Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
Every patriot has an obligation to question authority. Those who
are honest are not concerned with your watchful vigilance, and
those with integrity are not concerned with your discernment. Every
American is obligated to voice their concerns and stand up
for their freedoms and liberties. One nation under God, indivisible
(00:27):
with liberty and justice for all. Ladies and gentlemen. We
are the men in the arena. We are the Patriot Confederation.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
We live back down from Bye. We're a free Americans.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
All right, Ladies and gentlemen, Welcome to Patriot Confederation for
what is the twelfth of August twenty twenty five. I'm
your host, Bad Billy out of Twin Falls, outa Hope,
joined as always by John Grovenor out of New England
National in New Hampshire. How's it going up there, brother
scog Here Billy.
Speaker 4 (01:18):
I'll tell you what, man, I'm just liking that Donald
Trump these days. He's just kicking ass and taking names.
Speaker 3 (01:23):
How about it?
Speaker 5 (01:25):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (01:26):
Yes, I mean, uh, I mean, I'm gonna be I'm
gonna be honest, you know.
Speaker 5 (01:30):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:31):
Federalizing the police, the DC police is something that is
of a concern to me mainly because you know, say,
the next administration that comes in, especially if they're they're
uh communist, leftist, democrat whatever, you know what that how
far they're going to take that. But uh, you know,
we got to get a grip on the crime that's
(01:53):
been happening. For sure. You know, we saw what happened
to uh Big Balls and then we you know, but
what happened in Cincinnati was much much worse. Actually, So
it's a legal thing.
Speaker 4 (02:08):
It's always been there and Obama could have done it,
Biden could have done it, anybody could have done it
right because it is a legal process. But in the
DC did belong to the Senate or to Congress. They
were supposed to be in charge of it, but they
delegated that to people like mayor Bauers. Who then and
there's true crime in it, right, and there's a real
(02:29):
concern is who do they delegate it to when they
when they turned it over to somebody and you get people.
Speaker 3 (02:33):
Like Kerr and then of course they have to turn
it over to the military because you got police officers
there that aren't doing their job. But anyway, enough on that,
our guest this week, I want to welcome Mark Fitzpatrick
to the show, a fellow Idahoan and also owner of
the Old State Saloon and of course, the man who
(02:56):
put on Heterosexual Awesomeness back in June. Mark, thank you
very much for joining us.
Speaker 5 (03:03):
Hey, I'm glad to be here. Thanks for having me on. Yes,
a lot of exciting stuff going on. I even posted
this week can't wait to see what happens this week,
because I feel like every week we go into it's
just you never know what wonderful things are going to happen.
Speaker 3 (03:17):
So oh yeah, yeah, I mean, well, we we've got
we got quite a bit to talk about in an
hour to do it. First off, I just got to
get your reaction on something though. When I was a kid,
I was you know, I was brought up, you know,
in a very conservative household, a nuclear family. Even though
(03:39):
I wasn't raised by my mom and dad. My dad
knew he couldn't provide very well for me, so he
gave me over to his sister and her husband to
raise me. And they raised me as one of their own,
of course, and she, you know, she got me into
the church, taught me my morals and values right there,
and horse you in Idaho, where I grew up just
(04:01):
twenty miles north of you. Well, one thing, she will
always get on me and tell me, you know, stay
away from bars, they're nothing but sin and all that.
But we have a man such as yourself who has
the same morals and values as her, and yet you
own a bar.
Speaker 5 (04:20):
Yeah, I get a punch from the left and the
right sometimes it seems like or you know how that
goes with people. You know, I'm Christian and I love
a Lord and that's the most important thing in my life.
And I get a lot of people who are Christians
who will send messages in and essentially call me a
(04:42):
sinner for owning a bar, and I disagree strongly with that.
I would say, well, you know, we're basically a restaurant.
We call ourselves a saloon, but we have a full
food menu. In fact, this week we're actually announcing that
we're opening up to all ages, which is really cool,
and it'll be twenty one and over after eight pm,
(05:04):
but the rest of the day will be all ages.
We open at eight going to be opening at eight
am with hot breakfast, sandwiches and hot food. So we're
basically a restaurant at this point. But yeah, they'll they'll
say that, you know, you're you're you're serving alcohol to
people and you know you're getting people drunk. And I
(05:26):
guess the way that I respond to that, I say, hey,
do you do you say that to restaurant owners where
people come in and they order food and you know,
somebody can sit down or people do sit down every
day and they'll overeat, you know, and and just eat
way too much. And that's you know, when you overeat
or overdrink or whatever you're doing to access, it's going
to be could become sinful activity. And it's certainly not
(05:49):
the restaurant owner's fault with people unless I mean unless
they're saying, you know, all you can eat and shoving
food in people's faces and you know, trying to get
people over eat, you know, which you don't see that
happen very often. But and we don't do that at
Old State Saloon either. We are definitely for being sober minded,
as the Bible says, and being alert and the whole point,
(06:12):
you know, of a lot of what Jesus says is
to seek the truth. Like you guys said on your
intro there, the truth matters and you can't be seeking
truth if you're drunk. You can't be seeking truth if
you're high, not sober minded. So we want people to
be sober minded. And most great majority of people who
come in out of Old State Saloon are really good,
(06:34):
conservative Christian type people. There's very few people that get drunk.
Of course, sometimes that happens, but our bartenders are pretty
quick to cut people off, especially my son, my son Man,
he cuts people off like he's only twenty. He's allowed
to bartend at nineteen. You're allowed to bartend at nineteen.
But he's amazing to me because he cuts off people
(06:57):
that are much older than him, and he has the confidence.
