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September 28, 2025 • 53 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
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, honor God Invisible,

(00:27):
with liberty and justice for all.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Ladies and gentlemen. We are the men in the arena.
We are the Patriot Confederation.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
We liver back down from bye.

Speaker 2 (00:42):
We're an Americans.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
All right, Ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 4 (01:01):
Welcome to Patriot Confederation for what is the twenty third
of September twenty twenty five.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
I'm your host, Bad Billy out.

Speaker 4 (01:10):
Of Twin Falls, Idaho, joined by John Grovenor out of
Nashawa and New Hampshire, New England, Northeast.

Speaker 3 (01:17):
How's it going up there, brother, Good as ever could be.

Speaker 5 (01:21):
Considering that somebody decided it was a good idea to
threaten to use weapons of massive druct destruction against the
governor of New Hampshire, that's what's interesting enough. Followed up
with mass shooting last Saturday during a wedding. Could you
imagine father of the groom or the bride is dead
because some another one off shot and killed him.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
Yes, yes, I remember reading about that, and of course
prayers and condolences to whoever was killed or wounded. Of course, yeah,
somebody they You know, it's so funny.

Speaker 3 (01:59):
Even after it's.

Speaker 4 (02:01):
Been proven that the radical left is responsible for much
of the violence happening, they still want to blame it
on the right. They want to blame it on those
who uphold the Second Amendment.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
Wow, what do you need guns for, Billy? What are
you done for?

Speaker 5 (02:21):
You need to hunt? Just go to the store and
find your food like decent people. What do you need
guns for? Man? Come on, man?

Speaker 3 (02:28):
Oh no, yeah, right.

Speaker 4 (02:29):
Or you need to become a vegetarian and quit eating meat.
If that's the case.

Speaker 5 (02:36):
Right, you're so gross man eating meat? What's thrown with you?

Speaker 3 (02:38):
Man?

Speaker 4 (02:39):
But this shooter apparently was one of those pro Palestine
whatever what I guess he's before opening fire, he screamed
free Palestine.

Speaker 5 (02:53):
So he announces the children are safe, and he announces
free Palestine. But he's it's not Palestinian. I don't think
he's supposedly all dressed in black. But you know, I'm
getting to the point now with all these copycat shootings
and stuff that he's just yelling, you know, whatever the
mantra is of the day, if it was transgender rights,

(03:14):
we all must be united, that's what he would have yelled.

Speaker 3 (03:17):
Yes, well just wow, yep. Well, I don't know.

Speaker 4 (03:24):
It's like one of these, one of these people. You know,
as far as you present the facts to him, and
you can, you can clearly show them that the sky
is blue. You're gonna show them pictures of the sky,
that the sky is blue. You're gonna you can even
grab him by the hair and pull their pull their

(03:45):
head to the sky and say, see the sky is blue,
and they're gonna scream in your face that the sky
is green. You know, this is what we're dealing with, partially.
There's much more to it.

Speaker 5 (03:57):
Green Billy, it's green with envy. For Cripe's sake, Come on,
man to screen with tinvy.

Speaker 4 (04:02):
Oh joining us this week of course, uh with that
monumental mohawk. I want to welcome Chase Matheson aka the
Patriot Punk. Thank you very much for joining us. How
are you, sir?

Speaker 6 (04:17):
I am doing exceptionally well. Thank you for reaching out
and having me. Yes, the mohawk is is my branding
as an independent journalist. It's cheaper than business cards. And
I'm pretty sure I have the tallest mohawk in all
of Republican politics.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
Now.

Speaker 4 (04:33):
See last week when I announced that you were going
to be our guest, John said, is the camera, you know,
with these small frames that we have here in the display,
is going to be large enough for that mohawk?

Speaker 2 (04:46):
He did ask that, Well, I did.

Speaker 6 (04:50):
It sticks a little higher than the screen, but you
can you can see most of it. You'll definitely have
at least one person scrolling by try to leave a
and say what is with that hair?

Speaker 2 (05:03):
So it works as an attention grabber.

Speaker 4 (05:07):
Yes, yes, indeed, you know, just like one of our
colleagues here at the Patriots Prayer Network we've had on
the show in the past, Maurice aka the Native Patriot,
you know, puts this red, white and blue war paint on,
you know, proudly Native American Andy shows it, but also
probably a Patriot too.

Speaker 6 (05:29):
That's that's what I like about this, whether you call
it the Maga movement, the populist movement, whatever it is,
it's there really is genuine diversity, not this forced you know, diversity, equity,
inclusion crap that they like to force down your throat.

Speaker 4 (05:47):
You know, I should also mention to his head dress.
He's got to make America great again. Headdress.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
That's pretty cool. That's pretty cool.

Speaker 6 (05:58):
I've done his spray paint FJB in the side of
my hair, but it's a lot harder than it looks
because it bleeds through.

Speaker 3 (06:08):
So oh, I can only imagine.

Speaker 5 (06:12):
Yes, So is this something relatively new to you or
have you had this since like the late nineteen eighties
or well.

Speaker 6 (06:18):
No, So I used to get a mohawk back when
I was like eight years old, a little one, and
I went to a real strict school, so it was
only during two week breaks, and then towards the end
of my general education, I went to a public school
and grew it out my senior year. And then while

(06:39):
at college somebody I was having them cut it in
the bathroom, as I've had to do so many times
being broke. Someone went a little bit too narrow, had
to buzz the whole thing off, and then I had
to start work. I got out of college at that point,
and no one would let you have a mohawk. And
then I was working as a program manager in the
aerospace industry just before COVID and was completely I worked

(07:02):
at a place where you could do anything and not
lose your job. So I was like, you know what,
I'd like to have a mohawk. I'm thirty years old,
but I've still got hair, so why not. I've always
wanted one. I can do one now. And then I
organized a protest during the pandemic right at the very

(07:24):
very beginning of it, and they saw me on TV
and fired me. So I said, you know what, I'm
just gonna keep growing it out and make the best of.

