Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
In a world of uniparty politics, Americans are not seeing
the fascism is not bearing to the left or the right,
but a corporate endeavor to control policy for self enrichment
and aggrandizement to non existent issues, to socially condition the
masses for global influence and control.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
This is today's new ward order. We the people are
not happy with it. This is America Talks.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
Hello everyone, and welcome to America Talks. It's been a
while since we've been on here. We've had a little
bit of a hiatus because mister Greg Toller's had some
personal business to take care of. So we took a
little time off and Aj here was nice enough to
step in and to fill in for Greg, and so
we thought we'd fire back up and get things rolling.
(01:22):
So when Grag comes back, things will be just rolling
right along. How you doing there, aj, I am doing
just fine, doing just fine. Okay. So we're waiting for
a guest to come in. Mike Ferris is running for
US Senate out of the great State of Kentucky's attempting
to fill Mitch McConnell seats. So as soon as he
(01:42):
gets in in here, we'll we'll get into some good
and deep conversation with Mike. In the meantime what we
got going on. I saw something about Taulca gaber I
couldn't verify it, but so speculatively speaking, Taulca Gabert supposedly
released some declassified information that Barack Obama was and I
(02:05):
think I've heard this before. He knew that Barack Obama
had ordered that Trump should be taken out. He didn't
say the word assassinate or killer or anything like that,
but if I remember correctly, he ordered that he should
be taken out for the interest of national security. Do
you hear anything about that?
Speaker 4 (02:26):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (02:26):
Yeah, I've been following that to the tea.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
And to say that Americans want to see Barack Obama
prosecutor right now is probably a yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:37):
I'm off for Obama for prison. I think that's a
great campaign. I didn't care much for the man, he
just I didn't like him when he was running. I
thought he was fake, he was phony, and it was
gonna be the destruction of the United States. And he's
proven that he pretty much wants to change his country,
(02:58):
make it more of a socialist last communist nation, and
put his bright on the path for it, and I'm
pretty sure Biden was his third term.
Speaker 5 (03:08):
Indeed, no doubts.
Speaker 3 (03:10):
There looks like Trump is demanding Kamala, Beyonce and Oprah
be prosecuted. What do you think that's about.
Speaker 4 (03:23):
Hm, the fact that he's mentioning those three names and
woman man Beyonce.
Speaker 3 (03:32):
Starting he wants, all right, this makes sense. President Trump
demanded that former Vice president Kamala Harris. I can't believe
she was ever anything close to being vice president. I
can't believe she was ever a senator. How ridiculous. But anyway,
former Vice President Kamala Hears be prosecuted along with Beyonce,
Oprah Winfrey and now was sharpened for fees that were
(03:53):
paid to the stars during the twenty twenty four election.
And if anybody recalls, they were given absorbent amounts of
money to campaign for or stand up for Kamale ears
to be the next president of the United States. And
it turns out that that was I believe, was in
illegal expenditure of campaign funds or was it just being
(04:14):
steamed and seen as fraudulent to the American people because
these people were insincere about their endorsements.
Speaker 4 (04:23):
I'd say you you're pretty consistent on that. I just
got a text from Mike. So the reason why Mike's
actually running a little bit late right now is that
he is currently in Australia right now and they just
underwent a time change that he hadn't had factored in.
So over there right now, it's ten am, but it's
(04:47):
takingally nine to fifteen now because the time change they have,
So that's what's having a factor in right now.
Speaker 5 (04:53):
And he so, yeah, he had to plan around that.
Speaker 6 (04:58):
Wow.
Speaker 5 (04:58):
So if he's a little bit jack right, I only know.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
Whow that got him?
Speaker 6 (05:02):
All right?
Speaker 3 (05:02):
So yeah, so Trump is claiming that those campaign fees
were illegal. You are not allowed to pay for an endorsement,
and it's totally illegal to do so. Can you imagine
what would happen if politicians start paying for people to
endorse them? All hell would break out. I think they've
been doing that for a lot of years. I don't
know about you, but I'm pretty over in a day.
(05:23):
But he's got a good point because it's fraudulent, it's misrepresenting.
And I always wonder now because I see Eminem come
on and I'm like, and I like some of Eminem's music,
But now I'm kind of like, I don't want to
hear that trash, you know, after e after he was
on stage with Obama playing around like you know, yeah
that they there were buddies and stuff. I'm just like, yeah,
(05:47):
I think he's a leftist nut job and his music
just seems to lose meaning when you start seeing him
that way. So yeah, that's kind of interesting. What else
we got here for these while we're waiting things to cover? Geez,
oh man five hours ago and illegal my immigrant from
(06:09):
Els Ealvador has been sitting us to life in prison
for the brutal killing of a West Virginia woman whose
burned body was discovered under a couch along a roadside.
Speaker 5 (06:20):
Oh God help us all.
Speaker 3 (06:23):
I don't know if I got to go into those
details on that one. I think that just spoke for itself.
But forty seven year old David called her him was
sintince Wednesday in Jefferson County. Took a court after pleading
guilty under the Elford plead to the murder of a
thirty two She's only thirty two. Thirty two year old
Samantha Daily, so an Elford plea allows defendite to maintain innocence.
(06:46):
So I guess it's like a no contest plea where
he can't make a case or a defense, so he
just pleads no contest sort of thing. Wow, So let's
see at Cardon was sentenced to life in prison with
possibility pro after fifteen years. So I guess it's all
we need to know about that one. Otherwise it's just entertaining.
(07:11):
Hey do you hear about this? I saw some video
on it. I don't know if you ever heard this
infidel global globalization of infidel or something like that. And
so they're calling for Infidah means what does it mean?
That infanda means uprising, I think, And it's not calling
(07:34):
for this globalization of infidel where you attack people who
support Israel or institutions that support Israel and stuff like that.
And I don't know, I don't remember if this was
connected to it, but two white victims beaten by Bobby Cincinnati.
Shocking footage captured a woman getting knocked out cold with
(07:57):
a punch to the face. I don't know if you
remember the knockout back of the nineties and early two
thousand and I think it's something that still exists today.
But apparently they're doing this now while they were not.
They were punched to the face during a violent brawl
on the Cincinnati street, and police have vowed to track
down the violent thug seen in the viral clip. The
(08:20):
flight broke out the heart of downtown Cincinnati and Friday night,
with a white man and woman appearing to be relentlessly
targeted by a group of largely black assailants. It remains
unclear what sparksan, but witnesses told WXIX that one of
the groups made racial comments before the blow started, though
it is also unclear who the initial aggressors were, so
(08:40):
they were doing this as a knockout game. Places like
New York City and stuff. A lot Jewish people got targeted,
and that that's why I brought this up. As Oh,
Mike says, hello, jents, Sorry for the delay, just looking
for you. Get in here as soon as you can, Mike.
But you know, when you get a chance, I know,
it's kind of difficult because you weren't you weren't expecting
to be called so soon. So but yeah, but there's
(09:02):
also this thing. I don't see any articles on it
right now, but yeah, global globalization of infantol or something
like that and they want same sort of thing. They
want to target people who support Israel. And you should
have been given a link, Mike, did aj give you
a link to get in here? And maybe Greg, if
(09:27):
you could help Mike out with the link, that would
be great.
Speaker 4 (09:33):
Yeah, let's say I send him the lake. It's the
top one on that on that message.
Speaker 3 (09:39):
You must I've been I wonder if he was traveling.
Was he traveling?
Speaker 2 (09:42):
And it just hit like.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
Yeah, and I'm like, oh, yeah, geez, yeah, well that's
nice thing to be willing to do this when he's
been traveling stuff. Yeah, it should be the top link
you were giving you to just click on it. It
should bring into a back room. You can set your
microphone and camera up and then when you're ready, just
(10:06):
join us and we'll bring you in after you do. So, yeah,
he's checking it out now. So there's a lot of
nutty stuff going on in the news.
Speaker 4 (10:25):
Speaking of nutty, so this has been one of the
attention getters that we've been having the deal with. I
know that Greg actually hasn't mentioned right here. So supposedly
Andy Basheer, the governor of Kentucky, is considering running for president.
To me, that'd be the biggest joke of a lifetime.
(10:46):
The man's hardly known outside the state of Kentucky right now.
He was very, very opinionated on how COVID was held
because he shut down the entire state. During COVID, we
had the second highest employment right and the only one
that topped us was Hawaii.
Speaker 3 (11:06):
Hawaii.
Speaker 5 (11:07):
Yep.
Speaker 3 (11:08):
Oh wow. All right, So let's bring in our guests,
mister Mike Ferris.
Speaker 6 (11:16):
How you doing, Mike, Hello, Jim doing good yourself?
Speaker 3 (11:19):
Good, good, Good to see you come in here. I'm
gonna pass over to AJ because he knows you better
than I do, and let him start the discussion.
Speaker 4 (11:28):
Okay, Hey, Mike, So we obviously know that you are
running for a Senate right now for Mitch McConnell's seat
of the hall seats. A little bit of background for
everybody out there watching right now.
Speaker 6 (11:42):
All right, Yeah, my name is Michael Parris. I'm from Elizabethtown, Kentucky.
I was born in Port in Indiana about five days
before Christmas, at about two and a half months old.
My biological mother had kind of let me off with
the guy she was dating there in Need County, which
led me into the Social services system that landed me
(12:04):
in Hardin County and then ultimately ended in me being
a foster child from that age until I was about
three and a half years old. So I was with
that foster family for roughly three years, and then obviously
the state let the biological mother get me back, which
was obviously kind of a bad scenario where I would
(12:27):
live the next nine years of my life and kind
of I guess call it poormental hell from different issues
and stuff with that individual and the people that she
associated with. Nonetheless, at twelve, I was able to basically
get semi adopted or what they call a parental guardianship
by that same family at twelve years old, and I'd
(12:50):
basically gotten enough trouble there in kind of southern Indiana
and northern Louis was an adolescent that raised enough hell
that they were going to try to put me in
a boys home kind of, so you know, I made
the suggestion that hey, you know what if we tried
this route, and the probation officers you know, were definitely
for the idea. So luckily we were able to handle
it that way. Stayed with that family until I was eighteen.
