Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
I welcome to for the Defense of the American people
on Attorney Brad Koffel. The General is back in with
me again. General's good dating youth.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Great to be with you, sir.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Last week missed you, but can't be set in with us.
You know what we can't be. I mentioned last week.
I was looking up on the board here in the
studio and I said, holy cow, this is our eighth
anniversary show. This was last week. First show I ever
did was June four, twenty seventeen, and Campy was in
(00:36):
here for the anniversary show. And I didn't totally realize
camp he has been our producers since the very beginning.
He said in although we voted for Kamala at twenty four,
which I love the fact we had someone in studio
that we know and actually confessed to voting for Kamala
Harris and we had a good conversation.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
So you weren't actually ratting him out.
Speaker 1 (00:57):
No, I wasn't outing him. Okay, it's Ryan Seas in general.
Uh and the co exists. People are burning again. I
I how do they know which cause they're going to?
This time? I mean, how do you keep track? Is
this Wall Street?
Speaker 2 (01:13):
Is this?
Speaker 1 (01:15):
Uh? Police brutality. Where is this? How do they know?
Speaker 3 (01:22):
It's weather based? Have you ever seen them in January
and North Dakota.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
It's Which is why I think we need to move
more of our infrastructure, our government infrastructure, into the interior
of the heartland and up into the cold areas. They
let's think this through because our days coming eventually, somebody eventually,
when the when the when the people show up. I
don't care if you're American born here and your grandparents
(01:50):
go back to the Mayflower, if your parents go about
your grandcestors, grandcestors, I like that that actually works.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
Yes, that shortens things.
Speaker 1 (01:59):
If you're ancestors go back to the Mayflower. There's a
very high probability that your grandfather went to East Coast
prep school an ivy, and your parents went to a
boarding school, and then from there fell out and became
part of the SDS color first Color Revolution in the
(02:21):
United States in the late sixties early seventies. Am I
keeping you awake?
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Nope, not at all.
Speaker 1 (02:27):
But and so those those rich white or more affluent
white families from the East Coast, those board teenagers in
the in the sixties that had time to get high,
had time to sit around and think about the universe
(02:47):
and our existence.
Speaker 3 (02:49):
And they knew that if they failed out of an
Ivy League school that they would still have money backing
on to do something.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
Oh sure, yeah, And you know, get high, and you think,
this is what Karl Marx and Angles did. They were
the original hippies. Unemployed pumpkins came from money. At least
one of.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
Them dead, abusing the health, the help, abusing.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
The help, and they you know, you get high and
you think about you come up with ideas that are
fairer than your lot in life. By the way, your
lot in life pretty damn good. And somehow you want
to find a cause, You want to find something to
go bitch about. And there was a lot to bitch
(03:37):
about in the late sixties. You had, well, you had
a very very popular president, Jack Kennedy getting assassinated, a
very very my favorite twentieth century when I say top
five twentieth century figure, doctor Martin Luther King Jr. Assassinated,
(03:58):
Bobby Kennedy assassinated, plenty of others we're unaware of.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
Malcolm X assassinated.
Speaker 1 (04:04):
Thank you, Biggie Small. When was Biggie That would have
been early nineties and nineties. Yeah, this is all before
tupacin Biggie, right. So you have idleness of the late sixties,
a byproduct of the post World War two new economy,
(04:27):
the American capitalism that was enshrined in the United Nations.
So this was going to be this global covenant at
the direction basically of the United States the West, and
we are going to be taking our goods and services,
our culture, our way of life, and we're going to
(04:47):
be spreading it around the world. And if you don't
like it, we're in NATO. We've got this alliance. We're here.
You know, no one's going to take us down. Union tried.
I still believe we are all over the place right now.
In general, they might have too much coffee. But Soviet Union,
(05:08):
I believe, was more of an idea at the beginning,
when we amped it up into Cold War, when we
created NATA, when we created when we took the Breton
Woods Agreement and made the US dollar the world currency
as opposed to the Russian ruble or going back to
the British pound or some other currency. As a result
of that decision, we had to put a lot of
(05:29):
American dollars into the global economy. Why so those countries
and companies and industries had US dollars to trade.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
With well and so that they could rebuild their economies
after World War two had destroyed them utterly. Correct, And
so that now we have people that would buy our products.
