Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
The first show of the year. General, Happy twenty twenty
five to you and to you sir, new year, new
buck Eyes team. Is there portals that opened up? Did
we bring anyone in on this controversial quarter?
Speaker 2 (00:15):
I mean, these are the same players that played in
the Michigan game, right right, but they have the same coaches.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
Speaking of which, though, they did just bring in the
that tight end clar out of Purdue, who is They've
just signed him for next year. So it's a big,
big tight end edition.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
What what have we been saying these last two games
and comparing contrast to the Michigan game. I mean, it's
a new buck Eyes team. It's the team we told
we were told that we had.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Yeah, that we had. So great to see that. Great
for Ryan Day, great for buck Eye Nation.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
It's going to be difficult to beat Ohio State in
good weather or indoors. It's almost impossible.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
Pretty sure that's the next two games.
Speaker 3 (00:54):
That's all we have left is to indoor teams.
Speaker 1 (00:57):
I'm not sure our backup quarterback is if Howard goes down,
but anyway.
Speaker 3 (01:02):
Actually, Devin Brown has committed to stay throughout the season
before he transfers to wherever he's going.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
Good for him.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
All right, Well, new Year, new Buckeyees team, actually same
Buckeye's team, but it may have taken the Michigan game off.
Speaker 1 (01:14):
New generation, do you hear about this? General? There's a
brand new generation on the rise.
Speaker 2 (01:20):
Babies born on New Year's Day twenty twenty five are
the first members of generation Beta Beta, Beta and shouts
jesse Lee Peterson, from twenty twenty five to twenty thirty nine.
We finally have arrived at a point where gen Z
Marri's millennials and produces beta babies.
Speaker 3 (01:39):
Right, so they're going to be called If they're male,
then they're Beta males.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
I don't know if the Beta generation's going to take off.
They said there was an Alpha generation from twenty ten
to twenty twenty four. I haven't heard about the alphabet
but alpha generation, but we have this Beta generation. AnyWho,
you know, we're going to talk about the New World
(02:06):
Order two point zero. Our loyal listeners, thank you, and
all of the listeners we've picked.
Speaker 3 (02:13):
Up over the years, and our sponsor and our sponsor,
chess Row.
Speaker 2 (02:18):
We have covered at various levels and depths, periods and
time in both the America and Europe where we saw
the warnings and the consequences of unchecked power, whether that
is unchecked political power or financial power, banking power, media power,
(02:44):
and the show has always been for the defense of
the American people, because the American people must constantly beyond
guard for concentrations of power, especially as those power brokers
become more and more remote from your locality, from where
(03:07):
you live, where you stand, where you breathe, where you sleep,
where you're wear your children.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
And we've been warning on this show. And we're not
the only ones.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
I mean, this is Peppy Cannon has been barking at
this for forty years.
Speaker 3 (03:20):
Iron ran longer than that.
Speaker 2 (03:22):
We're here, guys, I mean we're here, and we've been
in the New World Order for forty years. And that
New World Order which Ronald Reagan, I'm not putting the
NW on Ronald Reagan. Ronald Reagan tried to get a
peace deal worked out with Gorbachev, but Gorby wanted Reagan
(03:44):
to give up space.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
Wars, strategic defense initiative.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
Right, and Reagan was just unwilling to sell out the
nation's security for that.
Speaker 3 (03:53):
And then the USSR collapsed, and quite right too.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
So there's something to be said for American nationalism. Ronald
Reagan's version of American nationalism beat Soviet Union's form of
nationalism called communism.
Speaker 3 (04:11):
I loved his quote about that. They asked him, what
is the strategy with the result with residult about the
Soviet Union. He goes, it's very simple, we win, they lose.
Speaker 2 (04:21):
Reagan leaves George H. W the poster child of the Rhinos. Yeah,
the deep state initiative, the Cold War warriors, that very
much the tip of the spear, the Anglo files, and
they kind of picked up where the BRIT's left off
after World War Two, when the United Kingdom, the Empire
(04:45):
of Great Britain started to lose land and people and influence.
And Pat Buchanan and many other Conservatives watched George Bush's
mine and brain get filled, well HW get filled by
the Wolfowitz doctrine of a new world order.