(13:13):
Those are the people that I still call Mom and
Dad did this day. We raised Hey and tobacco on
their farm out in Sonora as well as well as
other small crops, but the two large drops was Hey
in tobacco. At at eighteen years old, I joined the
Air Force as a helicopter repairman for the helicopter that
you see in the back back there. That's an H
(13:34):
sixty Black Hall helicopter for those that don't know. And
so was school trained on that machine in the Air Force,
went and did some time in Iceland and England with
the US Air Force. Had some contractual issues with my
government and decided that civilian life was going to be
what was best for me. So I got away from
the Air Force, returned to civilian continued this career with
(13:57):
this machine that you see behind me over the next
twenty years basically, and in twenty twenty two I created
my own company called Prime Hawks, where we service, repair, modify,
consult and acquire these aircraft for civilian customers globally. So
(14:18):
as we're speaking now, I'm in Australia with a customer mind. Here,
this one's get a little bit of maintenance that needs
to be done that as far has some specialized tooling
and skill. And then I've got a couple teams of
men in Texas right now breaking one aircraft down, finalizing another,
and then possibly some mechanics going to Billings to get
(14:39):
some parts from a scrapbird down there. But yeah, so
this is a very dynamic career that I'm in. But
that's a little bit about me right now. So we're
doing a lot of work across the globe, Canada, Australia,
looking to open up the doors to Portugal, Chile, and
possibly Norway in the near future. Percussion that are going
(15:00):
to use this aircraft as a tool for wildland fire
utility construction, whether that be power line construction, you know,
erecting ski resorts or putting air conditioners on high rises. So,
without further ado, that's kind of a little bit about me.
If you guys are interested in any other component of
what we spoke about, just let me know what I
can go into further detail. But that's the short and
(15:22):
long of it, like like I like to call it.
Speaker 5 (15:26):
Well, that's good to know, Mike.
Speaker 4 (15:29):
So let's go ahead and point out some star war
questions here about your campaign. I know that well, obviously
you're running for the man that's referred to as the
turtle here in Kentucky run against. So among those candidates
that you're running against, I know that two of them
are out right known for being mitchipalcconnell's boys, and that
(15:49):
is Daniel Cameron and Andy Barr. So with that in mind,
what's your opinion on some of your other competitors in
this race?
Speaker 5 (15:59):
So to speak?
Speaker 6 (16:01):
Well, look, I mean I don't always like to sling mud,
and what I've told a lot of folks, you know,
when speaking about these opponents of mine, what I'd like
to do is speak, you know, more factually on whatever
it is that they got going on with their campaigns
or their history. Right, So let's just go with Andy Barr.
I think like a fifty seven percent voting record in
the Senate for conservative score and so obviously we don't
(16:25):
need that in the Senate looking to be another forty
year run until he becomes see now like Mitch McConnell.
And then as far as Daniel Cameron, I mean, I'll
be honest with you, I didn't run for governor because
he did, and I was putting my faith in the
fact that he was going to win. And so now
his joining in this race almost immediately. You know, it
(16:48):
kind of made me feel eerie about his chances of winning.
So I thought, well, you know, I would be all
right reading for him. But it's one of those things where,
you know, you say, if you want something done right,
you do it yourself kind of thing. So I can't
give him another chance to fail. You know. Whether that's
what he does or not, I don't know. But you know,
he was running a statewide governor race that he ended
(17:10):
up losing, and then now he wants one to send
him to Washington, d C. And I just don't have
faith in it. I mean, I think he has a
lot of support and he has his own base, albeit
I think he went through a political slaughter in Louisville
over some issues there several years ago that we all
probably know very well about now. As far as date Morris,
(17:30):
simply put, I think the guy is just very fake.
I think he's propped up in a way by somebody
in the establishment. That's my opinion, because he comes to
us as this self made billionaire that was you know,
single mother childhood, and then kind of gloats that he
had it tough, and so you know, that to me
(17:51):
is very outputting, because if you want to see tough,
I can show you tough and give you stories of
what a tough childhood is like, you know, just to
have a single mother's situation because maybe your dad wasn't
the greatest guy and didn't stick around. That's a little
different than actually going through hard times. And like I said,
if any of that, discussions need to be more more
and glad to go into detail about it. But then
(18:13):
on top of that, he's got a lot of very
liberal policies that he enacted in that Rubicon Global As
far as of understanding, I think he's kind of stepped
away from that now and he's just dealing with Morris
Industries or whatever. But the thing is, the man had
an opportunity during a very you know, rough period of
time for Americans and especially Kentuckians dealing with COVID lockdowns,
(18:37):
mask mandates, bax mandates, you name it, to stand up
and kind of look the people in the eye and say, hey, look,
I'm going to go to that for you, whether you
work for my you know, corporate company, or whether you're
just a citizen in the state who needs a voice
from a guy who's got a little bit of power.
But if you trace the guy back to his you know,
(18:58):
twenty first year of life, you know, he's very already
invented with McConnell. He's already fundraised for him. He's done,
you know, he's raised so much money. Mcconnald's already basically
you know, told him how proud he was of him
and his ability to bring money to the Republican table
for Mitch McConnell up there, Uh, and then other folks alike,
(19:20):
and then the supporting of Nicky Haley over Trump. You know,
obviously I don't think that's what Kentuckians are looking for
or even want. So I mean, look, maybe I'm wrong
about the guy. You know, maybe somebody has a change
of heart. He's a you know, turned to leap or whatever.
But I mean, with those liberal policies being so deeply embedded,
uh in his company, I mean that to me is
(19:41):
just it's a huge red flag. And I think there's
some other folks that are thinking the same way. Now.
I've been told by one of uh, Nate Morris's kind
of closest supporters that you know, Nate has told this
gentleman that he respects me and my story and uh,
you know, uh takes pity on the fact that you know,
I was raised rough in the state of Kentucky. But
(20:03):
for me, I mean, if the dude is a man,
my number is a matter of public record, he can
reach out to me and on his own accord explained
to me why you know, he had those policies in
place to promote BLM, to promote the LGBTQ community, and
then of course to advocate for his employees to receive
(20:23):
vaccination just next in line after medical, medical, medical workers
and first responders. So and we all know what's happened
with the vaccine. Now there's so much data that's come
out saying that basically the ones that they called conspiracy
theorists were true. You've got worms in people's blood, You've
got mile charditis, you have this, you know, predominantly in
(20:45):
the aviation community with airline pilots, and you're seeing you know,
basically tragedy after tragedy with folks basically passing out behind
the yoke of an airplane carrying two hundred passengers or more.
And it was just, you know, one of the great
atrocities ever kind of pushed on the American people outside
of some other items that happened about seventy or maybe
(21:07):
eighty years ago. So as for my opinion of those individuals, Listen, personally,
I have no problem with those guys, but I don't
think that they're the type of gentlemen that we need
from the state of Kentucky representing us, especially for the
next forty years, if that's what they plan to do,
because from what I can tell, none of them have
even so much as spoke about term limits, which is
(21:29):
another thing that we really need to look into putting
forward in the state, and then of course obviously moving
on up to the federal government. So again, without further ado,
if there's nothing that you want more in detail, that's
kind of my inter nutshell opinion of the other three
opponents that are the major players, if you will.
Speaker 4 (21:50):
All right, Mike, I understand that you've had your agreementances
with the court system these last few years, that you've
actually won a few court cases. Carry to explain what's
been going on, I know has had something to do
with your cup, correct, So I.
Speaker 6 (22:10):
Don't know which exact one ye're referring to. I did
have situate Give me one second, yeah, get I did
have one lawsuit that come against me in the state
of California. We had a customer that basically didn't pay
his bill on some services. Uh, and that resulted in
us losing about a half a million dollars one second, Yeah,
(22:36):
lost about a half a million dollars on that customer. Uh.
And then he sued us with some what I like
to call, you know, false allegation. So we went through that, uh,
you know, basically his lawyer and me. You know, I
tried my best not to hire lawyers of my pen
so I negotiated a deal where he was able to
pay less money to us and get out of the
(22:57):
whole deal and give him a couple of years to
it back. That gentleman ended up going to jail on
other white collar crimes within like six months of him
filing that lawsuit against our company. Anyway, and you know,
you know, due to the lawsuit, you know, kind of
I have to pretty much say, you know that the
matter is settled and I can't disclose any information about
that individual. So that's just the way that that stuff works.
(23:20):
On the federal government side, there was the mass mandate issue,
and basically, yeah, that's the one. Yes Okay, okay, well
there is some folks that know a little bit about
that one in our community. I didn't know if you'd
been able to dig that up or whatever. So but
then again, more than willing to speak on it, so
long as it doesn't implicate negativity to a certain individual
(23:44):
that's named in the lawsuit settlement. But anyway, so before
Biden became you know whatever you want to call him,
there in twenty twenty inside of our federal government and
enacted the FTMM, which was called the Federal Computation Map Mandate,
the airlines, on their own accord, had implemented some kind
of pourced masking on their passengers by you know, guidance
(24:08):
the direction of some medical quote unquote experts, right, And
so during that time, you know, I was able to
basically tell them, hey, look, I'm medically exempt. You know,
I can't wear a mask for long period of time,
which you know that that issue kind of stems to
some earlier childhood traumas. Like I told you in those
nine years that I was in some bad situations as
(24:28):
an adolescent. But I just can't wear masks, you know,
for long periods of times. And you know, to second
that I have a beard that doesn't allow any mask
on the planet to work against protecting me or any
others from a particulate that is zero point oh one microns.