Speaker 1 (05:50):
By the way, By the way, Joe, what fiscal policy
policies did the United States use in the Marshall Plan
for Europe and rebuilding Japan?
Speaker 2 (06:05):
That I couldn't tell you.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
I will tell you, thanks for asking. H free market,
no regulations, no government interference, straight up, private marketplace lays
a fair. You're talking about wells a fair? Yeah? So
what we know our leadership, the smarty pants in the boardrooms,
the smarty pants, and the government agencies, the Brooks Brothers
(06:28):
suit crowd, the professor crowd, the economics, the economist crowd.
They know what works. You want to rebuild a nation,
get the nation, get the government out of the way.
Let private money get in there. Private money moves faster
than government money. Private money is much more accountable than
(06:48):
government money. If you steal a private dollar, you're going
to lose a private finger. If you steal a government dollar,
then you tell your friends, let's create five oh, one,
C three's and NGOs, and let's go take these government,
these baskets of dollars that are being dulled out here
by the United States, and let's go spread our larva.
Speaker 2 (07:12):
You are sounding very much like iin rand.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
And as a result of us spreading our larva v larvae?
Speaker 2 (07:22):
Is that? Yeah? The larvae we Otherwise there's one gigantic larva.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
We created a lot of people who don't like us
around the world, who hate us, and that the last
wet say, sixty years eighty years of American foreign policy
and pandering to a domestic base that either refused to work,
(07:51):
couldn't work, chose not to work. There were jobs, plenty
of jobs. America has always had great jobs, unless you're
a college grad in twenty twenty five, where the unemployment
rate is up there with the Great Depression.
Speaker 2 (08:02):
Because you haven't been taught anything in college.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
We had plenty of jobs. We had a lot of idleness,
and we had permissiveness. Ronald Reagan, governor California, did not
tolerate this level of permissiveness at Berkeley. Remember that I
know we were in we weren't born yet, but being historians,
Governor Reagan sent in some boots in uniforms and batons,
(08:29):
and I don't know about Baynet's and do UC Berkeley.
Reagan's way of enforcing domestic pop domestic law and order
has been forgotten until Trump revives it. And now Trump
all of a sudden is Hitler. Does Hitler have an
NIL deal? Because at this point in time, the Hitler,
(08:50):
the Hitler estate should be one of the wealthiest families.
Speaker 3 (08:55):
Yeah, because they've been using his likeness and name without
his permission.
Speaker 1 (08:59):
I mean, can you imagine time how much money that
the Hitler estate should get from the abuses of their
of the nil all. Right, after the break, we're going
to talk a little bit about when these riots, when
the co exist or burning burning things again show up
in your area, your neck of the woods. They're between
(09:20):
you and going out to dinner downtown, or between you
and and safety at Easton getting to your job, getting
to your job. Yes, what are we going to need
to do the American people? Because that what are we
going to do? Because Gavin Newsom, the new American Left,
if the if the federal government, which is the the
(09:41):
enforcement arm on behalf of the American people's last resort
when that fails, because they're tying Trump up in lawsuits
in court. Then it's on us, the people. What are
we going to do after the break? John and I
are going to come up a little game plan or
what you should be doing. General. It's Riot season again.
(10:04):
Welcome back. This is for the defense of the American people.
I'm attorney Brad koffl. This is six to ten WTV
in iHeartRadio. You can catch our show anytime you want
on demand pur Purple podcast button for the Defense. You
can just type in my last name Kawfl on Spotify, iTunes.
I don't know what else wrong R on other platforms
(10:27):
we have. We're coming up on I think a couple
million downloads sounds right. We are getting about fourteen thousand
listeners per show. Is my understanding. The way these ratings work,
which is pretty dagone good, feels like every time we talk,
we're talking to a small arena.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
It means we dwarf all the other shows.
Speaker 1 (10:47):
It's not where the hegemon? Where the hegemon? We're the big, beautiful,
conservative common sense show.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
And in this area certainly, yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:56):
That no one nationally seems to want to grab us
and pull us up and ask us for our opinion here
in Columbus.
Speaker 2 (11:04):
Nor do we need the likes of them? That's right.
