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February 22, 2025 49 mins
  • Let's go back to where it all started, Ryan & Hank not knowing anything about podcasting, how to upload to the various platforms, or even how to record properly! This was our first ever recording together and at the time and I could only figure out how to upload the episode to our Facebook page. So I've tried to clean the audio up and I'm releasing it again, on all platforms!!!
  • We Love You Ryan 🤘🏼 
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
Oh, so there we are. So here we go, man,
our show for the first time. It's first roll show me.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
It's been a long coming.

Speaker 1 (00:36):
How you doing. I'm good, man, I'm good.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
How are you?

Speaker 1 (00:38):
How's the baby man?

Speaker 3 (00:39):
Man, I'm bless, bless, got a good evening going on,
just sitting around the house.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
Not doing too much. Cool cool.

Speaker 4 (00:46):
Well, I guess with a name like six four three
double playing, I guess we might as well get into
how's the Cardinals doing?

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Man? How's your team doing that?

Speaker 3 (00:56):
To be honest, it's been a rough start out of
the gate, man. It looks like we're going to pick
up the win today in Seattle. We're up seven to
three in the bottom of the eighth. We've had a
good offensive outing behind Nolan Gorman. He hit him a
good three run shot is sixth of the year, twenty
second RBIs. But we just cannot seem to get any

(01:20):
production from our rotation and our bullpen. And it's really
hard to do anything when you're just relying on your offense,
which isn't consistent. So you know, I have faith that
maybe building which Junior cares more about the Cardinals than
he does about Arby's, and we might go get a
couple of pits.

Speaker 1 (01:41):
Hopefully we grab some arms.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
You know, we've got plenty of outfielders as hate as
bad as I hate to see any of them go.
We've got more than enough to use his trade bait
and locked her some arms, which we desperately need.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
Well, that's what I was.

Speaker 4 (01:56):
That was the point I was going to make. Man,
is you know trade deadlines coming up. You know, you guys,
y'all certainly have enough trade bait to maybe make things work.

Speaker 1 (02:06):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (02:07):
I do pay attention to the Cardinals because you pay
attention to him, So I don't know, man.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
I mean, it's a good looking team, the foundations there.

Speaker 1 (02:16):
We just brought Paul Deyong back.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
He's coming out of the minors and he's he did
pretty well in the minors. He had him a six
RBI game just a night or two ago for Memphis,
and so he's coming in hot and he produced this
game a little bit. I think he's already got a
hit or too, but we need him to show out
just enough to get traded.

Speaker 1 (02:38):
I'm not a de Young fan.

Speaker 3 (02:40):
I figured we could throw de Young, and apparently they
don't want to let one Yipez play on the big
boy team for some reason, because all he's doing is
killing the minor league. So we could throw those two
together and maybe go get an arm.

Speaker 5 (02:52):
You know.

Speaker 3 (02:53):
That's that's what this team needs, is it is close
to an ace or it's close to a shutdown reliever
as they can get to really just come in and
solidify things.

Speaker 4 (03:04):
You know, man, I honestly, I think a good arm
for y'all that I believe is personally going to be
on the trade deadline is going to be your Keidy.
I know that people hate to hear that, but I mean,
he's kind of like the weak link in our roster.
The only problem is somebody like your kid is going
to cost y'all a lot. So I just don't know, Man,

(03:25):
I don't know, but I do wish you guys investment,
I really do.

Speaker 3 (03:29):
That's another you know, bright side about the Cardinals is
they have a really deep and really solid farm going on,
with a lot of top end prospects in the in
the in the league.

Speaker 1 (03:40):
So you know, they've got the AMMO.

Speaker 3 (03:43):
It's just whether they'll actually go out and do something
that is unlike the Cardinals and go get a big
name cough up a bunch of money, secure somebody for
more than a couple of years, and really invest in
the pitching. They're more than willing to go and get
another when aeronauto with.

Speaker 1 (04:01):
Paul Goldschmidt, that's great.

Speaker 3 (04:03):
But if you've got you know, forty one year old
Adam Wainwright coming back off of injury, and you're hoping
he's gonna be the guy that just comes in and
shakes things up, and I just don't see it, you know, But.

Speaker 1 (04:15):
It's it's early in the season. We've got a long
way to go. It is, it is.

Speaker 5 (04:19):
It is.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
Baseball is baseball, Baseball is baseball.

Speaker 2 (04:22):
Speaking of baseball, man, I guess I gotta jump to
my team real quick.

Speaker 1 (04:26):
Man, How are those doing?

Speaker 4 (04:30):
Man?

Speaker 1 (04:30):
What am I? What am I going to say?

Speaker 3 (04:31):
Man?

Speaker 4 (04:32):
You know, coming in off the World Series win, we
had some injuries, We have injuries coming into the season.
We picked up someone who is injured, which Michael Bridley
did actually start today in Sugarland on his rehab assignment,
so he shouldn't be back in a week or two.
Al Tuova, of course, you know, he's the captain of

(04:52):
the team, which, to be completely honest, man, Dubon is
really kind of changing my perspective on from the whole
Ala two Bay situation.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
I'm not gonna say that.

Speaker 4 (05:03):
You know, obviously Al two Bay is the cornerstone LU team,
but what are we supposed to do with the Dubon
who's on his seventeenth straight heat like game like, he's
leading the entire major leagues with seventeen straight games hitting.

Speaker 1 (05:19):
He has a three forty.

Speaker 4 (05:20):
Three I believe at the last time I checked sluggy
percentages right around there. He's on a big home run hitter.
But I mean, he's a dude that's getting on base man.
And just today, I mean, we swept the Atlanta Braves.
And if anybody out there in a Facebook land or
wherever this lands doesn't want to hear this, but y'all
wanted a twenty twenty three World Series of preview, and

(05:43):
if that's what y'all wanted to land, and then just
like Philadelphia, y'all don't want Houston because I mean, they've
just been slacking on you boys, like seriously the entire
last three days.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
But honestly, man, I feel good about it. It's April.

