Episode Transcript
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(00:12):
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
enthusiast, Second Amendment defender, and recovering FBI
agent Kyle Seraphin. Well my friends, welcome to the
(00:39):
Kyle Seraphin show for Monday, August the 18th.
We are rolling right now. Welcome to your week.
I hope it is going well so far. Can't really complain on this
end. Although I had one of those
moments where I was really glad that I was 43 and not 63.
Yesterday I was carrying my kidsplastic ride along Jeep through
my garage which was a disaster area 'cause I was doing a
reorganizing and I stepped on a Rubbermaid lid.
(01:03):
Any of you have ever done this before?
They're basically slick like glass.
So I just busted my ass and fellover and I was like, oh man, I
wonder how bad Monday morning isgoing to feel since I landed on
my right side on my shoulder andI'm a bum and scraped up my foot
and it doesn't feel that bad. So hurrah for relative youth, I
(01:23):
guess is what I was feeling. I was feeling grateful this
morning as I put my feet on the ground.
And then I immediately got pissed off because I went and
found out that our America Firstrepresentatives and the folks
that are supposed to be pushing forward the agenda for making
America healthy again and choosing America First and not
foreign conflicts and all this other kind of nonsense.
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It's all theater. It's not to say that Democrats
are any better. I just don't want anyone to
think that I'm over here making an argument on behalf of
Democrats. I think they're awful and they
think they're awful. So we're going to cover that
today as well. Democrats actually think that
they are so bad that they don't even have an idea of who would
be in charge of their party on the national level.
That does tell us that this is an opportunity.
(02:05):
And unfortunately, as is classic, I think that
Republicans are squandering thatopportunity and they're doing
things like talking and not doing.
So we're going to have a show that might be a little bit
controversial. We're going to talk about the
white man's burden. We're going to talk about the
historical concept of white guilt and when it came in and
this this push, which is a leftist push that has been
adopted by people on the right. And then the last piece that's
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really bothering me and I just cannot get over it.
And so if you are part of this audience and you listen to this
program and you are over the ageof 60, take a deep breath.
I'm not talking about you most likely because you're probably
not running for office. You're probably not in politics.
If you are and you're holding a spot where someone younger
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should be stepping up and you'retaking party resources or you're
taking the institutional resources, then maybe it is for
you because Marsha Blackburn is going to run for governor.
I woke up to find Tim Burchett, who people think is great and I
think is mediocre at best. He's out there pushing forward
this agenda that we're going to have a 73 year old lady that
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should be. That's that's how Tennessee
should be run. The best man for the job of
governor in Tennessee is a woman.
Because at the end of the day, people in national politics that
claim to be on the right can't help themselves but pick up this
garbage feminist mantle and everything about it is damaging
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to women and to the rest of the country.
So that's where I'm go with that.
And that may be a little bit controversial.
Before we get started with that,we'll just talk about my friends
over at Patriot Coolers. Nothing controversial about
putting hot coffee in a mug and then hoping it stays hot.
Actually, that's the sort of default position that we can go
pick one of these things up. Same story with cold drinks.
Every single place that we go, the Seraphin house is toting
(03:54):
around multiple patriot coolers.From the cooler that sits in the
back of our minivan to the patriot coolers that are sitting
on the table. Yesterday we went to a splash
pad. I think it was like 138,000°
outside. I felt like I was underneath a
flippin microscope or a magnifying glass.
The guy was just burning us and the kids are running around
through the water, which was disgusting and, you know, public
(04:14):
water full of chlorine and what not.
And they all got dehydrated. But luckily we had at least the
last remnants of my wife and I'sPatriot coolers.
I had the 40 oz and we had a 30 oz.
And they're both filled up and the kids drained all of that.
So we ended up being extra thirsty and tired, but beverages
were still cold. There was still ice in them even
after sitting in 138,000 degree heat in the Texas summer.
(04:35):
Yeah, even at like 6:00 in the evening, it's still freaking
crazy hot. If you guys want something
that's going to do the job, keepyour beverages cold and or hot,
Patriot coolers.com at the website patriotcoolers.com.
The promo code Kyle. It's just my name.
We'll save you 10%. You guys can see a link in the
show description. If you want one that is
customized like this one, this is a suspendables flag, 16 ounce
(04:58):
coffee mug. This is really good for your
desk. If you want people to know that
you're kind of a radical and youkind of think that America is
not what it should be, you know that you have this hope for a
future and they are not realizing it at the moment.
In any case, check them out. Link in the show description.
We appreciate you guys supporting our sponsors as they
support us. We're going to get into today's
program. Right now
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I'm leaning back. OK, so we're going to lead off
with something that I'm not super excited about, but I did
take a phone call before I got started today.
I actually took 2 phone calls from George Hill.
The first one I couldn't answer because I was busy.
And the second one, he's like, hey, man, are you awake?
Are you good? Are you up?
George Hill is my suspendable friend and brother.
He was at the FBI for about 11 and change years in the Boston
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field office. And his focus often times is on
geopolitics and on the international sphere.
His concerns often are about counterterrorism and the way
that our country interacts with other countries and what that
might mean for the sort of security apparatus of our
troops. That's his focus often times.
And as he rightly pointed out, we don't often talk about
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international politics, mostly because I don't care.
I don't care about other countries.
I guess that plays into today's like a white man Burden.
There's a couple of different stories.
There's a story about Tim Burchett going to India fest.
We're going to just light that up real quick.
There is a there's a poem that was written by Rudyard Kipling,
which goes back about 100 and 25126 years at this point.
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And it was a request for Americato engage in imperialism.
That's where a lot of this goes back to.
It used to be that people thought that there was this
white man's burden to go out andcivilize the uncivilized in the
world. Do you know that?
And now what we do in order to civilize, and we don't export
our good ideas. We import crappy people into
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this country and then just take on their crappy ideas.
That's what we've done recently.And a lot of that comes from
this feminism, this feminine perspective where you're like,
oh, but they're so they need to be here because what else will
they do? And some of the stories that we
have are absolutely absurd. I've got a really, really fun
one. This is from, I think it's from
NBC News. We'll get to about how we
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shouldn't tax people from crappycountries that come to the
United States, earn money in this country and then want to
send it back. The remittance taxes.
We shouldn't do that. It's mean because how else are
we going to support other countries with our monies and
our economy? Bizarre, absolutely bizarre.
The first thing, though, is thatGeorge Hill called and he was
very upset about this meeting that is going to be happening at
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the White House. It was the first thing that I
saw before I went to bed last night.
And so I'm going to read you Vladimir Zielinski, who is a
Democrat hero and a penis piano playing president of this
country called Ukraine, which was next to a bigger country
called Russia. And then the bigger country
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invaded the smaller country withthe piano penis playing
president. Do I sound kind of like Kamala
Harris talking to a kindergartner?
I feel like that's what the onlyway that I feel about Ukraine.
All right, here. Here's what he said.
He actually went out on X. This is a message to Americans.
Vladimir Zelinsky said, quote, I've already arrived in
Washington and tomorrow I'm meeting with President Trump
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that tomorrow is today. We will be also speaking with
European leaders. I'm grateful to the POTUS for
the invocation. We have a strong desire to end
this war quickly and reliably. And peace must be lasting, not
like it was years ago when Ukraine was forced to give up
Crimea and part of our east in the Donbas.
And Putin simply used it as a springboard for this new attack
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when Ukraine was given so-calledsecurity guarantees in 1994.
But they didn't work. Of course.
Crimea should not have been given up then, just as
Ukrainians did not give up Kiev,Odessa, some other city that I
don't know how to pronounce and don't care about.
After 2022, Ukrainians are fighting for their land, for
their independence. And now our soldiers have
successes in the Donks and the Sumi regions.
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I'm confident that we will defend Ukraine effectively,
guaranteeing security, and that our peoples will always be
grateful to Donald Trump, everyone in America and every
partner and ally for their support and invaluable
assistance. Russia must end this war which
it started. I hope that our joint strength
with America and our European friends will force Russia into
real peace. Thank you.
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No, I, I think, I think what, what should be said is that you
lost the war, that you, you haveceded some territory and you're
going to have to lose that. He doesn't seem like he's ready
to go and compromise. And this is the real problem.
And so this is the, the coveragethat's going out there Now.
We're told, if you actually believe some of the things that
Trump has been pushing out across social media, that he is
not going to grant them a, a membership into NATO, which you
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guys already know what I think. But I think NATO should be
disbanded because there is no Soviet Union and NATO existed as
a Cold War mechanism. That war for which it was
created is no longer there. So why do we still part of it?
We could still have individual, you know, we can have individual
treaties with individual countries.
But this idea that this multilateral European focused
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anti Russia, anti Soviet thing that doesn't exist anymore needs
to exist. That all seems like a military
industrial complex money grab tome.
Maybe I'm crazy, maybe it's justthat I don't care and the
Europeans continue to make awfuldecisions on their own.
Why should we fund it? Unclear.