Speaker 1 (11:06):
So, oh, I have a new in general. So you know,
when you if you post something online like Facebook or
Twitter or whatever. I guess there's a feature where you
can turn off the comments. Okay, so you can put
out what you want to say, but disable the feature
for any trolls to troll you.
Speaker 2 (11:23):
You can always block those people to do that.
Speaker 1 (11:25):
I now this came out of nowhere. The other night
I said something and my buddy who I was with,
I said, sorry, I turned off my comment feature, so
I get to talk, you don't get to respond. I
like that. You can use that if you want. It's
riot season. Which riot will be Fort Sumter? One of
(11:48):
these is going to be Fort Sumter General, I don't
think so for the listen okay, well number one for
our listeners under fifty that weren't properly taught American War,
American history? What was Fort Sumter?
Speaker 3 (12:06):
Fort Sumter was a ford in South Carolina. South Carolina
had succeeded one of the very first ones to secede
during the Civil War, the first but it was It
was a federal outpost, a Union outpost in the middle
of South Carolina.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
Kind of like an ICE detention center, right.
Speaker 3 (12:24):
And they were they were basically going in there to
take it over the Antifa, no, the Southern Confederate Forces,
And that was basically the first battle. And I believe
that Francis Scott Key wrote to the Star Spangled Banner,
didn't he?
Speaker 2 (12:41):
No? No, that was the.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
Twelve I'm not sure. Yeah, that was age twelve. It
was eighteen twelve. Wrong War. The men that went to
the ice the detention center there in South Carolina known
as Fort Sumter. What makes them different than the Starbucks baristas,
(13:03):
the Bambi's that are doing what they're doing now.
Speaker 3 (13:07):
Well, it's interesting because you know, these leftists, they always
have this thing that it's all about them, you know,
And they get interviewed on the street and they say, well,
I don't trust the federal troops to protect me, Like
they're not here to protect you.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
They're here to protect the ICE facilities. Your local police
won't won't won't.
Speaker 1 (13:31):
Protect I mean, mayor the police will Mayor Karen won't. Well,
how I mean, it's almost like the Stars of the Line.
We have a The La Mayor is named Karen.
Speaker 2 (13:44):
True and goes to Ghana whenever there's a problem.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Right, She's not in Ghana now, is she?
Speaker 2 (13:50):
She's gone somewhere.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
Yeah, I don't think we can travel. Yeah, trust gone somewhere. Trump.
Trump did not put gone on the list. So Karen
basket hand leave, she can go back to she can
go visit Gone anytime she wants, and.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
She probably will pretty soon.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
Yeah. Sure, he's getting probably easier to deal with fires
than it is to deal with angry Mexican drug cartels
and opportunistic black mobs and even more opportunistic, naive, utopian,
white skinny undernourished.
Speaker 3 (14:26):
The Liberals still hasn't issued any permits to rebuild any
of the places that were burned down in the wildfires.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
Eventually, the people are going to rise up and say
enough of this. The question is you about Fort Sumter?
Is one of these things? Is one of these going
to be at Fort Sumter is? And just I will say,
when I started thinking about what we're going to talk
about on the show, my first thought thought that came
to my mind was, by the way co exists people,
(14:54):
and we're not against coexistence. We're not against it. We
are in favor of organic coexistence. We are not in
favor of just pretending like our southern border doesn't exist,
and pretending like the moment you get here, you are
entitled to every right and privilege as the rest of us.
(15:17):
That's not the way the laws are written. That's not
the way things are. If we, as a body politic
want to change these laws, we can and we will,
but the laws haven't changed because the will's not there.
Speaker 2 (15:30):
Well, we also prefer coexistence without the arson.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
I prefer coexistence shouldn't require selfie stick, shouldn't require gasoline.
Co Existence shouldn't require burning the American flag. Co Existence
shouldn't is not waving your country's flag that you refuse
to go back to. That's not co existence.
Speaker 3 (15:53):
And it's not co existence to block major traffic arteries
so the ambulances and people going off to work can't
get to their employment.
Speaker 1 (16:04):
So, to tease this out, what I see there is
a bona fide political argument of what rights, if any,
do illegal human beings have? Human beings that are here illegally.