Speaker 5 (07:31):
It journalist now, so you can do it.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
Now exactly, yes, sir.

Speaker 6 (07:38):
And I also do a little bit of other things,
but it's all self employed.

Speaker 5 (07:43):
So I'm kind of past the stage of being able to,
you know, put a mohawk up here. But I'm kind
of curious, do you do, like what like a human
inversion machine to get your hair that way and that
link and stuff?

Speaker 6 (07:58):
So I kind of had trouble shooted some of those
ideas in the past. And when I first started doing it,
I was using like bees wax or something, but at
about six inches high, it started to tip over and
it looked like you needed to throw another purple pill
at it. And I saw a video of some pink
haired Antifa leftist on YouTube showing how he spiked his

(08:22):
and now I basically it takes me about seven minutes.
I've done it in a stairwell and a parking garage
surrounded by people less fortunate we should we should say,
in Austin, Texas. And I've done it in a public
bathroom of public bathrooms all over just but I do

(08:44):
have to bend over upside down. But I don't have
to hang over upside down. If it gets any longer, though,
I'll turn into a broom.

Speaker 4 (08:53):
Oh my goodness. You know kind of reminds me too.
I just remembered this. But when I was a teenager,
I remember seeing on MTV there was this professional skier
who out of mohawk, probably taller than yours, and you know,
he'd always that was his trademark, was ski and his mohawk.

(09:14):
But his hair was so long that he had to
lay down on his side with a lot of hairspray
to get it to really stick up.

Speaker 6 (09:21):
So, yeah, that's laying on the side works, But it
you have to have something support it unless it's really
really skinny. Mine in order to get the body is
a little wider, and when I've tried laying on my side,
it just turns off to the side, and I look
like I'm teaching geometry.

Speaker 5 (09:43):
Children, right ankle.

Speaker 4 (09:47):
So well, for one, we need more teachers to teach geometry.
But oh wait, isn't geometry racist.

Speaker 6 (09:53):
It's part of mathematics, right, Well, there's no pretty flags
that tie into to math. You know, I've never seen
like the addition flag, so you know, it's just just
bad branding. That's the Left is all about branding, and that's.

Speaker 3 (10:11):
Well, you know, and I remember.

Speaker 4 (10:14):
Very clearly, I'm watching Boys in the Hood that was
made back in the early nineties. It was a great
movie to illustrating what happens in some of the worst communities.
And I remember Laurence Fishburne saying after the two kids
they took their they took their college tests, and he said,

(10:37):
those tests are culturally biased. It's the math that's universal,
and now math is racist.

Speaker 6 (10:45):
Well, you know, science is meant to be universal also,
but not if you identify differently. Yeah, my incorrect addition
answer identifies as the correct answer, so you have to
give me a one hundred.

Speaker 4 (11:03):
There you go, there you go. Oh my goodness, time
is going by already so quickly. We got about three
minutes before we got to take our first break.

Speaker 3 (11:11):
But real quick.

Speaker 4 (11:13):
You're based in the volunteer state. I know a little
bit about it. I lived in Memphis for about a
year myself, and I'm going to tell you it's when
I lived there. That was probably that was two thousand
and six into two thousand and seven, and I loved it,
absolutely loved it.

Speaker 3 (11:34):
You know.

Speaker 4 (11:34):
The weather seemed perfect, not so hot, not so cold,
you know, and the Memphis I remember going to the
Memphis Zoo and I had a really good time because
they actually the Memphis Zoo actually has has a lot
of animals that other zoos don't have. But on what

(11:54):
that said, Memphis is one of the poorest states in
the whole country and one of the highest crime. Of course,
now Trump's talking about deploring troops into Memphis, but also,
I mean, Tennessee just has its share of political messes,

(12:16):
and you're doing what you can to expose that and
make things right.

Speaker 6 (12:22):
I am, and there is no shortage of work. Let's
just say that Memphis is an absolute we don't normally
claim Memphis. The rest of Tennessee doesn't. And I know
that sounds bad. It's kind of a joke, but it's
it's as big as Nashville, give or take, and three
times as deadly. Yes, but it's not really much better

(12:47):
than the rest of the state minus the violent crime,
the corruption, and everything is widespread as peanut butter.

Speaker 3 (12:55):
However, the barbecue is the best in Memphis.

Speaker 6 (12:59):
Yes, you can get some good stuff in Jackson, though
in the outskirts if you find someone that learned in
Memphis but moved out because you know they're tired of
fixing the broken windows.

Speaker 5 (13:10):
You guys skipped over blues, right, It wasn't Memphis known
for blues.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
I mean absolutely, Elvis.

Speaker 5 (13:19):
So, but you're right about the crime and stuff. Billy
was talking about the exotic animals and the zoos, and
I started smiling because I was thinking about the crime
you were talking about when he said exotic animals.

Speaker 4 (13:31):
Now, seriously, Memphis Zoo has a lot of animals that
other zoos in the United States don't have it and
or very few, you can say, like pandas for one
don't we don't have very many zoos that have pandas
and Memphis.

Speaker 3 (13:48):
I don't know if there's still one of them that
they were when I was there.