There's a headline that comes from, let's start with ABC News.
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It says Trump says Zelensky can end the Russian war almost
immediately. Now, this comes on the heels of
Donald Trump meeting with Vladimir Putin out in Russia.
I'm sorry, in Alaska. And they had this like, big show
of force where they walked by all these next generation
fighter jets and they flew AB2 bomber over the top.
And everybody thought it was pretty cool.
And everyone was like, look at this massive flex.
OK, Yeah. Show you.
You showed him that we have thisgreat military power.
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And we do. If you think that Putin didn't
know what that was or what it looked like, if anybody thought
that that was somehow a threat to Putin, that seems silly to
me. Like, 'cause the United States
president walking next to you basically makes you the safest
person, certainly in this hemisphere.
You're on American soil. So there was no threat to to
Putin at all. All right, Trump saying that the
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that Zelensky could end the war almost immediately.
And he said this prior to Zelensky getting in and meeting
with a host of European leaders who are going to be all in
Washington. Donald Trump on Sunday teased
out what he said would be a big day for Ukrainian President
Vladimir Zelensky. Hopefully that that little turd
wears a suit. You're seeing the picture on the
screen right now from the last time he was in the White House
when he got kicked out. You remember that?
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And he was wearing his like coolguy T-shirt, like I like that
T-shirt. I think it'd be cool to have AT
shirt that was a black Henley button up with like some kind of
a emblem, like a suspendables embroidered piece on there.
But you're going to show up to negotiate with the most powerful
person in the most powerful country in the history of the
world at this point. And you're going to wear a
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Henley from like American Apparel or whatever the hell is
making those things from from Ukrainian apparel?
I don't know. I think it's I think it's
embarrassing because it's not like you're under threat.
Do you remember the beginning ofthe Ukrainian conflict when he
was running around and OD Green and like putting on putting on
those like those commando sweaters and acting like at any
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moment, like Russians were goingto kill him off.
And the Russians had no interestin it because if they did, they
would have actually killed him off.
And then we're supposed to believe that that he was just
this hero And how quickly our media went after that.
Really silly. If you guys have never seen the
Zelensky special we actually created.
We being the suspendables at that moment in history, created
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a suspendables T-shirt because he went in front of Congress and
he gave some speech and he had like a, he had like a hoodie on
or something. And in the middle of it was the
Ukrainian symbol. So it was like an OD green with
yellow. And so we created an OD green
with a yellow badge, Zelensky special T-shirt.
And my buddy Gerardo Boyle was slinging that for a little while
at the suspendables merch shop, which I don't even know.
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I think I deleted the slide for it.
But if you guys want to go checkit out, it's the Dash
suspendables.com. You're welcome to go back and
take a look. I think he probably still has
some Zelensky special. They are pretty funny.
All right, today there will be asummit with Trump's meeting with
Russian President after rest thethe summit that he had in
Alaska. Trump appears to have demanded
or dropped his demand that Russia agreed to an immediate
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ceasefire. Now he's pressing Kiev to accept
territorial concessions. So this is the concern.
You saw the tweet. The tweet was essentially that,
Vladimir, that Zelensky wants noconcessions, he wants a peace
deal, but it just 100% that Russia is unilaterally going to
drop and there's no way they're going to do that.
The Russians have too much at stake.
They've put too much into this. They're not going to just walk
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away and see territorial gains that they have.
On Sunday, Trump explicitly saidthat Ukraine will not regain
Crimea, occupied by Russians since 2014.
That was something that was kindof alluded to.
They don't want to have a deal where they lose.
But you can't be in a war where you're losing and then think
that you get to win simply because the United States is
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going to lean in on it. President repeated that Ukraine
will not be allowed to join NATO, which is the other thing
they want. The other thing we have to be
worried about is a NATO light Lite, some sort of light and
version where they are protectedby NATO, even if they're not
like a, a signatory to the treaty.
That can't be the case. We can't take on another NATO
ally at this point. And I don't think we should take
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on any NATO allies. I think we should be divesting
from NATO. But we'll see what happens.
The the issue is, is that the first lady put out this like
heartfelt letter and all the maggot people fell all flipping
over themselves. They're like, she's so
compassionate and she's so great.
Look at the heartstrings and everybody.
This reminds me of a Sting song called I hope the Russians love
their Children too. If you guys have never heard
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that, it's worth a listen. And it's this appeal that like,
at the end of the day, like we all love our children.
And so violence is terrible and war is bad, and mutually assured
destruction would be the way that would happen.
So everybody should sort of divest from nuclear arms.
It didn't work then, and nobody got rid of their nuclear
weapons, and it doesn't really work now.
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There is a bigger concept of peace through strength that if
you want peace, you prepare for war, that you show that war
would be so intolerable that youwon't be able to walk out of it.
That's the move. Ukraine can't make that happen.
the United States could. It's like you could probably end
all of all of the people that matter in Moscow in in a split
second. But we would also suffer
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greatly. Or would we?
No, we would. We don't want, we don't want any
of that. Peace through strength means
that you're strong enough that nobody wants to fight you.
And so you don't have to fight. But unfortunately, if you have
your wife tugging at your heartstrings and telling you all
of these, you know, these sad things, there's children and
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they're suffering. There's children suffering all
over the world. The interesting thing is, is
that the Russians sort of hold on to this like kind of stoic
attitude. And it doesn't seem like it's
moved anywhere and you wouldn't expect them to.
It's like, why would why would you be swayed by somebody?
It's kind of like when somebody else's wife scolds you.
They don't have any authority. They don't have any.
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They don't have any pull on you.If your friend's wife tells you
something, you're like, that's your wife.
That's not my problem. That's the way I feel about it.
That's the way I feel about whenpeople scold me on social media.
It's like, who the hell are you?Melania Trump thinks that you
should stop the war. So what?
Nothing. So nothing is what it looks like
to me. In any case.
We'll see. I'm.
I'm a little bit concerned only because it it gives Donald Trump
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sort of that wiggle room. And it also opened up sort of
the that softness that exists where Americans kind of go like,
yeah, we should. We should be the best of what it
is now. We should probably be a hard
line right now. That's my take on it.
I don't want to see us spend anymore blood.
I don't want to see us spend anymore treasure.
I certainly don't want to see any boots on the ground from
Americans. I don't need any of this.
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And neither do most Americans because they voted for this guy
who kept claiming America first.America first should mean
something just in the way that make America great should mean
something that make America healthy again.
All of these things, they all get watered down over time.
And I think that's where we're going to go with today.
I'm really frustrated with it because there's nothing worse
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than someone telling you principles and you're like, OK,
I sign on for that. I am on board for America First.
To me, I'm just a regular guy who hears someone say that.
And I think that means that we're going to take care of our
house first. We're going to get ourselves in
order. And if there's an ability for us
to move forward and help other people too, great.
But I'm going to do my lawn. I'm going to make sure that my
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home is painted. I'm going to make sure that my
windows are properly sealed up and ready for winter.
And then if I can get done before the fall, then I'm going
to go and try to help out neighbors.
But first, I'm going to solve what happens right in front of
me. And there's a lot of reasons why
you should do that, especially when you're the president of 350
million or so people that live in this country.
However many of them are living illegally.
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Shouldn't you be focused on the folks here 1st?
And all of the problems that we have, of which there are copious
amounts, there are significant levels of socio and political
and economic struggles that people are having.
And you could go out there and you could be like, yeah, we're
going to get that done. 1st. Or you could try to focus on
everything all at once and get nothing done, which is kind of
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what I always see Republicans do.
They always float out these great ideas and everybody gets
jazzed up about it. And then you turn around and,
and then we all get to die a little bit because nothing gets
done properly. I see you guys in the chat out
there. I like that you put your mask on
1st, right? Right.
Why do you put your mask on 1st?Because if you're unconscious or
you no longer have functional consciousness because you don't
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have enough oxygen, the partial pressure of oxygen has dropped
too low in the cabin. Then you're no longer able to
serve any of the other needs. If I don't take care of me
first, I'm not going to be able to take care of my children.
If I get sick and I'm in bed or I'm no longer able to function,
if I break myself falling in thegarage like an idiot, then who's
going to carry the kids stuff? Not my wife, not my neighbor.
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I can't lean on them first. They might if they have help, if
they have time, but it's my job.You got to do your job first.
So I agree with all this. Or you could be like this guy
who everybody thinks is such a great dude and people who live
in Tennessee, they love him. I've met Tim Bersch I think like
probably 2 Times Now. Both times I found him utterly
underwhelming. Maybe it's because of soft crap
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like this. And then you go and look him up
and it's like, look, I don't need to know that much about the
guy. He first got married.
He's 60 years old. So he is like the the youngest
of the boomers folks. He's 60 years old.
His first marriage was four years long.
And his wife, as I understand it, either was convicted of or
she was credibly accused and shehad six counts of like identity
theft. And then they got a divorce.
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They were unable to to keep it together.