Speaker 4 (05:58):
I think we're eleven and ten, so we're no, I'm sorry,
We're twelve and ten. We're two games above five hundred,
typical of Houston, you know. I mean, it's gonna take us.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
A little while to get going.

Speaker 4 (06:07):
But I could go on and on and on then,
but I don't think that's what the people are here
to listen to. Although, just so everybody knows, every time
you jump on these podcasts, we're gonna have one of
these conversations, because I mean, it's baseball experiences and beer man,
that's what we.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
Do, exactly exactly.

Speaker 3 (06:22):
And as far as the Astros go, some of their
slow start could be contributed to a World Series hangover.
A lot of folks like that, and I don't think
it's necessarily that. I mean, you look at all the teams,
you know, pretty much outside of the power who you know,
are just really shocking the baseball world right now doing

(06:44):
what they're doing. Everybody had to start now. I don't
think there's any one team that outside of just a
couple of you know, the Milwaukee Brewers, the Pirates, that
can really just look at these first twenty twenty.

Speaker 1 (06:57):
Five games and be completely happy with what they have.

Speaker 4 (07:00):
You know what, I absolutely, absolutely, and you know That's
what I was telling my wife the other day. I
was like, you know what, like, yeah, we we dropped
the games and the Rangers. But what a lot of
people don't realize is that we were also at a
signing all that day. Like we started signing, well, they
started to signing autographs.

Speaker 1 (07:17):
At six am.

Speaker 4 (07:18):
They didn't get done until three, and then they had
to be at the mall park, you know, and then
practice and whatever. So you're right, the hangover thing is real.
I think a lot of these big day teams, you know,
you have the Otanis and the bets and all these
other big players that are having to do a lot
of extra things off the ball field that we're not
paying attention to. But right, But you're actually right, man,
It's just we are way too far into even be

(07:40):
looking at it. But this podcast is going to go
all the way through the end of the season, so
we're going to get into all of it. But until
that goes on, man, I guess we should get into
what we're here to talk about.

Speaker 3 (07:50):
Let's get it all right, man, So go ahead, So
let me let me know the big subject for this
test from We're going to be talking about slops okay, okay,
And if you were to type in sibs into Google,
you're going to get a couple of really interesting results.
Right there at the top of the page, it's going

(08:10):
to give you a definition from Army dot gov, straight
literally from the Army, and this is what it reads.
It reads, soldiers benefit the Army's mission by using unconventional techniques.
Their intelligence, interpersonal skills, cultural sensitivity, and foreign language proficiency
helped sway opinions and actions of foreign governments, groups and individuals.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
I mean, that's.

Speaker 3 (08:34):
Straight from the Army, and it's crazy how that in
and of itself is the conspiracy.

Speaker 4 (08:42):
You know, it's important to note because I read the
same exact definition.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
It's important to note.

Speaker 4 (08:48):
What I don't think a lot of people want to
understand is that there is a fucking word for it.
And I'm excusing you guys, but we're going to cuss
on those podcast is what it is. We are not
family friendly, but we'll try to keep it to a minimum.
But there is an entire word for it. So that
means like it is a theme like propaganda, conspiracy theory.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
These are words that.

Speaker 4 (09:10):
I have wikipedias like, these are words that are actually
real things. So a lot of people hear things like
SYOP and they say it's a conspiracy theory. That's just well,
I mean the man just read something from Army dot Go.
I mean it's a real thing.

Speaker 3 (09:24):
There are the different brand like like they're legitimate parts
of the army and Air Force and other branches that
are specifically labeled sciops.

Speaker 1 (09:36):
Like it's out there, and.

Speaker 3 (09:37):
They put it right thereut there in front of you,
right right. It's nothing they're hiding. Merriam Webster defines siobs
as military operations usually aimed at influencing the enemy state
of mind using noncombative means.

Speaker 1 (09:52):
Right, they don't hate it.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
And Merriam Webster wants to give you the definition of
dispersing leaflets, you know, like from whatever. Well, it is
just like the the most innocent level of you know
what they're trying to talk about. Because the one thing
I like that we're doing is we're starting here because
in a sense, this is the center of the spiderweb

(10:16):
that everything else touches exactly.

Speaker 4 (10:19):
And you know, I will reference some other people on
this podcast. I don't think that there's a legality of referencing,
you know, something to hear from somebody else.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
But you know, you have people like Sam Tripley.

Speaker 4 (10:29):
And what Sam Tripley says, and I'm paraphrasing, is basically
Hitler created the syop, Russia took the syop over, and
America perfected it. And that is basically the way I
look at it right now is everything we ran on
is ran on by a siop. And if you're cool,
then I'll give you a definition of how easy, in
Layman's terms, it is to sy off somebody.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
You go up that.

Speaker 4 (10:51):
Okay, So let's just say this is extremely hypothetical. This
is not a situation actually happened, But this is the
way I explained to my wife Halisyop runs because my
wife love her to death. She is the most BookSmart
person on this planet. She has everything intelligently that you
can want a woman, except when it comes to shit

(11:12):
like this, she just doesn't want to hear it. She's
just like, well whatever, And I think that's how most
people are. So let's just say, hypothetically, there's a guy
who lives in the apartment across from us, right, and
let's say every morning I notice that, you know, he
has a wife, right, and every morning she leaves for
work and he has another.

Speaker 1 (11:34):
Female pull up.

Speaker 4 (11:35):
The female goes up to the door, he lets her
in there inside for ten fifteen minutes, they leave together
every thirty minutes before he gets home, she you know.

Speaker 1 (11:44):
She drops him off and his wife gets home.

Speaker 4 (11:47):
Right, So let's just say that happens every day, every day,
every day, every day. Well, let's just say, for some reason,
I just bring that up to my wife. I'm like, hey,
that's super weird that the guy over there, his wife,
you know, leaves work and then another female shows up,
and then they leap together, and then before the wife
gets home, she drops him back off. That's all I say.

