Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Welcome to Veronica Live, and I am here with I
love having X influencers on my show.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Here.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
I've had a bunch and I have bumped into He
goes by Jayhons on X. His real name is Justin
and he's got an excellent show that I listened to
on X and we'll get into all of that bit.
I had to have him on my Space today, So Justin,
Welcome to Veronica Live.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Thank you Veronica for having me today. You know, it's
been a pleasure. I've been a fan of your spaces,
you and Larry Brock and Roxy, been a fan of
y'all's work on X and I'm just happy to be
here and happy to talk with you today.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
Yeah, it's great. We just finished a show.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
The Reckoning is my one of my ex shows, and
you're always be bopping in there. But break the breaking
news that just happen right now. I've been watching the
news and I wanted it to come from you. What
just broke in the United States?
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Jay Hans so Kamala Harris just certified the election. So
Donald Trump and Jade Vance are the president and vice
president elect. So it's official now, It's all our hard work,
is you know, going to fruition, so it's really going
to happen. I know there's been a lot of uncertainty
since you know, twenty twenty and everything that happened and
(01:17):
the law fair and everything, but it's all coming together
now and we can see it firsthands.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
Well, it's just a glorious day. I had it on.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
I have to say, she looked absolutely miserable. She should
have borrowed like doctor Jill's red pantsuit. Maybe that would
have helped her attitude today. But she's having a rough go.
So Jay Hans, first, let's talk about who you are,
because you are also a veter and I love my
Army brothers and sisters, So talk about what you did
(01:46):
in the army YEP.
Speaker 3 (01:48):
So, I'm a twenty year veteran. So I was a
US Army first sergeant black Hawk crew chief. So I
deployed five times to Afghanistan, Iraq, and then I was
training Saudi's who were fighting in Yemen. And so I've
done a bunch of different overseas assignments. Flew most of
(02:12):
my career as a black Hawk kerchief and flew all
the way to the end. I was a company first
sergeant and so I was. My last mission was actually
in the Helmand River Valley and Poppy Field fighting the Taliban.
So yeah, so that was my last That was my
last flight ever. So a lot of people do the
(02:32):
the you know where they taxi underneath the fire trucks
or whatever and they sprayed the houser or whatever. Well,
my last mission was actually you know, on and op
So that was pretty cool way to go out.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
Thank you for your My brother in law flew black Hawks.
So I understand the intensity over there because I've I've heard,
you know, all the missions over the years.
Speaker 2 (02:52):
But uh, what did being in the army mean to you?
Speaker 3 (02:56):
Justin Well, so originally when I joined in the military,
I joined the US Coast Guard and I wanted to
you know, do search and rescue, and I did a
little bit of that, but as you know, uh after
nine to eleven, because I was in the Coast Guard
when nine to eleven happened, and seeing all that happened,
(03:16):
I wanted to do something more and so that's when
I looked at jumping over to the Army and I did,
and I became a helicopter crew chief and deployed almost
immediately after after joining. So I went to Iraq right after. Yeah,
just like you know, you go to your training or
whatever and then go to first duty assignment at Fort Campbell, Kentucky,
(03:38):
and dam I'm gone and you know, off off into
oif one. So deployed, deployed right away, so you can
probably understand how my mom felt. You know, I go
from US Coast Guard or whatever, which which was you know,
the Coast Guard was good too, you know, It's just
I felt like I needed to do something more. So
that's when I you know, like I said, I jumped
(03:59):
in that me and some of my mom's you know,
dying as she's you know, I made the leap from
the little scary and deploy immediately. So yeah, but it
was fine. And you know, I did two Iraq tours
and then I did Afghanistan after that, did a couple
(04:22):
nominative assignments in between there, and then I finished out
my last deployment to Afghanistan in twenty seventeen, twenty eighteen.
Speaker 1 (04:31):
And I want Tylert, you have five combat tours and
you have your Bronze Star recipient, so you are a
complete stud justin so again, thank you for your service.
And people did don't know It's funny. I didn't understand
what the Coast Guard was until I was a lieutenant
in the Air Force, and then I was like, oh,
I would have loved that, you know, you because explain
the Coast Guard too. It's a little gentler, aren't you
(04:52):
protecting the United States and working drug trafficking. So it's
a little gentler than being fighting Taliban in Afghanistan.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
Yeah, and so I mean they you know, they're they're
working twenty four to seven too. I mean I did
search and rescue, So I've rescued you know, people you
know that were drowning. I've you know, helped sinking boats.
I've I was on an icebreaker for a little while.