If your first foray is into marriage at my age today because
he got married at my age as of right now, and your marriage is
to someone who is a lying scamming criminal.
And then your second marriage happened after my marriage
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started and my marriage started when I was 31.
He was 48 years old when he got married the second time.
He has no children of his own. He adopted his his second wife's
kid. There's nothing conservative
about these things. I'm not trying to like crap on
people here or like set some standard like the sort of, you
know, there's no true Scotsman or whatever it is.
I'm not trying to do a fallacy here.
But at the end of the day, thereare things that are actually
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conservative. Like, there are values that are
conservative and then there's Republicans, and Republicans
always lose slowly. They don't win, whereas
Democrats constantly attempt to win, even to the detriment of
themselves, which is what we're seeing right now.
Right now, they're in like one of those reorganizational years
where they just, they blew the entire wad on horrible ideas.
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They've got no one decent in their bench.
They've gone to a completely ridiculous place
philosophically. They they're all their ideas
have finally come to run into each other at full speed and
nobody can get get after it. But like, is it not kind of
disgusting that Tennessee, whichshould be one of the reddest red
red places there is? And then when you go meet people
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in Tennessee, they're what you expect.
They're like what I remember OG Texans to be like, just leave me
the hell alone. Get the government out of it.
If this is your hero, you guys are screwed.
This just came from his this just came out this morning.
He just pushed this forward and we're going to get there because
again, I think that our, our local politics, which is where
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you should actually have a lot of say your, your elected
representatives that are in state, which this guy did, or
they're at the federal level, but they're your, your local
congressman. If you can't get them to just
focus on things that matter to you and represent you to
Washington, they're busy doing this crap.
It's, it's all over. And I don't mean to be a black
pill again, but I'm just saying I'm so disappointed that we
(22:06):
can't field a single person thatjust gets it.
Keep the government out of your business.
That's your entire job as a Republican.
They actually used to campaign on it in my lifetime, right?
That was the whole idea. Like Trump and Reagan, the 2
greatest presidents of my lifetime, one of them actually
sort of stated that the government was the problem.
And then you guys have cheered on Donald Trump, who pretty much
(22:27):
thinks the government is the solution because he's a 90s
Democrat. That's how much we've lost.
Here's Tim Birchett here with the Republic.
Hey everybody, Tim Birchett justleaving India Fest in Knoxville,
TN down here at the Indian Temple right in right across the
line and from Knox County in Loudon.
You get a chance to come out. Indian folks are just wonderful.
(22:50):
The food's spectacular, the people are friendly and just
can't have a better day in Knoxville.
What a day. Thank you all for sending me
here. What is that?
And you're like, well, how's that?
What does that have to do with Zelensky going to the White
House? I'll tell you what it has to do
in my mind. You're Tim Burchett and you
represent a, a district in Tennessee and you're going to
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India Fest to talk about Indian culture.
You're going to wear Indian flowers around your neck.
You're going to go and talk about how like everything about
them is conservative because they love family and Mary.
No, they don't. They're they're not conservative
because they're not. They don't have American values,
which are Christian values. The end.
How do I know how many people were Hindu in the founding of
this country? It was a, it was a non
(23:33):
represented part of this country, period.
How many people in America need to care about what happens in
Ukraine, whether Ukraine sees territory or doesn't?
Does it does it benefit anybody here in the United States?
I would say no. It certainly doesn't benefit
anybody that I know. So Donald Trump's position can
(23:54):
be really simple. We are not going to give you
anything. You are welcome to buy with your
own money any of the munitions we sell 'cause we sell them to
lots of countries. And you could be one of those
countries. And if you cannot afford to
maintain a war with Russia, who we don't have a declared war
with and who we pretending is this enemy.
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But it's not the same enemy thatit was in the Cold War and is
punching above its weight and isnot nearly the the person that
we need to get into a hot war with.
Then you are going to have to seed a bunch of stuff and your
penis piano playing president isgoing to have to join the big
boy club, which is that he's going to have to deal with.
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He doesn't have the ability to fight because he's not big
enough on his own. So make peace immediately.
We could demand that right now. The Europeans are not going to
stand with Ukraine. If the United States pulls away
and just says you're on your own, good luck.
Whatever money you have, you canbuy our stuff.
That's it. It's at full retail.
Enjoy. United States government is not
(24:59):
going to subsidize your effort anymore to watch your citizens
get killed off instantaneously. It's over.
It has to be because these people can't stand on their own.
Instead we have this like half assed position where we're like,
yeah, we're kind of like not really in a war with you, but
we're totally going to give you a bunch of information.
We're going to give you a bunch of our stuff.
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We're going to we're going to bein the soft fight with a, with
an enemy that we don't need to be fighting.
It's this, it's this half assed position.
It's saying, you know what, we don't really agree with feminism
and we don't really agree with the way that the left goes.
But we sort of Co opted like most of their arguments.
And we're willing to be, we're willing to be swayed because
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we're willing to make peace withsomething that's not good.
We are willing to go some half measure because we don't have
the courage of our conviction. That's what this looks like to
me. This is what I woke up to.
This is this is how I woke up and and got irritated
immediately because I do follow Tim Burgett.
Here we go. We need a 73 year old lady to be
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the governor of my state becausethe best man for the job is a
woman. Literally a feminist slogan.
And why 36 years this lady has been in politics.
She's 73 years old. If you are a boomer and you are
not in politics, consider how many of your friends that you
went to high school with are no longer with us.
(26:29):
This was a, this was the, the two things that I saw
immediately. My father got back from a, from
an all class all year reunion inWisconsin.
And he said half of the people that he graduated high school
with are now dead. If half of the people that went
to high school with you when youwere 18 are no longer on this
planet, maybe, maybe you should focus on like the rest of your
(26:50):
life, like raising grandchildrenand being a great example and
being a fountain of wisdom, which I'm sure you have copious
amounts. Maybe you shouldn't be trying to
run a state government because we don't need you.
I'm Marsha Blackburn, I'm running for governor, and I
would be honored to have your support.
Hey everybody, Tim Burchett. I'm here to support my friend
(27:12):
Marsha Blackburn. Marsha and I are in the state
Senate together. Everybody's heard the stories,
but bad guy, that's the truth. The income tax was coming down.
The big boys were pushing it down our throat and it looked
like it was going to happen. I remember Marsha got on the
Internet. It was right after Alan Ward
invented it actually, and and put the word out to the people
(27:32):
and she turned them out. Without Marsha Blackburn, we
would have an unconstitutional state income tax in a government
that would be overrun with debt.Tennessee is a great place to
live. And one of the reasons it is, is
because Marsha Blackburn stood in the gap and a lot of folks
didn't. She is a brave woman and I'm
proud to support my dear friend Marsha Blackburn, or Governor of
(27:53):
the great state of Tennessee. I love Tennessee, I believe in
Tennesseans and I'm ready to deliver the kind of conservative
leadership that will ensure our state is America's conservative
leader for this generation and the next.
We we're like several generations past at this point.
(28:14):
There's nothing conservative about a 73 year old lady decided
to go and try to run for governor because what she does
not hang it up. I, I, I'll say it again.
If half of the people you went to high school with are dead
now, maybe you should be focusing on the next part of
your life, which is like, do youhave things to hand off to your
grandchildren? Do you have some values and some
(28:35):
stories? Can you can you be like
available for the people that are younger that are going to be
live in that, that next generation that you just talked
about? It's not your kids generation at
this point, because your kids are probably in my era, they're
in their 40s, maybe in the early50s.
So they have kids most likely. And some of them honestly could
actually have you could be a great grandparent at that age if
(28:57):
generations held. I don't care how old you look.
I don't care how with it you are.
Somebody actually made an argument to me this morning.
They're like, she's 73. She's not 80.
I don't give a shit. She's going to be 74 by the time
she could get into office. Why are we pushing this?
There's nothing conservative about that.
Hang it the hell up. That's called pride, by the way.
(29:19):
Every time I I see this, I want to have these conversations with
my buddy Gerardo Boyle and have a biblical discussion about it.
It's such an evil that somebody sold the idea that you, the
world will not live without you.We need this old lady.
She's a old lady. She's old as hell to my
children, right? Just because, just because, you
(29:40):
know, some things I looked into her, her, her work history and
they describe her as a businesswoman and an American
politician. And I guess she's had a business
for a long time. She started her own business
when she was like 27 years old, 28 years old, like a marketing
firm. She's been in politics for over
36 years. That is a, that is a complete
(30:01):
lifetime. And what is the opportunity cost
with that? Because what you're doing is
you're going to throw party resources.
You're going to throw incumbent Congress people's endorsements
and support. Because we know how she's going
to vote and we know what she's going to do.
She's a known quantity to the swampy crap that exists to all
the people that keep going with the status quo.
If you want to know why the status quo is completely
(30:22):
undefeated, it's because the status quo has access to the
institution and because those ofyou who love voting for the
people that were already in office, I know that person and
that's my Rep. What about when that Rep ages
out? Why do we not have like a would
would you want that Lady drivingthe school bus for your kids?
