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February 17, 2025 138 mins
The episode kicks off with conversation about squirrel damage of the Cybertruck, protected animals and government funding. Walter then shares his experience with the Walther GSP. Legal topics touch on John Crump, FPS Russia, and Rob Blagojevich's pardon. The conversation shifts to Elon Musk's public image, DOGE, Trump policies, immigration, and brace bans, wrapping up with insights on military recruitment, identity politics, and gender integration in youth activities.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
On, and then go over here and start.
Alright.
Let's see.
Okay.
I think
Hey.
We still got three windows.
What's up with that?
Oh, right here.
That's just right here.
I don't I don't wanna mess with it.
And then when Patrick comes back
Have to
go back then I gotta figure out how to put thatthing back on over there.

(00:23):
So there you go.
Alright.
So I think I believe that we're feeding out tothe folks out there.
Let us almost look like we you know, if I wouldhave done you in the first circle and then me
in the second one then a seven, it'd be likeJames Bond.
You know?
Remember the James Bond movie?
It'd be like a circle circle.
Then Then double o seven?
Yeah.
Yeah.

(00:43):
Yeah.
Then double o seven.
Let us know how the audio is and all that stuffout there.
You guys are joining us live on PlayYour so wecan actually hold shooters like this right
here.
Who knows what this is?
I'm not even gonna say you should know.
You should know by now.
Should know by now.
And then I'm not
gonna spoil
it.
Yeah.

(01:03):
Walter's got a soon to be famous award winning
That's from your that's from your Olympic, yourcompetition days.
Right?
Right.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Can you imagine me, like, skiing down the hilland then stopping somewhere?
Like, oh, yeah.
I can imagine a tumbling head over ass down thehill.

(01:25):
Oh, yeah.
I would break bones of golf.
Ah, fuck it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Skiing.
Oh, yeah.
Machine gun.
Just skiing machine.
Yeah.
Not, not not super athletic.
Okay.
Let's see.
I believe that we are feeding out to the folksout there.
I'll check, make sure.
Our friend, Cujo seventy four, shout out tohim.

(01:47):
Hope all is well with you, my friend.
You're you're doing good.
And, my CJ grew out there as well.
As you guys come in, hit the arrows up on thisvideo on player just because that helps us over
here on the on the player side of it.
Walt, I think we're ready.
Let me push the buttons and and, set it off upin here.

(02:09):
Welcome back to the Hank Strange Situation,lifestyles of the locked and loaded.
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(02:32):
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Alright.
And boom.
There we go.
We are live.
Let's get those jazz hands going.
It's just me and Walter today.
Patrick is on the frets.
He's not here.

(02:53):
There you go, jazz hands.
Alright.
Thanks for joining us.
So, this is episode 1,050 of the Who Moved MyFreedom podcast, free for all Monday.
What's up?
You know
what this do you know what this sign is?
Running running, man?
Illegals running from ice.
Oh.
That's the new gang symbol.
That's the symbol.

(03:13):
Time to get stepping.
Time to get the hell out of dodge.
Get up out of here.
Get up out of here.
Yes.
So, anyway, episode ten fifty or 1,050, freefor all Monday.
Walter Keller of Safety Harbor Firearms
Yeah.
And, stemparts.com is joining me here.
Shout out to all the folks out there in thechat.

(03:35):
Thanks so much for hanging out with us here onyour Monday.
We appreciate you guys.
Like I said, I see Jay Grewe out there and CoolJoe right now.
And as other people come in, let us know.
Since it's only me and Walter, here's what Iwas gonna do tonight.
Any rumors, myths, legends, anything you everheard about Walter Keller, you know, any

(03:57):
stories, that you ever wanted straightening up,whatever you guys ask, he will he will answer.
We'll get you straightened
up.
Walter.
Right, Walter?
You committed to this.
I I even thought I didn't ask you.
You're ready for this.

(04:17):
Right?
Sure.
Okay.
Cool.
There you go.
And by the way, there's our logo for theknight.
There you go.
There you go.
Let's see.
Let's see if we can get it up here.
Boom.
What do you think about that?
It's just Like
a, like a pet eagle.
Yeah.
It's just the, it's just the skeleton, whichalways represents me.

(04:38):
Pirate life.
Kind of like an AR SBR, I guess, I would say.
SBR.
I actually like the XM one seventy seven.
Is it?
Oh, okay.
Man, you need to make a dictator.
Something looks off about this.
Let me see.
What's it that's throwing me?
It's getting bad.
It's got a funny break, but it's it's gettingbad.

(04:59):
Yeah.
Oh, you know, well, the the magazine well lookskinda weird.
I know.
Yeah.
The magazine well.
But overall, it looks decent on that.
You were saying before we started, the, thehand looks weird.
Yeah.
And, I like that it has some kind of watch onthere.

(05:19):
It's not identifiable.
And then, of course, yeah, you look like,Walter's always the eagle.
Walter looks like the pet eagle.
The pet eagle.
Yeah.
Do you think you could actually keep an eaglelike that without him clawing your eyes out?
It might be a little challenging.
Yeah.
I think you get your face really.

(05:40):
You have to put one of those leather masks onyour face.
Your face is gonna get I don't know.
I I actually don't know anyone who's ever kepta Ped Eagle, but I'm sure there's people.
Yeah.
I mean, probably if it's if it's injured orsomething, you you could have a Ped Eagle.
Yeah.
Right.
I think you have to have some kind of licenseto

(06:01):
Oh, I'm sure.
Mess with the eagles.
Because I think any protected creatures that wehave here, you met you touch those, you go to
prison.
That's what I believe.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, floor Florida has the, Florida has thosegopher tortoises.
Yeah.
Don't fuck with the turtles.
Even turtles Yeah.
Don't don't mess with them.

(06:21):
You know, if you wanna go fuck with something,go jump in the river and fight with an
alligator.
Yeah.
Go.
Find a nice small alligator.
Like, about that big.
Yeah.
You'll be fine.
They didn't do nothing.
Yeah.
I yeah.
We have those here.
We don't mess with them.
They can do whatever the hell they want to do.

(06:42):
Yeah.
You know?
That now the tortoise, I think, is protected inis that protected in Florida?
Or the whole I think that's a Florida thing.
I'll have to look that up.
I think
it is.
Yeah.
I don't think it's a net.
I don't know if it's a national thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't think that particular one's national.
The gators also protected.
Believe it or not.
Yeah.
And the freaking alligators, and they're notthey're not endangered.

(07:04):
That I gotta get Dojo on that thing.
Dojo's gotta fix that.
What's up with that?
You know what?
And and you and funny you, I mentioned that.
That is an an issue.
You know, why do you have on why you haveanimals that aren't that don't still on the
list?
That that cost money.
That costs money.
Yeah.
Well, because there's money that's going tofish and wildlife or whoever.

(07:26):
Right?
Surveys and all this
kind
of shit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think I think the I think the money should begoing to making Gatorbites.
Someone's sending that money to USAID so that,they can they can come up with a coronavirus
that would affect them.
It's gonna affect the alligators.
It's so stupid.

(07:46):
The thing about that USAID thing is Mhmm.
It's not just the like, a leftist thing.
Mhmm.
Everybody stuck their fingers in that thing.
Yeah.
CIA, everyone.
The Bushes, the Clintons, everybody.
Yeah.
New York Times was getting some money.
Yeah.
Politico?
Come on.
Why are
we funding these leftist organizations?

(08:07):
Yeah.
I always said why are we funding the PBS, bythe way, too, actually.
Yeah.
We don't need to fund anyone.
And nowadays, we don't need it.
Perhaps in the past, like, in way, way back inthe days, but I don't think we need it today.
No.
We definitely don't
need it.
If you
can't make it, you can't make it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, let's see here.
Before we jump into the questioning, the toughquestions for Walter, couple of things oh, so

(08:31):
first of all, this is my, Walter GSP in '22.
There you go.
I found this myself while I was traveling.
As you got that when you were in the Olympics.
What are you talking about?
Right.
Yeah.
Sure.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
I would like to see you know what?
Maybe what else young and skinny I could havebeen in the Olympics is possible.

(08:54):
But, yeah, the grip was the whatever grip theyoriginally had on it, someone messed with it
and, like, adjusted it to their own hand, Iguess.
Yeah.
So, actually, Walther helped me out and and gotme a replacement for that.
And then Patrick, babyface p, actually helpedclean up the rest of this.

(09:14):
So very nice gun that, by the way, never shot.
Really?
No.
Why?
I don't know.
I think we need to do another 22 video.
All 20 twos.
Yeah.
And just do and and, like, have a competitionand see who because this this is supposed to be
I
tell you what to do.
Uh-huh.
You wanna have a 22 pistol competition?

(09:36):
Yep.
You get to pick whatever pistol you wannacompete with.
Yeah.
Whether it's Yeah.
A fancy Walter or it's a Mark two Ruger or aYeah.
Or a revolver, and then, you know, let thechips fall where they may.
Yeah.
We'll set up, like, a 22 like, we'll show allthe 20 twos we have, and then we'll set up,
like, a 22 Plinkster kinda competition at theend and see who wins.

(09:58):
Let's see.
Check for accuracy.
What are you, what are you holding over there?
What you got?
Well, this is my XM four fifty.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Now let me go hold on.
Let me go full screen here so we can actuallyshow that off.
Now are you supposed to be talking about thisright now?
Or
Yeah.
We can do whatever we want now.
Okay.
Alright.

(10:19):
Well, Anderson Anderson Manufacturing thatmakes this lowers an Anderson lower.
Mhmm.
They're having a big bore build off.
That's a it's me, Flying Rich, John Crump, Joe,shooting gallery in New England, and
Dark, I think.
And dark.
Yes.
DLD after dark, all building a big bore rifle.

(10:41):
So I chose four fifty Bushmaster because that'spretty big bore.
Mhmm.
Yes.
Yes.
Do is pattern my build off the XM one seventyseven from Vietnam vintage.
Mhmm.
Except mine is
Except April.
Master.
And if anybody notices, it looks close.

(11:01):
There's an extra hole here.
Because this motherfucker runs full of fuckingauto, bitch.
Have you tested this with four fifty,Bushmaster?
Certainly.
And if you would like to see the video, you cango to Safety Harbor Firearms on YouTube and
look at the short.
There's a short that Hank Strange was behindthe camera when we filmed it.

(11:24):
Oh, really?
Yeah.
So really.
Yes.
Oh.
Me.
That's
cool.
Me doing a this is a seven round magazine.
When was this, Walt?
This was before before the shot
show.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
I do a mag dump.
This this this mag holds seven rounds.
Let me
see if I could find that.

(11:44):
Mhmm.
And it's a it's a popular, short for me.
Mhmm.
This is actually a metal car stock, which Ibought probably twenty plus years ago and never
used it.
And this is the perfect time to build this guyup.
I had to make this break from scratch becausethere nobody makes a a four fifty diameter XM

(12:08):
one seventy seven style break.
Uh-huh.
Okay.
But, no, this thing is a this thing is apretty, abusive.
We'll say that.
Yeah.
It's gotta be bodacious.
Let me see if I could pull that up because Ieven myself forgot about it.
Here we go.
Okay.
So, yeah, on Safety Harbor firearms as Waltsaid, and it's this one, XM four fifty.

(12:30):
You got 13 k views on it so far.
And let me see.
It's not gonna we're not gonna get to see thewhole thing here because oh, and then the man,
that's that's pixelated right there.
That needs to that needs to catch up.
You guys dial up modem action going there.
Yeah.
What's why is that?

(12:52):
Why is that taking so much to come in?
Let's we'll we'll give it a second.
We'll just let it loop.
It's gonna it's gonna probably load here atsome point.
But, yeah, that's not coming in as it'ssupposed to, which is interesting.
I don't know.
Let me see what, Internet am I.
Am I on the right Internet?
Yeah.

(13:14):
Definitely.
I don't know why.
That must be that must be on, YouTube thatthey're not coming in clear on that one.
Jeez.
My my short is not super, super clear either.
So, I don't
I don't know why, but it it didn't come outthat way.
So Yeah.
I mean, it looks great in the thumbnail.
I wonder if they're deliberately degrading theimage.

(13:36):
Well I
don't know.
They they didn't monetize it for me.
Yeah.
I don't know why.
Of course, because it got 13,000 views, theydidn't wanna
Yeah.
Well, they're they're coming down ateverything.
Everything pretty much that we put up, evenwhen we put the podcast up over on YouTube, is
getting demonetized now all of a sudden.
Most of my videos lately have been monetized,but they're not,

(14:01):
I
don't usually, if you're not sticking the magin or loading the mag or doing anything like
that, you usually get away
with it.
But Mhmm.
This
one here, they didn't like it for some reason.
I think lately I think there's something goingon.
We'll find out.
I have funny the tea leaves are coming backfunny from, YouTube.
So it seems like we're about to get smacked up.

(14:23):
Maybe they cut off their USAID money.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Something's going on.
Shooting gallery, Joe says, hey hey.
What's crack a lacking everyone?
Shout out to Jim.
Like I said, for everyone who's coming in, Jadethat I see out there, Cujo, shooting gallery.
If you guys have questions, myths, legendsyou've heard about Walter Keller and you want

(14:45):
me to straighten them out, let me know.
I have some already that I could go to, butwhat's up?
You have a a question about your own self?
Straighten it.
We'll we'll straighten it right up.
Yeah.
She's getting seven straight.
Oh, and once again, another reminder, tomorrownight, 10:00, DLD after dark, we're having the
where you're gonna see everybody's build thatthey made.

(15:06):
I haven't seen them all.
I've seen crumps.
Yeah.
I think I saw crumps.
Yeah.
I I've seen parts of Joe's, not all of it,parts of it.
Did I see Joe's?
I think.
He knew what he knew what I was doing from dayone because we talked about it in the shop.
Yeah.
But, and I haven't seen anything of, of Rich'sor Darks.

(15:26):
No.
I saw Rich's because I would Rich came here toshoot his.
Ah, okay.
Because I actually have the because in RichRich's build has a suppressor involved in it,
and, and he also used, what was that what wasthe caliber Rich was using?
Because he used the Fort Scott.

(15:46):
Whatever that's set.
Eight six.
Eight six.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So he came here and I did the camerawork forhim.
So I saw that.
And then I'm trying to think and then I think Iput up a video somewhere, but I can't remember.
Or no.
You know what?
I don't think I did because Rich might've toldme I couldn't put it up yet.
I was so good about that for so long.

(16:07):
Mhmm.
And then finally, the other day, I said, f it.
This is
going up.
Yeah.
And I posted the short, and it kinda it kindawent along nice and it didn't do a whole lot.
It didn't do a whole lot.
And all of a sudden, it they engaged this thethe main boosters Mhmm.
Like Elon Musk does, and a fucking thing justtook off like a straight up like a rocket.

(16:28):
Nice.
Who so right now, from your odds, you know,from your perspective, who do you think has the
best odds of winning?
Well, you know, if if you like painted guns,like a painted lady
Mhmm.
You know, you might go for that.
If you like your if you like your ladies to be,just straight up and right in your face

(16:49):
Mhmm.
You might, you might like a little rock androll, so to speak.
If you like your ladies au natural or
you And if you like Yeah.
You like them a little slutty?
You know what rock and roll is?
You know, that term rock and roll is about sex.
Yeah.
Right.
Are you the only one that has, a machine gun inthe running?