Speaker 1 (05:06):
A unipolar world.
Speaker 2 (05:08):
The United States was going to be the Globo cop
and many of us were in favor of that, many
of us were against that. Let's see how this works out. Well,
nine to eleven just turbocharged that whole new world order.
But by two thousand and three, regardless of nine to eleven,
(05:29):
George W. Bush announces the Bush doctrine that where there's
possible terror, there will be the United States to whack
a mullet. Well, what we've now have has also been
predicted that you're gonna have. You're going to radical radicalize
(05:49):
hundreds of thousands, if not millions of Muslims or Russian
speaking Ukrainian Russian speaking people that don't like what we're
doing in Ukraine.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
You're going to radicalize these people.
Speaker 3 (06:01):
Some would say they were radicalized very much earlier than that.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
But we've now made enemies to the point where they
are bringing not only they bring it here, but it's
we now have home grown gi Jihattis.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
We have jiha Joe's. We have two g Hi Joe's
this week.
Speaker 3 (06:20):
Right. Well, remember that Fort Hood shooting that was or
that was Bragg Yeah Hood back in the I think
about ten fifteen years ago that a major that just
opened up and started shooting people.
Speaker 2 (06:33):
If the military rank and file is subject to this
type of thinking, this virus, I mean, you would think
the men and women in uniform would be impenetrable.
Speaker 3 (06:47):
Well, but you have to think though, there's millions of
people have been under arms and we've got three that
have done this. I don't know that we can say
that this is a pattern or.
Speaker 2 (06:56):
A travel I know, but we it's certainly postpones a
major Bowl game, right, Right, you have tell the families
of the ten, eleven, twelve people that were mode down
on Bourbon Street, right that this isn't a direct consequence
of a horrible foreign policy that was initiated.
Speaker 1 (07:19):
By the Cold War warriors in the mid nineties.
Speaker 2 (07:24):
And we talked about this on the Last Show, which
is the final show of twenty twenty four. And you know,
we give our trust and essentially the country's credit card
to the politicians, and.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
The voting.
Speaker 2 (07:41):
In Congress and the decisions by the executive branch has
been inconsistent with the American government putting the American people first.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
When was the last time the American.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
People as a whole felt as though the American government
was putting the American people first.
Speaker 3 (07:57):
That would have been probably around nineteen eighty one or two.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
Yeah, I mean, I think you can go and I
think you can certainly say nine to eleven September eleven
September twelve, George W. Bush was given carte blanc authority
go do whatever it needs to get done. France objected
to all This member objected to the invasion of Iraq
in two thousand and three, and we stopped calling them
(08:21):
French Fries. We call them freedom fries. All right, This
is that turbo button from nine to eleven where we
went on full blast, has been stuck on full blast,
and it's time to unplug that, recycle, power down and
figure out what is the will of the American people.
(08:41):
They spoke in November, and you've got it, and Donald
Trump has a mandate. We must now have no hesitation
and continuity of government as it relates to the national
security apparatus. If nothing else, the Democrats and the Ryan
Knows must let the continuity of the national security state
(09:05):
continue by Donald Trump's appointees to Attorney General, FBI Director,
and SECT deef am. I missing a betty, who does
he here for state?
Speaker 3 (09:17):
Rubio, he'll he'll go through flying colors.
Speaker 1 (09:19):
That has to happen and immediately. Don't wait. Don't wait.
Speaker 2 (09:25):
Based upon Mitch McConnell's customs or Chuck Grassley's customs of
waiting four weeks, it's got to be done immediately.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
This is not a radical concept anyway, stick around I'm
Brad Coppel, and that's a general in general.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
Here is the for the defense saliva test that I've
come up with overbreak, And.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
I want to tell you what I did over break.
I didn't really, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
I really told you what the Kappel family was going
to do over alla days. But a life changing experience
my wife and kids. I'm going to talk about that
a little bit. I learned a lot more that I
was not expecting as a.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
Result of this trip.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
But here's first the for the defense saliva test for
the one hundred and nineteenth Congress. That's just getting pressed
into service. If you are if you love the show,
if you like what we're talking about, then you'll agree
(10:29):
that the saliva test for every representative.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
We want to know.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
No job killing trade deals, no dangerous open border or borders,
and no more unconditional guarantees to support foreign nations that
their interests make our interests less safe. More specifically, we
(11:01):
need to take a break from meddling and foreign affairs
that do not advance America's national security interests.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
So what are they doing? Anthony Blincoln and the Biden White.
