Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
Okay.
(00:02):
Let me see.
Alright.
So, yeah, you just have to edit this part.
What part?
Because I start I start it live before Beforewhat?
I start Okay.
Go ahead.
I start this thing.
I've already started it.
(00:22):
Don't worry about it.
I
can't explain it to you now because you okay.
Alright.
I don't see him, so I'm gonna get startedbecause these people usually do not wait.
(00:45):
Let me go live here.
Alright, here we go.
Alright.
Cool.
Let's see.
I am live here.
I'm waiting to see if we get if you guys canhear me, let me know.
(01:05):
Give me some confirmation that the audio iscoming through loud and clear out there to you
guys.
Let me see.
I'll check and see if this is actually, feedingthrough yet.
Smash those thumbs ups.
We need it.
(01:28):
Typing that at the same time.
Alright.
Just so far, it's just me, and I'm stillwaiting to see.
I don't let me see.
I might have to refresh this.
Okay.
There we go.
Alright.
It looks like everything's feeding out there tothe folks.
(01:49):
I'm waiting for babyface p to join us.
I don't think Walter's joining us today, butit'll be me and Patrick.
So, let me, let me just get this kicked offhere.
I'm I'm just gonna have to trust in the force.
There you go.
It's probably gonna be Glock talk tonight.
(02:09):
Probably gonna be Glock talk.
Alright.
So and a lot of other stuff.
Yeah.
Let's let's kick this off.
Let's get this going.
Welcome back to the Hank Strange situation,lifestyles of the locked and loaded.
With arms list, you can shop the extensive listof nationwide firearms classified.
(02:34):
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Alright.
Boom.
(02:54):
We are live.
Let's let's, do the jazz hands.
There you go.
Jazz hands going.
Jazz hands with guns.
I'm I'm guessing you've got a Glock to show offtonight.
Oh, yeah.
I think this is my gen one.
Right?
Yeah.
Is that the real gen one?
I think so.
I'm very jealous.
I do want one.
There's not a g one on it, but I guess therewouldn't be.
(03:17):
Right?
I You remember where you got that?
Some store.
It was, I think in Ocala.
I think my friend Bubba Roadkill.
Yeah.
Okay.
The store that he gave I I
am looking for one.
No.
I got
Yeah.
Yes.
You've got something to show off.
So we are live.
This is episode 1,061 of the Who Moved MyFreedom podcast.
(03:40):
He's got a holster and everything to go withthat.
DeSantis holster?
I don't know.
No.
Even better.
Let's see.
What is it?
What does it say?
Sullivan's?
It says custom made at Sullivan's Tampa,Florida.
It's it yeah.
It's not a Andrews.
(04:02):
It's an
e for Tampa police department.
Oh, there you go.
Okay.
It's not a Andrews custom leather, so what canI say?
This What can I
company, now defunct, this was back in theseventies and eighties and nineties?
Mhmm.
And a police officer with his worth his waitingin well, what's the phrase?
Not gold, but worth his salt
(04:22):
Mhmm.
Hat at Sullivan.
This is what this guy made all the gun holstersfor all the TPD.
Oh, okay.
Interesting.
Okay.
And
he's now defunct.
Interesting trivia right
gave that to me years ago, so now I get to putsomething in
(04:48):
of Chromvandium Arms.
He's here joining me.
Walter probably is he's on his way back fromLouisiana.
I believe that the new pope is Creole, soWalter went to Louisiana to pay homage, kiss
the rain, bow down, wash the feet, etcetera, ofthe new pope.
(05:09):
That's what I hear.
Back back there.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
I don't think he's he's not he's not gonna makeit for this show.
Hopefully, he's listening.
Did you did you hear about that, that the newpope is Creole and all
kinds stuff?
Your text today, but I thought he was fromChicago.
Yeah.
(05:30):
Yeah.
I think he's from Chicago, but he has dual hehas dual citizenship.
So he's an American citizen and, what is it?
Ecuador or something like that or Peruviancitizen.
One of those, I think.
Oh, really?
So yeah.
And he's got whatever.
I don't know if it matters, but, you know, he'slike the Obama of popes.
(05:51):
You know what I'm saying?
So he's supposed to be culturally diverse, orthat's at least how they're trying to spin it.
So Walter's out there, like I said, washing thefeet of the pope, washing the feet of the pope.
I didn't see any beignet.
I didn't even realize Walter was in Louisiana.
I didn't either.
I thought that that picture he sent from, hisSunday Mother's Day was in good old safety
(06:15):
harbor.
Yeah.
I mean, I didn't see pictures of Belyetsgetting thrown up in our communications.
So, usually, that's what's going on.
But, anyway, the title of the show is half ofnothing is still nothing.
What do you think that's about?
What do you think that's about?
NFA.
NFA.
Yeah.
Suppressors coming off the NFA.
We'll talk about that a little bit.
(06:36):
Well, probably a lot of bit here.
Let's see how excited and hot headed.
It's just me and Patrick.
So
I I I mean, if we can get John Crump to come
on for a little bit.
Yeah.
We could reach out to Crump.
Let me see if I could Lola.
Yeah.
See if Crump is available.
Want me
Talk to in FA.
Yeah.
See if he's available to come in live.
Send him the link.
(06:57):
I don't know if he's available or not.
Because when he did his live, he did it for,like, two minutes, which
is Mhmm.
Unusual.
Rare.
I don't know if he was off to do something withthe kids or not.
I was gonna call I was gonna call this we don'tneed no stinking jets.
Do you know what I was thinking about?
You don't know what's going on with that?
No.
The jets?
(07:17):
Make any sense to me.
With the jet situation?
Okay.
I'll bring you
up to speed.
Getting a free jet, and everybody's up in armsabout it.
Yeah.
But we I don't think we need it.
It doesn't make sense to me.
I'm not a fan of that.
So not a fan.
Not a fan of that whatsoever.
What about free a free jet?
You're not a fan of a free jet?
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
So we'll we'll talk about all that.
(07:38):
Shout out to everyone who's out there.
Let me see if there's any shout outs that needto go out.
We already have, like, nineteen, twenty peoplein the chat.
You guys can help us out by smashing thosethumbs ups.
They do help, you know, even though we're hereon Rumble, we're doing this live on Rumble
because they don't let us hold gun.
YouTube doesn't let us hold guns and touch itlike that and show you guys guns.
(08:01):
So that's why we're on Rumble, and, that'llhelp us out here.
So smash those thumbs ups.
We appreciate it.
Let me see.
It looks like we got shooting gallery NE is outthere.
C Bolas, Night Train, original, Kurt twentyfour.
Anyone has any questions, anything you guyswanna talk about, we'll get into whatever
(08:21):
you're excited about, you wanna know about,whatever happened over the weekend.
We will get into it.
How was your weekend, babyface?
Good.
Good.
Good.
We didn't do
don't don't think we did anything on Saturday,and then Sunday, we made ribs.
Mom and dad came up.
We went to PDQ first, which PDQ always doessome sort of Father's Day of of Parent's Day
(08:47):
thing.
So they nor they always do a Father's Day and aMother's Day.
So, like, yesterday was BOGO at PDQ, so we wentto lunch Mhmm.
At PDQ.
And then I smoked some ribs, and we had a nicedinner, and it was good.
It was overall a good day.
Okay.
Good Mother's Day.
Good Mother's Day.
(09:07):
Yeah.
It was nice nice and quiet.
It's all you can ask for.
Yes.
Happy belated Mother's Day to all the mothersand the mother's mothers out there.
You know?
I I I spawned Lola this Mother's Day.
Good.
I washed I washed her car for her, and I gave
deserves it.
Yeah.
I gave her suggestions on what to make me forbreakfast.
(09:30):
Bet that went over real well.
It was actually pretty good.
It it was like a breakfast casserole.
That was my idea.
I was gonna do it, but then I got busy, workingon stuff.
You get busy at working on Thursday.
You take
Oh, I was working.
I work every day.
No days off around here.
No days off.
(09:50):
Day I took the entire day off, and I didn'twork at all.
Yeah.
By the way Walter.
Yeah.
This is what we got from Walter, crawdads,which are basically like cockroach of the ocean
or the seas or whatever that wherever the hellthey come from.
I guess so as a lobster, but I and I likelobster, but I don't know about that.
Do you eat these things?
You would like them if you got them.
You'd like them.
(10:10):
If you like seafood, if you like lobster, ifyou like do you like crabs?
I'm okay with crabs.
I'm not a big crab, guy either.
I like lobster and fish and stuff like that,but
Yeah.
You should try them once.
They're not bad.
Get them when somebody else has ordered them.
Don't order them yourself just in case.
I've tried all that stuff.
Like, my mom, you know, my mom had a policy.
Whatever she cooks, you eat or you die.
(10:32):
It's yeah.
It's what we do at home here.
Yeah.
It's not my they're not bad, but they're notreally my cup of tea.
I'm not I don't mind eating the tails mostly.
Mhmm.
But I'm not into fucking the juice out of theheads.
That
is not
that ain't my thing.
I still
Doesn't even sound right, but I get it.
Yeah.
It's not my cup, but, you
(10:53):
know Yeah.
They insist on it.
I don't know if you know this, but I famouslywell, maybe my no one probably talked about it,
but I went to this thing that was, like, put onby Brownells, and there's a bunch of big gun
guys out there and myself.
And they did the same kinda what is thiscalled?
Like a
Crawfish.
(11:13):
Crawfish.
A crawfish broil.
And Boil.
They boil or whatever.
Okay.
It's a boil or a broil?
Boiling them.
You're not broiling them.
Okay.
It's a boil.
Okay.
So that just doesn't sound right.
But anyway
Boil them.
It's seafood boil.
Yeah.
So they did this thing.
People like that stuff.
Have you never seen the black people takeseafood boils on airplanes?
(11:34):
They love that stuff, man.
Doing it on an airplane?
I don't know.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Oh.
Yeah.
No.
I don't know about vlogged.
I mean, I yeah.
I'm from The Caribbean and all that, so I getit.
And people from The Caribbean, they eat a bunchof crap that, like I said, when I was a kid,
maybe I was forced to eat, but I don't do it.
So anyway, we went out to this thing.
(11:54):
I told them I don't eat that stuff, and theydid it anyway, which was fine by me.
But so, so then they had they sent someone toget me a burger, but we were, like, out in the
boonies.
And everyone and everyone was like, well, screwHank Strange.
I'm gonna eat, which I was totally fine with.
Yeah.
And then Eric of IV eighty eight, he refused toeat until my food came in, which it came, like,
(12:19):
two hours later.
And I felt bad.
I kept telling him.
I was like I was like, dude, you need to youneed to eat.
You got way better friends
than me
than IV.
Yeah.
That's just one of I don't know.
That's just one of one of those things.
Chad was like, screw Hank Strange.
I'll be eating food.
Mhmm.
Absolutely.
So there you go.
Yeah.
I don't expect that.
(12:39):
I would've you know, at the end of the day, Iwould've just eaten the corn.
There is other stuff in there that's okay, but,you
know Corn and potatoes are the best part.
Well Yeah.
I'm sure they're not the best part, but I lovecorn and potatoes in it.
Yeah.
I don't think everyone will agree with you.
That's the best part.
By the way, check out.
This is our logo today.
This is just me and you.
We might get what do you think about look atthat.
(13:01):
Anthropomorphic dog.
No suppressors, though.
You need to have some suppressors.
Yeah.
You know what?
It's not easy to Yeah.
I know.
This dog looks this scruffy dog looks badassright here.
Mean, he's got his eye patch.
A little, yeah, he's a little mean looking.
The tongue is hanging out, like, ready foraction.
I don't think you could get your tongue outlike that.
(13:24):
No.
I can't.
Can Buckshot?
I don't
know if I even ever seen Buckshot doing the oh,he can.
Oh, okay.
I'm trying to remember if I've ever seen that.
Of course, you know, you got the skull, there'sa AK in there, and there's a Boeing, a 747Dash8
Boeing.
Like I said, originally, I thought we weregonna talk about not needing any stinking why
(13:49):
did I turn you on there?
Let's see.
Yeah.
Originally, I was gonna talk about not needingany jets, so we could probably cover that real
quick.
Did you see this in the news?
Something, but not I'm not sure exactly what.
Yeah.
There's okay.
I saw it on Twitter.
Yeah.
So here, I'll pull up something here that wecould share with the people.
(14:12):
So, Trump administration in talks to accept newAir Force one as gift from Qatar.
Oh, it's coming from Qatar?
I didn't realize that.
Yeah.
Who do you think was giving it to us?
The the king of England?
No.
I thought it was it was Boeing or or one ofthem doing it, and I thought that was a little
(14:33):
bad.
No.
I didn't realize Qatar was doing it.
No.
I am totally against that.
Yeah.
Boeing should totally give up a free.
So Boeing is they were supposed to have madethis from the first administration.
He ordered an air force one and they haven'tdelivered it.
So that's Boeing
was saying, hey, thank you for helping withsomething.
We're gonna give you a free jet.
Which I was like, okay.
That doesn't bother me as much, but Qatar.
(14:55):
No.
I didn't know it was Qatar.
Yeah.
If it was Boeing, I would not be bothered.
Idea.
Boeing should buy that jet.
They should.
They get enough money from us that they shouldjust go, you know what?
Here's a good
That's what I thought, Hank.
That's what I thought.
Was like Boeing was like, oh, man.
We've made lot lot of profits this year.
Let's give the president a new jet, which whichI I legitimately thought was like, okay.
(15:17):
I can see why people are complaining becauseyou might be getting some nepotism.
You might you know, Boeing might be looking fora favor or a handout.
No.
They get a lot of contracts.
They get they already get that.
They don't care.
They they get that already.
Yeah.
But, no, I didn't know it was Qatar.
No.
It's Qatar, bro.
Qatar does Qatar is not oh, my god.
No.
That's Yeah.
President Trump's administration is in talkswith the Qatari government about accepting a
(15:39):
luxury Qatari plane for his use as presidentand potentially beyond, according to people
familiar with the matter, Under the potentialagreement, which is raising legal and ethical
concerns, the plane owned by Qatari By theQatari royal family would be used as Air Force
One while Trump is in office after beingretrofitted by a US Defense Contractor, blah
(16:00):
blah blah.
So, I mean
No.
No.
It goes on.
But yeah.
And Trump was talking about it.
Saying.
The somebody in on Twitter was like, oh, yeah.
You're gonna be wanting wanting to check forbugs.
And I was like Yeah.
Why would Delta be bugging that plane?
Or why would Lockheed
Bowing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Now it makes sense.
There's no way in hell you accept first of all,it's a white elephant.
(16:21):
Let's start right there.
It's a white elephant.