Speaker 6 (13:51):
Memphis has a lot of potential, as does the rest
of the state. The issue is it's been ran by
what we call the good old Boy network for so
long that it really needs a good a good cleaning,
good spring cleaning, scrubbing, rinsing out. And uh, we've got
the right like setup for everything, got the good people,
but the representation is lacking.

Speaker 3 (14:13):
Absolutely well.

Speaker 4 (14:15):
We are at the first quarter, so we're going to
take our first break and we'll be back in roughly.

Speaker 3 (14:21):
Just under two minutes.

Speaker 4 (14:24):
All right, ladies and gentlemen, we are back, joined by
Chase Matheson aka the Patriot Punk out of Tennessee, and UH.
One discussion I definitely want to talk with you about,
of course, is the flag law in Tennessee, because we
have something very similar here in Idaho. Basically, I don't know,

(14:44):
it may be identical, but you can, uh, you can,
you can tell me more about it to here in
just a second, of course, to explain our law here
in Idaho.

Speaker 3 (14:56):
It's government buildings.

Speaker 4 (14:58):
Basically we cannot we can only fly the American flag.
The military flags, of state flags, and tribal flags, and
those are the only ones permitted in front of government buildings. However,
the Boise mayor has managed to find a loophole and

(15:18):
call the rainbow mafia flag some something historic and is
able to fly that, which it's absolutely disgusting.

Speaker 3 (15:30):
Now in Tennessee, you have a similar law. Go ahead
and talk a bit about that.

Speaker 6 (15:40):
So we passed the law this last legislative session. I
believe it took took effect on July first, according to
my quick refresher, and it I had some issues with
the law originally, and I don't know if they actually
fixed them, because it didn't limit it to just the
United States flag and the state flag, and a lot

(16:01):
of municipalities have their own, like the city of Brentwood,
the City of Tullahoma, and I thought that they should
have maybe given a few more exceptions. I think the
AI overview says that they have, but overall it says
you have to limit it to official government flags of America,

(16:22):
your state. Something that's not it's a political and justifiably
in an institution of education is the intent behind that law.
But it's really we're having the exact same issues actually
in my city tonight, actually should be at a school
board meeting right now, but there's I've got someone there

(16:43):
filming it for me where this exact discussion is coming up.

Speaker 3 (16:50):
So is it? Let me guess, it's got to be
the Rainbow Mafia flag.

Speaker 6 (16:56):
So it is, and this is the I can't blame
the left for taking this approach. The right needs to
take this approach. If you find a loophole and they've
done something you don't like, exploit it, force them to
take you to federal court over it. That is your
only recourse as a citizen, either voting, which has not
I mean you need to do obviously, but it's it

(17:17):
alone is not enough. So the left is setting themselves
up to threatened litigation and probably litigate if you kick
them out. But there's the caveat you mentioned that they're
using the historic context there.

Speaker 3 (17:30):
Yes, yes, they are.

Speaker 4 (17:32):
Mayor McLain has said, oh, this flag is historic. Personally,
if you ask me if a flag is less than
fifty years old, there's nothing historic about it.

Speaker 6 (17:44):
Well, my question is which version of this flag is
the historic version. Are we talking about the original Pride
flag that was flown in the sixties or whenever during
the first because I think it probably looks a lot
different now.

Speaker 4 (18:00):
She's using that thing with the with the pink and
white well and whatever.

Speaker 2 (18:07):
It's historic.

Speaker 6 (18:08):
It came out in twenty twenty three, guys, quick, Yeah,
but they are so unapologetically like they will use that. No,
it's historic. It happened in history. It's like last week,
but it happened, so it's now historic. And they will
stand on that argument and take it all the way
to the finish line if you let them. And we

(18:32):
on the right don't tend to do that as much.
I think we were seeing some progress, but.

Speaker 4 (18:39):
Now that's you know, Shane Klass, a good friend of mine,
has he said right here on the show, and he
said in multiple videos on his Facebook, the reason why
the left is so successful is because the right has
been gutless.

Speaker 2 (18:57):
And I think it's men that haven't gotten involved.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
Yeah. The truth.

Speaker 5 (19:02):
The truth about that though, is people on the right
they work for a living. They're busy, and they have lives.
You know, they like to hunt, they have different hobbies
and stuff like that. The left will organize, but then again,
you've also got on the left, you'll have things like, well,
what's that organization called crowd crowdfund. I think his name

(19:27):
of the Crowds.

Speaker 2 (19:28):
On Demand, Great Crowds on Demand, Yes, Adam.

Speaker 5 (19:30):
Schwartz, And so, uh, they'll pay people to protest. I
mean maybe if we on the right were so fraudulent
we would pay people to protest our important issues, then
maybe we would be organized and get things done too.
But I don't think we should represent ourselves as fraudulent
and paying people to protest.

Speaker 6 (19:51):
So I want to I don't want to disagree with
that because you're you're correct, but I one of the
things that I do. I'm nowhere near James o'keef left,
but I had somebody try to spam me by signing
me up for Planned Parenthood a few years ago, and
instead of getting mad, I just created a fake email
and registered. Went to some of their Zoom meetings just

(20:13):
to just tried to feel out what they were doing.
Got some really good like you know, undercover audio, if
you want to call it that. But what I think
they are that they will pay one person, they will
pay the organizer, they will pay They were paying people
twenty five dollars an hour minimum two hours to do
a one hour Zoom meeting where you just read a

(20:34):
script talking about Kamala Harris, and they had someone sent
them the material and they paid one person, and then
that one person found every every social dissident, every person
that was that didn't have any friends, every island of
misfit toys person that they could, and they all they

(20:56):
aggregate them to the same exact protest like that. No
King's protest was was promoted by ten or twelve different
Tennessee groups. That's why they had so many people there
is they all work together. And I think, yeah, yeah,
it's funding from the top, But I don't think that
they're paying five thousand people. I think they're paying fifty people.

