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August 25, 2025 • 86 mins

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(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, hello my friends, welcome

(00:40):
to the Kyle Seraphin show. Today is Monday, it is August
the 25th and this is going to bea big week.
I think it's going to be be a big week for me personally.
It's going to be a big week for the suspendables and it might be
a big week for some of you that are looking for a little sense
of justice that are hoping to see the right thing happen in
this country. For a couple of people that have
done the right thing, give you alittle bit of a a taste.

(01:02):
I also want to say thanks to thefolks that went up and met up
with me on Saturday. We did a local meet up with a
handful of folks that are in ourchat regularly on Rumble.
So if you were there, awesome. It was great meeting all of you.
A heads up, I didn't know this, but we have a chat moderator
over on YouTube. So if you're watching on YouTube
and you see Crypto Rick, don't get on the wrong side of Crypto
Rick. He's set up as our chat mod.

(01:22):
I didn't even know that, but I got to meet Rick.
That was very cool as well. We had Rose Lopez, appreciate
her always being there in the chat in the morning and I also
appreciate Eric Jason who's keeping an eye on things.
So if you guys have not joined our chat previously, that's
where you can do it. If you want to see it live, if
you want to do it, it's a very different feeling.
Our our show has two sort of dimensions.
One of them is the podcast and there's information and maybe

(01:42):
there's some news stories and maybe there's some insight that
you've never seen before. And the other is kind of this
community that sort of builds upbehind it.
And we've had some folks that have been very, very loyal and
made connections that are not related to what we do on the
podcast every morning. I'm more of a vehicle to to keep
you guys available. So I appreciate that you guys
have forged those connections and that you've that you made

(02:03):
the friendships and a lot of really neat things have happened
in real life because of that. It is not because of me, it's
because of you. So thank you for joining us for
the that have done that. We're going to talk today about
white guilt, which is an interesting concept.
And I think it's dead. I think it's dead.
And I think Donald Trump, if he didn't kill it, he sure as hell
fired a couple of shots that putit down.

(02:24):
And and it is certainly bleedingout because of some of the work
that he's done. But it also echoes sort of a
bigger sentiment in this countrythat people on the right, and I
think independence and God, I hope some people on the left as
well are just sick of talking about race.
We're done with it. We almost killed racism in this
country in any meaningful way. It's almost been gone.

(02:46):
And it was almost gone in my childhood.
I can't think of a single television program, cultural
moment, icon scenario that that didn't show that race was no
longer a factor in the 1990s. And yet here we are 2530 years
later and it's still being brought up and it's being

(03:07):
revived and it's being kept alive on life support so that
we've got these leftist to try to punch into us.
And once again, even though there was some new life breathed
into it and it got a full blood transfusion under the Obama
administration, even though it should have been the opposite,
all of that I think has failed again.
And I think the second election of Donald Trump actually proved

(03:27):
that. I think November 2024 should be
the mark where we can say that was the end.
Again, I don't know that we had a hard date previously of when
it ended. So we're going to talk about
that. And that's going to give us
stories about Washington DC and the federalization of law
enforcement moving in with the National Guard, the apologists
and the apologies going on for the motorcycle ATV dirt bike

(03:50):
gangs that exist throughout the Eastern Seaboard, but they're
also in the in the northern Midwest and they're even out all
the way to California. So one of the ways that I'm
going to show you some of this information is through vertical
format videos. And I've only got a couple of
slots that I normally build. I generally keep it like three
or four of those. So today's going to be a little
bit more self produced. You're going to see a little bit
more of my hand behind the scenes because I'm going to have

(04:12):
to go and grab these video clips.
I can only grab so many at a time.
So we're going to build those up.
But the story goes something like this.
The people that are trying to make apologies, the people that
are trying to keep race alive, they obviously have a vested
interest or a stake in it. And this podcast today is is
stirred, let's say, by an interaction that I had with a

(04:34):
guy named Malik Abdul. He shows up on CNN all the time.
He's a black guy. He claims to live east of the
river in Washington, DC. And he he lives in Southeast DC,
per his statement. I've worked in Southeast DC and
maybe he and I have very different definitions of it.
There's places like Navy Yard where you can walk around and
you can have money and you can dress nicely and you can have a
nice car. And then there's places like

(04:55):
Anacostia where I used to go work and there's some really,
really ugly neighborhoods that Idon't think you'd make it
walking a mile in a suit, no matter what color skin you had.
And so to act like these things are still a problem and to act
like we're actually dealing with, to act like we're still
dealing with racism in this country in the same meaningful
way that you can't talk about slavery, that you have to

(05:15):
capitalize the word black, all of that stuff really stupid.
And I think it's going to be a losing bet.
And if you're a quote, UN quote Republican and you're adding
strategy to Republicans in this country at this time, you're
talking to leftist and they're not interested in what you have
to sell or say. And so we're going to get out
from behind that. We're going to talk about white
guilt and how it's kind of evolved from Trump one point O
to two point O. And that might be a little bit

(05:36):
touchy, but I'm going to show you guys some stuff that this is
not a new problem. I just think that people are
confronting it with a new attitude.
And whether you call it black fatigue or whether you just call
it sort of like being an American and saying, hey, just
welcome to the program. You need to get on that.
You need to get on the bandwagonthat either you're in America
and you want to be part of this country or you don't.
And I think that is what the quote UN quote MAGA ideal stands

(05:59):
for. Making America great again would
have to mean something. And I know it's a trademark
brand and I know you guys have sort of Co opted it and made it
part of your identity. Like I'm MAGA or I'm not MAGA.
If you look at the plain words of what he was aspiring to, it
was a nostalgia that America hadthis greatness.
And many people who come into our call in program and folks
that are in our our locals community will let me know that

(06:19):
that kind of peak somewhere in the 80s or the 90s.
And you know, you can argue thatthere's better music in the 70s
and I probably agree with you, but the idea that everything was
pretty darn good before 911. It's it's hard to argue with.
For all the problems and failings of this country, we had
a really sort of good experiencethat those of us who remember it

(06:40):
share. And those who were born after
the fact don't, they don't know it.
And that's why I have more in connection.
And, you know, I, I guess I'm anelder millennial, but I have
more in connection with the Gen.Z and, and even you boomers, we
have more in common with our childhood because I grew up
analog like so many other people.
And I don't want to apologize for the way I grew up or where I
grew up or this country, which Ithought was great.
And I hope one day would be great again.

(07:01):
We may be going into another phase of it, but we'll see.
I'm I'm not as optimistic that these stains the same state
continues, but I am optimistic that all of us will continue to
be neighbors and live next to each other.
And you know, I'll walk outside barefoot and be able to walk
back into my house and I don't have to have a machete at my
hip. Let's talk about my friends over
at silent real quick before we get deep into the weeds here,
because there's lots to cover. Silent is an outstanding

(07:23):
company. They make a really cool product
and what they're trying to do isgive you something that is kind
of that, that throwback, that nostalgia, you know, like where
you weren't being tracked by a cell phone because the thing
that's in your pocket, your tablet, your phone, your laptop,
all of your social media, all the stuff, they're all tracking
you non-stop. Government agencies use it, big
tech, corporate data brokers, cyber criminals, Everybody wants
a piece of your digital footprint.

(07:44):
They don't ask, they just take it.
Usually it's in the terms of service.
That's why Silent exists. If you want to be able to take
control of things and kind of have an analog moment, that's
kind of the way I like to think about it.
Silent makes Faraday gear. It blocks all wireless signals.
That's cellular, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPSRFID, near field
communication. No signal means no tracking, no
remote access, no bread crumbs, and nobody hacking your stuff.

(08:05):
Yeah, think about the number of things that we are putting out
into the world as we walk aroundall those little signals that
are radiating to be able to track us.
If you guys want to eliminate that and step back in time for a
little bit of time, you might want it.
You can use the same technology that our friends over in special
operations use around the world.It doesn't matter whether you're
working as a CIA case officer orwhether you're a, you know,
special operations guy in the military.

(08:26):
Secure comms is critical. Being able to block signals,
avoid surveillance. It's a critical mission feature.
I used to do it when I was in the FBI with our with our
sources and so on. If you want to be able to take
that technology home, it's not that expensive.
You should get the good stuff, not the garbage because it leaks
and then you won't be getting the value.
Use my name, Kyle, as a promo code at slnt.com/kyle.
Make sure my name fills in there. silent.com/kyle.

(08:48):
You get 15% off, you get free shipping on qualified orders,
and all you got to do is drop your phone in the sleeve like I
do every single morning before we start the podcast.
You drop it in, away goes the signal off grid and everything
goes silent completely. You're invisible to the outside
world and you erase that digitalfootprint, at least for a little
while. Get yourself a little Peace of
Mind. That's slnt.com slash Kyle.
Let's do, let's do this. Maybe we might touch some third

(09:11):
rails here for politics, but I think that's what we do here at
the Kyle Syrup and Show. And I don't want to be shy about
this because the this is an inherently racial moment in DC.

(09:31):
And our press is actually makingit that moment.
There's nothing we can do about it.
Here's the story. I want you to just look at what
you're seeing on the screen. That's Muriel Bowser.
She's got a new look. It's more ethnic as well.
DC students are heading back to school amid Trump's law
enforcement surge. That's a headline from ABC News.

(09:53):
The DC mayor says it doesn't need troops to get school kids
to school safely. What an interesting thing to tie
together. She's tied together kids going
to school in Washington, DC, public schools and a 2000 person
National Guard surge to try to crack down on crime in
Washington, DC where crime is rampant.