So with that being said, he implemented the FTMM and
(24:52):
then that set the pace for the airlines to basically
try to flex, muscle and break the laws of obviously
the you know, federal laws of the DOT and then
the ACAA and then the a p A and you
know basically, uh, the Rehabilitation Act, all these different laws,
(25:12):
you know, from civil rights law language to basically constitutional
and state law violations. Right. So, initially I had sued
the TSA in the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals because
the TSA as an agency, you can't sort to suit
them in a district court because you really have no option.
(25:34):
You have no option to suit them in a district
court because you can't sue them monetarily. You can only
sue them on a policy change. Bowser, Come on, get.
Speaker 5 (25:43):
So you're dealing with a dog right now.
Speaker 6 (25:46):
Yeah, he's he's he's a stubborn kind of Madam wall
He's but he's a nice dog anyway. He just so
the TSA you can only sue for a policy change, right,
you cannot sue them monetorly. You can only basically say, hey,
look here's the law, you violated it. You must obey
the law, and by the way, you must reverse whatever
(26:07):
decision you have made. So in that case particularly, there
was a gentleman in DC, so that circuit obviously is
heavily liberal, that filed a case against the TSA for
the same issue. I think it would have been like
two months before I filed mine, and now like we
had something like twenty other coalition members that filed lawsuits
(26:30):
across districts, six or seven districts in the country. So
there's a US Code. It's kind of a funny written
language law that says, basically, if there are let's call it,
you know, two or more issues of the same issue
that go into a court of appeals action wherever the
(26:52):
first filed complaint lands, that it, you know, by law,
must be transferred to the initial basically appeals court. So
beings that this gentleman in DC was first, he was
he basically got to screwed over is what it is.
And I mean there's really no other way to explain it.
(27:13):
So by law, even the three panel judge in the
sixth Circuit, which handles like Kentucky, Indiana, Cincinnati, Ohio, or whatever.
In our sixth circuit there they can't even buy law
disclaim keeping that in that you know, jurisdiction because they
lose jurisdiction over the case. Right. So basically they shoved
this thing to d C, you know, those those liberal
(27:37):
judges Obama and basically I believe it was what other
past president was it that might have been a Bush
or a Clinton appointee. Those three panels, you know, all
appointed by basically either liberal judges or basically non America
(27:57):
first people. And so they basically shut the whole thing down.
Told us that basically the TSA had the right to
implement this FTMM under what they call a security directive,
which gives them the ability to just create this shit
out of thin era, out of the Patriot Act. Right,
So we lose that battle. But anyway, in following that lawsuit,
(28:18):
I think it was something like two days later, they
placed me on a terrorist watch list or you know,
people call it the Quiet Skies program, which is like
a QUADS system where you get flagged for being all
possible terrorist or whatever. They can They claim all day
that it's also at a random but it's really not
so anyway, I filed a motion in that sick circuit
(28:39):
while that while that case was open to be removed
from the list. Luckily they quickly removed me from it
because the judge kind of, I believe it seems that
he's like, hey, this is kind of a red flag,
you know. But outside of that, you know, I filed
a DHS rebuttal on the DHS website, which anyone can
do is placed on that list. Right, Well, here we are,
(29:01):
what is this? This is twenty twenty five guys. Uh,
this was all around twenty twenty one, twenty two, So
what are we three and a half four years removed
from this issue and a three letter agency that is
robbing and pilfering your government your tax dollar for a
government agency to be held up doesn't have enough time
to write me and say, hey, oh we're sorry, or hey,
(29:23):
here's an explanation. So it's a bunch of rubbish. It's
in togwash that this three letter agency even exists because
they don't do their job and they're definitely not responding
to folks who have issue with being targeted by them.
And this is even with the you know them having
a Koyad administration right now, where you know Christy Noam
(29:43):
and Telca Gabbard and Sean Duffies of these dot DHS
agencies could very easily go hey, mister Ferris, hey, look
we understand that your government attacked you during COVID. There's
a long list of yous and look we're going to
make every single one of them right. I've wrote them all.
Ran Paul knows about it. I've had many conversations with
him at length. In the beginning he wanted to help,
(30:05):
but now that it's not media spin, he could give
a shit less. And then not only that, I've got
a lawsuit in the Western District of Kentucky, which you know,
basically he says, oh, because you know it's in a
lawsuit now, there's nothing I can do whatever. And so nonetheless,
that's what your government's doing for you, because I also
have three, well thirteen DOT complaints out, which is what
(30:27):
the ACAA basically tells you can do if if basically
the airlines don't abide by non discriminatory law. Right, so
before I filed the CDC and five major airlines in
the Western District. After we lost the TSA battle, I
tried to obey the law, gave him a mass condemption
for my doctor, gave them the negativeuck COVID tests, followed
(30:50):
all their illegal policies and the rules that they made
up out of thin air, which the ACAA minds you
directly and very plainly says they cannot do against disabled
travelers in the nation's airspace. They've done it anyway, the
DOT allowed it. So that's why the DOT doesn't want
to respond because as soon as they give me an
answer supporting or denying to support me, now that gives
(31:15):
me even greater leg to stand on to tell the
court in the Western District, like, hey, look, there is
no statutory scheme in place. You've said, there's no private
right of action for a citizen of the United States
to sue a major corporation like the airline because they're
protected by the ACAA, which supposedly has this statutory scheme
in place where if they discriminate against the disabled, you
(31:36):
can file a complaint. They'll investigate the airline. If they
find the airline has done you broke the law, then
the DOT gets to find them on your behalf and
keep thirty thousand dollars per incident. So then again, I
also don't believe that's something that Congress would have wanted
or had in mind when dealing with protecting disabled traveler
(31:56):
and if they did add that in mind, they should
all be fired. So with that being said, that case
is still open in the Western District of Kentucky. It
just passed the motion to dismiss. Yes, I have basically
submitted that claim and followed that through without counsel. There's
about one hundred and eighty docket line items in there,
and so we're currently awaiting for a decision by Judge
(32:20):
Ben Beaton of what they call a motion for judgment
on the pleadings, which it doesn't appear that me is
going to stick. The Airline Council is basically, you know,
using jargon language and trying to you know, bounce the
ball back and forth across the tennis racket, and you know,
by themselves because they think that they weren't breaking the law. Well,
the lawyers know they broke the law. The lawyers know
(32:42):
the law, the airlines know the law. They did this
all on purpose, and then they're basically just trying to
turn around and point the finger at the Biden administration
and said, oh, they made us do it. Well, no, listen,
you could have very easily said, look, here's the law.
We have an obligation to look at this human based
on what the ACA language says, look at his medical
(33:03):
exemption that he's given us, look at him personally and
can plainly tell he's not sick and is no arm
to the passenger, and then let him ride with his disability.
But no, they oxtracized, targeted, demeaned, you name it over
almost a two year period. And I patronize these airlines,
(33:23):
you know, two to three times a month, if not more,
maybe five six times a month, depending on the scenario.
So I'm giving these guys a lot of money. Not
only that, they were bailed out by the taxpayer to
stay alive because they were all shutting the country down.
Guess what. They couldn't pay their mechanics, they couldn't pay
their pilots or flight attendants, they couldn't put fuel in
the planes. So what do they do. They turn around
(33:44):
to the pederal government and say, hey, we need help
because you shut the country down. So then they take
your taxpayer dollar. And then when you go to board
to playing the disability. It doesn't matter that you've bailed
them out. And it's basically a big fu middle finger
to your face and spit on you and say good
luck getting wherever you need to go to make a living.
And so no difference than American banned me from the
(34:06):
airline just for requesting a mask exemption. So you know,
those people need to be held accountable and no one's
gonna do that. They're gonna stand on TV and tell
you they are. But these politicians don't care. These problems
are not their problems. So the citizen read is our
job to make our problems their problems. And if they
will not make it them their problems, then we remove
(34:27):
those people when we put individuals in there that will
make it their problem and correct the situation.
Speaker 4 (34:37):
I will give you credit for putting on the boxing
gloves and going after them during COVID. I know a
lot of friends of mine that did so, and I
would say nine out of ten of them caught victories,
and that so well good, that's good.
Speaker 3 (34:51):
I'm kind of curious, did you contract contact the Office
of in General Inspector General.
Speaker 6 (34:58):
No, I didn't. I didn't contact the IG at all.
Because basically, from what I can tell, you know, climbing
the ladder per se of political debauchery, you got to
start kind of with the dot there with that specific situation,
(35:19):
and then pass that. You know, interestingly enough, when you
file this DT complain, even though the the lawyers will
tell you you have no private right of action to
suit these guys right in the automated DOT response, you know,
it will tell you, hey, we're going to investigate these
claims on your behalf, but just know that you may
not get the result that you want, so you're going
(35:42):
to likely have to litigate this on your own. It
says it right there plainly in the DT response. So
right now, that's what we're doing. We're litigating it. Unfortunately,
that just takes a very long time. You know, months
go by between any motions or approved denied anything, any
needle moves on the spectrum. Right So I would say
we're probably two weeks to a month removed from getting
(36:04):
some decision from this motion for judgment on the pleating.
I'd like to see how this plays out, Let them
all make their bed and how they're going to decide
whether they're going to follow the law or h they're
going to break the law as well. If they do that,
then yes, we'll elevate that beyond to maybe an appeal
sport decision, which would then go to the sixth Circuit
from the Western District asking for you know, you got
(36:26):
to kind of jump the line here and play the game.
So I'm going to battle this thing to the end
that these people think that they're going to, you know,
shut me up or kick me to the side. Good luck.
I'm already invested. I've spent all my own money. I've
got plenty to do it. I'm not worried about it.
So keep them coming. We'll keep the battling. It doesn't
matter to me.
Speaker 3 (36:45):
I love it. Yeah, I've been I've been trying to
contact the OG in the past, and it's pretty much
a fritless endeavor. You're You're right, it's I don't think
you get much out of it, if anything at all.