Speaker 5 (21:17):
Well, okay, you're right, because if you paid fifty people,
they're going to attract the remainder amount. Some people are
foolish enough they're give them their time away for free,
not realizing some people are paid.

Speaker 6 (21:26):
Yeah, yes, yeah, and then they will they will pay
someone who that Zoom meeting. They will still pay them
the fifty dollars or one hundred whatever it is they're
paying them, even if the zoom meeting has two people
on it and both of them are people like me
trying to record it to see how and I'm seeing
that a lot. But they are then they will advertise
if you're looking to get paid, we're we have paid.

(21:48):
They don't call them propagandas, but they have. We have
paid propagandas because of this.

Speaker 5 (21:51):
Yeah, yeah, yes, yep, yeah, you're right, yeah, absolutely, so, yeah,
they're they're better organized. We on the right, we you know,
we get on social media, we'll say our piece. Well,
we'll organize in certain ways. Of course, you did have,
like Charlie Kirk was basically an organization well established. We
do have that sort of organization. But as far as

(22:11):
masses and the bulk of a standing up, I mean,
can you imagine if we wrote a letter campaign of
millions and millions of us actually sent the letters into
our members of Congress and to the president to address
these issues that aren't being addressed. And there's many and
there's a lot of issues.

Speaker 6 (22:27):
The thing that I see with the right, it's not
all like this, but in mass most of the people
in positions of power, especially more establishment positions, they are older,
and they they literally think that every person would have
to write a letter. Not saying that you're encouraging this,
but what the left does is have one person take

(22:48):
a link that once you've signed up, automatically drafts that letter.
You just go click a button and then they go
and they spam everyone they know with fifteen text messages,
emails and everything to make sure that they answer. They
click that button, and they make it easier for people
to be involved. So like whereas a conservative or a

(23:10):
Republican might hear some of this and be like, I'm
just busy, I don't have time, You're right, you actually
probably also worked outside and exhausted yourself while a lot
of these people you know did whatever underwater.

Speaker 5 (23:21):
And the Mocha lattes fifteen dollars from Starbucks and yeah,
yes there they're paid activist funds.

Speaker 6 (23:27):
Yes, yes, while meanwhile hoping we uh pardon their student
loan debt for their underwater basket weaving degree that they've
you know, uh never been able to put to good use.
And what we have to do is we have to
a keep up with technology, I think a little bit more,
get some more youth involved, because there's there are kids

(23:49):
that can sit there and in ten minutes write you
an app that notifies everybody in your town that signed
up for it, that it's time to go vote that
automatically does the car like you write that if you
have one really nerdy guy.

Speaker 5 (24:05):
Yeah right, that's the whole thing about. They can set
it up or one person's pushing the buttons. All these
emails are going out and basically all you need to have
a sign up with an email. But it makes it
look like all these other people are pushing the you know,
sending their own emails and stuff. Yeah right, it's kind.
But see to me, it's fraudulent and it shouldn't be
done that way because it cheapens the system of things
the way it's supposed to be. It's representative to the individual,

(24:25):
not the one person who's got a bunch of people
that just foolishly signed up, right, So to me, it
means something if millions of us on the right actually
sent the letter individually. It could be one written letter
and you just put a caption and say, hey, I
fully support this, I hope you'll get into this, you know,
something simple as that, and send it out in an email.
It only taste a couple of minutes. The amount of

(24:46):
time people spend on social media have a knee jerk
reactions to stupid stuff that's nothing but emotional appeal to
get them to basically for clickbait. So this one guy
on social media is over here going, wow, I've got
millions of likes and this and that, and I got
my ad sells that I'm making. You know, that's nonsense,
that does nothing. But you could take you five minutes

(25:09):
to send an email to a member of Congress, and
your two US senators less than five minutes probably you know,
easypsy done, and and you actually might have actually done
something to make a difference.

Speaker 6 (25:21):
Here's the other thing is that we're all educated people.
If I told you to write your congressman and I
didn't have his email, you could go find.

Speaker 3 (25:30):
It, but.

Speaker 6 (25:33):
It yeah us well, and you're especially on a state
level because I deal a lot with state level to
find your state representative and stuff like that, especially where
we're a part time we're full time campaign state, but
a part time legislative state. And it's really hard to
actually find the correct email all the time. Even if

(25:54):
you were smart and you collected a list two years ago,
well they redistricted, you've got a different person, they had
a new election, they swapped it out. They somebody resigned
right after getting elected and they've appointed somebody else.

Speaker 2 (26:05):
It takes real dedication to keep up with it. Whereas
the left, every one of.

Speaker 6 (26:09):
Those little organizations with a zoom meeting will also include
a link that makes it super super easy, way easier
than government websites for you to find it. And I
think that we conservatives like to pull ourselves up by
our bootstraps, and in this case, what I think will
save the movement long term is if we give some

(26:32):
of the younger people that don't know. Yes, they are
smart enough, capable enough, and should figure it out, but
let's give them a hand up because they start to
compete with the left, and the left is they are
well funded and well organized.

Speaker 5 (26:46):
Our our youth going where you went with that, are
brilliant people and they're not recognized for it. We got
brilliant young people, but they get put down too much.
You know, we gotta to stop doing it. We need
to elevate them and like you said, show them the
pitfalls and elevate them to so they can be something greater.
And to correct myself, go to House dot gov for

(27:07):
your representative, Senate dot gov for your senators.