Speaker 2 (11:15):
House on their way out, fast tracked another one point
two five billion to Ukraine and now. And I didn't
do much, I didn't do any really research on this.
I just saw headline something about Ukraine turned off the
natural gas pipelines from Russia to Europe that run through.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
Parts of Ukraine.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
I mean this type of boxing in the Soviet the
Soviet Union they considered to be the Soviet Union, this
type of boxing in of Putin and Russia.
Speaker 1 (11:50):
They are just you absolutely know they want war with Russia.
You know they want war with Iran.
Speaker 3 (12:00):
It's the Biden administration scuttles around through the storage areas,
looting as much as they can. In the last days,
you know, it becomes very clear, you know what they've
been about all along. But Europe is not going to stand, however,
for the Soviet gas being cut off because that that
(12:22):
is those are cold winters over there in Europe, and
they've outlawed all of their coal fired plants and nuclear plants,
and natural gas is the only way to heat those homes.
Speaker 2 (12:32):
Yeah, it's it's absolutely criminal what's happening. And you have
to pay attention because they're not going to tell you. Oh,
they're not going to tell you. The losing argument that
was said in the situation room, which is okay, if
we if we cut this off, this this is one
(12:55):
step away from an act of war. The missile going Already.
Putin has had amazing reserve on the US made and
sanctioned missiles into the Russian homeland territory.
Speaker 3 (13:14):
I think he knows that he can put up with
anything for a few weeks.
Speaker 2 (13:20):
So the litmus test, the saliva test, it has to
be put Americans first.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
Let's let's let's let's not just lick our wounds, but
let's repair the damage that's been done.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
And Biden wonders, how you get twelve percent out of
that or ten percent out of that.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
It's not the most profitable thing to do. Have policy
that favors the people. It's just not You just can't
make as much money.
Speaker 3 (13:49):
Right, You just can't make any money, and then these
people will expect it.
Speaker 2 (13:53):
So the trade deals, keep an eye on the trade deals,
keep an eye on money going uh to other countries.
And we really in the opposition to the to Trump's
appointees going to be a big battle, but we really
have to fast track those. We're just not in a
(14:15):
spot where we can where we can be in limbo
at this point, and the and the Democrats and Rhinos
that plan on sabotaging the Trump appointments, they all need
to be primary.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
More than that they we are.
Speaker 2 (14:31):
We may be in the opening stages of a non
kinetic World War three, for all we know. We've got balloons,
high altitude balloons flying inexplicably over the country. We're webs
of drones. And you know what the payload that you
put on a high altitude balloon, balloon, e MP devices
(14:55):
things they can take the grid off, The payload that
you can put in these balloons, the pay that you
can put into these drones, we're just not getting answers.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
We know more about.
Speaker 2 (15:05):
Luigi man Gione than we do about the two guys
who tried to kill Trump to this day. So they're
going to try to They're going to obstruct denominating process,
and then any rift in magaworld, like the H one
B visa, the Unit Party and the media is just
(15:29):
going to run headlong in there and try to force
a bigger gap in MAGA. You're important the MAGA stay
on the same page on H one B, and I
want to hear your thoughts on H one B.
Speaker 3 (15:43):
General well, before I do that, you're also going to
see a big litigation spree in the federal courts where
they carefully pick hardcore leftist trial judges in the US
federal district courts to injunct anything that Trump tries to do.
But with H one B, I think it's a very
(16:03):
simple compromise that can be made here. You can bring
somebody in via this H one B program, but that
person must be as he works or she works, that
person must be training his or her replacement, who will
be an American citizen. And the moments that that replacement,
that that replacement takes the job over, then the H
(16:26):
one B status will be renewed for that immigrant, that
foreign citizen to come in and do it again with
another American citizen. Disney employees years back, we're having to
train their own replacements. It was sickening. Ye. Well, I say,
if you're an H one B visa holder, then you
have to train your replacement, and that is a condition
(16:48):
of you getting your H one B renewed.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
Look, you're putting a burden on the H one B visa.