I did a little bit of law enforcement, and I
even did a security detail for Al Gore at the time,
(05:22):
who was vice president. It was supposed to be a
pr tour, but really he was kind of kind of,
I guess, testing the waters for his presidential run when
he ran against uh Bush. And so that's you know,
I did a lot of different things within the Coast Guard,
and then we did you know, we had firefighting and
(05:45):
stuff like that. It's kind of like being in the
Coast Guard is kind of like a you know, like
a Swiss army knife. You kind of do a lot
of different things, you know, you do little Yeah, yeah,
it was you know, you're just busy all the time,
and then you know they're they they're on call a
lot for all their different missions. So it's a lot
of duty time for those that are within the Coast Guards.
(06:06):
So I'm proud of my Coast Guard time. I just
you know, after nine to eleven, I just felt like
I had to do something more and get into the fight.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
Well, I love it, and you are also in the
fight on X as an ex influencer, So how did
you get into being an X space host and having
your show? Let me get the title right, because you
know I'm on Cold Medicine here Liberal tiers on tap.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
How did you end up doing this show?
Speaker 1 (06:31):
Because it's wonderful and I love Insurrection Barbie just I
want to throw that out there too. I'm such a
fan of hers.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
Yea, yeah, I have a fabulous team on X Insurrection, Barbie,
Doug Billings, Carmen Love Kimmy. They are phenomenal team to
do spaces with and I'm really proud to be a
part of that. But Originally, when I made the jump
to X, I was, you know, on Facebook, like a
(06:57):
lot of people were, and I was just like, you
couldn't post anything political. I would post something political and
then your account would just go to zero. And my
mom would even comment. She'd be like, I didn't see
this picture that you posted until two weeks later. Well
it was because I was being suppressed for you know, anything,
(07:18):
anything that you said that was conservative or political or
anything like that. And so I was like, screw this,
I'm making the jump to Acts. And originally when I
started on Acts, it was just to have fun, you know,
post some political comments or whatever, and you know memes
and videos or whatever, and we're just having fun over
there because you could just say what you wanted to
(07:38):
say for the most part. And so it grew and
you know, as you get more involved, soon you start
having you know, politicians reaching out to you for shout outs,
and you start getting involved in you know, politics within
your state, you know, Georgia is where I live now,
and it just becomes something more and you realize that
(07:59):
you can actually do something with your platform. And so
as you start to work to build it or whatever,
you know, it just it becomes more than just social
media for me, and it was kind of cool that
you could actually influence and so the space is thing
is it came you know, I really got involved in
(08:20):
those starting in the summer, but it just became, you know,
the equalizer for a lot of people. You know, you
can't really talk to somebody who was on a news
program or you know, on Fox News or whatever. But
we have the same level of guests that they have,
and we can put you know, average people in touch
(08:40):
with them and they can have a conversation with them
and ask them about real issues. And so it's a
really cool way to you know, put people in touch
with politicians, celebrities, whatever and talk about real things with them.
And it's you know, it's free for everybody to come in.
They can you know, request a mic and they can
come up and talk and it's it's just an awful
some platform to do that.
Speaker 2 (09:01):
That's so funny.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
I was telling that to somebody because back in the
day when I when I was young, sounds like we're
kind of close in age a little bit, but you'd
write like a letter to celebrity and like here x
you like you said, you can actually touch people and
a lot of times you can message them or comment
that on their their ex space and they can see it.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
So I do love that.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
You know, if a Clay Travis he always likes my
stuff or Buck Sexton, you know, it's like I'm like,
oh wow, they like my stuff because a lot of
these people are running, you know, they have people that
work for them, but they are Their comments are their comments,
which I like so well. I love your space. But
I wanted to talk, you know, about politics to you.
Speaker 2 (09:42):
So what did this.
Speaker 1 (09:43):
Election mean to you?
Speaker 2 (09:45):
Justin?
Speaker 1 (09:45):
I mean I was on pins and needles, petrified. You know,
I went through this in twenty fifteen sixteen when I
was the Trump chair. Everybody kept high five in me
and going Vronica, good job, you worked your ass off,
but you're not gonna win. And to me, this election
was more important than that one because I just felt
like our society was going to fall off a cliff
with all the DEI crap and the way the military
(10:08):
is and.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
Just all the law fair. So what did it mean
to you, Justin?
Speaker 3 (10:15):
Yeah? So I was, you know, I was really concerned.
I mean, after the past four years under Joe Biden,
we saw you know, a picture of how bad things
can get and how much worse they could get, you know,
potentially continuing down that path. And so I dove headfirst
into everything that I could do political as far as
like getting President Trump elected. I was. I was a
(10:39):
Trump Force forty seven captain. I was helping local candidates,
you know, doing door knocking. I was trying to elevate
them on X, get them you know, name recognition on
you know, for free, just getting them up there and
having them talk issues, so to get their name out there.