(12:08):
That's it, and I don't say nothing else, nothing more
and nothing less. Well, my wife happens to work from home,
and she works from the computer and the window that
looks out to these apartment. Well, now she's noticing it
every day, every day, every day, every day. Now she's
texting me saying this cheating piece of shit blah blah blah,
bah blah blah blah. Well, what she doesn't know is

(12:28):
that the dude picking him up as his sister. And
I knew that the entire time. I just didn't e
bulge that. So that's how a psyop works. I mean,
And basically all I did was drop a little bit
of knowledge into her head to make her see those things.

Speaker 1 (12:43):
And that's how it works.

Speaker 4 (12:44):
And I know that's a really broad, weird description, but
that's basically how a syop works. So imagine if I
can do that to one person, how easy it would
be to do that on a very broad scale when
you have the media and so on.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
And so forth. Oh. Absolutely.

Speaker 3 (12:58):
I guess another way you could look at it is
somebody or some group of people back in the whether
I think, I honestly think it started, as you said,
with Hitler, and they saw what he was able to
do throughout the forties and around the middle of the
fifties into the sixties, somebody decided that they were going
to start playing a long calm.

Speaker 1 (13:20):
We are seeing the latter stages of long con.

Speaker 3 (13:26):
Which presents itself in the form of whether you want
to call it socialism or communism, all of these radical
agendas that we're seeing and getting forced down our throat like,
it's all the latter stages of this movement that started
with just a tight knit, close group of people that
over time with their wealth and influence and their power

(13:48):
has created this network of just evil seditiousness. Man Like,
it's really because we are all under a psiot.

Speaker 4 (13:59):
Yeah, well, you've seen the h I'm sure you've seen
the images of a herd of sheep, right, And they
go through the same fence every day for years and
years and years, and then eventually the farmer cuts down
the barbar fits and they still go to that exit.
You know, they could run out of the fence at
any time because the fence is no longer there, but
they're just so conditioned to run through that. Oh you know,

(14:20):
it's it's the exact same thing. So when you can
do something like that and people, you know, I think
a lot of people don't want to see the big picture,
and these are things that are going off every day.
The problem is is that we've been so colluded and
ran down buy side offs that we don't even know
which way is up or down.

Speaker 3 (14:36):
You have, We've been desensitized to it. Absolutely, We've been
desensitized to it through through movies, through through the media,
through video games, through living life in general.

Speaker 4 (14:51):
Bro bro Hey, I'm so glad you brought that up,
because I want to do you remember, just like a
month ago, the whole trained e railment and yeah, it
was it.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
Was Ohio, Yeah, it was any thing.

Speaker 4 (15:06):
So Netflix dropped the movie the day before that happened.
So when I asked my wife about the Training your realman,
you know what she said, isn't that a movie on Netflix?

Speaker 1 (15:17):
Yeah? That's that's what they do.

Speaker 3 (15:19):
That's how they do it exactly, is they give it
to us in this They present it to us on
this platter in such a way that when we take
it in, just like you were talking about with with
you know, convincing your wife that the neighbors cheating, they
give us just enough truth to be like, oh okay,

(15:39):
but then they make everything else a joke around it.

Speaker 1 (15:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (15:43):
Yeah, And I think the I don't know if you're familiar,
And this was the reason why I picked or I
decided that I wanted to do a side out thing.
Are you familiar with the social credit score that's going
on over in China? Yes?

Speaker 1 (15:56):
I really am. Uh.

Speaker 3 (15:59):
You know, I listened to a lot of and and
with which I want to speak on just a second.
I listen to a lot of Dan Gino Okay, okay.
I stumbled upon him in my early days of listening
to podcast and it was right it started his And
just in the last couple of days I started listening
to some of Tripole's latest episodes. They started mentioning him

(16:21):
in some unsavored mans and it really got me concerned
because I would like to think that Damn Bogino is
one of the rare voices that really is giving you truth,
you know, but it's there. It's seeming like his background
and stuff, where he where his his his talent agency
that he came from is very questionable, and so I

(16:43):
don't know, man, you never really can't trust anything that's
out there, as as I just you.

Speaker 4 (16:49):
Know, has stated earlier about the whole neighbors eating thing,
which I know is such a weird like way to
go about it, but it was an easy way to
just kind of.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Go into it.

Speaker 4 (16:57):
You know, words like sile fall on people's ears definitely,
and the same kind of words like control opposition also
fall on those words kind of you know, in a
weird way. You can get into people like Roguan, you
get into people like Damn my Genao, you're getting people
like Sam Tripley, and I mean you kind of have
to ask yourself, like are these guys battling for likes

(17:19):
and clicks? You know, So it's hard because it's so
easy too, It's so easy to sign off someone. I
just showed you.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
How easy it was, you know to do that. So
get back to your question. Yes I do.

Speaker 3 (17:31):
I am aware of this national social credits to that
they're trying to push in hand with the uh stevdc's
the central Bank.

Speaker 4 (17:42):
Right the fifteen minute cities were its other if other
people are go ahead, go ahead, I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (17:46):
I mean, I know we're going.

Speaker 4 (17:48):
To I know we're going to get this timing down better.
I know it's a it's our first show. People like we're.

Speaker 1 (17:52):
We're going to figure it out.

Speaker 2 (17:54):
But go ahead, And I don't mean to rupt you.

Speaker 1 (17:56):
No, No, it's all good. We we you know.

Speaker 3 (17:59):
Then I created this little information to tripoli too on
what I listened today, Like we're experiencing in real world
already a soft form of it through the censorship that
we see on Facebook, Like you say something that they
don't like, and then all of a sudden, you don't
have access to your privilege, you know what I'm saying,

(18:19):
Like they restrict, they take privileges away from you and
it's just like what you know, if you think of
it for what it really is, man, that's what it's
gonna be. What if one day, you know, if they
get through with all this, you're not gonna have a
debit card.

Speaker 1 (18:33):
You're you're gonna have a you know, preferably up to them.
I believe they want to chip in your arm.

Speaker 3 (18:38):
And you're gonna go and and you're gonna go reach
for something in the grocery store and a pane of
glass is going to slide down this.