Speaker 4 (27:10):
And like you said, the left are very well funded too.
You got to remember the lot of the left, especially
radical organizations like Antifa and BLM, are funded by.

Speaker 3 (27:24):
The likes of Georgy Borgy Soros and by you.

Speaker 6 (27:31):
How many well USAID, well, no USAID, but not just USAID.
Put things in perspective, just some quick numbers. The town
I live in is a population of twenty one thousand people.
Our school board's annual budget is forty two million dollars.

Speaker 2 (27:48):
That's just the school board.

Speaker 6 (27:49):
That doesn't include any ambulance services, police roads, any of that.
And throughout our budget we also give forty thousand dollars
to the Chamber of Commerce, twenty five thousand dollars to
this nonprofit, fifteen thousand dollars to this nonprofit. And it's
those nonprofits that are the money, and I don't want
to say it's being funneled maliciously. They live in an

(28:10):
echo chamber. They have friends. They've got, you know, one
rainbow flag wearing blue haired Karen wants to find the
ice hating mask wearing Karen, and they team up and
they help each other. But they're all running these nonprofits
that are also doing something not political, feeding the homeless.
It's for a political reason most of the time. But

(28:32):
they're doing something non political.

Speaker 5 (28:35):
I mean it's designated purposes for something non political. But
the redes the aid money for political purposes.

Speaker 6 (28:41):
Yes, and it can be and it can be done legally,
where like the nonprofit then sponsors whatever. You know, Hey,
we can afford to sponsor the Democrat Day at the
park even because it's an a political event. It's a
community event that the Democrat Party does. The Republican Party
doesn't ever do a community event. It's always a political
speaker where they at the very beginning, at the very end,
they ask you for a lot of money.

Speaker 5 (29:03):
Well, you know, five o't one C three you can
be like fifteen percent for politics and stuff like that.
You get away with something like that. But yeah, yeah,
you're absolutely right.

Speaker 6 (29:12):
And it's your money that's funding it. And that is
why I take the unique approach, and that's where you
unique up on them from behind, and because if you
try to fight them at their own game and you
try to do everything the exact way that they want
you to do it, they will always outspend you. They

(29:32):
will always bankrupt every single person. Hey, listen, we don't
need the funds. See, we can we can win by
two ways. We can fund our our members of Congress
and corporations are really good at that and they probably
get about eighty percent of the favor from members of
Congress over their constituents. Or we can vote, and when

(29:53):
we organize the vote and start thinking why am I
supporting one party or the other party? And if you
think about people on either side of the party, because
Republicans don't always do us a good service, and we
got way too many rhinos. When we start looking at
going you know what, I think we should lean towards
independent candidates. The party starts getting scared when people start
moving away, then they start listening. To clarify, I don't

(30:15):
mean funding politicians. The Tennessee Republican.

Speaker 5 (30:17):
Party, why I knew what you meant.

Speaker 2 (30:19):
Yeah, well, the.

Speaker 6 (30:19):
Senate Republican Party owes one of my friends five thousand
dollars where they did some good old boy politics.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
He ran for governor.

Speaker 6 (30:27):
But so I encourage no one in Tennessee to give
them the money until they pay that back. But you
need to support local independent groups, your local GOP group
or your local whatever it is group that's actually getting involved.
They all donate to the state and the larger groups,
they fund it. That's also how the corporations fund your
congressman at these committee appointments and fundraising goals and things

(30:49):
like that. But we need to fund in order to
get people to vote because in America. My dad's from England,
and in America, there's always an election, always city counseled,
this special election, whatever it is, there's always an election.
And politics is boring and no one really likes it.
So we have to get the thing out there. And

(31:10):
I don't think spending television commercials at thirty million dollars
a run is the way it goes. I think it's
to support those local grassroots people. Soros buys off das
because it's the cheapest, most effective race to manipulate and
get stuff done. Okay, so get involved in your district
attorney's race. Background check every single attorney that's put their

(31:31):
name in the hat, and expose everything they've done, and
eventually you'll get good people apply.

Speaker 4 (31:37):
I think we're over run, Billy, yes side absolutely, so. Yeah,
we need to take our bottom of the hour break
and we'll be back here in about three minutes. All right,
ladies and gentlemen, we are back once again. We are

(31:58):
joined by Chase Mathis and aka the Patriot Punk out
of Tennessee. Uh, Chase, I wanted to ask you something
here because we were talking about who who the left
is funded by, and I mentioned, of course George Soros.
You also mentioned the taxpayers. But I have to ask you,

(32:21):
like here in Idaho, we also have big corporations that
are going like especially when we have our election seasons.
Big corporations like Micron, which is a huge microchip plant
based out of Boise, and we have of course our
local power company, Idaho Power. You know, they'll they'll donate

(32:45):
uh substantial amounts of money to some of the worst
candidates uh that especially uh Rhina Republicans that you can
you can think of.

Speaker 3 (32:59):
I have to ask you what.

Speaker 4 (33:01):
I'm sure Tennessee has some of that problem too with
big corporations.

Speaker 3 (33:05):
Am I wrong?

Speaker 2 (33:07):
You're not wrong at all.

Speaker 6 (33:08):
They just tried to I think they were referring to
it as the Monsanto the bear pesticide legislation. You had
some massive funding come through packs and and.

Speaker 2 (33:22):
And they do.