Speaker 6 (36:55):
If you did, it'll be an automated response that said, oh,
we're so sorry for your troubles, and sir, we hope
that everything can be No, I don't want that. I'm
coming for these folks. Heads. You know.
Speaker 3 (37:06):
Here is well, we're very very busy and we're shorthanded
where we have to prioritize our cases.
Speaker 6 (37:12):
So yeah, correct, yeah, yeah, been there, doesn't they?
Speaker 4 (37:17):
So, Mike, I do have another question that I know
is going to get people's attention. So you know as
well as I do. We've had just recently saw the
big beautiful bill pass and right now currently and the
DJ we're seeing issues with the Epstein files.
Speaker 5 (37:33):
Thomas Massey, as.
Speaker 4 (37:35):
You well know, has been very loud in his uh
criticism of the Trump administration and dealing with these issues.
Would you yourself vote with Thomas Massey and staying with
him and dealing with these issues.
Speaker 6 (37:50):
Yeah, let me take a sip of this water here.
I'll get into that for you. So, first of all,
I'm offending of these Epstein files. I'll tell you right now,
I don't know much about it. Here's what I've seen
on the media, which you know, basically I trust. What
(38:11):
I called arms Lend agreement is that basically there is
some list of these folks that were, you know, molesting
children on this island. Granted, we have a woman currently
sitting in prison supposedly for committing no crimes, right, so
we can we can say obviously there's some crime somewhere
(38:32):
there's a woman being you know, basically thrown in prison
toward at the moment is get Ozane Maxwell or whatever.
So to answer your question, I think what MASSI is
doing is honorable in basically trying to force the federal
government in telling us the truth because these folks like
to lie basically through their teeth every day, and they're
(38:53):
under the impression that the citizenry at mass can't handle
the truth and that they must suppress it, hide it,
not release it, make it a secret, whatever, and so
on the flip side of that, a part of me
is kind of glad that they're continuing to play the
game that they're playing because it's going to awaken more
(39:13):
folks who are going to say, hey, wait a minute.
You know, we've been watching this play out from the
quote unquote suicide in the prison of this gentleman that
we have grainy footage of and your ring doorbell camera
records better over a broken Wi Fi connection than a
maximum security prison, right, So that's a problem. So we
(39:34):
know something's not right there. There's a little bit of
smell of fish there. So this man supposedly kills himself
and then you have I hate to say it, Dan
Bongino and what's the other fella, Cash Fattel both went
basically to war with the Biden administration over the idea
that this man did not kill himself. And then now
(39:56):
all of a sudden, just a month ago or less,
both of the those gentlemen are one hundred and eighty
degrees from where they stood on principle on their podcast,
on other major podcasts of what they would do if
they got a hold of this administration. So you know,
it's all kind of fake and it looks bad. And
so I think what's happening is you have the folks
(40:16):
of this country and the state of Kentucky going, what
in the hell is going on? I mean, all of
the people that I trusted, which were very few and
far between at best already, are continually shrinking to a
minimum or nothing. And so yes, I think what Massey
is doing is honorable. I think if there is a
(40:38):
list and if there are people implicated on it, and
I listen, if Trump is on it, right, Trump has
got so much support through the nation that I feel like,
if the man is on it, but it's not malicious,
well then just release that. Just tell us what they hell,
the truth is, let us see it for ourselves and
say he look, yes he did visit the whatever this
(41:00):
this transaction they were whatever the case may be. But
don't be afraid to tell the truth at a moment
where basically the country is hanging on this idea of
wanting to hold child pedophiles, you know, accountable. I mean,
that's one of the, if not the most atrocious crimes
you can commit as a human being against a child
(41:22):
who's defenseless. And I mean that's even when you include
feevere you know, wartime, you know issues, or I mean
their children, they're defenseless, they have no idea, they're being manipulated,
they're being forced into this situation, sometimes being manipulated to
make them think that that's what life is about and
(41:42):
that it's comfortable and it should be this way. And
so you never go out for the most vulnerable. And
I'll just be honest with you. As a child has
an adolescent, I had my own fair share of abuses. Now,
not sexually. I wasn't sexually abused, take God, but I
was electrocuted as a six year old child. I was
(42:04):
drowned in basically scalding hot water and then sometimes even
ice cold water by my biological mother's husband at seven
eight years old, you know, for wedding the bed, for
being stressed in a home that you know, basically tore
my mind to pieces as a child, because I had
no guidance or structure. Right now, I don't live on that.
(42:25):
I don't have a victimhood mentality towards it. But if
I ever see that gentleman, I'd be hard pressed not
to put my hands on him. I haven't seen him
since those times. But it's a child right. At all costs,
we must protect the children of this nation. It doesn't
matter what your consequence is going to be. God will
(42:46):
see fit that you get out of that eventually, because
those are His children. And so if we're going to
allow one man to control a massive group of child
molestation and manipulation, but then not go after whoever the
hell it was associated with him, and then of course
(43:06):
hang them at the courthouse square with them, that's a
problem with our country. I mean, that's a moral problem.
That's that's a that's a very moral problem with the
human brain, and it needs to be absolutely washed out
of society. You cannot have people acting that way and
you know, our commandments tell us now, shall not kill,
(43:27):
steal whatever, you know. But the thing is, what do
you do with those people you did? You have to
set a precedent. And I'll even go kind of just
to an interview I had with this guy Body Brooks
on Fox fifty six and Lexington. There was a situation
on Twitter where this this girl, Gretchen Smith or whatever,
she's kind of got a big following on X. She
(43:48):
walks into her gym there at her apartment complex. She's
sitting on a bench right inside that gym. She takes
a selfie of herself and over her left shoulder as
a woman in uh, you know, full Islamic get up,
the hid job and the big dress, and she's walking
on a treapmill over her shoulder. You can see her
there and it's just a still image. And this girl, Gretchen,
(44:08):
she basically captus this photo and says, hey, I walked
into my local gym this morning, which is part of
her apartment complex. And I nodded at this woman and
told her good morning, and she responded by saying, I'm sorry.
I don't talk to foreigners. Now, you have a culturally
white born and raised woman sitting in her hometown and
(44:31):
a woman who migrated here, whether legally or illegally, does
not matter, and she's gonna call this woman a foreigner.
That's the assault in my opinion. So yeah, basically I'll
put a comment on there, and I said, hey, well,
just choke slammer and that'll change her mind. Well, then
a couple of days later, the uh I guess wherever
she lived, got a hold of that post is the
kindly asked her, hey, please take that down. You know,
(44:54):
it kind of looks bad on her religion and this
and that, and so you know, she posted that second
photo and I've commented on that one too. I said, hey, well,
don't forget the choke slammer on your way out. And
so this guy Body Brooks brings this up in this
interview on Fox fifty six. He says, well, I don't
mean to get you with a gotcha question, but you
know you're talking about committing assault against citizens of this country.
And I said, look, yeah, sure I did say it
(45:16):
a little bit, you know, figuratively, not literally. But what
are you gonna do. You're gonna go to jail, you
pay a fine, but you set a precedent they're trying
to erode your culture in this country. That is a
huge problem. They're trying to erode your constitutional and sovereign
rights in the state of Kentucky. That is a huge problem.
Not only have they tried it, they absolutely succeeded time
and time again by creating laws that go directly against
(45:39):
the Constitution, and as speaking with a constituent within our state,
Article six, Section two and three blatantly talk about when
there are state laws that go against the constitutional law,
the Constitution wins every time. But that is not what
you're seeing right now. You are seeing a bunch of
basically what i'd say polished by politicians going to DC
(46:03):
quote unquote saying they're going to fight for you and
make a change. They get up in there in some room,
somebody makes them a deal, and then all of a sudden,
their entire mo changes. And I don't know how we
fix that other than basically snatching folks out of the
middle of nowhere who have zero political involvement who have
(46:24):
been fighting them, such as myself that knows how to
be on your side of the fence. All of these
other folks basically in this race have seemingly went to
school to be a politician and successfully became a politician.
Now you can argue that Nate Morris is not that way,
and that there's actually even some language on his website
(46:47):
that says something about he took on the establishment and won. Well,
I've asked one of his biggest constituents, hey, what does
this mean on his website? What did he fight? And
went and this fella tells me, well, I'll be honest
with you, I don't know, but I'll ask him. And
so he went and asked Nate Morris said hey, what
does this mean? And he's like, well, I just had
(47:08):
a kid. You know, I'll get back with it. Now. Understandably,
he didn't just have a child. And you know, I
did make a comment on his post you know God
is good that, you know, because that's a miracle. Every
child that's delivered into the earth, I think is God's work.
So you know, I just told him basically, God is good.
But he didn't respond to this question, and he didn't say, hey,
(47:29):
you know, this is what I thought. Some people are
kind of trying to tie it to Bill Gates or
or some stuff with his you know, Global trash company
or whatever. But I'll tell you. It looks to me
the only thing that he's been fighting is a battle
to fundraise for Rhino Republicans. Just to be honest with you,
that's what they said. So yeah, and and and they're
(47:51):
very good at it. And listen, I know I've veered
off this subject a little bit. To answer your question
again resoundingly, Yes, I would support Massy in his efforts.
But what I want to get into here is this
idea that constituents, some constituents have now. AJ, don't bite
my head off here, because I know we kind of
went back and for it over some things online. But
(48:13):
we've got to change our mind when it comes to
thinking the only way we're going to elected patriotic representative
in the state of Kentucky is by making sure he's
clean shaven, with a suit and has notoriety with party
politics and plenty of war chest money. I think if
we can get away from that, if you can just
(48:35):
dig into your heart and pray about it a little bit,
and then God will give you the answer. He'll tell
you where to send your heart. And listen, AJ, if
your hard is to go with mister Morris, I will
not ever criticize to you for that, because that's what
your brain has deciphered, that's what you feel is the
right choice. And that's how this is supposed to work.