Speaker 2 (06:59):
To do it.
Speaker 5 (07:01):
But anyways, that's that's my response to people who say
that sin on a ball.
Speaker 4 (07:06):
He honors a sense of responsibility. Well, at the same time,
I mean just a quick reflection here. If you look
at Noah, he come in drunk. Remember before his sons,
he was drunk off his hind quarters, right, But yeah,
he was God's chosen person for that day. So I mean, yeah,
you're right. I tell you, use it, don't abuse it.
But you're gonna have moments in life. It doesn't mean
(07:28):
you're not a Christian. It doesn't mean it's just people
being judges. What I'm trying to get at. It doesn't
mean you're not a Christian. It doesn't mean you're not
a good person. Doesn't mean you're going to Hell just
because you got a little bit of aviated one day.
Speaker 3 (07:37):
So you know, it's kind of funny too, is in
the past in some countries they've actually given alcohol to
certain people because they said it makes them, uh speak
the truth. I don't know if you ever if you've
ever heard the Latin term in vino veritas, which means
when I drink, I speak my mind.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
Yeah, that's true too.
Speaker 5 (08:01):
And we were reading Timothy today my Bible study, and
Paul writes to Timothy to drink some wine. It's also
good for settling the stomach problems. And I think about sometimes,
I think about their wine that they had back then,
that you know, Jesus uh, you know, created wine out
of water and gave it to people at a celebration.
(08:23):
But you know, I think about the wine they have
back then and how it's good to cure stomach problems
and things like that. And I think about our wine today,
which is probably full of a bunch of chemicals from
you know, from destroying weeds and things like that, and
you know, we're just being poisoned from every angle.
Speaker 2 (08:39):
And I kind of wish, hey, I wish I could
try that wine.
Speaker 5 (08:42):
You know that Jesus made water into wine and they
said it's the best wine.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
I would love to try.
Speaker 3 (08:47):
It, you know. And and that's a good point you're
bringing up too. I came went to the Red Pill
Expo in Tulsa, Oklahoma, about exactly four weeks ago. And
every time I go to the Red Pill and I
speak to people like g Edward Griffin and the guest
(09:07):
he always have had has there, you know, I come
back with a frame of mind that number one I'm
I'm I'm loaded with more information about a lot of
different things, but one of the main things is health.
You know that I mean, because they really really drill
that into you. Of of certain products, you know, and
(09:29):
one thing I do take regularly right now, especially since
I'm fifty years old and you know, I'm going through
what they call andropause. And I was recommended dear Antler velvet,
which is a natural substance for rejuvenating yourself. And I'm
(09:49):
telling you what, how this stuff how good this stuff works?
Is I like to I like to keep my fingernails close,
you know, because I don't like having dirty fingernails. And uh,
I just cut my fingernails two days ago, and uh
with it, I have to go in and cut them again.
It's made. This stuff is making, is rejuvenating me fast.
(10:11):
It works and link link in the description for IGF one.
I get yourself some it works.
Speaker 2 (10:20):
I'll give it a shot.
Speaker 3 (10:21):
Yeah, yes, yes, indeed. See. So we got about four
minutes before we have to hit the first break. We're
going by real fast already. But man, have you been
hit with controversy left and right? I mean the blowback
from the heterosexual awesomeness? I mean, uh, I thought it
(10:45):
was great because you really put it to the mayor
of Boys, who who I think does not belong in
Idaho to begin without correct me if I'm wrong, But
you're not originally from Idaho, right.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
That's correct.
Speaker 5 (10:58):
I moved here seven years ago to just outside of
Boise and the Eagle area, and man, I'm so thankful
every day. I'm thankful to God that he put up
and created the circumstances for us to move here, and
thank thankful to be here. But yes, I agree with you. You know,
(11:19):
we do have a lot of i'll just call it
like infiltrators, I guess you would say people.
Speaker 3 (11:28):
Mayor McLean is one of those people who has come
to Idaho to change Idaho for the worst. She's from Massachusetts,
and if you go go there, John can tell you
all about it. He lives. He lives in a New
England area and has to sometimes deal with the crap
that they have in Boston. But she came over to
change the landscape. That's what she's doing. Oh, Governor little
(11:53):
I can you know, there's there's some that I like
about him and a lot that I don't like, you know.
I mean, we go all day about Governor Littledres because
he most of the time he irritates me with his policies.
But I like the fact that, you know, he did
say that historic flags, American flags, tribal flags, military only
(12:14):
in front of government buildings. And she all know she
found a loophole to make the rainbow mafia flag of
a historic flag, and she's allowed to waive that thing.
But at least you putting on that event, you kind
of stuck it to her.
Speaker 5 (12:33):
Yeah, I mean, I guess one of the points of
what we're doing, if we're just gonna be very honest
about it, is to basically, you know, play this game
back and stick it to them as your words of like, hey,
you're going to be out celebrating sexuality. Well, we're going
to celebrate God's design for sexuality and it.
Speaker 2 (12:54):
You know, it just really I.
Speaker 5 (12:56):
Can tell you it really pissed everybody off around the
around the world actually, because they still you know, to
this day, every day I get messages from people that
are just disgusting and threatening and everything else.
Speaker 3 (13:08):
Oh yeah, well I've seen it. They're they're calling you, uh,
they're calling you some kind of ist, some kind of phobe. Yeah,
you're you're a racist, You're a homophobe, You're a misogynist. Oh,
they hate your Yeah, I've seen it on Facebook too,
They're threatening to come and burn your place down.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
Yeah. Facebook.
Speaker 5 (13:32):
Then they all got together and reported me as a terrorist.