(10:17):
Now you can avoid crime in Washington, DC.
There's no question in my mind. You can walk lots of places.
I used to go for a jog either with or without my handgun when
I was in the in the Bureau. You can roll around in the
National Mall and generally speaking, you'll be left alone.
There's plenty of places in Northwest and Northeast and even
in Southeast. And you can go walk around on
foot. You can dress nicely like you're

(10:38):
going to go work in government and you can get away with it.
And by get away with it, I mean,you have to be really pretty
strategic about your routes if you want to avoid criminal
activity or if you want to avoidpeople who are just generally
sort of ne'er do wells. Yeah, you could do that.
But you also could find yourselfsitting at a nice brunch
location. And I had a colleague who lived
in DC, worked in DC with me, andshe'd come in almost every other

(11:00):
weekend. And she'd be like, oh, man, you
won't believe what I saw. Oh, what was it?
What was that thing that you saw?
Oh, you saw a motorcycle gang ofdirt bike riding 25 black young
men between the ages of let's say 15 and 3515 and 40
surrounded some Filipino guy whowas just trying to do his
freaking laundry, had a laundromat on on a Saturday

(11:22):
morning or a Sunday morning. And they beat the shit out of
him and took all of his stuff, took his money and threw his
stuff on the ground. Why would they do that?
He didn't look rich, did he? And she's like, no.
And I was like, why didn't you intervene?
She was like, I only had one extra magazine.
I was carrying a Glock 26. I had 26 rounds.
I wasn't going to go or 2020 rounds total plus one.
I didn't want to go in there. It's like, yeah, I don't blame

(11:43):
you. You're a female and you're, even
though she was kind of like a pretty cool chick for an FBI
agent, like you're going to go fight 25 dudes.
No, where are the cops? Why don't they show up?
Why don't they follow down on this thing that continues to
happen? And if you go show people what
that is, if you've never seen it, I'm going to share it with
you so you guys have an understanding.
But if you go show people what that is, you're not supposed to

(12:06):
say that they're black. You're not supposed to say that
the people that are in doing this are between school age,
high school age, college age, and then young working
professional age black men who don't have purpose.
And I used to work in the neighborhoods in Southeast that
are absolutely atrocious where you'd find hundreds of young men
under the age of 50. They are not retirement age and
they certainly didn't have disabilities based on the way

(12:28):
they moved around or they were working out in their front
yards. And also the kind of crap and
you'd see it and you're like, what are these dudes doing?
Oh, they're doing open air drug markets.
Oh, they're planning their next bank robbery.
Now, granted, I was an FBI agent, so my job was to
investigate federal crimes. So, you know, I got something of
an eye for finding people who are dealing narcotics.
I got something of an eye for people that are involved in

(12:51):
planning a bank robbery. And we, you know, would go and
surveil people and all these neighborhoods and all these
cross streets, you're like, damn, I might have to switch up
my vehicle a couple of times perweek because we're going to be
out here all the time. We're going to be sitting on the
same freaking streets. And how many times can a guy who
looks like me you're not watching?
And if you've never seen the show, I have blue eyes, I have a

(13:13):
beard, and I have pretty white skin.
Even though I've got a pretty good tan going because it's the
summer and I work outdoors a lot, I stand out.
One of the great stories on surveillance that I had was a
buddy of mine who was a very senior FBI agent.
He had Gray hair. He would wear Hawaiian shirts
all the time. We couldn't talk him out of it.
And we would go into the shittiest black neighborhoods in

(13:34):
Southeast DC or in in like Maryland, which is right across
the state line border there. It's Southern Ave.
I believe. So you'd be in these areas and
you'd be parked. And there is no reason why a 50
something year old Marine Corps veteran FBI surveillance agent
who's like tall, skinny, white, wearing a Hawaiian shirt with
flip flops and shorts on. That guy doesn't belong there.

(13:57):
And they know it. You know the residents of these
streets of these neighborhoods, they'd walk by and they'd see
him and they'd go. They'd be like, Oh no.
So you'd have you'd have Jay geton the radio and he would go,
He'd go, I think someone's taking a look at me and kind of
a hard eye on me. And you go, OK, do you need to
get out of there? And you go, let me try
something. And I swear, whether he did this

(14:18):
or not, he told me he did this, which is even funnier.
Like one way or another, he saidhe just unbuttoned his Hawaiian
shirt and started touching his nipples.
And there's nothing funnier thanseeing like some like hard thug
guy who's like, hey, I think that looks like a cop, looks you
down through the window and finds out you're not a cop.
You're just a weirdo that pulledover on the side of the road to

(14:39):
touch your nipples. And so it works.
And so you get to throw the stink off you, but you look like
a freaking cop if you look like me or if you're older than me
and you look like me in these neighborhoods.
Why is that? Because they're black
neighborhoods. We just call them what they are.
Let's be honest about it. But you're not supposed to say
that. And you're not supposed to say
that they're unsafe for some reason.

(15:00):
And for some reason, we've drawnthe analogy that DC students who
head back to school are also going to be somehow affected by
by a law enforcement surge that Donald Trump is doing to try to
clean up Washington, DC. And I don't think it's the right
tool. I've told you that.
I think they should seat it to Maryland and let it see what it
looks like. But Maryland's done a crap job,
and they've done a crap job of this for a very long time.

(15:21):
We're going to talk about the 12:00 boys.
If you're not familiar with that, you'll be educated today.
I'm going to read the story a little bit.
Muriel Bowser went on and told ABC News.
We don't need federal agencies to help get kids to school.
We'll take care of getting our kids to school.
You know, implies by ourself. What she doesn't realize is that
those kids, many of them are notreally kids.

(15:44):
They're acting like men. They're attempting to be men
even though they're not. They don't have a male role
model. And they are the reason why it's
unsafe. In Washington DC, an FBI agent
was carjacked by a 17 year old high school age boy, treated
like a man, but a boy not even of it the the age of majority.
Yet you see it all all the time that the the people who are

(16:08):
involved in the carjacking spreeare 16, they're 15 or 14 years
old, and they're carrying a gun in our nation's capital.
And so nothing tells us that there is a failure in this
nation more than looking at your, your, your capital city
and realizing they can't even handle the simplest thing out
there. I do understand Trump's instinct
to want to make sure the National Guard comes in.

(16:30):
The difference between me, a conservative, and a lot of the
Republicans is they're looking for a win.
And I'm looking for the system to work.
And the system is supposed to bethat we actually divest things
back to local control. DC can't run itself, though.
That's proven. And it shouldn't answer to
Congress. It should answer to a state.
I don't think our founders ever fathomed that we would have
people living under the rule of Congress directly without a

(16:53):
member of of, you know, the bodythat does the legislation.
That's crazy. So they cry about taxation
without representation, but theychose to live there.
I can't fathom why anybody woulddo it.
And everybody who tells me that they live in Washington, DC and
here's your experience. I go, you're not living in
America, so nobody cares. I mean that like hypothetically
for all the conspiracy theories,I did have a lady pop up one

(17:15):
time at a speech I gave in in New York and she gave me her
theory that Washington, DC is actually not America and that's
why it's controlled by the globalists.
Just divest yourself of of the crazy and hone in on the fact
that is it is not the way that Americans live.
That's what I mean when I say not America.
And that includes California is certainly in the major cities.
It includes everything on the East Coast that's basically
north of the Potomac. Like I just, it's not America to

(17:37):
me. Even parts that kind of resemble
it sometimes, like rural PA, you're still being governed by
what's going on in your major cities, Philly and Pittsburgh.
And they're not America in my experience.
They're not the same as mine. Like you didn't.
You can't order a flamethrower. They won't send it to you.
Somebody will look at you weird if you're driving around in a
diesel truck in a lot of these places with some small
exceptions like up in Maine, youknow, and various rural parts.

(17:59):
I understand that there are someexceptions here, but let's just
broadly speak and have a problemwith this.
The school year begins as Bowserand the the Office of State
Superintendent of Education. By the way that that means
Washington DC, not a state. It's a federal district touts
proficiency rates in English arethe highest since they had prior
to COVID-19 pandemic and that ELA, which is English and

(18:21):
English and language arts has the highest on record.
It's still crap. I found this story the other day
and it reminded me of how nutty our world is where we've got
these poor kids that are coming out and they don't even know how
to speak or read English. So what do you do with that?
What do you do with people that don't even know how to read
English and they're and they're going to college, right?

(18:43):
Shouldn't that be a problem? See if I can find the story here
because I'm having to dig it up on the fly.
The, the, the, the, the idea that something would mean
something when you graduate fromanywhere that you could graduate
high school. It should mean a minimum
competency, should it not? If you graduate from college or

(19:04):
you even get into college, it used to actually mean something.
And for some reason it doesn't anymore.
For some reason, you're able to just cruise on, here's a girl
that can't read or write in English.
And I do think that this is partof that suicidal empathy.
I think that it came from white guilt where people were like, we
need to give opportunities to people, no matter who they are,

(19:26):
whether they've earned it or not.
Because they work so hard to come to America or they work so
hard trying to survive the streets or whatever other
nonsensical reasons that make people who have a bleeding heart
and they mean well. And all they've done is they've
ruined things for that person, and then they've ruined things
for all the other people that participated in it.
Listen to the story out of Yukon.

(19:46):
This is not a new story, but this is something that did hit
me over the weekend. It's like, yeah, this is exactly
what's going on here. This is suicidal empathy, and it
hurts everybody. It doesn't just hurt this
person. It actually hurts the
institution, and it hurts the people that also get degrees
from those institutions and so on.
Do you ever think you'd be goingto college here?
No, never. Not ever in many years.

(20:09):
In some ways, Alicia Ortiz is living an American dream.
The 19 year old began her freshman year at the University
of Connecticut in Hartford. This fall, she's excited to
study public policy, the culmination of hard work after
moving N from Puerto Rico as a child.
Do you remember when you first came to Connecticut?
Yes, I remember I was very nervous, but I know it was going

(20:32):
to be better opportunities for me to learn.
But Alicia says those opportunities never came to
fruition, even today. Could you read this or would it
take you a long time? It's impossible.
I is seeing his words everywhere.
Alicia graduated from the Hartford Public School system
last year, but she says today she is illiterate.