Speaker 1 (18:43):
I'm like, no, you you said YadA YadA.

Speaker 3 (18:46):
On Facebook in twenty thirteen, so you cannot buy bread
today or whatever you.

Speaker 4 (18:52):
And that's where I was going to go because like
you know, what a lot of people understand is that
we do not get to see Chinese news, Russians, we
don't know what the hell is going on with being said.
But one thing I do know, because I have research
it enough, is that you know, in these fifteen minute cities,
which are cities in China that are not all cities,

(19:12):
but a lot of those cities there, they're completely ran
by the Internet. So your air conditioner, your your car,
every everything.

Speaker 1 (19:21):
Is ran so Faltera.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
So here in America.

Speaker 4 (19:29):
So so jails, jails in these cities in China are
starting to dissolve, where only murderers or tents to murderers, rapists,
so on and so forth are there, whereas here we had,
you know, drug infractions, speeding tickets, these smaller market crimes,
well they're they don't put you in jail anymore for
these small market crimes. What they do is they cut

(19:50):
your air condisry off of the day. They shut your
car down for the day. You know it's you, and
I know it seems super bleak, and you're like, wow,
that could never happen. But man, my body death. My
buddy downloaded a progressive maybe allegedly downloaded a progressive insurance
app recently, and he gets a discount for a non

(20:11):
barking clause. A non barking clause is basically not swearing,
so he gets a discount if they don't swear in
their vehicle or around their phones. So we're already starting
to see the branch off of Facebook where it used
to be you got banned for a day, or three days,
or thirty days if you're me, and you get banned
for a couple of months. But now it's we're gonna,

(20:33):
we're gonna put We're gonna put your your posts lower
in the timeline, because that's how addictive we are to
lights that. No, don't put my posts lower in the timeline.
I need to be seen. I need to focus. So
I mean it's already starting, man, And I don't understand
why people don't see it. And I think maybe they
do things don't think about it. So I think that's

(20:54):
basically my whole point about siouts in general is how
easy it is to sigh out the public.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
I think it was Man in Black Movie.

Speaker 4 (21:00):
He even said, like a human being is a smart,
well old machine, but humans are dumb animals, like we
really are in groups.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
So and we saw that with COVID, but we'll go
into that another episode.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
Man.

Speaker 3 (21:15):
One thing about it is, Man, is we as humans
are habits of creature.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
True, And regardless of whether you are aware or believe.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
Or notice any of this or not, most of us
are gonna wake up in the morning and we're gonna
go clock in, and we're gonna go work, all right,
or our ten or our twelve, we're.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
Gonna go home and we're gonna do what we do.
And then we're gonna go sleep, we're gonna wake up,
do it all again.

Speaker 3 (21:37):
And at the end of the day, a lot of
people find that it's a lot easier to not think
about it because it doesn't disrupt their life as much.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
As they know it.

Speaker 3 (21:47):
Because the people that are behind all of this, they
use this method of trickling it out over time and
little increments so that it's never in your face at once.
You know what I'm saying. It's it's stretched out so
that it might take five or ten years. I mean,
think about what I said, as we're seeing the long

(22:09):
con that probably started in the fifties, you know, and
so they're willing to wait in order to this change.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
They're willing to.

Speaker 3 (22:18):
Wait five ten years because they know that at the
end of that time they're in end goal product will
be there and that will be something that it will
be irreversible.

Speaker 1 (22:29):
Yeah, I mean we vit. No talk a little bit.
I'm sorry, go ahead, No, you're good, ma man.

Speaker 3 (22:38):
That's why it's so vital to take note of it
now and keep your old mind open to it now,
because the more people that recognize it and openly call
your congressman. Call these people have phone numbers that you
can reach them. We elected them, we can talk to them,
and we can tell them, hey, if you keep voting
the way you're voting, you will not get my vote.

(22:58):
And it might just be one person, but if you
get enough one people to do it, you can you
can enforce a bit of change. I'm not saying we
can go and and and force their hands, but to
an extent, we can, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (23:12):
I mean, at least on a local level.

Speaker 4 (23:14):
But you know it's it's like Sam Tripley says all
the time, and I know I keep referencing him, but
he says it all the time, Like, you know what,
you can't do anything on a grand scheme until you
start doing things locally. You know, your local mayor your
local dish. You're local that maybe they're all controlled. I
don't really know at this point. I'm not a C person.
I'm really not.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
I didn't subscribe to the Q movement.

Speaker 1 (23:36):
I know, being you talked about this, I know you
didn't either.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
You're not gonna get too political or whole thing, but
I do.

Speaker 4 (23:43):
Know that one thing that was said on a huge
drop or whatever that I did pay attention to is
that everything we're watching is there, you know, and that
and that's really how I'm starting to feel.

Speaker 1 (23:54):
Because they're not imported. Yeah, exactly exactly.

Speaker 4 (24:00):
And you know, it's funny because like, let's just go
into the whole bud light thing, right, because that's the
newest thing, right. You know, it's funny because people don't
ask yourself questions like okay, and I'm just going to
go on the record, I don't give a damn if
you cut your dick off whatever you want to do.
As long as you're not hurting children or forcing yourself
upon nobody, I don't care what you do. And I
think that should be a principle of this you know podcast,

(24:22):
because really, I.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
Mean, do you care? I don't care, but I'm just
drawn a line at the children.

Speaker 4 (24:26):
Yeah, the same. But when you start shoving it down
our throats, it's a reason. And I'm thinking that that's
just this election schedule. You know, last election schedule, it
was a blacks and the whites and the blacks and.

Speaker 1 (24:37):
The cops fighting.

Speaker 2 (24:38):
Now it's yeah, yeah, it's a transsexual movement and let's
go after the right necks.

Speaker 4 (24:43):
Right, So let's do this to bud Light and then
Kid Rock all of a sudden pops up shooting bud
light bottles and cans with an assault right for a
machine gun. Nobody start to ask theirselves how the fuck
did he get it a machine gun? I mean, like,
that's not legal to own by a person. I don't

(25:05):
care if your celebrity or not. But nobody asked these questions.