Explain Explain that one to me.
I don't understand.
So, yeah.
I had to explain it to Lola.
I'm gonna pull it up while I talk about it.
So, elephant is like royal Like, so royalwealthy people, powerful people back in the
day, they would give each other what's called awhite elephant as a, you would give that to
someone who you don't like.
You give them a white elephant because it's abig ass elephant
(16:45):
that needs gotta take care of it.
Handlers.
It, yeah, it needs to be fed.
Okay.
Plus it's white on top of that, so it getsdirty all day.
You gotta clean it.
I've heard that before
before.
So it's a way to, like, give something to afriend but
And isn't good.
You really don't like, but, yeah, you wannapunish them
Okay.
At the same time.
Yeah.
Lola asked me that same question.
So here's the definition.
(17:06):
A white elephant is a metaphor for somethingexpensive to maintain, but of little or no
practical use or something that is difficult todispose of dispose of.
It's often used to describe an unwanted gift orpossession that takes up space and costs money
to keep.
Because because it's rude to get rid of it.
Yeah.
So you have to accept it, but it's a shittygift.
(17:28):
Yes.
The phrase originates from a legend about theking of Siam who would give albino elephants as
punishment to those who displeased him.
Oh.
Walter's joining.
And I I think Yeah.
I think I actually have heard this and if youit was a big deal because if you killed that
elephant, then you were like, they would killyou.
Like, Well
(17:48):
had all
You yeah.
You made a vie you violated.
Oh, look.
Look.
Walter's oh, he's decided to go live to tour.
Why did I send him the link?
I was gonna not send Walter the link.
Just to
show off
the You bastard.
Oh, that's so delicious.
Oh my lord.
Okay.
So, obviously, some people are still inLouisiana.
(18:12):
They're they're still over there, apparently.
I don't think their signal's gonna come in toogood.
We might have we might have even lost themright there.
So
Yeah.
Those I've never I've never had well, I'venever I I've had beignets here from a little
beignet place, but I've never had them at once,and I'm I'm very jealous.
Those look good.
(18:32):
Yeah.
That was awesome.
Now I'm hungry.
Yeah.
Know, I had some chicken wings right before wedid this.
Oh, you're
having dinner.
Marley is making dinner tonight.
Jeez, Walt.
Yeah.
Oh, here we go.
He's coming in again.
He's coming in again.
Hold on.
Let's see if he can get a better so he'sobviously Walter, you're still in Louisiana.
(18:54):
Right in the face.
Yes.
We are.
Yeah.
Oh.
We leave at seven.
Nine.
You leave at nine.
Okay.
So beignets will spoil if you bring them on theplane.
I ain't get you ain't getting none.
Well, thanks.
It's good to see you.
How was the pope?
Did you go visit with the pope?
(19:14):
I figured you would enjoy that.
Yeah.
Yes.
I was just telling Patrick I didn't know whathappened to the usual pictures of of beignets
and videos that we always get when you're inLouisiana.
Well, figured since I was gonna be here and youwere all in live, I figured I'd Mhmm.
(19:35):
Yeah.
Just show off.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We didn't
have any this this this is the first time we'vebeen here since we got here, and we're leaving
tonight.
So
Oh, okay.
So what is the state of mind?
Is everyone in Louisiana happy or somethingbecause they can somehow claim ownership of
the pope?
Okay.
My mother-in-law my mother-in-law goes tochurch religiously, and the subject has not
(19:57):
come up.
I don't know.
Didn't bring up
knows that he has some connection.
I don't think there's anybody in this life.
They're trying
push the only one that knows.
Yeah.
Oh, he had some connection in Louisiana.
Yeah.
I know.
But this Yeah.
Says, I don't know him, so I shouldn't tellyou.
Yeah.
Someone in his some I think his father ormother or something like that was supposed to
(20:17):
have been, like, Haitian or something, believeit or not.
Uh-oh.
White Haitian?
Yeah.
I
don't know.
I was at a gathering yesterday, and nobodymentioned it.
Nobody mentioned the pope to me yesterday atthe crop for spoils.
So Yeah.
No one's worried about it.
Anybody gives to.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No one's worried about
it.
Not when there's not when there's crawfish onthe table.
Yeah.
Exactly.
What are you in Louisiana for good things orbad things?
(20:40):
Everything's good?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Everything's fine.
It was fantastic.
All that rain that No.
All that rain
No deaths in the family.
Because it seems like every time you go,there's a death in the family.
Every time what?
I'm sorry.
No
death.
Every time you've gone recently, there's been adeath No.
There's no deaths or anything.
The last time was a funeral thing.
Yes.
Yes.
This time, no.
(21:01):
No.
Celebration.
It's good
to hear.
I'll find it.
Yeah.
And I'll probably be back next month for a
Seventh birthday.
Her
Peggy's mom's birthday.
So
Oh, okay.
Say happy birthday to Peggy's mom.
Patrick is showing off Glocks right now.
He's showing off his gen one.
Yeah.
I see.
Gen two, I think.
And his Tupperware thing.
Yes.
Yeah.
(21:23):
Alright.
Well,
enjoy your beignets.
Yeah.
Good to see you guys.
Stay home safe.
Alright.
Bye.
Yeah.
I gotta eat my my my stuff's cold.
Yes.
I know.
Sorry.
Goodbye.
Goodbye.
Okay.
That was nice.
Yeah.
So so we were talking about the white elephantthing there.
(21:44):
Yeah.
So then that was I remember hearing thisbecause if the sultan gave you a white
elephant, you had to keep it alive and healthyand pay for all of it.
Yeah.
You would die probably.
You know?
Yeah.
You ended up starving it or killing it, thesultan would, like, kill you.
Yes.
It was definitely an insult.
Yeah.
It was a chore that you had to keep that son ofa bitch alive.
Yeah.
Yeah.
(22:04):
It was a way to punish I just realized I didn'twear wear my hair hair watch.
I got
nothing.
Oh, you too.
Look at that.
That's so shameful.
I had hands.
I was hands deep in a in a tank
Uh-huh.
Of screening
In an elephant.
Ew.
No.
Thank you.
No.
Yeah.
We've got thirty seconds.
(22:26):
I was gonna say something, which I probablyshouldn't if we already have yeah.
So for that reason, I think it's that.
It's just an expensive ass thing to maintain.
That's just one to me that it's a whiteelephant.
If you guys hang out with us until the nextsegment, which is coming up here in a few
seconds, we'll go into the other things.
(22:46):
We'll talk about the suppressors, NFA,etcetera, coming up right after this.
We wouldn't be able to keep the Who Moved MyFreedom podcast going without the support of
great companies like Franklin Armory.
Franklin Armory provides 100% US made firearmsand awesome binary option triggers.
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(23:11):
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Okay.
I was was gonna see if there's one I could justmake up a watch here.
Okay.
So so listen.
Yeah.
So it's a white elephant in my opinion.
Right?
Because it's something you have to maintain,all that kind of stuff costs money.
I know Trump has money.
(23:31):
We don't get to we don't get to it.
Right?
We it's the and it sounded like it was stilltheirs.
No.
They're giving it to Trump.
They're giving
it Trump. Way
Trump. Way the way you said it, it sounded likethey're giving it to him to use.
So the plan was, this is how Trump is trying tospin it, and and I don't know if it's a good I
personally don't think it's a good idea.
(23:52):
But they were gonna give it to him to use untilthe end of his presidency, and then it would
switch over to the Trump library.
He said in a press conference he woulddecommission it because it's fuck all
expensive.
So then it's just an empty shell that's gonnabe sitting in the library Yes.
Which I don't know if he needs all that
or people need use them.
(24:13):
This seems some this seems weird to me.
Yeah.
And Ronald Reagan, I think, already hadsomething similar to that, like, plane was Air
Force One at the time, when it gotdecommissioned, I guess they they donated it to
Ronald Reagan, and it's in the Ronald Reaganlibrary.
I don't know if Trump needs all that, butthere's a there's other stuff with this.
There's the security thing, You know, there'ssecurity measures and precautions, like anti
(24:37):
anti aircraft stuff that needs to go on there.
There's spying things, anti spy.
Yeah.
So why would we get this thing from Qatar whenBoeing just needs to make Air Force one and
stop messing around?
That's okay.
So it it would be a to me, it would be a littlebit different if Qatar says, hey.
You know what?
You deserve a nice new plane.
(24:58):
We're gonna pay for it.
And they call up Boeing and say, hey.
Make make the president a new plane.
Put it on our our black car.
Don't know if I yeah.
But that would still be that still seems tooquid pro quo as Yeah.
Qatar is looking for something.
Or they're looking for something like, we wantyou to be favorable.
Like, we don't we don't
Yeah.
We're a married person.
And even Laura have you ever heard of LauraLoomer?
(25:20):
I I only
know that she's Abso fucking lutely nuts.
Yeah.
So even Laura let me see.
I don't know how you spell it.
Loomer.
Laura Loomer.
Yeah.
Laura Loomer.
Even she is against it.
She's she's bat she she's, cellophane pantscrazy, dude.
Yeah.
She, like, is But even she is against it.
Even even she is saying that it shouldn't bedone.
(25:42):
About everything.
Right?
Yeah.
Well, yeah, she's pro Trump about everything,but she says
This is a bad idea.
Yeah.
She says it's a bad oh, this
is what she looks like?
She dude, she's disgustingly ugly.
Why is Laura picture
of her.
Go find go look up just Google Laura Loomer.
She has had so much plastic surgery done thatshe looks like a creature in the way
(26:07):
And why is she, like why does Laura lookbecause I heard that he actually she he listens
to her or something like that.
He should he shouldn't because she's sheliterally had a an order of protection.
She got baker acting and can't own firearms.
Like, she's crazy.
She's straight she's straight cellophane pantscrazy.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Jesus.
(26:27):
She looks like a monster.
But even she says it's wrong.
So
She's dude, she's nuts.
Yes.
How did she become how did she become a deal?
How did this chick become any kind of
No idea.
She's she's a Trump sycophant in the in thetruest way possible where anything Trump does,
she's, like, kissing his feet.
So if she's saying it's wrong, then that's abig deal.
(26:48):
Yeah.
I think it's a bit and I I don't think weshould take it.
I'm not saying, like, if if they wanna dosomething, I think there's other things they
could do, but I don't even know if a planewould still help.
Right?
Because we gotta maintain this plane.
Just I don't know why he needs a new one.
What
I I don't it gonna do for people, guitar?
What's it gonna do?
It's there's something.
(27:09):
There's something more.
Nothing is free.
Nothing in this world is ever free.
There's something else there.
God, I
thought it was I see, I thought it would again,this goes back to I thought it was Boeing was
gonna do it.
No.
And even then And then Trump is like, who saysno to a free jet?
Sometimes you gotta say no to free stuff.
Free stuff isn't free.
Nothing is free in
(27:30):
this world.
And also, like, as, fifty Cent is is famous fortalking about this, don't let no dudes take you
shopping.
Don't let dudes take you shopping.
Because that's, that's a Diddy reference.
Yeah.
That's not man yeah.
That's not man shit.
Yeah.
Every time Diddy wants to take a dude shopping,he's trying to
say no.
No.
Thank you.
Yeah.
He's trying to ditto that dude.
Good.
Yep.
Yeah.
So stay away from it.
(27:51):
I I think I would stay away from this.
There's a if they wanna do stuff to help outAmerica, okay.
Cool.
But I don't think this is this is notnecessary.
And they can wait until Trump is out of officeand give him whatever the hell they want to.
You know, it's only, like, three years or so.
Yeah.
It's not
big deal.
Then, you know, then there's no you're notgetting anything out of them.
(28:11):
You know?
Yeah.
This is this is almost sounds Biden let Bidenesque where, what's his name, was was running
a, thing out of Ukraine.
Like,
it is a bad idea.
It's a It's
bad idea. bad
a It's a
idea. bad idea.
I don't think it's a good I don't know.
But they but they are saying it's all legal,and they're trying to go ahead with it, but I
don't
agree with
just an idea.
Yeah.
(28:31):
Night that's idea if
the car was doing it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If you should look into that.
Hotdog nine ninety is out there.
He says hello, chat.
Shout out to Hotdog nine ninety.
Night Train says Boeing has been going througha wildly turbulent time these days.
Yeah.
Boeing's Bones kinda messed up, and Trumpactually ordered an Air Force One back in his
(28:53):
first term, and then when he left office, Bidenadministration took over.
This is according to Trump, and he says theyput a lot crap on the list, the want list for
that, for the air force one, which I don'tthink it needs to have a whole bunch of shit in
there.
It just needs to be safe and secure and antispying, etcetera, be able to protect the
(29:15):
president and the and the cabinet close to himwho might be traveling at that time on the
plane.
And that's it.
We that that doesn't need to be, you know theydon't need a lot of bells and whistles on that,
in my opinion.
No.
No.
You need you need whatever is necessary to keephim from getting blown out of the sky if he
flies wherever.
Mhmm.
But it's it's just a means of travel for thepresident.
(29:37):
We no.
No.
I'm with you.
I'm with you.
It's crazy.
Yeah.
Night Train also okay.
Hold on.
Here we go.
Let's see.
Lola Strain says Creole, question mark,question mark.
I thought he was from Chicago.
That's what I thought too.
And that's in in regards to the pope.
I yeah.
If you guys need proof, I'll look into it.
But if you just Google the pope or look at hisWikipedia, it's all up in there.
(30:00):
Do you do you wanna do that, or you wanna talkabout the NFA?
NFA?
I don't talk about
the pope.
I don't trust the pope.
There you go.
The pope hasn't been the pope since, like, 1940or '19
Here's all you need to know.
He's claiming Chicago.
Yeah.
So he's super liberal.
There you go.
That's all you need to know.
Let's see.
(30:21):
Okay.
So Cboe says, so he's asking questions.
So suppressors are actually coming off the NFANope.
But SBRs are not?
Nope.
Not happening.
None of it's happening.
There's a chance there's a small chance thatthey're going to change the price of a tax
down.
(30:41):
Mhmm.
And that's only a chance at this moment.
That's not even a guarantee.
I think that we owe the folks and people who ifyou're obviously, the people who watch us the
second amendment folks and you guys areprobably tracking what's going on, and there's
definitely, the big dudes out there talkingabout it.
(31:01):
I know Collier Noir said something, which Ididn't really see whatever he said, but, I
think he was a little misinformed on what wasgoing on, but probably in the right ballpark.
You know?
And there's been some other people.
I know VSO, for example, has been putting stuffup about this.
Of course, our friend, John Crump, has beenposting about this.
(31:22):
But do you wanna just go back and explain topeople what's happening?
Because it's not really super big news.