(20:53):
She still doesn't know how to read or write when she was in
early education. They would just either tell me
to sit in a corner and sleep or just draw pictures flowers for
them. She can't even speak English

(21:13):
properly. She can't read.
She got to go to college. How?
I mean, many of you either went to college or you have kids who
did recently. And there's always these like
college essays and there's applications and there's there's
exams. I remember people used to like,
I went to a college prep school.That was a big deal.
They put everything on hold. They would go to SAT prep

(21:36):
classes to get into colleges. They'd want to go even just get
into a state school because theywanted to try to get a
scholarship. Now you got this dim bulb who
doesn't speak English properly, who came to this country.
She doesn't actually tell us whether or not she came here
legally. And she got a graduation diploma
from the Hartford Public School system.
She got a high school diploma, which supposed to mean a minimum
competency. And then she turned around and

(22:02):
got into college. But she can't read because she
spent her entire time in schooling drawing pictures of
flowers in the corner. I mean, This is why, This is the
Direct Line that I see why when you set that, that soft biggest
tree of low expectations that we've heard about as people on
the on the political right for years, they have damaged the

(22:23):
people that were in her class. They have cheapened the degrees
and the work that those people did.
They have ruined this poor girl.They've put her in a situation
where she is guaranteed to fail.Yeah.
I don't consider Puerto Rico America.
The chat is out here trying to correct me.
It's Puerto Rico. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Whatever, you're right, I miss that.
Her English is still crap. What do we speak in this

(22:44):
country? We speak a language that
everybody should understand. And if you don't, then you end
up on the roadways and not knowing what to do.
Do you think that girl can do anything in this country?
Functionally? I don't.
I'll give you guys credit. You guys call me out on
something. That's fine.
The National Guard is in DC and they're armed and they're
worried about that. Like, what did you think the
military's purpose was? It wasn't there to come and play

(23:06):
Patty cake with people. We've given people an
opportunity to step into a very dangerous scenario, which is
what that is. You've put them in a situation
where you've got armed motorcycle gangs and ATV riders
who are hell bent on not obeyingthe law and they think it is
their right to whatever the hellthey want.

(23:27):
This is a video from 2 days ago.This happened on Saturday.
This is 7:56 PM according to thetime stamp.
There are many such examples of the reason why the DC National
Guard is armed right now. And you're watching the
political left flip out out and act like it's being mean to
kids. It's kids that they're armed
for. Look at that.

(23:49):
And I can tell you by looking atthat street, that's one of the
nicer streets. So what are they doing?
Those are AT VS Those are dirt bikes.
Those are non Rd. ready. They're driving into oncoming
traffic. They got no problem.
They pop wheelies and then you ask like, what is this all

(24:10):
about? Like why do they do this?
Go look up if you don't think this is real or this is not
something that's been happening for a long time.
It has been happening for quite a long time.
You felt I'm going to turn the volume down on it.
You've got, you look, the guy's going around a car that's doing
a legal turn. They'll ZAP right in.
They'll, they'll, you know, they're putting them self at
risk. They're putting the drivers at
risk. They're putting pedestrians at
risk. There's a cop driving right

(24:30):
there with them doing nothing, pulling over no one.
Is that a good service to any ofthese, these people, these kids
or these young men? Is it helping them achieve
anything? What's crazy is you get these
like these generally right leaning sort of libertarian
types that will go out there andtell you like, hey, like they're

(24:52):
just exercising their right to travel and you're allowed to
travel as long as no, we have rules.
You're on city streets that are paid for by everybody, so you
can't go do this. And some people might wonder,
like, where did that come from? Why is it like that?
And I want to play you somethingthat was put out 15 years ago.
I actually thought that this story was actually only 12 years

(25:13):
old. It's a 15 year old story.
There's a movie about it that's been out for at least 12 years
as well called The 12:00 Boys. I'll explain to what they are in
a second. This is not a new phenomenon.
This is a continued phenomenon that has existed for quite a
while. And in having it and having and
allowing this sort of quote, UN quote, bleeding off of of
pressure, you're telling people that it's acceptable to break

(25:36):
the law because you feel stressed or because your life is
rough. And that is the opposite of what
we do in this country. There are no mobile gangs of
dirt bike and and ATV riding thugs that happen in cities that
are full of nothing. But like hillbilly rednecks.
I've never seen them. I've looked for them.

(25:57):
And I've been aware of this phenomenon for like at least 10
years now. But you will find them in
Oakland, You'll find them in Chicago, you'll find them in
Saint Louis, You'll find them inWashington, DC, You'll find them
in various places in New Jersey.I don't think they've hit New
York City. You'll find it in Cincinnati.
I've got videos of a lot of thisstuff.
And you'll definitely find them in Baltimore, where I don't know

(26:18):
if it grew out of Baltimore or if that's just what it is.
But these are people that do notqualify for a driver's license,
same as the people who don't qualify for a diploma.
They don't have a driver's license.
They're not able to have a driver's license.
Often times, if not most times, these are stolen and then they
go out there and they wreak havoc on people.
Check this, you guys. Tell me if you've ever heard
this. This is the New York Times from
2010 for. President Obama.

(26:41):
That is not the New York Times for 2010.
I thought I got the wrong clip. That's why.
Here we go. This is an opinion piece.
An opinion, doc. OK, 12:00, boys.
They're going to ride with 12:00boys.
This is this is done in 2013. So this is 12 years.
That was correct. Helicopter.
I want to know what we're doing about these little scumbags on

(27:02):
these dirt bikes in our downtown.
I want to know if anyone out there has seen this police call.
OK, so the guy who said that wasthe police commissioner.
Here's where it's going to get controversial.
I mean, these kids are just little bastards.
These aren't like nice kids and this.

(27:22):
And the problem is I'm going to throw it out there because
they're African American. Nobody wants that's to say it
because no one wants to take action because you got young
black kids, they're misbehaving.You got to do something.
You got to do something. I don't care if they get hurt.
Frankly, I don't care if one of them dies now.

(27:43):
You got a kid kicking a police cruiser?
In Baltimore City you will see it all.
You will learn the right way to do all the wrong.
In Baltimore City they have a PhD in it.
All right, so they go on an interview.
I'm going to put this this little clip.
It's about a 4 minute clip and Idon't want to put all of it up,
but I'm going to show this over on kyleserafin.com.
So we'll put up a little link tothat there and you guys will be

(28:06):
able to watch it. The fact of the matter is, is if
you're going to go out there andride into oncoming traffic, if
you're going to disrespect law enforcement, you're going to
kick police cars and you're going to act like none of this
stuff, you know, is a problem. Those bad behaviors are the same
reasons why Giuliani went after broken windows and people that
had various like property violations.
If you allow the riff raff to can proliferate in your city,

(28:26):
then you're going to have all the problems that you're going
to have from people who learned the wrong lessons that they can
get away with small things. People who can be trusted with
small things can be trusted withsmall, bigger things.
People who will get away with small crimes will try bigger
ones, and they do. And almost all those guys now
have learned that they can breakthe law with impunity.
They start carrying guns. Many of them have criminal

(28:47):
records. And if they don't, they will
have a criminal record at some point in time, but it'll be
something way bigger than they should have been ticketed and
said, hey, you've lost his bike.And by the way, you stole this
bike, so now you got Grand Theftand now you've been removed from
your your ability to legally owna gun.
And now you've just really limited yourself.
No, we're going to teach them the wrong lessons.
We're going to get away from it until it becomes something
horrifically bad, dangerous. And that's the story that Mike

(29:10):
Waller wrote. And it's not a very recent
article. The fact of the matter is this
has been, this has been a problem for a long time.
Mike Waller is a guy that's beenon our program.
If you guys want to go back and listen to a really good
interview talking about the history of the FBI, talking
about it, the intelligence sort of aspect of it, A lot of really
good information that came from Mike Waller.

(29:30):
He's a think tank guy. He lives in DC.
He also has a place up in in thethe Northeast, out in the cabin
somewhere so he can get away. I think it's in New Hampshire.
But he tells me all the time that DC is incredibly dangerous
and that he's glad that Bruin came down so he can carry a gun
and that his neighbors know thatthey have to look, look out for
each other. And they live in a really nice
part of Washington, DC. This story just got run the

(29:50):
other day. It's about something that
happened months ago, carjacked in the capital.
The crime of the pandemic is still roiling DC.
So they had something like almost 1000 carjackings last
year. The year before it was 500.
This year we're on track for another 500 or so.
So they're really excited that they're down to 500 freaking
carjackings. That's a ton of cards.
That's that's almost 2 a day. It was after 8:00 PM when Mike

(30:13):
Waller pulled up to his home in a well to do block of Capitol
Hill. This is where all the, you know,
the people who have money and means and work around our
government do. Waller, then 59, glanced at his
phone to check an e-mail and with set within seconds, two men
appeared on either side of his Gray Mercedes waving handguns.
They say Glock handguns. The man on the passenger side
opened it up, slammed his gun into Waller's right ear and

(30:34):
scalp, knocking him out momentarily.
When he came to, he was still strapped in with the seat belt,
blood flowing down the side of his head.
The gunman ordered him out of the car and commanded him to
throw his phone into the bushes.As they began to drive away, 1
pointed his gun at Waller and threatened to kill him on the
spot, prompting Waller, batteredand bloody, to duck into an
alley. These guys knew what they were
doing. They were completely smooth
about it, He said. He's a defense and foreign

(30:55):
policy strategist for the Centerfor Security Policy, a
conservative think tank. They seem like real
professionals. Waller has been all over the
world doing shape many things for the American government on
behalf of our people. He's been in Central America,
which can be very dangerous. He was in the Soviet Union,
which can be really dangerous. Then he was in there afterwards.
For all of you that think that this is a bad, this is just

(31:17):
because somebody had poor situational awareness.
When you're dealing with people who are professionals, they take
advantage of folks. They don't have to strike right
then. They take advantage of folks
when they are distracted. How many of you look down at
your phone when you're pumping gas and are not aware that that
is the best time to be able to pull something from you, either
your wallet or your car or your life?
How many are are not aware of that?