Speaker 3 (16:19):
Well, this is what's interesting about this because these people's positions,
they start and end with the premise that people who
don't have a right to be here, have a right
to be here, Well.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
That's under human rights. It's we're going to continue. I
think this is very important to flush out. It's an
argument that's not worth having. It's basically saying it's cold,
so I'm going to wear my bathing suit out what
it's not. Look, I disagree, Jenna, and I have no
idea what that analogyis meant. But the fact is that
(16:52):
what's being argued in a kind of an obtuse way.
And they need to be clear about this if they
want to if they really want to turn this into
a Kent state, if they really want to turn this
into a really bad stain on American history, they need
to pick up the theory that or the idea that
(17:13):
these are human banks that are endowed with natural rights,
and these natural rights do not leave them. Ever, They're
not natural rights that they only get when they're United States.
All people are endowed with natural rights.
Speaker 2 (17:29):
Like the right to go to work without having your
natural right. No, it is to me.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
These are human rights, these are natural rights. In the
United States is the land of freedom, and it was
designed and built as a place to protect our natural rights.
That was the whole purpose of the nation state.
Speaker 3 (17:52):
It's not why they're coming here. They're coming here for
free phones or welfare payments and food stamps.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
They're coming here because their conditions suck.
Speaker 3 (18:00):
And that's because they didn't change them. No one fought
and died for their country. They just said, oh, the
place I live sucks, so let's just go somewhere else.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
The ability for the people to marshal resources and affect
regime change in Venezuela, for instance, like.
Speaker 2 (18:19):
When we took on the British Empire.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
Yeah, uh, it requires a lot more effort in the
United States. And by the way, I'm not an apology,
you know, I'm you know, or I stand on this.
You're giving the position for the other side, and I
respect that they're long there. But when the when the
new Left finally catches up to where where they should
what they should be arguing, which is, these are human rights. Now,
(18:44):
these people are here, they're on American soil. The entire
purpose of the United States was the land of the free.
And I grew up don't know about you guys, but
when I grew up, I always was under the stan
The understand a belief that if you're a foreigner and
you make it to the United States and Ellis Island. Welcome.
(19:08):
That's what I grew up understanding, and it's it's very
hard for me. It's very hard for me, as a
strict constitutional conservative to tell these people you don't have
a a right to be here. They do have a right.
There is a human right. However, we have laws in
(19:31):
place that trim these human rights. In exchange for, or
as a trade off for law and order. We all
surrender a percentage of our human rights to live in
an organized, civilized, law and order society. When the expression
(19:52):
of their human rights steps on our right to live
free and in peace and tranquility and not be blocked
on our way to work and not worry about our
cars getting car bombed, then our law and order kicks in.
Welcome back. I'm Attorney Brad Koffel, and that is the
(20:14):
general General. We just ended the last segment talking about
wait until. I'm saying wait until the new Left, that
confederation of misfit toys, the indigenous people, their voices are
being elevated. This is the indigenous tribal people, our land.
(20:40):
The Mexican voice is being lifted, this is our land.
The black urban voice has been lifted. Normally it's been
historically it's been no civil rights. Then our civil rights
were granted to us, but then water we had to
(21:01):
march in the six fifties and sixties to get equality.
And then we took a hard turn in our foreign
policy and started creating refugees all around the world as
we said, we're fighting and blocking communism Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia.
(21:24):
Then we moved into the Middle East, North Africa, and
as a result, we've created, through foreign policy and exidents
and exodus and relocation, a resettlement of large millions and
millions of people from not just other Western countries, no,
(21:49):
from other civilizations. They didn't want to come here, did they.
They did not. They liked they liked where they were.
They've been there for thousands of years. Everything was fine
until you Americans brought in regime change Iran had you
know Iran in the late forties, the United One of
(22:14):
the first things we did with our new mite was
stage a coup in Tehran. We put in our own
person until the people had enough of it and they
threw that person out. In the seventies, we were unnoticed.
In seventy nine and eighty. We were unnoticed.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
You don't think that the welfare state has any role
to play as an attractor for people to come here
and sit on a couch and get a free phone.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
How do you get war? How do you get troops, bullets,
material planes, military planes, tanks on foreign soil without an
Act of Congress?
Speaker 2 (22:57):
How what does that to do with the welfare state.