It shouldn't be about who's going to raise the money,
(48:57):
who's going to have the notoriety, who's going to endorse
this man. I don't want any of those people endorsing me,
to be quite honest with you, because I'm not sure
I want to be associated with him. I'd rather the
guy at the Chevron down there, who's been having problems,
you know, keeping a store open, endorse me over Donald
Trump even I mean, and I know that sounds ridiculous,
but that's just how I feel. I mean, I don't
(49:20):
think you're hitting some really key things right here.
Speaker 3 (49:25):
And I've known people, well, it doesn't matter which party,
but you know, being conservative, I'm more associated with the
Republican Party right. And I've known people that were front runners.
I've known people that were really, really in the crowd
and they really loved them, and they were voting for him,
and they've literally been told, hey, you're not winning, but
he's gonna win over there. And it is exactly what you
(49:48):
just described as the fundraisers. They're the backscratching. They're going
to do what with the party says or or they're
going to play middle of the road, right, they're going
to cater to the left and the right and try
to play that stupid game. And that's stand on principles.
And this is the guy they're looking for, right. So
he's a young man, he's gonna he's gonna go along
to get along, and he's gonna vote the way he's
told to vote. And we've seen that on the other
(50:10):
side of the eye. We've seen that with Cinema. She
voted against what the party wanted. They centered her and
runner out of the party because hey, she's not a
team player with us.
Speaker 6 (50:19):
So yeah, so what you're describing here.
Speaker 3 (50:21):
As an opportunity not to win within your party because
you're not their party favor. So, well, how do you
feel about supporting independent candidates as opposed to the party.
Speaker 6 (50:34):
Uh so, so you mean someone who's not basically affiliating
himself with a d R R. Right, Yeah, yeah, okay,
So listen, I'll be completely honest with you. I kind
of view myself more of I would say it constitutionally. Obviously.
I've been a Republican since I can remember up voter
vot a Republican since I was basically able to vote legally.
(50:58):
Here is the problem. And massy Is and Rand Paul
are two basically the poster children for this name. They're independence,
they absolutely are independent. They are saying they're Republican. But
if you look at Rand Paul's sign, what's on his
campaign science a tour? What is the torchs associated with
(51:20):
the liberties? Right? So you have to obviously, as you said,
infiltrate the game a little bit. So I think you
play the game in so far that it doesn't ruin
your moral compass or road your integrity, right. And if
that means, you know, citing as a Republican to get
(51:40):
there or whatever, that's fine. I think that that's obviously
the way to do it. Because you look at what's
going on and there's one it's one club. It's one
big club. They don't want independence there. Massi's went on
about this at length. Where you know, if you're an
independent and they go into do bill discussion, there's two rooms.
You're a Democrat or you're Republican. There is no independent road,
(52:01):
So you'd be tough trust to being independent, running and
winning anything, and even if you did, they basically seclude
you from everything you do up north. And then not
only that the gatekeepers inside the swamp up there, that
you didn't even elect these these unlucky gearcrats who are
gatekeeping what bills go for.
Speaker 3 (52:20):
But what if we all had a shift in how
we think and we stopped supporting the parties. What if
we all just started saying, hey, you know what, I
want to come at an independent candidate. I no longer
want to be part of these parties because these parties
are mold, their factions of what they are. That's how
described them. And he said in his U State of
the Union or I mean his farewell speech, that you
(52:43):
will be the one who serves the party, not the
party serving you. And I think that's what we've created
as a circumstance where the party has a dependency on
us to support them, the man.
Speaker 6 (52:51):
Of all the absolute do a mold which.
Speaker 3 (52:53):
We really don't qualify for. We don't we're not part
of the agenda. We were never part of the creation
process of the agenda. They've got a we never had
to be idea, and now they're asking us to fit
in this mold. It's like, wait a minute, you want
me to fit in a mold of which you are
using artificial intelligence. You're using robotics to run me out
of a job, to minimize the human being. You put
(53:16):
in corporations first, you're putting machinery first. And to check,
our forefathers caught for this country, not for machinery, not
for corporation, for freedom of the man.
Speaker 4 (53:27):
Absolutely, let me follow what you just said, John, And
I've always said this, the biggest problem with the American
experiment was the dispute between Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson
that resulted in the two party system. Because as soon
as that happened, well, it can be argued that that
was the setting of the disease that had slowly had
(53:47):
issues with this country and almost destroyed us in the
eighteen sixties.
Speaker 5 (53:51):
But we ended up survi having the Civil War.
Speaker 4 (53:54):
But since then, we're now at the most partisan time
of our history, where you're they're on one side or
the other. If you're looking at it from just the
party perspective, so you're looking.
Speaker 3 (54:05):
At us, you're looking at a time when you got
these monetary elitists, you got these people that are just
phenomenally wealthy. And what they do is they back up
both sides because whoever's the victor is going to favor
them because they were supported financially. There are two ways
to win in DC. One is financially by supporting them,
and two is at the vote, at the polls. If
(54:25):
they don't have the votes, they don't win. If they
don't win, they're screwed. So those are the only two
ways you're going to win in this world. We don't
have the money.
Speaker 6 (54:32):
Yeah, I have to have the vote, Sarah, I never
got your name. I'm sorry. Can I get it now
so I can adjasinate Prepper.
Speaker 3 (54:39):
Oh yeah, my name's John grosvenor.
Speaker 6 (54:41):
John Gogan. Okay, so listen, John, you're correct. I mean
it is going to take a long time. Now. Listen,
it took us forty years to get where we stand now,
fifty years where it has gotten as bad as it
is now. Granted, as AJ said, the eighteen sixties, right,
you had the shift to kind of how the political
(55:03):
makeup or the structure was made up, and that began.
I think the demise of what we see now so
longer than forty years ago. But let's say the most
egregious of what we're seeing is probably within the last
forty fifty years, right, because even in those times, in
the eighteen sixties, you still had a massive amount of
(55:25):
people who were very much centrally minded around the America
first spirit, around defending this country's cultural morals and values
and the fact that it is a godly Christian nation.
And I'll even go further there. I don't even think
that the Constitution was written to say, bring in a
(55:47):
hundred religions and build a hundred religions of churches and
do whatever you want here. I think it was basically saying, look,
if you don't believe in God, we're not going to
ostracize you. But we do believe in God, so you
will not ostracize us. That's my opinion of how that
was written. I don't think it was written to allow
all these religious to come in here and try to
(56:09):
wash out godly Christianity. I just think that's absolutely absurd.
Some people argue against that, you know a lot with me,
but I just simply don't think that, you know, that
was the way that they intended this country to be
to be. You know, ran so it's going to take
if we start today. It's going to take, in my opinion,
(56:31):
twenty to thirty years. Do not only hopefully vote yourself
out of this mess, your in by finding candidates. And listen,
I don't like to always talk good about myself in
any manner, but I will say an individual like me
who has the spine to stand up and fight his
government when they make mistakes against his rights and do
(56:52):
it until the bloody ends. And then on top of that, say, hey,
not only am I tired of your shit, but I'm
also tired of saying you do it of my brother
and sisters. So I will stand in the front of
the line for them and take the sword if that's
what it takes, because that's what our forefathers did. And listen,
a lot of men died and a lot of blood
was shed to get the freedoms that we have right now.
(57:15):
They didn't do that as a game. It wasn't a joke.
It wasn't about fundraising. It was based oh oh, oh man,
oh you and you're taking our money. There is and
now look at us right being taxed by our governments.
And I'll be honest with you. I sit here right
(57:37):
now on an island called Australia, this country, and other
customers in Canada, we speak about how their economy runs
and what their governments look like and the money they
take from them. These guys are on fifty almost sixty percent.
If we keep playing the same game, that's where we're
going to be. You will own nothing and you will
be happy. As the man has told you at many
(57:59):
of these world economic forums, right what was his name,
flau Schwab, I believe he said that basically, you will
own nothing and you will be happy. That's not what
I want because listen, everything that I own I earned,
and I have pride and everything that I that I own,
and not only that, I have pride in my craftsmanship
(58:20):
and my subject matter expert skill to come and help
my customers battle wild land fire and say there, you know,
brothers and sisters, homes and structures and businesses or what
have you their forest. Right, So, my business is built
on a mechanical transactional thing. But it's also kind of
(58:41):
like a first responder thing, you know, it is it
is delivering a service to a community, whether that is
in Australia, Canada, you know, west of Texas to California,
right even in the Appalachians, you know. So one thing,
as far as my agenda is concerned, that is hard
(59:01):
to speak to Kentuckians about, but will allow me to
do this as a federal seat, is this aircraft right
here is very special, this HALK and it's really only
about twelve years old in the civilian community. It's over
forty years old in the military. But the thing is
it's fairly young in the civilian community. So the FAA
is scared of it. Some of the other folks you
(59:22):
know that are within the industry evolve in fire or
scared of it, and they've restricted what it was designed
to do, and that is basically to haul people safely
and to get them somewhere very quickly with an impeccable
safety record. So what you have right now is the DOI,
the Forest Service, all of these agencies that are saying, hey,
(59:43):
you know, we can't use this dual engine machine because
it's a restricted category. We've got to use this single
engine Huey or whatever that's not restricted because it's a
normal category aircraft. And then not only that, you look
at the North Carolina issue where you had guys trying
to come in and get those folks rescue and all
of the things that they needed. And you had FEMA
(01:00:03):
and all of them trying to shut them down right saying, hey,
you can't go in there. FEMA's got to do it.
We're going to send in the guard. Well what happens
when in two weeks, one hundred babies have died because
you told the guy with the helicopter that he couldn't
go in and save the child. You look at the guy,
what was his last name, John Howard or something. I
think with that aerial recovery, he went kind of viral
(01:00:25):
for going in and saving this I believe it was
nine day old child.
Speaker 3 (01:00:29):
This is a thing.