(31:38):
Because I can tell you if you want to do a really good grab on
somebody, if you want to snatch somebody up when they're not
aware and they are not most likely to grab their weapon,
that's when I would have my SOG teams go and, and watch people.
If you want to go take somebody down, I've seen it done so
smoothly. You pull up a, a minivan to the
other side of where you're getting gas, You're in there
pumping. You got your credit card, you

(31:59):
got your wallet, you're thinkingabout whatever it is.
It's like 2 guys get out, they put you in the minivan and
you're gone. Most people are most unaware
when they are doing mundane tasks like accessing their
wallet or pulling into their house and hitting the garage
door opener and getting ready togo home because you got a
million things on your mind. No, nobody is living in the red

(32:20):
all the time. The red is sort of that like
heightened sense of awareness where at any moment, you know,
death or serious physical injurycould happen.
Most of us live somewhere between the yellow and the
orange. But occasionally we're in these
white moments or these black moments where we're tacked.
We're completely task saturated and we're unable to process new
stuff. And then you find out that as
you open the door to get out to go to your house, bam, you've
got a freaking a gun punched into your head.

(32:42):
Now, that doesn't happen in niceneighborhoods.
It doesn't happen in my neighborhood.
It probably doesn't happen in yours.
But if you live in DC near the Capitol, it's a real thing.
His carjacking had no headlines.It happened in August of 2021.
He's told me about it privately as well.
And I know that this means something personally to a lot of
folks that live in that area. And just because you haven't
experienced crime personally, the odds of you living in

(33:03):
Washington, DC and experiencing somebody near you, one of your
neighbors, one of your friends having a nasty criminal action
happen? It's basically all of them.
And it's almost always black people, like, like the highest
percentage you can imagine, whatever it is, 85 percent, 90%.
There's some Hispanic gangs at work in the area too, but it's
really specific who's doing St. level crime and acting like it's

(33:27):
not and acting like this is somehow going to be a problem.
We're how threatening the children because Donald Trump
has put a bunch of people from the National Guard in there is
insane. It's an insane proposition.
And it actually shows you that they hate what's going on here.
They hate the people that they are actually in charge of.
They want them to be in a miserable and an ugly place.
You only have homeless people sleeping on the wall of the

(33:50):
federal courthouse in our nation's capital by choice.
It could be a, a choice to, to, to neglect that.
But that's, that doesn't happen.Drug dealing happening on
federal property when every single federal agent drives into
work in the morning, That only happens because there has been
a, a complete ignoring of the issue.

(34:11):
And a lot of it comes down to white guilt because
overwhelmingly, I'll say 95 out of 100 of the homeless people
that I saw in Washington, DC were black males.
Tons of them. It doesn't make the National
Guard the solution. It might be a temporary
solution. I just don't want it to stick
around. It's not a good answer, but

(34:34):
there is clearly a problem. And our media turns around and
acts like racism and bigotry andyour guilt for living in a safer
area is the problem. That's the crazy piece.
And I'm going to show you some more of those stories in a
second before we do. If you live in the part of the
world where you actually have enough room and you worry about
other things, like not somebody carjacking you, maybe you're
worried about things like blackouts.

(34:54):
Maybe you're worried about the Department of Energy's
projections saying that we're going to see a skyrocketing of
needs for energy and failures ofour electrical grid.
I've got this kind of handled already.
This is something that I've beennoticing in my own thing.
Even just a little brownouts area problem.
That's why we have the the grid Doctor 3300 here at the house.
It's it's right outside the studio.
It's quiet enough to operate inside.
It's pretty neat. And we actually had multiple

(35:16):
real world test. You put it in UPS mode.
So the uninterrupted power supply and your critical stuff,
whether it be a refrigeration orwhether it be your AC unit or
whether it be something like, I don't know, your medical
refrigerator that keeps your, your meds or, or some sort of
life saving stuff. All that will continue to roll
even when the power goes out. Power outages could increase by
more than 10,000% over the next few years, says the Department

(35:38):
of Energy. You don't have a backup
generator of some kind. This is a time you can do it.
This is one that anybody can own.
You don't need to have like piped in propane.
You don't need to have like something special.
Unlike a gas generator, It's quiet, it's fume free.
You can use it indoors for just the things that you need.
It's powerful enough that almosteverything in your home can run
off it and it can run for a while.
This whole studio is supposed torun for like 60 hours.
If we lost power here, based on the the calculations we've done

(35:59):
and took from turning it off from having actual power drops,
it gives you a calculation of how much time you got left
before it's empty. We've partnered with My Patriot
Supply for years. Here's the deal right now.
This is the deal where you can get their Grid Doctor 3300 and
you're going to get a free battery expansion pack.
They're like a $1300 value. You're going to get that when
you buy the the main product, the actual solar generator.

(36:21):
Go to mypatriotsupply.com/kyle. Mypatriotsupply.com/kyle I
haven't needed it yet, but I actually I'm just like an over
preparing kind of guy and I verymuch want the battery expansion
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they're carryable by one person.You're talking about like 20
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(36:42):
seem like a pretty neat option if you want to be able to run
things for a very long time because you want to be self
reliant and you don't want to bebeholden to anybody else.
mypatriotsupply.com slash Kyle As usual, our sponsors.
You can find the links in the show description.
What is the media telling you isthe real problem here?
They're telling you that it's that that that our government is
overactive and it's really mean to brown people.

(37:04):
It's mean to black people. It doesn't give them a chance.
Here's what might check in for Kilmore Abrego Garcia's ice
check in. Here's what might happen when he
goes and checks in with ice. Now, luckily we're late enough
in the day to be able to find out that in fact, he was taken
into custody. That's the best part.
But they were actually writing articles about a guy who broke
our law, who's an alleged Ms. 13member.

(37:26):
And, and God forbid he actually be deported.
He got deported, he got brought back and then they had to
release him. There's been all this, I bet
millions of dollars worth of, ofDemocrat donation law fair has
been done on this one guy alone.And so I've got a video of him
coming home, which is absolutelyabsurd and ridiculous.

(37:47):
You cannot make this kind of stuff up.
This is a video of of Abrego Garcia returning home.
And of course they had a celebration.
And of course, the celebration is not in English.

(38:18):
Garcia. Nothing like renting a hotel to
be able to do this. Video you can read, I'm saying
he's reading off a script there.And I don't really care about
the jazz music in the background.
OK, so what's the story? What the story is, is that they

(38:40):
were very, very worried that he was going to get deported again,
that he was going to be grabbed and then exported to Uganda to
some sort of holding cell. So you have ABC News saying
here's what could happen. He's under threat of
deportation. He's been threatened with
deportation to Uganda. He's expected to hear appear
before immigration authorities on Monday morning in Baltimore.
That's today. This was written.
This written today, earlier thismorning and then I've got the

(39:03):
the CNN live update. He's been taken into custody by
ICE. His lawyer says because he has
no right to be in this country. He doesn't belong here, nor
should he be here. But if you live in a world where
you feel guilty about your quoteUN quote white privilege, if you
feel guilty about American privilege that you live in a a
place where you have so much wealth available to you when you

(39:26):
have safety as a default condition.
If you feel guilty about the rest of the world cannot come to
the United States, then you somehow make excuses for people
who violate the law. And then you end up making
excuses for guys like this alleged Ms. 13 members, guys
who've had police reports filed on them for domestic battery,
for domestic violence against the wife who's standing there
next to him. And she doesn't know any better.

(39:46):
Like what is she going to do though?
You've put these people, I've said this many times, the the
leftist argument against illegalimmigration is just as strong as
the one on the right on the one on the right.
We're like, get the hell out of here.
You don't belong here. You broke the law.
You'd have no business in my country out.
But let's say you're on the left.
Let's say you're a bleeding heart Lib.
It's seriously simple. You can have the argument with

(40:07):
these people. I will tell you definitively,
having worked in MS13 neighborhoods, having worked
with MS13 sources who are reporting on the gang and are
being extorted by the people that are around them.
OK, the sources are usually not in MS13.
They are just living in neighborhoods that are
controlled by MS13. Here's what happens.
They pay somebody to get them across the border into the

(40:28):
United States, expecting paradise, expecting happiness,
expecting all of the opportunities that they've been
lied to, even though they don't speak English and don't have any
useful skills. So they come here and they get
dropped into some crap hole neighborhood.
And it could be in Dallas, it could be in Los Angeles, it
could be outside of Baltimore, it could be right next to

(40:48):
Washington, DC, La Casa de Maryland.
All you got to do is get them into those neighborhoods and
then they're screwed. And then what do you do?
You're in America. You're thousands of miles from
any border that you know, you speak a language that people
don't. Often times you don't even speak
like normal Spanish. Sometimes they'll speak other
languages. And you think that you were
coming here to get something brilliant and beautiful.

(41:10):
And then you realize that all you have is an abusive boyfriend
and a gang that's going to extort you for any dollar that
you make. And so they extort people who
make a couple $100 a week for 20bucks every single week, and
they'll do that to hundreds of people.
And that turns into a six figureincome for the gang in
extortion. And it's teenagers with guns
that are doing it. It doesn't matter if they're
black or brown in this case, they're brown people, and

(41:32):
they're abusing who other brown people.
What you've done is you brought in a captive victim population
that has no access or recourse to law enforcement, that has no
access to culture or language, that has no assimilation
capabilities, that has no legal right to be here, and is under
constant threat of deportation. And you've made them victims of
the gang that comes here and does the same thing because they
prey on the kindness of Americans.