Speaker 3 (16:54):
People don't care.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
All right, I'm understanding, But that's I'm just going to
strong Man. This H one B argument a set. If
the idea is that the American people just don't have that,
the white Anglo Saxon, Protestant, Catholic, whatever, the European bloodlines
(17:18):
don't support a stem level.
Speaker 3 (17:23):
Brain, utter nonsense.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
The men and women that made America great by definition,
we're all immigrants, So we can never win the immigrant
argument because we are one nation of immigrants, legal immigrants
under God. And if you have the belief that the
(17:51):
American mind is not as smart as a Pakistan or
Indian or Asian brain. If you believe that, then I
understand why. Because the various science foundations in the United
States and their sponsors, big employment, big tech, they told
(18:19):
you that to get H one B visas simply to
get foreign workers for junior and entry level positions for
much lower wages.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
That's the key for the lower wages, hard stop.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
They want the high quality people from India and Pakistan
to come over here and work for half of what
it would cost to hire an American.
Speaker 2 (18:44):
That is all H one B is and I will
listen to cogent counter arguments to this. My email is
Brad at Kaffel Law dot com. Brad at kawfelaw dot com.
It is my opinion as of today, and this is
(19:05):
not a foundational opinion. I don't change my foundational opinions.
I don't have that many foundational opinions. But this is
a political economic opinion that I'm willing to change. But
right now it is my opinion based upon the research
and reading a common sense that I have that the
H one B visa pattern is very simple. You get
(19:31):
foreign workers who will come here for much lower wages
for very specific tech industries that are for junior entry
level positions, and if they can speak decent English even better.
Speaker 1 (19:46):
Are they going to unionize? No? Are they going to
speak out about the exploitation?
Speaker 2 (19:50):
No, because there's probably some problems with their visas or
there's been some exploitation of the H one B program,
and they know that they speak out, it's going to
get discovered that they're most likely.
Speaker 1 (20:05):
In violation of the fine print of H one B.
Speaker 2 (20:13):
All right, General, what's what's Biden's White House Press secretary's
name again?
Speaker 3 (20:18):
Uh? John Jean Pierre Jean von Dame? John?
Speaker 1 (20:23):
What is her name?
Speaker 3 (20:24):
Kareem Jean Pierre von Dame.
Speaker 2 (20:28):
Has she come out yet insisting she came out a
long time ago she's gay. Does she come out insisting
that Jimmy Carter is alive and well yet, well, no,
that's just fine as his mental faculties are just fine.
And please, Peter Doozy, don't don't even ask.
Speaker 3 (20:48):
Right, right or all right.
Speaker 1 (20:53):
So the year twenty twenty five it needs to be
the year of answers. We need to declassify a lot.
Speaker 3 (21:03):
Of stuff JFK files.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
We need to declassify even more because if the fear
is if we declassify too much, then Russia and Iran
will know our secrets.
Speaker 1 (21:18):
Dude, Russian and Iran know more what's going on in
the United.
Speaker 2 (21:22):
States back of the house than the people than American
people do?
Speaker 1 (21:25):
Am I right?
Speaker 3 (21:26):
Absolutely to me? I mean well, first of all, intelligence
work is on unclassified materials.
Speaker 2 (21:33):
I mean, if I well, if you really want to
know what's going on back a house at state, you're
going to get more credible information directly from Putin and
the g They know they're paying attention.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
They have spies. We don't. Ours are supposed to be
the press.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
The press is not necessarily you know, the old press
is getting better. Citizen free press is getting better in
the national calls.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
I mean, there are places where you have to you
have to go.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
X is getting better, but Tucker is getting better. Tucker's
Tucker making it better. Tucker gets it. I mean, you
talk about a guy in recovery, you talk about a
guy who who is offering Maya Kolpez.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
He's like, I know, as part of the machine.
Speaker 3 (22:17):
I know. Isn't that what Trump said during the debate
with Hillary Clinton? He said, uh, you know, I used
these laws just like you did, and just like all
your big donors did. Dave Chappelle remarked upon.