Speaker 1 (25:08):
Man, they just don't.

Speaker 3 (25:09):
You can get permits, but it's just hard to believe
that somebody like Kid Rock would be able to obtain
a permit for something like that.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
But my whole point, like, I can go to there's
I live in Houston. There is four shooting ranges here that.

Speaker 4 (25:24):
You can actually go and shoot an actual machine gun,
and you have to have all kinds of background checks, this.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
That, and the other, not to mention to own it.
I'm sorry, but to me, Kid Rock does not seem
like the.

Speaker 4 (25:35):
Person that the government or the ATM is going to
give a machine.

Speaker 1 (25:39):
Gun to you. I mean's just to be honest, I
don't know.

Speaker 3 (25:42):
Look, it's funny you mentioned Kid I will say in
his defense, I have talked to a veteran that was
overseas deployed and he came on a USO tour, and
he said that Kid Rock was genuinely a really cool person.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
So I have no doubt at all.

Speaker 2 (25:59):
I have no doubt that My point of it is
is that O.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
Him to having one, he was probably one of the
ones I would want to have one in the end
of all things.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
You know, hundred percent. Man.

Speaker 4 (26:10):
I think my point, getting back to a sy off situation,
is that these celebrities, these people that we all seem
to worship, whether we like it or not, really, at
the end of the day, man, they don't own their name,
they don't know who they are, They own nothing, and
they're really controlled and can do whatever.

Speaker 2 (26:27):
They want to do.

Speaker 4 (26:28):
I mean, Leonardo DiCaprio of One People, of One Person
has been anti vaccinations pretty much as far as I
can remember, but all of a sudden, oh, let's all
get back. It's just been the same thing. And it's
so it's hard for me when I go back to
being like everything is theater. It's hard for me to
take anybody really serious besides you or people like me,

(26:52):
or people who are sitting back looking like man, you know,
you look at TV and you're being programmed. It's literally
called a television program and then you think about the
word television and it's tell a vision like you know,
it's like it's basically programming you.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
And that's how we're all ran every day.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
And you're guilty of it, and I'm guilty of it.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
We all started getting away from TV and then were.

Speaker 4 (27:14):
Happened, man social media, So it's not watching the news,
and now we're getting our news on social media, but
we're getting it means and funny shit that you know us.
So scyops are literally everywhere and we're living in a
world where we're just consumed by them.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
So I don't know, man.

Speaker 4 (27:30):
What's what's your take on celebrities and celebrity deaths and.

Speaker 1 (27:34):
Are they real? Are they not real?

Speaker 2 (27:35):
I mean, who knows.

Speaker 1 (27:38):
I think Kurt Kobine was killed. He did not shoot himself.
I know it's funny.

Speaker 2 (27:45):
We said thirty minutes and we're about to go down
this rabbit hole.

Speaker 3 (27:48):
Yeah, no, I'm cool with it. No, Look, man, the
truth of it is, celebrities is you. They get they
get plucked from from a really young, early impressionable age
and they get into a lifestyle and surrounded by individuals
that prey on them. Twenty four to seven and exploit
them and force them to undergo things that are are

(28:14):
truly horrific in order to obtain that of celebrity. And
you see glimpses into what they went through years later
in their life, with like Orlando Brown falling apart in
the streets, and you got all the like what has
Madonna done to herself?

Speaker 1 (28:34):
Like like, obviously these people have been through some stuff.
You know what, I knew.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
I'm with you on that, man.

Speaker 4 (28:41):
I think my thing is and this may be the
biggest conspiracy part of being because I have been black
people a little bit.

Speaker 2 (28:47):
I'm gonna be honest. My thing is simple. It's like,
my name is Ryan.

Speaker 4 (28:52):
I'm not gonna say him a last name, but let's
just say somebody offers me four million dollars to be
right right, So now I'm this right iszel person, I'm
doing everything, I'm famous, I'm rich whatever. Well, they can
control everything that Ryan Nizzle does, but Ryan is his
own person and has no.

Speaker 2 (29:14):
Control over his life anymore.

Speaker 4 (29:15):
So it's real easy for them to say, hey, man,
we need you to dine the correct because you're actually
technically worth more dead than you are alive. And then bam,
I'm dead, but I'm not really dead. I'm just living
on an island somewhere.

Speaker 1 (29:29):
You know what I mean, or whatever the case may be.

Speaker 4 (29:31):
So I don't know. I guess my whole point, I
know that seems a little out the box, but my
whole point is just like, is it really can we
really seem like, really take what these people are telling
us seriously?

Speaker 1 (29:44):
Because I mean, I know you, of.

Speaker 4 (29:47):
All people, because we talked about this before, a lot
of the stuff that we hear man just seems like
complete bullshit and we're able to beat through it.

Speaker 3 (29:55):
A lot of it is and it's given it, and
it's given to us like that for a reason, because
there's the vast majority of especially of Americans, that are
willing to believe it.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
They want to be.

Speaker 3 (30:05):
Told by TV, by phone that this is the way
it is. And it's all to keep us divided, because
if we're looking at each other, pointing our fingers at
each other, fighting each other for whatever reason, we're not
looking at them and scrutinizing them, and that we have

(30:25):
lost our way, like we have completely lost our way
as a people. Not just this, I mean this outseat,
you know, supersedes any nation country like us as a
global people have lost our way.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
Man.

Speaker 4 (30:38):
Oh yeah, and you know, I'm not sure we're going
to keep going or not. But if I can, yeah,
I'm here, brother, I'm here. If I can give an
example of how easy it is to be siod, if
I really want the people listening to really think about this.

Speaker 2 (30:54):
If you followed me on Facebook, if you know me
in real life, you know that my wife is.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
My absolute world.

Speaker 4 (31:01):
I am also in a biracial relationship. Well we have
she's the mother of my children. We cook together, we
lay together, we come together, we go to work together,
we do everything in the world together. And everything was fine.
Then twenty twenty hit, the big racial tension happened. Bro,
Even me and her were fighting like.