(17:10):
Oh, there you go.
I'm the only I'm the only, SOT.
So
It's gonna be it's gonna be tough to see who'sgonna win that one.
I think, who is who is it?
I believe that Krump's is all themed out.
Right?
His is Yeah.
He's,

(17:31):
Yeah.
What was it?
Was it was it Deadpool?
Was it Deadpool?
Yeah.
Yeah.
His is Deadpool.
So you guys so tomorrow at ten m, that'll be onDLD after dark.
After dark.
There you go.
And that will be on
the that will be on rumble probably because wewanna be able to touch the guns.
Yes.
Yes.
Which everyone is going on the rumble now.

(17:53):
So you know what?
Should I,
everybody's been saying you should go torumble.
Yeah.
You know, people have been asking me.
They've been saying, you know, Hank, we shouldgo over to the rumbles.
You know, not yeah.
You know what?
I am thinking about it.
I can't lie about that one.
I am thinking about it.
You guys might hear us switch back or you mighthear that we switch back over to, to Rumble.

(18:18):
Dark, Joe, getting good numbers from
Joe's yeah.
Joe's been on there for a while.
Dark is is Dark also been on there for a while?
He's doing that too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think John is going over there.
Crump's getting ready to go over there.
So
Yeah.
Yeah.
So there you go.
So okay.
For the first question that I'm gonna ask,which is not really related to Walter, but

(18:42):
let's see if we can make it Walter related.
Jade Gru says, can Crump get a pardon for CSR?
And, you know, there might be a rumor out therethat Walter is very closely connected to Donald
j Trump.
Do you think your buddy, Donald j Trump, thatyou Right.
That you can help get CSR,

(19:04):
pardoned.
I don't know anything in particular, but I knewthere's there are things in the works.
So Yeah.
That's all that's all I've heard.
So
Yeah.
I don't see why CSR shouldn't get pardoned.
Same thing with,
Well, it's not an easy process if you're
not lying.
Of, you know, in the news.
So same thing I would say with FPS Russia.
Could FPS Russia get a pardon?

(19:26):
He's not in prison where CSR right now islocked up.
But FPS lost a lot of rights and stuff likethat behind all the crap that happened to him,
which really doesn't didn't seem very fair tome.
So it would be nice to see you know who I'mtalking about, FPS Russia.
Yeah.
I do.
Yep.
Yep.
Yep.
Yeah.
I'd like to see him also get pardoned so hecould, get back to exercising his rights.

(19:50):
Exercising his Russian language skills?
Probably wouldn't be the most popular thingright now.
I'll just say that.
Who?
FES Russia?
No.
The that playing playing that you're Russian.
That's not Oh, oh,
oh.
Yeah.
But he's not Russian.
He's Georgia boy.
I understand that,
my friend.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Would you like to see him, would you like tosee him do the, maybe he could be Ukrainian.

(20:16):
Maybe maybe FPS Russia finds out that he'sreally Ukrainian.
How about that?
Be be yourself.
Yeah.
Speaking of pardons
Bardom.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You probably have not heard this because thisis this news is breaking right now.
Rob Blagojevich was pardoned by by, by Trump.

(20:40):
No.
So we're not we're we're not just making upstuff.
See?
Trump pardons former Illinois governor, Roger.
Are you serious?
Bogojevic.
Boom.
Oh, you know, because oh, yeah.
You know why they threw him in jail?
Because he was gonna bust on the Democrats.
Yeah.
So remember that, yeah.
But now but now remember in in Trump's firstterm, I believe that Trump, commuted his

(21:03):
sentence.
Remember?
So he got because he spent he spent timealready locked up, LaVoy, bitch.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He spent time locked up, and then I think thatwhen Trump came into office, he commuted his
thing.
Now Trump fully pardoned him, but but this,earlier today, I heard that he's pardoning him
because he wants to make him an ambassador to,like, Kosovo

(21:26):
or something?
Some place like that.
Yeah.
One of those countries one of those eastern
Oh.
Yeah.
This is the Bavoevic?
Just listen to the name.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That
could be his people.
Right.
As you always say, it could be his people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think I'm I'm cool with it.
I got no issues with it.

(21:48):
And and he was at the, wasn't he at theinauguration?
I think so.
I don't know.
I think Lagojevich was at the inaugurationlooking at, at, Jeff Bezos chicks boobs, I
believe.
Well, you you would you would be too, of
course, standing
right next to him.
Hell, yeah.
Of course.
You know, if you're gonna here here's mytheory.
If you're gonna show him, I'm gonna look.

(22:09):
Yeah.
If you're gonna show him, I'm gonna grow him.
I can't touch them, but I'm gonna look.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Interesting.
So yeah.
So I think that's official.
I heard it was gonna happen, but I think it'sofficial.
So And,
you know, Trump Trump I I always wanna saycrump.
Trump, definitely is drawn to the folks thatare, that have flipped over from the dark side.

(22:36):
Mhmm.
You know?
Because I think he understands they understandhis plight.
Yeah.
We're gonna be right back.
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(23:01):
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Boom.
Okay.
We're back.
Yo.
What's up?
Speaking of speaking Franklin Armoury, don'tforget our conversations we have with them at
Shot Show.
Yeah.
Do you wanna talk about it?
It or something specific in there?
Or
binary for the 16, binary for the 17,

(23:22):
Scar.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah.
We talked about the.
Yes.
And then they've got You you
came down with the Hmong, so you forgot allthat stuff.
Yeah.
You went back to we were supposed to do, we'resupposed to do a video with Franklin Armory at
the show, and we were there.
I think the first time, we got separated fromLola, so I didn't have the camera.

(23:46):
And then I wound up getting really sick and notbeing able to go back there.
But, yeah, the also, aren't they making they'reactually making, 22 rifles now that they're
selling.
Yeah.
They're making yeah.
They're making a whole,
whole gun.
Not this one.
This, they're not making.
But do you do you recognize this is have youever seen this?

(24:06):
Is it serious?
Press something or other?
Yes.
Now hold on.
Let me go.
I'm gonna put this I'm gonna put myself on fullscreen here so I could show this off.
Alright.
So check it out.
This is from it's it's a Defiance.
I've shown this before.
It's a Defiance twenty two AR.
Defiance is a company that is owned by ChrisChris that makes the Chris Vector.

(24:33):
So this is your, like, an aluminum, you know,22 caliber AR integrally suppressed.
Look at that.
Check that out, Walter.
Yeah.
I really like the handguards.
See?
Look at the handguards.
See, I I don't.
So,
Oh, you don't?
Oh, you hate the handguards?
I think it's too much, but

(24:54):
You think it's too much?
Oh, okay.
That's just no worries.
No worries.
Yeah.
I love it.
I love it.
So, by the way, this doesn't come like thisintegrally suppressed.
I got the barrel, and I think Babyface, changedout the barrel for me.
And he was here this weekend, Patrick, and heactually, zeroed set this all up so this could

(25:15):
be my squirrel hunter because the squirrels thesquirrels have done serious damage to my
Cybertruck.
Again.
Yeah.
First Yeah.
First, I got a first, I got a hankering forAustrian wire.
And then Yeah.
Then they got a hankering for, Texas wire.
Oh.

(25:35):
Yeah.
Is it made Cybertruck made in Texas?
It's assembled in Texas, and I think about, 65%of all the parts and everything comes from
America, and the rest of the parts come from,Mexico and Canada.
Probably sourced
And China.
Yeah.
Sourced.
Yeah.
It's the most American pickup truck made.

(25:58):
The the Cybertruck.
Most American pickup truck made, and the reasonwhy it's been in the shop now for the last
couple of weeks has nothing to do with I knowpeople have gotten, like, you know you know
when you when you when someone puts outsomething the first time, they say you should
never buy one?
Like, the first ten, first hundred or thousandof them always has issues?

(26:24):
Mine, yeah, first but mine was actually, VINnumber like 27000 something.
And there were really no, issues with it.
But squirrels, you those bastards, tree rats,whatever you wanna call them, the scourge of
the earth, they have my Cybertruck sitting inthe Tesla service center all disassembled right

(26:51):
now.
I don't know if you could see that it's all,but they gotta drop the battery.
They gotta drop the battery and all that kindof stuff in here.
Yeah.
Because because they chew through wires, andthey chew through the high voltage wires too,
which I don't know how you survive that.
I I I don't know.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, I don't know how they're exposedwhere a squirrel can get to it.

(27:11):
That is my question.
I agree with you, sir.
That was my that is my question.
I'm like, how the hell?
Hang on.
If you're listening Yes.
How can it be bulletproof and not squirrelproof?
Step away from that doge for a second and tellme where to
Come on, Elon.
How can I bulletproof it?
I'm digging I'm digging, what he's doing, andand I'm digging the fact that he's getting in

(27:33):
everybody's nerves.
Yeah.
I mean, that just it's just, and I think Ithink the more they get on his nerves, the more
he likes it.
So,
Yeah.
But also that shows me when you see all thepeople who are reacting adversely to what Musk
is do like, who if you're in America and you'remad that an American is finding corruption and

(27:54):
waste, then you are part of the problem.
If you're mad at him because if you're mad inAmerica because your taxes are too high, your
fuel prices are too high, everything's toohigh, your fuel prices are too high,
everything's too high, too many this, too manythat, and somebody goes out and starts going at
it to reduce this stuff and you're mad.
Why would you be mad?
Unless you're getting some of that

(28:15):
money.
Hello?
Well, you know, that old wrinkled up blackwoman goes in front of the department.
You know?
All those Democrats and what this what they'redoing is dangerous, by the way.
And it's also what they came down on all theJanuary 6 people about.
Did you see her walking back to the car?

(28:35):
She can't walk by herself.
Oh, these people this is one of the reasons whythey don't care about America.
They're all old and decrepit, all of them.
All those people who are out there, all theDemocrats who are out there, they're all old
and decrepit, and they and they're all bitter.
The acidity of the Trump derangement and nowthe freaking, Musk derangement syndrome.

(28:58):
Cut off cut off your payback money syndrome.
Yeah.
That's what that's what the deal is.
Yeah.
Well, the funny thing is America is not ontheir side.
Donald Trump is is very, very popular rightnow.
I didn't look at the Super Bowl because I don'tgive a crap.
But, I saw that Donald Trump was at the SuperBowl who got a you know, everyone was very

(29:20):
happy and cheering him.
And I hear that Taylor
Swift got food.
Taylor Swift got booed.
Mhmm.
Yeah.
You know?
And she's a leftist, by the way.
Yeah.
Seems about right to I'm not a Taylor Swiftfan.
So No.
No.
No.
Not a Taylor Swift fan.
So You ain't getting on that you ain't gettingon that tail, so you know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Listen.
The only people the only dudes who are intoTaylor Swift are dads, and I and I'll and I'll

(29:47):
give I'll give, what what can we say?
We'll give amnesty to the dads that are forcedto be into Taylor Swift, like dads of
daughters, you know, that they have to go toTaylor Swift concerts.
We'll give them amnesty.
If you're a dad of sons and you have to go to aTaylor Swift concert, you got bigger problems.
You gotta get your
son checked out.

(30:08):
You know what I'm saying?
Saying?
That's on you.
And, there are dudes though who are all crazyabout Taylor Swift.
And, yeah.
Keep on keep on keeping on and dreaming aboutTaylor Swift.
She don't care about you.
No.
All she cares about is that.
Yeah.
So, I don't know.

(30:28):
I never really found Taylor Swift all that.
I mean
I don't think she's I don't think she's allthat.
I don't think she's attractive, and I don'tthink she's talented.
I gotta see I gotta see her
without a war paint on.
Yeah.
Now I remember, like, in my time, there was ayoung Madonna.
I like a young Madonna.
Don't like the new don't like current Madonnaat all.
Oh, no.

(30:49):
She's a freak show now.
Yeah.
Young Madonna was okay.
Let me see who else back in the days was, whoare the who are the pop star chicks if we go
back?
Joe says we should have a squirrel culling.
Yeah.
That's that's definitely that's
a part of me.
You sit out there like a it brings some youbring some rebel flags.
You sit out there.

(31:10):
Have some break a little Jack Daniels.
Oh, okay.
Bullets in your gun.
Right.
And and Do you have some rebel flags?
No.
I don't.
The only rebel flags I am bound to have wouldbe Star Wars rebel flags.
I I saw that.
I don't I don't know the details about it, butthere's a store in either South or North
Carolina.
That's all they do is sell rebel flag relatedstuff.

(31:31):
Oh, really?
And the dude working in it was a black man.
He was
Get that money.
He was he was starting, barred up, hit the hat.
Come on in.
Get that.
I'll tell you one thing, man.
Brothers get over shit.
They're making money.
Oh, you know, there you go.
Yeah.

(31:52):
Yeah.
Hey.
If I could if I could make a million dollars ayear off of first of all, I'm not big on
identifying with any flag.
Although, I I respect the American flag, youknow.
But let's say, like, I was born in Guyana.
Right?
And so there's a Guyanese flag.
I have never put any identifying things likethat on my cars.

(32:16):
You know?
I don't walk around with that really.
I don't I don't really play that game.
I know.
I don't.
You know, some people wear, like, flag shirtswith the shirts to or have a beach towel like a
flag, and it's like, no.
I ain't the flag ain't a the flag ain't a beachtowel, and the flag ain't a t shirt myself.
But Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I I think I've probably done that or,like, done something where there's a thing on

(32:37):
there.
But, you know, in general, what I'm saying,like and and I'm very patriotic.
I'm very proud of America.
I'm proud to be that I was born in Guyana.
But I think the idea of identifying your shit,especially when you're not next to your shit to
protect it.
Like, why would I put a Guyanese flag on myshit so somebody so someone walking by that

(32:58):
hates Guyanese people because some Guyanesedude stole his girlfriend.
You know what I'm saying?
It smashes your windows.
Scratches you.
That that would be a special relationshipbecause I couldn't tell you what a Guyanese
flag looks like.
Oh, I could I could show you if you wanna seeit.
But, I mean, it's like, you know, the Guyaneseflag, they called it the go they call it the

(33:20):
golden arrow.
Let me see.
I'll look up the Guyanese flag right now.
I'll pull that up for you since we're talkingabout it.
So does anyone out there fly flags?
So for me, the only flag I think that like, Iwill okay.
So it's not just the American flag.
I like the, I like the I like the don't treadon me flag as well, but I'm not a big flag.

(33:41):
Yes.
That's not a
big flag, though.
That's that's not you know, that's I mean, Ihave a hat here with the Ukrainian flag on it.
Oh, you do?
Oh, good.
I hope we get some Ukrainian questions forWalter.
That's what I'm really waiting for.
Go for.
No.
You know?
All of, so here we go.
Check it out.
This is what the Guyanese flag looks like.

(34:02):
Flag of Guyana.
Guyana's national flag, nicknamed the goldenarrowhead, was adopted in 1966 to mark the
country's independence from Britain.
So, you know, like I always tell you guys thatmy, my parents, who were born in the, mid
forties right after World War two, They wereboth born British citizens, and then I guess in

(34:25):
1966, way before I was born, yeah, probablylike about six years or something before I was
born, they Guyana, like, claimed itssovereignty and then came up with its own flag.
So here you go.
This is what the Guyanese flag looked like.
If you hate Guyanese people, you see this flagsomewhere.
It is red, yellow, and green for anyone who'slooking.

(34:49):
Yeah.
Is it just just me or there's three differentshades of green and a couple of yellow?
In these different things.
But, yeah, basically, this is what it lookslike right here.
This is what the this is what
the guy
named Frank.
Let me know.
Yeah.
And most, a lot of the Caribbean flags look letme see.
What does the Jamaican flag look like?
Because the Jamaican, yeah.
Jamaican flag, I think, also has the samecolors.