If you try to pull it up, you won't see a lotabout it on the The
Gearing Protection Act and one other act havebeen floating around Congress for a decade now,
and they are never they're just never broughtup because nobody has the balls or the votes to
(31:43):
get it passed.
Well, we finally own everything.
The we even have the votes, you thought, in theWays and Means Committee where the Hearing
Protection Act is currently sitting.
And then so we we thought that there was hopethat the may Ways and Means Committee would
push through the Hearing Protection Act, getthe votes that were needed, then it would get
(32:06):
stuck into reconciliation where it got thevotes it needed, then it would go to the
president and get signed, and suppressors andmaybe SBRs and s SBSs would come off the NFA
where there's no longer any tax stamp.
There's nothing that just they're title onetitle one or title they're like a normal gun.
You go to a gun store, you get the serialnumber, you do a 4473, and you take it home,
(32:26):
which is also con unconstitutional, but we'lldo that later.
Well, today, come to find out, the Ways andMeans Committee is possibly gutting the hearing
The language.
Mhmm.
Yeah.
They're gutting the language of the Hearing actand instead are bringing it down to s form four
(32:52):
suppressors only.
Form four suppressors.
So transfer suppressor transfer, that'snormally $200 tax stamp, will be a $0 tax
stamp.
Yeah.
And part of that is a win.
I don't wanna come off as being wholly obtusebecause that is still progress forward.
The problem is that we could have gone all theway.
(33:16):
We could have gone all the way to the end zone,and it sounds like two votes kept that from
happening.
And those two votes may have corruption behindthem in that they are industry related or money
changed hands or I'll help back your your playif you need some money, stuff like that.
Yeah.
So I think that's hear
(33:36):
that's what you're hearing.
Yeah.
I think that's a good description of what'sgoing on.
There's not a lot out on this because a lot ofthis is playing itself out in the background
and Actively.
There are still
talks being held held actively.
Yes.
So this is why people can still put pressure, Ifeel, on congress and the members of congress,
(34:00):
which like, this is on the ways and meanscommittee.
Right?
I think we can we can probably find the waysand means committee.
Can still calls call the ways and meanscommittee, and I would suggest you do.
And you can do that right now if you'relistening to this, and I'm gonna talk directly
to y'all, which I don't ever do.
If you are listening to this right now, feelfree.
I will get the number for you, ways and meanscommittee phone number.
(34:24):
And while while Patrick is doing that, I'm justgonna throw some stuff up here that's already
out in because, you know, because this ishappening in the background, there's folks out
there saying, hey.
You know, we should be careful about what wesay putting things out there, spoiling things,
letting the cat out of the bag, or you know?
And then really what we need to do is keep thepressure on the politicians, which I agree
(34:45):
with.
If we genuinely wanna, like, make somethinghappen, you know, but this is all complicated.
This Pressure's important, but this iscomplicated.
Anybody that's watching this and not a weekfrom now because it won't matter.
It's for anybody that's live Mhmm.
You can Google this.
But so if it's a week from now and you stillneed to do something, you can
Google.
Mhmm.
(202) 225-3625.
(35:08):
That is the phone number for the Ways and MeansCommittee.
Yes.
They will not be sitting at their desks.
Nobody will answer the phone right now.
It's 07:30 at night.
Mhmm.
You can leave a voice message.
All 40 of you that are secretly watching
this Mhmm.
Call right now.
Just ignore us for the next five minutes.
Call and tell them we want you to pass anunmitigated, no changes hearing protection act.
(35:34):
Stop playing around and pass the hearingprotection act because they are currently two
votes shy and they're holding it up and itseems that it's not gonna get passed.
This is
the this is the legislation right here that isgetting put in place.
AOWs are still gonna be $5.
(35:55):
SPRs, SPSs, machine guns are still gonna be$200.
Suppressors will be $0.
That's that is a win.
That's a win, and I'm not I don't wannaunderstate that.
It's it is a win.
But with those two votes, we could go all theway and get suppressors off the NFA
(36:16):
permanently.
Yeah.
I'm just going through and showing like, it'seasy to find out who's on the ways and means,
who are the like, obviously, the Democrats onthere aren't going for this, which is easy
enough for you to see who the who the yeah.
The Democrats, when they're are outvoted.
We do not care what their opinion is.
(36:38):
We have the votes.
If two whoever the two people are would get offtheir bums and do something
I think this dude, David what's his name?
David.
Is Dude looks like a crazy man,
by way.
David Kustoff.
Yeah.
They want me to subscribe or something here,which I'm not gonna do.
But yeah.
So there's the you know, that I think that guyis connected.
(36:59):
I'm trying to remember who's the other guythat's connected to this.
So the other Kurt if you watch Curtis's videotoday, the SOGUN channel, he was making it seem
that Chris Cox, the old NRA ILA guy Mhmm.
Also had something here.
Mhmm.
But I don't know the ins and outs.
I've tried asking and nobody will tell me yetbecause I have a big mouth and I like to run
(37:22):
it.
So nobody will tell me.
But there are supposed to who are holding thiswhole thing up when we technically have the
votes and we could get this we could get thisover the finish line.
So let me see.
First of all, let me see if there's anyquestions that have come in about this.
Night Train was saying, you know, take thesuppressors off the NFA over SBRs.
(37:43):
If I had a choice since the workaround ispistol braces, that's that's, you know
Suppressors aren't the right move, first.
Mhmm.
But none of it should be on the NFA.
It's all unconstitutional.
The NFA should be gone, and the Hughesamendment should be gotten of as well.
That's big steps.
We're not ready to take big steps becausenobody is they're all too much pussies to take
(38:03):
big steps like that.
Right.
He also said that he called the Ways and MeansCommittee today and left a So, you know, if we
go back
That's all we can do.
But the
more they hear from us, the more they go, oh,shit.
People are actually paying attention to whatI'm doing.
I might wanna change this.
So this is from my point of view, like, thehistory of this, which most of you guys know,
(38:26):
but just to recap a little bit.
This is not the first time we've tried to dothis.
The, Hearing Protection Act has come has comeand gone, multiple times here.
Right?
We've had, Republican super majorities before,and this kind of stuff still didn't happen.
This is in the nature of the Republicans wehave out there.
Right?
(38:47):
A lot of times, this stuff gets kicked down theroad.
They they or they, like, they knock this aroundfor a while and tease you.
Bullshit over and over again of, it's just notthe right time.
Oh, just wait for the midterms.
Oh, just wait another year.
Oh, just wait Bullshit.
It's the right time.
Yeah.
It's the right time.
Time.
(39:07):
There is no there is no greater time than rightnow with Right now.
With Donald Trump in the White House.
Republicans have a super majority.
Americans are sick and tired of the bullshitthat's going on.
I think that the Hearing Protection Act hasmerit.
What what am I talking about?
When we're talking about suppressors, are aresuppressors available to the people of America?
(39:28):
Yes, in most places.
One, not everywhere.
Two, there's hoops that you have to jumpthrough in order to do this.
Part of I would say, like, half of that hoop isyou gotta pay a tax stamp.
The other half of that is you need to go andfill out paperwork and get the approval of the
government in order to do it.
That's where it becomes Both of those thingsare, unconstitutional.
(39:51):
Right?
So Yes.
This has gone on This is this is why I say,like, half of nothing is still nothing in my in
my opinion.
Is it is it a it a good direction?
Okay.
I don't wanna be as negative as you becauseMhmm.
I do think that this is still this is still apositive in certain ways.
(40:11):
It's just we're all all of us extremists outthere are upset because you're so close to just
doing something good for the American peoplefor the first time in your entire career.
Mhmm.
You have the votes.
We could get this done.
Go.
Get it done.
Get do something.
(40:32):
Stop sitting on your ass and doing nothing.
Yeah.
Listen.
You're not wrong.
You're not wrong.
First of all, so this is just the news rightnow as it's coming out, and people are a little
bit upset about it because everyone was holdingtheir breath hoping that we can actually get
this thing through.
This doesn't mean this is going through andthis is gonna wind up on the president's desk.
So so we could go, oh, this is real this iscool.
(40:54):
I'll take it.
I'll take the $200 off the tax stamp.
We don't know that it'll ever get to his desk.
Yeah.
But we don't know if it's ever gonna get to hisdesk.
The other part of it I wanna say, you're notwrong in what you're saying, but here here's my
opinion on it.
Okay.
So you take the $200 away.
Now, you will have just like when we weretalking about this with the braces.
(41:17):
Right?
When the ATF was waiving the fee for thebraces, and there were folks who were rushing
out there, oh, I'm gonna get a free SBR now,that's just gonna pile into the system.
So, you take away the $200 fee, which is like,you know, I don't know if that's even
considered a tax stamp anymore if you didn'tpay the taxes on it, But you take that away,
(41:41):
more people pile into the system, the wholesystem slows down.
No matter what, you still have to go throughthe system, which discourages a lot of people,
so these suppressors don't wind up easily onpeople's guns.
Right?
So is that are we really doing anything?
So, like, vis a vis hair herring protection?
And which what I mean by that, the easiest wayto explain it is, you know, a few years ago
(42:07):
what what do what do you have?
A salad?
It's a bowl.
It's a rice bowl
with chicken.
Oh, rice bowl.
Also avocado and beans.
Yeah.
So a few years ago we got a minute, but we'lltake this over into the next thing.
A few years ago, I you if you're a gun guy,you've been to shoots out there.
Right?
You've been to, like, IV 88 shoots or shoot youknow, what's the one that was in Kentucky?
(42:31):
You've been to all these different shoots.
Have you ever been to a shoot where all theguns have cans on them?
Because it's beautiful.
It's wonderful.
I I have become jaded to having cans becauseI'm so used to shooting around them that when I
go to a range and there are people with threezero eights and short barreled five five sixes
without cans, I'm like, I don't wanna shootnext to you.
(42:53):
Yeah.
So in essence, this is the heart of the HearingProtection Act.
It's it's it's definitely a little bit morethan that, but that's the beautiful thing that
we're trying to make happen here.
To me, this still gets in the way.
We we've got like a couple of seconds here.
I'm gonna let this break happen, and then we'regonna come back and keep talking about this.
We'll be right back.
(43:14):
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Alright.
So we're back here.
I mixed it up.
I'll show it off again because Marley didn'tgo.
Oh.
It's it's like rice Good.
(43:55):
Chicken, edamame, avocado, and then some like
I like how Marley always use it.
Is this your bowl?
This is your bowl.
No.
No.
We have we have these are our our bowls.
Yeah.
I'm saying, yeah.
This is your bowl you always get your food in.
Lola does the same thing to me.
We have eight we have eight of these whitebowls.
These are our soup and breakfast bowls.
(44:15):
This is the bowls
we're No.
I'm not knocking it.
It's cool.
It's not my bowl.
Like, my name's it's not my bowl.
There's a BFP BFP needs to be emblazoned.
We have a cold table setting of
these bowls, and these are our
bowls.
Yes.
Yeah.
It needs to be emblazoned.
That's how you get your food.
Don't Don't get me started.
Don't get me started on bowls because I am aman that believes a bowl should be bowl shaped.
(44:37):
I hate those bowls that are just kinda like
Kinda flat, like, kind of they don't know ifit's a bowl or a plate.
Yes.
That they if they're confused, then I don'twant it.
It's either a bowl or
a plate.
Anyway, sorry.
No.
Lola gives me my food in a bowl too.
I like that.
Yeah.
I'm not knocking it.
Night Train says, there is no tomorrow.
Apollo Creed.
(44:58):
That's Apollo Creed quote.
And C.
Bola says, I've never been to one of thoseshoots.
There It's it's awesome.
And this is the thing I'm saying, like, itreally would help, for You know, especially
when you're shooting repetitively and all that.
If you go to these shows where you obviouslyI'm sure people have been out there shooting
and and there's knot suppressors on on theguns, it's just It's it's like a blessing.
(45:21):
I I'm I've done it, I think, maybe twice orsomething like that, and I wish that everything
was like that, and the only way to get it thereis to take this off the NFA.
You don't have to do a tax stamp.
You don't have to go through the paperwork.
The two go hand in hand.
You fill out $44.73 and you take it home.
Yeah.
Taking away the money part, sure.
(45:44):
It's not I can't call it a bad thing, buttaking away the money part and not taking away
the government part where you have to get theirapproval, especially if everyone piles into the
system sucks.
You know?
And so that's that's my thing about this.
And I would really like to see that.
I'm not it's not like you know, some peoplethink it's just a joke, right, to say the Hairy
(46:08):
Protection Act because guns lot, and the gunsare still gonna be loud.
But it is just really nice to be able to to tobe at an event like that, and everyone's having
fun, and it's not super loud.
I imagine the people that are listening to ushave shot suppressors before.
And if anybody comes across this and gets tothis point and you've never shot a suppressor
(46:30):
before, they're not quiet.
Mhmm.
They're quieter.
But if I I don't I still wear ear protectionfor anything over a nine millimeter.
Yeah.
Because it it it rings my ears and I don't liketo to hear buzzing for the rest of the
afternoon.
Like tonight, this is bad enough.
It's better and there's a lot of benefits toit.
(46:50):
Like, you're out hunting, most hunters don'twear ear pro because they take one single shot.
So over time, they're damaging their ears.
There are lots and lots of benefits.
The the benefit to you know, the green benefitthat that liberals, I I don't think understand,
like, you're not you go to an outdoor shootingrange, you're not disturbing the wilderness as
(47:11):
much as you are if it's just loud gunshots.
There's tons of benefits to
There's a lot of things.
You know, people feel like you can put ear AirPro on your dog.
It's a ridiculous thing.
I've been to so many gun shows and that is notDo
you know how many times I get comments aboutold videos of either Sailor or Buck saying,
that dog didn't have an Ear Pro.
And it's like, mean, I can't there's no puttingEarPro on those dogs.
(47:34):
They would they would never allow that.
No.
They don't.
And I've been to these shows and seen supertrained dogs.
And somewhere, like, when I went to SHOT Show,I actually have a video of these, I think I
don't know what kind of dogs they are.
I think I've shown it to you before.
I would have to go look and see if I could findit though.
But so you can see these dogs in a normalcondition with those things on, but I've been
(47:55):
and I've seen a lot of those dogs just takethose things off.
Now, some of them, if you really, really workon it, you might get it, but, you know, that's
just one aspect of it though.
It's it's This is better for people who shootrepetitively to have suppressors on everything.
And if you're already jumping through hoops toget the gun, why do you have to jump through
(48:16):
hoops to get the suppressor?
It's not gonna make you more of a criminal andsome kind of super stealth ninja that you can
do bad things to people and no one's gonnaknow.
Like you said, nine millimeter, five five sixstill loud.
Every inner city black kid has a Glock switch.