Speaker 6 (01:00:30):
He died if they didn't go in there and tell,
you know, those agencies that no, we are absolutely going
in to save our brother and sister. They've got help
written on the ground. They're there, the water's coming. No,
we're going in. So it's things like that. We need
to get people in the northern part of our country
(01:00:50):
to understand too that there's issues like that. If they're
modifying the weather, let's just say they are. It looks
like they are because you got folks in acting legislation
to stop it across country and Marjorie Taylor Green as well,
saying hey, we don't want more, you know, no more
weather modification. Are you guys still there? Yeah? Yeah, yeah, Hello, Yeah,
(01:01:10):
we're here.
Speaker 2 (01:01:11):
We're here.
Speaker 3 (01:01:13):
We've got disruption and connections. I don't know if you
can see us or if he can hear us or
what's up. No, he's gone yep. Oh man, No, he
was making some good points.
Speaker 5 (01:01:23):
He was.
Speaker 3 (01:01:24):
He gets back and he will grab him. I think
he was referring to earlier aj. You know, he's talking
about religion and what he's referring to his lack of
religious persecution. R matter, whatever religion you want to be,
or non religion at all. Yeah, you can be what
you want to be. But the thing about it is
happening today is here he comes. We'll get back from
that later. All right, we got you back.
Speaker 6 (01:01:48):
Yeah, We're I lose you. I didn't realize the video
was frozen until like three minutes in the counters.
Speaker 3 (01:01:51):
We were hearing you the whole time.
Speaker 6 (01:01:53):
So oh okay, well all right. So yeah, anyway with
the weather modification, if they're going to modify the weather
to basically cause issues with the citizenry, we need to
have the right to battle it. And if that means
going in and rescue folks with a you know, a
forty almost forty five fifty year impeccable safety record aircraft,
(01:02:15):
then so be it. It's no different than the Second Amendment. Right,
you got a machine gun, I want a machine gun.
You got a cannon. I want a cannon. You know
it's equal, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:02:30):
So we're not talking about a warcraft too, We're talking
about a flying machine.
Speaker 6 (01:02:34):
We're just talking about a machine designed to rescue people.
That's it, I mean, And honestly, if you look at
the history of Sikorski, Igor Sikorski, which was a Ukrainian
fellow who created the Sikorski brand and that machine there,
there's an old famous quote that says, you know, when
you're on trouble anywhere in the world, and their plane
(01:02:54):
can fly by and drop you flowers, but a helicopter
can land and rescue you. Oh, that man was very
much rescue oriented that thing. Dual engine was designed. I mean,
if an engine goes out on that aircraft, it can
still sustain itself at eighty knots with one engine. That's
how robust that aircraft is and how safe it is so.
(01:03:15):
But we're using single engine Huey's in these environments where
they're hauling twelve to fourteen smoke jumpers or hot shot crewmen. Right,
if that engine goes out, you're dead. That's it. You're
pretty much gone. Now. Granted, until twelve years ago, those
were our options. So there's a risk you take for
a reward. Is thee work is the juice work to squeeze? Okay,
(01:03:39):
we make a decision and it's executive, and the nation says, yes,
we agree. We should, at all costs try to protect
the citizen view of our land from wildland, fire, from flooding,
you know, build infrastructure that makes our lives easier, what
have you. Now, we have another option, and that option
is sitting behind me. And there are roughly seventy five
(01:04:01):
at this point civilian operators of this machine, and I
believe somewhere close to two maybe two hundred and twenty
five to fifty of these out in civilian hands, And
already in this twelve year span, they have innovated so
many good improvements to this aircraft that Sikorski wouldn't do now,
namely because guess who owns it? Lockheed Martin and guess what,
(01:04:25):
Lockheed Martin has contracts in stuff that makes a whole
lot more money than that. And oh, by the way,
if you want parts for that machine from the manufacturer,
good luck, buddy. You got two aircraft, I got one
hundred fighter jets I gotta put parts on and I'm
making billions of dollars. So guess where you gotta get
these parts from other birds that have been deemed scrapped.
You pull them off, you test them, your pair them, whatever,
(01:04:46):
then you certify it. So I think we need to
be looking at that too, because what's gonna happen. You're
gonna have all these aircraft out here. These people have
sunk their life savings into building a business to provide
an absolute service to their communities. And when the machines
are all gone off the auction block in the army,
where's the parts pool coming from? Like the manufacturer has
(01:05:07):
just dumped, you know, the support for this machine because
they've lost control of it on the type certification side.
So a small part of why I'm doing this is
to go out and protect small business owners who have
these aircraft as well, and who are wanting to just
provide a way of life with their family and provide
(01:05:27):
a service to their community because of their special skill set.
So I think there's some legislation that can be headed
up up there that will help this community thrive and
that will help them protect their people. Now that's that's
obviously a further back issue because of the most importance
to me is removing rogue judges from our court system,
(01:05:48):
holding these you know, big corporations accountable to the illegal policies.
You know, parental rights to choose for the children, are educated, obviously,
supporting law enforcement veterans, you know, all your first responders.
I think you can tell by the look of my
face that I support the Second Amendment pretty eavily, and
you know, many other issues that I think are on
the forefront of that. But you know, and it's probably
(01:06:10):
gonna take me six to eight, maybe even twelve years
into that second term to get something like this going with.
You know, a guy like Tim Sheehy who's also part
of this community from up from up out of Montana. Now,
he's done a lot of good stuff too already. But
I think with our background being Tom and mine, you know,
him being the fixed wing side. He owns Bridger Airspace
(01:06:31):
that does the uh what they call the seat for
single engine air taxes, air taxies that that dropped for
Tardan and water on these fires. You know, he's got
a long history background in those aircraft. You know. Now
we got fix wing and rotary wing, and both of
those heads are there brewing up what's gonna help get
this done and make it proper for the entire community
as a whole. Instead of choking them out and saying, oh,
(01:06:54):
you sunk four million dollars into this machine. You've got
you know, one and a half to two million dollars
in pay all the year. But we don't want to
give you these contracts because well, that's going to have
people on it, and we don't think that aircraft's safe.
I think that's a silly approach. This is the most
safe rotary wing aircraft you can sit in, and it
has been for nearly fifty years. You know.
Speaker 3 (01:07:15):
So what is that one of gathering here is you're
you're getting to your point is that there's a lot
of backscratching going on. You know, this guy's got absolutely
or regulations and they're controlling the markets and they're they're
weeding out small because I see this in trucking all
the time, like with the eld mandate, and they're weeding
small independent businesses for.
Speaker 6 (01:07:35):
The sake absolutely market. That's another one of our campaign promises. Right.
There is a fellow named Bruce de Torres who hit
me up and there's a podcast I did with him.
If you guys get a moment, uh maybe an hour
or so, go watch it. But anyway, he is a
(01:07:55):
fellow that works with the American Small Business League and
he's pretty well educated in the federal government contracting side
of small businesses. Right. So with that being said, over
the last I think like ten years, there has been
this kind of push for you know, DEI, right, And
(01:08:17):
inside of that DEI is also this thing of what
they call small business set aside. Now I think this
is valuable, but basically, if you look at what a
small business set aside is, it is woman owned business,
veteran owned business, uh, service disabled veter owned business. You know,
all these other different businesses that are small business set
(01:08:39):
aside what I would call qualified. And so they're supposed
to be giving of the entire federal government contracting makeup
twenty three percent of federal contracts to these small businesses.
In reality, that number is actually reduced to three percent,
(01:09:03):
and this gentleman has that data on that, and I
think that's another thing I think. I think maybe Daniel
Cameron Nate Morris both mentioned this, but I was already
on this train before either of them put it on
their campaign policy. With Bruce Detorres, he reached out early
in the game and said, hey, can I educate you?
Will you talk to me? What are your thoughts on this?
(01:09:24):
And we went over that for about an hour and
so demand's sharp, and I would like to take his
brain and his research, along with his folks that have
been doing this for years, on how to infiltrate that
system and make it actually work for the people. Because look,
here's the numbers. That twenty percent is about a three
(01:09:47):
hundred billion dollar loss to the small businesses of our community. Right,
ninety eight percent of our businesses are all small businesses.
There's two percent that are your big componference, that's your
lockeyed but you're you know, you're Boeings, that's your defense contractors.
That's all of these places or companies rather that are
(01:10:07):
major corporations. And as you said earlier, John, are being
rewarded for basically implementing for protocracy, which is the value
of money over people. Right. And so that's also a
big issue because here's what they've done. They've given you
(01:10:28):
this low rent wage, and they said, oh hey, but
wait a minute, we're going to give you help insurance
and we're going to give you this insurance. And we're
going to give you that insurance. You just got to
take less pay. Hold on, wait a minute, all right,
let's look at this. Here's the health insurance. What is that?
That cost me thirteen grand a year? You thirteen grand
a year. When I get sick, I go pay a
(01:10:49):
guy one hundred bucks. No, thank you. If they're going
to be if they're gonna be big money risk takers,
take the damn risk. You got twenty six thousand dollars
of mine and my employer's money. If I get a cold,
you pay for the damn cold. That's what you wanted
to do. You wanted to take a risk, right, So
you got the checkbook, You write the check to the
doctor when I show up when my nose is running.
(01:11:11):
But that's not what they do. They say, Oh, here's
all these things we're going to protect you from. And
then when you go in and need it. They go, oh,
wait a minute, but was there a zombie apocalypse or
was the grass a little greener yesterday? Because if so,
we don't have to cover that. No, get the f
out of here. You do have to cover that. You
wanted to take a risk, you wrote me a policy,
(01:11:31):
please pay the bill. And then so what did that do?
Because of the fight that they put up. Now all
of these doctor offices around the country have to hire
a specific individual just to battle the damn insurance company.