And I even I was like, well, I'm going to
(10:59):
do pole watching too, because Georgia was so critical. Yeah. Well,
when when I went to look into that, they were like, well, hey,
we have pole working positions in your county, and I
was like, you know what, screw it. I was like
I'm doing it, and I quit my job and I
started doing pole working too.
Speaker 2 (11:15):
Really, so I was like you.
Speaker 3 (11:16):
Know what, Yeah, I have two teenagers, and I was like,
there's no way that I'm not going to do everything
that I can to get President trumple like it, because yes, yeah.
So I was like I have two teenagers, and I
was like, you know what, I can't look them in
the eye and just be like, you know, I did
everything that I could do. If I didn't do everything
that I could do, and so I jumped in on everything.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Was there anything that shocked you being so close to
an election as now you're actually there working it. Were
you shocked by anything or at this point you felt
like Georgia had it all under control.
Speaker 3 (11:52):
I feel like it. You know it. Well, let's just
be honest. Fulton County in Atlanta are a problem, and
the rest of Georgia is really red. And I was
confident that President Trump would win Georgia as long as
they could keep it together up in Atlanta area. And
so I think we had enough people involved and enough
(12:15):
people with eyes on the things that they were doing
up there that we held you know, we held the line,
and we didn't do anything out of the ordinary. Everybody
did their job. But the thing was is we got
rid of a lot of the uncertainty we got. You know,
the the drop boxes in Georgia, they moved them inside,
so there's no external unmonitored drop boxes or anything like that.
(12:38):
They're inside, they're monitored by the pole manager. And so
doing little things like that, you know, is what that's
all We needed. As long as long as we had
a little voter integrity here, as long as we had
a secure election, I felt like Georgia was no problem
and we proved that.
Speaker 2 (12:54):
I love that.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
Well, you know, I'm Freedom Florida. So I feel like
we've led the way in election integrity.
Speaker 2 (13:00):
So what We've got fourteen days.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Until Trump is handed the baton to run with our nation,
which I cannot wait. And he's picked some incredible people.
They're not all Republicans, So I'm just excited about this team.
What what are you most excited about? As as he
takes the helm here and we get our country back
in order.
Speaker 3 (13:21):
As far as his cabinet picks, the ones that I'm
most excited about are the ones that are passionate about
the things that he's put them in charge. You know,
It's it's fine that he has some loyalists that he's
he's going to stick into his positions and stuff, and
that's that's fine. I get that. But the ones that
I'm really excited about are the ones that we're passionate
about what he put them in charge with beforehand, Like
(13:44):
Cash Battel, like you know, RFK Junior, like you know
Pete hegsas these people are going to make the changes
that we want to see in the Trump presidency, and
so those are the ones that I'm most excited about,
even Tulca Gabbert, you know, we in Elon and Vivic
like those those are going to be phenomenal choices for
(14:06):
him because they you know, they were passionate about the
things that he assigned to them to before he even
put them on there. So they had a planet, you know,
that they were thinking about in their heads before they
were even put into those positions. And so those are
the ones that I want to see confirmed.
Speaker 1 (14:23):
First, do you have has there been an issue or
too besides saving our nation, which I know for you
and I that's number one, But has there been something
that you've been really really passionate about, Like I really
want our military to get back to the mission of
being the military. The whole DEI culture and man wearing
skirts it just pushed me to the edge.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
So, so, what what are some of.
Speaker 1 (14:47):
The issues that you are passionate about under Trump moving forward?
Speaker 3 (14:53):
Yeah, I mean that's that's a big one for me too,
you know. And the other piece of that is is
Pete hag Seth is he you know, he's a field
grade officer, so he's closer to the troops in the
global war on Terror, So he understands these issues better
than somebody who say, uh, you know, a four star
general or whatever. And when you know they deployed to
(15:15):
Iraq and Afghanistan, they were already you know, a flag officer,
and so he's closer to the ground, so he understands
better these positions that you know that he's going to
have an impact on. And so that that excites me
because you know, you brought up the issue of transgender
soldiers and stuff in in the military. Well, those people
(15:35):
are not deployable. That's one of the things you know
as a company first, aren't that. I just couldn't understand
why they were allowing that, because as soon as they
start on hormone therapy or as soon as they start
in therapy or whatever they they they do their transition,
they become nondeployable. You can't deploy in the army with
the cavity in your mouth. So when they're on all
(15:57):
these medications and therapy and stuff like that, they're non deployable. Now,
so what is their purpose in the military. They shouldn't
even be in there in the first place. And so yeah,
it's a waste of money, it's a waste of time,
and it hurts unit readiness. So it's you know, those
are those are the types of issues that Pete's going
to have some insight on and he's going to know
the impact and so hopefully we can you know, move
(16:19):
past that.