And now Facebook, I can't even come close near Facebook.
They just for somehow they know and then they take
my account away from me. Somebody else, somebody else manages
the old State account, old State Saloon account on Facebook.
And that's about That's about how we can do. We
had almost twenty thousand followers on Facebook when they just
(13:53):
erased us.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
Of course they of course you did, of course you did. Anyway,
So we're at the first quarter, and we're gonna go
ahead and take our first break, and we'll be back
in just under two minutes. All right, ladies and gentlemen,
we are back, joined by Mark Fitzpatrick out of the
Boise area onner the Old State Saloon. Now, Mark, he
(14:19):
posted something on x that was very interesting. I think
you posted it yesterday. It was a long post, interesting story.
Somebody had to come and cuss you out because they
heard bad things about you on TV. And if they
heard it on TV, it must be correct.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
It must be Yeah.
Speaker 5 (14:42):
I was sitting out front of Old State Saloon with
my son, my youngest son, and we were just having
dinner and lady that I know her, I mean left
talked her in the past, and she used to come
into Old State Saloon, but she doesn't anymore, and it's
(15:03):
probably a good thing.
Speaker 2 (15:04):
She kind of overdrinks.
Speaker 5 (15:05):
But I saw her leaving another bar and she walked
down the street in front of us and stopped and
looked at us, and she looked at us in a
way where she was wondering why we were sitting together,
because my son is he's thirteen. He's pretty tall and
strong for his age. He's thirteen, and he's Mexican and
Native American. He's adopted, had we foster cared for him
(15:29):
since he was five days old when we were foster
family in California, and then we ended up adopting him,
which is a whole crazy story because it's very hard
for a white family to adopt a Native American child.
But that's an interesting thing in and of itself. But anyways,
(15:50):
sitting there and she's wondering why, you know, we're sitting
there together, I can tell. And then she gives him
a fist bump and then asks for a hug, which
was kind of odd. And then she's hugging him, she
whispered something to him, and I didn't know what she
whispered to My found out later when he told me.
But she whispered stay away from him, you know, referring
to me, which is just kind of funny because I'm
(16:12):
his loving father and we have a very good relationship
and so he you know, he just kindly can like
finishes up hugging her, sits down, and then she starts
to walk away and looks at me and says, we
just disagree on so much. And I said, what do
you know? What do we disagree on? Because I always
like to have conversations one on one. I like to,
(16:34):
you know, if people are willing to film conversations one
on one, I put him online.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
Even at the Pride events. I do that.
Speaker 5 (16:39):
We get in some good conversations sometimes. But anyways, I said, what,
you know, what do we differ on? And then she
just stares at me and says, you're a racist. And
I said, okay, can you give me one example, just
give me any example of my racism, you know, so
that just justify what you're saying. And she couldn't she answer,
(17:00):
and stares at me and and uh, you know, definitely.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
Had been had been dreaming quite a bit.
Speaker 5 (17:06):
And I said, it's you know, it's really ridiculous that
you're standing here in front of me, in public, in
front of my son, and you're calling me a racist
and you can't figure out why you're calling me that.
And she said, well, you know, the news said so
the news said you were and uh so I said, okay, well,
(17:28):
maybe you can explain what the news said that.
Speaker 2 (17:32):
You know that I'm a racist. She couldn't do it.
Speaker 5 (17:35):
I think she realized when she realized that that I'm
not going to say his name, when when the boy,
when she realized the boy is my son, she you know,
she started to apologize, but then she got back and
being very accusatory, and and and then she did mention
that that I'm against gay rights, which is I depending
(17:59):
on what she means, this is not true. But it's
just hard to get people to engage in an intellectual
conversation when they just want to point the finger at
you and call you a name simply because they disagree
with you or you disagree with them about morality or
what's right or what's true. And you bring truth, truth matters.
You bring truth into a world of deception, people are
(18:21):
going to get pissed off. All the deceivers are going
to get pised off. Everybody that living under deception deception
is going to get pissed off. She's one of them,
she got I challenged her. I stood up and I said, no,
you need to explain now that you're in public calling
me a racist.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
You need to explain why and.
Speaker 5 (18:37):
Give everybody the evidence, and she couldn't do it, and
I said, you're a liar and you're a coward and
you're drunk, and get out of here.
Speaker 2 (18:44):
And so she ended up F you and F that
and blah blah blah.
Speaker 5 (18:48):
And at this point I had an audience coming outside
and everything.
Speaker 2 (18:52):
And I said, just leave, just go, and so she left.
But that was the end of that.
Speaker 5 (18:56):
We had a good family conversation about it later on
at the dinner table the next night. So I don't know,
it was a really good learning experience for my son.
It was an uncomfortable situation. And I actually really like
for my my family and my kids to conquer uncomfortable
situations because that's what really like gives you the education
(19:18):
experience you need to deal with things in the future.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Like if you if you can.
Speaker 5 (19:24):
Get through this, talk about it and think, hey, this
is what I would have done in the future, it
will equip them. And so we did that, and we
talked about, you know, some biblical ideas surrounding all of
that and what she said and what I should do.
And so I could have put it out on video,
and I decided not to do that. It's a small town,
and I know people know this person, and and I
(19:46):
you know, we'll see maybe maybe next time I see her,
she's apologetic.
Speaker 2 (19:49):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (19:50):
I'm happy to still happy to converse with her and
talk about whether or not I'm racist.
Speaker 3 (19:57):
I'll let the booze wear off and maybe you'll be
willing to listen. I don't know, but yes. And then
one of your videos that I watched to you talked
about how you go into the Pride events and you
try to engage in conversation. Of course, some are awfully confrontational,
(20:21):
as you know. I mean you look at videos from
people like Adam Francisco down in Florida and a few
others who I've seen are very he has to deal
with very, very aggressive people because he just remained so calm.