(41:54):
It's white, liberal, moronic voters that say, I want to help
these poor people, but I don't care if they break the law.
And then suddenly you realize that those people are actually
worse off here than they were back home because at least back
home, they knew the culture, they knew the rules, they knew
what was going to happen. And you're going to cry about it

(42:17):
when this guy who by all accounts and by all evidence
that's been pointed out, shows was part of the actual problem,
not one of the nice people that came here and worked their ass
off. And yeah, do I have some
sympathy for people like that? Of course.
I'm a regular human being. If you busted your ass to go
solve a problem and make your kids life better, who's going to
be mad at you about that? You still got to do it the right
way. You can't.

(42:37):
I couldn't go do it in another country, and neither can you.
But I have empathy for that. Or you can be a dude who's got
MS13 Tats who wears the Chicago Bulls hat, not living in
Chicago, not being a Chicago Bulls fan, simply because it has
the horns and we know exactly what it means.
And you're going to see leftist activate for that.

(42:59):
I've got this video that that tells you how structured and how
BS the entirety of the leftist news.
And sometimes you get these likelittle moments.
The AP, The Associated Press uploaded a raw version of their
newscast and they did this a couple days ago.
This is Lisa Dreyer or Dwyer. She's reading a news story and

(43:23):
it's so stage scripted and edited just like that video you
saw of our Brega Garcia, that when you realize what these
people do to thread together a newscast that sounds so
polished, it makes me laugh. Like how does that Lady have a
job in mainstream media and Steve Friend does not see friend
can at least go and and speak extemporaneously accurately
about almost anything. Clearly we do the same thing

(43:46):
here. You guys are seeing that I'm
programming this in the background.
Like for those of you who don't realize it, like this is what it
looks like. This is what I got.
I got no script. I got the visual of what's in
front of me that says like, so Ican see what I'm what I'm
sending out into the stream, what's going to be the podcast,
and we just wing it every singletime.
And then you got these clowns. And this is so.
It's so illustrative of how goofy these people are and how

(44:08):
fake it is. They're not even reading their
own words. Watch this.
Indicating what? And is and Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu indicating.
You can get it. Come on.
Hearing is the latest upheaval in the US military and

(44:30):
intelligence agencies and comes a few months after details of a
preliminary details of a preliminary assessment of the US
strike on Iran were let I'm. Going to pause it for a second.
So if you're just listening, there's a guy that's filming his
his screen and it's the AP podcaster.

(44:52):
It's the AP radio thing. How goofy is it?
This lady is put on a blaze thatsounds like this so that when
she goes on on air she she has aproblem.
Let's get a running start and try to tell the story again.
I'm reading things directly off the script.
I have no thoughts of my own. I am simply going to convey
propaganda, propaganda that someone else wrote.

(45:15):
I mean, this is nonsense. This is not how regular people
talk. Some of the folks that are in
our chat right now got to see metalk on Saturday.
This is how I normally talk. Sometimes I laugh, sometimes I
think it's funny. This is the way that I operate.
And then instead you've got these people that are giving you
this old school polished produced thing.

(45:37):
One of the folks that I talked to at Catholic Vote when we were
originally doing a transition over this is going back to
November of last year. They were like, make it more
raw. It's OK to have the the podcast
be a little more raw it and a little less produced because
people want to know that when you know that the fly by wire
feel, which means that when I pull something, the wire

(45:57):
activates and you know, the flapgoes.
This is a concept that it's the the plane that we have here.
The the news information that isbeing shared is being generated
to you from a real brain at a real moment in time.
And it might not be true in a few minutes.
And sometimes I say things wrong, like a lady from Puerto
Rico is not from America, even though technically I guess it is
America. I wouldn't want to be there.
I'm going to continue this videojust because it's a little bit

(46:20):
funny. I'm not going to play all of it,
but it's about two minutes long.You guys can find this online as
well. Tim Kass put it out.
But it does show you the falsityof it, that that there's an
agenda, there's a narrative, there's a script.
There's literally a script. And that's why we got to be
worried about what's going on with Obrega, Obrega Garcia, the
most famous illegal alien in America.

(46:41):
And it's not even a good case. It's not even a good case study.
Oh boy. What is going on?
Try again. The guy's laughing too.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has fired a general whose
agency's initial intelligence assessment of damage to Iranian

(47:02):
nuclear of damage to Iranian nuclear sites from US strikes
angered President Donald Trump. How shitty at your job are you,
Lady? This is not that hard.
You read the script. I read freaking stories every
day. I pull them up live and I give
them to you guys. If you don't know, when you see

(47:23):
me looking off to the side, that's where the story is.
Again, it's crazy. It's fully nuts.
He's under deportation threat. He got deported.
The crowd groaned and chanted shame, shame.
After they got they got him in custody in Baltimore, his lawyer
came out. His lawyer's name is Simone
Sandoval Moschenburg. Oh, my God, that's so good.

(47:44):
Sandoval Moschenburg. What the hell?
Mr. Abrego Garcia was taken intocustody by ICE this morning.
He said he reported this after being after he was released from
custody pending a trial on federal charges.
Those are the human trafficking and smuggling charges, folks.
That's why I'm blown away that the talentless human beings that

(48:05):
have to do multiple takes and they put on the fake voice, Jeez
Louise. And these stories, they're so
desperate to give us what it is.Why, why are they giving it?
Here's Cincinnati, by the way. This, this suicidal empathy,
this white guilt thing, It's, it's falling apart.
It has to because people can't watch this stuff and be like,

(48:28):
oh, yeah, that's what I want to live in.
I showed you from 2013, Baltimore, New York Times.
Again, go to kyleserving.com if you guys want to see this old,
old clip from the New York Timesdoing a puff piece about how
breaking the law was a way to blow off steam for urban utes
Yeah, I'm doing the My Cousin Vinny.
The the utes How many is 2 utes the utes They're, they're riding

(48:49):
dirt bikes and motorcycles because they are starting at a
gate. It's like a gateway drug, but
it's a gateway crime. You're going to ride illegally,
then you're going to carry a gunillegally, then you're going to
car Jack a dude. Because guess what?
Riding around on dirt bikes where you can go anywhere and
you can jump up and you're used to popping wheelies and running
around on the, on the side streets or, or popping up on
the, on the curbs. It's a really good way to get

(49:10):
yourself into position and to get away from a car jacking.
This is Cincinnati again, Cop car right there doing nothing.
It's tolerance, but it's not in a good way.
It's the same way that you tolerate this a hole, Arbrego
Garcia being in our country and people are out there crying for
it. They're sad for this man who, if
he lived next to them, they'd beterrified of.

(49:44):
OK, We, we could tell from the commentators voice the the girl
filming this that she's a white young woman.
She's got that white young womanvoice and they're starting to
realize 12/13/15 years of this crap, it's starting to come
become problematic to people that are looking at going like,

(50:05):
wait a minute, why do we live like this?
Why do we have to have people that break the law and why can
we not say that they all look atthe same?
Like if 50 guys in a crowd are black, can you describe it?
I had this funny little moment where this guy was like, is Kyle
a racist? She's a liberal racist.
They're all racist. Let me help you out real quick.
Describe to me what I'd be looking for in the human beings,
the human persons that are involved in riding wheelies and

(50:27):
motorcycles around Washington, DC or Baltimore or Philly or
Cincinnati or Chicago or Saint Louis or Oakland.
What would they look like? Like, just like, imagine, I just
had my eyes closed and I want togo find these people cuz I got
to give them something. What do they look like?
Well, Kyle, they're under the age of 35, and they're over the
age of 15. OK.

(50:50):
And they're men or males. Oh, OK.
So we got boys and young men. Got it.
Anything else? Nope.
That's it. So I'm just looking for, like,
men between the ages of 15 and 30.
Any other identifying characteristic that would help
me find them? Yeah.
They live in shitty neighborhoods, and they're all
black guys. Oh.
Oh. OK.
How do you know those things arestolen, Serafin?

(51:10):
Oh, because we used to work the cases all the time, and they
were always like, it's like you'd you'd know that they were
seen on those things. What were they involved in?
Street level crime, murders, gang activity?
It's it's non negotiable. That's just what they that's who
uses those things? Could they afford those?
Maybe if they did it was becausethey were doing like drug
transactions for cash. Shouldn't cops be looking at

(51:33):
people that are buying that? Maybe.
How about we don't profile the people that are buying ATVs?
Although I really questioned some some things about you
buying an ATV if you live in Baltimore or if you live in
Washington, DC. Like why are you buying an ATV?
Like where do you ride the thing?
How do you get it there? Do you own even a trailer to
take it home? Oh, you're going to ride it off
the lot? That seems like an indicator.
But I don't want to profile people that buy stuff in America

(51:56):
because I live in a free America.
How about we just go find the A holes that are riding them
illegally and doing wheelies? By the way, the name 12:00 boys.
I was going to tell you where itcomes from.
It's really dumb. It doesn't sound very cool or
hard. A 12:00 boy, a guy who gets his
motorcycle up to a 90° angle, his wheelie up to a 90° angle
because it resembles the 12:00 on the clock.

(52:16):
That's where they got the name. And, and kids as young as 10 are
seeing that and be like, that's what I want to go do.
I'll, I'm, I'm committed to riding dirt bikes illegally in
an urban area. And the people who make excuses
say, well, they need some reasonto blow off steam.
It's the same thing. Students are worried about law
enforcement surging as DC students go back to to school in

(52:36):
Washington, DC. No, the law enforcement is there
for many of your quote UN quote students and student age people.
So they need help and they've proven it.
There's tons of these videos, bythe way, and I could show you
more. But if you can't talk about the
problem and you can't do it honestly, if you can't have like
a reasonable discussion about like, hey, we've got a real
problem in this country and here's what it looks like.

(52:57):
Here's another version of what that looks like.
It looks like a teenage boy running against girls.
And if we can't say, hey, as a father, I'm not going to allow
my daughters to compete against young men just in the same way
that I would say, look, this is a shit neighborhood and I'm not
going to let my wife walk home in it.
Can we do that? We just be honest about certain
things and stop having the guilt.