Every single one of them has a switch on theirGlock.
It doesn't matter to kids who are anybody who'sbeing a criminal.
(48:37):
Mhmm.
They don't care.
They don't care about the law.
They will Right.
Make a shitty suppressor.
They will go steal somebody else's suppressor.
They don't Mhmm.
All this is doing is hurting us as law abidingcitizens.
But and suppressors don't suppressors aren'tgoing to, you know, really mask, like, you
know, even a nine millimeter or a five fivesix, three zero eight for sure, AK.
(49:01):
It's not gonna mask it so you could do badthings.
Yeah.
Of '22, I shoot a 22.
Like, so when I'm going after the squirrels outhere, I did it today.
I didn't get any of those bastards.
But, you know
Everybody deserves a ten twenty two with anintegrally suppressed barrel because it's
incredible.
Mhmm.
They all everybody deserves it.
(49:22):
Yeah.
When was shot chill
seventeen hours ago.
What?
That looks familiar.
1,100 views on guns daily.
I'm gonna send this to y'all.
About oh, is this something that you did?
That's on Twitter.
I'm just scrolling through Twitter while I'mwhile I'm yelling.
Okay.
Yeah.
I'm trying to find I'm trying to find the thingwith those dogs just so I could show people.
Now you guys is among the things when it comesto terminology, a suppressor or silencer.
(49:44):
It's actually silencer.
Mhmm.
If you look, the original patents andeverything were for a silencer, but suppressor
is just a more correct name.
Mhmm.
But they're they're they're the same.
You can use either one.
There's no so if anybody ever tells you youcan't call it a silencer, tell them they're
full of shit.
The maximum a maximum.
The Maxim silencer, the first one ever createdwas called a silencer.
(50:07):
Mhmm.
And the patent was for a silencer.
Yeah.
Here's muffler, call it
a can.
Call it whatever you want.
Yeah.
Let's see.
I think this is the video.
Let me see if I can get this up so you guyscould see this.
So, here we go.
This is that video I was talking about.
Here's a Oh, he's wearing glasses.
You can do these silly tricks with dogs andstuff like that.
(50:28):
They're wearing glasses.
They're not even wearing In the end, this islike a joke.
They don't like it if they get aggravated orwhatever, they'll respond to it.
But should should they be used to loud noisesand everything around them?
Yeah.
I think so.
If they're actually gonna go into some kind ofcombat or fighting situation, they should be
used to loud noises, which, like, our dogs areused to that.
(50:51):
So, like, my dog that he's no longer with us,but Sailor was very used to that and really
didn't care.
I'm not saying it didn't damage his ears, ofcourse it did, but he didn't give a crap.
That put him in work mode whenever he heardUncle's gunshots.
Yeah.
So Check the check the group chat that I justtexted.
Oh, okay.
(51:13):
Let me see.
I just think that if we don't So you can removethe $200 that the I just don't know what it's
even called if you don't have to pay the taxstamp, but whatever.
You can remove that.
If you have to jump through the hoops, you arestill That is still jumping through the hoops.
It's not the Hearing Protection Act.
(51:34):
It's not The the essence of that is to make iteasier for folks to get access to suppressors
to put on their guns to save their hairy.
So I don't think it becomes that.
Now, me take a look at Let me take a look atthis.
So what Oh, this Is this you?
Did you put oh, Guns Daily.
(51:54):
This is somebody some random thing on
the This is Walt.
This is this is the is good.
Yeah.
Safety Harbor firearms with a hundred and fivek views.
There you go.
Awesome.
Oh, Guns Daily.
Okay.
Cool.
I'll give that give that some love.
We are both on the
very much.
(52:14):
We are both on the x for anyone who's outthere.
We're both on the x.
I am I'm Hank Strange on the x, and and thenPatrick, of course, babyfacep.
I post all of what I'm getting up to on x.
I try to see, like, with the shows going onright now.
I put it up there.
I reposted John Crump's two, three minute, thefastest John Crump ever.
(52:39):
I don't know how he did the breaking news fromhis phone.
He got well, there's probably a way he got thisvideo in.
Because he's got that level of tism is whathe's got.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He figured out a way to get it in there.
Look.
He's in the car.
He's in his this looks like he's in a Bentleyright here.
I'm gonna say it's a Bentley.
I'm just making that up.
(53:00):
Don't get mad at him.
That's my Mother's Day post.
Look at that.
And, yeah.
So I put all my stuff up there.
BabyfaceP is, BabyfaceP on there, I think.
Alright.
And BabyfaceP.
Yeah.
At realbabyfacep. Fish
Fish p.
Yeah.
There you go.
(53:22):
Yeah.
So complaining about complaining about it, andit does nothing for us.
So if you are you know, if you got the fiveminutes, call the ways and means committee.
I'll say the number one more time if you'resitting on your butt with a beer in your hand.
(202) 225-3625.
I'll put it in chat.
(53:42):
If somebody wants it, I gotta sign in.
Mhmm.
If you wanna call the Ways and Means Committee,everybody should.
And and just leave them a voicemail.
Leave them a quick voicemail.
C Bolas says, never shot a suppressor or amachine gun.
Wow.
You need a you need a remedy of that.
We gotta fix that thing.
Where's where is where is C.
Bolas again?
(54:02):
Tell us where you are.
Man, we gotta make we have that that has to befixed, sir.
We can we can fix the machine It's like you're
walking through life a pretty much a virgin.
You've only gone to, like, maybe first orsecond base.
It's big.
It's big.
Yeah.
I've I've popped a couple now even as an s anSOT now, I I have gotten the opportunity to pop
(54:25):
a couple of of virgin machine gun cherries, andit was very fun to watch them.
We always like He's in Alabama.
He's in Alabama.
It's really fun watching a first timer shoot amachine gun because their face just lights up.
Yeah.
It's awesome.
It's something you have to experience in yourlife.
So he's in Alabama.
Yeah.
We we I'll we gotta work on that and see if wecould figure out a way to make it happen.
(54:46):
Oh, yeah.
Shooting gallery and he says a suppressor wasone of the first things I grabbed when I moved
to Florida, and I shoot mostly suppressed onall my guns other than shotguns.
And Once you once you start shootingsuppressed, you like, I only when I was
reloading nine millimeter Mhmm.
I basically only reloaded subsonic nine milbecause that was the most fun to me.
(55:10):
Shooting sub nine millimeter is really, reallyfun.
Mhmm.
Like, that's all I ever reloaded.
I never did one fifteens or one twenty five 20fours.
Yeah.
I always did snubs.
Yeah.
I mean, it's it's fun to put to to put cans onthere.
Now there's a universal setup, a universalsuppressor thread that you can get.
(55:31):
So it kinda it kinda helps out with the costand everything because I know the accessories
and all that can get expensive.
Night Train says, I'm still on the fence whenit comes to the terminology, and that's what
you were talking about, suppressor or silencer,either one.
It doesn't matter.
I know people get all caught up.
It's not like a thing of clip or magazine.
(55:54):
That that's my opinion.
So there's some behind there's some behind thescenes stuff.
I know, like, VSO was alluding to it, andthere's some other things going on.
And I don't wanna, like, throw me personally, Idon't wanna throw things out there until it
becomes official.
(56:15):
So until okay.
So in other words, like, what's happeningbehind the scenes, I don't wanna put names out
there until it's official, like, some number oftwo a organizations have confirmed and then are
speaking about it.
I'm not the one that tries to jump on the
Breaking news bandwagon.
To write
(56:35):
an article, and then I will share it.
I'm not the first one to jump on it because Inever know if it's correct.
Yeah.
But what is happening behind the scenes?
And you could just imagine this.
This is not, like a leap of imagination here.
So just think about this.
What would happen if all of a suddensuppressors came off the NFA?
Well, we already we already know.
What?
(56:55):
You will not be if suppressors one it just cameoff the NFA Mhmm.
You will not be able to find one for the nextsix months, eight months, maybe a year.
You better keep an eye out because every singleone's gonna be sold out constantly.
And the weird thing is if you go back, right,like I said, this has happened several times.
When the when this first came up years ago,what happened?
(57:16):
A lot of people stopped buying Yes.
Yes.
Stopped buying suppressors, and actually thesuppressor industry were the ones who put it
kinda put it out there.
I remember being at a SHOT Show in Vegas and itstarted coming out, And then people were like,
oh, shit.
Suppressors are coming off the NFA.
And everyone stopped buying cans because theywere waiting for it to come off.
(57:37):
And then what would have happened if it didcome off at that point, as Patrick is saying,
you won't be able to find any because theywouldn't be able to make them fast enough.
Everyone and their mama would be in thebusiness.
I don't that's not a bad thing.
Mhmm.
If they came off the NFA, you could make oneyourself at home.
That's one benefit.
Mhmm.
There's a lot of things The market willeventually equalize itself.
(58:01):
So that's one of those things that the mark theprice PSA won't start producing them.
PSA would get into the suppressor market ifthey could sell them as could you imagine the
PSA nine, the PSA twenty
they would be technically, they're already inthe suppressor market.
They're just not pushing it hard
right now.
Pump them out like crazy.
Just you run-in the mill nine, twenty two, 40five, five five six cans, they would produce
(58:24):
that sort of stuff.
Yeah.
But the market would eventually catch up andthings would be fine.
Yeah.
However, that that in between time right thereis what a lot of Well, don't wanna say a lot.
There are people in the firearms industry, evenincluding people who make suppressors, who are
afraid of that.
Right?
They think all of a sudden this will get out ofcontrol.
(58:45):
Too much competition, competition brings downprices, prices prices coming down makes the
profit very thin and people will peoplecompanies will go out of business especially if
they're over leveraged.
Companies need to that's the promise they overleveraged.
But Mhmm.
My answer to business has always been, I wouldrather even if my my profit margins are slim, I
(59:12):
would rather somebody come and say yes to medoing work for
them
because that equals money versus them coming inand saying, sorry, you're too expensive.
I don't need the work done.
That's just money that I don't get.
I would much rather make a smaller especiallyif you were doing manufacturing, make a smaller
profit, but push more out the door and thingsequalize themselves.
(59:33):
And then expand your business.
Make you can buy three more c and c.
There there are benefits to to selling at acheaper price and moving volume.
There's there's there are benefits to volumesales.
But.
Well, so this how can I put it?
Some people have a scarcity mentality.
So in other words, they feel like there's notenough.
(59:55):
I'm I I gotta corner this more.
No one else could do this thing.
And some people have a overabundance mentality.
That's, you know, like, I'm probably like that.
I'm overabundance mode.
If I If there's something that I like in thesupermarket or whatever, I buy a shit ton of
them when I have the money.
Right?
I buy it.
And then there's some people who just get one,and then they'll go back and get another one.
(01:00:17):
That's all well and good, but when it comes tocompanies, there's people who want to destroy
the competition even in a game like the even inthe gun world where you would think these guys
are pro second amendment and they wouldn't wantto destroy you know, they because we all need
to get together on this, and you would thinklike, you know, all tides, like, the tide
(01:00:41):
raises all boats kind of a thing.
All ships
yep.
All ships raise.
But they there are companies that don't thinkthat way.
There are people that don't think that way.
No.
There's there's quite a few people who don'tthink that way and I think there it that
includes probably amongst the sus thesuppressor or solicer manufacturers.
I don't think all I think most of them are gunguys, and they they're down with anything
(01:01:05):
that's pro second amendment and moves the causeforward.
But there are some people who probably like,no, this is not gonna work for me.
And they've been from from what I hear, they'vebeen in the background, you know, talking to
these congresspeople and giving them that roomto go, okay.
Well, we'll just do this then, and we'll still,you know, leave it this way.
(01:01:29):
And I just don't think that's I don't believethat's the right way to go.
It's not the right way for the secondamendment.
It's not the right way for business either.
I don't think so.
Just this this stuff should come off
Less regulation is find me an instance whereless regulation was not better for the consumer
in the end.
There will be turbulence.
(01:01:49):
There will be fly by nighters who create reallybad cans that are cheap.
That's going to happen
gonna happen initially, but so what?
People are gonna see their way around them andthey're they're gonna go, I just
be a smart consumer and then eventually, if youwill See, but here's the thing, they want to
rationalize the money of this, and by by theway, from what I hear from people, the $200 is
(01:02:15):
coming off for your tax stamp as a person, butthe way that the language is, it's not coming
off for the manufacturer for when they
The manufacturers do not when you create an NFAitem, you don't pay a tax.
Oh, okay.
There's tax.
Okay.
But
the do the form two.
Okay.
Just called a form two, form three.
Mhmm.
You do a form three.
So at no point does that catch up to you?
(01:02:37):
Like, many suppressors
you make?
Have to pay excise tax like a a regular gunmanufacturer.
Okay.
So
once they make a 50 suppressors or whatever,they have to pay excise tax.
That sucks.
Yeah.
That should also be gotten away gotten rid of.
Mhmm.
But that's a different conversation.
Yeah.
So anyway, my my thing regardless of what'sgoing on there, I think in the wording of it,
(01:03:01):
which we don't really know until it's actuallyout there.
The thing is is that ultimately, if you build abetter product, if you innovate, you will
dominate the market.
So and and you you obviously, you gotta domarketing but, you know
That's one of the problems right now is we'rerunning technology that's from 1920.
(01:03:23):
Like, it's there's nothing really drastic hashappened.
We've had better better metallurgy, but that'sthat's it.
You know?
There's some yeah.
There there are some industrial things I thinkthat would make it easier, maybe
three d
printing is the
biggest leap forward.
Yeah.
In terms of slowing down, we're gonna take abreak here.
So let me Let's take that break and come backand talk about the industries.
(01:03:46):
We wouldn't be able to keep the Who Moved MyFreedom podcast going without the support of
manufacturers like Safety Harbor Firearms.
SHF is a quintessential family owned smallbusiness totally representative of the American
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Safety Harbor Firearms is a Florida basedmanufacturer manufacturer of the compact entry
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(01:04:11):
Also, SHF happily delivers on your Sten gunparts needs.
So don't forget to check out Stenparts.com andsafetyharborfirearms.com.
Okay.
So just to jump just to jump back into this.
So, you know, here's the thing.
So as far as the industry, you were justtalking about Hiram Maxim, I think.
(01:04:33):
Yeah.
Yep.
When was that?
That's, like, couple hundred Nineteen twelve.
'19 '12?
Okay.
So, like
I'm like that.
A hundred years.
Hundred and some change.
Years ago.
Yep.
Yeah.
Now, technically, technology hasn't or or thetechnology of a suppressor hasn't changed.
But there are things that have changed overthat time in industrial.
Through.