You had to deal with one who told who started
(20:41):
screaming at you and told you not to California gate
the state. Now that right there, I just started laughing,
because I'm a native Idaho and I have Yes, I've
moved out of Idaho at points in my life, but
I've always come back. And and you know, as far
as California, caate and the state, that's exactly what he
(21:03):
was doing. What happened, you know, the when they said
that Idaho was full of white supremacists, especially up north. Oh,
that's because somebody from California moved to North Idaho and
started a network for the area and brotherhood up north.
So you know, that was somebody else trying to Californicate
(21:23):
the state that wasn't a native Idaho and that did that,
you know, And and you came to Idaho because I mean,
let's face it, California actually used to be the reddest
state on the map, and you know it just from
San franciscoing on out, it sunk into the abyss. And
(21:44):
you know, you obviously wanted to come to what old
California used to be, which is Idaho. And now we're
sinking into that abyss.
Speaker 2 (21:54):
Yeah, it does.
Speaker 5 (21:54):
It does feel like the eighties, you know in a
lot of ways, you know, and a lot of things
that I really loved about California a long time ago.
But we're starting to feel a change. There's a change everywhere.
I feel like a lot of people are struggling right now.
I feel like people are tired of all the taxes
(22:15):
and inflation and the financial pressures and rules and regulations,
and it's the taxes are You go everywhere and there's taxes,
and California is horrible. And I will say Idaho, even
in the seven years I've been here, has gotten worse
(22:35):
as far as rules, regulations, and taxes go. The reason
I discussed this in link with somebody recently, and I
think the reason being is because the value of land
has gone up. And you could definitely blame that on California, Oregon, Washington,
people moving and the high demand for property value land's
(22:57):
gone up. And when you have the value of land
go up, the risk is higher. And when you have
a higher risk for people who are investing buying a house, whatever,
whether it's their personal residence or investing or building things
or whatever, when the risk is higher, you need more
rules because you've got to protect your risk. Attorneys get involved,
(23:18):
and so things start to become more regulated, and the
more expensive things are, and so you start to see
and this is the part where I agree with people
who've been in Idaho for a long time blaming things
on people out of state. I agree with them in
this instance is that things are getting more regulated in Idaho,
(23:41):
and you have rules and people who want you to
follow rules and you start to feel like that takes
away your freedom. And that's because I think it's directly
because of land value going up skyrocketing. Now, the rest
of what's interesting is the rest of like the culture
wars that are being blamed on California, Oregon and Washington.
(24:04):
I don't think that has much to do with California, Oregon, Washington.
I think it has to do, you know, with you know,
these devices and how powerful they've got.
Speaker 3 (24:13):
Oh yeah, I mean well social I mean, the phone
is one thing, but social media has has been a
big corruptor. I mean, we love Facebook and our X
and all that, but there's there's just I don't know,
maybe maybe it's time to take us It's definitely time
to stake it, take a step back, look this over,
(24:35):
and maybe some things need to be done away with,
you know. I mean we've heard the phrase it's a
small world. The Internet has made it a lot smaller
for sure. And then with social media into the mix,
you know.
Speaker 5 (24:51):
Yeah, the learning curve, I mean, the amount of learning
that's happening with our youth when they get a phone.
And even if you're the type of parent that doesn't
allow your kids to have a phone. Their friends have phones,
and so the only you know, you have to homeschool
and you have to you know, keep up these big
barriers just to keep them away from the filth that's
on the internet. And it is all over the place,
(25:13):
and it's it's some of it is very tricky, and
some of it is I mean, you have these children's
websites Roadblock, think these different websites that they play on,
and they seem maybe fun, innocuous and and just you know,
like they're for kids and everything. And there's predators on
there that are trying to you know, get them to
(25:34):
meet up in the park so that they can molest them.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
It's there.
Speaker 5 (25:37):
It's it's just crazy the world that we live in
and how quickly everything changed.
Speaker 2 (25:43):
And so I think I think a lot.
Speaker 5 (25:44):
So I think a lot of what is like those
negative things, the fact that people in Idaho are are
or you know, it's really everywhere, but in Idaho people
are thinking, hey, we now have to learn, you know,
what these pronouns mean.
Speaker 2 (25:58):
And and a man a man is.
Speaker 5 (26:01):
Not it could be a woman like all this crap, right,
and and so what do they think they're like blame
they're blaming it on all the changes that happened, and
I think it's a misblame as far as that goes.
I think the blame is on the control of media
and information over these devices and how easy the transfer
of information has become to everybody, you know, we whether
(26:26):
they say like entertainment and comfortability. If you can get
people entertained and comfortable, you can enslave them.
Speaker 3 (26:32):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (26:32):
And that's really kind of this path that I think
we've been on. And my hope is that that is stopping.
I would pray, I pray that that stops that the
people that are in power and control and want, you know,
to to essentially control everything with a with a flip
of a switch. I hope that that's coming to an end.
(26:52):
And like you're commercial about the farm, you know, the
farming and people supporting local farmers and everything.
Speaker 2 (26:58):
Like that, that's a fight.
Speaker 5 (27:00):
That's that's a fight against big aga, against big you know,
big food, all those places, and it's a fight worth having.
Speaker 3 (27:07):
Well, I'll say something about that when we come back
from our bottom of the hour break, which is just
a little over three minutes. All right, ladies and gentlemen,
we are back being joined by Mark Fitzpatrick, out of
right here. Beautiful Idaho. Sorry, John, I'm a little biased,
(27:29):
as you know. That's all right.