Speaker 1 (16:21):
I'm with you fully, I just I want mission only
and plus, as you know, we always are doing more
with less than the military anyways. And then if you
count somebody they can't deploy on your team out, that
means somebody else is having to pick up their slack.
And we're just too busy in the military.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
What does Ukraine mean to you?
Speaker 1 (16:39):
Because you're you're a soldier, you know, you've you've seen action.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
Are you ready for it to end? I'm like, I'm ready,
justin for for Ukraine to be over.
Speaker 3 (16:50):
Personally, Yeah, and it's it will be over as soon as,
you know, as soon as President Trump steps in. I
believe Putin fully wants to you know, he wants an
exit from from Ukraine. Granted, he's gonna want to you know,
keep some of the ground that he kept obviously, but
the thing is is like pot I believe wholeheartedly that
(17:11):
Putin is looking for an exit from that. I think
he's you know, the whole invasion was he bit off
a little bit more than he can chew, and so
you know, he doesn't want something like our Afghanistan where
drags on for twenty years and that you know, he's
losing troops and losing money and then you know people
are saying, you know, different countries are sanctioning him and
having to deal with all that. So he's looking for
(17:33):
his exit too. And so that's where you know, it's
an issue when Biden authorizes you know, it's the lengthy
to strike him or whatever. It's like, you guys should
be looking for for an exit strategy too. Everybody should
be seeking peace in this process. And so that's you know,
I'm just tired of war. You know, I don't want
to see my kids go to war too. I went
(17:53):
to war and I know what it does to people,
and so I'm just you know, everybody's tired of it.
We're war weary, and we need to stop getting involved
in all these we need to stop getting involved in
all these different conflicts around the world.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
So true was on that note, what are your feelings
about China, because you know, I've talked to all kinds
of political leaders and national people, and China is more
important to them than Russia as our threat. And we
know China is constantly trying to you know, hack us.
They're sending people across the border, which we'll get into,
(18:26):
But how do you see China again with your shoulder,
with your soldier goggles on.
Speaker 2 (18:32):
They're justin.
Speaker 3 (18:34):
Well, I mean, they're they're an obvious and immediate threat
because they can they don't even have to go to
war with us, and they can do things to us.
They can hack us, they can you know, the Biden
administration just a minute, it was national news that they
admitted that they can take out you know, are you know,
power plants, they can take out you know, ports, they
can shut it all down with hackers. And so they're
(18:57):
an immediate threat to US versus you know, somebody that's
you know, across the ocean or whatever, like in US
getting involved in all these different countries complex China can
hit us in ways that you know, it's like this
is a war that's been going on for a while,
and so that you know, that's scary because they also
(19:18):
do things. They'll provoke us with the balloons and everything.
They know, just keep doing it. And it doesn't seem
like anybody within the Biden administration at least that you know,
they just seem to just let it happen. You know,
my god, they could have shot that thing down when
it was over Montana and you know when when it
was over a field. You know, why did they get
let it get all the way to South Carolina. It's ridiculous.
Speaker 2 (19:41):
So yeah, I'm very fighter pilot. Let's shoot it out
of the air, you know, which I can't believe.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
I mean again, it shows this Biden administration that we've
lived on under. So what are your thoughts on that?
Because you know, I talk with Ron Hart a lot.
He's a syndicated daily caller guy, writes columns every week,
and he's on the news everywhere, and and he's known
for years that Biden has checked out. What does this
(20:08):
administration mean to you? I Mean, I'm like, who's in charge?
I mean I always say Obama, Rice, Jared, But how
have you been seeing it through? You know, justin this
madness we've lived through the last four years.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
Well, they they it seems like that that party likes
to choose incompetent people because they can use them for
their purposes. They they whoever the you know, the deep
state or you know Obama pulling strings or whatever. It
seems like if they have an incompetent person you know
out there, like Kamala or Joe Biden, that that's you know,
(20:43):
they they favor that. And so that's where you see
like you know, senators that are are essentially on life
support and you know, dying when they're in the office.
You know, Ruth Vader Ginsberg too, like that. All these
people like they they prefer that because and they can use
them for you know whatever. You know, they're to push
(21:04):
their agenda and then they can claim, oh, you know,
he's just old or whatever, he's feeble or whatever, and
you know, or she's just not that smart or what.
And so they're basically pushing forward this agenda through these
morons that they have on there, and so you know,
it's it's just really bad, bad way to do things,
and not good for our country and not good for
(21:24):
the world. Even yeah, well.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
I've rolled my eyes.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
I'm surprised they're not stuck in the back of my
head as many times as I just don't believe these
people that he's appointed. So, Okay, one of my hot issues,
probably number one, has been the border, justin because we've
let all the you know, Trump has even said the
number twenty million people in that I don't know.