And we've gotten some we've gotten bettermetallurgy, things like stellite, things like
(01:04:57):
that, a high temperature alloys, and we'vegotten three recently, we've gotten three d
printing, which allows you to make moreintricate designs.
Mhmm.
But it's still the same concept.
It's it's still just a car muffler is all itis.
I mean, because you're still doing you'reyou're basically doing the same thing.
Right?
If Yeah.
We're talking about traditional firearms.
(01:05:18):
Oh, it is.
Yeah.
I mean, well, because there's a projectilethat's, you know, got gunpowder behind that
explosion, and so you're you're you've gotthese hot gases.
I mean, the what's happening in there hasn'tthere's nothing that's happened there that's
changed that.
So it's just a matter of, like, slowing downthose gases, right, in order to muffle the
(01:05:42):
sound.
And and also, I think the image trace, like,what what was suppressors mostly?
I I think in the in the beginning, obviously,it was to make it quiet like a muffler, but
it's also to mask the image trace.
Right?
Like, if you're a sniper or whatever shootingfrom somewhere military tactics wise.
(01:06:02):
Yes.
No.
No.
No.
It it obfuscates your location.
Right.
So, yeah, what's changed there's not that muchthat's changed about that.
So, you know, what it's what it's trying to do.
But that doesn't mean you can't haveinnovations in there.
I think it's cool that everyone's kind of goingto that universal suppressive standard.
(01:06:24):
That makes it more affordable.
Yeah.
Because here's the thing, and and this willprobably change if you can get these things off
the NFA truly, but what happens is that you geta suppressor.
In order to put it on a rifle, let's say, or ahandgun, you need some, accessory that goes on
that rifle or handgun in order for you toconnect the suppressor.
(01:06:46):
Most of the time, even though you, like, youknow, you might have threaded on a lot of
handguns, but there's something that might goalong with that.
Right?
You might need a booster, or like in the caseof a rifle, you're removing the muzzle device,
you're putting on another muzzle device, thenthe suppressor's gonna connect to that.
So there's all this stuff you There'saccessories that comes along with it, but
there's still I think in the beginning, therewas, like, three or four companies.
(01:07:08):
Right now, we maybe have, what, like, 300 orsomething companies?
Couple of maybe Manufacturers?
Yeah.
Manufacturers?
I can think of I can think of dozens offhands.
Yeah.
At least a hundred.
We could say there's at least a hundred, butthere's still not enough that that so for
example, let's say, we're talking aboutSilencerCo, and they've got their particular
(01:07:31):
thread for their accessories that goes on.
Right?
If if they can't make enough of thoseaccessories, because you don't have just one
rifle, you might have five or 10, and you don'twanna change everything every time, so you
wanna put a muzzle device on everything.
If they don't make enough of those, then whatdo you do?
Yeah.
Yep.
Right?
So now, you'd have to get different, like,suppressor for every gun versus having one
(01:07:57):
suppressor or a few suppressors, and you couldput that on whatever gun you happen to be
shooting.
If they don't make those accessories, now youWhere are you gonna find that from if it's
proprietary?
But if you use a universal thing, universalthread pitch, you can get that accessory from
anywhere, and therefore, you know, you can mixand match those things.
(01:08:17):
So I think that's I don't know.
Most people probably think that's not even abig deal.
A lot of people don't even know about that,which is But that's something I think that's a
thing.
The metals is a thing.
There's gotta be some technology for bafflingthe damn sound.
There has to be a way, man.
We can use AI.
We you know?
(01:08:39):
We can use modeling to
I mean, this this is the same this this is thesame argument I've had that I make about
limiting people to manufacturing machine guns.
We don't innovate.
We haven't innovate innovated in the machinegun realm Yeah.
Because it's so difficult to get the licensingand keep yourself in business to try to make
stuff.
It's just not worth it for us.
(01:08:59):
You really have to sell a lot to make the moneyto do this, and this is why they don't even
make a lot of the accessories in the firstplace because why make more accessories than
you're gonna sell?
You So you've gotta predict how many you needto make, and then you could be on or off that.
And if you wind up with a with, like, 10,000muzzle devices, let's say, right, that you
(01:09:22):
don't sell, that's a lot of money that you burnif they don't sell.
So a lot of times they under make.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Do you do you consider integral barrels a partof the innovation or no?
Think so.
It it Integral barrels are are interestingbecause they only really work for certain
(01:09:45):
calibers.
Doing stuff where you have to have a gas tubemakes it a lot more difficult.
Okay.
But what we've integrally putting a barreltogether has been an idea since, I mean, the
1917 machine gun, the Maxim machine guns, theyall had water jacketed barrels.
So it's not unusual
So that's kind of like right in the beginningthey were doing that kind of stuff.
(01:10:06):
It's just not a suppressor, but it's a barrelinside of a barrel with a water jacket to keep
it cool.
So it's kind of the same idea.
We just now it it goes on the end.
It makes it quiet instead.
Mhmm.
Mhmm.
But but, again, we're talking about stuff fromthe twenties.
Things haven't changed in a long time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think we could we could move all thisforward.
I think the companies could make money.
(01:10:28):
It would be in their benefit.
I I don't think they should support this kindof stuff, and I'm not saying who is or who
isn't, because I think most of them probablyare all for it coming off the NFA.
It would just make it easier if you could justgo out there and buy these things.
If you could buy them online, buy them from astore, you don't have to go through a bunch of
shit.
I don't think you should have to even do aforty four seventy three to get your hands on
(01:10:51):
this stuff.
It's kinda silly.
Yes.
Yes.
I agree with that too.
But Yeah.
That that
won't be changing soon.
Yeah.
What do you that's because they're completelyunconstitutional?
Yeah.
I mean, are they are they are they firearms?
They're not firearms.
They're not firearms.
They're accessories.
They're arms.
They are arms that are used to defend orwhatever for oneself.
(01:11:12):
So they do fall
under No.
I'm talking about the I'm talking about thethe, the suppressor.
Okay.
So you're saying like, okay.
Because remember to to Mhmm.
Be covered by the second amendment, it has tobe an arm.
It has to be an arm.
Right.
I see
what you're saying.
It is an arm.
Mhmm.
It's just not a firearm.
It's not a gun.
It's not it's
it's Are we just considering it an arm becausewe want it to be or what?
(01:11:33):
Do you genuinely?
It fit it genuinely fits into the category ofsecond amendment.
So
Yeah.
Yeah.
Accessories aren't covered.
They can be
covered.
Argue that they're not covered.
Some people argue that, but
I feel like if the accessory is a if it is ifthe accessory is an integral part of the
(01:11:55):
functioning of a firearm, it's covered.
It should be covered by the second amendment.
Like, you know, you need a magazine in order toto use this firearm.
Yes.
You know?
People shouldn't be able to go in and I knowthat's happening.
Right?
There's court cases out there where they'relike, oh, you don't have the right to have 20
(01:12:15):
rounds in this gun.
Every time they the interesting thing is everytime they take that higher, every time they
take that up Mhmm.
They it always gets shown that, no, it is anarm.
It's it it's an arm.
You know?
Yeah.
So
Yeah.
It's part of the This is a funny thing, like,it You know, it's part of the function, but
(01:12:37):
it's something that people go after in orderto, for lack of a better word, suppress the use
of the things.
That's what's happening with suppressors.
How do they wind up on this thing?
Because they somehow were considered part ofYou're you're a gangster if you have this.
Like, why why Only a criminal would need tohave a suppressor on there.
(01:12:57):
Were yeah.
Gun.
Yeah.
I mean, that's the same with with shortbarreled guns and machine guns.
Yeah.
Even machine guns.
Why do you need a why would you need a machinegun?
Only if you're a criminal.
And we had we had, liberal judge or we hadsupreme court judges at the time that had very
little concept of the true constitution.
Yeah.
So
So listen.
This thing is going on out there.
(01:13:19):
I think people should pay attention to it.
It's kind of flying under the radar, which tome is some people think it's a good thing, it's
a bad thing.
I think it's a bad thing that this is allflying under the radar.
There's folks who wanna keep it under the radarso that the public opinion doesn't get affected
by this, but then that means all the thenegotiating or whatever is happening backroom.
(01:13:42):
And if that and if if politicians get backroomdeals going
You're you're able to hide so much more fromus, think.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They do dumb shit.
So I would let I would let I I'm for I favorletting the politicians know that you know what
they're up to.
We know what they're doing.
You're not hiding any of this from us, and wedemand that you we put you there to make
(01:14:03):
changes, and these are the changes we want.
Yeah.
So do it.
Yeah.
So if you guys don't have I don't know ifthere's any more let me look and see.
If there's any more, like, questions orcomments on that particular thing.
If not, we can move on from that.
And and and meanwhile, I will encourage I'lltake the time to encourage people to smash
those thumbs ups.
(01:14:25):
We definitely need those.
Let's see.
Okay.
Do you know, there's other stuff going on inthe news.
Is there anything in particular that you wannatalk about that's going on?
Not that I can think of.
What about the drug thing?
The so one of the things that Trump is up to isthat he is making a deal on
(01:14:52):
Trying to get rid
of prescription drugs.
Yeah.
Yep.
Yeah.
Let me see if I could pull this up.
So I think was it you that shared this?
Mhmm.
Yeah.
I sent it to y'all.
Yeah.
So here, I'll just throw this up to give youguys an example of what we're talking about.
This is from Nick Sorter.
(01:15:12):
That's is that who that is?
Nick Sorter?
And, the pharma companies have been screwingover Americans for a decade while giving
sweetheart deals to foreign countries, and Ithink this is a post from Truth Social that was
reposted from Donald Trump.
For many years, the world has wondered whyprescription drugs and pharmaceuticals in The
United States Of America were so much higher inprice than they are in any other nation,
(01:15:36):
sometimes being five to 10 times more expensivethan the same drug manufactured in the same
exact laboratory or plant by the same company.
So I think he did an executive order today, andwhen I looked at the press conference, he was
saying that he has he has a friend of his thatwas in England.
Right?
(01:15:57):
And his friend happens to be I think the way heput it is really, really fat or something like
that.
Right?
Yeah.
What was what was the way he
said that?
That really bizarre.
Yeah.
It was
where he was like, you know, my friend, he he'staking the he's taking the fat he's taking the
fat shot.
You know?
He's complaining to me about the fat shot.
It's too expensive, and it doesn't work.
(01:16:18):
Really, really bizarre.
That's a Trump Trump is like your grandpa.
I it just doesn't make any sense sometimes.
I I don't know what he was most of the time, Ican understand him.
I didn't know what he was talking about.
Well, I played that for Lola.
Lola was cracking up.
So, basically, he's talking about Ozempic.
Yes.
That's the that's the fat the fat shot.
(01:16:39):
Yes.
The the shot for fatties is boo what he'ssaying.
The fatty shot.
Yes.
So he said his friend was so his friend was inEngland.
He took the shot.
In England, it cost, like, $88.
In America, the same thing.
The guy pays $1,300.
You know?
So he did an executive order
(01:17:00):
then why why should we be paying for the restof the world to get supplemental drugs for
free?
You know?
Why should we?
Because this is the deal that they all workedout.
The other countries around the world are notgonna pay that.
So America, these things do get developed here.
We give tax breaks to these companies, and then
charge us out the ass for them, and then Yeah.
(01:17:22):
They give them away for free
and Even though they could sell these drugsforever?
Yep.
Yeah.
If they if they charged us the same $88 inAmerica, they'll still make a shit ton of
money.
Yep.
But they just make 10 times more money becausewe just let it happen and no one ever did
anything about it.
So it looks like he's gonna do something aboutit, which is good.
Yeah.
I just don't know if the way he's gonna do itis gonna actually do anything.
(01:17:47):
I I don't know.
My the the more interesting thing for me isseeing how how the Democrats spin this because
Mhmm.
Obviously, they are into this as well.
I don't know.
I'm curious to see how they spin this.
Yeah.
I I think you're right.
I agree with you.
I'm curious to see how they spin it.
You know, we have normal minds, so we can'tnecessarily think about how they could see it
(01:18:11):
as a bad thing.
Mhmm.
And and I was because you I think you said thatearlier.
Yeah.
They're gonna figure out some way.
This is killing this is killing the immigrants.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Something.
Who knows?
Yeah.
It's racist to make Americans pay less.
I I I don't know what they're they're gonnacome up with something they have to.
Yeah.
(01:18:32):
I agree.
There's something they're gonna come up withbecause they are highly unlikely to just get
along just just go, no.
This is awesome.
Let's do it.
Mhmm.
So, I mean, I did see the press conference.
It had RFK junior in there.
The whole thing it was funny to me watchingthat press conference.
You know, they all everyone has to stand thereand wait for Trump to finish talking about,
like like I said, he's your grandpa.
(01:18:55):
Mhmm.
You know, he goes on and on about the day.
You gotta stand there.
Yeah.
So but I agree with him on this onewholeheartedly.
I actually do too.
I I don't price fixing is not the answer andI've said that before, but it's insane that if
they're gonna sell it overseas for $5, why am Ipaying $25?
Mhmm.
That that that doesn't make any sense.
(01:19:16):
We should be getting the best price.
We invented it.
We put the labor.
We did everything.
Yeah.
No.
No.
No.
We get the best price.
Well, you're assuming that this is only gonnasell for, this is only gonna sell for, like,
six months.
It's only gonna be hot for six months.
That's bullshit.
If that's the case, why are we giving thempatents on stuff?
Yeah.
You know?
So that's the thing right there.
(01:19:37):
If you have this drug So, for ex Let's talkabout the fatty drug, the fatty shot.
Okay?
For fatties like me, which I don't believe intaking those shots, by the way.
There's some people who have to do it for theirhealth and everything.
I would just rather go the hard way, justcontrol what you eat, exercise Yes.
Etcetera.
Yes.
It's it's not it's not too hard if you
just Yeah.
(01:19:57):
Eat well.
Everyone shouldn't be skinny and some of thosepeople that are on those shots look really bad,
and and you go past the point where you can'tstop it from eating your body, and it's getting
it It's eating your bones, your bone density issuffering, your muscle mass, and stuff like
that is suffering.
So, I don't recommend everyone go out there,and that's not what I'm trying to say here.
(01:20:20):
But let's say we have that shot.
There's a fatty shot now.
You're a fatty like me.
You're like, oh, I'll just go take the fattyshot.
When is that gonna run out?
Never.
Yes.
It's never gonna run out?
Yes.
Okay?
So why do you like, you're you're amortizingthis over forever.
(01:20:43):
You don't need to get, like, you know, 1,300every single time someone gets that.
So the argument the argument that the drugcompanies use is the profits we get from
selling our drugs to you, we put into researchand development.
That's the argument.
And whether you agree with it or not, I I can'tsay.