Speaker 2 (22:29):
It, I believe. And I had to talk to my
kids because we were traveling.
Speaker 1 (22:33):
Let me tell you. Let me tell you this trip
real quick, all right.
Speaker 2 (22:37):
So several years ago, Michelle said, we need to take
the kids when you get to Africa, when you go
on a safari. We had some other friends that had
done it, and I'm like, big, big, big bills there, right,
that's a that's a whopper of a trip.
Speaker 3 (22:53):
That Did you adopt any children while you were there?
Speaker 2 (22:55):
No, I would didn't want to come back. I wanted
to be adopted by them. So in a in a nutshell,
and I'm going to talk quite a bit in future
shows about what I observed in Tanzania and SERENGETI. I've
always been a fan of European history, especially British Empire history,
(23:17):
and we know that the dark continent of Africa was
attempted to be colonized by Belgium, Germany.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
England, Italy with the right but it's such an impenetrable
country and very very difficult. So we we we fly.
Speaker 2 (23:41):
To Amsterdam and then from Amsterdam to Kilimanjaro, Tanzania, and
then we get off the plane and we go through
customs and they're just we went to WrestleMania Russ Dayton
in Newark, Nork.
Speaker 1 (23:59):
You went to Wrestlenian nurk Okay, I didn't. You totally
had me. The people that come in contact with are
awesome people. And I'm talking about the locals. Of course,
there's a lot.
Speaker 2 (24:17):
There's a growing number of expats from Australia, Germany, Belgium,
Europe that are trying to get business up and running there,
but it's such a hard place to do business.
Speaker 1 (24:30):
But anyway, here's what I learned. African Africans are still
tied to their tribes. Everyone down there is still part
of a tribe that identify still being part of their tribe.
Our guide, sixty four year old.
Speaker 2 (24:47):
Wonderful guy trained in veterinarian veterinarian wildlife conservation, knew everything
about the animals on the Serengetti. We spend eight days
with a fantastic and one night by a fire out
in the savannah. We did four nights and three nights
(25:10):
in tent camping, and in fact, if you saw a
picture of the tent you would giggle that it's tent camping.
Did have a hardwood floor and nice hot water. Anyway,
he and I were talking and he said, America, you
just have too much. You're too greedy, you don't need everything,
(25:32):
and those things are causing craziness, craziness. It's driving people crazy,
whether it's just depression and social anxiety or worse.
Speaker 3 (25:45):
So this fellow doesn't have those things because he's renounced
all of that.
Speaker 1 (25:48):
No, he's just like when you're in charge of yourself,
he said, we work several different jobs. We take care
of each other. We don't live for money.
Speaker 3 (26:00):
How romantic.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
Yeah, But they're the tribes on there, they're just there.
They get it.
Speaker 3 (26:05):
There.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
There is in harmony with nature as possible, and somewhere
along the way, the West put a crack in nature,
whether it's the natural laws of money with finance and
fractional reserve banking and fiat currency, or put a broke
nature with this concept of artificial states and corporations.
Speaker 1 (26:29):
Things are just fake. Now, everything's just fake.
Speaker 3 (26:32):
Said the socialist governments of Africa.
Speaker 1 (26:35):
Yeah, but the people don't like their government. Like you know,
it cost one hundreds, like one hundred and fifty bucks
a person to get into the Serengetti per day, and
if you're going to spend the night in the Serengetti,
their national park, it's extra seventy dollars per person. These
things add up.
Speaker 2 (26:53):
When you're a family of five. And then when you
they have two point five million visitors all right, and
they plan on eating to five million in the next
ten years. I go, where's all this money go? Because
of SERGETI they don't need any money. I mean, they're
just the animal. It's everything because it goes to the
central government. And as you can see, it's not coming
back to the people. That's your socialism. So the the
(27:17):
people there, they're like, look, we just stick with our
tribes because our socialist government it's corrupt and the only
and they're just happy because like you know what, we're
just we've given up on our government. We've had one
party rule since we got our independence, and we just
(27:38):
we just take we just take care of each other.