Speaker 6 (33:23):
They funnel the money around a little bit, but are
our most staunch Republicans took thousands of dollars just before
COVID from Pfizer. A lot of them, like the heart
of Tennessee is in the medical They a lot of
them sold proprietary medical equipment devices, whatever it is, into

(33:44):
the medical industry, so they're friendly with that. We just
had the Ford the Blue Oval thing. I think we
gave them five hundred million dollars. We've got a Titan
stadium that we just forked over I think half a
billion dollars for So the corporation thing, I think that

(34:05):
really goes back a lot to how these committee appointments
are are done and the fundraising once again for actual campaigns.

Speaker 2 (34:14):
So I don't know if.

Speaker 6 (34:16):
If your audience is familiar with how the committee appointments
in Congress traditionally work and how people have a fundraising goal.
But that's if you're never going to get two million
dollars in independent five dollars donations, not unless you're Donald
Trump from one voting district. But it's very easy for

(34:37):
a big corporation to come in and cover that that
fundraising quota that you have from your local party in
order to keep your committee chair or your chair your
committee position, and that of course buys influence.

Speaker 2 (34:51):
Because they're the only ones keeping them in office exactly.

Speaker 4 (34:54):
And of course it's not just one corporation, you know,
Like I said, here in Idaho it's Micron, it's Idaho Power,
another corporation, and I this is an acronym, but it's
called IAKI. I forgot what it stands for. But they're
a big corporation here who Ayaki is actually funded by

(35:14):
Soros and that's been proven.

Speaker 6 (35:20):
If you put a spider chart on the wall, it
would look like a fully filled in circles, how cross
it is.

Speaker 4 (35:29):
Yeah, yeah, you know exactly what I'm talking about. Probably
a lot better. You know more of what I'm talking
about giving your reaction.

Speaker 6 (35:39):
It's I got into politics knowing business, and I was
a door to door salesman for a large portion of
my life, and before that my dad was one. So
I grew up around average people. You don't get any
more of an honest sampling of an area than knocking
on every door in the street and being live to

(36:00):
by most of them.

Speaker 2 (36:02):
That's so.

Speaker 6 (36:05):
I look at it a lot like I understood this.
It's like, well, why is that guy doing that? Well,
if everyone listens to the same radio station wi FM,
what's in it for? Me and the politicians. Politicians are
the worst about it. And there's two types of people
I see get involved in politics. People who were wronged

(36:26):
by the system. A lot of people had that happened
in covid or they felt that there was something tragically
wrong the left every time there's an officer involved shooting,
when there's a black guy involved, it becomes something that
they rally around they feel wronged by. And then people
that get involved because they see personal benefit in it.
And most of our politicians got involved.

Speaker 3 (36:46):
For the latter. Yes, yes, I got. I gotta tell you.

Speaker 4 (36:52):
I like your approach to the whole thing is basically,
you know, g Edward Griffin even said this here on
the show that you know, if you want to clean
up house in the political realm, you got to start
at the bottom, at your local level. You can't can't
start at the White House, can't start at the Capitol.
Got start at the very bottom, because that's where it

(37:13):
all begins.

Speaker 6 (37:15):
Mm, that's don't go ahead. Sorry, no, no, I wasn't
saying anything, Oh are you? You don't chop a tree
down from the top. If you chop it down from
the top, it's called pruning. And in a year or two,
it's going to grow back and be even probably more solid.
But if you whack it down at the bottom, you
might have to get the stump grinder out, but the

(37:38):
tree is not there anymore. And that's locally. You can
make a difference. You can go to an event. You
can be the person that records that the meeting that's
not live streamed nationally. You are not and I don't
mean this rude. None of us, even as politically involved

(37:59):
as we are, one of us are skilled enough to
go be ultra effective in the halls of DC.

Speaker 3 (38:06):
Oh.

Speaker 4 (38:06):
I know, yeah, yes, if somebody asked asked me to
do that, and first off, i'd I'd require a substantial
price just for trying to make that effort of doing
something I know I couldn't do.

Speaker 2 (38:22):
Well, they've got the they've got you covered on the price. Uh.
And they'll even supply you with a fang fanger two.

Speaker 3 (38:29):
Yeah, but uh, I don't know. I couldn't do it.
I know I couldn't do it.

Speaker 2 (38:36):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (38:37):
And I want to just point out real quick, I
had someone message me and I don't. So it looks
like the flag bill in Tennessee passed one branch but
did not pass. I think it was the Senate. It
was put on UH committee in Tennessee. I think one
version of the flag bill did for like outside of
government buildings, but the classroom. When I had a school
board meeting, school board member messaged me and say that

(38:59):
that and did not pass.

Speaker 2 (39:01):
That it was left up to local school districts.

Speaker 6 (39:03):
So if someone wants to fact check me on Tennessee's thing,
that's uh. I would be more than happy to to
stand corrected.

Speaker 4 (39:12):
So this is happening right now as we speak.

Speaker 6 (39:15):
Then correct and uh. There it turns out. And I
don't know if you guys have to go to another
break or anything, but.

Speaker 3 (39:23):
We will hear in about five minutes.

Speaker 2 (39:26):
Okay, cool, So plenty of times.

Speaker 6 (39:28):
So after the Charlie Kirk memorial or during after the
Charlie Kirk assassination, a teacher in Tullahoma loved a post
that said something really bad about Charlie Kirk, calling him
every ick and ist and phaubisimist that there is out
there yea, And then she posted some diatribe along with

(39:52):
UH said, I found this meme that perfectly summarizes the situation.

Speaker 2 (39:56):
And it was a.