(53:18):
I'm going to give you a couple stories about why I think that
the Trump two presidencies spaced out actually ended it.
I think that Donald Trump one point O did a like a like a 12
combo where it was phased and stunned.
And I think the second election proved that people were just
sick of it because we had Biden in the middle and we had COVID
and we had the George Floyd riots and we had burning down
and everybody made apologies forBLM.

(53:39):
And then a bunch of people went like, Hey, BLM was bullshit.
It was a it was a scam. The people who ran it bought
mansions. There was no movement on the
so-called issues that we were worried about.
And what we found out is that those issues are emotional but
they're not based on fact. It's the same story as this.
I don't want to infringe on thispoor young boy who's super

(54:00):
concerned and and weirded out. Watch this dude dominate a bunch
of little girls, girls being, you know, teenagers.
Watch him. This is in Portland.
This is like Ground Zero for crazy.
I'm going to show you when people stop dealing with it or
stop accepting it, that we're all better off.
We can all be honest. Check this out.

(54:36):
Come on, Kelly. OK, so I cut away.
I counted it was at least 8 seconds, maybe 9 seconds between
when the boy crossed the boy with long hair, by the way.
So he had long hair. So he was doing that.
He had 9 seconds ahead of anybody else in a 400.

(54:57):
He was like 100 yards in front of them, maybe more.
Why would you let that happen? And then there's some like fat
white chick down on the on the thing wearing a puffy jacket,
giving him a high five. That actually is the real
problem too. I know that we're moving away
from this stuff. I know that we're not tolerating
it nearly as much. And unfortunately, it's going to
have to be certain people who step up and go, listen, what

(55:18):
you're saying is crap. I'm not going to participate
anymore. And it's going to have to be
people on the left. And I think that Donald Trump
actually moved the needle on some of these people because he
was, he just was, he just didn'tapologize about it.
And I think that's what people love about Donald Trump.
That's, you know, when I think he's funniest, it's because he's
not apologizing about stuff thatneeds to be said.
This is Snoop Dogg. I'm not a huge Snoop Dogg fan.

(55:38):
I liked his music when I was younger because I was dumb.
And now I don't like what Snoop Dogg represents.
He's on The Breakfast Club talking about, I think it's The
Breakfast Club, the giving podcast, whatever that is.
He's talking about a problem where we're going to introduce
gender and race and all this crap and put guilt on people in
kid shows and most parents now. And I'm in the same boat because

(56:02):
my kids are the age that would watch this.
I'm like, why are you making me deal with this problem?
I'm going to opt out of all of it.
I won't be part of it if Snoop Dogg's not going to be part of
it and Kyle Serafin's not going to be part of it.
And we're coming from pretty opposite ends of the world and
the spectrum when it comes to politics and thoughts and the
way that we live our life and our values.
I think that shows a movement away from this nonsense.

(56:23):
I took my grandson to see what was the movie with Buzz Light.
Toy Story. Not that one, but.
The oh, the new, the new Buzz, the light year, I think it's.
The light year, Kiki Palmer is in that movie.
She plays like the daughter. So we watching it and the lady,
which is Kiki's Mama, they move on into the space years, they

(56:46):
move down the line, they're likethen she had a baby.
What a woman. I want my grandson in the middle
of the movie like Papa slew. How'd she have a baby with a
woman? She a woman?
Oh shit, I didn't come in for this shot.
I just came to watch the goddamnmovie.
Hey man, watch the movie. They just said she and she had a

(57:09):
baby. They both women's.
How did she have a baby? Movie ain't over with.
So it's like this. Fuck me, I'm scared to go to the
movies and I'm like, y'all throwing me in the middle of
shit that I don't have an answerfor.
That's it. That's exactly what it is.
You're putting me in the middle of something.
I don't want to be part of it. And people that are like, not
otherwise, that are inclined to be in that sort of camp of, of

(57:32):
saying, yeah, like, I'm, I'm liberal.
I'm I'm, I'm compassionate. I, I care about other people.
That's where it starts going. This is a New York Times article
that was run in 2019. How white guilt in the age of
Trump shakes the Democratic primary.
There's a lot in even just the headline there when the New York
Times starts covering things changing racial attitudes of

(57:53):
white liberals in 2020 and how they decide to vote for
candidates. When Donald Trump was elected,
Joel Olson was outraged at the racial tension that he felt
fueled his rise, the silence of his white neighbors and the
stories of racial discriminationhe heard from non white friends.
And black friends said they werefollowed around department
stores. They claimed Mr. Olson, who's
white, became a member of the National Association for the

(58:14):
Advancement of Colored People. Such an anachronistic name.
He thought that white Americans were scared of the country's
growing Latino population, so hejoined the League of United
Latin American Citizens. He now registers voters on a
weekly basis, including with thewomen's league, the League of
Women Voters, to atone for his white privileges.
I have to cover all my bases, hesaid while wearing an N double

(58:35):
ACP shirt at a Kamala Harris rally.
It hurts my heart that white people are afraid of this
nation's growing Hispanic population, and I cannot allow
that to continue. White liberal voters like Mr.
Olson are thinking more explicitly about race than they
did even a decade ago. And that is it.
That was 2019. And where did that go?

(58:56):
If you believe the election results, then you believe that
it gave us a Joe Biden with a Kamala Harris as vice president.
That guy was being manipulated by every single thing out there.
They pushed all the buttons and he went out there and did
exactly what he was told. Hey, black people are being
infringed upon, support black people.
So he did. Latin people are being infringed
upon, support them. So he did.

(59:18):
Women are being are being infringed upon, their rights are
being taken, support women. So he did.
And then he saw what it got them.
What did it get them? More unrest, more inflation.
The American dream being pushed out of reached 10 + 1,000,000
people coming into this country.Not good outcomes for them,
which if you've ever seen it, you know, it's not good.

(59:39):
Violence, burning down of American cities, probably lost
members of his family that won'ttalk to him ever again because
of COVID shots and stuff. And the sort of that sort of
ideology that went down with it.This was the year before, by the
way, the New York Times ran a story.
How can I cure my white guilt? The things about privilege that
it can be used for good. I don't think people are buying

(01:00:00):
it anymore. I think that regular people are
looking around going like, hey, asshole, you can't just break
the law. It's not, it's not what they
call it noticing on the social media trends.
It's not. It's not.
It's not wrong and it's not bigoted to look at something and
and realize that all of the people that do a certain thing

(01:00:21):
look a certain way. That's actually a human survival
instinct. We learned early on, if you if
you study any psychology, you'relike, oh, like stereotyping.
It can be negative, but stereotypes can be good.
And every single stupid entry level American psychology class
starts this in colleges. They go, what are some good
stereotypes? And people be like, Asians are
smart, Asians are good at math. What are some bad stereotypes?

(01:00:43):
Black people aren't criminals. You know what some good
stereotypes about them. Oh, they're good at at at
sports. Like all this sort of like basic
low level thinking. Why do we have stereotypes?
Because it's a survival mechanism where you look around
and you go, I don't think that all black people are a problem,
but I do know that all the people on these damn motorbikes
that are doing the carjackings in Washington, DC are black.

(01:01:05):
So if I see a black person on a motorcycle that's doing things
that are otherwise criminal, I might be a little bit more
concerned. That's a logical and rational
thing. It's not bigoted.
It's based on evidence, and it'sa survival tactic that is built
into your brain. If God built us perfectly for
all the imperfection in this world, even if we use our tools
imperfectly, that tool can be used to keep you alive so that

(01:01:27):
you can do better things later. Can stats be manipulated?
Absolutely. They certainly can.
Can you can. Can you find out that some of
these things are are used and and and used against you?
Sure. How about the governor Gruesome
in California. He likes to do that.
The problem is, is that Americans are wise to this.

(01:01:48):
And although many people probably couldn't pass a basic
entry level stats course, more and more we're starting to see
people get hip to it. Before I play this Governor
Newsom video, let's do a quick break real quick.
And you're going to have a Spotify ad for those listening
on Spotify. There it is.
And here we go. Watch this.
This is Governor Newsom using statistics to lie.
And people aren't buying that either because it's easily
debunked. And my favorite guy to debunk

(01:02:10):
them is Adam Corolla. If you guys don't know, he's
great and he hates Newsom. Why are you protecting the folks
there? Eight of the top 10 murder
states in this country. Red states?
What? So classic Newsom just on social
media he comes out and goes. I don't know what Trump is
talking about. 8 out of 10. Of the top state, murder rates
are in red states. Which he was right, that is

(01:02:32):
true. Right.
But of course when you go and then look at what the cities
are. Right. 9 out of 10 are Democrat
and the only one that's not Democrat just switched to
Republicans 6 months ago and they're and it's on its way
down. Yeah, it's all the cities that
are Democrat. Run.
There's a classic Newsome manipulation.

(01:02:53):
He doesn't know the bull he's spewing.
It's really wild to see him do that well.
All he has is manipulation of numbers and statistics and
workarounds. That's all he really, he really
has. You know, when you don't have
the truth, that's about all you got.
It's interesting that he's goingto go, you know, sort of try

(01:03:14):
this on the world stage now. We'll see if people are if the
word is dumb enough, but something enough to buy into
that I think that some people are dumb enough and I think less
and less people are. I think there are far less
people that are interested in how do I cure my white guilt and
they're more interested in how do I pay for my groceries and
how do I not have how do I not have stupid danger everywhere I

(01:03:37):
go, like driving on the road? Shouldn't I be able to just do
that and not get killed by some illegal alien trucker that comes
from California under those bad policies?
This was something that'll probably enrage many of you.
This is a video clip from the the arraignment, the initial
appearance of the Indian truck driver who made an illegal

(01:03:59):
U-turn in Florida and killed three people simply by turning a
big rig that he should have never been behind the the wheel
of. And I'm going to let it, I'm
going to play it without commentary and I'm going to
comment after the fact. And it's a little bit hard to
listen to it, but just, you know, they're reading and then
they're translating. So listen to this good.
Morning Sir. Please state your full name for
the record Courts in session hunt.