But you're going to have her runthe state that's going to be in
(30:42):
charge of all the school systemsfor your kids.
Like, look, you can be like me. You can opt out of all of it.
I opt out of almost everything Ican.
I don't want to participate in anything that is governmental.
I got AADM this morning. Kyle, can you talk more about
health insurance and how you optout?
Yeah, just opt out. Just take the money that you
would spend on health insurance and put it into a savings funds
(31:03):
and manage it yourself. Most of our society is built on
the idea that you think that youcan't take care of yourself and
so you're going to outsource it to someone else.
You're going to give them both the the burden and the
responsibility. You want to be a conservative,
Take all that stuff back for yourself.
Who's responsible for you? You.
The end of the day, What if the government?
No, just solve it, Solve the problem.
(31:25):
Should you call somebody else tofix the problem?
No, you should knock on the doorand tell somebody, hey, this is
going to be a problem. Oh, your cat's coming into my
yard. I'm just going to put the cat
down if it's in my yard. The end.
I was told, like I shouldn't talk about that, but I'm
serious. If you have a problem with your
boundaries, they are your boundaries.
If you need to call somebody else to enforce it, we have a
real issue here. Or you could be a leftist.
(31:46):
You could be on the left becauseeverything I keep seeing is that
there's almost no difference between these parties.
It's just that one person mouthsa certain sort of values and the
other mouth and other values, but the actions are basically
the same. I think I've got a here.
This is a good example of this. Do you remember that we were
talking about how how Texas Democrats fled from Texas
because they were going to redistrict it and they ran away
(32:07):
and they went to to Illinois. This was a big deal.
This was national news. This was an attempt for Donald
Trump to steal the 2028 midterms, and he was going to
start 2026 at midterms. He was going to steal the the
2028 election because he was going to put the right people in
because of Texas, because it's so evil.
Has any seat in that Texas Housebeen vacated?
(32:32):
Nope. Not a single one.
Not a single change happened. I'm going to just read this
story from CBS and then we'll doanother sponsor read here.
Texas Democrat lawmakers who fled the state to deny a quorum
and prevent Republicans redistricting plans are making
their way back, each on their own timeline, multiple sources
familiar with the matter told CBS News.
Remember the FBI got involved inthis.
(32:55):
Cash Patel made an announcement that they were going to go run
these people down. Nothing changed.
We heard all this big tough talk.
Nothing changed. The only person that's been
honest about this, from what I can tell, is Brian Harrison.
It's because he's like me. He's just a malcontent because
he sees people lying and he doesn't want them to lie.
And he's like, hey, you're lying, and that's the biggest
sin that you're going to find onthe right.
(33:15):
Noticing the truth too early makes you the problem.
And if you wait long enough, then everybody goes like, well,
yeah. I mean, we knew they weren't
going to do anything in the whole did you?
Because I watched you cheerlead.You can't convert from being a
cheerleader to being someone whosaid, well, they were never
going to win anyway. You can't 'cause we can see you
because there's a history of this stuff.
(33:36):
Dozens of Texas Democrats stead the blue fled the blue states
earliest month after Donald Trump suggested the state should
redraw the US House district mapto secure more Republican seats.
The Democrats until now have remained out of the state to
deny Texas Republican Greg Abbott a quorum.
What did Greg Abbott do? Nothing.
Governor Hot Wheels, by the way.I absolutely love it.
(33:56):
I was talking to one of my buddies over the weekend and we
we made reference to Governor Hot Wheels.
It's a fantastic name. I think it's funny and I think
he does too. But what did he do?
Did he did he divest them of their space?
Did he send the Texas Rangers, the press felony charges?
No, it's the same as that as that, that character Ralph from
(34:17):
the from The Simpsons who was like doing nothing, but he's
like, I'm helping. That's your, that's your, your
Republican Party folks. For those of you that are
registered as Republicans and think that the solution is
simply we just need to get more Republicans into office.
No, you need to get the right people in.
And generally speaking, the right people are probably not
thinking of themselves as Republicans.
(34:39):
That line between what conservative is and Republican,
the real thing is you need to goout there and espouse those
values to people and compromise not even a little bit.
You can't give a single inch on any of the values because all
the inches were given in my lifetime before I was actually
even old enough to do anything about it.
The fact that a 90s Democrat is being celebrated as a
(35:00):
conservative, that's Donald Trump.
Somebody who has spent more thananybody else who still thinks
government is a solution as longas it's our government.
No, we've got to claw ground back.
And this is the same thing I sawthat people realize like they
were like, well, never again. It's like, no, no, no, no, no,
no. We've already lost too much
ground on so many of this stuff.No, people are not living these.
(35:22):
You're not putting people in theoffice that live the values.
You're getting people that that say things that sound good and
play you folksy music. Listen to this.
Listen to the opening of this. I'm Marsha Blackburn, I'm
running for governor, and I would be honored.
I mean, she's got a fiddle in the background.
She's just like us. She also likes old folksy,
typesy music. Go watch Oh brother, wear out
(35:43):
that, which is a great movie. And I got to, I was going to try
to show my kids, but they weren't interested.
You watch, what do they do? They go, we need to get us some
of that reform. And the guy goes, you idiot, you
can't be the reform candidate ifyou're an incumbent.
You can if you're if you're a Republican, you can actually
sell people that you were reforming against yourself and
people will still vote for you. And if you're on the left, all
(36:05):
you do is crazier and Wilder andmore racism and more identity
politics and more doubling down on we're just better people.
They make a they make a moral appeal regularly.
And I've got some of that from aprofessor in at Stanford, which
I'll play you. The Texas redistricting effort
would have created five more Republican leaning seats ahead
of the 2026 midterm. They have a narrow majority in
(36:25):
the House right now. That's ridiculous because we
live in Texas. I live in Texas, and it
shouldn't be narrow, but all thepopulation centers go one way.
Historically, the party that controls the White House
typically loses ground in the midterms.
That's what we're looking at. They denied Republicans a quorum
multiple times, got a small victory, and then the GOP
wrapped up the session. They ceded that territory.
(36:46):
Tell me how we're winning again.Tell me how we're so back.
The funny thing is, is people will just keep making the
argument, well, we're not. We're not there yet.
OK, What did Sean Hannity used to say?
TikTok. It's coming.
I promise you it is. I promise you it is on the way.
And when the losses happen, thenit'll just be excuse Phil again
(37:09):
and then it'll be, well, if we just had power, you had all of
it and you didn't, you didn't get there.
So again, the biggest sin is, isletting people know upfront.
I would not be surprised if there was a bunch of concessions
made and unnatural support for, for Ukraine at the White House
this week simply because of emotions, because people are
(37:32):
constantly, constantly letting their emotions be played instead
of holding on to simple principles.
And it shouldn't be that hard. All right, Speaking of
principles, one of the principles that you might want
to be interested in is the principle of self-reliance.
And then also not giving away your data and your information
and not just seeding your, your responsibility for keeping track
of that stuff. It's hard to keep track of it
(37:53):
with all the terms of service out there, obviously, but you're
carrying around a tracking device in your pocket.
If you guys want to not have a tracking device sometimes this
is one of the the silent bags. It's a little bit different.
This is a roll top waterproof bag.
I carry it with me when I go to the pool.
I don't want anyone to know I'm in the pool where I'm not
carrying my gun in the water. Government agencies, big tech,
corporate data broker, cyber criminals, everybody wants a
piece of your digital footprint.They don't ask, they just take
(38:14):
it. A lot of times you're signing it
away. You guys can claim that back
with a bag from silentslnt.com slash Kyle.
Use that promo code at checkout.Save yourself 15%.
That's the way to do it. Silent makes Faraday gear.
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Your phone is a virtual like smorgasbord of junk coming out
(38:35):
of it. If you guys want to stop that,
all the signals, that means thatyou cannot be tracked.
There's no remote access, there's no bread crumbs to where
you're at. Put it in, drop off the grids.
The same technology special operations teams.
It's the same technology counterintelligence agents use
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it's not that expensive. It's better than getting cheap
garbage that doesn't work because then you think you have
(38:56):
there's nothing worse and think you've got some sort of coverage
there. It doesn't work if you want to
secure your comms, if you want to secure your footprint and use
it when you want, and more importantly, if you want some
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don't want to be putting out your signal into the world where
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Drop your phone into one of their Faraday sleeves, jump off
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(39:18):
slnt.com again, slnt.com/kyle and use the promo code Kyle for
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it's just going to fail you and then you'll find out.
How do I know? Because I tried all the cheap
stuff on Amazon and they were all junk.
All right, let's press onward here.
I'm going to tell you this, likeI said, this, this burden, this,
(39:39):
this, this claim, the idea that this would even be a meaningful
conversation in 2025 and that this would move the needle for
anyone tells you how sympatheticfolks are, how soft and not
principled we are. Because at the end of the day,
if you are a quote UN quote America first person, and most
Americans should. Because if you can't take care
(40:01):
of your own country, we've got people that are leftist that are
libs. That are that are interested in
this bleeding heart idea, but atthe same time they're crying
about not having enough money. They can't afford to do things.