Speaker 2 (21:46):
Who you are. And you know, I love legal immigration.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
My family is for multiple countries legally here and I
friends that are legal immigrants, and I hate that Americans
have been put in harm's way. And what does a
border mean to you? And when Trump says, and Tom Holman,
who I love is and is on fire, that we're
going to start deporting your ass, you know, tell me
about your thoughts on the border.
Speaker 3 (22:12):
Yeah, there there's no easy way to do this, and
and so they it's it's going to have to be
a painful and grueling process to remove people from from
the country. There's there's no good way to do it.
We don't have a system in place. And and you know,
and and the fact that you know, the u N
and these you know, these charities and NGOs or whatever
(22:34):
that we're funding all this stuff, like we need to,
like there needs to be sanctions for these organizations that
were you know, pushing these people to do this. Why
are they coming to our country? You know, they were
flying from Africa to South America, trekking up through Mexico
to our country, and it was paid for by somebody.
You know it none of it benefits us. But the
(22:54):
thing is is like now that we're stuck with, you know,
this huge issue. You know, I think once they start
doing this in once, because they're going to have to
put people in camps of some sort, they're gonna have
to bust people in some way, and so there's no
way to get around that in order to get them
out of the country. And so I think once they
(23:14):
start doing that, once people start flocking to sanctuary cities
or whatever the case may be, I think that some
are going to start self deporting because they're not going
to want to go through that process. And then potentially
as they go through that process, we might find out
that they're a felon or you know all these other things,
and so hey, do I want to do jail time
or should I just get out of the country while
(23:36):
I can? And so I think a lot of them
are going to self deport. The other part is is
the asylum process, which is absolutely ridiculous. I don't know
the exact number, but I think it's like forty percent
of the people that are claiming asylum in the US
have gone home to their home country that they're claiming
asylum from on vacation. It's absolute. It's so ridiculous. If
(24:00):
people knew the things that were going on, they would
just be floored because it's such a it's such a
you know, they're making a mockery of our country, and
you know, people are teaching them to exploit our legal system.
And there's no reason. There's no war on the Canadian
or the Mexican border. There is a drug war, but
on the on the Mexican border. But the thing is,
(24:21):
it's like there's no war. There's no reason for them
to be claiming asylum here because they're not the next
country over.
Speaker 2 (24:27):
Yeah, very true. And on that note, I was going
to ask too, because fentanyl, you know.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
We barely even touch We talk about like one hundred
thousand Americans roughly are killed a year, and it's it's
a war, you know, and and all of us. I
know people I know, a major I worked with was
a drug addict and ended up dying from it.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
Couldn't believe it.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
It has literally impacted all of us. And so that's
one of the reasons I'm excited about securing the border.
Justin is getting this fentanyl. I hope we kind of
go after these drug lords and cartels, and are you
okay with going after these folks as well, like Trump
has said, kind of like a military operation to stop
this because Americans are dying every day.
Speaker 3 (25:08):
Yeah, I mean you can't, like you can't just you know,
play by the rules when they're not going to play
by the rules. I mean, they're essentially they're in a
war zone below, you know, on the Mexican Mexican side
or whatever, and then we're just then here pretending like
you know, it's just you know, a basic law enforcement issue,
like we're going to be able to stop these people
they have. It's a multi trillion dollar industry, and so
(25:31):
you have to combat that, you know, at its core.
And you know, maybe I don't know how that looks.
I don't know how, you know, if Mexico plays ball
with us and they allow us to kind of, you know,
go at these but something has to change because it's
it's completely out of control. And the other pieces the
human trafficking, the human like a human yeah, human traffickers dream.
(25:57):
I mean, who knows how many kids? You know, these
these children, they they don't know who they are, and
nobody's looking for them. And so yeah, they've said, like
I think they said, like you know, it's up to
like half a million that they estimate. But the thing
is is, like, we don't even know if that's even correct.
It's probably a lot higher than that. And the thing
is is, you know, nobody, nobody knows who a lot
(26:19):
of these kids are, so to pretend like you know,
we're going to find them or anything like that, a
lot of them are probably dead, unfortunately. And so that's
why we have to deter this, you know, before it
even happens. You can't you can't try and combat this,
you know, after the fact, Like it just doesn't work
that way. And the Biden administration, you know, open the
floodgates to this. They really they screwed a lot of
(26:41):
things up and a lot of lives were lost because
of that stupidity.