(01:04:33):
My name is Harjinder Singh. OK.
Thank you, Sir. You have been arrested on 2
separate warrants, Sir. The first arrest warrant is for
three counts of vehicular homicide.

(01:05:06):
The second arrest warrant is forthree counts of manslaughter.
Both the rest for us affidavits were previous reviews by the
judge. All right.
And it goes on like that where they have this stuttering and

(01:05:28):
halting thing. Some of these initial
appearances can be done in like 90 seconds, 2 minutes.
They come in, they read the charges.
Somebody has to translate it into whatever language it is or
they can understand English ideally.
And then they just go back and they make it, you know, not
guilty. And then we go into the next
phase. In this case, they are slowly
reading the stuff to this man. Then they're having this lady do
these intermittent translations.Do they do that anywhere else?

(01:05:51):
I guess that's the victory of the American system, that we
have such a fair system that we're going to give a guy like
that who videotaped himself froma dash camera.
Who clearly was on scene and wasarrested for doing the thing,
who you can go back and find hadall kinds of paperwork because
the CDL is not without like lotsof documentation.
The fact that he was driving a load.
All that stuff is inspected. There's federal and there's

(01:06:12):
state statutes that are coming to play, both in California
where he got the license, back in Florida where he was driving
the thing. All of this stuff.
He's got a United States Department of Transportation
requirement. All of these things were
bypassed. This guy didn't do anything
properly. He was allowed to work in a
place that he should not have been, and he was given probably
the single scariest amount of responsibility that nobody
thinks about everyday. Who the hell is driving enormous

(01:06:35):
multi ton loads where you are driving with your family
members? Are you going to send your wife?
Are you going to send your husband?
Are you going to send your grandkids out into a vehicle and
they're driving in their flippinminivan and suddenly some guy
who's driving a 53 foot long trailer and a 40 foot long rig
in front of it does 100 and you know, 100 foot long insane turn

(01:06:57):
that ends up taking off the roofand all the heads of your
family. Is that a possibility?
Because that's what we're looking at right there.
And it's disgusting and and we're so fair in this country.
We're so just that we're giving him the same sort of, you know,
look at what's going on even though he doesn't even speak our

(01:07:19):
language. You ever seen a court trials
that have happened in other nations, even civilized nations,
like other first world nations where they're out there?
Man, you, you better hope that your translator is keeping up
because the judge is saying things, the prosecution is
saying things, things are movingand you're just there because
you don't even belong there and they know it.
That's suicidal empathy. That's sort of like, we feel so

(01:07:40):
bad about the, the, the way thatour country is that it's so good
and you didn't have the right togrow up here.
You're apologizing by our systemfor the white privilege that
you're, that you're hearing about that white guilt, but it's
going away and people are fed upwith it, people on left and
right, because more and more people get touched by this
stuff. You want to turn somebody who's
a who's an avowed leftist into aright wing radical car Jack em,

(01:08:05):
and then watch that person get arrested and then let go the
same day because they're a teenager, which is, by the way,
the same story that we heard about from Mike Waller.
And that person goes on to kill somebody.
Be the person that had a family member that was killed by
someone that was previously arrested for a previous violent
offense. And see if that doesn't make you
just a little bit more inclined to say all of this stuff is

(01:08:27):
garbage. And we have an idea what it
looks like if it goes full crazy.
Because we have Great Britain. We separated from Great Britain.
We took the testicles in that relationship.
So America lives as a country that still nominally has balls.
And then we can look back at theold country where this country
kind of founded out of where we fought for independence from,

(01:08:50):
right? I think that's a fair statement.
We have Great Britain's balls ina jar somewhere, apparently.
And we might want to go help them because this was the
craziest story that I heard the weekend this weekend.
This is a lady talking about a man arrested because he said the
most simple statement that we say in my house almost every
single day. This is a common phrase for my

(01:09:12):
children who are not bigoted, for my tiny little daughters and
my son and my wife and myself. And there's no bigotry involved
in it. But it could get you arrested in
England right now. OK check this.
A man was just arrested in Britain for saying we love bacon
outside of a mosque protest. Sorry about the protest.

(01:09:35):
Outside the Didsbury mosque, a British man shouted 3 words.
We love bacon. Police stepped in and arrested
him. Of course.
Let's pause here. We're now living in a country
where you can be arrested for saying you love a food.
Not for threatening violence, not for waving a knife, not for
doing a throat slitting gesture at people from a hotel window.

(01:09:58):
Not for walking inside somebody else's house.
Trespassing whilst holding your bits.
That's fine as well, but for saying that you love bacon
because Muslims don't need bacon, that's now a hate crime.
The authorities know they can't control the migrant chaos, so
instead they try and control you.
They police the words of ordinary British people because

(01:10:19):
that's easier than facing the consequences of their own
policies. And the excuse?
They'll call it hate speech. So what do we get?
Arrest for bacon, lock down drills for kids and the
government pretending it's on community safety.
And how do you end up with that?Indicating what?
And is and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

(01:10:41):
indicating. You get it because you have
propaganda for news that goes out there and floats, something
that's not true on the AP, on the news wires, on the NPR
types. And the hard left is starting
to, you know, even the people onthe hard left have to look at
this and just go like, Nope. And that's why you see the
Democrat Party underwater. There are some people that will
never not believe this. The chat actually pointed out

(01:11:02):
over the weekend, I found a a picture of a woman who was
showing off her cast and a broken arm allegedly, we have no
idea whether it's true or not, was showing off her cast, said
she lived in Chicago, that Chicago doesn't need the
National Guard. By the way, Trump's talking
about putting the National Guardthere, which means it's racist.
It's racist to put law enforcement or some sort of
federal occupying group, God forbid they have weapons, even

(01:11:25):
though that's what they're goingin there to go do.
It's like create law and order. They're going to put the
National Guard in Chicago potentially.
And why would they do it? Because Chicago can't take care
of its own problems. And they've proven it by not
taking care of their own problems and allowing
significant increases in crime to the point where you can have
a shootout in broad daylight. Nobody's going to go to jail in
Chicago. If you guys don't follow
heyjackass.com, go check it out.Look at their website.

(01:11:47):
You'll see all the things of what they call Chicago values,
which is basically black people killing other black people.
And that's where the threat is. And if you're a black person
that's in my tribe and there's tons of them, by the way, had so
you can mask what hit me up overthe weekend.
He was like, what's up, bro? Like where you been?
I never see you. It's like, yeah, like, I love
that guy. Why?
Because he has the same values as me.
He cares about family. He cares about raising his kids.

(01:12:08):
First thing he did, send me pictures of his daughter and his
son because we have the same value system.
So we're the same. We don't have the same skin
color, but everything else is wehave the same sense of humor.
He works for Babylon B, right? I got guys that served with me
in the military. They look not like me at all.
Tatted up, different muscular build, different color skin,
irrelevant. We care about our kids.

(01:12:30):
We care about making sure that they are raised to be good
citizens, that they stay out of trouble.
They have like, you know, sort of the same generational
knowledge that we had want to teach them how to take care of
themselves and to be self reliant and to be good citizens
to each other and to their friends and so on and so forth.
It doesn't really matter what you look like.
You could be part of my tribe and look nothing like me.
There's tons of them. It's based on values, which is

(01:12:53):
what America used to actually agree on, which is why every
single freaking show you saw in the 80s and the 90s, they all
had a freaking moral. I'm sorry, I'm getting animated
by this. They had a moral to the story.
Do you remember every damn sitcom you saw?
There was a moral to the story at the end of it.
Like, don't lie to your friends.Tell them the truth upfront and
you'll have less problems or whatever it was.
You knew what the moral was and it didn't matter whether it was

(01:13:14):
watching, you know, Urkel and family matters.
If you're watching with Hanging with Mr. Cooper, you watch
Sister, Sister, Fresh Prince, even The Fresh Prince of Bel
Air. What was the entire point of
that show? He was in a crowd of people who
all were black in Philly that beat the crap out of him.
You got in one little fight, which was going to result in his

(01:13:36):
death because he was involved ina gang or he was involved in a
place where there were gangs doing dangerous things.
So they sent him to Beverly Hills, where the nice white
people were, but also nice blackpeople who had money.
How crazy is this stuff? It's so simple.
We knew this. We knew this 30 years ago and
Americans didn't apologize aboutit.

(01:13:57):
Super simple. They knew what was up and they
lost it. They got 30 years of of
retrospective to try to shove itback down.
They got a reset with Obama and all that's terrible.
I'm going to play you one littlething of where it ends up going
because it obviously it's on purpose.
This is a report from a guy thatI love watching.

(01:14:18):
I love his accent. I don't love Irish accents in
general, but I like this guy because I like the way he talks
like what he says and what he's saying is this is clearly on
purpose, but people are getting sick of it.
The real crime right now is noticing too soon.
If you notice too soon, if you bring people into your country

(01:14:38):
that want to be part of your country, that add value to your
country, that share the values of your country, we don't have a
problem, especially if they don't break the law to get here,
which is the real key. I've lived next door to people
who, who came here from Africa with the same values.
We cared about family. We cared about, you know,
starting businesses. We paid about making sure that
we're, that our, our houses werein compliance with the HOA,

(01:15:00):
which we both hated, but we did it anyway because that's what we
bought into. And that's what the, that's what
the rules are of the area where we lived.
And we all wanted bigger spaces and property and more space for
our kids to play. That's easy.
It's when you start bringing in a thing and apologizing for
other people not having your values and acting like you're
the problem for having values inthe 1st place.
That's the craziness. And I think Donald Trump is

(01:15:21):
mostly done away with that, at least in the same rational
people. And the people that are still
holding out and think it's somehow this guy is The Dirty
bad man because he's going to deport Kilmore Arbrega Garcia
and that these guys standing outside of a building somehow
represent a threat. The only places where you see
this kind of like military presence standing armed is where
you've actually created the problem in the 1st place, Third

(01:15:44):
world corruption. If you import all of the people
that are from the third world that look like that, guess what?
You're going to get third world results.
If you bring a shit load of people in from Latin America,
where they're used to seeing armed people in camouflage
carrying machine guns, then that's what we're going to need
to bring it back. Anyway.
My Irish guy, I can't remember his name, but it'll be on the
screen in a second here talking about the problem.