(35:12):
Hold on.
I know there's yellow in the Jamaican flag, andthen there's meanings to all the oh, yeah.
Okay.
Here we go.
Every a lot of people know the Jamaican one.
Yeah.
I've seen that before.
Because if you like this if you like themarijuana, you know all about the Jamaican
flag.

(35:33):
Check that out.
Boom.
Boom.
Yeah.
That's what
the a conga.
Yeah.
So a a lot of the a lot of the Caribbean onesor something like that gonna be somewhat in
that vein.
So okay.
I don't know how we got sidetracked.
I don't know either, but So I
but identifying things.
Like, you always see people identifying like,you know, I see those folks who have their car

(35:56):
and they put the little stickers of how manypeople, like
a
mother and a father and a son and a daughter ortwo moms.
And their dad.
Yeah.
Two dads.
Yeah.
And a little cat or it's like what are you upto?
Oh, the the
coexist stickers and all that bullshit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I believe in the gray man philosophy.
Don't identify your shit out in the world.

(36:19):
So if you see me doing a gun video, I might bedressed like, you know, a gun guy.
But typically, I'm walking around looking likea regular dude.
You know?
How does this gun guy dress?
That's what I You gotta have the five elevenpants
and You gotta have yeah.
Some cargo pants, boots.

(36:40):
And and and, you have some kind of yeah.
Like hold
them like this.
Your hat has yeah.
Your hat has, like, a gun on it.
Come take it.
Yeah.
You know you could tell gun guys, like, whenyou were going to, shot show, you know you
could tell the gun guys.

(37:00):
Yeah.
Shooting on the plane.
Shooting gallery says the pirate flag.
I do fly the pirate flag.
That is true.
Oh, yeah.
Well, okay.
They would
have gone to 18.
One that's, like, no quarter given.
There's one of those pirate flags that saysthat.
Yeah.
I will fly a pirate flag.
When we went to a shot, we had to stop inAustin.
Mhmm.
And when
the plane loaded in in Tampa, I looked aroundand I go, these people aren't going to SHOT

(37:23):
Show.
Mhmm.
They just didn't have that look.
And sure enough, we got to Austin, and therewas, like, 10 of us left on the plane.
Mhmm.
And all
the people in Austin got off, and then theyloaded up with people going to Vegas.
And right away
You could tell the gun guys.
You could tell a Vegas load, not necessarilyeven shot, but the women have new clothes on

(37:44):
Mhmm.
New tennis shoes, new this, new that.
They're, you know, they're all they're excited.
They're fucking Yeah.
A gun guy typically has a tactical lookingbackpack on
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Of some sort.
Yeah.
Some patches.
Some patches on there.
Some cargo pants maybe.
Definitely cargo pants.
Definitely.
Definitely cargo pants.
Yeah.
Might have, what is it?
The, remember I used to wear them all the time.

(38:06):
The, paracord paracord bracelet.
Okay.
At the same time that shop was going on, theconcrete show was going on.
And then you can see you can tell the concreteguys too because they that's all those guys are
are kinda round and they look like constructionworkers.
Yep.
Yep.
Yep.
Yep.
I I saw a lot of, yeah.
I saw a lot of construction.

(38:26):
A lot of concrete dudes out there.
And concrete dudes have money also.
Oh, yeah.
Well
Yeah.
They're making that money.
Making that money.
Okay.
So let's see.
With with in this segment, we got, like, fiveminutes.
I don't know if there's any other let let's getinto some of the questions.
So this is a this is a question that afrequently asked question that people have of

(38:49):
Walter Keller.
We might get into some serious ones at somepoint.
But, is it true that Walter Keller is thebrains behind the a k fifty, Walter?
No.
No?
No.
There you go.
So that's all Brandon Herrera.
I have I had never met Brandon Herrera.

(39:10):
You never met Brandon?
Nope.
Not even here on the podcast?
I thought you did.
Oh, that's right.
He was on podcast one time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I I tried yeah.
No.
No.
Aside from that.
But in person, you've never met Brandon?
No.
Oh, okay.
There you go.
So are you building a 50 BMG Gatling gun?
So let's stick with the fifties 50 caliberthings.

(39:31):
No?
Okay.
There you go.
Yep.
Alright.
Okay.
That was that was pretty straightforward.
Question.
Yeah.
Did you ever think did you ever think, you knowwhat?
It would be cool to have a 50 BMG AK 47.
Do you
ever think that?
Not not like that.
No.
No.
Would you this is going nowhere.
Would you buy would you buy a 50 b m g a k 47?

(39:56):
I would I would if if Brandon Herrera comes outand he's taking orders and he's starting to
sell them and it's a reasonable price, I'll buyone.
Yeah.
What do you think what do you think Brandon'sgonna sell?
I think at some point, he will sell them, butwhat do you think he's gonna sell them for?
Well, those he's he it's gotta be in that, oh,you know, well, well

(40:22):
Let's see.
I have my number in my head, but I wanna I'mcurious to see what you think it what you think
in the
I do bet you can get a bear for basically10,000.
Right.
Right.
Mhmm.
So so a target price would to to just kind ofpeople would go, like, yeah, I'm fucking in.
Would be, like, 6,000 to 6,500.
Mhmm.
Yeah.
You and I are in exactly the same realm.

(40:42):
I'm thinking it's gonna be between 6 and ten.
Now that's gonna be very hard for him to makemoney based on Brandon's probably not gonna
have a big machinery behind him.
It's gonna probably cost about 4 or 5,000 justto make that thing for Brandon.
He's not he's not Barrett or any of these othercompanies.
Yeah.
You don't have to be.
You think so?
Okay.
Comp good.

(41:03):
This gun's not complicated.
Yeah.
But we still have to have materials and there'smilling and different things that's gonna be
involved in that.
Yeah.
You gotta you set up and you make a couplehundred to start with.
Yeah.
Would you would you manufacture those forBrandon?
No.
No.
Why?
Because it ain't mine.
I'm I I'm not set up I'm not I have enough ofmy own stuff to do.

(41:26):
So Yeah.
Yeah.
It's not easy.
I don't think it's easy to build that pistonand everything for a 50 to to to make the AK.
It's it's taken him a long time.
But also, Brandon has not focused on that.
He's been
No.
That's not his He's
been blowing up.
That's not his main source of income.
So Yeah.
Yeah.
We'll see.
I think we'll see it at some point.
We'll see it.

(41:47):
Let's see.
We got a, wait.
This is someone in here.
His name is, Colter Welter.
And he says, is Walter plotting worlddomination?
That's you.
You put your own thing in here.
I did.
I am planning world domination.

(42:07):
Domination.
Okay.
If
you're listening if you're listening to Trump,Relon, I volunteer to help you with your cause.
Yeah.
What would you like to do for, Trump?
What what would be your favorite job in theadministration?
I can't say what I'm really thinking.
You want you wanna be in immigration?

(42:28):
No.
I'm thinking blonde chick organization.
The the what?
The blonde chick?
Well, he he kind of if if you notice Uh-huh.
Well, his press secretary is a 27 year old.
Mhmm.
She's blonde.
Yeah.
The federal blonde, inspection.
Well, we're not gonna inspect them.
We're not gonna get that, like, the boat, youknow.

(42:49):
Uh-oh.
Okay.
You're gonna be PC on that.
Make the grade, Justin.
Make the grade.
Yes.
No.
I don't you know, I just like to do, like,what's going on right now.
Mhmm.
Clean house.
Yeah.
They're doing a good job.
I think they're doing a really good job.
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(43:14):
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(43:37):
Alright.
Boom.
We are back here.
We're back here.
You know, couple things I was gonna say.
So, yeah, they are doing a very good job in myopinion.
I think And Go ahead.
And they just scratched the surface.
Yeah.
They're just getting warmed up.
Was it Trump did put out a executive order onthe second amendment.

(44:00):
Right?
I think that happened over the weekend.
Yeah.
Don't know I personally don't know what that'sgonna mean.
I know people made videos and talked about itand all of that.
Did I look at
Guns and Gear's video on that?
I I
Yeah.
Pam Bondi is gonna have to review all thethings that Biden did in the four years
that Yeah.

(44:21):
You know?
Yeah.
I don't know.
The whole pump pan bond Pam Bondi thing.
I don't I don't really have a huge thingagainst Pam Bondi except she kinda echoed what
Trump was saying back in the day when whenTrump was talking about getting rid of due
process and all those kinds of things.
She echoed with

(44:41):
Yeah.
Red flags.
She was on the Rick Scott band wagon.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
I and but she's she's confirmed.
So she's attorney general now.
Right?
Yeah.
She's gotta follow Trump's orders now.
Yeah.
So and I and I think she's got her ownpolitical ambition, so maybe at least for this
time, she'll stay in line.

(45:02):
But I don't really know what they're gonnafirst of all, an executive order, no matter
what, it it's not that effective when thatperson's not president anymore.
So unless we get JD Vance, which I think JDVance is really about guns and into guns, we we
you know, to me, an executive order is notenough.
That's what I'm trying to say.
I don't really think that has, stick ability.

(45:24):
You know?
Ability.
Yeah.
We need a little bit more than that, but maybewe can see them come in, change out the ATF
director.
Cool with, Herrera becoming ATF director orsomeone pro gun.
And then obviously start, correcting a lot ofshit the ATF has done, and then actually work
to give us back, some stuff.

(45:46):
So the first Trump administration gave us somegood things because they put Supreme Court, put
people on the Supreme Court court seats.
So now I'd like to see that get followedthrough.
But I'm curious to see what happens in Trump'sadministration and how we actually do something
for the second amendment.
Yeah.
Outside of that, if I think to myself, like,what would be a good job to have in the

(46:11):
administration, I don't know.
That's something I would be the most interestedin the administration.
I also would like to see Trump really dosomething about hardening and protecting the
schools.
I think that would be cool if we can actuallysee that.
You know, I just had a thought.
Mhmm.
Now that we're exporting a lot of the criminalelement

(46:33):
Mhmm.
It's gonna be interesting, and and I'm anumbers guy.
I think numbers tell the truth.
Mhmm.
Let's see what happens with actual numbers andviolence and gun related violence.
Is that
what we export are exporting a large number ofthe, shooters.
Yeah.
I think So you're and you're talking are youtalking just about, illegal immigrants with

(46:56):
that?
Or, like, you know, there was the rumors thatTrump wants to send even, like, American
citizens that are criminals over to, where wasit he wanted to send them?
Was it Argentina or Venezuela, I think, maybe?
Why?
You know, you didn't see that, that he wasthinking about sending Americans to Venezuela
to go to the prisons?

(47:18):
You can't do that.
You can't do that.
Yeah.
I don't think it's a realistic, I don't thinkthat's a realistic thing.
What's it's almost as nutty as this thingabout, Gaza.
Mhmm.
And taking that over and
Oh oh, America owning Gaza?
Yeah.
And I'm like, what the Yeah.
No.
Thank you.
Talking about?
Yeah.
So I don't know how accurate this is, but, seethis?

(47:42):
PBS, what's in now you gotta take into who'sputting this up there.
But PBS, what to know about, the El Salvadorianmega prison?
Trump has promised to send US Prisoners.
And then even here is Fox News, Trump deportingcriminal aliens to Guantanamo Bay.
That's got that's not what we're talking about.
Here's NPR.
Would it be legal for Trump to send US citizensto El Salvador's jails?

(48:08):
This is the Associated Press.
Trump says he's exploring option to send jailedUS criminals to other countries.
So that I don't think I would not necessarilylike to see that.
That's that's that's not Yeah.
That wouldn't go.
So And if our if the criminals here in Americaare really that bad, we maybe

(48:28):
death penalty.
There's a lot of folks that need to, you knowanyways Yeah.
I think too much I and I do I do also believetoo many things are criminalized in America.
But if we've got really bad criminals andthey're Americans and we don't want them, if
they're really, really bad guys, they've killedpeople and and they're repeat offenders with

(48:50):
all that and they're not good people, and butand they're Americans, we're the ones who need
to to do what needs to be done to them.
If that's indeed what
it is.
A wild dog
a wild
dog gets put down.
Yeah.
Right?
If if that's indeed what it is.
But then I think there's also a lot of peoplewho are locked up for really stupid ass
reasons.
So

(49:10):
Yeah.
We need to focus on the the ones that shouldn'tbe here first.
Okay?
I think you'll find once you get rid of a lotof the folks that shouldn't be here
Mhmm.
They're gonna see the crime rates go down.
Yeah.
Let me get
should happen is you should pay less for autoinsurance after that too.
Yeah.
Let's see what happens.
That's really a big effect that you have frompeople being here, illegally.

(49:34):
But it's not all it's not just, illegal peoplewho are here illegally that don't have
insurance.
It's a lot of people that don't have insurance.
Yeah.
Right.
And anyone who does have insurance is sufferingfor anyone who doesn't have insurance.
Thank you.
So Yeah.
Yeah.
Let me get some comments in here.

(49:54):
Let's see.
Primitive Hunter says, back in early videos, hesaid talking about Brandon.
He said a k 50 is expected to sell, like,4,800.
So we'll see.
And then primitive hunter also said WalterKeller for a t f.
I see Armament and Axis is is in the chat.
Shout out to Armament and Axis.

(50:15):
Actually, we need to have Armament and Axis onthe show sometime.
I'll work that out, and we'll get him on show.
The ATF director, I don't think it would itwould last very long over there after I because
I I went there once.
Mhmm.
And I I and I know what the the building theyhave, and we should just sell that building.
Mhmm.
It'd make nice office space for some othercompany.

(50:36):
Mhmm.
But
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think there's a lot of, it it's like chasingafter alcohol, chasing after tobacco stuff.
That's a waste of time.
Sorry.
Yeah.
That's I yeah.
I don't think we have a big need for the ATF inAmerica.

(50:56):
And the
gun is all is all created by them Yeah.
As far as having to chase after things.
So
Yeah.
I don't know if we could just flip a switch andshut them down.
I know they have a really nice collection ofguns, and we definitely have to, either get
those guns out to the people or maybe put themin a museum somewhere where folks
can go No.
You know something?
Have access to those?

(51:17):
If those guns are transferable, guess what wedo?
Sell them.
We sell them.
Yeah.
What is that program that you're in that youcould buy guns from the government?
What is that thing again?
Well, the CMP?
The CMP?
Yeah.
Anybody can do that.
You can do that too.
You don't have to do that.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No.
We should just sell them.

(51:38):
Yeah.
I you know, close down the close down the USAIDbuilding, clean it out, and sell it.
Fucking get rid of it.
That way it can't come back.
You gotta remember something.
If if all of a sudden Republicans aren't incharge again Mhmm.
The fucking leftists are gonna come back andand put all these start giving away the money
again.
Mhmm.
So sell it.
Close the buildings.

(51:58):
You got a post office that's closed, sell it.
Save the guns.
Save the guns.
Sell every fucking fucking thing.
So as because at some point, someone's gonnahave the smart idea to destroy the I'm I
believe the ATF has a probably one of the bestfirearms collections in the world.
And, yeah, man.
Can you imagine?

(52:18):
Historical guns can go to a museum of somesort, but they have examples of a lot of things
just because, you know, in their criminalcollection and all of a sudden.
Sell that fucking stuff.
Sell
it.
Mhmm.
You know?
Let the people let the people have access.
Yeah.
Get rid of it.

(52:38):
I don't know if I'm in such so I would notmind.
I would love it for machine guns to be a thing.
But what would be awesome to me is for us toget our hands on some bullpups that cannot be
otherwise had in America
Well
that people have in the rest of the world.
You gotta get rid of the import garbage, whichYeah.
Most of that is executive orders.