(01:21:04):
I'm just saying that is the argument they
make.
Mhmm.
It's absolutely retarded.
Yeah.
Because they're
not And they're selling it to the for a thingthey're selling to the world.
When when the CEO is making $45,000,000 for theyear, clearly, it's not going enough of it is
not going into r and d.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
(01:21:24):
And they have a lot of stuff.
I I can confidently say it's not conspiracy.
They have a lot of stuff they're not puttingout there.
Yeah.
Come on.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And also, by the way, they're gonna have a drugto counteract the the the side effects of these
drugs.
Bone loss, the
Yeah.
Everything.
Yeah.
(01:21:44):
Yes.
They have to.
That's really where they're gonna make moneybecause you take the fatty drug, then you
become a vampire because now your ass is toobony, and then there's gonna be the bony drug.
You take this bony drug and it brings back yourbones and some muscles.
It's craziness.
And and I know that sounds weird to everyone,but I've seen it.
I worked for a long time in health care.
(01:22:05):
I'm not, like, in I'm not personally in themedical field.
I don't have any degrees, but I worked, forexample, in a in a halfway house for, insane
people.
And when they came into this halfway house,they had to take drugs and they I I remember it
would be like a solo cup full of drugs,Patrick.
Just And I remember going like Yeah.
(01:22:26):
I was like, why are there all these drugs inthis thing?
And they'll And and this one person wasexplaining to me why they're drugs because
you're literally just giving them drugs.
And they're like, oh, this is the original pillthat I had to take, then I got this side
effect, so I have to take this pill, then Ihave to take this pill for the side effect of
that, but the combination of all these pillsgave me, different side effects, so I gotta
(01:22:47):
take this thing.
That's how people become zombies.
So
Yes.
And those drugs, I can tell you, I did somedrug trials while I was working in for another
company, and some of those drugs are absolutelyhorrific.
The side effects they give you are
horrific.
Oh
my god.
(01:23:08):
Yeah.
C.
Bola said you were you worked at a hospital.
So if you're out there in the field, can seethis.
Lola is a pharmacist.
She sees this, and even she knows.
And she makes her money from that, but it'shorrible to see.
Yep.
You know?
So what would you like to have we got fiftyeight seconds.
What drug would you like to have that you couldjust take a drug and it does it for you,
(01:23:30):
Patrick, if it could give you no horrible sideeffects?
Oh, if I could if I could take some sort ofdrug that would just get rid of my anxiety
Mhmm.
I've told Marley before that if they ever gotto the point because I have I have pretty bad
anxiety, and I take a medicine for it.
And I don't like doing it.
I really hate it, but it runs in our family.
(01:23:51):
I've told Marley before that if they ever gotshock therapy back to the point where it
actually worked or, like, ketamine therapy, Iwould go do that.
I would literally I would pay lots of money tofully remove my anxiety.
I don't think it's possible.
So But I
would pay I think is very this is superpersonal, so I don't expect you to answer it.
Have you ever heard of the ganja?
(01:24:11):
I have, and it it supposedly works, but there'sall the other
Yeah.
There's a whole bunch of things that goesbehind that.
You're gonna be right back here in a second.
The Who Moved My Freedom podcast is madepossible by our partners at 2A Commerce.
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(01:24:33):
ecommerce and web application development inthe shooting sports industry.
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(01:24:54):
Once again, visit the number2acommerce.com.
Yeah.
I am not supporting anybody smoking anything.
I have never smoked cigarettes.
I did smoke a cigar one time when I survivedthat thing in Utah.
I like a good cigar every now and
then.
Yeah.
You yeah.
And I've never smoked weed, but I grew up mydad's that was, like, the first smell I could
(01:25:17):
ever remember.
Lots of lots of ganja.
Yeah.
And, you know, from The Caribbean, that was athat's a normal thing.
It's a natural thing.
I don't have any problems with it.
The smell is really freaking horrible.
I walked into the gun store today
from testing a firearm for
a customer and was like I I looked at one ofthe guys over across the counter, and I was
(01:25:39):
like and he's like, I thought I smelled thattoo.
And I was like, okay.
So it's not you.
Who and then one of the other guys
was like, yeah.
The dude that just the dude that just walked inhere and had me change
the mouth.
So the device smelled like weed.
Yeah.
I mean, it's the it it's it's a potent smell.
But you know what?
I would say this, I think a lot of people haveanxiety, me included, and for some people, it's
(01:26:01):
worse than others.
Mine Yeah.
It got so bad when I was freshly out of collegethat I became like a shut in where I couldn't
go to work, I couldn't get anything done, and Ihad to go I had to go get some medication to
help me, like and again, the sad thing is itruns on our family because my grandmother had
it too.
Oh, yeah.
Listen.
I would say if people have things like that,definitely get help for it, but be careful.
(01:26:24):
Like, we I cannot avoid taking drugs.
There's things I have to take.
Right?
There's Yep.
Always some kind of medication that you have totake out there.
We can't avoid it.
You know?
But if I if I can, I try to not take things Idon't have to?
Let's just put it that way.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because, you know, if things get for example,you know, if things do get apocalyptic, how the
(01:26:45):
hell are you getting any any drugs?
That is is something I've actually thoughtabout in
as stupid as that may Stay away from Patrickbecause you're gonna get slaughtered.
As no.
But as stupid as that
may be, I've
thought about that before.
And it's not even apocalyptic.
It's like if we have a bad hurricane or if wehave some natural
disaster We we we don't make our drugs here.
(01:27:06):
You know that.
Right?
We don't.
Yes.
Yeah.
Or if China has a bad hurricane or natural
If China just gets mad at us.
I mean, right now, they're they're theysupposedly went on a ninety day moratorium.
They're, like, working out the trade thing.
But what if they just go screw you, America?
Yes.
I I've thought about that many a times thatthat things can just
What if they mess with the drugs?
(01:27:27):
What what if they're like, yeah.
We're gonna send these drugs to America.
It's gonna turn everybody crazy.
Turn them all gay.
Yeah.
You know?
So Yeah.
We we need to make we need to make our shithere.
But Yes.
You you know, I try to things that I don't haveto take, I try to, like, come off of it.
Even if there's I pay a price for that orwhatever, I try to not do it.
(01:27:48):
But When I try to cut my own arm off that timeMhmm.
I told him don't give me ketamine.
Or, it wasn't ketamine.
It was, fentanyl.
I was like, don't give me fentanyl.
I need to remember this level of pain that I'mfeeling right now and never make
this And he didn't try to cut his arm off.
Was a total accident because he's
a machine a machining accident.
He's hyper he's hyperactive.
I So you're like that.
(01:28:08):
Told him I was like I was like, no fentanyl.
I need to remember this for the till the day Idie.
How painful this is.
Yeah.
No.
It's a good lesson for you because this is thethe opposite between me and you.
See, like me, everything I do, I go easy.
I take my time.
I'm like, let me make sure I'm going throughthe steps.
Patrick is, uh-uh.
This needs to get done.
Keep in head.
Just do this right now.
Yep.
(01:28:29):
The reason I was one minute late is because Iwas cleaning this and I had to have it done.
Yeah.
He's like a caveman.
I mean
He will literally bang a nail with his head ifthat's what it takes to get the nail in.
Just needed.
So that's how that crazy stuff happens, which,yes, you need that little warning sign in life
on the road to tell you, chill the hell out.
(01:28:50):
If you do enjoy having two arms, yeah, then, goeasy.
Okay.
Do you wanna talk about guns?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I got I was
talking
Hold on.
Let me
I got a new gun.
I got
a gun.
Yeah.
Hold on.
Let me go full screen here with you.
Give me one second.
I'm gonna go, full screen here in a minute.
Give me one second here. Me
(01:29:10):
Me show you that.
What I got.
Put it back in its little box.
Let's switch this over.
Yeah.
So let me see.
Here we go.
Boom.
I have wanted a Tupperware Glock.
And for any young'uns out there that don't knowwhat Tupperware Glocks is, the Glock gen ones
and gen twos came in this plastic case, not thesnap cases that we're used to today, which is
(01:29:36):
like Tupperware.
So that's why they're called Tupperware Glocks.
I've wanted a Tupperware Glock for years, yearsand years and years and years and years, and
I've never found one that I wanted to pay theprice for.
Mhmm.
Well, the other day I was on the Internetgoing, I wanna buy me a gun.
And I came across a gen two Tupperware Glock,and it was very reasonably priced, so I picked
(01:29:57):
it up.
This one is serial number TG46964.
I called Glock today and they said this one wasmade in 1990, December of '19 '90.
So you can actually call these mofos andthey'll tell you You're gen one.
You should call them tomorrow or just give methe the serial number, and I'll call them.
(01:30:20):
Oh, okay.
And they'll tell you when it was made.
They'll tell you what year, what month, andwhat year.
Is this a automated thing or a person?
No.
No.
A person picked up, and I said, hey.
I got a serial number.
Can you let me know when it was made?
And he went, oh, yeah.
Hold on.
Give me the serial number.
And the guy's like, that was made in Decemberof nineteen ninety.
And I was
like, can you tell me what the policedepartment had it?
And he was like, nah.
I can't.
I don't have that much info.
One more year.
(01:30:40):
One more year, and it would have been yourbirth year.
Imagine if you can get your birth Hold on.
8089?
Was there '9.
No.
There
are gen
from '89.
Oh.
I wish I wish I
could find out this is a gen one from '90
'89 gen one?
You
I will want to buy it from you very Oh.
(01:31:00):
I will get that tutor from 1970 something thatyou
Not for Jim over that.
But I I want I wanted a 1989 gen one verybadly.
Mhmm.
But yeah.
So this one came along.
I picked it up.
I'm really excited because this is gen two.
And if anybody out there has ever played theoriginal Half Life, the original pistol that he
(01:31:21):
carries in Half Life is a gen two Glock 17.
This one came with the box, the Tupperware.
One semi original long restricted lawenforcement nine millimeter magazine.
And then two, gen five, brand new gen fiveblock magazines.
The purple
So so where was the do you know where this gunwas used?
(01:31:43):
I saw you talking about something in the in theon, like, in the back chat that we have.
Yeah.
Rumor on the Internet seems to think that thesecame out of, DC Metropolitan Police.
Oh, okay.
They they because a whole bunch of these hitthe market, like, six months ago, which that's
why I was surprised.
I never saw them hit the market.
I would have bought one back then.
(01:32:03):
And then I found one the other day, and thiswas the last one that that particular gun shop
that I called had.
So how would so you have all the Tupperware forthis, but how would someone know if they're
looking at a gen two or like here.
Let me see.
I'm gonna put up.
Yours is a gen one.
Right?
Yeah.
Hold on.
Let me put my let me go to me first here.
What camera am I going to?
(01:32:24):
So
No.
The main
camera.
Here we go.
Alright.
So right here, how do I tell from
this?
If you look if you look at the texturing on thegrip, that is called pebble texturing.
So that's a gen one because it has a wraparoundpebble texture.
Oh, okay.
(01:32:44):
That's gen because there there is no like, theydon't put g one or g two on it.
Right?
Like that.
But the but the new ones do have that, though.
They have, like, g four or Yeah.
They they probably have that stuff.
Well, let
me go back to you.
Okay.
Hold on.
Let's switch this
around.
Bubble.
Okay.
Mhmm.
Gen two is still no finger grooves, but theyadded front and back serrations.
(01:33:09):
So it's the texture that we're used to on thegen threes Uh-huh.
But there's texturing on the front and on theback.
That gives you a gen two, and there's still nolight.
There's still no Glock rail, so you can't put alight on these.
Oh, okay.
So yeah.
So there's no there's also no accessory rail onit and all that.
Oh, okay.
(01:33:29):
When they moved to the gen threes, they addedfinger grooves and an accessory rail.
When they moved to the gen four, they addedstronger texturing.
And then when they moved to the gen five, theygot rid of the finger grooves, and they kept
the stronger texturing.
Oh, cool.
Yeah.
After this, I'll send you the thing, and thenwe'll see
I'll call I'll call tomorrow.
If it's an 89, I'm you're gonna have to figureyou're gonna have to come off it for me.
(01:33:52):
You will have to figure out how to get anotherone.
Yeah.
Then you'll have to get one from 1972.
But, obviously, this was not around in 1972.
What the hell?
That you want from 1972?
No.
I was gonna ask you, like, do do gun guys even,like is that a thing for gun guys to collect
their birth year guns?
I don't know.
People tell me tell us
(01:34:12):
in the I I kinda realized that I wanna do thatnow.
If I find That
would be cool.
So what was a cool ass gun in 1972 that I couldlook for?
I don't even know.
An m p five, but that so a lot of the thingslike that would be full autos.
That's the problem.
You could get an m 16, not a full auto m 16.
You can
get, like, an s p one.
You probably found like an s p one from 1972.
Damn it.
Now, I'm gonna ask Twitter what guns were
(01:34:34):
Yeah.
What were the badass guns?
And some of the dudes out there in 1972 wereprobably buying guns.
You could tell me.
In 1972, I was in a socialist communistsocialist communist nation called Guyana and
their Oh,
this is what you should try to find right herebecause you've talked about these before.
(01:34:54):
The Walter PPKs, the March Walter PPKs, theywere made in '72 because they're pretty old.
Oh.
So when it came to handguns, it says Coltland
Oh, because James Bond.
Oh.
James Bond.
Yeah.
You could get in 1972.
Wait.
Wait.
Wait.
So what okay.
So what how would I tell a 1972?
(01:35:16):
Let me see if I look
that up.
Learn the serial numbers.
And then when you came across an older Waltherp p, you'd have to call Walther and say, hey.
I got this serial number, or you check onlineand
see Oh,
that Some places some places keep those serialnumbers, like a database that you can look up.
Yeah.
So let me see.
I'm gonna screen I'm gonna share my phone withyou guys here.
(01:35:37):
And that
So this is what I see.
This is what comes up when I'm looking.
What?
I could I got an
I might I would love a '72
in the garage right now.
A 1972 Walter PPK or 1911?
My I think my Python might be a 70 it's either72 or 74 and my my Colt nineteen eleven might
be a 71 or a 72.
(01:36:03):
16 A PPK would be so nice.
Did they do wood grips on PPKs back in 1972?
They did.
They
can got really nice They had the dark wood
Dark wood.
Yeah.
You could do that.
You could find one of those.
I bet you if you look they made a lot of thosetoo, you probably could find one if you looked
around.
Yeah.
Let's see.
You just gotta see all the serial numbers andyou gotta look let's see.
(01:36:24):
Walter, PPK.
Yeah.
But do people put years?
So, like, if you're looking at gun broker, dopeople put the year of that gun in there?
You need to you need to look at the serialnumbers.