Speaker 6 (39:57):
Turkey standing outside of an oven where another turkey was
being cooked, and it said FAFO Tullahoma has an air
Force base. And even though we're like I said, there's
a little there, a little liberal, not the people, just
the people that run it. And uh, the people didn't

(40:17):
take that kindly, called for her termination all of that stuff,
and then they started posting pictures from inside her classroom
and found out she's got one of those Triangle Pride,
that abomination on the wall, Rainbow Mafia as I call it. Yes, yes,
the Rainbow Mafia flag on the wall. And she's teaching

(40:39):
criminal justice and I've seen comments. I can't verify this yet,
but it seems like she used to be a police
officer and was fired for posts she made on social
media or was let go for that, and that the
Nashville Public School System wouldn't even hire her. But that's local.
Elections have consequences. During our last election, I struggled to
get people really really involved in the school board because,

(41:03):
let's be honest, no one likes to say school boards
races should be partisan. No one likes to be mean
to the the teachers, the people in education, and I
get that, but when you have a school board member
tell you in an open form that she doesn't know
what woke is, and then it's not her job to
keep woke out of school. Believe her. And that's what

(41:23):
we're dealing with right now here in in Tennessee.

Speaker 4 (41:26):
So well, well, if she's not capable of the job,
we can find somebody who is.

Speaker 6 (41:34):
I have a different approach where they expect everything to
be like a Hegelian dialectic. You know, we take things.
This approach, we take things. These are your two options.
I don't like to do that. I like to go
out back, find some unique, weird thing and take an
abstract approach to it. It's the only way because they
map out these chess games the same way everybody does,

(41:55):
and the high the more, the higher up you get,
the more mapped out. They are a local level. A
lot of the time they only have two or three
moves mapped out. And if you can throw them something
that they haven't seen before, you take an approach that's unique.
They don't know how to handle it. They react, they
blow a fuse, and they give you more than you neque.

Speaker 3 (42:16):
You know.

Speaker 4 (42:16):
I'm going to say this really quick though, regarding a
lot of the the Charlie Kirk posts. I mean, there's
some people I agree that deserve to lose their jobs,
like or or whatever because because of the vile things
they said. But somebody got fired from their job just
for saying I hate Charlie Kirk. And it was it

(42:38):
was like a month before the assassination ever took place.

Speaker 6 (42:42):
And I'm like, okay, that's not right. There is a post.
This happened here in Tennessee just yesterday. Actually I covered
it on our daily segment that we do. A liberal
ex police officer posted in a community form a whole
bunch of anti Charlie Kirk memes during the visual vigil
celebration that they were having in a community group, and

(43:03):
one of the memes was a Donald Trump quote after
the Perry High School shooting, which is in Iowa, I think,
and they're in Perry County. And because the meme referenced
a school shooting in Perry High School, this man was
arrested and put on a two million dollar bond for
a threat of mass violence against a school system. And

(43:28):
the guy's liberal, he's deranged, he's got TDS Orange man
bad syndrome out the wazoo, and he should be laughed at.

Speaker 2 (43:35):
That's it. There's no arrest. And I think that.

Speaker 6 (43:39):
People are as much as some of these people say
that they hate what they're seeing about Charlie Kirk, I
think some of them are secretly like they love the
the being able to get back at people.

Speaker 2 (43:50):
And I don't think that's a country.

Speaker 3 (43:51):
That is not good, That is not good at all.

Speaker 4 (43:54):
That's I mean, I understand the want for vengeance and
I feel it too, but you know, it's about proving
that you're a better person and proven taking the mature approach,
and too many people are not doing so. Anyway, we
are ten minutes left of the show, so we better

(44:15):
take our final break and we'll be back to close
things off here in just under two minutes. All right,
ladies and gentlemen, we are back and we are getting
ready to close things off here in just a minute,
reaching the end of the show. And my goodness, has

(44:38):
time just flown by, as especially when you have conversations
like this, there's not enough time or there's too much
to discuss within an hour's time, you know, especially when
you get into conversations like this. So one thing I
wanted to I wanted to say before we hit break

(45:00):
there too. Is you know I talk I was saying
how we need, especially a lot of us that are Christians,
need to prove that we're better people and not lower
ourselves to the standards what the left tried to do
to us during George Floyd.

Speaker 3 (45:21):
Summer of Love on all that crap. You know. The
the night.

Speaker 4 (45:29):
That Charlie Kirk was assassinated, I did a stream with
my good friend Stephen James out of Arkansas, and for
the first time, him and I did a lot of
streams together, whether we talk about wrestling, we talk about boxing,
we talk about politics, whatever, but that was the first

(45:51):
time him and I ended a stream in prayer and I,
you know, I basically quoted that when Jesus was dying
on the cross and he looked to the heavens and
he said, Father, forgive them, for they know not what
they do. And that's that was where my mind went
to anybody who was celebrating the death of Charlie Kirk

(46:13):
is I thought, you know, go to the old phrase, what.

Speaker 3 (46:16):
Would Jesus do? And that's that's where my thought patterns
haid landed.

Speaker 6 (46:22):
Yeah, I mentioned that there's like that that secret faction
of people that say that they don't like it, but
they're they're clearly getting something out of it because they're
just obsessing.

Speaker 2 (46:32):
You.

Speaker 6 (46:33):
You may hate it, but why are you then scrolling
X for five hours a day looking for these people
and hunting every single one of them down like you're
obsessing over it. Though I understand that, like you said,
the need for vengeance, I think that those people are
doing the same thing that the Left has already done,
and that is they've got so enveloped in this mindset

(46:54):
that And I'm not a medical guy, but I think
it's called the amygdala basically controls like some of your emotions,
and once it gets hijacked, it's really hard to turn
it off, and it takes several hours to change that
that mode. And I think these people just have it
stuck in a permanent on position.