(53:00):
None of that was done through congress.
Bush, Clinton,
I think
Bush Do you think do you think, Trump's gonnahit some of those executive orders and all of a
sudden we can get some cool guns?
I hope so, but I'm not holding my breath.
Yeah.
To be
honest with you.
Yeah.
What did you think of and I'll go back to thequestions, for you.
But what did you think of that Bushmaster ACRthat Babyface got his hands on?

(53:24):
I do have a short up on on the, Instagram.
Yeah.
Check out Hank's chart.
Give him some numbers.
Make him feel good.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
Because I need it.
Yeah.
So I I hate I hate YouTube.
That's what I hate.
I hate when my creativity gets burned andwasted.

(53:45):
We had this conversation earlier today.
My
Oh, my lord.
Yeah.
Go.
Go.
You know, there's this thing about trying toohard.
Sometimes try too hard.
Yeah.
Patrick and Walter are over that shit,obviously.
And I understand.
I'm with you.
I'm with you.
I'm over it, but it annoys me still.
In my 13,000 view, four fifty Bushmaster video,Hank shot it.

(54:08):
I posted it without hardly doing anything tothat.
Maybe I maybe I trimmed a little bit off theends of it, maybe, and boom.
It just you never know.
Mhmm.
Mhmm.
I mean, I Yeah.
But you you know, the the point the point is isthat still, like, you know, the the the better
we do, the more people are attracted to thestuff that we're doing is the more they're

(54:30):
gonna come down on us still.
And I hate that.
That's just annoying.
It went to 13,300, then it kinda went flat.
Mhmm.
And it's still getting views, but not 600 anhour or a thousand an hour.
Mhmm.
So Yeah.
I think YouTube is getting ready to drop bombs.
I hate to say it, guys.
But it feels the tea leaves read to me likeYouTube's about to drop bombs on people.

(54:53):
That's that's what I feel.
So here, let's see let's see if I could showthis.
There there we go.
That's probably better.
I I
What do you think on this?
I have nothing against it.
Mhmm.
I wouldn't spend money that you guys weretalking about just to go to a folding stock.
There's no effing way.
Sorry.
Mhmm.

(55:14):
I think it's a cool gun.
I wouldn't mind owning one.
Yeah.
I it would have been a really cool gun if ifRemington was and that was Bushmaster Remington
part of the Freedom Group at that time.
Yeah.
So, and they and they they pulled it into theirinto their mitts and then jacked the price up.
And then they had issue they had some of thoseguns had issues, I think, too.

(55:36):
So
and you you don't have one.
Right?
No.
I don't have one.
But you do have a poster on your wall thatevery time I see that thing, I want that
freaking poster.
I got that from from Magpul at the two thousandseven shout show when they were showing that
gun off as their new gun.
Yeah.
Where the hell is that poster?

(55:58):
Let me see if I could find that poster becausethat poster is freaking awesome.
Every time I see it, I think to myself, I wantthis gun.
So yeah.
Where is it?
I'm trying to see if I could pull it up here.
That same year at the SHOT Show, Magpul hadtheir folding gun, which now they're kinda
coming out with slowly.

(56:18):
Oh, the, what is that thing called?
Chassis, actually.
It's not a Yeah.
It's not a axle bolt gun.
It's a chassis.
See if I could pull that up.
So what was that?
That was a Masada, that folder you you have.
Right?
Masada, Bushmaster ACR poster.
Yeah.
I'm just trying to show people the poster I'mtalking about because I would even love to have

(56:40):
one of these posters.
It's not even easy to find that poster, by theway.
I was trying to get, what the what what thehell?
What did I do with it?
I was trying to get someone to send me apicture of that poster.
Oh, here we go.
No.
I got it.
Here.
I'll show you.

(57:01):
Here we go.
Walter has this poster on his wall.
It is freaking awesome.
If anyone has this poster and they could get itto me, I would love to.
Mine has faded too.
It's not as
Oh, it has?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Very cool.
So that's what they came out with the first,and that's what they were gonna offer.

(57:22):
That was the concept.
And I saw the gun at the shout show sitting ina, you know, actually in
a display.
Mhmm.
And you could touch it and everything at thattime.
And I thought, oh, this is is cool.
And then it of course, you know what happened.
It went
to It becomes a cluster of who builds it.
Now remember, Matt Paul so Matt Paul wasoriginally gonna build that.

(57:42):
Right?
That was
legends of this since we're talking aboutlegends and everything.
Was that around the same time that Magpul wasalso gonna, put out its own AR?
So that so and then they did actually put outsome lowers that have Magpul on it, and they
built some guns that have Magpul, but theydecided not to do any of that.

(58:05):
I don't know, but I don't remember seeing anyof that.
I mean, it was probably a wise choice that theydidn't because soon as you become a
manufacturer of firearm, you become under
the the
heavy hand.
You get under deeper but they did actually makethem because I've seen them.
I think they're called is it China doll?
But I The
AR is The

(58:26):
AR.
Yes.
Because I've seen one.
I've seen a completely built Magpul AR withMagpul stampings and everything on it that a
friend of mine had.
And he also had a Magpul lower that had aMagpul stamping on it.
But he said it never came out so they must havetechnically become a manufacturer at some
point.
But it never really went past the what theyshowed at SHOT Show.

(58:49):
And there's very few of them out there, andthey're very valuable.
Let me see if I could pull that up.
As a thing, branded a
gallery says, freedom group equals governmentpsyop.
Yeah.
Well, freedom group was this.

(59:09):
Mhmm.
Freedom Group came about when things were crazyin the gun world as far as selling stuff.
You know, you could you could sell anythingthat had looked like an AR 15 and people would
buy
it.
Mhmm.
But as as and I I predicted this.
I said, well, what's gonna happen is when itslows down, Freedom Group's just gonna fall
apart.
And guess what happened?

(59:30):
They got slow and Freedom Group fell apart.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was all and and, you know, they were allauctioned off and everything.
So
Well, yeah.
It's hard to find it's hard to find that, but Iknow that's a thing.
And if anyone knows that it's a thing outthere, just confirm that for me.
But I've actually seen the guns.
I've I've fired them in the past.
I can't remember if I have a video on that ornot.
But there was a a gun guy I knew that actuallyhad a complete built Magpul AR, and he had a

(59:57):
lower also.
So just think about that.
If you're into Magpul, there's no differencebetween a Magpul branded AR and any other AR
except that Magpul brand on it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So Oh, is
it is
it common?
Yeah.
Not that much of a of a mark.

(01:00:18):
So
Yeah.
Armin actually says love the brace band isnull.
Yeah.
Pretty much.
Yeah.
That that's be that'll be one of those thingsthat Pam Bondi will look at.
Yeah.
Let's see what'll happen with Pam Bondi.
We can't really do it.
We're we're past it now.
Yeah.

(01:00:40):
You know?
So we gotta we gotta deal with that.
Okay.
Let's see.
So here's another myth or legend question forWalter Keller.
Says, I heard he did some wet work for DARPAback in the day.
What is the definition of wet work?
Wet work.
Yeah.
Does that involve a
Some pew pews.
Employ a DARPA?

(01:01:01):
No.
You know, as strange it may as it may seem, Iwill neither deny or confirm that.
Oh.
Oh, boy.

(01:01:22):
You're just gonna make that worse.
Okay.
We we were
actually were involved with a little somethingin with dark Yeah.
Walt is always involved with a little somethingsomewhere.
Have you done any wet work in Ukraine?
I will neither confirm or deny that.
Okay.
Alrighty.

(01:01:42):
I personally have not been to Ukraine.
Okay.
Let's just say that.
Yeah.
You were not born there?
No.
Your
My family was.
My family.
Your dad was.
Yep.
Obviously, on your dad's side going backgenerations, you guys, did your you so your
family on your dad's side, they left Ukrainebecause of the stuff that happened, against

(01:02:02):
Jewish people.
Right?
They came to they can't no.
No.
Nothing about being Jewish.
Okay.
'19, when the Russians came when the Germanscame into Kiev Mhmm.
They got shipped off to labor camp, spent spentto World War two in labor camp.
So why did they so so when the Germans came in,why did they ship them if they were going
mostly after Jewish folks?

(01:02:23):
Well, how did they get get
That's a that's a that's a that's not trueeither.
Oh, so they were just going so when the Germanscame in, they weren't just shipping out Jewish
people.
No.
No.
No.
Okay.
I don't I don't know exactly why they ended upin in in labor camp in Poland.
Mhmm.
But there was something about them the Germansdid not like.
I you know, I'm not sure.

(01:02:43):
Okay.
I mean, they had a German last name.
Keller is like like Smith in Germany.
Yeah.
Right.
Right.
But I don't know if my I I don't I don't knowall all the details.
I just know they were in labor camp.
Okay.
Everybody's everybody survived all that.
Yeah.
And then then,
For some reason, they were on the wrong side ofthe Germans, but you're saying it wasn't that

(01:03:03):
they were Jewish or anything like that?
No.
No.
No no no Jewish in my family in my father'sfamily.
Okay.
Mhmm.
Joe said he was he was kidding about the DARPAthing.
Oh, see, I didn't even name him.
He just he just outed his own self.
Joe Joe just doxed his self.
But Yeah.

(01:03:24):
And accidentally found out a truth review whilehe was doing it.
There you go.
My dad's family, came to this country legally.
Yeah.
We're gonna take we're gonna take a quickbreak.
Let's let's come back to it.
Hold on.
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(01:03:50):
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(01:04:12):
Alright.
Sorry, Walt.
I rudely interrupted you.
What you said your family came here when?
Legally?
1952.
So They were
they were in they were in displaced persons,was they called that's what they called back in
the old days before they got the fancy name ofa refugee camp.
Where where was that?

(01:04:32):
In Poland, I believe.
In Poland.
Oh, okay.
So So
they so so they were shipped out of Ukraineinto Poland.
And then at the end of World War two, they gotliberated by GIs and stuff.
They they were liberated by the Russians, theircampers.
Oh, by the Russians.
Okay.
They got liberated by the Russians.
Interesting.
Okay.
Yeah.
So they did the whole and nobody wanted to goback Mhmm.

(01:04:54):
To Russia.
Nobody wanted my they didn't wanna go back withthe communist.
Mhmm.
I don't know if there was reasons why theydidn't wanna go back with the communist.
Mhmm.
See, Ukraine was a weird place before World Wartwo in the thirties and all that stuff.
There was people that were pro communist.
There were people that were anti communist.
And and then when the Germans show up, what doyou say you are?

(01:05:16):
I would just like to get the hell out.
Yeah.
If you if you answer the question wrong Yeah.
Yeah.
Right there.
So Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, but, anyways, '19
So was it was it like a big fan sorry.
I didn't mean to cut you off about that.
But so how was it like a a lot of killers atthat point that they The whole family.

(01:05:38):
So there was five.
Well, my my uncle was born over there.
My one uncle was actually born in Germany afterWorld War two.
Mhmm.
Okay.
When they
were still in in one of those displaced personscamps.
Okay.
But my my actually, one, two, three, four.
Four four siblings of my my grandparents, bothof them.
Mhmm.

(01:05:58):
So, 1952 through the UN sponsored by basicallya farmer in in Natchitoches, Louisiana of all
places.
Mhmm.
And they come in through New Orleans, end up inNatchitoches, and basically, he's just looking
for labor.
Mhmm.
So, you know, they they hang out there, andthey already had friends that that came over
from that side.
They were up in Illinois.

(01:06:19):
And, and eventually packed up the car andheaded to Illinois, and and that's where they
were until we moved to Florida.
Like, you were born there.
So so did did they ever talk about that stuffto you?
Like, did they ever give you details or justgive you, like?
Dad, every once in a while, I never asked mygrandfather that stuff because I didn't think
about it then.

(01:06:40):
Okay.
You know, you don't think it wasn't it wasn'tlike a you know, one of the it wasn't a a topic
of conversation.
Mhmm.
When when Pope John Paul, the Polish pope, whenhe got anointed as pope, we're watching TV and
there's watching this stuff.
And my grandfather says, oh, I played cardswith him in the camp.

(01:07:00):
Oh.
Yeah.
That's true.
Right.
Right.
He was a priest.
Mhmm.
And I was like, no.
Really?
He goes, yeah.
You know?
And his way, he'd say stuff like that.
Mhmm.
And it's like but, you know, my dad
Their their time in the world was a reallytough time for the for the
planet.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That wasn't Yeah.
Even though even even though, I don't know allthe details.

(01:07:21):
But, yeah.
And then, of course, you're in displacedpersons after the war and and, you know, you
got nowhere to go.
You don't wanna go back where you came frombecause you don't like the people running the
show there.
Mhmm.
And you don't wanna stay where you're at inPoland because that a lot of these places when
they had these displaced persons camps, like inGermany, they had them.
The Germans didn't want these people to stayeither.

(01:07:42):
Yeah.
Yeah.
No.
You're not you'll get the fuck out.
Yeah.
That's common.
I mean yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, we got our own problems.
We don't need you.
Get out.
So Mhmm.
They came over here and, you know, then therest is I never thought too much about it
growing up.
They're like, oh, I'm a first generationAmerican.
It's like, oh, okay.
Well, that's kinda cool.
Yeah.
Now my mother's family, they were here fromprobably since mid eighteen hundreds or

(01:08:07):
something.
So
Okay.
I was gonna say, did they come off the what'sthe name of that ship?
We didn't land on Plymouth Rock.
Plymouth Rock landed on us.
Yeah.
I'm I'm not going to come.
Right.
What was that ship?
What's that famous ship that all the, BlueBloods came off?
The the My people came off the Amistad orsomething like that probably.

(01:08:29):
Oh, that's a slave ship.
Yeah.
I know.
I know.
I'm saying, not and I I am not descendant of,slaves here in America, but in The Caribbean,
very much so.
Right.
Right.
So So yeah.
But, yeah, that's in a in a nutshell, that's,that's that's, that's that's the story.
So Yeah.
I'm just I was I was just curious about it,like, you know, what it would have been like

(01:08:52):
back in the fifties basically having nothingand coming to America.
And you don't even speak the language?
Yeah.
That's what I was gonna say.
Did they speak English?
Probably not.
No.
Mhmm.
And then when you come in, just because you'rewhite don't mean the other white people like
you either.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
Because you're Polish, and then there's you yougo to a town where there's Poles and there's

(01:09:13):
Swedes and there's and everybody else and, youknow, you know, like, get these fuckers out of
here.
You know, that kind of thing.
But Yeah.
And and people go to their, you know, like,they normally do.
The Swedes live in together.
The Poles live in an area.
Boom.
You know?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, that's the only way you're gonnasurvive.
So
Yeah.
Yeah.
My dad Yeah.

(01:09:34):
I'd I never people would say, oh, I hear I hearI hear an accent with your father.
I said, I never hear no accent with my dad.
Mhmm.
I never at all.
I mean Mhmm.
He used to talk.
Your dad had a little bit of an accent, but notnothing yeah.
Because he came here when he was what?
He was born in 1938.
So nineteen thirty eight, forty eight.

(01:09:55):
So, yeah, he was young when he came here.
So Mhmm.
But, yeah, the typical everybody everybody inEurope at that time and a lot of places all
have a story.
Mhmm.
So Yeah.
Because you survived, you have a story.
Your dad also seemed to me like a guy thatpretty much, got along with anyone.