They got student loans, but they're worried about like tax
burdens for African immigrants. This is a story from NBC News.
The fact that they showed up on their front page tells you a
lot. The diaspora of Africans in the
(40:22):
United States fear that a tax will make it harder to send
funds for babies and food and healthcare back home.
Oh really? Do you live here?
This is your freaking home. Welcome to America.
You want to be in this country, live in this country.
You want to live in Africa? Get the hell out.
Nobody cares. Nobody needs you here.
Why do they get this? Why is it effective?
(40:44):
Because there are voices on the hard left which continue to
invade and push and even influence people that you think
are on the right. It's the same reason why I saw
some African priest standing in the middle of Waco, TX at Mass
and saying I need $17,000 for a well that we don't have the
ability to do on our own, that we won't be able to maintain on
(41:05):
our own. And then after we spend the
$17,000 it probably won't be working statistically in a year
after you throw your money. So do you want to light your
money on fire in Africa or do you want to try to use it here
for something? You feel bad about Africa, don't
you? Do you remember?
Was it Sally Struthers and the, and the, the feed the children?
And there was always like flies walking on their eyes.
And some cameraman was like, oh,yeah, just let the fly walk in
(41:26):
your freaking eye. What is that?
It plays on a good and moral people because Americans are
full of heart and that is a great thing.
But we're willing to look past our neighbor who's suffering,
and we're willing to look past our own, like, household.
That's not even in order A 1% tax is going to burden babies
and food and healthcare back home.
(41:47):
Home equals Africa. This new remittance tax is
supposed to start in the new year.
It has university students reeling at the implications
it'll have for her family in Nigeria.
Why are you a student in the United States of America?
Why are you why are you in my country and then you're worried
about what happens back in Africa.
You could be worried about that.You just you can't be a Nigerian
(42:10):
American. This is AUS citizen who's saying
this. Born in the United States, Eagle
doggone crease. A second generation Nigerian
American says she thinks that the 1% tax passed as part of
Donald Trump's big beautiful bill, which was too big, would
directly affect the financial lifeline she sends back
overseas. Not Americans problem.
Unless you feel that sense of guilt that that pervasive white
(42:32):
guilt, where does it come from? It comes from this side.
This is like appealing to like your Christian nature.
That's the way that you have to,you have to bring people that
are not Christian into your country to be able to give them
access to Christianity. That would be the reason you
guys don't know. That's the reason why
missionaries and colonists went out there theoretically to bring
the Gospel, because these poor indigenous savages in countries
(42:56):
that that didn't have any exposure to it needed it.
That was the claim that the thatthe folks that came out of
Europe, they were like, we have to go spread the Gospel.
We have to send the Jesuits in to Latin America.
We have to bring them the Gospel.
We have to share with them the salvation of Jesus Christ.
Now it's like we have to give them democracy, things that
Democrats like, as my buddy Steve likes to say.
(43:16):
And we have to atone for the things that we did previously,
which was make their countries better.
And then we didn't stay long enough to keep it going better
because they weren't capable of handling it themselves.
I cannot get over this video that I've seen that says that,
that most African languages do not have a concept or a word for
the, for maintenance, for maintaining things that are
already out there. Anyway.
(43:38):
I saw this version of, of Joy Reid.
This is why I know that we have an opportunity.
We being people who are conservative, not Republicans
per SE, because you've got this as being one of the thought
leaders on the left. There is such disarray.
And by the way, the, the polls say it as well, they're in such
disarray that they can't even get themselves together to make
any sense or appeal to normal people.
(43:59):
They don't even know why they'refailing when they are.
And Republicans don't even see this as an opportunity.
They're willing to go to India Fest and push a 73 year old lady
to be the governor of like what should be one of the most
conservative states in America. Here's Joy Reid explaining why
everything is so awful in America.
Allegedly, they can't fix the history they did.
(44:20):
Their ancestors made this country into a slave, a slave
hell. But they can clean it up now
because they got the Smithsonian.
They can get rid of all the slavery stuff, they got Prager
U. They can lie about the history
to the children. They can't originally invent
anything more than they ever were able to invent good music.
We black folk gave y'all countrymusic, hip hop, R&B, jazz,
(44:43):
rock'n'roll. They couldn't even invent that.
But they have to call a white man the king because they
couldn't make rock'n'roll. So they have to stamp the king
on a man whose main song was stolen from an overweight black
woman. Are we being serious right now?
This is a lady who was raised mostly in Denver.
(45:07):
Her parents were college professors.
Like what? This is a lady who's crying
about something. She lives a conservative life.
By the way, that's Joy Reid. Joy Reid was she was married in
1997. She's got three kids, but the
(45:30):
same man, she lives a relativelyconservative looking life from
the outside. I don't get it.
She has a bachelor, not of science.
Like she has a bachelor's degrees from Harvard.
That's how much she's experienced difficulty and she's
out there campaigning on. This is why I know the left is
screwed. The left is not making any
(45:51):
sense. You're like, wait a minute,
you're a multi millionaire who has followed all the rules that
we would expect a multi millionaire woman who had all
the opportunities possible, a national audience to preach to.
You don't know why that you don't have any connectivity with
that audience and you're going to blame the audience for not
having a show. By the way, she's gone out there
(46:12):
saying I don't even know how my show had value.
And then she's going to go and she's going to tack what, Elvis
because of slavery? A woman who has experienced
basically no roadblocks from what I can tell.
Wasn't she making multiple $1,000,000 a year?
If one of us made that for a year, we wouldn't have to work
(46:32):
again. So I need more of this.
I need more people pushing back.I need less guilt, period.
This is a a guy who's who's spelling out a guy who actually
is calling out what racism lookslike.
I want conservatives to actuallypush conservative positions.
(46:52):
It's like, look, racism equals you give people extra, extra
power because of their skin color.
We don't believe in racism and that's why we can't do any of
it. That's why we don't care about
people who are not in America. It's not about skin color.
It's about you're either American, you're not a Nigerian
American, you're not a Canadian or a Cambodian or whatever else
American. You're from the United States.
(47:13):
Welcome, be part of it. There's no India fest.
Do you know how many America fests are being held in India
right now from people from America that have moved to India
and can't wait to share their American culture with people in
I0? There are none.
You can't find it, but there's India fest in freaking Knox
County, Tennessee. Why it's suicidal empathy.
(47:35):
We feel like we have to give this way.
How about more of what this guy's about?
This is a little bit. There's some curse words in
this, so deal with it for. About one person alive the day
that was a part of slavery. No, for sure, most of these
motherfuckers that's claiming that they'd been through
something may never experience no racism in their life.
But I guess it's the systemic part that we still what's
systemic about it? Systemic racism.
(47:57):
Tell me what's systemic about it?
I don't see it. Wait, did did they change?
What's the, the what's the thingwhere you got to hire a certain
amount of colored people? Whatever.
That's racism in itself. Yeah, I know.
Affirmative action. Affirmative action.
Yeah. That's why it says there's some
companies pulling that back. They're saying, hey, yeah, they
did away with it. Yeah, they're largely.
Yeah, the Supreme Court did awaywith affirmative action.
(48:18):
Yeah. Shout out to the Supreme Court.
Yeah. I'm like, let's get it.
That's racism in itself. That means that you're not
getting in on your merits. You're getting in based off of
the fact that they had to include you.
I know so many people that got into college based off of the
fact that there was a part of a diversity, equity and inclusion
program and they flunked the fuck out, right?
We got to put you in here. They couldn't, they couldn't
even handle it because they wasn't prepared to be able to,
to be able to compete on a, on alarger scale.
(48:40):
So you don't believe in systemicracism?
Absolutely not. Listen, I don't believe in
systemic racism in the United States of America.
It's too many people getting toomuch money.
And I ain't even talking about black people.
Listen, think about it like this.
If it was systemic racism based off a race, right, then why are
white people literally slightly above us when it comes to the
(49:04):
amount of money that they make per household?
Why are the majority of white people the ones that's on
federal government programs? Why are they the ones that's the
biggest welfare recipients? Where is it at?
How come it's not benefiting them?
Why they're not working in theirown best interests?
Why are the ones that's making the most per household Asian and
(49:24):
Indian? Why didn't I hold numba There's.
There's a million examples of why, but by the way, the idea of
systemic racism being a problem in 2025 America is the same
argument that like systemic misogyny or sexism is what's
holding back women. It's the same argument and it's
(49:45):
made by the same people. The problem is somewhere in the
1990s, a lot of people that consider themselves to be
Republican or lean to the right actually internalized all that
crap. And so all of these women that
got involved in politics back then because we needed a female
voice to compete with the femalevoices on the other side because
we didn't want to seem sexist because that's what the
narrative was. All of those people are still in
(50:06):
office, they're just in our office.