Speaker 3 (27:40):
But you know we do in America. We didn't give
up on our government. The British government. We shot them,
but and we got shot by them.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
My concern is and what I didn't feel in Tanzania,
and I don't think you're going to have in this
on and it's a it's it's I certainly didn't. I
didn't come away from this trip to Africa thinking, whow,
I'm on the right team. You know that the West
has it right, that this materialism, consumerism, just printing money
(28:13):
and and try and just it's it's obscene, you know
what I'm talking about.
Speaker 3 (28:17):
The printing money, certainly.
Speaker 2 (28:18):
But the whole obscenity of this, of this type of lifestyle,
and that the bigger problem that we have is not
own that that that the a lot of the African
countries don't have, is our country is taking our money
and kicking hornets ness all around the world and pulling
(28:40):
our youth into military service for non congressionally approved, unconstitutional
war and taxing US at extremely high levels, and the
consequences of homegrown terrorism.
Speaker 1 (28:56):
Now we have gi Jihadis.
Speaker 2 (28:59):
How Joe, I just think there's a there's a After
nine to eleven, we got into this collective psychosis. Everything
has changed for our generations, and I just don't feel
like we have learned our lessons. We're doubling down on
really bad mistakes that have previously been made.
Speaker 3 (29:22):
You know what I'm saying, Well, we've writed one of
those mistakes back on early November of this year, and
in about two and two weeks or so, we're going
to be sweeping out all the detritus.
Speaker 2 (29:36):
All right, Look, if only we had a I'm not
going to go into a ran right now, but I'm
just telling you there is absolutely an effort to get
to provoke and Ran into war with US in Israel
and Russia. There's a plan, and it's not being talked
about out loud, but all the elements of this are
(29:58):
right in our base, and we just need to get
to the point where Donald Trump can get in there
and pull.
Speaker 3 (30:04):
Us out of this tailspin.
Speaker 2 (30:09):
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Speaker 3 (30:45):
I would say, just go up there and take a look. Yeah,
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Shouldn't all Silverados be silver?
Speaker 1 (31:26):
Right now?
Speaker 2 (31:28):
At the risk of being accused of gaslighting our listeners.
Speaker 1 (31:32):
I want a strong man. I think you and I
need a strong man.
Speaker 2 (31:35):
The neocon neoliberal foreign policy of endless covert military interventions
regime change, the whole idea the world needs a singular
superpower to rule them all and wanting to our concern general,
our concern, and this is a huge concern, is that
we have very large American chess pieces that can be
(32:00):
accessed and mobilized very quickly, efficiently, and surreptitiously by unelected, unaccountable,
very wealthy men and women.
Speaker 1 (32:13):
And I think that we need a strong man. This
argument are we making? Are we arguing for a reversal
and foreign policy?
Speaker 3 (32:26):
Is it a mistake?
Speaker 1 (32:27):
General?
Speaker 3 (32:28):
Well, put it this way. I mean, there's always two
sides to every coin, Like take the H one v. Visas.
You can make a cogent argument that bringing in very
very talented people to expand our tech industry will expand
jobs in America. I understand that argument, but there's a
counter argument to it that we've already got those people.
(32:50):
It's just that we've got some companies who are too
cheap to pay and want to manipulate the labor pool
by bringing in all of these foreigners. So there's always
going to be some good things about you know, the
US has this global power that it will stand astride
the world as a colossus and dominate this and dominate that.
(33:12):
But in the end we can't afford it. It leads
to ruin and resentment all over the planet.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
Has there been Has there been an empire that has
survived to this day?
Speaker 3 (33:24):
Well, I mean currently the American Empire are still surviving,
and how eardly, about two hundred and fifty years into that.
Speaker 1 (33:29):
I know the American Empire.
Speaker 2 (33:30):
Imperialism really didn't start technically, it probably eighteen ninety six
with McKinley. We're really we're only one hundred and fifty
years into this empire. Every empire dies the same way.
They just they get too spread out and it costs
too much top rate, and you can't take care of
(33:51):
your own, and then your own turn on you and
you have civil war or revolution or both. When Bush
gave his two thousand and two State of the Year
Union address, the Axis of Evil speech, and the National
Security Strategy for the United States adopted the Bush doctrine,
a brand new concept of preemptive war. It's unfamiliar, certainly
(34:16):
in unilateralism. One of those Ivy League big words. It
simply means it's our, it's our playground. We control the chalk,
the basketball, the hoop. You know it's our playground.