Speaker 1 (23:00):
I'm gonna tell you, Okay, The warfare state immediately after
World War Two drove the welfare state. The welfare state
was expanded big time by the FDR, the old FDR,
basically socialists, the Left, the old Left, New Dealers.
Speaker 3 (23:24):
That was definitely the seed, and then LBJ watered and
fertilized it correct.
Speaker 1 (23:30):
There was an idea that communism was not a political
ideology but actually an economic model that as we have
a race for natural resources that we're gonna need in
this computer age, we're gonna need lithium, We're gonna need cobalt,
we're gonna need we're gonna need oil, we're gonna need
(23:53):
we're gonna we're gonna need natural gas, all of which
we have here in America. But it's cheaper if we
go colonize if we like Vietnam, we picked up where
the French couldn't hold. After World War Two, the Vietnamese
they wanted to nationalize, that's all they wanted.
Speaker 2 (24:13):
What resources did they have.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
They had the same resources that we had in the
seventeen seventies, which were right makes might and might makes right.
We say might makes right Vietnamese. Now you know the
story about the the Vietnamese drawn a blank on his name,
(24:39):
Hu Chi Minh. So Hu Chi Minh became the Vietnamese
nationalist leader, not North Vietnam, not South Vietnam. The Vietnamese
people wanted to be liberated. They wanted to liberate from France,
their colonists. The French fought in Vietnam, they pulled out,
(25:03):
and for some reason, the Dallas brothers and Truman or Ike.
I don't think it was Ike as much. It was, well,
it was Ike Kennedy for a little bit, and then
LBJ and then Nixon. For some reason, we had to
get in there and step in the colonist's shoes of
(25:25):
the French.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
It was the whole George Keenan containment.
Speaker 1 (25:28):
George Kennon containment policy. Well, this wayward scud missile like
foreign policy required more congressional approval as constitutionally, but you
buy those votes by expanding your base. You expand your
(25:50):
voting base.
Speaker 2 (25:51):
What do they do?
Speaker 1 (25:52):
Civil Rights ACKs sixty four, Civil Rights ACKs sixty five.
LBJ is the most he's the modern day abolitionist, although
he's very much a racist. There's no coincidence between the
expansion of military power in the mid sixties and the
(26:18):
expansion of the welfare state in the mid sixties. We
had to deal, we had to the American the Conservatives,
the Hawks had to wheel and deal with the FDR
new dealers. And we'll give you you look the other
way here on our foreign policy. We'll look the other
(26:40):
way on your great society. Meanwhile, the Conservatives and one
of my favorite, Robert A. Tafts, like he was a prophet,
he was prescient. He goes, hold on both sides are crazy.
You can't. We just got out of World War one,
World War two and a depression. Have we not learned anything?
Get out of NATO. No, we don't want to be
(27:01):
a NATO. It's a military alliance. It's provocative, it will grow,
it won't shrink. No, we're not going to get in
the UN. It's a vassal state for the United States,
and we're going to take democracy to you, whether you
like it or not. Don't do the UN, We don't
this World Bank and IMF. Do you understand All we're
(27:23):
doing is we're lending money to third world countries that
can't pay us back, and as a result, they're going
to be debtors in possession of their own land, and
we're going to seize on their collateral. The American the
original American conservatives of the forties and fifties saw this,
(27:44):
and it's all come true.
Speaker 2 (27:46):
Guys.
Speaker 1 (27:47):
The expansion of the welfare state was the other side
of the coin of the expansion of the military state,
the warfare state. Now we have really angry mobs of
foreigners waving their flags, burning our flag, taking over our
major US cities, not little towns, major US cities, while
(28:11):
our media is saying there's no there are no riots here,
nothing you see here, nothing to see here. The Democrat
Party is stuck in the middle of all this. They're wayward,
they're listing, they have no charismatic leader, and the last
time they've been this far out in the woods was
probably right before Bill Clinton got elected ninety two before
(28:34):
Bill Clinton, Republicans had the White House for thirty four
years save the four of Jimmy Carter and the Democrat
You look up the Democrat Leadership Council. They put together
a playbook for Bill Clinton. They found their horse in
Bill Clinton. Down there in Arkansas. Oh, very much a conservative.
(28:58):
He's a Southerntive, He's a Dixie He's for sure a Dixiecrat.