Speaker 4 (27:32):
I think Idaho is beautiful.
Speaker 3 (27:33):
I've been there. Yes, you got the White Mountains there
in New Hampshire. We do.
Speaker 4 (27:40):
Hi, tallest peak in the northeast of the United States,
second tallest peak in the east of the Mississippi.
Speaker 3 (27:48):
There you go.
Speaker 4 (27:49):
Yes, Mitchell got us in North Carolina by four hundred feet.
Can you imagine North Carolina?
Speaker 3 (27:57):
Oh no, I've been some very beautiful areas in North
carol Line and especially the Tennessee border in the Great
Smoky Mountains.
Speaker 4 (28:04):
Oh, you get on the dragons till Man. You got something?
Speaker 3 (28:07):
Yes, yes, indeed, uh uh Mark, what I wanted to
share with you is there there was a man that
I used to listen to. His name's Clay Douglas. Of
course he's not podcasting anymore, but uh, this was back
in what twenty eleven. I started listening to what he
had to say and start started to catch a little
attention of what has been happening, you know, and and
(28:31):
realizing that, you know, number one, I need to I
need to get better with God, you know, because uh,
you know, we've been. We've been in the end times
for the past decade, and of course where it's been
that was that was twenty and eleven, so so that
was what fourteen years ago, and of course we're a
(28:51):
lot closer now. But what what he shared with me was,
you know, when the communist world order takes over, the
first thing they're gonna go after is the farmers, because
they want a society that's going to be reliant on them,
(29:13):
you know, they they want that, those big tech slaves
is what they want. You know. They don't want you
to be able to maintain for yourself and grow your
own food. No, you're gonna you're gonna live in a pod,
You're gonna eat bugs, you're gonna own nothing, You're gonna
be happy. That's what they want. So the farmers the
(29:33):
first target. Second target is the is those of us
that are faithful to the old regime. Let's say you
on that.
Speaker 2 (29:47):
I think now there's a lot there to comment on.
I think.
Speaker 5 (29:53):
As a Christian, you know, I know that most of
the church teaches end time and rapture and things like that.
I don't fall exactly into those categories. I do. I
do think that most people in history, from what I
can tell, in recent history a couple hundred years, seem
(30:14):
to think that they're in the end times.
Speaker 2 (30:17):
And it could be that we're not.
Speaker 5 (30:19):
You know, you read through the Old Testament and you
see different periods of time where leaders come in and
things go bad and people start doing horrible things and
worshiping golden images and blah.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
Blah blah blah.
Speaker 5 (30:34):
And then you have a different leader or king come
in and things those get destroyed and things go good
and they return to good again or relatively good. And
I think God sets those people, you know, in places,
as the Bible tells us. And so you know, the
way that I see it is that we can't sit back,
(30:54):
and I feel like it's a big mistake and it's
part of a deception to say that we're going to
sit back and just say, well, well the end is near,
so let's just pray and be ready for the end
and not do anything. I don't see that as a
and I'm not saying that you're saying that at all.
I'm just saying like, we need to we need to
(31:15):
get together and fight this evil. And that's why you
have your show, and I love it and I'm thankful
for that. But and the big way of doing that
is to get the truth out there. The truth matters,
as you guys say, and so the more that we
can share that truth and expose darkness, and and that's
what that exposing darkness and sharing the truth is what's
(31:38):
gonna wake more people up, to get them out of
their stupor or drunkenness or whatever you want to call it,
where they're not actually paying attention to the evil that's
going on in the world. They're just like, I'm being entertained.
I'm comfortable, So I'm just gonna keep going down this
path of allowing all this evil to happen. But we
need good people who have morals to identify as evil
(31:59):
and be there to say no, hey, no more of
this stuff. We need people to say, hey, look, you
can't you can't be marching down the middle of Boise
demanding sharia law. It's just not going to work here.
I don't know if you saw that video today, but
we need to be able to we need to fight
back against these things.
Speaker 3 (32:17):
Oh uh. Texas has already put into law that sharia
law will not happen, and I applaud them for that.
Of course, there's some backlash there, and of course they're
read districting nonsense that they're that their fate.
Speaker 5 (32:34):
You know.
Speaker 3 (32:35):
I think they fixed that today too, you know. And
I think it's really funny, funny how the left accuses
us of jerry mandering when they open the borders and
and let millions of immigrants in so they can secure
their spots and register them to vote and make them citizens,
(32:57):
and all that they accuse us of jerry mandering. Isn't
that just the hypocrisy is just unreal. It's just unreal.
But to get to what you said, you know, I mean,
whether or not we're in the end times, you know it,
it remains to be seen. I do believe, and you know,
(33:18):
and there are too many Christians out there, or so
called Christians whatever, think, well, God's just gonna take care
of us. We don't need to do anything. God is
known to test you and test your will to see.
God wants to see how tough you really are. And
(33:38):
so you know, he's not just going to appear and
take everybody away just yet. He wants to see who's
worthy of the fight first. That's at least that's what
I've always believed that's what I was taught.
Speaker 5 (33:51):
Yeah, I agree. I mean, Jesus so many times says,
don't be deceived. And then he's you know, he says
a powerful truth, and usually it's related to evil leaders,
religious leaders of the day and questioning you know, them
and their motives, and you know, and Paul writes in Hebrews.
(34:13):
You know, one of my favorite, you know, parts of
the Bible is this part where Paul writes in Hebrews.
He basically says that you're all gonna be baby Christians
unless you make a practice out of discerning between good
and evil. And that's the end of chapter five in Hebrews.