(01:10:17):
He was cool.
Yeah.
Like, your dad would talk to anyone.
He was cool with me.
You know?
No.
No.
No.
No.
He didn't have any problem with you know?
Yeah.
I mean, it's like everybody.
You know, you meet people and depends how theytreat you, and that's how you treat them.
Know?
Uh-uh.
Yeah.
But he just seemed to me, you know, he seemedto me like, you know, that he came out of those

(01:10:37):
people in America that didn't have it easy.
And and you have to grow up surviving.
So you don't have a lot of time to really spendyour time judging.
You're just right Oh, I mean, okay.
Trying to to make it.
Yeah.
My my father wasn't an angel.
Let's just say that.
I I I did hear lots of things.
Mhmm.
So in terms of, like, being a bad boy?

(01:10:59):
Or No.
Well, there was
some of that too when he was a teenage drivertoo.
But Mhmm.
You know, like drinking and rolling cars overand doing stuff like that.
Mhmm.
But I guess he changed when he got married.
So,
but, Yeah.
And he was a old school gun guy, man.
He was not super not super safe all the time.

(01:11:21):
My dad was buying, you know, guns from thestore when they had them in barrels for $5 and
$10 and
then one.
Mhmm.
And then growing up, they were in the house,and nothing was locked up.
They were just in the house.
So Mhmm.
You know, and I could easily put anything Iwanted, but I I kinda
Yeah.
No.
And I and I know he was one of those stashmoney kind of people, like, when you hear about

(01:11:41):
the people who put money in the mattress.
He was a mattress money kinda dude.
I was when when the when the the double widewent away and, you know, after Peggy found that
that plastic bag with another $1,800 or $1,200in it, I was wondering, please don't tell me
there's some more money stashed some place wecan find.
So Yeah.
You gotta walk around your that property with afreaking metal detector.

(01:12:06):
Who knows?
There might be something in that shed stillthat I haven't found.
But Yeah.
Yeah.
No.
He was a he was a interesting kind of person.
Didn't throw away anything.
A lot of the old like, my parents obviously areyounger than your parents, but, my mom didn't
believe in that.
Like, you made something out of everything.
Back in the olden days, there was no going toMcDonald's or going to someone was asking me

(01:12:30):
about that over the weekend.
Like, we didn't go to the restaurants and
you
didn't you didn't go you you had dinner at thedinner table and, you know, you made stuff.
That was a special thing when you went out toeat.
Yeah.
You know?
So
Yeah.
My mother made clothing for us.
I remember that.
My mother would have, patterns of, like, shortsand shirts and stuff like that.

(01:12:52):
And then she would, she and she would make uswork with her doing that.
Like, you have cut out those patterns, and thenshe had a sewing machine, and you help her get
set to sewing, and she's sewing everything.
Yeah.
She did everything.
She made her own wine, you know, like dessertlike cakes and all that.
Like Right.
Right.
Yeah.
My mom did a lot of cooking too.
So And there was never, like, I I love thisabout Lola because Lola's awesome.

(01:13:16):
Right?
So it's me and the two boys, and she tries tospoil us all.
Lola will make something for me to eat, youknow.
Then she'll make something for my older son,something for my younger son.
My mother, she made one thing.
And you eat it or you don't eat.
Right?
Yeah.
You eat it or you die.
My mom didn't do that.

(01:13:37):
So Oh, okay.
Yeah.
But that was just like old school.
You have to or like how I've seen you have thatthing that I came I think came from your dad
where, you know, if you see something out therethat someone threw away because it's not
working anymore for them to fix it up.
Grab it.
Yeah.
That's it.
But that that was growing up doing that.
There was, like, you know, there wasn't moneyto buy all kinds of like, you're gonna build

(01:13:59):
something.
You'd see if you can get that wood someplacefor free, you know, instead of going to the
store and buying it right away.
You know?
So that that each that teaches how to makethings and how to fix things and all that.
I think a lot of people have lost that.
Yeah.
That a bit.
So
Yeah.
I'm really asking, says my mother andgrandmother both made clothes for us.
Also going to Ponderosa and a single motherpair of four kids is a big deal.

(01:14:22):
Yeah.
Going out to eat.
Yeah.
I used to eat at Ponderosa when I lived inSaint Pete.
That's when night train.
Yeah.
Like, I I'm trying to remember when I was akid, like, when we actually went out to
restaurants.
I don't think we did that until we movedbecause we moved from Guyana to England, and
then we moved from England to Nigeria.
When we went to Nigeria, that's when we startedbawling.

(01:14:45):
Like, eating, like, where you would eat in arestaurant.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
You know?
I mean And that was not that was still not abig deal.
Like, that's not I mean, it was still not athing you did often.
Yeah.
There was maybe around Christmas time, go out
and eat.
Yeah.
Maybe something like that, but not Mhmm.
Especially going up, there wasn't, you know,there wasn't a lot of money for that stuff.

(01:15:07):
So
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I didn't suffer nothing like that.
We weren't, like, poor poor, but we weren't weweren't definitely we'll we'll say we'll say,
lower middle class.
How's that?
Mhmm.
That's a good Mhmm.
Like, do you know what
I mean?
Yeah.
Both my parents worked and Yeah.
And then soon as I got old enough to go to ajob, I got a job too.
So Mhmm.
Because I want a car, and then my mom said, youget the car, you gotta pay for the insurance.

(01:15:29):
You gotta work.
Mhmm.
So I thought, alright.
No worries.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And your mom's side of the family, just toclose it out for anyone who's curious, those
they're Europeans.
Mayflower.
They came over on the Mayflower.
Hey.
So that's the boat you're looking for.
Right.
I don't know exactly because we haven't dugthat deep, but, yeah, that's that's the that's
the Scottish English, you know, that I Irish,that part up there, and then my dad is Eastern

(01:15:54):
Europe and all that stuff up there.
So Mhmm.
It's interesting.
I wonder what we'll find out about your mom'sside of the
Well, that would that's easier to find out thanon my father's side because
I think so.
You know, they've been here a lot longer.
So,
Mhmm.
Mhmm.
When you start to go into Eastern Europe, itit's a whole another

(01:16:15):
Well and then everything that happened with theGermans would complicate all that.
Right?
Because there'll be so much lost.
Yeah.
That and just the I have lots of pictures ofpeople that I didn't ask, like my aunt to was
on my mom's side.
Mhmm.
She passed away a couple years ago, and I hadall these pictures, and I meant to give them to
her.

(01:16:35):
So you can say, is this this one, this one,that one, this one, you know?
Yeah.
And they didn't do it.
So now I have these pictures of all thesepeople from up in Illinois in the fifties and
the forties, and I don't know who they are,really.
Yeah.
So I always meant to sit down with my mom andjust talk and record her talking about stuff,
which she did.
She wrote some stuff down, but I never did it.
Did we ever put your dad in a video?

(01:16:56):
It has to be he has to be in a video somewhere.
Mostly when your dad when we were shootingdoing videos, your dad was there.
We were trying to keep him from shootingsomeone.
Oh, we were trying to trying to keep himtalking in the background.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If he had Lola there to distract him, he wasprobably pretty good.

(01:17:18):
Yeah.
Like, okay.
Right o right over to Lola.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Lolly.
Yeah.
No.
I just I I you know, we should have probablydone it though.
We should have probably talked to him about, Idon't know if we had that much video.
I when when he was living in the camps andstuff like that Mhmm.

(01:17:38):
I guess at one point, they lived in Germanofficer horse stables once the Germans were
gone Mhmm.
With murals.
They had murals in the horse stables and allthat stuff, and then they lived in barracks,
deck old, like, three story barracks, a German.
Yeah.
And then some story of me throwing a cat offthe roof.
And Wow.
Do you think that, has something to do with whyyou're so deep into the World War two stuff.

(01:18:03):
Like, you that's really what you my my opinion,I could be wrong here, but I think that's what
you would like to get your hands on the mostand the stuff you collect and all that.
Right?
Gun stuff.
Yeah.
There's some cool stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I I'm an equal opportunity gun collector.
So, Yeah.
You know.
And even, like, some people get mad about this.
I've talked to people about this.

(01:18:24):
Some people get mad because people collectstuff from the Nazis.
I don't think people realize how many Jewishpeople collect things from the Nazis because
you should not
biggest collectors.
Yeah.
But you should not forget what those fuckersare up to or that they existed.
Right?
Like, I think yeah.
There's a lot of shekels in, in Germancollectibles right now.
So When I went to the Dragon Man Museum and theDragon Man is Jewish.

(01:18:48):
And his, his ancestry goes back to to what hapI mean, he he's like a Jewish dude from
Brooklyn and everything, but his family goesback to that.
Those were the those were the most valuablethings in his collection, I remember asking
him.
The the Nazi stuff.
Like, he has one of those, gun, like, beltbuckles that's a gun that flips
out Yeah.

(01:19:09):
That, I think, Hitler's bodyguards had.
I think he said he has serial number 001, andthat was very valuable.
Yeah.
So and I think a big part of that isremembering that these people existed.
These are the things they did, and someone'sgotta yeah.
But today, people don't really like, if youtalk to my kids about it, they don't really.

(01:19:29):
It's something from a movie or from a videogame, but does it really register?
And a lot of the movies are really, really,really they make out every German was a, like,
a a crazy Nazi.
Not every German wanted to be there either.
Mhmm.
Doing what they're doing either.
You know, they're just like American guys.
They didn't wanna be over there doing whatthey're doing either.
Yeah.

(01:19:50):
Not every Russian that's fighting right now inin what's going on with Ukraine wants to go out
there and get slaughtered.
Or Ukrainians don't wanna get slaughteredeither.
Oh, right.
So Yeah.
No?
It's a bad situation.
Those, North those North Koreans they sent overthere there, they didn't wanna get slaughtered.
I mean, seriously.
It's like Yeah.

(01:20:10):
You you're jumping out of the frying pan intothe fire because, is it Kim Jong Un or yeah.
Is it yeah.
Kim Jong Un sent your ass over to, Trading
trading you for, the rocket technology.
Yeah.
Come on now.
Or something like that.
Yeah.
Or food.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Some more, some more liquor he likes to drink.

(01:20:32):
Yeah.
Let's see, let's see what else.
Crazy questions.
Come on.
Yeah.
Let's see what other questions are in here.
If you guys have any Mhmm.
My, when they when my when my dad came overhere, the family came over here, they came over
in a converted, LST, one of those ships thatopens in the front.
Oh, really?
Oh, cool.

(01:20:52):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like that be that, that beached up on Normandyand opened the ship's camp.
Oh, wow.
Interesting.
So they came on a ship and they landed inLouisiana.
That was the port they came in.
New Orleans.
Sorry.
They came through a port in New Orleans.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you should be able to find records on that.
My dad became a citizen '68.

(01:21:15):
I have all that papers.
Mhmm.
You know?
So he had all that, you know, the cards and theMhmm.
All that all that stuff.
And, so yeah.
And, yeah, I'll just leave it at that.
Yeah.
They had him down as being Polish on hispapers.
So Mhmm.
Because he came out of Poland, and I guess youknow what?

(01:21:35):
Let's not rock the boat and start let's justthey think we're Polish.
Let's just Yeah.
Go with it.
Did he ever care to go back to, like, theUkraine or something?
Oh, when the stuff started over there before hedied, he's like, I'm gonna go to Ukraine.
I said I said I said, dad, fuck.
They got enough problems to do.
They don't need
you over there.
Yeah.
And they're not
gonna they wouldn't they wouldn't let you inthe country if you showed up there.

(01:21:57):
They wouldn't let them in.
Probably not.
No.
So
No.
They don't need they don't need to, yeah.
Also, they would not want America yeah.
They don't want Americans over there.
But there are Americans who are over there.
There's also Brits and Fighting.
Yeah.
And people who are out there fighting.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's there's plenty of Americans working inbehind the scenes over there.
Mhmm.
Mhmm.

(01:22:17):
So this is a thing here, from someone.
I'll see if you know who this is.
Walter is the Sasquatch.
I I identify as a Cro Magnon.
Sorry.
I'm
not Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sasquatch.
Okay.
Yeah.
Walter is definitely related to the missinglink.

(01:22:38):
Yeah.
There's definite miss missing link, blood inthere.
There's some missing links, though.
Right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I would say that.
Someone talking about you building an AR 50,building a a three three eight Lapua Bolt
action.
I don't know.
You've done that in the past.
Right?
Have you done some, other big bore?

(01:22:59):
Three thirty eight.
I thought about it, but, doing an upper inMarch.
And Mhmm.
I had barrels, and I had everything.
And then I came to my senses and
decided not
to do it.
So,
Yeah.
Army Man Access is asking us, Walt.
He says, have you seen the recruitment numbershave skyrocketed since Trump took office?

(01:23:19):
They just keep going up and up.
Patriot patriotism is back, maybe.
Wow.
I didn't hear that.
I have.
I heard they were having Mhmm.
I heard they've been having issues.
So, Yeah.
They were previously.
I would say there's probably a lot of I don'tknow.
The mill I didn't I never did the militarything.
So I didn't go into the military.

(01:23:40):
I did think about it at one point.
I got close a couple times.
Yeah.
But I did not do it.
A lot of my friends when I graduated highschool in 1988 did go off and do the military.
And I think that, it's a good thing that youhave these young folks who are willing to
volunteer and go out there.
But, like, my friends went off into DesertStorm and not everyone came back.

(01:24:03):
There's a price to be paid for it, and I thinkwe should keep a lot of the nonsense that we
have out of it.
We're gonna take a quick break and come back.
We'll stick on that when we get back.
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(01:24:27):
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(01:24:50):
Boom.
Okay.
We're back.
So like I was saying, I think that, and Iremember even in the late eighties when, like,
everyone I went to oh, not everyone.
I would say at least half the people I went tohigh school with went into Desert Storm in one
fashion or another, army, navy, air force, orwhatever.

(01:25:12):
The identity politics was just starting tobecome a thing then.
And back then, remember, we had a simplersolution.
Right?
Don't ask, don't tell was the way to deal withthat.
And and and I think I don't think that wasperfect, but I think it was probably the best
way to go about things.
But definitely in the last, like, ten, fifteenyears, it's gotten pretty nuts.

(01:25:33):
Yeah.
It's it's Yeah.
It's Trump's gonna fix that.
I mean, he's fixing it already, actually.
So some of that.
Yeah.
But if you think about it, a lot of that willbe discouraging to people who now there's
categories of people who wanna go into thearmy.
Some people just wanna go in there because theywanna get paid for doing nothing.
Right?

(01:25:53):
Some people don't have anything to do.
Yeah.
So but for for the majority of people who doit, it's a like, you get out, maybe you don't
feel like going to college, you don't know whatyou wanna do with your life, and then you
decide to do that.
There's also folks who their parents,grandparents, all that were in the army.
They go in.
They do their time.

(01:26:14):
They said people who wanna serve the country,we saw a lot of that after nine eleven.
But we we we need people to actually do this.
Right?
We need people to
Right.
Be ready to serve, in lots of different ways.
Yes.
I I think we need to be careful that we don'tjust engage them everywhere in the world,

(01:26:34):
though.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
You know?
But As soon as I I think it's discouraging tosee a lot of the craziness that's been going
on.
Yeah.
And it and it and it and it makes it makes themilitary look like a freak show.
Mhmm.
You know, when you are paying for sex changesand you let people just do weird shit and

(01:26:57):
they're Mhmm.
That's It becomes a circus, but but who wouldwant to get him, like, an I think the you know
what I think?
The the the identity I don't know how to putit.
You could probably tell me a better word,Walter.
But what's been happening is kind of been,like, normal people versus the circus.
The freak show.