Speaker 1 (26:45):
So so today is also the anniversary of J six
And you joined me in the earlier show today, the
Reckoning with our J six Larry Brock that was a
prisoner for three hundred and seventy two days as a
former fighter pilot.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
What does J six mean to you?
Speaker 1 (27:02):
I mean, for me, it was just, you know, it
saddens me that people still think that that it's a
real thing. I think there was hired people and it
was a government operation to try to take over, you know,
and ensure that Biden got in.
Speaker 2 (27:18):
So how do you see it?
Speaker 3 (27:21):
Yeah, I mean it was you know, it was an
entrapment thing. And and a lot of people, you know,
people were put on terroists watch lists. They didn't even
go into the capitol, which is just crazy that they
would do that. Like they were just out at the
rally or whatever they were walking around and there now
they're on a terrace watch lit. It's just absolutely ridiculous
what they did to these people, and and to the
(27:43):
you know, the the people that went inside, they were
invited inside by law enforcement. They were like, yeah, come
on in or whatever. You can just hear you know
the law enforcement. Yeah, they're they're like guiding them in
or whatever. Ye like, for the majority of them, you know,
there were people that you know, you know, did some
vandalism or whatever and like kind of you know, they
(28:04):
those you know, but those are petty things. It's not
like they were trying to overthrow the government. It's just
absolutely ridiculous to even you know, pretend like that's what
they were trying to do. You know that we have
a right to protest and you know, they don't have
a right to trespass and stuff like that. But just
if they were trespassing, that doesn't mean they're a terrorist.
You know. You know, we had you know, doing the
(28:25):
BNLM riots. I mean, you had people burning down cities.
You know, that's that's a little bit more you know,
to me than somebody trespassing on the capitol. So you know,
the fact that these people are sitting in prison and
stuff like that, it's just it's it's you know, our
justicism really need some work. And so hopefully Pam Bondi
(28:45):
is up to that.
Speaker 2 (28:46):
Oh she's going to be wonderful.
Speaker 1 (28:48):
And I'm hoping immediately their pardon and they get compensation
because you know a lot of breadwetners went to prison
and people have been ruined by this. So what does
the word accountability mean to you as we look forward
to Trump again running with this football justin.
Speaker 3 (29:06):
Well, I mean, you know, we really need to look
into this stuff because I believe that there was evidence hid.
You know, they purposely withheld evidence. They probably destroyed evidence.
You know, they were they were pretending like it was
something that it wasn't, and you know, they went through
all these processes and you know, with the J six
Committee or whatever, and they knew things and they hid them.
(29:26):
You know, that's a crime. You can't just do that,
you know, you can't just like hide evidence and and
pretend like things didn't happen they did or vice versa.
And so those people, like, they need to be held
accountable for their actions because I you know, we wouldn't
even be talking about these pardons if they hadn't committed crimes.
(29:46):
And so that's that's why I think, you know a
lot of people are looking for pardons and trying to
trying to get out of this because they they know
what they did was wrong, and so these people need
to be held accountable for their actions.
Speaker 2 (29:59):
Well.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
I also hope moving forward because what Trump went through
with the law fair, from the lying of the dossier
to just just everything. I don't ever want to go
down this road again, justin.
Speaker 3 (30:12):
Right. Yeah, it's just you know, hopefully with you know,
Pulsey being in place, and you know, the Director of
National Intelligence, you know, you know Cash to tell you know,
these are the type of people that you want going
at these things. These are they're passionate about the you know,
the systems, and they're you know, they see the flaws
(30:35):
because you know, they've been working you know, in the system,
so they understand where where some of the problems are.
And so hopefully, you know, they tackle these head on,
because we only got a couple of years to do this,
and if we don't get it right now, we're going
to see this all over again.
Speaker 1 (30:51):
So true, I like to ask people, where were you
when you heard the news that Trump was almost assassinated
the first assassination Trump that was really real that we
really have no details on still, that they cremated the
body immediately and all of that.
Speaker 2 (31:07):
Where were you and what were you thinking that day?
Speaker 3 (31:11):
So I was actually I knew of the rally and
I was taking a nap and my friend called me.
He doesn't he rarely calls me like that. He called
me and he was like, Hey, did you see what happened?
I was like, no, what what happened? He was like,
they shot Trump? And I was like, and I turned
on the TV and it had just happened, Like he
called me like minutes after it happened. I saw it,
(31:32):
and I was like, holy crap. Like I was like,
you know, I people would you know, talked about it,
you know, and they you know, in in you know,
as the campaign was going on or whatever, and they
talked about, you know, hey, liberals are crazy or these
people you know, they're going to try and do something
to Trump or whatever. But when you see it happen
like that, it's, you know, the realness, the rawness of it.