Like we think it's Paul. We don't know for sure
it's Paul, but we think it's Paul.
Speaker 2 (34:31):
And so.
Speaker 5 (34:33):
You you know, he says, like, if you're not making
a practice out of discerning between good and evil, what's
true and what's a lie, then you can only handle
the milk of scripture. It means you're not ready to
move on to the meat. Yet you're not you're not
a mature Christian. You're not somebody who's gotten past the basics.
(34:54):
And because you have to make a practice out of
doing that if we're not doing that, then we're just
not really doing our jobs as Christians. We need to
be people who are salt and light, shining light, and
that's truth, and it's bringing truth in the most uncomfortable
situations when you're gonna lose something. Jesus says, if you
bring truth like I am, they're gonna hate you. The
world's gonna hate you, but they hate it. Just know
(35:15):
that they hated me first. And so if he's our example,
then you know we ought to be doing what he's doing.
And that means a lot of people are gonna hate
us and they might even put us to death at
some point for speaking truth.
Speaker 3 (35:27):
You know, Mark, I don't know if you went to
my website. I know that prior to the show you
were checking out some of my previous broadcasts, and thank
you for that. But if you went to my website,
the Bearded Patriots dot com, you will see at the
top there I have Ephesians five eleven pinned there on
every page. Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness,
(35:51):
but instead expose them.
Speaker 5 (35:53):
Yes, so agreed, it's a directive and we got to
do it. And so I think to you know, for
you know, I believe that there's been a lot of
deception in the Church throughout the last couple hundred years.
And I believe that a lot of Church has been
deceived to think that we ought to be just waiting
(36:17):
for the rapture to happen. And things are getting bad
and that's good. Things are getting bad and that's good
because the end is here, so let's just pray and
wait for the rapture to happen.
Speaker 2 (36:28):
And that's a huge mistake.
Speaker 4 (36:30):
I think they miss these words like to be meek
and mild, you know, a meek shielled heirt the earth,
and a lot of people think that means to be
just timid and not do anything. And truth of the
matter is, from my understanding, it all Greek meet meant
to be strong like a horse. You know, you're supposed
to be obedient to God like a horse is obedient,
and you're supposed to be strong like a horse, you know,
(36:52):
not mild and timid. It's about being strong like a horse.
So a lot of people misconstrue the words through the years,
they take on new definitions, and those things are feeding
because we believe something that isn't really true. When you
look at it or dissect it. This commonly happens. And
so you see the aggressors in the in the globe
or what Islam people Muslims or the people who support
(37:13):
is on.
Speaker 3 (37:13):
They're fundamentalist Muslims.
Speaker 4 (37:15):
I'm not saying all Muslims is bad. I don't want
to get into picking on people for being a Muslim.
But at the same time, when we got fund of
fundamentalist Muslims attacking people, blowing things up, driving fear into people,
and people are becoming what obedient to them, They're becoming
compliant to them. They're starting to fall over into their
their thinking. It's like because of fear. So they're winning
because they're being the strongest. We have to be stronger
(37:37):
than them in order to win.
Speaker 2 (37:40):
Fear. Yeah, I mean that's a huge word. There's so
much fear.
Speaker 5 (37:44):
And I think people don't want to address things, or
think about things, or consider deceptions and things like that
because they're afraid of the ramifications. Example, like even people
in church, they don't want to be singled out by
their churches doing something. And so if the church doesn't
like what you're doing, even if it's right and true,
people are afraid to say something or speak up or
(38:05):
or be a barean like you know, Paul's like the
Brians are awesome because they're really checking everything and they're
bringing it to the word and studying it and making
sure it's true. And you want to be like a
Brian in church, Like, there's some pastors that will basically
want you out of church for doing stuff like that,
and people are afraid because they don't want to lose.
It's like the parents of the boy that was cured
(38:25):
of being blind and inca is Matthew nine or ten
or something, but they said, hey, go ask him yourself,
because we don't want to be a witness on what
happened because we were. They're afraid of being kicked out
of the synagogue and ask That's a lot of that
fear based.
Speaker 2 (38:40):
You know.
Speaker 5 (38:40):
People don't want to get kicked out of their social groups,
their church, whatever for speaking truth.
Speaker 3 (38:44):
You know who I think is a good example that
a lot of people should follow. And my example was
actually a Muslim and that'd be the greatest Muhammad Alie
because he didn't care that Elijah Muhammed and kicked him
out of the church. You know, and you watch that
movie I'll leave with Will Smith and that that one
(39:08):
line his girlfriend tells him, Elijah Muhammad says, you can
be a Muslim again, and he looks at her and says,
I never stopped. So just because the church kicks you
out doesn't mean that you can't stop believing, you can't
stop praying, They can't control.
Speaker 4 (39:27):
That sounds a bit like he understood Jesus Christ morning
he did the Muslims because is that what Jesus was
was the original liberator. He went against authority in the
church and in the government.
Speaker 2 (39:39):
Yes, he did.
Speaker 3 (39:42):
All right, So we are at the final quarter and
we're going to take our final break and we'll be
back to wrap things up in just under two minutes.
All right, ladies and gentlemen, we are back and with
roughly just about twelve minutes to go the way. Yes,
(40:05):
they're great, well some some of them. Some of them
of course, are are with the Patriots Prayer Network, and
then there there's my affiliates uh personally as well, and
then John has a couple also, So we make sure
to tie all all that in, all of them links
in the description. But I did want to ask you,
(40:29):
you know, going going back to the month of groom.