So now that person gets paid eighteen twenty five dollars
an hour just to hunt heads. And it's like you said,
(01:11:54):
right here, you'd pay the bill. What are you doing? Well,
the most we pay for a twenty five hundred dollars
our deal is seventeen in a quarter. Well, the most
we pay for a ten thousand dollars leg cut off
fifty six hundred bucks. So what's the doctor going to do?
All right, damn, I'll take it, you know whatever, Yeah,
just pay me the money. I done got twenty five
dollars an hour invested in this woman hunting you down.
(01:12:16):
Just I need something for my labor, you know, So
we got to cut that out too. That's got to go.
So from small businesses to healthcare to all these systems.
Speaker 3 (01:12:27):
You're saying accountable care organizations don't.
Speaker 6 (01:12:29):
Work precisely.
Speaker 3 (01:12:34):
Precisely, So, yeah, you're absolutely right. We're a little bit
over time here. We probably should start wrapping it up.
You got anything else on your mind, any closing statements.
Speaker 6 (01:12:47):
Or yeah, Look, I think honestly, at the end of
the day, hopefully AJ's talking to you has helped you
kind of peer into the human that I am, you know,
kind of the mindset that I have going into this race.
I do own a small business. I stay very busy. Luckily,
(01:13:08):
some of my pipe hitters are stepping up and taking
on challenges that they normally didn't take to help me
make sure that my business goes on in my absence.
So obviously I'd like to first of all, say thanks
to those folks, because without them, you know, this would
be tough. And then secondly, another thing I want to say,
and this is to the men of this of this
(01:13:28):
state who are going to vote in this race. Right now,
the support that I'm getting in mass believe it or not,
is by women who are thirty early thirties to late
sixty year old. You know why, because there's a I
think there's an alpha male connection. There's this spine made
of steel connection. There's a guy that's going to fight
(01:13:49):
for their freedoms. And guess what happened during COVID. The
federal government came after their children. And listen, you don't
go after mama's children. When you do that, you ignite
a fire under women. And you know, as I always
like to say, hell have no fury like a woman scorned.
So the men of this state need to step up
(01:14:11):
and get in line. And if you agree with this agenda,
quit worrying about how much money I'm going to raise.
I'm gonna pay for the shit. Don't worry about it.
It's all good. I'm going to buy all the campaign material.
I don't have a problem with that. I think all
that can be done for roughly fifty thousand dollars or less.
Someone told me a hundred someone told me three hundred
(01:14:32):
thousand was the real number. I don't think anybody really knows.
So I think, as a gentleman with or without a family,
if you have something to protect in your life, because listen,
that's another one of the major reasons I'm even doing
this because I have a child right now who's ten
(01:14:53):
years old. My dad wasn't big into politics. My dad
adopted me obviously. He was a farm man his whole life,
and he was a farm hand when he was young,
at five years old with his dad until he passed away.
They didn't get much into politics. Now they are old
style Democrats, if I'm not mistaken, that switched to Republican
because the whole party's wanting to mess. But in a
(01:15:15):
state like ours, we got to get over this whole thing.
Daddy said, you're a Democrat. Boy, you're a Democrat. Right.
We've got to get over that. We've got to get
over this idea that I need to raise all this money.
We've got to get over this idea that I have
to have endorsements. I don't think you need any of that.
We can set a standard in this state right now,
(01:15:36):
in this election that will turn this entire process on
its head for years to come. And I think the
way that we do that is by having the conversations
like we're having right here right now. If you've noticed Facebook, X, Instagram,
(01:15:56):
all of them, I don't care what platform you're on,
some juncture are willing to at all costs silence anything
they disagree with you on. Let me give you an
example Facebook, when I created my US Senate campaign page,
within twenty four hours shut it down and locked it.
(01:16:20):
And so what did I do? I appealed it, and
I gave them a photocopy of my real ID and
downloaded their stupid app to give them a face scan.
And within hours of their going through the a field process,
they wrote me back and said, not only is your
account disabled, we've now disabled it because it goes against
our community guidelines on integrity. Now, as a man whose
(01:16:43):
business motto is quality through integrity, you can only imagine
how that makes me feel. So I wait about a
month and I finally decided, Okay, I'm going to file
an FTC complaint. I filed the FTC complaint and within
three days, the three accounts that I created that they
shut down all of a sudden start getting notifications for
So there's an avenue to win at all costs. That's
(01:17:07):
what the moral of this story is. You can do
it as you can do it as a regular fellow,
you can do it as a regular woman. So to
the men of this state, it's time to stand up
stand next to you, woman, stand in front of your child,
protect them at all costs from this federal government overreach.
Because that is your senator's job is to protect your
(01:17:29):
state's sovereignty from the overreach of the federal government. The
US senator cannot help you with your local issues. He
can only advocate for you with strongly worded letters and
then basically give you advice of who to speak to
to fix that issue. So when you're voting in this thing,
(01:17:51):
understand what it is you're voting for, Understand the office
that they're in, what their authorities are you know, and
what they're able to move forward. And then not only that,
remember this man or woman whoever you send there is
there to represent your interest and your interest alone, not
(01:18:12):
his interest, not his buddy's interests, not his whatever, it
does not matter. You speak with your voice, and you
have to do it so good in the primary that
you can overcome any amount of you know, debauchery or
hoisting that they decide to do with your election ballots. Right,
(01:18:34):
we also need to go single day on paper. That's
gotta be how it is. So they've hosted your vote,
they've hosted your money. You know, they've hoisted everything you
can get your hands on, and they say, hey, that's
mine too. That belongs to the federal government too. No,
it does not. This property is not yours. My mom
and dad paid for it. It's theirs. They own it
(01:18:55):
out right, and you're still taking money from them. That
don't need to be happening either. But guess what if
they try to stop paying that property tax, they're going
to come and try to hunt my mom and dad down.
No different than your families, No different from the situation
you're in with your property. It's ridiculous. We're over it.
It's time to move on from it. And the only
way we do it is you put somebody in there
(01:19:15):
with a spine that says absolutely not, we're done here.
So you know, without further ado, that's my suggestion, dig in,
share this, Share this media. You are the media now,
you know. That's why they're suppressing it. That's why I
brought it up. If what you were saying was not
causing a ruckus to their major plan, they would not
(01:19:36):
try to silence you. They would be of no matter
to them. They want you to shut up because you
are speaking freely and you have a free mind, and
that is causing them problems not only with money, but viewership,
which also causes them problems with money and connections. So
my phone number is a matter of public record by design.
(01:19:58):
I don't want you to talk to somebody who doesn't
I know what I'm going to say. I don't want
you to be fed a lot of bullshit from somebody
who's being paid to do what I can do and
have a conversation with you. I can cut an hour
and a half, two hours out of my day or
whatever every week or whatever. It's no big deal, you know,
reach out to me, let's talk about it, no matter
what organization you're with. I'll try my best at every
(01:20:19):
step of the way to make it work while I'm
trying to transition out of being a president of this
company and then handing all of that workload over to
some individuals within the company and going and fighting for
you guys. So it's simple, It is very simple. They
have They will have you believe that it's impossible. You
(01:20:41):
got to have all this garbage. I'm telling you these folks,
when you talk to them, they're not even smart. Really
like you. You give them enough information that you overload
their brain. They're like, oh my god. Yeah, okay, well
good talking to you, sir. I mean, I've seen it
time and time again with these politicians.
Speaker 3 (01:20:59):
They say, thank you for coming in, and you're thinking
with me when I go vote.
Speaker 6 (01:21:04):
Yeah, it's like that. It's like the whole line of
it's the first thing I think about when I wake
up and the last thing I think about when I
go to bed. And they didn't answer any questions. You
didn't even answer the question. Guy, Come on, answer the
question where do you stand on it? Don't be scared
to speak your mind. You might lose ten voters, you
might gain twenty. So listen. That's my theory of it.
(01:21:26):
I have nothing to hide from anybody. My theory is
to go in there and just be basically a straight
shooter like I've been my whole life. You know, tell
it like it is. It might not always sound good,
it might not always make me feeling. Uh, you know,
feeling's real, real, nice and pretty. And I know I
don't have a slick face, shaved shaved face, and I'm
not the greatest looking guy in the world. But I
(01:21:48):
will tell you this. You know, when you have you know,
most of your supporters are literally women who are telling you, hey,
don't shave the beard. Yeah, don't change the way you talk. Yeah, definitely,
don't buy a suit until it's definitely needed. But you
have these clean shaven men who are in suits and
(01:22:09):
they're saying, you gotta shave your beard, you gotta buy
a suit. No, I'll buy a suit when the decorum,
you know it needs that suit to be there. So
if I make it to Washington, here's what I'll do
for all my guys with the slick faces. If you
elect me, I'll buy your suits and I'll wear them
the d C. But I'll be honest with you. Any
(01:22:30):
man that approaches me into the suit in a suit,
I'm already turned off by it because what's he going
to do. He's trying to sell me something, He's trying to.
Speaker 5 (01:22:37):
Lie to me.
Speaker 6 (01:22:38):
You know, that's my entire life experience with suited men
approaching me that I do not know. So where have
I worn a suit in my life? When I was
married and when I went to prompt so about it?
You know, any other day I'm in I'm in functional
clothing that helps me do the job that I do.
And listen, I understand decorum. I understand you know history.
(01:23:03):
So listen, if I'm not going to wear suit to
go meet a bunch of voters and hoodies to have
a conversation, it's just silly. It's a fake thing, right.
I mean, I'm clean cut, I'm straightforward, I dress well.
So just remove all that stuff in my mind, because
this is not a beauty contest, and it's definitely not
(01:23:23):
a contest of you know, who has the cleanest shade face.
So it's a contest of what you want to see
happen with the politics in your state. That's what the
contest is about. You need to wrap your head around that,
and you need to quit voting to win red and
quit voting to these you know, money laundered donation campaign schemes.