(31:55):
This really just hits home. I was slored. I was like,
this is crazy, Like you know, it's the rhetoric, the
you know, the the Biden administration rhetic, the news organizations
that were putting all this stuff out that they were
drumming up hate for him and and for no reason.
And so because he was a great president, and and
(32:17):
you know, they they they were responsible for a lot
of this. They're they're responsible for for these things happening.
And so you know, I put that on them, and
and it's you know, we have to we have to
stamp this out, and we got to get our media
under control. They can't just be doing this, you know,
especially with the sitting president, you know, and then you know,
the Sake dossier's and all this stuff, like we can't
(32:39):
keep going down this road and expect a good outcomes.
Speaker 2 (32:42):
So true, and that's where I feel.
Speaker 1 (32:44):
I mean, you're an EX influencer because I you know,
I I an EX account, but I never was interested
in it.
Speaker 2 (32:51):
And then in.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
April I got my check mark and I started playing
around because I was like, oh, you know, Elon owns it,
and I love that it's kind of unfiltered.
Speaker 2 (33:01):
Justin that like we get our news there now and
it's always breaking.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
I mean there's still, you know, occasionally there's some garbage,
but for the most part, I feel like X is
where it's at and we can be the influencers. Are
you feeling that way too now? Because I want legacy
media done if they can't clean up, see yah?
Speaker 3 (33:19):
Right? Well, the nice part about it is, too is
we can pick apart their spin, like we can get
ahead of their spin. You know, ten fifteen years ago,
you couldn't do that. You were just basically force fed
what they told you and you just basically had to
deal with it, you know, Now with X. We can
immediately go on there, we can look at the story
that they're telling us and we can pick it apart.
(33:41):
We can say, no, this is bs. The way you're
telling this is not true, and so you can pull
that apart and it really levels the thing field for
the average person and you know, the news media as
far as like holding them accountable. And the other thing is,
you know, I don't really agree with community notes, but
there is value in it because you know, even you know,
(34:02):
Joe Biden's accounts, what's getting community you know, Kamala Harrison
getting community note, these news organizations are getting community noted
and right right, So yeah, you know, I again, I'm
not a huge fan of community notes because I believe
that conservatives are unfairly targeted with them, but we are.
(34:24):
But the cool thing is when you see somebody like that,
when it's an outright lie that they tell, you know,
from a national platform, and you know versus you know,
somebody make a mistake or whatever they're specifically you know,
lying to people, and to see them get called out
on community notes, it's kind of a beautiful thing.
Speaker 1 (34:42):
So have you had any challenges being an ex influencer?
I mean, I've definitely been attacked a few times, and
it's always because they are of the other side. Nine
times out of ten, it's they're on the other side
and they can never fight you on the issue. You know,
they're always going after you for something else. So have
you had that happen to you?
Speaker 3 (35:03):
Yeah? Absolutely, I was trying to. Like the other day,
I was trying to because I was they were talking
about the two terrorism incidents, the Las Vegas.
Speaker 2 (35:13):
And that's going to ask you about that too.
Speaker 3 (35:16):
The narrative that everybody was saying was that, oh, they
served together at Fort Bragg. I was like, no, they
did not serve together Fort Bragg. The one guy as
an s F soldier. The other guy was like a
regular army, different.
Speaker 2 (35:29):
Career fields, not even the room, you know, Nope.
Speaker 3 (35:34):
No, yeah, And the Special Forces soldiers have their basically
own base at Fort Bragg. So it's it's really it's
not even it's not people don't understand what they're saying
when they say, oh, they were at Fort Braggy. Yeah,
there's no way. It's a huge face. It takes a
half an hour to drive across Fort brag it's so big,
And that's really in the you know, there's fifty thousand
(35:56):
to maybe up to seventy five thousand, give or take,
you know, depending on what's going on there at any
given time. But you know, there it's a lot of people,
plus all the dependents and everything on there. You know,
it's just unrealistic to say, oh, they serve together for it,
but that's not realistic. Like there's absolutely no way that
they they serve together in any capacity. And I don't.
Speaker 1 (36:15):
Millions don't always know, you know, justin they're always they
think they know, but they don't know, you know, so right,
but go ahead.
Speaker 3 (36:26):
Yeah, So it's but then, you know, I'm trying to
and you know, educate people on this because I know
quite a bit about the base and you know, I
was an Army first artist, and so they'll call me moron.
They're saying, you don't know what the hell you're saying
or whatever, and they're just you know, blocked, you're muted
or whatever, and it's just like I'm just telling you
from experience, you know this, that that narrative is not likely.
(36:50):
So you know, but people just don't want to listen
to you. They call you names. Whatever. It happens on
a daily basis, I just let it roll off. You know,
I'm not too worried about it. You can call me
whatever you want to call me. I'm just you know,
I'm gonna try and get the truth out there regardless. Right.