So I'm looking up the serial numbers right now.
Okay.
This needs to be one of your missions.
I will pay you a finder's fee to find me
a Walter.
(01:36:45):
A Walter PPK from 1972, sir.
You know I was also named after, James Bondactor.
Oh, really?
That's how your first name came about.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Did not know.
Yeah.
Listen.
In 1972 in The Caribbean where I was born, theyhad something called movies.
(01:37:09):
So in Guyana, you either had a every most ofthe movies were Indian movies.
And then every now and then, you would get,like, you know, they obviously had British
movies.
So James Bond, you know, Sean Connery was thefreaking man when I was born.
So every all the ladies in The Caribbean werenaming their babies.
(01:37:31):
Sean?
Yes.
Unfortunate.
That's why you see I hate it so much.
I didn't realize that's where it was from.
That's why whenever I meet someone whose nameis Sean, I go, whoever is whoever gives their
kids that name makes their kids evil.
So But, yeah, he was like, the you know, Iguess that goes with a lot of actors and stuff
(01:37:51):
like that if you go through generations of whypeople have some stupid ass name.
You know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm sure that was popular.
Yeah.
There was, like, somebody you know, this namewas popular.
So, yeah, there's a crap ton.
Let me see.
There's some comments in here.
Kurt twenty four says local shop kicks peopleout for smelling like weed and it's legal here
(01:38:14):
but not federally.
Yeah.
You can't That's an unfortunate thing.
They need to take it off the $44.70 threes inmy opinion.
Our local shop that I do work with does notkick you out for smelling like weed.
They just tell you, listen, I can't if you areseriously considering buying a firearm, they'll
tell you, listen, we can't sell it to youtoday.
Come back tomorrow and buy it.
We're happy to sell it to you tomorrow, youcannot
(01:38:35):
But technically, they're making you lie on thatform, which they can use against you later on
if they want to.
You gotta be careful of stuff like that.
Yeah.
Yes.
Night Train says glocks are sexy.
Mister Bullshitter says, Hank, my name is Sean.
Don't hate me or something like that, he says.
I don't hate it.
I have plenty of friends with that name.
It's so freaking common.
It is so ridiculously common.
(01:38:57):
It's not I think in my phone, I have, like,probably 20 something, people with that name
and a whole bunch of friends and all that kindof stuff with that.
So I don't hate anyone for it.
I just make And, you know, most of the time, noone with that name knows why I'm saying that
the that they're evil.
I just get, like, you know, evil looks andeverything.
(01:39:17):
And sometimes Lola has to go behind me and,like, explain why I'm making that joke.
So
I don't like people with my same name.
If I ever get to
be Patrick or something.
Yeah.
I don't respond to that, by the way.
There's people who try to call me, by by mygovernment name, and I don't freaking respond.
You know what's funny?
(01:39:38):
I tell Marley that all the time.
Marley says, dude, or Patrick or what?
And I'm like, don't call me by
my government name.
You are not allowed
to call me by my government name.
Don't call me out my name, woman.
Yeah.
I don't
like it.
Because that
that only means when I'm in trouble forsomething.
Yeah.
Exact oh, Lola does that when she gets mad.
She gets when she and she wants to annoy me.
Yeah.
She does that to me.
So, yeah, you're on the hunt right now.
(01:39:59):
Nineteen Nineteen seventy two PPK though wouldbe badass.
Yeah.
And anybody out there wanna get rid
of a Glock,
a Gen one Glock, especially with Tupperware,would be very happy to take it off your
hands.
What was the let me look this up.
I think there was serial number because thereis a Oh,
of this one?
Yeah.
That one.
Hold on.
Because there are some some things out therethat have
(01:40:20):
Oh, now you've gotta find out.
Now I wanna know how old it is because theythey dated gen one's dated all the way back to
'81 or '82.
Something like that.
Oh, this serial number is actually interesting.
I'll send it to you.
K.
Send it over.
And I will I will absolutely call Glock in themorning and figure it out for you.
Yeah.
(01:40:40):
The guy didn't even hear.
The guy clearly, do this all the time becausethe guy was just yep.
It was from this time.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
So is this supposed to have a Tupperwarecontainer?
Because I don't know if I got a Tupperwarecontainer originally.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
I don't think when I bought this, I got aTupperware thing with it.
Me, most people didn't keep it.
(01:41:02):
Yeah.
And then, let me see.
What's my hold on.
Since I told Lola you were gonna talk aboutGlock, so I was like, I'm not gonna let Patrick
out Glock me.
Oh, look at that.
This is the '22 Glock, the 40 four.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Remember this?
I put a
switch on that.
Oh, you know what I saw?
You know Brandon Herrera put up a video aboutthe zip 22.
It's, like, over a million views.
(01:41:23):
I know.
I know.
And I that the sad thing is I would like to owna zip 22 at some point, and I will never be
able to
get one.
Yeah.
You did a you did the video with mine.
I it didn't get a million views.
But
I'm not Brandon Herrera.
Yes.
Exactly.
Everyone go check those out.
Those are, like he said it's the worst gun inthe world, which is true.
(01:41:45):
Literally, the
worst gun ever made.
But
that was that's what makes it awesome tocollect.
Yep.
It's the
worst gun
ever made.
Yeah.
So check this out.
Remember this?
This is the reissue of the
Yeah.
That's a gen one, but it's not a real gen one.
See, that's the thing though for me.
It's that I could get that.
Yes.
But I want a real gen one.
Yeah.
But these are still collectible.
These are still collectible.
(01:42:05):
It's still
cool.
And it has the whole Tupperware thing in there.
The whole Tupperware and then the gun and andall of that.
And, yes, it kinda it does have, like, the noX-raying.
Yeah.
But it is and then did they They
they stopped Oh, and
Oh, and then they put they they put p 80 on thebecause
(01:42:26):
that's because that's what they put on theoriginal Austrian guns that Yeah.
Was in military.
So in the beginning, they didn't put anythingreally on the slides?
No.
Not a whole lot.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
This is still cool.
I would like to to get a Tupperware.
So what is the reason for the hole?
Look, I noticed yours has, like, mine's covered
chance that your block 17 is probably from1988.
(01:42:49):
Oh, if that's the case, you'll never get itfrom me.
You know why?
More than, like, '88.
You know why?
Is that when you got married?
No.
What?
I don't know what I I don't
know In 1988, I got married to Lola.
Lola would have been, like, 13 years old.
Oh, I didn't have any concept
at all.
Who are you?
I think I was in 1988, I was 16, and Igraduated high school.
(01:43:11):
Yep.
Yeah.
I'll call tomorrow, and I'll ask, and I'll
I'll get
you a hard number on it.
No.
That's cool.
That's cool.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But, no, I am
Volo would have been 14 back then or somethinglike that.
Once I pay for this one, because I do you know,I I try not to I try not to buy more guns than
I can pay for at the moment because I like topay cash for my guns.
Right.
(01:43:31):
Right.
Once I pay for this, I will, probably belooking for a gen one.
Yeah.
I have a couple of things on the list.
Right?
You know right now, an ACR is on my list.
I can get you one.
I can get you an ACR.
Lola will not allow me to go to that budgetlevel.
That that what's I need to know the budget thenbecause I gotta I can offer on some of them,
(01:43:52):
but I gotta know what you're
Right now, Lola is in a mood of whatever I tryto get approvals for gets shot down.
So that's where I'm at right now.
I'm try yeah.
I'm trying to make I'm trying to make her Hey.
Just got out there in The States.
Let's get some stuff sold.
You got
a gun you ain't using to sell it.
I'll get you an ACR.
Oh, no.
Night Train says, I have a friend who is astate trooper in North Carolina whose name is
(01:44:13):
Sean.
There you go.
Mister Bullshitter said, everyone hates theirgovernment name.
Yeah.
I don't like it.
Kurt twenty four says, I graduated in '88 also.
Oh, cool.
And C Bullis says, I turned 18 in '88.
Awesome.
Here you go.
Night Train says, I was living in New York Cityin 1988.
(01:44:34):
So was I.
So we were in New York City at the same time.
I was in I was in Far Rockaway, yo.
So I don't know where, Night Train was at thattime, if he even knew.
Far Rockaway is like the last stop on the atrain.
Okay.
Let's see.
No.
You know, I've got some I wanna get aBushmaster ACR.
Now, you've got me where now I want a I want aPPK from night Folks, let me tell you about US
(01:45:00):
Law Shield.
If you're serious about your second amendmentrights, then you need to get serious about
protecting yourself legally.
Use promo code hank for two free months on anannual membership plus a locked in rate of just
$10.95 per month.
(01:45:20):
Remember, the fight for freedom doesn't end atthe range.
Arm yourself with US law shield, and rememberto use promo code hank So I'm looking up to see
if there was a James Bond movie in 1972.
It was, Diamonds are Forever.
Hey.
(01:45:40):
Diamonds Are
Diamonds Are Forever also has one of myfavorite cars, which you hate.
I hate it.
You hate it and you love it.
That's a that's a, a clue to you.
It's not a Tesla.
In 1972?
I hate it and I love it.
You hate it and you love it, and I'm gonna putsome up on the screen right now for you.
(01:46:05):
Boom.
Oh, those ugly Mustangs.
Yeah.
Those are
These are not ugly, man.
These are good looking.
The mach one.
The mach one.
Mustang.
Oh.
Look at that.
Those sixties rather.
Sixties Well, yeah.
This is like yeah.
This is like a 70.
I think this is a toy right here.
71.
Right here.
Toy.
This is a toy we're looking at.
But that's a beautiful car.
(01:46:26):
You don't like that?
Ugly.
Ugly.
So that's what James Bond was driving inDiamonds Are Forever, which, the James Bond
back then was, what's his face?
Sean.
It's not Sean Connery still.
Right?
No.
Diamonds Are Forever, I think was Roger Moore.
(01:46:47):
Hold on.
Okay.
I think it was Roger Moore, who I kinda likeHere's my problem with Roger Moore.
Right?
Like, I, you know, I grew up I lived in Englandin the late seventies and, he was the saint.
Oh, no.
It was Sean Connery.
(01:47:08):
Okay.
Good.
I'm happy.
I'm I'm happy.
So Roger Moore was the saint in England.
I don't if you ever heard of the saint.
It was kinda like a James Bond, and it was thesaint.
So, anyway, he he's cool for that, but he's avery anti gun dude.
He's the he's the most anti What do you expect?
Yeah.
He's the most anti gun James Bond.
Look at this.
(01:47:28):
Look at what this f one could this Look at
what this do you know do you know what afreaking my god.
This is so cheesy.
It's so bad.
It god.
Sean Connery.
So bad, so cheesy.
Let me see this.
I hope this loops again.
(01:47:49):
But now I need to know what so what was hismovie?
I know he had a PPK probably in here, but
Oh, yeah.
Think he Sean Connery, I think, always had aPPK.
I don't think he Yeah.
Had anything else.
But there's a poster where they have thatWalther that was like a, a BB gun, really, or
air airsoft or something.
Remember?
Yes.
Lots of cool things.
(01:48:09):
Dammas are Forever is a good movie, man.
Like, in the seventies, that's when they hadthe hot chicks in the seventies.
You know?
You could actually have some meat on your bonesback in the seventies.
If you I like that movie.
It takes place in Las Vegas.
You know, all that good stuff is in there.
So I'm trying to figure out yeah.
(01:48:31):
They you know, the seventies, man.
There was good times.
Coming out of the sixties, you know, ourparents were getting all kinds of STDs.
There was no care.
It was before AIDS came along.
It
ruined everything.
Care.
Yeah.
See Bullet says Sean Connery.
Night Train said Roger Moore.
(01:48:52):
Yeah, it was Sean Connery.
Roger Moore was very anti gun, did not likeguns.
That's why if you look at his James Bondmovies, there's not a lot of gunplay.
And I think he was probably the one that wasWas he in the movie poster where they had the
fake?
Maybe.
Do you remember the name of that Walther?
(01:49:12):
Let me see.
Roger Moore.
It was a Walther something.
I'm fake gun of some kind?
Yeah.
It was a air saw You didn't you didn't knowthis?
Mm-mm.
There was one of the James Maybe it was SeanConnery.
No.
It was Sean Connery that was in that too.
There's a Yeah.
(01:49:34):
There's a Sean Connery movie poster where thegun in there is a Walter, but it's a It's not a
Hold on.
Right here.
Hold on.
Let's see.
I'm gonna put this up here.
And I will find out exactly what this gun iscalled, but So in this poster right there Oh,
let me go back to Here's another one.
(01:49:54):
This is it.
That is not Let me see if I could show this.
This is not a real gun.
Oh, I do know what you're talking about.
Yeah.
That's not a real gun.
That's a BB gun.
Yeah.
That's a BB gun, but it
I think I should
I guess it just looked cool back in the days.
I don't You know, I wouldn't mind having one ofthose, whatever they're called.
I don't know what those are, but those are thatwas in a cartoon.
(01:50:18):
I was looking at, like, the Venture Brothers,and they were talking about that in a cartoon I
was looking at not too long ago.
But, yeah.
Have I
didn't finish the Venture Brothers.
I need to.
Venture Brothers is so awesome, man.
Very good.
It's a really good show.
Yeah.
It's funny.
You know?
There's a movie.
Did you see that?
They put out
a movie.
Well, no.
I wanted to finish a show before, and I justhaven't.
(01:50:39):
I need to.
I watch that over and over again.
I'm on I'm probably on my tenth time of goingthrough the whole
You could just leave it in the background, andit's it's pretty good
for that.
Yeah.
So yeah.
What other guns are on your list right now ofguns you need to
Gen one Glock, and I'm always in the market foranything John Browning that I don't already
(01:50:59):
own.
So I'd like to I'm getting rid of some stuff.
If anybody out there was a US marine and theywould love to get their hands on a US marine
corps nineteen o three Springfield, I do haveone that's going needs to go away.
I I'll make you a good deal on it, so that'sgotta go.
But, yeah, anything John Browning and mostanything John Browning that I don't already
(01:51:22):
have, I'd like to get.
I'd like any of the older stuff in 1890, '18'90 '2, '18 '90 '4.
I need a 1895.
I I gotta I gotta get all of it.
I gotta get all the Brownie stuff.
Oh, okay.
So you don't have enough John Browning gunsright now?
There's never enough John Browning.
(01:51:42):
How many 20 twos do you have that are JohnBrowning?
Four.
Five.
Five.
Yeah.
I have I have a Browning Browning twenty two, sa 22.
I have the Colt Woodsman.
I have the eighteen ninety eighteen ninety.
(01:52:03):
I have the 19 o six.
I thought I had one more.
Was Browning ever connected to a bullpup of anysort?