(01:16:06):
And this is a microcosm, Irelandvery, very small, China huge,
same number of foreigners, not per capita.
He's saying, by the way, he's saying, he's saying the actual
number of foreigners that are allowed to to emigrate in
something about people that understand that values matter.
China's a big country, lots of people, much more than Ireland,

(01:16:26):
lots of land, much more than Ireland.
Well, guess what? Ireland has roughly the same
amount of foreigners as China does, the same amount as China.
China's a lot wealthier, it's a lot bigger, a lot more people,
and we have the same amount of foreigners.
You wonder why in the last 10 years you look around and
Ireland has drastically changed.You wonder why your house prices

(01:16:50):
have increased massively. You wonder why GPS have a
three-week waiting list, why hundreds of thousands are on
waiting lists for hospital appointments.
It's because Ireland, our politicians are flooding this
country with immigrants, completely unsustainable.
And it's happening like that andthey're pushing the narrative

(01:17:12):
now that if you have a problem with immigration, something that
for hundreds of years people talk very seriously.
But now even if you you were to talk about it, maybe say there's
too much, you're a racist, you're bigoted, you just hate
other people having a problem with your country being
demographically changed, flooding the place with non

(01:17:34):
Irish people. You have a problem with that,
well, you're just racist. Let it happen.
Stop, stop being racist. Stop doing those things.
He goes on to explain exactly what we've all heard.
And that's why people don't talkabout it.
And most people will get cancelled from their job because
there's still that attitude, that quote UN quote political
correctness from 30 years ago that that popped up where you're
not allowed to talk about certain things.
I don't have that problem right now, but I will be told called a

(01:17:56):
racist. I was called a racist all
weekend. And the old excuse used to be
like, well, I've got black friends.
Like, how dare you? Here's the thing.
I don't give a shit if you call me a racist because I have black
friends that I've had for decades and I don't care.
It has nothing to do with them being black.
I don't like people that are liars.
I don't like people that are criminals.
I don't like people that don't share my values.
And I don't care what you look like, which is why I don't live

(01:18:17):
in non America, whether it be Washington, DC or New York City.
I don't want to go there. I don't want to hang out in
California. I don't want to go to San
Francisco. If you don't share my values,
you're not my people. It doesn't matter what you look
like. I just threw a news story up
that we're going to end with, and it's pretty strange because
you're like, how in the hell does that tie in?
Seraphin? First human case of flesh eating

(01:18:38):
screw worm parasite detected in the United States, HHS confirms.
Is that a big turn from what I was just talking about?
I'm going to tell you it's not, and I'll tell you why.
You know I will. The craziest weird stories often
times come back the things that make perfect sense.
The first human case of flesh eating screwworm parasite was

(01:19:00):
detected in the United States. The case is related to a person
who recently traveled to El Salvador and it was confirmed by
the CDC on August 4th. The amazing thing is, is that
this is on NBC News. It was one of their main stories
this morning. It's quite salacious.
And it says that the spokesperson for the CDC said,

(01:19:22):
quote, the risk to the public health in the United States from
this introduction is very low, but the opportunity to implement
means of controls is very high. But what we don't find, and they
go on to talk about how like, they were serious outbreaks in
Central America in the 80s and 90s and that this thing, you
know, lays a bunch of eggs and they can hang out and you can
have them transfer. Do you guys know that when you

(01:19:43):
go into a state like California that they, like, want to do a
strip search of you to find out whether you have any fruit or
vegetables from not California? And that's in the United States.
One of the amazing, amazing things about having a bunch of
illegal aliens coming into your country, particularly from El
Salvador, which is where we get the Ms. 13 guys.
It's where we get Kilmore, Arbrega Garcia.

(01:20:04):
When you have the back and forthof the family members and the
attorneys and, and also some of our like dimwitted, you know,
white guilt, sort of selling senators and Congress people
going back and forth to these places.
They come back with stuff they do.
Maybe they come back with a bunch of eggs for a flesh eating
screw worm that's going to end up screwing up livestock and

(01:20:24):
cattle because that's what it's going to be.
The only solution is going to bemore government.
By the way, there's always the same solution to it.
The left always sees, well, if we just had more government.
Nope. For those of us that are
conservative on the right, the answer is the answer is really
straightforward. Let the government that is
supposed to work, work, enforce your borders.
Don't let these people come in. If you come from a country that

(01:20:46):
has nasty things like flesh eating human screwworm parasites
or that targets our livestock, it turns out that our businesses
are really important to us and we need to be able to eat.
So you can't come in. You have no right to be here.
We don't care. The Chinese do it.
Remember, the left was super into doing COVID lockdowns the
way the Chinese do. How about we do some basic
lockdowns on the border like theChinese do, which was the point

(01:21:10):
of the Ireland story. Did that weave it all through?
I hope it did, and if it didn't,leave me a comment and tell me
why it didn't make sense, because I want to know that.
By the way, the answer that theyhave to the screw one problem is
breeding billions of sterile flies and dumping them from the
air in southern Texas and and Mexico to stop the parasite
spread so that they'll basicallylike breed with sterile flies

(01:21:30):
and then not have more. That sounds awesome.
I can't see that being the startof a freaking zombie movie
either, right? All right, I'm going to remind
you guys that if you guys want to support the program, it's
free, it's cheap, it takes a little bit of your time, I
guess. So it's not totally free.
You can subscribe to any channel.
YouTube, we just hit 12,000 subscribers over there.
Thanks so much. For those of you following on
YouTube Rumble, we're almost at 30,000, so we appreciate you

(01:21:50):
there. XI think we're coming up on 1/4
of a million or something like that.
So follow us on all those placesat kyleseraphinrumble.com/kyle
Seraphin and youtube.com. Slash at Kyle Seraphin Locals is
Kyle seraphin.com if you guys want to be part of that program.
Super easy, great community, little behind the scenes stuff.
We love it. I love being able to see what
you guys write because some of you guys have some real weird

(01:22:10):
ideas and they are funny and it's where I can share with you
things that don't really make itinto the podcast or they're too
long. Kyle serafin.com You could be a
free member of the community. No big deal.
You could be a paid member. If you guys want to support what
we're doing and you want to pushback against FBI tyranny and all
that stuff, that's that's you supporting my unpaid government
activism that I do. I do have to give you a palate
cleanse because it's been it's been a day like that.

(01:22:31):
So let's see what we got here. I bet you I got something kind
of funny that we can full something about a man who's just
had enough. This might even be a little bit
long, but why not? I saw this this this weekend.
It kind of made me smile a little taste of of how we can
tolerate certain people, but we can't tolerate others.

(01:22:52):
Where in the heck is this recording?
See, this is the building it on the fly while we're out here.
Stand by, we'll find it is a manwho is a pharmacist, and he's my
tribe, clearly, but he doesn't look like me.
You guys are going to be shocked.
He's got tattoos. Where in the hell is this guy?

(01:23:12):
All right, it may have to wait for tomorrow.
It will wait for tomorrow. So I'll give you something else.
How about a Gen. X boomer throwback to people who
are young and are gay and want to try Everclear?
This is totally unrelated. Did they ever try to Everclear?
What? Whoa. 1985 flashback.
Taking a shot with no reaction. That's the goal.

(01:23:33):
No reaction. Yeah, that's not going to
happen. 190 prove 95 ADB. Oh, you don't have to tell us
that. We know its origin story.
Oh, he's not mixing that with anything.
This poor kid. There it is.
Yep, and the record for somebodyattempting to drink Everclear

(01:23:57):
without mixing it with somethingis 0.
For however many times they attempted to do this, you didn't
have any elder Gen. X or millennials you could have
conferred with that. They could have warned you about
this. I could actually smell it now
and it's not even anywhere near me.
This was our form of entertainment.
At every party there was always at least one person that tried

(01:24:17):
this, and they always failed. It is liquid fire.
Everclear is the reason why we have most of the emojis we have
today. That was the inspiration for the
faces. Even when you mixed it with
something, it didn't help much at all.
Well, on the bright side, your mouth is now sterilized for the
next 15 years. There you go.

(01:24:39):
Some of you guys just had some college flashbacks.
I'm not mad at that. I did find the the clip in the
middle of that. I needed a clip to get away to
go find the the pharmacist. We'll play it tomorrow.
No big deal. For the quick question that
popped up, I've seen it both on both chats from both our our
rumble chat and our YouTube chat.
Who are the 10 FBI agents that got reinstated?
Nobody did. No FBI agents got reinstated.

(01:25:00):
Cash Patel still full of crap over there at the FBI and we're
going to keep pushing him. Go follow me on X if you guys
don't already. You can see my message to him
from the morning, this morning. And the list of the 10 who are
supposed to be reinstated. They, by the way, do include
Steve, Fred and Gerardo Boyle. Hasn't happened.
God bless all of you guys. Thank you for listening.
Thank you for caring about what's going on to those folks

(01:25:21):
and and my buddies over there. And I look forward to seeing you
guys through this week. This week.
We do mediation with the DOJ on Friday.
So it's going to be a little interesting.
And we're recording a an interview with an FBI whistle
blower who you don't know yet, at least not from here.
So look forward to that on the Sunday.
It's going to be a big one. Have a great rest of your day
and let's get this thing startedoff properly.
Thanks for listening to the KyleSerafin Show, streamed live

(01:25:43):
weekdays on rumble.com/kyle Serafin Bobble Kyle on Twitter,
Truth Social and Instagram at Kyle Serafin.
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