I mean, June, Uh, I always like to throw that
little joke in there, But what was it that pretty
much inspired you to put on the heterosexual awesomeness? I mean,
before you answer that too, I mean one thing is
I mean, there's a lot of people are saying you're
trying to shove your ideology down society's throats. But when
(40:52):
I was on my way to the park, Uh, why
did I see Rainbow Mafia flags on every single street
post as I was on my way down there, Every
single one of them had to have one of those
things on it. Oh gee, If that's not shoving the
ideology down somebody's throat.
Speaker 5 (41:14):
Yeah, I mean there's an agenda for sure. The agenda
is the Pride agenda, and it's well funded. It's been
well funded for decades. I think some of the things
that Trump has done is take away some of that funding.
Is my what I think is happening through USAID. I
think a lot of money was going out through USAID
coming back into all these movements and.
Speaker 2 (41:35):
Funding all these events.
Speaker 5 (41:37):
And the propaganda and the marketing which to push forward
the Pride movement. And what they tell you the Pride
movement is and I'll get to answer your question. But
what they tell you the Pride Movement is is not
what it really is. What they tell you is, hey,
we're just here to protect you know, gay people from
(41:58):
being able to walk down the street and not being
at act and to have the rights to just be
happy and to live life pursuit of happiness, et cetera.
And they shouldn't be, you know, victims of things like that,
and that that is not true. The reality of the
Pride movement is that they are coming after our children
(42:18):
and they're not reproducing, and so they have to come
after the children to continue that on. It gets very
spiritual and dark. I mean, you get into Baphomet and
we no longer have definitions or they don't want us
to have definitions of male and female and the way
God designed us.
Speaker 2 (42:37):
And they want to.
Speaker 5 (42:38):
Try to convince children children who are having struggles because
the traditional family has been attacked for decades, where you
no longer have a masculine leader male and you know
his wife and they are in a loving relationship raising children.
It's hard to find that because it's been attacked so much,
(42:59):
children are now as a result, struggling in school. The
schools teaching a bunch of wickedness. They're not doing well.
Everybody says, well, maybe you'd be happier if you were
not a boy and you're a girl. And then all
the kids and teachers and everybody says, yeah, maybe you're
a girl. And then this boy starts feeling like, hey,
this feels like people love me.
Speaker 2 (43:19):
Now.
Speaker 5 (43:19):
This is like the first time I feel loved in
my life because I'm not getting it at home, I'm
not getting it anywhere else.
Speaker 2 (43:24):
And maybe I am a girl, you know. And so
they continue on and they go down this path, and
then they get prescribed drugs without their parents even knowing,
and then they're on these drugs, and the drugs stop
them from becoming a man, stops this boy from becoming
a man, and then they get go down this path
of even going so far as to having sex organs
chopped off.
Speaker 5 (43:42):
This is about as evil as it gets and wicked
as it gets. It didn't start this way for me
a year ago in June or just before June and
twenty twenty four. The reason why I did heterosexual loss
in this month at Old State Saloon, which that went
viral around the world. The reason I did it is
(44:03):
because I knew what was coming in June, and I said,
what can we do that would be celebrating God's design
for sexuality instead of this wickedness that has gone to
such an extreme where we're supposed to be celebrating disgusting
men who are half naked in front of children, doing
(44:24):
pelvic gyrations in parades down the street. We're supposed to
be celebrating this nonsense, this wickedness, And so what can
we do at Old State Saloon that would counteract that
where we could celebrate something that's God's design, hence heterosexual awesome.
This month was born and we had a blast. We
had a blast in the bar, had events that whole
(44:45):
month and it was a great time. And I got
a ton of hate and threats, death threats, building threats, burned.
Speaker 2 (44:52):
Down the building, all those things.
Speaker 5 (44:54):
So we go into the next year in twenty twenty five,
and I decided to do an event downtown.
Speaker 2 (45:01):
We did that event. It was well put on.
Speaker 5 (45:04):
We had five to seven hundred people show up, but
it was spread out a little bit too much, and
we never had a lot of people at one time.
It was very strange. I will say that those two
days were very cold and it was rainy, and the
whole time days before and after were much warmer. There
were a lot of things we were fighting against.
Speaker 2 (45:24):
We had the.
Speaker 5 (45:25):
Other side was attacking anybody that said they were coming.
People would call us and says it's safe to show
up because the wicked, immoral other side of the equation
was attacking anybody who thought to sponsor us, anybody who
thought to go. So there was a lot of challenges,
but we did it. We pulled it off. It was
a great event. And we also had Heterosexual Awesome this
(45:45):
month again at Old State Saloon throughout the month.
Speaker 2 (45:48):
That was fun too.
Speaker 5 (45:50):
So we'll continue to do Heterosexual Awesome this month for
the years to come. As long as there's going to
be Pride Month, we'll be doing Heterosexual Awesome this month
in our bar. So you can come down and plan
yourcations accordingly and join us next June. But yeah, so
that's that's what kind of prompted. It was just a
desire to do something that would honor God's creation for sexuality.
Speaker 4 (46:13):
So I'm looking real quick doing searches and stuff. Earlyer,
I was seeing some articles saying that you actually had
support from the homosexual community. Is that true or was
that just sarcasm or.
Speaker 2 (46:25):
No, that's true.
Speaker 5 (46:26):
There's there's a lot of homosexuals that are recognizing what
I just explained, which is this is no longer about
protecting basic rights like basic human rights. This is no
longer protecting homosexual relationship from existing, you know, like they
just they want to exist. Hey, look, I could disagree
(46:46):
with that, I could disagree morally with that, I could
say biblically, but I'm I'm happy that people have the
right to choose to do what they want to do
when they're an adult.