Speaker 3 (34:31):
Well, Mike makes right.
Speaker 2 (34:32):
In an anarchy, if you're benevolent or beneficent, you have
the ability to not run the playground, just align your pockets,
but to actually have a policy of running the playground
that the people who want to play in the playground,
that are paying for the playground say, yeah, we're.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
Cool with that.
Speaker 3 (34:55):
We all like it right.
Speaker 2 (34:57):
Nine to eleven changed America's foreign policy for a very
long time, to the point there was such a thirst
for war that his Axis of Evil speech and the
expansion to the Bush doctrine that we will preemptively take
(35:18):
out threats real or perceived, like the WMDs and Hussein's
Iraq and anyone that posed a future threat. Now, how
does the rest of the world, nuclear tipped world, or
radical fundamental Islamists who have no problem with suicide, how
(35:44):
are they supposed to respond to this type of American
foreign policy? And then bombs start dropping in your country
and troops and tanks and planes, and then you've lost
your dad, or you've lost your uncle, or you've lost
siblings to bombings, And what about our soldiers that are
(36:08):
there watching this.
Speaker 1 (36:10):
I have a very dear friend.
Speaker 2 (36:13):
From a special Forces unit that doesn't exist, wink wink,
it never has, it never has. I feel bad for
him and his brothers and their families. They were told,
you're the tip of the spear. You're doing this to
(36:36):
protect the American homeland. I'm not so sure that may
have been an element of this New World Order Bush doctrine,
but it seems like somewhere along the way, George w
who I love. I feel as though George w Somewhere
along the way, the Bush doctrine got expanded at the
(36:58):
request of certain non government actors like the military industrial
the military industrialists, and then the Bush doctrine expands even
further of unilateralism, that we'll go it alone.
Speaker 3 (37:15):
I don't have a problem with unilateralism so long as
I mean, you can't entrust your national security to others.
But if you have this idea that we can solve
every problem with a rifle, round, a mortar and a missile, uh, that's.
Speaker 1 (37:31):
Let me Let me go.
Speaker 2 (37:32):
Let me go back to my Africa trip, because I
met young men who would be there. I met a
Masai tribe, Mara tribe, and these are people that were
working the resort or working the camp that we were at,
and the world Asia, Europe, Africa has always been At
(37:55):
the beginning, there were always tribes and then this nation
state comes online just in the last couple hundred years,
where in the name of the people they have the
moral right to go bomb foreign people. And I come
back to the same thing over and over, which is
nation states start wars, but then they send their people
(38:19):
to fight them. Do your friends and military combat vets
and you if you had to prosecute a target to
his death, do you not need to know that you
saved an American life in exchange? And if you can't
make that connection, should we be there to begin with?
Speaker 3 (38:39):
Well, the problem with the individual soldier getting a veto
over the general's orders is that the individual soldier can't
see the entire picture.
Speaker 2 (38:51):
But I'm saying that they were sold a picture I say,
maybe truly wrong, was not actually not.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
Actually honest true.
Speaker 3 (39:03):
But I mean there's a lot of dishonesty that goes around,
and it's not limited to us. I mean, when those
tribal people gave you the name of Mcalla that stands
I looked it up on YouTube, and that thinks he's
our friend.
Speaker 1 (39:20):
Well, what's your wife has a tribal name?
Speaker 3 (39:22):
Well, I was actually a friend of mine's wife. She
us was ten percent Native American, and she went to
the Algonquin tribes and got certified registered and they gave
her a tribal name of ten Skualawa. It translates into
hollers from couch, you're awesome.
Speaker 2 (39:42):
Bottom line, I think our point is what I learned
in after was it's when the nation states get together.
Speaker 1 (39:50):
And there's conflict and ain't between the people. The people
we can coexist.
Speaker 2 (39:56):
But get the nation state warhaw get these guys chained up.
Speaker 1 (40:02):
A little bit, and we need them. We need them,
but not everywhere all at once. Anyway, Happy New Year.
We're looking forward to a great year with you guys. M.