(01:27:17):
Yeah.
And most of us are just normal people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I'm not just talking about, like, there'sfolks out there who are gay.
I get it.
I mean, I I know people like that.
It's all it's all good.
But, you know, most of us are just not even thegay gay people are just normal people.
It's when you get batshit crazy, like, you aregoing into the military so you can switch from

(01:27:40):
one sex to another.
Yeah.
And, like, that's not really what that wholething is about.
Or
You want to be accepted.
Everyone should accept you, and and that's nothow it works.
I don't have to accept you.
I mean
Well, if so if any if one person is entitled totheir individuality, then every other person is

(01:28:00):
entitled to their individuality.
And most of us are in individuality does notwant weird shit.
In the military, it's not about what you want.
The military is about the military.
And the first thing you should be trained inthe military is how to dispatch other people.
Mhmm.
That should be the number one chore.
I don't care if you're an office person orwhatever.

(01:28:22):
You should still
I mean, ultimately, that's the reason whyyou're there.
A lot of the folks who are going into militarydid not wanna kill anyone.
No one wants to I don't wanna kill anyone, butif you're you're playing part in the armed
services for a reason.
Right.
Yeah.
What what you know, there's that option.
What if you're behind the lines and all of asudden the lines are right over the top of your

(01:28:44):
office?
Mhmm.
You know, you have to either die or fight.
Fight or die.
Fight or flight.
Whatever.
There's that whole Mhmm.
That whole thing.
Marines Marines are a marine first.
Yeah.
And I think you need to I think you need toit's part of what it entails that you you're
gonna need to kill people and you're gonna needto save people as well.
Right.

(01:29:04):
And because those two things go hand in hand.
Right?
And,
I think a lot of people get in the militarythat and and I've never been
in.
Mhmm.
But you see people that are come and theyweren't even in combat.
Mhmm.
And people
not even in combat.
They come back, and they're all, like, freakedout.
Mhmm.
And I'm like, really?
You were you were well, you know, I I I don'tget that that part.

(01:29:29):
I don't I don't I could see if you were in a ina situation where Mhmm.
There was things going off and, you know, likelike in a trench in Ukraine.
Mhmm.
That's a pretty scary fucking place to be at.
But working on trucks, you know, behind in ashop somewhere?
I think it I think it really does depend onyour experience.

(01:29:49):
Obviously, we have a lot of friends who served,and there's, like, the ones who really were in
positions like combat positions, either most ofthem don't even wanna talk about it.
But when they do talk about it, it's veryhorrible things they saw.
However, even if you didn't serve in, like, anout front combat position, you're still gonna
see some horrible things that could mess youup.
Outside of America is not like America.

(01:30:12):
So what is normal in America?
If you go to Afghanistan, there's horriblethings like, you know, imagine you're okay.
Let's say your specialty is, like, Lowell'sbrother served it.
He started doing, X-ray tech and MRIs and stufflike that.
Let's say that's your specialty of what you do.
But you're in a place and you're seeing whatthese people believe in doing to children.

(01:30:34):
It's horrible.
You're gonna wanna kill someone if you seethat.
Right?
Like, what people in some of these cultures doto children.
That kind of stuff is
Well How
do you see that and you don't wanna take thoseguys out or, you know, so there's there are
things you could come across that are horrible.
Or if
you're an x-ray tech or you're doing a medicalthing, you're gonna see people get hurt, you

(01:30:55):
know.
Blown up and stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He himself her her brother was involved in oneof the suicide bombs where someone came into
their mess hall and blew up a suicide bomb, andhe had to, triage people and all that.
So
Yeah.
I mean, that the granted, yes.
That's but that's that's like a frontlinething.
Yeah.
It does just but I I have a strong feeling alot of people in the military sometimes

(01:31:16):
shouldn't be there.
Yeah.
I feel like that's like anything else.
Yeah.
Yeah.
For sure.
They're there because they have nothing else todo?
Yeah.
Don't you think a lot of people that are copsshouldn't be there?
Oh, most of them shouldn't be there.
They shouldn't be cops?
And then now we're, like, forcing that we aremaking these cops a certain amount have to be

(01:31:36):
female or a certain amount have to be this orthat.
That's bullshit.
That's
Yeah.
I want people who have the highest aptitude tobe a police officer to serve people, but also
that they will they may have to take out peoplein order to serve people.
And the ability to to function in a you know,when you gotta drag your buddy out of a
situation
Under stress.

(01:31:57):
Drag him five feet.
Mhmm.
Yeah.
Same thing with firefighters.
Well, I would say even more so for firefightersprobably.
Right?
Because you're you're requiring thesefirefighters to be able to, to run into
buildings that are on fire, which if you'veI've experienced that, like a building being on
fire.
When I did my, I did my internship, I went to,like, a broadcasting school in Palm Beach, and,

(01:32:22):
so I had to do a this it's a stupid thing, butI don't I don't, you know, I don't give it a
lot of credits.
But I did it, and I had to do an internshipafter that.
And I interned with the Palm Beach, firedepartment in their, video department, and they
were burning a building down.
And so they wanted us to to tape it, and theywere like, oh, do you wanna go into this

(01:32:44):
building while it's on fire?
I went through the doorway, and I was like, no.
I don't think so.
I'm not gonna be in this building while it's onfire because it was I was looking into the jaws
of hell, and it was scary and very hot.
Yeah.
So you need strong dudes doing that.

(01:33:04):
Well yeah.
Yeah.
And you need to have yes.
Mhmm.
Yes.
And once again, I think they've made mistakesby putting Mhmm.
Females in positions that they cannot handlephysically.
Right.
Yeah.
They might be able to handle it mentally, butphysically, if they can't handle it, you know
And without a doubt, there's bad there's badass females.
Without a doubt, there's bad ass females.

(01:33:25):
There's there's little girls that are bad asstoo.
But Mhmm.
This when you have policies that force thatshit into organizations, it doesn't work.
So Yeah.
I would put my life in in the hands of a womanthat's truly bad ass, but we have to identify
that.
And then when we find those women, for sure, weneed to, like, support them, train them, pay

(01:33:46):
them for the the abilities that they have, butyou can't force everyone to go down that path.
Most naturally, that's gonna be dudes.
And not every dude.
Every dude is not made out to be a firefighter.
If you cannot go into the fire, like how I sawthat fire and I was like, no thank you very
much.
Right?
Then

(01:34:06):
You saw the you saw the thing with the fires inLA, this large woman Yeah.
That was in the fire department.
Basically, when she asked about going in andget the guy out of the fire area, she basically
said he shouldn't have been there.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah.
What if the what if the shoe was on the otherfoot that she was in there and that guy had to

(01:34:27):
come in and get her?
Then then maybe she's too big to be be drugout.
I don't know.
But she wasn't a thin lady either.
She was kind of a thick girl.
So, Yeah.
You know, flying riches in the chat.
Yeah.
Flying flying riches is all I have to accept.
You gotta accept him.
Me.
Yeah.

(01:34:47):
Yes.
We have been forced to accept Flying Rich.
Yeah.
But we're all we're all crazy.
So, yeah, it's easy for us to you shouldn't dothis if you can't do it, by the way.
And nothing in life should you do if you're notup for that.
Yeah.
I I Yeah.
And I don't think this is difficult, but noteveryone's built to, like, get out in front of

(01:35:11):
a camera and talk about shit, and then have todeal with people judging them or you said
something.
You know, a long time ago when I started this,I talked to a a gun writer, and he said he
would love to do YouTube, but he was concernedwith if he did YouTube and he said something
wrong, then what?
And I was like, dude, you you like, you livelife.

(01:35:33):
You're gonna be right and you're gonna bewrong.
So, yeah, if you're gonna do this, you have tobe the kind of person that you just put
yourself out there and you're willing if youmess up, you gotta be willing to go, I messed
up.
I said the wrong thing.
I'll if I screw up, I'll tell you I screwed up.
Yeah.
You could ask Joe some of the shit I say in theshop.
Well, I don't have to ask Joe.

(01:35:54):
I'm pretty sure.
I don't know if I I don't
know if I put
it over the Internet.
But
No.
You should have put it on the Internet.
Thank you very much.
Joe, do not let him put Joe screen what goes upon the Internet before it goes up there,
please.
Yeah.
And and I I realized that too.
So, you know, sometimes it's it comes out of,emotional, it's an emotional interruption.

(01:36:18):
That's what you'd say.
Yeah.
But, you know, like, everything you do, youtake a risk and you put yourself out there.
And I'm not trying to knock everyone.
I think so there used to be a time in the worldwhen we believed that I think under the eyes of
the law, everyone should be equal, but thereality of life is we're not the same.
We all have skills, experience, abilities,natural abilities

(01:36:41):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That set us apart.
Right?
And we used to respect that.
Do you remember do you remember those times?
Well, that's like that's like, you know, we beboys Mhmm.
And then they're girls.
Mhmm.
The girls are not boys.
Yeah.
Or not not yeah.
Everybody's not the same.
Everybody can't do the same thing.

(01:37:01):
No.
No.
No.
No.
But some people have a natural so for example,you don't have, you know, I'm not saying you
don't have degrees because I I'm pretty sureyou do have a degree, but you're not
necessarily formally trained in all the thingsyou can do.
You just have a natural ability to do thosethings.
Right.
Right.
I mean, some people can pick up a sit down witha piano and start playing it.

(01:37:22):
Yeah.
And my grandfather did that one time.
Mhmm.
My dad's dad, we were up in Illinois at myaunt's house, and they said, oh, yeah.
She said something about, you can play thepiano.
And I'm like, you can't.
Mhmm.
I didn't say that like that.
He sat down.
He started hitting the keys, and
Mhmm.
It made sense.
Now he maybe did that long, long time ago, butMhmm.

(01:37:43):
You know, I mean, some people can pick up like,I was welding all day today.
Mhmm.
So some people can do that naturally.
Other people, they just can't fucking get it.
You know?
And
but I think that we used to we used to be ableto notice that.
Right?
Like, we noticed a person.
If you were a watchmaker, let's say, you and Iare into watches.

(01:38:04):
If you're a watchmaker, you, you know,watchmakers would look out for other people
that had the natural ability to be watchmakers.
A lot of times, that would actually be womenbecause if you're dealing with little tiny
things, right, you you know, that's the natureof watches.
There's a lot of guys involved in that in termsof invention and stuff like that.
I think if you look at it, people could takethis the wrong way, but I think men are

(01:38:28):
typically more inventive than women.
Not to say that women aren't inventive.
I think there are inventive women out there.
But men, the way our minds work, we are alwaystrying to, create things and fix things and,
yeah, make things better.
It's just the way naturally that men work.
You know, same way that there's there's justthings that women do very naturally compared,

(01:38:53):
to men.
Right?
So we used to identify people by that and thenput those people in those positions to serve
the world.
So whatever it was you did Right.
You serve the world in that way.
If you were a good negotiator, you'd were anegotiator.
You don't put somebody in that position that itisn't.
Yeah.
If you're very good at organizing people yes.

(01:39:14):
If you're good at organizing people and beingthe boss of people, they will go, oh, this guy
or this woman, she's great.
She could see that and figure it out and thenwe do it.
But then I think, you know, as the schoolsystem, especially past your basic education, I
think in the world we had no education and thenpeople had to have a basic education, then they
started going to higher levels of education.

(01:39:35):
That higher level started fucking everythingup.
Pushing folks into that higher level that haveno business being in it Mhmm.
And giving them a false sense of accomplishmentthrough this, degree that is useless pretty
much.
Mhmm.
Yeah.
And then they get out and then they get out inthe real world, and it's like, well, you you
don't want I I can I can underwater basketweave?

(01:39:57):
You don't need an underwater basket weaver?
No.
You don't need a liberal arts person?
Well yeah.
And and and the first but the first educationaldegrees that were given out, we're not giving
out and all this bullshit.
I think there's valid reasons to give outdegrees.
You can argue whether and
you had real Yeah.
Lawyers and yeah.
I've got it.
Yes.
Real engineers and I mean, there's good lawyersand then there's lawyers that are

(01:40:17):
just Yes.
Yeah.
Shit.
We do need lawyers, unfortunately.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah.
You you wanna get one.
You wanna have
a good one.
Yes.
Yes.
We do.
But you wanna when
you get really sick, you want a good doctor.
Yeah.
Even teachers.
We need teachers.
We need nurses.
Yeah.
Doctors.
Yeah.
In school that they were just there to fill ina spot?
That's the first place I noticed something waswrong, man.

(01:40:39):
Like, my parents are we're both naturallyteachers, my mom and my dad.
And that's because they love to teach toeducate people on things, to share knowledge,
and to bring people to knowledge andunderstanding of things.
Right?
But, yeah, when I came to America and, I sawthat there were people just taking the teaching

(01:41:00):
job to get in there, and then once they becametenured or whatever and they couldn't be fired
to do nothing close.
Yeah.
Or to even just try to, like, abuse thechildren or take advantage of the children.
I was like, what are we doing?
If we're if we're so bloated that we have thesepeople that are destroying the people they're
supposed to be protecting, then we have toomuch of that.

(01:41:22):
Right.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
And we have to cut that back.
And colleges and universities in a big not Idon't believe in the whole part, but in a big
part, that's what they are.
It it's it's it's a it's a racket
for them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And it probably needs to be pulled back, man.
The funding, like, we were talking about USAIDand the other things that Trump and Musk are

(01:41:43):
going after.
I'd like to see them go after some of them.
These will not exist if you pull out thefederal money.
Yeah.
Night Train, this is in your this is up youralley because you were a Boy Scout leader.
Thoughts about that.
Yeah.
How about the boy scouts, no longer beingcalled, boy scouts, Walt?
Okay.
So both of my sons are both Eagle Scouts.

(01:42:04):
Mhmm.
I was the leader of the of the troop, until itdissolved, and we just ran out of boys because
we weren't getting fed from the the cub scoutsbecause there was some
things.
Shenanigans.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
But I think the main driving force with allthat is the good old fashioned shekel.

(01:42:25):
Mhmm.
The boy scouts are so well, first thing, theboy scouts were so worried about being all
inclusive.
Mhmm.
You know, we have to accept everyone.
You know?
And with that comes problems at times.
Mhmm.
You know?
Especially when boys aren't boys or maybe boyslike boys.
And
Well, some people just need to be rejected fromshit.

(01:42:45):
Now there was there's always there's allthere's always been boys that have liked boys
and the boy scouts and
For sure.
Stuff like that.
And and but when you go to that girl thing,that to me I don't know how it is now.
Mhmm.
I mean but it just kinda like, woah.
What do you do when you go camping and you'reout doing this and you're doing that?

(01:43:05):
It
It becomes distracting because you can't reallyyou can't really teach them what you wanna
teach them if you put them all in the same pot.
It's easier to separate the boys and the girlsand to get them the skills.
Girls need survival skills and all of that kindof stuff as well.
And boys need the skills of being able to cookand do domestic what we would consider domestic

(01:43:26):
things.
But but sex should get separated from thatregardless of what their sexual orientations
may be.
Boys are getting girls get to a certain age,they start thinking about the same stuff.
Mhmm.
And it ain't it ain't cooking eggs in themorning.
It's
But it's nature.
Well
This is the way Woah.

(01:43:47):
This is the grand design of the universe.
I I get that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So anyway But
we also but we all but that's also a teachingmoment to me that you have to teach discipline.
Right?
And restraint.
A lot of adults need that too.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And when they keep their thing in their pants,so they're not going after the the the girl

(01:44:09):
scouts, boy scouts' mother.
You know?
True.
But, anyways, we my my last boy, Spencer,finished the scouts right as that idea was
coming to fruition, and I'm glad it did becauseI I didn't have to deal with it and, no way the
force be with them.
But Yeah.
Overall, the boy scout experience, I think, wasgood for all of them.
So Mhmm.

