?
And they're charging money to take buses here.
Charging money. So what do homeless people do?
If they want to go on there and sleep and piss and shit and stab
somebody? They have to go and fundraise to
get on a bus. Like what?
The fuck? So I'm just going to get back
there and get back to the gays for Palestine protests.
(01:55:50):
Even the bikers aren't assholes.And like, nobody has assaulted
me today. I'm sitting here, literally.
I got cash hanging out of my pockets.
No one's called me a racist toxic sis white male.
What am I doing here? America's to be abused and live
in a tiny studio apartment and welcome illegal migrants into
your space. I'm going to have probably 10
living with me, sharing a bed because I care and my dating
(01:56:11):
life here is amazing. Like women they like.
When I take charge, they like like When I leave, they're nice.
They're feminine. Barf.
Gag me. I prefer a woman with a shaved
head, 8 cats, who hates men, thepatriarchy, but still wants me
to pay the bill. And what if I get attacked right
now? What am I supposed to call the
racist cops? No, no, no, mom.
Donnie's going to have therapists come and talk out the
(01:56:33):
problems. Hey, excuse me, why did you
just. Shoot that guy in the face.
Maybe it's a a childhood fear ofeye contact really get to the
bottom of the problem. You know, I'm tired of feeling
like a man because they're it isno gender.
You know, there's more and more of that.
If you guys don't follow Tyra Fisher, you should.
He's hysterical. And yes, obviously that was
(01:56:54):
satire. If you guys don't know, he got
kicked off Gutfeld too. He decided not to go back on
Gutfeld because they accused himof being a sexist, some scandal
nonsense. And he actually had a really
long Expo on that that I watched.
And I feel bad for the guy because he seems like he's got
the right sense, the right senseof humor for this program, too.
That's it for today. I know we went really long.
I think tomorrow is going to be really exciting and potentially
(01:57:16):
Friday being even more so. So stick around, share the show,
subscribe if you haven't. Just I'm just looking with some
information that I'm not able toshow you yet.
I think we're going to have a good time.
God bless you. Hang in there, go have a good
day. You don't live in New York City,
so everything's OK. Thanks for listening to the Kyle
(01:57:37):
Seraphin show, streamed live weekdays on rumble.com/kyle
Seraphin. Follow Kyle on Twitter, Truth
Social and Instagram at Kyle Seraphin.