He was popular down there in Arkansas. He got Walmart
down there. He had Walmart down there. You have some
other big comp corporations down there, Whitewater, a lot of
money down there. And he was Southern, he was charming,
(29:20):
he had some fleas on his fur. But a lot
of money got behind him. And you've in what you
will see in nineteen ninety two is that being electable
is an financial asset. It's a financial instrument. Big money.
You pour big money into a horse like a young
(29:40):
Bill Clinton, and he beats a bush and pio. At
ninety two, a lot of money poured into the Bill
Clinton world, and the Bill Clinton world lost. The labor
unions lost, the African Americans, they're losing the urban voters.
They are going to be left with angry white women
(30:04):
and university educated progressives. They're going to lose the young
male vote, and they're going to lose the southern moderates.
It's all what Clinton said. It's the economy, stupid, not
foreign policy. Keep your eye on our economic situation. Fix
(30:24):
us first. That's how Clinton got elected. As soon as
he got in there, he just picked up the neokon
cold War pegemon. And here we are, we're still dealing
with this crowd. Before I forget welcome back. This is
for the defense of the American people from the American heartland.
Six to n W DVN Columbus, Ohio. The show is
(30:49):
we have we are Friday nights at six pm. Sunday
mornings eleven am, Hello church crowd, and Sunday's seven pm.
Hello truckers. Friday night six Hello diners, going out and
have your cocktail, maybe winding up for the for the week.
If you're in the market for a new American vehicle,
(31:12):
may I suggest a Chevy or GMC from Chez Round.
They have you can get up to fifteen thousand dollars
off right now. My favorite pickup truck, the Chevy Silverado.
Well that's the ev fifteen thousand dollars off of Silverado
ev Wow, ten thousand dollars off a twenty twenty five
(31:37):
GMC Sierra fifteen hundred. Now we're talking no tariffs. Now
we're talking. That is a beautiful truck. I'm looking at
it right now. You can get one thousand dollars off
their little EV's, your little Chevy Blazer, your little Chevy Equinox,
the GMC Hummer EV. I'm not sure how I feel
about that.
Speaker 3 (31:56):
See, I've got some suggestions for them, you know, in
their marketing. You know, with all the riots going around,
and then you get a lot of damage done to
vehicles as you're trying to get through to places and
they're they're smashing your cars, they're standing on your cars.
Speaker 2 (32:09):
Why not have an option that puts not a heavy
but a medium electrical charge.
Speaker 3 (32:16):
Through the exterior of the vehicle so that these people
that are slapping.
Speaker 2 (32:19):
Your slapping your car and all this kind of stuff,
think you get a little shocked bag.
Speaker 3 (32:23):
Why not some external compartments, like some external glove compartments
that you can from which you could release like a
live skunk.
Speaker 1 (32:32):
I think Tesla will have something I guarantee you there
will be a button on your app. And I have
a Tesla. I've had three. I really really like my
Tesla's and a scooter. I've got a Vespa. I've drove
that in to day.
Speaker 3 (32:44):
Yeah, and they're they're fun and they're fun, but so
are fat girls and mopads. You just don't want your
friends to see you.
Speaker 1 (32:54):
I was wondering if you're going to work that one
in general. I still We've been talking for eight years
that the rational elder voices of America have warned the
younger generations. If you think that the other people of
(33:16):
the world want what we're doing here, you're wrong. If
you think that the people in other parts of the
world want to be like you, you're wrong. What is
it about you? When you're being interviewed courtside at a
riot and you're one of these beta males who've come
(33:41):
up out of the parents' basement wearing his older brothers
football pads and catcher shintguards, or his sister's helmet and
elbow pads from roller skates or skateboard.
Speaker 4 (33:57):
When you're wearing your when you're wearing your your alpha
male brother's gear and maybe a little bit of your
sister's makeup and you go courtside to a riot in La.
Speaker 1 (34:10):
Swing by target, grab it selfie stick or one hundred
pass them out when you get interviewed, do you expect
the people in other parts of the world who feel oppressed,
who are really oppressed, look at you and go, I
want to be like him. You ever thought about this?
(34:32):
What are they selling here? Do they not realize when
we see these people, we all know their story. They're
a walking, talking, breathing psychological forensic psych assessment. What part
of these people being interviewed do they think when they're
being interviewed? Do they think that they are very convincing?