(01:44:30):
Yeah.
Most of the people I talked to who did that, wenever did it.
I didn't do it, and and then my kids didn't doit.
But, and I know we've got a limited time here,but I do think there's certain experiences that
children need to have as they grow up, and weneed to consider that.
Let let's take this break and come right backto talk about that.
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Arm yourself with US law shield.
And remember to use promo code Hank Yeah.
Patrick yeah.
Yeah.
Patrick hates that thing.
And he's here right now.
He'll be making fun of me the whole time that'sgoing on.
What's up?
Crumpy's Crumpy's in the chat.
His boys are in boy scouts right now, and hesaid they have separate troops for boys and

(01:45:36):
girls.
So Mhmm.
But I think, you know, a lot of the stuff theboy scouts do, a lot of girls can get a lot of
good experience like going out in the woods andcamping and and Yeah.
And self reliance and all that stuff.
So I think it it goes it's a two way street,you know.
And and and there's also in scouting, there'scalled venture scouts.
Once they get past a certain age, they can be aventure scout.

(01:45:58):
Mhmm.
And that's boys that's always been boys andgirls.
So
Mhmm.
You know.
Yeah.
Shout out to Crump, out there.
He says nerds.
There you go.
Yeah.
It says we are nerd squad.
Yeah.
He says he's an assistant scout master.
I have met his boys.
I got your nerd squad here.
Right.
I don't know.
I have met his boys, who are very spirited,rambunctious, normal, healthy American males.

(01:46:26):
Very also highly intelligent, which they getfrom their both their mom and their dad.
Man, when you put two nerds together, man, youyou create a super nerd comes out of his son,
one of one of Trump's boys was talking to meabout, how he was gonna hack someone that was
getting on his nerves.
And I was like, oh my god.
So

(01:46:46):
I'm left I'm left in a flying riches, armedscholar has breaking news.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So listen.
I think that as kids grow up, they need certainthings.
And for sure, we need to give a kid's basiceducation, but I think things like boy scouts
or girl scouts is a really important part ofthat.

(01:47:08):
Because you need you need, like, a a classicaleducation in the world around you and how it
works.
And then
you need to just get outside and, I mean, as asas much as I have sucked at times being outside
in the weather and all that stuff Mhmm.
I think it it builds character a little bit.
Yeah.
But but as human beings, there's certain thingswe also need to teach our children.

(01:47:32):
So for example, I can't think of a place onthis planet.
Obviously, there's places that are landlocked.
But anywhere on this planet that human beingslive because we are 70 something what are we?
70 something percent water at least, you shouldknow how to swim, for example.
Yeah.
Every human being should know how to swim.
Yes.
Yes.
That's a that's a survival skill.
Yeah.
Every human being from a very young age, weshould attempt to to educate them on how to

(01:47:57):
swim and the dangers of water.
Every every time summer starts, like summertimecomes around, which is coming up here in
Florida.
Mhmm.
Next amount of kids drown.
Yeah.
Unfortunate.
It's terrible.
The kids that drown just in pools.
This is one of the reasons why I hate pools.
That's what I mean.
In backyard pools, people drown.
You know?
And it's like Yeah.
It's like there shouldn't be that way.

(01:48:18):
No.
But we but it's one of the basics that we don'tgive to people that we should make sure that
people know how to swim.
We should also make There's a tremendous
amount of adults that don't know how to swim.
Yes.
You're right.
Yeah.
And I'm not saying, like, swim like you're afreaking Navy Seal.
Yeah.
You know?
You just need to be on a
safe float.
Stay up above all the

(01:48:38):
Yeah.
Know the basics.
Know that water is dangerous and it kills you.
Okay?
Know that there's also creatures typically inwater.
Yeah.
Like you said, Walt, know how to float, knowhow to stay afloat, how to swim, and
understand, like, currents and tides and stufflike that.
Yeah.
And don't don't do dumb stuff in the water.
Yeah.

(01:48:58):
I I always for some reason, I always grew up onthe beach.
So in New York, I grew up in Far Rockaway,which is on the beach.
And kids would go out there swimming in theAtlantic, man, and get caught in those,
riptides and
stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, so I think I think that's a requirement.
And then I think there's things like guns andstuff like that that should also be a and I'm

(01:49:20):
not saying everyone should be forced to carryguns because I don't believe that.
But you should be able you should be able tounderstand those things and the destructive
capabilities, how to make them safe, how tomake them destructive, how it works Fire?
Should yeah.
Don't fuck around with fire.
Yeah.
That's true.
That's a bad one too.
Yeah.
That's how a lot of kids a lot of kids,unfortunately, like a lot of fire is a house.

(01:49:42):
Yeah.
Burn yeah.
Yeah.
And
Yeah.
Including, like, me and my brother when I thinkI told you before when we were kids, my, like,
in England, when we we used to walk to school,and my mom would give us, like, you know, she
would give us some money to buy candy and stufflike that.
Right?

(01:50:02):
So, instead of my older brother convinced meinstead of buying candy or whatever to buy to
buy the caps, you know, the caps for guns?
Guns.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The cap guns?
We would buy those little, like, tight reelsthat go in the cap guns, and we built up a
bunch of them.
And then we took a light apart, and we put allthese caps in one big pile and electrified them

(01:50:28):
and blew up our bed and started a fire.
I almost Yeah.
I had up up in Illinois when I was just, like,six six probably.
Mhmm.
Had, like, a playhouse thing in the backyard.
Mhmm.
I was messing with candles and matches, and andnext thing you know, it's on fire, and I got my
ass kicked for that.

(01:50:49):
Yeah.
My dad my dad put it out, but I count my buttkicked for that.
Yeah.
So I think I feel like there should be basicthings that you should teach your kids.
Art should be a very important part of kids'lives as well.
Me personally, I believe that, and creativity.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Everybody's that's my phone.
Is that your phone?

(01:51:10):
Okay.
I get notification now.
Sounds like a prank.
Yeah.
You need that.
We finally figured out how to turn it on.
Oh, okay.
Mhmm.
What was I gonna
say?
Creativity.
Very important for you to be able to makethings, fix things, all of that.
Yeah.
Just simple, you know and when it comes to art,I mean, it could be just as simple as drawing

(01:51:30):
or coloring or or, you know, blue with x plus yand, you know, and making things.
And it doesn't
You should you should be able to make your youshould be able to make your own shit.
I remember a lot of times as a kid, you know,we couldn't we didn't necessarily have money.
So making toys, you had to make your own toys.
Oh, I'm getting a
Okay.
So if you hold that button on the left side ofthe phone down, it will go to silence mode.

(01:51:56):
You'll feel it buzz when it goes to silent.
The the top left.
The drill.
Oh, it's fine.
I don't think anyone cares.
They could still just hear it in thebackground.
I did it.
I did it.
Yeah.
Rich said, I only did dumb stuff in the water,play with fire outside.
Nitrain said, I grew up on Coney Island and Iremember quite a few people had drowned off the

(01:52:19):
treacherous waters of Far Rock Way.
Yes.
Quite a few.
Yeah.
I mean, water is that's when growing up, moveddown here to Florida, end up we ended up going
to summer school, like, summer, swimmingclasses.
Mhmm.
So we rode to the place, and you learn how
to swim.
Mhmm.
It's
a little terrifying at first if you're not usedto the water.

(01:52:39):
I remember I was either Will or Spencer.
I think it was Will, and they put him in thepool at the at the freaking, locally here.
There's a a recreation center thing.
Mhmm.
Like YMCA type thing.
He he was he was screaming bloody murder.
Mhmm.
Oh, yeah.
It was
just like Mhmm.
I don't even like to think of a about it.
Yeah.
Yeah.

(01:53:00):
Yeah.
I understand.
But he learned how to swim.
So Yeah.
You know.
I think it's I think it's really important tolearn that.
But there's just these nothing we're saying isnew.
It's also when you learn how to swim and youcan take off and go across the pool through the
deep end, you're like, I'm badass now.
I can swim.
It's a confidence builder too.

(01:53:20):
You know?
Yeah.
At least it was for me.
Yeah.
I think it's important
I could jump off the big high dive right in thedeep end.
Go right out of there.
Yeah.
I think it's important to discover people'snatural abilities.
Right?
So that's why I think you should, teach peopleto be creative, to build things, to make
things.
Because now we don't have I was just talking tomy younger son the other day, and I said,

(01:53:44):
listen, when it we were talking about jobs and,you know, jobs that people do and all this kind
of stuff.
And the fact that there's so many people thatdon't work in an office, which I don't think
there's anything wrong with that.
I don't work in an office.
But I said in order to not have to work in anoffice to go in some place and do a nine to
five, You need to have a special skill thateveryone doesn't have.

(01:54:07):
What?
You're you're not working in your office asyour business.
Yeah.
You're you don't have an office to work in.
Your office is
Yeah.
And I've had and I've had offices before, but,yes, my my my particular business entails me
moving around and doing stuff.
Right.
Well, now this thing, like, with thegovernment, people working from home.
Mhmm.
No.

(01:54:27):
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
Fucking because, you know, if you that's notworking.
Sorry.
Mhmm.
I I think there's I think there's circumstancesor whatever, but for most people, no.
But if you don't want like, I forget aboutthat.
Most people and I was trying to tell him this.
If you want to be able to have a job, okay,where you, you know, you could make a good

(01:54:49):
living and enjoy your life, you need to haveskills that everybody else doesn't have.
Okay?
Yeah.
Because any any kind of office based skill thatyou have today that you do for a living is is
on the way out.
This is where AI and automation and all of thatstuff is coming in.

(01:55:13):
Right?
So if if if AI and automation and anim and,robots and all that's coming in, where are you
gonna have the job?
You could have the job if you're the person whounderstands how to build the robot or repair
the robot or program the
robot.
Extra robot.
Somebody's Yeah.
You know, there's it's like saying there'snever you know, tanks are gone.

(01:55:34):
There's gonna be no more tanks.
They said that numerous times, and guess what?
We will always have to fight.
Yes.
They always gonna need somebody in the end togo in to where you just did your dirty business
and take over Mhmm.
And finish and finish the job.
Yes.
Do we
we're always gonna be in need of fighterswhere, people who are, you know there's just

(01:55:57):
certain things we're always gonna need.
And if you realize at a young age you have anaptitude for that, you can build something out
of that.
Look.
I'll talk about something that we're into,watches.
Right?
Now, I know everyone's, like, rocking their,you know, everyone has their smart smartwatch
on them.
I'm not hating on it.
Someone has to make that stuff.

(01:56:18):
But I like, like, an actual watch.
Look at that.
That is this is a GMT, by the way.
This is a Tudor FXD GMT.
This is actually a military style.
So this keeps, like this could tell me threedifferent time zones and stuff like that.
What was your watch?
It's an Omega, what are the Omega the Omegas?

(01:56:39):
Speedmaster?
Yeah.
Speedmaster, but the Apollo 11 comparative one.
Yeah.
So now the thing about these is these arelittle machines.
Like, we talk about cars and stuff like that.
These are little mechanical machines.
This one, this one in particular winds itselfwhen I move around.
Right?
Walters, you have to wind it.
But this is very intricate inside, and theseare a lot of money nowadays compared to what

(01:57:02):
they used to be when you and I were kids.
Right?
These are ex these these things are expensivenow.
Well, yeah.
Yeah.
I mean
Because everyone cannot make this anymore, andthe people who have the skills to make these
and work on them and fix them and all that kindof stuff are going out of the world.

(01:57:22):
And this is a place that you can separateyourself from other people.
They'll they'll yeah.
There's always gonna be somebody needed to fixthat watch, fix the band, even the simplest
things.
If you can't if your band is broken and youcan't fix it, you got no watch.
Yeah.
So if you can if you can fix things Mhmm.
Like or you can cut that brick and fix thathole and and make that fireplace, there's no

(01:57:45):
robots gonna come in and build your customfireplace.
You're gonna some some mason's gonna have tocome in and do that.
And people look down on those jobs, but they'rein demand, you know.
I think those kinds of jobs are in the highestof demand.
Right?
If you look at, like you were talking aboutwelding, the dudes who can weld are poor.
Yeah.
And now They're not broke.
Right?

(01:58:06):
With our with our new presidente, he's gonnahe's gonna let cut the, oil industry loose
again, and there's gonna be welding jobs allover the place.
Mhmm.
And you can work you can you make good money.
So Yeah.
And you don't have to go to four years ofschool.
You don't have to be a a PhD and a DAC and aand everything else.

(01:58:26):
You're not you're not you're not there'scompetition in the jobs, but it's not like, you
know, with these with the colleges turn outthese people with these degrees and, you know
Yeah.
And it's not look.
If you're the kind of person who has anaversion to hard work, I get it.
But there's jobs you can do that you don't it'snot necessarily physically hard.
Like, for example, sales guys, we're alwaysgonna have to have sales guys, and not everyone

(01:58:50):
can sell things to people.
No.
No.
Not at all.
Not everyone should sell things to people.
Not everyone that sells things to people haveany understanding of what they're selling to
people.
Selling.
But they're good but they're good talkers.
Yes.
But so if you're a guy who has, an affinity forsomething, like you like guns, you like
watches, you like cars, you like houses, andyou and you understand that and you have the

(01:59:15):
ability to explain that to people.
Now you have an ability to sell that to people,and you could be very wealthy from doing that.
There's so many Yeah.
So many things.
Right?
That I don't know, Walt.
I mean, just name it.
That we need a ton of skills in this world, andthat will never go away.
But if you believe that, oh, I just wanna get ajob where I get up, I go there, I punch in, I

(01:59:39):
sit behind a computer and clickety clack onsomething, your job is in big danger.
Yeah.
Well Okay.
Yeah.
And and and what will happen is you'll get to acertain pay grade, and they'll find somebody
else that can click the clack for less money,and you'll be gone.
Yeah.
So If they'll find someone else, and thenthey'll go to another country, and then
eventually they'll go to a machine or acomputer or something that can eliminate that.

(02:00:03):
And you as a human being need to to makeyourself specialize
hotshot young bucks he's got.
Yeah.
Big balls.
Using the AI programs.
Yeah.
And and it and it finds this stuff faster thanany human can find this stuff.
Stuff.
Mhmm.
I mean, because it searches just

(02:00:25):
Isn't that an edge isn't that an indication ofhow fucked up the government is if we need AI
supercomputers in order to go ahead and figureout the waste?
Well I I I'm I'm cool.
I like the kids.
Right?
That they could do that and they have theability to figure out how to sift through that
data, but if anything is that complicated, thegovernment should not be doing it.

(02:00:47):
Simple.
Well and and for years and years and forever,you've been told, we're working for the middle
class, for a middle class, the middle class,blah blah blah.
They're not working for anybody but their ownback pocket.
So and anybody who is against this stuff istrying to hide something.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Or they're just or they're just plain ignorant,you know, and there's a lot of plain old

(02:01:07):
ignorant people out there.
Yeah.
Night Train says big balls.
Listen.
Even right there, there's skills that people,you know, these guys have these skills and
abilities to program.
Or for example, like, there's a lot of kids nowthat like to play video games.
And I always told my kids, I don't haveanything against video games because I think
for a lot of people of this generation, you andI kinda grew up in generations outside of this

(02:01:31):
where we actually physically went out there anddid things.
Kids of this generation, it's not a bad thing.
Keeps them busy, and they, you know, they theycome back from work or whatever they do and
they play games.
They need to actually still go out.
I like that my like, right now my kids are outhanging out with their friends doing stuff.
But That's important.
Yeah.
But I always told my kids, okay.
There's nothing wrong with liking video gamesand spending your money.