So we're really proud of it. My argument is this, if you're a
woman in your in your child bearing years and you're in
politics, you're not conservative, period.
There's nothing conservative about that because there's a
more important job for you. 100%.
There's a man that can do the job that you're talking about.
And there's also no one who can do the job that you can do on
(50:29):
the men's side, which is have babies, you know, like raise
another generation of conscientious, intelligent,
compassionate, Christian, conservative American citizens
that actually think that there'ssome real values that are worth
fighting for this country. You can.
Nobody else can do it. No man can bring those forth on
their own. But women can, and they can
raise them, and they can be moms.
(50:49):
And that's critical. My wife and I constantly have
this conversation. The opportunity cost of going to
work. Let's say you make like $65,000
a year and your husband makes 80,000.
I did the numbers on this over the weekend.
This is something I sat and and,and figured out.
Women are like, oh, like, well, I need another job because we
need to have this of that $65,000 you make assuming that
there's no state income tax where you live, Let's say you do
(51:10):
it in Texas. Of that 65,000, over 25,000 of
it is gone. I think it's like 28,000 between
the average cost of daycare and your, your, your, your income
taxes on the federal level. So you're going to make like
$39,000 take home. That doesn't factor in what it
(51:30):
costs for meal prep, which you can't do anymore because you're
not at home. It doesn't factor in what it
costs to like transport your kids, additional wear and tear
on a vehicle, the gas going backand forth, the amount of time
that you're, you're going to be in a commute.
So that's best case scenario that you work from home and
that's assuming that you're like, you guys make a a
household income that's at $145,000 a year for two of you.
(51:53):
You're just not going to get ahead by having it done.
You're much better off tightening your belt, paying off
all the debts, getting leaner, which people don't know how to
do because they don't understandhow money works, and realizing
that the cost of childcare is you might be putting somebody to
raise your kids who doesn't agree with you.
And they think like this lunaticprofessor does.
This is a guy at Stanford. Let me see if I've got a slide
(52:15):
with his name on it 'cause I think I do.
Here he is. This is a guy whose name is Paul
Pearson, and he was giving a talk called Assessing the Risk
of Democratic Backsliding in theUnited States.
Again, progressives are progressives because they always
push forward, even when it's ridiculous, even when it doesn't
even serve their own interests, which is where they're at right
now. It will eventually serve their
(52:35):
own interest and they will eventually see the the people in
the right fail out and then you'll end up with more of these
people back in again. They're in a rebuilding here
right now. I'll show you that in a second.
But listen to the argument this guy is making.
They make a moral argument consistently.
You don't hear any conservative argument being made by people
(52:56):
who are Republicans. They don't do it.
They sort of has this squishy like it's, it's just a, it's a
smoothie of kind of like things that sound good and feel good
mixed in with leftist ideas. Because the leftists are the
ones who actually get to push things forward.
This guy's going to tell you what they're pushing forward.
(53:18):
It's why they're losing. The alternative is like a hard
no to everything. The way that you heard that guy
just push back on what you're saying doesn't exist.
So we don't accept your premise.Instead, Republicans tend to
accept the Democrat premise, butthey try to do it in their own
way and say our people are goingto be in.
That's why they keep pushing women forward into these
offices. The attack on universities, I
mean, I mean, I, I think the wayto think about this is that
(53:40):
there is an attack going on on basically all sides of
autonomous civil society, right?There is one thing going on and
it plays out in different ways in different environments.
And of course, lots of reasons why they hate universities in
particular, you know, including partisan, you know, like, I
mean, universities have become aDemocratic, you know, capital D
(54:04):
Democratic space, right? It's Democratic Party space.
And so, but it but I think thereare attacks on all all of these
institutional settings that thatand, and I actually think the
best protect. The more that people see this as
one thing, right, the more the illegals of these institutions
see it as one thing and don't take the attitude of like, I
(54:25):
need to put my head down, right.So they go after somebody else,
like they're going, they're going to go after everybody like
that. I just think that's really
clear. And like, it's not like, I
don't, I don't think like Harvard, frankly, you know, I
spent a lot of time long time inHarvard.
I don't, I don't frankly think Harvard was like born a more
heroic institution than I think they, I think they saw what
(54:46):
happened in Columbia and I thinkthey also they got that
particularly egregious letter, which has left them very little
choice. But I think the more that people
see, like you just this is a bigfight across all of all of these
domains, and the more the peoplerecognize that eventually it's
coming for all autonomous sites of civil society, the more
likely resistance is to succeed.Did you catch what that argument
(55:10):
was? The more likely that we can push
this back, the more likely we'regoing to succeed.
We need to do an all quote UN quote, autonomous.
Autonomous. Also, he just said they're not
autonomous. They're aligned with the
Democrat Party, Capital D Democrat Party.
Why would you send your childreninto these institutions?
Why would you push your kids to be indoctrinated by someone who
(55:31):
is making a moral argument that we are the right thing, that we
are the good thing when you actually believe something else?
Because you cannot have those two things in contrast and have
them both be true at the same time.
You can't believe in a God verment.
By the way, kudos to people on On X that shared that with me.
I've never heard that term, but I love it.
Leftists and squishy Republicans, they love God
(55:53):
verment. That's where all the good things
come from, right? That's what a capital D
Democrat, and that's what actually a capital R Republican
believes in. If you're a lowercase R or a
lowercase C conservative, then you don't believe in a God from
it. You believe in a God and good
things are basically not at all from things of man.
(56:19):
Why would you send your kids that?
What is it? What's the argument you send
your kids off to? You send your kids off to to the
Roman school or to Caesar. And like you, you're scared that
they become Romans. Like, yeah, of course you're
going to send them into academia.
So the answer to me is always like, how do we get less
government? Oh, I just won't participate in
anything that I can opt out of. Are your kids going to go to
(56:39):
school? No, my, my wife's going to teach
them. Oh, OK.
Are you going to participate in this program?
No, I'm not going to participatein that.
I only want people who are not part of the current system.
I want non incumbents to be voted in.
I want people who actually do not go out there and say, well,
you're part of this institution.We need to, we need people that
are have institutional knowledge.
(57:00):
I'd rather than burn it all down.
I'd rather than come in and say,oh, I don't know how this works.
Why did we do it this way? That's stupid.
Let's pass laws to break it. Let's pass laws to rescind this.
The best Congress that I can have would be, well, there's the
two best. The first one would be we're
going to revoke everything and build it up from scratch in two
years. I guarantee you we can think of
a pretty decent set of systems to replace the laws we need and
get rid of some of the antiquated garbage.
(57:20):
That'd be awesome. The alternative is, and the more
reasonable for every law that you pass to have to be taken off
the books, That'd be great too. These people, like they worship
a system again. I promise you, I would show you
that there. That's not working.
It's not working. Look, this is a failing model.
(57:43):
The left has already proved it to us.
So let me show you what it lookslike when they don't even know
who's in charge anymore. That's how I know that this is
an opportunity to win. And what we're seeing instead is
like squishiness and softness. Democrats at this point are
historically divided. It is a complete and utter mess.
It is messier than a hoarder's basement.
What are we talking about here? The national early poll leader,
(58:04):
25% plus. Normally, that's where Democrats
are. Biden was a 2025% plus in 2020.
Hillary Clinton was in 08 and 16.
Gore was in 00104. At this particular point, there
is no one, no one in the Democratic race for president
who's polling at 25. Plus, the water is quite warm.
If you're a Democrat potentiallythinking about running in 2028,
(58:25):
jump right in because at this point, there is no front runner.
Is that what do you think? Is that because?
Where how people view the Democratic Party right now, Is
that contributing to this? Yeah.
I think that that is in large part of what's going on is one
of the reasons why there is no front runner, nobody wants to
put anybody up at the top of their ballot list is because at
(58:47):
this particular point, the Democratic brand is in the
basement. It is total and complete garbage
in the mind of the American public.
The Democratic Party's net favorrating record lows in all three.
Wall Street Journal 30 points underwater.
CNN, 26 points underwater. Gallup, 26 points underwater.
And that is is being driven in large part by discontent within
the Democratic base. The Democratic base wants
(59:08):
something different will ultimately end up seeing who
they choose. It will be quite the why does
that guy talk like this when he goes out there and talks about
these numbers, What do they do? I ask myself a rhetorical
question and then I give one this performative garbage.
Like even CNN is giving you a reason why people don't want to
watch CNNI only go there becausesometimes they have some
interesting clip that's interesting to me in so much as
(59:29):
it shows 30 points underwater means that there is an
opportunity. That's what that says.
There's a bunch of people that said, hey, my party sucks and
our ideas are not good and the people we put forward are not
good. So what do Republicans do?
They go. We see a historic opportunity
here where people hate the opposition party, hate what they
(59:51):
are putting forward. Maybe we should be weak, soft,
squishy, and do nothing about it.