(01:23:47):
I'm not advocating for donations myself, because I think that's
probably not what the forefathers wanted either. I don't recall,
you know, our forefathers going around collecting money. No, they
were going out to speak with these people about issues
that they had within their you know, communities that was
being caused by the federal government or if it was local,
(01:24:08):
by their local government. Right, So they weren't going around
with the top collecting money until some years later it
got really corrupt. So anyway, I'm thankful for any support
I get. We do have yard signs, you know. We've
got the website farespercenta dot com which I've built myself
in about six and a half hours. Visit the site,
(01:24:31):
share the site. On that site are all my social
links that are active insofar as they'll let them be
active from this day forward. We'll see how that works out.
We're not going to get the endorsements, guys, We're not
going to raise the money. That's simple. That's that's going
to be a hard truth right there. But we don't
need it because if I've got you guys on my team,
(01:24:52):
those are the endorsements I want. I don't want your money.
You work hard enough to your money and the federal
government takes forty percent of it already. Listen, I'm fortunate enough.
I'm fortunate enough. I can go out and buy all
this campaign material and it will not bother me none,
and I can get it out to folks and we
can elevate the name and all of that. But at
(01:25:14):
the end of the day, it's about policy. It's about
what you're going to do while you're there, it's going
to be about who you care about and whether that
person is going to have your best interest in mind.
We have to return to that. Undoubtedly, we cannot sit
here and rally behind who we think the winner is
going to be based off some you know, cash cow.
(01:25:38):
We've got to stop. If you change your mindset, listen,
before I quit, I'll end it with this. When I
talk about mindset, you've got to manifest this stuff. And
that's a very godly thing. I've brought people into my company,
this company itself, my company I created by just speaking
(01:25:58):
to the idea of it becoming what it is now.
And listen, I'm busy, and sometimes I'm over busy and
too busy. But I prayed about it and said, hey,
what do I gotta do. I want to make this
thing that's valuable to these customers. They need it. It's
absolutely necessity in our industry. How do I do it?
(01:26:19):
How do I do it? How do I do it?
And then one day God spoke to me and he says, hey,
you start here, start at the bottom. Just change, just change.
If you don't change, it's not going to follow. So
I just woke up one morning I said, you know, what.
I'm going to go ahead and create the name Prime
(01:26:39):
Hawks LLC, which was basically thought of for many, many years.
And prime Hawks actually stands for Professional rotorcath Inspection, Maintenance
and Engineering for the black Hawk, but spelled with an
X to make it plural, meaning more than one. So
the X takes the place of chaos because obviously it's prettier.
(01:27:00):
I think it sounds cooler and it serves a better meaning.
So Prime Hawks that's the acronym for the Hawk. I
woke up one morning I called the lawyer there in
the Lord when I said, Hey, I don't know how
to create an LLC. What do I gotta do to
do it? Well, you owed me five hundred bucks. I'll
file all the paperwork with the Secretary of State. Okay, perfect,
You got to get an ei in? What's an ei in? Okay?
(01:27:23):
Call the tax lady, Hey, what's an e in? Well,
here's the site click here. And that change, just less
than three years ago, has sent me and my company
on a global manhunt to help these folks out. And
if I wouldn't have woke up that morning and said,
you know what, I'm gonna go ahead and just create
(01:27:44):
the LLC create the name, protect the LLC, get it established.
If I didn't do that that day, I'm not standing
here in Australia. I'm not fortunate enough to have the
money to help you guys. Get this campaign material out
stand with me to help me help you. So it's
just a small spark, that's all it takes to create
a big fire. And you've got to change your mentality.
(01:28:08):
You've got to get away from it. Start somewhere. I
don't care where it is, whether that's a daily habit,
and what you do with Facebook and political campaigning, whatever,
are sharing in this and that. Quit donating, start there.
Quit spending your money on bullshit. Take care of yourself,
take care of your family. When it comes down to
support a candidate, you vote for the candidate. That's where
(01:28:29):
your obligation lies. Outside of that, let them go find
out where they're going to get their money from the
political action committees who are going to buy them over.
And then you watch whoever raises the most money from
a political action committee that is not your guy. I
can promise you that, So I'll end it with that.
I appreciate to you both of your fellow's time. AJ
(01:28:49):
I appreciate your criticism. Sir, I know that you're very
heavily involved in this stuff and no hard feelings. Man,
you are a free person. You have free will to
do as you wish. But look, you've made a change
and you said, hey, come speak with me here. That's it.
That's the change. Aj. So whether you vote for me
or not, what you've done here today might help twenty
(01:29:10):
other people that can help one hundred other people a peace.
So just remember that that's how this thing works. You've
got to manifest and if you want to change it.
Speaker 4 (01:29:19):
Of course, And just so you know, we've already talked
with others that are associated with the program. We are
going to try to bring the other three major candidates
on here. Thanks for talking about their campaigns and their
thoughts as well going into twenty twenty six. But we
were glad to hear from you today for sure.
Speaker 6 (01:29:35):
Yes, sir, well, I'll be glad to hear you guys
get after them too. I was kind of hoping you
had some part of questions for me than what you had.
But anyway, you gentlemen, have a good day. I'm gonna
beat Jay.
Speaker 3 (01:29:49):
Oh you're all right. Way, Thank you for coming on, brother,
You know what you've Your message is incredible, it's strong,
it's powerful, and I think message alone. Even even if
you don't and I'm not, I'm not wishing to will
on you, I kind of hope you win me because
the things I've heard today, I think we're pretty incredible.
But you you make a very positive impact on people.
(01:30:11):
Listen to what you say, and you're making a difference.
I think you're making.
Speaker 6 (01:30:15):
All right, sir, from you today. All right, gentlemen, without
brother Ado, I shall leave, all.
Speaker 3 (01:30:23):
Right, Thank you, Michael, good luck on your campaign. Awesome. Ajay,
that was I think he was a pretty incredible person
to hear from.
Speaker 2 (01:30:32):
Man.
Speaker 3 (01:30:33):
I really enjoyed hearing from them. I look forward to
the other candidates as well.
Speaker 4 (01:30:38):
But oh yeah, I know bringing him on here. I
will say this much about Mike. He's definitely the Maverick
candidate going.
Speaker 3 (01:30:47):
Yeah, I tell you, man, we're here an hour and
a half and to me, it was worth it. We
went a half hour over because the thing you say,
I'm just going, wow, you know what this is. This
is a good message. It's a good, strong message of
good things to say. I enjoyed hearing it, so I'm
very grateful for him to come on tonight. So yeah,
(01:31:07):
I hope people listening paid attention to what was being
said and that part about your vote later he said it,
and I laid down a little bit about it myself. Look,
if you haven't got the power of the money, you
get the power in the vote. You got to write,
find the right candidates. You got to stick with the
right candidates. You gotta put the right candidates in the
way you can uh passing on flyers, helping on social
(01:31:28):
media campaigns, you know, like we did for Donald Trump.
We found our guy, we found our champion. We got
behind him. And Donald Trump had a strong campaign and
was doing well on his own. But in truth, the
masses contributed to that a lot. And I think, you know,
and even the guy with the twenty followers you don't
want his own private he may have made a difference
(01:31:49):
from one person, one votes, one vote, you know. And
so whether it is Michael or it's a future when
we have other candidates come on. You know, I hope
that you guys uh the certain well. And if you're
not from Kentucky, you're from another state, the same applies
to certain won't remember your powers in your vote, communicate
with one another, and get engaged. Look, you can sit
(01:32:11):
there and watch television all day long and be entertained,
you know, flip back beers and watch the Simpsons and great,
you've had a need. That's not going to change your life. Politicians,
that's what's going to change your life.
Speaker 5 (01:32:24):
Uh, it needs to be said.
Speaker 4 (01:32:26):
You know, anybody can pull up you know, YouTube or
whatever else they want to or play in our next
box all day long.
Speaker 5 (01:32:34):
Well, here's the reality.
Speaker 4 (01:32:35):
If you don't pay attention to politics, the chances of
you losing that stuff is there. Eventually, we're likely in
this country to have the freedom to do the things
that we are allowed to do. Other countries don't have that.
There are people in other countries that are worried about
when their next meal is gonna.
Speaker 3 (01:32:50):
Be Yes indeed, So yeah, we need to exercise that
while we still have it, because if we keep all,
if we keep going to the wayside, we see how
strong the liberal left as willing to fight to bring
forth socialism slash communism, and they're more than willing to
infringe upon your rights and they wouldn't mind taking away
your right to vote, restrict it in some sort of way.
(01:33:11):
Or undermine it, undercut it so your vote doesn't matter.
And so if we exercise it now get the right
candidates in there, we have a chance to preserve our freedoms. Indeed,
all right, so did you have anything else for this evening? AJ?
Speaker 6 (01:33:27):
Are you all good?
Speaker 4 (01:33:31):
I know that he's actually watching the show right now,
just remembers Ishul, but had to take him away from
the show for a short time.
Speaker 5 (01:33:38):
You though, he's a you know, I believe it's a health.
Speaker 4 (01:33:41):
Concerns, health concern So yeah, we you know, keep my
keep gregging, our prayers, and you know I'll see him
back soon as well. So but yeah, with that in mind,
I mean, I really don't have anything else from not
glad to being on here for the first show with
me as a host this time.
Speaker 5 (01:33:59):
Last time I was here as a guest.
Speaker 3 (01:34:01):
Yeah, yeah, I remember, Yeah, I was thinking about that
to the beginning the show. I'm like, we've had him
on as a guest. Oh yeah, it was awesome to
do the show with you, a J. I'm glad to
have done it. I think that's going to conclude our
evening for tonight, ladies and gentlemen. So as we always say, vote,
vote well, and uh, well, I guess I can just
give you the truckers way out. You know, the truckers
farewell for the week, keep the grease side down up
(01:34:23):
between lines, say a lot travels wherever you may be going,
and that's always be good. If you can't be good,
we'll be good at it. And were gone, y