No.
That wasn't that blasphemy wasn't done until,like, way, way later.
Damn it.
Okay.
Well, I guess I can't collect it.
I I can't do it then.
You know?
I do have some I I I have some stuff that's onmy list that's not I've always wanted actually
(01:52:26):
a PPK with
I know.
That's what I'm saying.
You gotta get a $19.72 PPK.
So don't get just any PPK.
No.
Yeah.
Cross one and you can tell that it's a 72 Yeah.
Yeah. You pay the money.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've been trying to look at '72 watches, but,my favorite night watch from 1972 is to is
ridiculously expensive.
(01:52:46):
It's You
know what you could do?
Uh-huh.
We should do this right now.
I'm going on Gunbroker and I'm just gonna typein 1972 and see what comes up.
And see if guns come up in there?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
There's there people put dates in theirlistings.
So That's good.
If there's a listing.
Yeah.
Here's a colt python.
Here's a Ruger mark one, a Beretta, a coltjunior.
(01:53:11):
A colt oh, it's gonna be really cool.
A colt detective special with some nice bluingon it.
What are those little colts that you have oneand Walter has one?
It's like a 25
or A
vest pocket.
A colt vest pocket.
Yeah.
That would be cool if I could get one from1972.
I think they stopped producing the vest pocketproducing the vest pocket well before that.
Before '72?
(01:53:31):
Okay.
Vest pocket.
I think that was
This is how you know you're becoming an olddude when you're that's why, like, right now,
the 1972 cars are also expensive.
For the the seventies cars.
The vest pocket was they stopped producing thevest pocket in 1948.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
If I come across a PPK, I'm gonna tell you.
(01:53:51):
There's a Heckler and Coke, h k four on here,which is a their version of the PPK.
What does that look like?
Hold on.
It looks do a quick search for the HK 4.
Oh, okay.
Hold on.
It looks very much like a rounded Is
that cooler?
H k four.
(01:54:12):
I think the wall here is a little cooler.
Oh, I see.
Okay.
I see what it is.
But I think the Walther is
probably No.
The Walther has more provenance because of theJames Bond thing, probably.
Yeah.
It it is more rounded off, though.
It looks more modern.
Yeah.
It does.
Yeah.
I think HK was going for a modern look.
Look.
Yeah.
Are those good guns?
Easy?
(01:54:33):
I don't know.
I've never shot one.
Don't know much about them.
But this is
interesting.
I wasn't uh-huh.
I've just I've never thought to look atGunbroker for dates.
By the by the year.
Yeah.
Your your year of birth was a cool year toobecause '88, '80 '9, the late eighties, man,
all those guns were in movies and stuff likethat.
(01:54:54):
You know?
Eighties gun movies were pretty good, I willsay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, there was a lot of cool guns in thosethings to to look back on.
So, you know, what's this?
There's lots of bullets.
Night Train says, here you go, Hank.
There's some kind of link from Gunbroker.
Let me see.
I might have
to open
mind if there's no way he found a PPK from '72.
(01:55:17):
Oh, he he did apparently.
No way.
The starting bid is $1,250.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
That's the price of PPKs.
That is 100% the price of a PPK.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
PPKs draw big money.
They're not cheap.
(01:55:37):
Yeah.
I'm gonna have to consider that.
It's if you're if you've been wanting a PPK,getting one that's your birth date is pretty
cool.
I wouldn't that'd be pretty neat to me.
Yeah.
Cboe says, if I had the cash, would go for the'19 o '3 Springfield.
I listen.
I'll make you cut you a deal because it's I Ineed it gone.
(01:55:59):
Yeah.
It will it is kind of it's more expensive thanyour standard because it is a US Marine Corps
marked gun.
But
Okay.
Yeah.
And that's alright.
I think we've seen that here on the show.
Right?
Yeah.
That's the one had on
here.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm trying to, you know, I'm trying to think ofwhat other guns out there I really want to
(01:56:19):
See what 19
to get into.
Oh, here's some other gun news before we getout, what I guess we could talk about.
Yeah.
Oh, shoot.
It's for
09:00.
Yeah.
If you, let's see here.
I'll put this up here.
Oh,
Hank Strange.
Nineteen eighty nine Glock seventeen gen twowith factory box.
What?
(01:56:40):
How much is it?
It's a penny start.
Nobody's bid on it yet.
I might have to watch this one.
Especially if the box matches the gun.
Yeah.
I might have to get up this one.
What year was your the one that you just boughtfrom?
1990.
'19 '90.
Okay.
Let's see.
(01:57:02):
So so CBC Global Ammunition to build $300million $300,000,000 facility at Pryor's Middle
Mid America Industrial Park.
So I think this is Oklahoma or something likethat.
So Oklahoma Let me see.
Is it Yeah.
Oklahoma City, Kevin Governor Kevin Sittannounced that one of the largest ammunition
(01:57:24):
manufacturers in the world is planning a$300,000,000 expansion project for a new
facility in Northeast Oklahoma.
Should be 350 new jobs.
I think they're gonna do nine millimeter.
When I was reading through this, it was talkingabout, they're gonna do those calibers that we
really need.
(01:57:45):
So they're actually gonna somebody's gonna beproducing more more ammunition?
More ammo.
Yeah.
I mean, we should have been doing we shouldhave been done did that one.
But that's that's good news.
Oklahoma.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Have you been to Oklahoma?
I think I've driven through Oklahoma a fewtimes.
No.
No.
Never have.
I've never been there.
I heard there's nothing nothing there.
(01:58:07):
Heard there's very little there.
Let me see.
I'm trying to see what other crazy things.
Oh, this has got nothing to do with anything,but if you like watches, which I do, I like all
kinds of different watches, Bolivar has apretty cool movie that's on Amazon Prime called
(01:58:28):
America telling time a hundred and fifty yearsof Bolivar.
That'd be cool.
And if you this is it it's it's if you look onAmazon Prime, you'll be able to find it.
It's got this symbol in front of it.
So oh, hold on.
We got a baby sighting coming in.
Take it.
Make it look like
Hold on.
Let me go full screen on.
Bam.
(01:58:50):
Who's that?
That's mommy.
Yeah.
Who's that guy?
There
you go.
I'll take it.
Say say bye bye.
Bye bye.
There you go.
Yeah.
It's the beginning of the end for you.
Oh, it is.
Believe me.
Yeah.
He's talking.
(01:59:10):
He's gonna be talking your business.
All he's Yeah.
I
looked at this I looked at this Bulova movie,by the way.
Very good movie.
Bulova started in New York City, Americancompany.
If you're a New Yorker, you probably knowBolivar.
My, like, oldest watches that I still have isBolivar, and I think we did Bolivar's
(01:59:32):
to make good stuff.
Yeah.
Did we do Bolivar for for that, for thecelebration of a thousand episodes?
Yeah.
Mhmm.
Yep.
Very good very good watches, and that it nowbelongs to a Japanese.
I think it belongs to
I don't know.
Citizen Group.
I think it's Citizen Group.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So good company, good watches.
It's a good movie to watch to look at, like,the history of stuff, and they made military
(01:59:56):
watches and all that kind of thing.
Very cool.
Founded in Queens, New York in 1875.
Yeah.
So for a lot of good reasons, I'm a fan a a fanof a fan of Bolivar and
the wild fish.
I have some cool Bolivas.
Yeah.
We get to 2,000 episodes, Patrick.
I'll get you another Bolivar.
You
will be literally about 70 years old.
(02:00:19):
Yeah.
I just really guessed.
We slowed down a lot since we hit a thousand.
Mhmm.
I mean, we're at what is this?
One sixty one, I wanna say?
Yeah.
One sixty We're at a 61, so we slowed down alittle bit, but, you know, we're still going.
We're still kicking ass.
I think we're still We're probably the longestNot the longest, because there's older podcasts
(02:00:43):
out there, gun podcasts.
Like, We Like Shooting has been out there for awhile.
Talking Lead has been out there for a while.
So I'm trying to see what any other cool newstuff or gun sales or anything like that come
up that you
that you nothing lately.
(02:01:04):
I I'm just I'm glad I got myself a Glock, anold an old school Glock.
Mhmm.
But nothing that I've seen that I've had tohave.
Because you know me, if I see something I gottahave, I'll go get it.
That's the problem.
Yeah.
And I think we're the old gun guys now becausewe're going for the old well, you always went
for the older guns, to be honest.
I like older stuff.
I've always liked older stuff.
(02:01:25):
Yeah.
And Pat and, Walter always went for the olderguns too, but, you know, let's see.
Look.
I think GOA published something about what wewere talking about here.
Did they?
Did they have something for us?
Let me see.
Let's let's see if we could pull this up, andwe'll we'll talk about what GOA was talking
(02:01:46):
about here.
And what and we got, like, a few minutes left.
Let's see.
Okay.
The house Ways and Means Committee has betrayedgun owners.
We must demand they add the Herring ProtectionAct and Short Act to their bill now.
(02:02:08):
And there's a number, the same number, I think,that you put up before.
There's a video here from gun ownersexplanation, probably better one than what
we're giving here that you guys can go to andfigure out how to get in touch with these guys.
I recommend to do it.
I think I'm not in the camp of I'm not in thecamp of not doing anything at all.
(02:02:31):
I think that's the worst thing that we coulddo.
You have to
you gotta do something.
Yes.
Yeah.
And at some point, I think we gotta get some ofthese rhinos out.
That's my feeling on this.
I agree with
that.
They have to fear us, and if they could justkeep telling us, let's just wait till the
midterm, they'll just keep pushing it down.
And if they say, oh, you know, but what are yougonna do?
You're gonna get, like, Democrats in here, andthat's gonna be worse.
(02:02:55):
We that can't that can't be a good excuseforever.
Democrats were in office, Republicans would bepaying attention.
Yeah.
Because that's how it works.
When Democrats are in office, we actuallylisten to what they're doing.
Where when when Republicans are in office, wepretend like, oh, they're gonna have our best
interest at heart.
Yeah.
Kurt twenty four says, usually, Trump does hisshow at ten on Mondays, I think.
Right?
(02:03:15):
That's the time.
Oh.
So yeah.
So after this, you guys can go over there andmake sure you, like, follow, subscribe, or
whatever it is here on Rumble to John Crump.
I think baby face, you have a Rumble.
Yeah.
I don't post there,
but I
just Walter has one.
Flying Rich has one.
(02:03:36):
Dark has one.
Who am I missing?
Oh, shooting gallery has Yeah.
Yep.
So just follow everyone on here.
I appreciate all the people who hang out withus and, and watch the show.
I think, you know, we do pretty good.
Let me see.
We've got 25 people watching us live right now,which is better, unfortunately, than what was
(02:03:57):
happening over at Player.
I think that was getting kind of, that wasgetting kind of old.
I don't know what's the deal with that orwhatever, but it seems like there's a bigger
audience over here.
It would we're obviously gonna have to build itup.
Like, right now, we've got 54 followers, so wegot about half of them watching right now.
(02:04:17):
So we gotta just build it up, you know, get toa hundred.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Everything starts from zero.
So, you know, that's how it that's how it goes,man.
I'm approaching a quarter of a millionsubscribers on Strangerpalooza.
Jesus Christ.
When you're in the algorithm, it actually works
for you.
So sad.
It's a lot yeah.
(02:04:38):
It's a lot of work.
I've been, you know, putting
a lot
of my effort.
It's just it's so frustrating that it'seclipsed to the other channel so quickly.
Yeah.
It's too bad.
I I would still rather be doing my my themajority of my stuff, gun stuff, but, you know,
on the I think the folks who got really bigbenefit the most right now.
(02:04:59):
And then I didn't get that big, and then I gotshadow band, and it's hard to shake that.
If you're probably coming in and starting freshright now, you could do well.
I think so.
And I have thought about doing that.
Thought
about stress.
Rich is doing pretty good with the Short'schannel that he has.
Catching up to me very quickly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So You'll you'll you'll pass me up in no timeand continue growing as long as he keeps doing
(02:05:21):
what he's doing.
Yeah.
He's got a good handle on that.
You know?
But there's a lot of things you and I could do.
I I thought always thought maybe we could do awatch thing or something.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just talk shit about watches.
Yeah.
You know?
I I don't know.
I mean, right now, I know you're pretty busydoing the doing the
(02:05:42):
start a business.
Yeah.
As a gunsmith, I think that's going well.
Right?
We could say everything's going well with that.
I have so much work in the safe right now thatI don't even wanna think about it.
I'm and I don't wanna complain.
I don't wanna complain because I don't wantless work.
I want more work.
Mhmm.
But I have a whole month's worth of worksitting in the safe right now.
Oh, that's cool.
Yeah.
It's cool.
Since we're here at the end, let's take thisopportunity for you to remind the folks out
(02:06:06):
there, you know, if they're looking for agunsmith, you know, how they can
Chrome Vandium Arms.
Phone number, (352) 642-9681.
If you want to send me an email atsupport@chromevandiumarms.com.
Happy to take on any projects that you guys arelooking for.
I had a guy contact me today and said, hey,Babyface p, I got something to do.
(02:06:31):
I need some work on this.
And he actually said, Babyface p.
And I was like, sounds good.
Here's my address.
Bring it send it my way.
I'll get it done in two weeks.
So yeah.
Yeah.
Things are going good.
Things are going well.
Check this out.
That's awesome.
And I do really recommend you guys if you'relooking for a gunsmith to, you know, send that
work to Patrick.
Hotdog nine ninety gave us $50.
(02:06:54):
Okay.
Thank you,
There you go.
Thank I appreciate that.
That's awesome.
Appreciate you for that one.
You know?
It's that's fantastic, man.
I I love it.
You know?
Like I said, you know, I think this probably isworking out the best right now.
That's the way it goes.
We'll keep doing this.
We'll keep bringing the show to you.
Yeah.
(02:07:15):
You know?
And then probably other content that we'reputting up.
I think Lola told me she's been putting up, vanvideos on Rumble as well.
So, it's a lot, yeah, it's a lot of workwrangling all the different videos.
So
Well, I just haven't had the time for all that.
But yeah.
Yeah.
So big thanks to hot dog nine ninety.
Everyone else out there that's hanging out withus over the show here, we appreciate you guys.
(02:07:39):
Thanks to Patrick for coming on, and Walter forteasing us with the beignets earlier.
Think so.
We appreciate that.
I if if John is on tonight, he's probably gonnafill you guys in on Yeah.
Please reach out to to these folks, put somepressure on them, and keep fighting the good
(02:08:00):
fight.
Yeah.
That's anything else to add, Patrick, before Ihit all these buttons over here?
That's it for me.
Alright.
Thanks so much, guys.
We'll see you on the next one.
We are out of here.