That's what we should do becauseif we upset the status quo, then
we wouldn't know the outcome is going to continue the same as it
was before. We might be in uncharted
territory. We actually accomplished the
thing that we said. God freaking forbid.
(01:00:11):
What does that look like? It looks like this.
The draft of the Make America Healthy Again report it trans
lightly on pesticides and processed foods.
The one thing that I remember from our, from our RFK input was
that Americans are fat. They are unhealthy, that there
are processed foods, that there are poisons that are out there
(01:00:33):
in the form of colors and dyes and pesticides being used on our
crops and our grains. That there is garbage in our
food supply. And it is making Americans soft,
weak, fat, slow, stupid. How do we fix that?
We make America healthy again. And everyone went, yeah, keep
our baby safe, give our childrenreal food, take the garbage off
(01:00:54):
the shelves. People are really into that.
People who like should want a bunch of autonomy.
If you're a conservative, you'relike, well, I just don't to eat
that shit. That's not for me.
Instead, what they were like, yeah, the government should ban
evil bad stuff. So what does this report say?
It's a draft. It's not the final.
There's a possibility that they have some way to revise this.
(01:01:15):
But the Trump administration's strategy to quote UN quote, make
America healthy again will bypass aggressive actions on
farm use pesticides and regulatory track grounds on
ultra processed foods. According to a draft document
that CNN of him. So someone leaked it and showed
that they were going to soft pedal the stuff that they were
hard on during the campaign. The Maha Commission, led by US
(01:01:36):
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F Kennedy
Junior, is set to release their final draft in the in the coming
weeks, recommending solutions for addressing chronic problems
and chronic disease in American children.
Seeing fat kids, obese children under the age like of teenage
years is heartbreaking. Go out and see fat kids and look
(01:02:00):
at them and go like, what on earth are these kids doing?
Why are they like this? You can go to a splash pad.
I did this. It's like water coming out of
the ground. It's like the simplest thing in
the world. It's the, it's the 2025 version
of opening up a, a fire hydrant and spraying water into and
having the kids run around in the street, right?
Except it's out of traffic and people can drive by.
(01:02:23):
I saw a £400 kid who was not a like, was probably like a young
teenager, 1314 years old, couldn't even flip and stand in
the water. He was sitting in a damn chair
that he dragged in there so we could sit and get the water all
over him. Not good for him, not good for
the kids around him, not good for the parents that have to
(01:02:43):
feed him. Horrible.
And don't tell me that just camefrom him.
Just like sitting around And youguys are on the on the on the
chat side saying, oh, it's because they're, they're playing
with their phones and video games.
We had video games when I was a kid.
It just wasn't the default entertainment.
That's not it. There's garbage in food.
And I actually thought that we had somebody out there that was
like dead set on it. What was he set on?
Vaccine problems, additives and chemicals that were part of our
(01:03:06):
Pharmaceutical industry that arethat are not solving it.
And then the second piece of it is garbage in, garbage out.
I remember my dad saying this when I was a kid.
He was just like, whatever you put in your body is the fuel
that's going to fuel your performance in whatever
athleticism you did. I always thought about it that
way and even though I'm like a world class eater of junk food,
if I had an opportunity less andless.
It's interesting to me the more you know about what's in it.
(01:03:28):
You're like, oh God, what is it doing?
Feminized hormones? That doesn't sound healthy for
me. What is it?
What is the actual output when Iput it into my kids food supply
and they eat it and then their behavior is immediately garbage
or slovenly. That's really sad.
This is the second installment from the Maha Commission.
(01:03:49):
They issued a report laying out the main culprits driving
chronic disease. If you're going to soft pedal
things like pharmaceuticals and pesticides, if you're going to
not talk about how ultra processed foods or what I like
to call food like products are abig problem in this country.
They're not the same when you goother places, by the way.
And that's the thing that peoplehave been kind of talking about.
If you just eat real food, there's no diet required, almost
(01:04:12):
none. So what do people want to do?
They want a pill. They want some quick fix,
something that's going to end uplike degenerating your heart
muscle or your brain. It's going to end up killing you
a different way. The solution is eating real
food. We used to joke about a thing
called the Six Mile Diet. My buddies and I when I was in
the military. It's like, what do you eat?
I'm like, whatever I want. I can eat anything.
(01:04:33):
But like my anything was like fruits, yogurts, a handful of
pop Tarts with their crap. But like at the end of the day,
they're probably not the worst thing in the world compared to
what's out there today. I'd eat a pop tart every day or
something like that. At 27, I can get away with that.
At 31. I couldn't at 43.
I sure as hell can't at 60 something.
Neither can you. Like you just can't.
(01:04:53):
We're not even like the things that are in our food are not
even food. Found this great Joe Rogan clip
talking about how they discovered something called
potassium bromate, which is in fortification.
It's a a commercial binding agent that they put in dough and
these guys are blown away by what it does and what it can do.
We put food like products in so much.
(01:05:15):
But if you go in there and you read and it's like, how many
things are you'll, you'll grab something and be like, oh,
that's, that's a good looking package.
It looks like a package of food that I might eat.
The fact that that it's in a package is already problematic.
There's a reason why my wife hasstarted milling all of our own
grains. It's to get away from exactly
what these guys are soft pedaling when you talk about it.
And so in a, in a historic opportunity to go and solve a
(01:05:36):
problem where you're like, Americans want it.
Nobody wants to be fat and unhealthy.
Everybody should agree on that. Who's going to end up winning?
Pesticide companies, Big agriculture folks.
That's where it's going to go. The fact that it is more
expensive to buy non chemically treated anything at a farmer's
(01:06:03):
market than it is to buy commercially produced junk is a
failure in this country. And that's what I thought the
RFK Junior added to the Trump ticket was going to bring.
Like at least a focus on that. Or people could say, hey, maybe
we could organic or otherwise, let's have less crap.
(01:06:23):
Or we could just do, we could just put potassium bromate and
everything and we could eat foodthat makes us sick.
How many times have you gone outto our meal?
We do this all the time in my house because we eat almost all
regular foods. It's like chicken.
It's just chicken and some sort of marinade on there.
It's going to have salt, pepper,maybe some olive oil, something
like that. Maybe, right.
Maybe you should throw some vinegar in there.
Maybe there's like some kind of balsamic.
Fine, make a little marinade. Chicken straight rice with
(01:06:47):
nothing else, not a lot of extracrap.
Then you go out for a meal and you're like, oh, that tasted
really good. And then you drive home and
you're like, I feel like death. It's universal.
Every time I go to a restaurant now and I eat food, I feel awful
about it because none of the stuff that we're eating today is
even food. I thought that's what we were
going to do. We were going to talk, call out
(01:07:07):
the stuff that was in it, and they're not going to do it.
They're going to take this historic opportunity of
disorganized government from theleft.
There's no real opposition coming out from the hard side.
They're out there still focused on racism and slavery in 2025
and we're going to soft pedal ultra processed foods and
pesticides. Here's Joe Rogan being blown
away by something. I think this is also worthwhile.
(01:07:27):
He was telling me that it's not even legal in Europe to have the
bromate. I didn't.
Know what the fuck? Bromate was he goes.
It's stuff they put in the in the the dough to make it last
longer and this and that. This kid has such balls where
he's sort of important twice as much for a flower.
Caputo Caputo flower dude. I don't know much.
I know a lot about this. You know, I'm not expressly
(01:07:48):
tells me the whole thing about it.
You feel different and if you eat that flour, I'll eat this
shit on the way to go train at my school.
And I, I'm not doing that with Pietros, no offense.
I'm not doing that with others. He has a it's so potassium
bromate, a flour additive used to strengthen dough, may have
potential health risks. While it's legal in the US, it's
banned in many other countries due to concerns about its
(01:08:09):
potential carcinogenic effects. Studies have linked it to kidney
and thyroid cancers in animals. Well, fucking duh.
And it's been associated with genotoxic and nephrotoxic
effects in both animal models and humans.
Acute symptoms from ingestion can include nausea, vomiting,
diarrhea, and abdominal pain. They put this in our flower
(01:08:31):
dude. That's what I'm saying.
That's crazy. Causes changes in DNA and
potentially lead to mutations. Guys, what the I'm telling you,
man, look. At that fucking statement.
That's crazy. Dude, that's why man I.
Didn't notice it's place at the end.
Give these kids so much credit. Nobody does this people.
They can't do that part. They can't import the flower.
(01:08:53):
It's just more, but this kids killing it and it's fucking and
it's it's such a difference, man.
They. Oh, wait, if you eat real food,
it makes you feel better about it instead of eating poison and
toxins. It's shocking.
But seriously, tell me more about the 1% tax we're going to
put on African immigrants who send their money back home and
how bad that is. We can't even fix the simple
(01:09:15):
stuff right in front of us. So I don't want to hear about
the problems about other countries.
I want to hear about this. And I'm going to just end with
this little discussion about there are a quick little kind of
highlight. We'll put it over on on the the
local side. So if you guys want to read
these articles, call Serafin dotcom is the the local piece.