Speaker 3 (47:12):
Yeah, yes, well you know.

Speaker 4 (47:15):
I My only advice is, uh, anybody who feels that
anger that uh you know, and and your anger is justified,
but uh, you know, turn to the Lord, pray and
mind you when you when you put your mind on
the Lord at that moment, you'll see how fast you'll

(47:36):
calm down. You may even you may even may even
cry and ball your eyes out. But you will you
will feel a sense of relief. I I guarantee you
you will feel a sense of relief.

Speaker 2 (47:50):
It's just saying God's the real thing. Man. Yeah, you
just can't let that.

Speaker 6 (47:54):
Uh however you want to refer to it, demon, that feeling,
that eat whatever, that the evil senses.

Speaker 2 (48:01):
You just can't let it overtake you.

Speaker 6 (48:02):
And that's I think that's why you see so many
leftists that appear to be like demon possessed, is because
they've been taken over by that.

Speaker 2 (48:13):
That ilk.

Speaker 4 (48:16):
Yes, yes, exactly, Oh no. And again I think I'm
looking at some of these pictures of some of these
celebrities like Sean Penn and a few others who have
severe TDS, and look how much they have aged. I'm serious,
Look how much they have aged. And I think that

(48:39):
kind of resentment over the years, you know, takes it
does take a toll on you.

Speaker 2 (48:45):
Yeah, I can.

Speaker 6 (48:48):
Only imagine what it looks like behind the scenes, Like
do these people even believe half of what they say?
Do they even know what they're talking about? Or do
they just read a script? I mean, because there's obviously
some section of the left that doesn't they have speech writers.
They're just the the personality.

Speaker 5 (49:07):
You see it, You see what you're saying all the
time when something happens and there's Nancy Pelosi's saying something
word for word that Chuck Schumer had just said that
AOC is saying. And basically the party just said like
panded out emails like here you go read this.

Speaker 2 (49:25):
Yeah, yep.

Speaker 6 (49:26):
Then they all got to get together for the photo
op with the scarves and take a knee.

Speaker 4 (49:32):
Oh yeah, they're yeah, they're saying that the right is
overboard on on you know, memorials for Charlie Kirk. But
yet they you know, first off, I think burning down
a community and in the memory of George Floyd wouldn't
say that'd be spitting on his memory by doing that.
And number two, I mean they're yeah, they're taking the

(49:54):
taking a knee and there's scarves and all that.

Speaker 3 (49:56):
Just well, they just made themselves look like idiots.

Speaker 5 (49:59):
If you ask me, what you're saying to us, Billy
is the hypocrisy of the left has no limits or bounds.

Speaker 4 (50:06):
Oh, the hypocrisy and the idiocy.

Speaker 6 (50:11):
Yeah, absolutely well, and remember the H in politician stands
for honesty.

Speaker 3 (50:20):
Yeah, but keep looking for it. Where is that?

Speaker 5 (50:26):
But you know, uh, it's see eno if you bring
up politician, right, and the defining difference between a politician
and a statesman. A politician is in it for himself.
A statesman's in it for the country. We don't see
much for statesman anymore.

Speaker 6 (50:39):
No, Well, it's because they lock you up, arrest you,
bankrupt you, and uh politically ostracize you if you challenge
their machine. Jokes on them though, because I'd already done
all that to myself. So so I've been there, man,
I've been to DC. I've gone against the agenda, and
they will blockball you. They will stop talking talking to

(51:00):
you when you don't wait if you're not there to
support their agenda. They want nothing to do with you.

Speaker 5 (51:04):
You make appointments, and you show up for your appointments
and they're nowhere to be seen.

Speaker 4 (51:09):
Oh no, you're wrong in one little point there, John.
That's not that they don't want anything to do with you.
They'll they'll have a lot to do with you. It's
just not going to be any good.

Speaker 5 (51:20):
Yeah, Well, they want you vote, they just don't want
you there.

Speaker 3 (51:23):
You go anyway.

Speaker 4 (51:26):
We're we are down to the last minute on tap
for next week. Of course, let's see, I gotta look
up the uh look at the calendar. Oh, yes, we're
going to be speaking with a with a gentleman named
Joseph Lombardi who's a he's a financial advisor and he's

(51:46):
gonna have some interesting things to share with us.

Speaker 2 (51:51):
Chase.

Speaker 3 (51:52):
Where can people find you?

Speaker 4 (51:53):
Of course we see the uh your website in the
ticker below, but of somebody who's only listening wants to
look you up, wants to check out your show, which
is an awesome show, by the way, and wants to
get involved in our Tennessee politics or at least learn
about them where they go.

Speaker 6 (52:11):
You can go to patriot first off, thank you very
much for that, and patriotpunknetwork dot com. I'm on all
social media media platforms at Patriot Punk Network except on
Twitter at real Patriot Punk. So and even if you're
not in Tennessee, I look forward to helping you because
all politics is local and it's you can take care

(52:33):
of this city that you can replicate the solution everywhere.
You just have to have a few dedicated men that
are willing to do it and.

Speaker 4 (52:42):
Women absolutely absolutely well. God bless you and thank you
for the work you're doing, because I know you're hitting
the streets pretty hard, and I like how you're finding
new tactics to sneak your way in and basically taking
it right out of Sun Zoo's book right there in

(53:02):
the Art of Warrior and following it well. Thank you absolutely,
and ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much for tuning
into Patriot Confederation. God save the Republic of the United
States of America.

Speaker 5 (53:21):
We will live back down from

Speaker 6 (53:24):
By the feed America
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