Speaker 1 (37:05):
And So what does it feel like being such a
strong conservative warrior? You know, because when you do have
I mean, like I don't know, I did a space
with Gerald Flynn, and you know, when seven thousand people
come into space, You're like, wow, you know this is
We've got.
Speaker 2 (37:21):
To get it right.
Speaker 1 (37:21):
Do you feel that way all the time because you're
a conservative warrior too?
Speaker 3 (37:26):
Yeah? And you know I make mistakes on there too,
and you know, I you know, I if I'm wrong
on a post or something like that, I'll delete it
and acknowledge that I was wrong on it. And the
other part is too, is like space is it's really
you know, it's a cool platform. The thing I was
talking to my costs on this and one night, you know,
we had twenty thousand listens just in one night to
(37:49):
one of our spaces. That's huge. Look, that's huge. It's
like we filled Madison Square Garden. You know, people just
talking to a guest on there. So it's you know,
it's it's really like I said, it's really a cool
platform to kind of it's a great equalizer. You know,
I've had doctor Robert Malone in my spaces. I've had
Grant cardone, George Papadopoulos. You know, tonight I got Mark
(38:14):
Lucas from the article Reproject. You know, I got the
founder of Black Guns Matter.
Speaker 2 (38:19):
I'm excited about that one. I love him.
Speaker 3 (38:23):
Yeah, he's awesome. So it's it's just really, you know,
it's it's really cool that they would come and spend
their time with us and and talk to people, you know,
on on you know, on on their level and so
and be honest with them.
Speaker 2 (38:38):
So what if we missed? Justin goes by Jay Hans
on X.
Speaker 1 (38:42):
You're one of my favorite influencers that you have your
own space, but you're in everybody else's space. Liberal tiers
on tap. What have we missed today? I mean, you're
such a patriot. I love that you, you know, served
our nation as well, so I know it really hits
you in the heart.
Speaker 2 (38:58):
What have we missed today?
Speaker 3 (39:01):
Now? I think we've you know, we've covered a lot
of it, and you know, it's just another way to
serve you know, it's we X you know, is kind
of in the foundational stages of what it can become.
You know, it's it's going to be you know, I
believe that there are going to be independent news organizations
within X, you know, doing spaces and stuff like that.
It's we've taken this crap that we've been given through
(39:26):
the media and we made our own media. And so
I'm just really excited to you know, keep going, keep
going on there, keep talking to people, keep influencing, you know,
working on politics. You know, because President Trump he's got
you know, he's got a huge task ahead of him
to try and fix this government in four years. And
he's not going to be able to fix everything. But
(39:46):
we need to help him. We need to influence. We
need to call out the media when they're lying about him.
We need to you know, uh vet his candidates, you know,
for his cabinet or his picks or whatever. We need
to help him out on these and be honest with them.
So I have a.
Speaker 1 (40:02):
Very important question, are you interested in going to work
for Trump or running for office? Jay Hans that break
News here, Break News on Vronica Live.
Speaker 3 (40:13):
I've considered it, and I'm trying to Like, I've considered it,
and I would definitely If President Trump wanted me to
go work from I would absolutely do it in a
hartbat whatever you wanted me to do, I would absolutely
do it, no question. But the other part of it
is is like here in Georgia, I'm trying to help
candidates understand the power of what they can do on
X and their social media. So that's one of the
(40:34):
things that I want to help people out because I
think Democrats do it a lot better than we do.
Not that they, you know, the things that they do
are good or you know, for the right reasons. But
the thing is is like we need to start adapting
conservative candidates. They need to understand like how to reach
people because a lot of them aren't doing it very well.
And so you know, these antiquated ways of you know,
(40:56):
politics and stuff like that. They need to integrate this
into their system. They need to have, you know, a
place where you know, Georgia candidates for instance, can come
on there, do a space and talk about the issues
and reach reach their voters because some of them we
just don't know about and we're concerned about rhinos and
all that stuff. And this is where we can kind
of dispel some of that and they can talk with people,
(41:18):
you know, on the issues that they're concerned with.
Speaker 2 (41:21):
Well, it's been such a pleasure.
Speaker 1 (41:23):
I've been talking with Justin goes By Jay Hans at
you can find him on ex Blackhawks CE Charlie Echo
four five seven, and you're always on X. You've got
your space Tonight, Liberal Tiers on Tap can't wait to
host you back here on prodic Alive.
Speaker 3 (41:38):
Justin, thank you so much for having me and I
appreciate you, you know, taking the time to talk with me.
Speaker 2 (41:44):
Yeah, God bless thanks for joining Bradua Klive