It'll be in the link for today'svideo.
This concept of white guilt thatpeople need to feel guilty about
(01:09:38):
being colonial settlers. First of all, the idea of white
is bizarre to me because the concept of whiteness is
relatively new and the people who are involved in that
whiteness is also new. If you guys don't realize this,
my wife's joke that we've alwayshad as a as a as a couples that
like when she was when we were still dating, maybe we were just
(01:09:58):
just married. She would joke to me that she
wasn't all white because she wasItalian.
She has an Italian side of her family who were not white
people. Irish people were not well
thought of from like 100 years ago.
You guys realize that the the creeping definition of whiteness
is pretty amazing. But if you want to read
something really wild, we'll putthis over here.
(01:10:20):
I have a A leftist Interpretation of the White
Man's Burden by Rudyard Kipling,and it was an appeal in let's
see, it was in 1897, revised in 1899, and it was an appeal to
the Americans to pick up the white Man's burden, which had
previously been borne by the UK.To go out and civilize this
(01:10:44):
concept of white guilt is prettywild that we should be worried
about African immigrants who arenot able to send money back home
because we have taxes on you taking our cash and sending it
out of the country that you comehere and earn and then you
benefit somewhere else. By the way, they do that in
India. They do it in like that's a huge
chunk of the Mexican economy. If you're going to do America
first, the thought would be if you're going to do America
(01:11:06):
first, you would do America healthy.
That would be big. Having your population not being
a bunch of fat slobs who are eating poison, which they
wouldn't even allow in most of these countries.
For whatever it's worth, you can't even sell our products
there. And then you're going to not
feel sorry about being what you are, which is that we export
some of the best things in the world that would let the United
(01:11:27):
States has almost single handedly raised the world out of
poverty. Instead, you have this concept
of white guilt, which sits out there.
It's a, it's a, a legacy of making you feel guilty for
simply existing in a place that's better and you have to
apologize for your ancestors actions.
(01:11:47):
There's these like there's a, anugly movement that's going to
brew out of this, by the way, and it's a, a nasty nationalism.
And I'm seeing some of these people and people are crying
about, look, how are you deporting these people?
They're just coming to the United States to work.
You know what? Previously you've came to the
United States to work. You either worked or you died.
That was the, the Ben Shapiro tactic.
And I believe it was actually pretty reasonable with no safety
(01:12:08):
net. Nobody in America, nobody on the
conservative side cares if you come to this country, if we
don't, if we have no immigrationrules, but also no safety net.
Come on in, see what happens. Sink or swim.
You might die on the side of theroad.
You might die underneath the railroad.
You might be part of the railroad system on the berm that
keeps the railroad up because you worked yourself to death
(01:12:28):
trying to give your, your, your,your future offspring an
opportunity. That's not what we have right
now. We have this white guilt along
with the burden. So they've added something to
the burden not go out there and civilize the the world and bring
them the things that you have been able to find primarily by
the way, it was all Christianity, which is all about
can you deny self? Do you have delayed
(01:12:49):
gratification? It's a big chunk of it.
Don't give in to hedonism. Have discipline.
That's what it was about. Now they act like a like your
your burden is that whatever youhave, you should just feel bad
about it. So they prey on your, your
Christian ideology of, of caringfor your neighbors when you
(01:13:10):
forgot to care for the neighbor that was right next to you,
which is why we have homeless vets in this country and we're
still worried about a 1% freaking remittance tax to
Africa. Any case, I'll put the full tax.
If you've never read it, if you never read the White man's
Burden and heard some of this, it, it, it used to be, it was a,
it was a, it was actually an appeal to go conquer more
places. If you guys don't know about
that. And that's been flipped on its
(01:13:31):
head. All right, I'm going to end with
something that I think is kind of funny.
It's a comedian because we like to do a little bit of a palate
cleanse. At the end of the day, even the
people on the political left, they actually do know that what
they're doing is unsustainable. They're just going to continue
as long as it's allowed, which is why that opportunity exists.
Right now. The iron is hot again.
If the Democrat National Party is in disarray, if the policies
(01:13:53):
are junk and people don't like them even within their own
party, if you have a chance to go do things strongly and you
don't like the folks in Texas right now that are coming back
and they're going to be able to maintain their seat, they're
going to be able to vote howeverthey want.
And it was all just a big show. The answer is not more of the
same people who have been in charge, you know, Vivek
(01:14:15):
Ramaswami, who then you guys will be like, yeah, he was.
He was at probably at India Fest.
He probably was. That guy actually was saying the
right thing. There's a reason why what he was
saying was resonating with people because it was realistic
that this country needed a 1776 moment where people said we're
throwing off the yoke of what has been previously.
It did not work. You guys have have ruined our
(01:14:35):
system to the point where we need to try something completely
new. And everyone was like, yeah,
yeah, completely new. Let's do it by doing the same
crap, by going out there and bowing to pesticide lobbyists
and big agriculture and processed food companies.
There's a major, major opportunity.
But what we could have had in this, like what we saw in the
(01:14:57):
first probably week of the Trumpadministration after the
inauguration, was like, Oh my God, we might actually get the
thing he said. And it's turned out instead of
being AU turn, it's turned out into a speed bump where we're
just slowing down the same agenda and we're just slowly
going to leak this crap out again.
In any case, at the end of the day, people on the left actually
do know that they can't survive without real things.
(01:15:17):
So I'm going to play a little comedian kind of pointing that
out to these folks that they're,they're unsurvivable without
actual conservative values. Before we do, just remind you
guys, you guys can support the program by going to
kyleseraphin.com. Join us up our locals channel.
You can support us by liking, sharing and subscribing over on
X over on YouTube and on Rumble as well.
(01:15:39):
It's rumble.com/kyle Seraphin orit's youtube.com slash at Kyle
Seraphin. Appreciate for those of you that
have joined up there, we appreciate all you guys
watching. I want to, I want to leave it on
a lighter note here. Again, the opportunity exists.
This is not even a new clip. This is from 2022.
So this was like year number twoof the Biden administration.
People used to know this. They still actually do deep down
know this. There's a reason why this stuff
(01:16:00):
all resonates. And even folks that live in the
logical places like New York or New Jersey and all you that live
there and try to tell me, look, oh, I'm doing the best I can.
No, no no, you live in a crazy place because your place cannot
exist without people that actually do the thing you talk
about. Here's a comedian making fun of
libs for fun. Going home for Christmas
tomorrow, going back to the Midwest, the good part of the
(01:16:21):
country. And my family's all like farmers
and, well drillers. They live in my family lives in
like the type of small town thatstill thinks Dippin Dots are the
ice cream of the future. You know, they're like the
Democrats gave us Dippin Dots. We wouldn't need fentanyl.
Oh, we love mocking middle America, don't we?
They are, don't we? There's so stupid, aren't they?
(01:16:45):
They also growl your food, don'tthey, you little, don't they,
you little soft handed liberal scum?
You'd bleed if you looked at a shovel, you little sweat.
You. You don't do a single useful
thing for the planet, you littlecrazy.
Isn't that true? You'd die in a day without
Republicans, wouldn't you? Yeah.
You can't eat a podcast, can you?
Yeah, no protein and slam poetryis there?
(01:17:12):
Yeah, I don't agree with Republicans, but good luck
finding a woke plumber. Go go.
Like finding a 50 year old guy with his ass hanging out who's
like free Brittany. That's what I hate about New
York. They think people think they're
so tough here. It's so annoying though.
(01:17:32):
You can make it in New York. You can make it anywhere.
Nah, you'd die in a day on my uncle's farm, man.
He doesn't have clean drinking water.
Sriracha or feminism, right? Well, he has sriracha.
He calls it Chinaman ketchup. But like, my uncle might not be
woke, but he's awake at 5:00 AM every day harvesting those
(01:17:56):
little brown organic eggs you love, right?
And he's whispering to every single one.
I wish you were white. I like everything about what
that guy just said, and I also like that he's calling about and
they're laughing about it because that's the reality of
it. The reality of it is, is like,
(01:18:16):
hard skills to win. And yeah, you can't.
You can't exist. All that stuff is propped up.
That guy at at at Stanford propped up only gets to exist if
you pay for it. And right now, the only reason
that you pay for it is because the people that we put in there
that theoretically have an opportunity to win, they refuse
to. So there you go.
(01:18:36):
That's a sad way to start our Monday.
I hope you guys have a great rest of your day.
I look forward to seeing what the hell this brings and
hopefully our president does. America First, guys, go out
there and share that if you can,if you want to push social media
stuff, especially those you wanttrue social.
America first means we don't payfor Ukraine's stupid war and we
don't let the penis piano playing president dictate how
(01:18:58):
Americans do it. Someone say that five times
fast. Make a clip.
All right, God bless you and look forward to seeing you again
tomorrow. Have a great rest of your day.
Thanks for listening to the KyleSeraphin show, streamed live
weekdays on rumble.com/kyle Seraphin Bobble Kyle on Twitter,
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