(02:01:54):
But how come you don't think about making videogames?
Thank you.
Because that's where you know, there's moremoney in the video game industry than in the
movie industry?
Well
There is?
Yeah.
Because you don't have to go anywhere to do the
Well, so not well, it's very complicated tomake video games nowadays.
Right?

(02:02:14):
Because you gotta write those stories, yougotta program them, you need to film things,
create stuff all around it, you need to testit.
It's very, very complicated, but every videogame is, like, $50.
And then a lot of the video games have thingsyou could buy in there.
So you might spend $50 on that video game, butyou're buying, you know, guns or whatever in
there.
Somebody put their put their new rifle in thatvideo game.

(02:02:37):
Yeah.
So there's a shit there's more money in thevideo game industry than even in the movie
industry.
And I'm always telling my kids, why don't you,
Find a way to make money with your with thestuff you like to look at.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So or at least figure out how to code and workon the video games or how to do to write the
games.
Yeah.

(02:02:57):
You're this big sports fan.
You're the oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You buy the t shirts.
You buy the hat.
You buy all the junk.
All you're doing is throwing your money.
Mhmm.
And are you getting anything from it?
Why don't you figure out a way to make somemoney off of some of this sports stuff?
Yeah.
However
But but not everyone's built for that.
Not everyone like, most people are theaudience.

(02:03:18):
Most people are the consumer.
My my father was very creative when it cametime to creating things.
Mhmm.
But he wasn't a he wasn't a no business senseat all.
No Mhmm.
How are we gonna flip this in the money?
How are we gonna, you know
Yeah.
It's not easy sometimes, but if you get theright thing, it's not very hard.

(02:03:39):
Yeah.
So I
think listen.
It's not everyone's not cut out for it.
So for example, I always wanted to be on thestage instead of in the seat.
Right?
And it's not that I want the attention.
I think it's more of, like I said, with myparents.
My parents are teachers, and they kind ofraised us like that.
And I look at what we're doing right now asteaching.
You and I are just talking, but there's folksout there who are teaching us stuff.

(02:04:02):
We're teaching them stuff.
We're sharing our experience.
We're learning and sharing it, and I alwaysenjoy that.
And so this is a what I'm doing here is anexercise of that.
But you, you're you're also a maker of things.
Right?
So that's how you wind up.
You're you're interested in making lots ofthings, not just guns.
But you have ideas, and you know how to take anidea out of your brain and and put it into

(02:04:25):
reality and make something that someone elsewants to buy.
I see opportunities.
Some that's like like I'm on the SHOT Show.
To me, the SHOT Show is an idea farm.
Like, I walk through a SHOT Show and see newguns, see new stuff, and go, wow.
Yeah.
I can make something for that or or, well, Ididn't why didn't I think of that?
You know, maybe I can make that better.

(02:04:46):
Yeah.
You know, but I've always been that way.
I've always been trying to think of some a newthing to make some money with and because Yeah.
I mean, frankly, if you don't have no money,you ain't got much in the in our world that we
live in.
You don't, Yeah.
You know, you you struggle constantly.
So
Yeah.
Currency is the currency of the realm.

(02:05:08):
You know, it's
You gotta pay for something.
Yeah.
Hate them all the money.
You hate the money.
Say all the stuff about being, you know, therich folk and all stuff.
But when you have plenty of cash and you don'thave to worry about paying your bills, you
don't have to worry about where this is comingfrom, life is way simpler.
Trust me.
No.
I agree with you.
And I think we maybe we used to live in a worldwhere, you know, so for example, let's say you

(02:05:33):
were the let's say you were the gunsmith, thethe gun manufacturer or whatever.
Right?
We used to live in a world where you can builda gun.
And then when you need the food to feed yourfamily, you could go over to the butcher, and
the butcher will go, hey.
Listen.
In exchange for that gun, I'm gonna give youmeat for a year or something.
Right?

(02:05:54):
We used to live in the barter system like that,you know, where you you you could do things
like that.
If you were the the person who made theclothing, you can make clothing for people and
exchange that for the things that you needed,etcetera.
But, you know, for I don't know how manythousands of years now, we've had a money
system, a currency system.

(02:06:14):
It's just what it is.
If it if it wasn't money, you were you likeyou're saying, you were trading.
Trading some eggs for some cloth or Mhmm.
Or trading trading a side of beef for a a kegof gunpowder or whatever, you know.
There
was Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I remember my mom used to make alcohol andtrade that with, you know, she would trade that
with people, especially, like, we lived in aplace where you're not supposed to have

(02:06:37):
alcohol.
Because we lived in the we lived in theNorthern Muslim part of Nigeria.
I mean, they gave
me a drink of beer.
Which you already know probably.
They drink just as much as everybody.
Oh, hell yes.
They just they just don't do it in public asmuch.
Yes.
And alcohol exists.
Like, there was beer and stuff like that youcan get there, but, like, my mother would make

(02:06:58):
wine out of rice and all.
Like, you can make wine out of anything.
But yeah.
And so people people will go, oh, we'll giveyou this.
We'll do this for that or whatever.
Yeah.
But we're not living in that world anymore.
I think now Not
so much.
No.
Yeah.
Now it's a system of money, and you have tofigure out a way to make money.
And in order to do that, I'm not I don'tbelieve you should specialize in everything.

(02:07:18):
So you should only have this skill.
Like, I'm a I'm a YouTuber because I have theskills to, I understand cameras and audio and
the Internet, etcetera.
So should that be the only thing I know?
I don't believe that.
I'm trying to learn from Walter how to fixthings and make things and how to, you know,
the whole gun thing is because I believe thathuman beings should be able to defend

(02:07:39):
themselves and, you know, you need to be a wellrounded person, but you need to have a skill
that everyone doesn't have.
And I hope, like, what we're saying makes if ifyou're a young person out there thinking about
this, there are things that you're into thatnot everyone is into, and you have an ability
to do that, and you should figure out a way toturn that into making a living.

(02:08:01):
Or if you're into something and look at thatthat you're into and is is is every avenue of
that been
Explored?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But yeah.
Is somebody missing something?
Mhmm.
You know, and and lots of times you'll findthere's things that people aren't taking
advantage of or or doing and you you can dothat.
Yeah.

(02:08:21):
You know what, really brought that home to mewhen we were hanging out at SHOT Show?
When we remember who we were hang so Peggy, I Idon't know.
You probably are into patches, but Peggy issuper into it.
And, we were hanging out with all the patchnerds, and just me looking at SHOT Show to see
how that trade of patches goes, man, that isthat's crazy.

(02:08:45):
Oh, yeah.
And there's people like Chris that works forme, he makes patches and sells them.
Yeah.
You know?
And he started with nothing to do that.
He just Mhmm.
And it doesn't take much to get into it.
A couple hundred bucks, and you've made a aYeah.
A group of patches that you turn on and makethree, four, five, six hundred percent profit
on when you sell them.
Yep.
Yep.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
And you
and if you keep putting it into that puttinginto that, come up with new stuff.

(02:09:08):
Yeah.
Figuring out what kind of patches people reallylike and why they like those patches and
With the AI stuff now, you can just you but thelogo you come up with.
Mhmm.
I mean, boom.
If you took that skeleton with the hair and thewhole nine hour, that could be a patch.
Boom.
Mhmm.
Mhmm.
Just like that.
So Yeah.
Yeah.
I wish I had the time to do it, man, or I hadsomeone, you know, working on that stuff, which

(02:09:33):
may happen at some point.
But, yes, I wholeheartedly agree.
Lola has this question before we wrap up, Walt.
Lola has this question for you.
And since this is all about Walter, we shouldend it on this.
What did Walter do before Safety Harborfirearms?
Was Safety Harbor firearms something you alwayswanted to do?
You have you have more you have enough
time for this?
Go for it.

(02:09:53):
We got as much time as we want.
Okay.
Let's go back in time.
I'll go back to when, okay.
I have worked at first grocery first job everwas at Winn Dixie grocery store bagging
groceries.
Mhmm.
Then I was doing stock there, and they wantedme to go into management, actually.
Mhmm.
How old were you?
Teenager?
Seven.
Okay.

(02:10:13):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I worked, so they saw that and they go, letme get that.
I didn't I had I had another friend that workedat Publix, and he was went into management and
all that stuff, but that wasn't my goal in lifeto be a grocery store manager per se.
Though everybody's gotta eat groceries, so it'sa it's, you know
Yep.
What I I've I've made trophies, worked at atrophy shop, Brown's Trophies over in Tampa.

(02:10:36):
Worked, I've worked in the shipyard for awhile, working on with my dad and and working
on ship stuff.
Drafting.
I did drafting.
I went to drafting school.
Did that for Hillsborough County.
Yeah.
So that's your formal education.
You have a drafting.
You have, like, a associates or something?
Degree in architectural design, actually.
Okay.
Cool.
And I and I and I did architectural draftingfor maybe a month, maybe Mhmm.

(02:11:00):
Of all
But you can figure out stuff in your head reallike, I've seen you draw things, but you could
figure out shit in your head real fast.
I I'm building it in here versus and then I'llmaybe write something down, but I can see it
before I do it.
A lot of people can't do that.
Mhmm.
I met Peggy working at General Dynamics, doingdrafting, and she got hired as a drafts person,

(02:11:20):
and and that's history.
Mhmm.
Clearwater Gas.
Worked for Clearwater Gas.
I did cable mapping mapping cable TV system foryou to walk all day with a with a wheel and
measure between the poles.
Oh, okay.
Mhmm.
Oh, what else?
What What else?
What else?
Okay.
When I was, I worked for another gunmanufacturer.
They'll go nameless.
Right.

(02:11:40):
Right.
Voldemort.
Uh-huh.
Voldemort firearms manufacturing services.
And then then I saw the opportunity with thewith the upper.
The 50 caliber upper came about, and I wasstill doing that.
And I said, fuck it.
Nobody else is doing it.
I'm doing it.
So But

(02:12:01):
so but I'm assuming when you were there, youwere like, before you went on your own and got
your own shop and everything, you were buildingor designing and building stuff.
In oh, yeah.
Yeah.
In in '99, I started stem parts.
Mhmm.
I saw a friend came over with some side platesand stuff like that, and I said, how much you
get for this stuff?
He told me, and I was like, really?

(02:12:22):
Oh, fuck.
I get those laser cut for $10 a piece and sellthem for a hundred.
Boom.
Bingo.
So I started doing that in '99, and then I Ihad Peggy stop her work, working basically as a
secretary Mhmm.
To come home and do that and take care of,actually, Spencer was born in '99 too.
So Mhmm.
Take care of Spence, make some money, make alot of money, make as much money in one day as

(02:12:46):
she made all week Mhmm.
Or more than that.
And And then,
because Peggy was, like, trying to she stilldoes it, manages, like, the administrative side
of the business.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then I started safety over firearmsofficially in 02/2003 with the uppers.
And then the rest is kind of history.
So yeah.
And I had other jobs in between differentthings, but, it used to be my friends would

(02:13:07):
say, hey.
What are you doing now, Walt?
What are you doing now?
It's like Mhmm.
Doing the same thing I did ten years ago.
What would you do other than what you're doingright now, making gun stuff?
I'll make this the last thing before we wrapup.
If you could do whatever you wanted to do nowis the next thing, what would you do?
I like making mini bike stuff.
Yeah.
There's there's a lot of opportunity there.

(02:13:29):
Mhmm.
I like defense stuff.
You know?
I like stuff like I'm thinking about dronestuff and stuff like that.
Mhmm.
Okay.
I need to I need I'm thinking about some stuffto make to shoot down drones.
Okay.
That's gonna acquire some I
think there's big I think there's bigopportunities there right now.

(02:13:50):
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Just a little bit.
Yeah.
But, yeah, stuff like that.
And, it's just I'm always trying to think ofsomething
new to me.
I saw a congressman talking about the dronesituations in airports, and then he showed
this, like, he I don't know if it was aprototype or an actual drone downing device.

(02:14:10):
It looked like a big, polymer gun kind of athing.
And he was like, yeah, you know, this cost$50,000, and we could put one of these in every
airport.
I was like, what?
50 g's?
Oh my gosh.
Someone should be someone should start sellingthose with 25 g's.
Yeah.
Air airports are tough.
You just can't start shooting guns at theairport So

(02:14:31):
Yeah.
I I don't think it looked like a gun, but itlooked like it was probably more of a launcher.
No.
Actually, what it was, it was a radar jammingdevice.
Oh, good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It looked like a gun, but it was a radarjamming device.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's that kind of stuff, and then there'slaser laser based stuff that they're doing
too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was thinking for the old fashioned, like, forthe, you know, when you're
on the computer.

(02:14:52):
Yeah.
Yeah.
I agree with you.
Okay.
Very cool.
Alright.
So listen.
I wanna thank everyone for hanging out with us.
Hopefully, you all got to know Walter Keller alittle bit better.
I think so.
I think I probably asked Walter some things Idid not know the answer to.
Network network at DARPA.
Yeah.

(02:15:12):
There you go.
And so do I do wanna remind everyone to to gocheck out what you said tomorrow at ten, dark,
DLDF to dark.
That's what
that's what it seems like.
Yeah.
I've seen some better Yeah.
Because, Crump Yeah.
Stay stay tuned to stay tuned to to dark,flying rich, Crump and those guys, and they'll

(02:15:33):
let you know exactly.
And you'll see Walter over there as well.
Walter, for the people who want to find outmore, more info about safety harbor firearms or
stem parts, and I always encourage folks, youcan Google the phone number, call these guys
during business hours, best way to get yourquestions answered.

(02:15:53):
So Monday to Friday, nine to five kind of athing, call over there.
Yeah.
And that's the best way.
But but, Walt, how can the people communicatewith you and support you, etcetera?
Well, Safety Reform is on Facebook, Instagram,and YouTube, player a little bit and Rumble
too.
Mhmm.
And then there's, and you can always call onthe phone.
Like I said, the phone number is on the websiteand you Google it, we pop right up.

(02:16:15):
Mhmm.
I've been doing it for twenty plus years.
It'll come up.
Yeah.
The dirt foot racing thing with the mini bikesand stuff also, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, a
little bit on Rumble.
Maybe a little bit on player too.
I'm not sure.
But, yeah.
Yeah.
We may all be switching over to Rumble here atsome point.
We'll see what's gonna happen.
And then there's 10parts.com, and you can, goto the website there.

(02:16:38):
You can call us on the phone.
Like I said, I've been doing that since '99.
So it pops right up when you do a Googlesearch.
So Yes.
Yeah.
Look for the phone number.
That's the best thing I could say to anyone outthere, and then call them during business
hours.
If you get if if you get the answering machine,don't get too bent out of shape.
Sometimes it happens.
But, once we do answer the phone, even ifyou'll get an answer one way or another.

(02:17:04):
And if a if a female picks the phone up, thatdoesn't mean she can't answer your question.
Trust me.
Yeah.
So,
these guys are a mom and pop, type business, sothat it's not like a whole complicated system
or anything over there.
So I'm just trying to remind everyone of that.
You're gonna need to exercise a little bit ofpatience in order to communicating with them,
but it will be it will be worth it once you getthrough.

(02:17:27):
So, babyface is not here, but you check out,babyface p on all social medias and chrome
vanadium arms.
That's, the name of it.
And, we'll see you guys.
I'm looking forward to, getting a look at, theshow these guys are all gonna do, with their
build.
So you guys will see that soon.

(02:17:47):
Yes.
Big thanks to everyone.
We are out of here.
I am going to stop pushing the buttons rightnow.
See you.
Let's go.
Let's hit the buttons.
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