Speaker 2 (46:55):
As far as that goes.
Speaker 5 (46:56):
I don't agree morally that it's right, but and I
think so basically, what's happening is you have a lot
of homosexuals lesbians that are saying, hey, look this has changed,
and this has become wicked and extreme, and this has
been definitely targeting children, and they're leading them down this
path of gender confusion and dysphoria. And kids are now
(47:17):
cats and there's no definitions of anything anymore, and there's
no such thing as a man or woman or whatever,
and that's a big problem.
Speaker 2 (47:25):
So you have a sizable group of mature a little
bit more rationally thinking people.
Speaker 5 (47:33):
That are homosexual that are just like, hey, we're fully
in favor of what you're doing. And I have email
after email after email, and I've made friends. I've sat
down for hours and talked to different people from that
community who.
Speaker 2 (47:47):
Agree with me. I've got one gent, you know.
Speaker 5 (47:51):
He comes and joins my family for dinner every now
and then, and he comes and does karaoke at the bar,
and he's homosexual. He's local, but he totally agrees with
most of what I'm saying. Now, there's some things we
disagree on, but that's okay. You can live life and
disagree with people and you can still be friends, and
you can even support each other in certain ways. You know,
(48:12):
I don't support I'm not going to support immoral what
God says is immoral or whatever.
Speaker 2 (48:17):
But as a.
Speaker 5 (48:17):
Person, you know, when somebody's struggling, of course, you know,
everybody's a sinner. So I'm not going to say, hey, look,
I'm not going to help you because you're a homosexual. No,
of course, I'm going to help somebody who's a friend
that I can help that's a homosexual, if they need
a job or whatever. You know, that's just being a
human being and being a kind and loving human being.
Speaker 2 (48:36):
So no, I don't hate homosexuals. I get those accusations
all the time. I'm not a hater. I love them.
Speaker 5 (48:42):
I probably actually love them more than the people that
they actually think do love them, which is quite ironic.
I love people enough to speak the truth to them,
as hard as that truth is. And the most important
truth is that we are all sinners, all of us,
and we all fall.
Speaker 2 (49:01):
Short of the glory of God.
Speaker 5 (49:02):
And if we don't have Jesus Christ recognized as our
Lord and Savior who died in the cross for our sins,
we will be separated from God forever. That's basically called hell.
If you don't want to be separated from our creator
forever in hell, recognize that you're a sinner and recognize
that God's son Jesus lived a perfect life for you,
(49:23):
died on the cross, took the punishment for your sins,
so you don't have to take the punishment. And that's
why you would be able to spend eternity in the
Kingdom rather than in hell.
Speaker 2 (49:33):
So that's that's my message of love that I give
to people.
Speaker 4 (49:36):
That's a good message, man, you know, it's you know
what they say, you always pray for your enemies because
it's out of love. We all, we all live in
the same world, and we're all world we're all prone
to be afflicted by the adversary. So you pray for
the people and love your fellow man. And and that's
what you expressed here. And that's pretty awesome.
Speaker 3 (49:55):
Yes, yes, indeed, you know what. So we're just about
out a show here. But I also got to say this, uh,
to make it quick here as I find this absolutely
laughable as I look into the uh uh reviews for
the Old State Saloon on Facebook and they are very bad, unfortunately,
(50:16):
and one of them, one of them said black people
are not allowed in the Old State Saloon, which I
find that very laughable because I have a picture of
me with a black lady in the Old State Saloon.
Speaker 2 (50:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (50:32):
We uh, we just lost one of our employees. He
got promoted because he's an awesome guy, but he's black.
He was black bartender, like minded guy, he loved working there,
and uh yeah we have we have black people in
and out of there every day, which is crazy.
Speaker 2 (50:50):
Ironically, that lady called me a racist. She left.
Speaker 5 (50:53):
The next two people who walked by and came in
a male white and the male black who I know,
and they're my friends, and they came in for a
beer or whatever afterwards. With It's just it's so ridiculous
the accusations that get that get you know stated, And
I do think it's because you can do that to
a male white. You you're allowed to see whatever you
want to a mail white, but you can't say it
(51:13):
to other people.
Speaker 3 (51:15):
Yes, but uh so real quick too, of course. Uh.
Old State Saloon is an Eagle, Idaho. It's a kind
of like a suburb outside of Boise. It's a really
nice town. Of course, I grew up in the area.
I know exactly where it is. Of course, if anybody
wants to look you up, it's Old State Saloon dot com, Yes, sir, Yeah,
(51:39):
And of course what do you what are your ex handles.
Speaker 5 (51:44):
My personal handles Old at Old State Mark, and then
the saloon is at Old State Saloon.
Speaker 3 (51:50):
All right, on tap for next week, ladies and gentlemen,
we're gonna be speaking with Cody Whipple. He's uh, he's
running for office in the Silver state of Nevada. So
we'll be speaking with him next week. Mark, It's been
a great pleasure talking to you. God bless you to
keep doing what you're doing and hopefully soon I'm now
(52:12):
that you've got all ages open me now I can
I can come in with my wife and my my
son and we can sit down and have a meal.
Speaker 5 (52:22):
So that'd be awesome. Let me know, text me, I'll
meet up with you. There's a lot of fun. I
appreciate having me on your show.
Speaker 3 (52:30):
Absolutely. I appreciate you being here, and I appreciate everything
you're doing and what you're doing for the state of
Idaho and the city of Boise as well. So I
thank you for that. And ladies and gentlemen, thank you
very much for tuning into Patriot Confederation. God save the
Republic of the United States of America.
Speaker 2 (52:52):
We will live there. From buying the fe