Speaker 1 (31:18):
It was that easy.

Speaker 4 (31:20):
It was so it was so easy to manipulate all
of us that even the person that I literally would
do anything in the world for, I was looking at
side eye like okay, well, you know, like even we
were fighting over Facebook posts and Twitter posts and just normal.

Speaker 2 (31:36):
Conversation every day, like it's that easy.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
And so I.

Speaker 4 (31:40):
Guess my only real point to that whole story is
that you're absolutely right. We are so divided and so
easily divided, and that all comes back around to a psio.
I'm not gonna say the man didn't really die. I'm
not gonna say it didn't happen the way it happened.
I will say it's a little weird that in the
middle of a pandemic he was killed by police officers

(32:00):
and people in the background were not wearing masks. But
that's either here nor there. But you know, during a lockdown,
so it did seem a little weird. I don't know
what what's your take on that.

Speaker 1 (32:11):
They're It's so.

Speaker 3 (32:16):
It's so hard to believe anything that you're presented with
at from any angle because everything has been just misconstrued
for dating all the way back to the the takeover
of the media.

Speaker 1 (32:33):
You know, we've never.

Speaker 3 (32:37):
Burg I guess, we've never been given one straight piece
of facts on the on the on the TV or
by the government. We've never been given anything straight. So
I just don't believe that anything that we see on
a screen can be taken as one fact because it's

(32:58):
out there by their will, you know what I'm saying,
Like they permit to be there, and if they permiss
it to be there, there's a reason they permis it
to be there and there's them went through this whole
phase during the pandemic where when podcasts were starting to
pop off and get stupid mad popular, you had people

(33:18):
getting banned for literally speaking the truth that is coming
out now on the TV as truth. But when they
were seeing it back then, they were losing their careers
over saying stuff that the media is saying now. And
it's just that that alone should let you know that
you can't trust anything they say.

Speaker 1 (33:38):
Well, yeah, especially like and as far as these these
mass shootings or whatever goes the.

Speaker 3 (33:48):
You know, when when the people that they put on
TV can be proven to be lying on the microphone
about huge facts about you know, huge part you know,
pieces of factual information according to them about what happened,
and you can prove it without a doubt to be false.

Speaker 1 (34:08):
How can you ever take anything and say that's what happened.

Speaker 4 (34:12):
Well, I'm actually glad you brought that up, man, because,
like you said, you said that the things that you know,
certain people were talking about and then are starting to
come to fruition now. And even though it's been talked
about at a nauseum, it doesn't matter now because the
syop has rated its course.

Speaker 2 (34:30):
It doesn't matter. The syop was not meant to have
a repercussion.

Speaker 4 (34:36):
The syop was meant to push an agenda, and once
the agenda is pushed, it over with.

Speaker 2 (34:42):
It doesn't matter now. If Hunter Baden's Last Type is real,
if Not eleven was an.

Speaker 4 (34:45):
Inside job, if COVID was fake, None of it matters now,
because what are we gonna do about it.

Speaker 2 (34:51):
We all fell for it. We all went for it
at the time.

Speaker 3 (34:55):
So I will say, I don't know, if you've heard
Joe Biden's comments recently about how another pandemic is coming,
I have a hard time believing that they'll get away
with something as big.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
As COVID again.

Speaker 3 (35:07):
I don't think that the majority of the American public
to turn belly up a second time.

Speaker 4 (35:14):
I think it's very important. I think you're absolutely right, man.
I think it's one of those situations where they're on
their you know, like Sam Tripley says, like Ryan from
names Full says, like our boys over at COEC they
shout out, like they say.

Speaker 2 (35:27):
I don't think they're winning, bro, I don't. I don't
think they're winning anymore.

Speaker 4 (35:31):
I think they're out of They're out of options, they're
out of ideas.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
I don't think.

Speaker 4 (35:36):
I just I think we're at a point where everyone,
even even my wife, friends at work, so on and
so forth, my mother, who is anti conspiracy, even they're
all looking back like, I don't know, bro, you know
what I mean, Like that's how everybody kind of feels
right now. And I think that, you know, at the
end of the day, I think all this really did
was united US. But at the end of the day,

(35:57):
the damage is also done because I look at all
the money this went to Ukraine, look at all the
look at all the money.

Speaker 2 (36:03):
That they were able to get out of these past
three years.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
Yeah, they they.

Speaker 2 (36:08):
That's where the socyle has printed money.

Speaker 1 (36:11):
Yeah, dude, paper through a machine and called it good.
Yeah there was what was it? What was it?

Speaker 4 (36:18):
A for of all the money printed in all of
history has been in the last two years.

Speaker 1 (36:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (36:26):
I just heard that in the three years of every
piece of paper currency in circulation ever has been existed.

Speaker 1 (36:37):
Just that. It's insane, man, It's insane.

Speaker 3 (36:42):
And you would think that with that kind of money
we would have actually seriously fixed American infrastructure, like we
notoriously in Mississippi County where I'm at have the worst
infrastructure in the state that I know of. Like it's
it's like talking about when you cross the county line

(37:03):
you run into potholes type deal. You would think that
with that money, we wouldn't have infrastructure problems, we wouldn't
have homeless problems, we wouldn't have three four dollars gallon gas,
we wouldn't have inflation out at least if we did,
we'd have more to show for it. But instead it
all went to some even bigger syop in Ukraine. We're

(37:27):
just because that that a good chunk of this money
has landed directly into Vladimir's Lensky and his general's pockets.

Speaker 4 (37:37):
You gotta think about it then, And it's not funny publicly,
Yeah it's not. It's not funny, But dude, let's let's
just revert everyone back to TikTok the Ghost of Kiev.
I mean, on bro, that is a syop, That's what
I'm talking about. And people think that like, oh, no,
this is just something random.

Speaker 1 (37:56):
Person putting that shit.

Speaker 2 (37:57):
No, dude, the government is putting that ship out.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
Was from call of duty, bro. It call of duty.

Speaker 2 (38:03):
Yeah, that's why what I.

Speaker 1 (38:07):
Said earlier if you know their name, they don't have
power exactly.

Speaker 3 (38:11):
And that's that there's another level of people behind the
scenes that are pulling the strings and and and they're
people like Lensky.

Speaker 6 (38:20):
Zelensky's literally a TV star. Oh yeah, yeah, he's a
he's Europe Ukraine. Come on, yeah, it's been it's been
referred to.

Speaker 1 (38:31):
He's done.

Speaker 4 (38:32):
He's a he's a huge cocaine head with whatever, like
hanging you know, drug shaing, nobody do your thing.

Speaker 2 (38:37):
The dude is literally like a Saturday Night Life star from.

Speaker 4 (38:42):
Ukraine, like he's an actor, just like a lot of
the people that it's just all a big show man.

Speaker 1 (38:47):
But what I was going to say a while ago, and.

Speaker 4 (38:50):
How easy a sigh off is to refer to go
back to that is in two thousand and five, I
got out of the old field side.

Speaker 1 (38:57):
I was in cell cars, right.

Speaker 4 (38:58):
So boom, I'm a cell car. The first day they
brought in some dude that sold Ferraris.

Speaker 1 (39:05):
He was like world renowned or whatever, and he told me.

Speaker 4 (39:08):
He said, how I said, how easy is it to
change someone's mind when they're saying no all the time,
you're trying to get them to say yes.

Speaker 1 (39:17):
You know to sell a car. I try that my wife.
It doesn't work or whatever.

Speaker 4 (39:22):
Anyway, so he was like, dude, if somebody walks in
the door and one person walks up and says, hey, Hank, like,
you don't you feel.

Speaker 1 (39:31):
Very well today?

Speaker 2 (39:31):
Are you good, You're gonna be like, Oh, I'm fine,
I'm fine.

Speaker 1 (39:35):
You know what I mean.

Speaker 4 (39:35):
I'm good.

Speaker 1 (39:35):
You're going to be your day. Well.

Speaker 4 (39:37):
Then at eleven o'clock, somebody walks up to you and says, hey, Hank, man,
you let you don't feel very well, bro, Like you're
you're kind of looking a little flush.

Speaker 1 (39:46):
Are you good? No, man, I'm good, but I'm starting
to feel a little rough. And then okay, well, then.

Speaker 2 (39:51):
One of conrolls around.

Speaker 4 (39:53):
Somebody else walks up to you says, Hank, bro like,
you look like you feel like shit, Like.

Speaker 1 (39:57):
You should probably go home.

Speaker 2 (39:59):
By one thirty, you're sick, dude.

Speaker 1 (40:01):
You're going home.

Speaker 4 (40:03):
It's that easy for people to influence you. Three separate
people came up to you at three separate times and
told you that you look like you didn't feel well,
and by one thirty you've convinced yourself that you're sick.

Speaker 1 (40:15):
Dude. The mind is that powerful.

Speaker 4 (40:17):
It's that powerful, man, it's that powerful. But what's even
more powerful is somebody else's mind over you.

Speaker 1 (40:24):
So I don't know, I don't really know. It's it's
just it. We're in a weird We're in a weird era. Man.

Speaker 4 (40:30):
I'm sure we could have been a little more detailed
about sciops throughout history.

Speaker 2 (40:33):
But I think the fact that we just kind of
went back.

Speaker 4 (40:35):
And forth about real life and how easy it is
to influence you or me or anybody else. I think
it or I hope it should speak to somebody, because
I mean, we got to link up.

Speaker 3 (40:46):
Man.

Speaker 4 (40:46):
I know people say we're in the age of Awakening.
I know that me and you were going to get
spiritual eventually. We've already talked about that. But I think
for right now, I think it's really just about stupidity
and just listening to what's being told to you.

Speaker 1 (41:00):
The willingness to accept a narrative. Yeah, the cognitive all
is this, that's all.

Speaker 3 (41:07):
It is not wanting to stand out and do the
hard part, which is for yourself. You just want to
be told because it's easy to be told. It's it's
it's really hard to look at the world around you.
And realize everything's foobar, you know what I'm saying, And
living constantly in a world where you see the evil,

(41:27):
malicious acts being played, you know why certain things are happening.
You know, it's a lot easier to go back to
that ignorance, that that sheep state and just put your
head back in your phone and keep going.

Speaker 4 (41:41):
Man, well yeah, because I mean that's what we're We
go to school for eight hours every day to indoctrinate
us for an eight hour day.

Speaker 1 (41:50):
At work exactly.

Speaker 2 (41:51):
That's literally a long we goes. So, I mean, you know,
if a teacher ever willed a TV into your class
room to show you.

Speaker 4 (42:01):
Something going on, it was a It wasn't that she
was trying to sigh off you or the principal was
trying to sig off you.

Speaker 2 (42:09):
It's somebody up top of the school board.

Speaker 1 (42:12):
Who's up there? Top? And up top? Did y'all have
Channel one? And y'all? Yeah.

Speaker 3 (42:19):
I remember I was in class the morning of nine
to eleven and we were sitting there going through a test.

Speaker 1 (42:26):
I'm not lying, I'm not making this up.

Speaker 3 (42:28):
I remember, man, we were taking a test and the
TV's turned on and I didn't know it, but the
TV TVs turned on everywhere across the nation and it
was broadcasting nine to eleven live.

Speaker 1 (42:38):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, Like what is that? Man?

Speaker 4 (42:42):
What not to not to show my age here? But bro,
I watched the Challenger blow up live on TV when
I was in like second grade. Yeah, they brought they
brought the damn TV into the rooms for us to
watch it.

Speaker 2 (42:59):
So they about that what you just said, Everything we
watched Challenger, O. J.

Speaker 4 (43:04):
Simpson Trial, not eleven. All those things are broadcast.

Speaker 2 (43:08):
In our free shaking classrooms.

Speaker 1 (43:10):
Why yeah, man, yeah, why? I mean I.

Speaker 2 (43:15):
Wasn't seeing other things like you know, Tupat.

Speaker 1 (43:19):
Being killed or any of those things.

Speaker 2 (43:21):
We weren't watching that, But we had to watch these
big events.

Speaker 3 (43:25):
You think about all the cartoons that were available to
us in the late eighties and through the nineties and
in the early two thousands, and you look at it
now that we're like, you know, twenty thirty years down
the road from that stuff.

Speaker 1 (43:36):
You'd go back and you watch it again and you're
just like Jesus christ.

Speaker 3 (43:40):
Man, how did only the innocence of a child can
can watch this and not catch on to it? Because
as soon as you lose your innocence in life. You
look at that stuff and you see it for what
it is, and that's a programmers.

Speaker 1 (43:55):
All man for a long time.

Speaker 4 (43:56):
Man, well you know it's your subconscious man, it's it's
what you don't realize what you are.

Speaker 1 (44:04):
Paying attention to and what.

Speaker 4 (44:05):
You learn until you're older and you look back, and
now it's too late. And dude, and by the way,
for the listeners, whoever does decide to listen to this,
and nobody does decide to listen to me and Hanklin
just going on and on.

Speaker 1 (44:18):
I promise you have this conversation every day.

Speaker 4 (44:20):
But this is the actual first time in two and
a half hears that we've ever spoke. And we've been
baseball card buddies for a while and we've been talking
back and forth for a long time in a group chat.

Speaker 1 (44:31):
We just decided to do this and do this together.

Speaker 2 (44:33):
But man, me and you, I have a feeling that
we can go on for hours hours.

Speaker 1 (44:38):
So a lot of a lot of good content is coming.
I promise you. Which we perfect this ship.

Speaker 2 (44:44):
Bro, We're gonna take it to the top of the game.

Speaker 1 (44:48):
I think for a first episode, we do too bad
for the first time here and trying this out. You know,
the only way we can go is up.

Speaker 5 (44:55):
A too bad man inst little money in it and
get some get some better equipment so we can upgrade
our audio and stuff and get some more capabilities and
and you know what, you know, just just the average
listener who does listen, you may hear some ads in

(45:16):
the future.

Speaker 2 (45:17):
I can promise you that we are not going to
get rich off of this.

Speaker 1 (45:21):
I know that for a fact.

Speaker 2 (45:22):
But as far as like Patreon and paywalls and all that,
I don't know where we're gonna go with all that.

Speaker 4 (45:28):
But I do know that for right now, for the
next foreseeable future, we're just gonna go off the top.

Speaker 1 (45:33):
Of the dome and just see where we go.

Speaker 4 (45:35):
But I do know that, Uh, this conversation is not over,
and I like a lot of the things you said,
and I think that we have to go back and
get into what conversation we're gonna have next. But we're
gonna do something me and Hankoff talked about. It's a
little bit different than everybody else is doing. We're gonna
let you guys tell us what you want us to research.

(45:56):
I think that's pretty cool because I mean, how many
times you click on a podcasts and you hear what
they're talking about or they want to talk about, Like
we're gonna just kind of go back and forth to
spitball this and we're all just gonna kind of blue
collar it together.

Speaker 1 (46:09):
And that's cool with you, big dog. Oh yeah, for sure.

Speaker 3 (46:13):
You know, whatever topics anybody wants us to take a
deep dive into.

Speaker 1 (46:17):
I'm more than willing to do that.

Speaker 3 (46:19):
You know, I think opening it up here with sobs
kind of opens the door to go in any kind
of way anyone wants to go into it, because it's
all gonna.

Speaker 1 (46:31):
You know what I'm saying this all spider facts off stop.

Speaker 3 (46:34):
So anybody wants to hear something specific, whether it be
are we living on a flat earth?

Speaker 1 (46:39):
Or you know, was not eleven faight? Was it a
missile that hit the one?

Speaker 4 (46:45):
You know, because I can't wait to get into that one, Dude,
I can't wait.

Speaker 3 (46:50):
I kind of hope somebody chooses ben Ghazi. I would
love to do a deep dive into the ben Ghazi
situation with killery Clinton.

Speaker 1 (47:00):
Uh, that would be that would be good.

Speaker 3 (47:03):
You know, there's a lot of different ways people can
go in and will definitely do any.

Speaker 4 (47:11):
Suggestion before we Yeah, what he just said is one
hundred percent before we get off of here. Man, my
last point, I have something that I want you to
look into. This is gonna be way left field, bros.

Speaker 1 (47:23):
So be ready for this.

Speaker 2 (47:25):
So I am be recovering at it.

Speaker 4 (47:29):
I'm just gonna be honest with that, like, I don't,
I don't care, and I'll reference it.

Speaker 1 (47:32):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (47:33):
I don't give a shit because I'm good now.

Speaker 4 (47:36):
The the uh, the the meth infetanine and the porn
and how that all goes together, and the fact that
our children are being placed on embetanines and poorness are readily.

Speaker 2 (47:49):
Available is something that I think we can dive into.

Speaker 4 (47:51):
At some point because there's got to be there's got
to be a relationship between the over sexualization of kids.

Speaker 1 (47:58):
Well, it just off the surface.

Speaker 3 (48:01):
I know that it messes with the It literally rewires
your brain. So that's definitely something we'll we'll take a
deep dive into.

Speaker 1 (48:09):
Cool. Yeah, cool, just awesome. I think this is awesome. Man.
I really had a good time with this, and.

Speaker 4 (48:17):
You know, we were so nervous and we just we're good, man,
We're good.

Speaker 3 (48:22):
Yeah, this is gonna be something that I that I
have a lot of fun with man.

Speaker 1 (48:27):
I love that I'm doing it with you.

Speaker 4 (48:29):
Sane man, same same man. Get this point, I don't know, like,
do you hang up first? Will I hang up first?
Do I say I love you? Do you say I
love you?

Speaker 1 (48:39):
I don't really know where you go from.

Speaker 3 (48:40):
I'm gonna hit I'm gonna hit this stop button, but
I don't think it's going to disconnect us. So until
next time, everybody, we appreciate you much love, Thank you
for having us
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