They're not Rosa Parks.
Speaker 2 (34:54):
They're not operating on a very high level.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
They don't have a fundamental basis. There's nothing fundamentally supporting
them other than this notion that the moment you make
it to the US as a as a person endowed
with natural rights, that you have the natural rights to
do you have a natural right to live wherever you want. No,
that's not the way we're organized. You might at a
(35:18):
at a at a utopian level, but if you're going to
choose to live in our cradle of freedom, we have
rules and the rules enforced by our mayor, and if
he or she won't enforce them, we look to the governor.
If he or she won't enforce them, then we're going
to look to our president. And thankfully we have presidents
(35:40):
that have the power, not the power, the duty to
send law and order down to where unconstitutional protests and
riots are occurring.
Speaker 2 (35:49):
We do now.
Speaker 3 (35:50):
And during the Biden administrations four years, there was no
president who would go in and send in the National
Guard to do things. And so what you saw then
and was people's last recipe, their last remedy, which was
to get on their shoes and go to Texas. And
(36:11):
so you had an exodus from places like California, Seattle,
all these places, and they would they would go and
then leave out of this place. They're like locust. The
field is barren, there's no more crops to eat. So
we got to go somewhere else.
Speaker 1 (36:25):
Here's what's different than this one, guys, And this is
what in our remaining minutes five minutes General saying, here's
what's different in my from my seat in the bleachers,
all the historically oppressed are organized, they're they're coordinated, they're
now getting funded. Let me say it again, the historically oppressed,
(36:46):
your indigenous people, your Latinos, your black Americans, apparently the
illegal aliens yep, and apparently the white liberal folks, the
historically oppressed. They are organizing as a unit, not as
(37:08):
a as confederate, as separate factions.
Speaker 2 (37:11):
Oh so they're being organized.
Speaker 1 (37:12):
They are being organized. They're being funded. We know who,
we know how. They're being funded through five oh one
C three cutouts in goo, cutouts that hire specialists that
write grants. And these specialists that write grants take a cut.
Maybe they take one percent, maybe they take three.
Speaker 2 (37:33):
Percent, maybe they take fifty percent, maybe they.
Speaker 1 (37:36):
Take more than that. They take a cut for the grant.
Palots of bricks don't cost that much. Then when the
grant money shows up in the C three's account, it
needs to get distributed. Well, first, the C three that
took the money, the the C three that took the money,
they're now going to take their cut for determining who
gets a fractional share of this money state's tax dollars.
(38:01):
So the own the people that they do business with,
are the people that they know, and these are the
people that went out and created their own C three
to receive that money from the NGO, take their cut,
pay their overhead and salaries, and then deploy it on
the street. These riots are being funded by tax dollars.
(38:28):
Probably not a majority, but maybe, But I'm willing to
say fifty to fifty. I'd say the other fifty percent
are just going to be really They're going to be
wealthy people, wealthy interests that want Democrat control. They want
these tens of millions of persons to be counted for
(38:48):
the senses in the year twenty thirty, well twenty thirty, yes,
but they also want people who will do a cheap
long care work, cheap restaurant work, cheap thing work because
they want it cheap. They don't want to have to
pay Americans what normal Americans would pay.
Speaker 2 (39:05):
They want to exploit these people as slaves.
Speaker 1 (39:07):
Well, we continue to exploit them. The giant sucking sound
that my man ross Pero said on the campaign trail
in ninety two and then ninety six, that giant sucking
sound was NAFTA. NAFTA was a that wasn't American Free
Trade Agreement, right, But that NAFTA was an establishment, It
(39:29):
wasn't main street we were I was against NAFTA. I
would have been against NAFTA if we had a radio show. Well,
what's happening is all the historically oppressed people here in
the United States are are organizing, coordinating, getting funded. You
notice the Palestinian flags are not flying in LA That'd
be little too much even for the left. But what
the heck happens when this becomes an anti colonialism movement
(39:52):
to invalidate, avoid the European Caucasians that settled here, the
indigenous people, the Mexicans, freed enslaved people's descendants. What are
they going to say? What are they going to say
to the white liberals who show up to one too
many community activist meetings. In the community activist meetings, the
(40:16):
white liberal walks in and they're the only white person there,
and the other people are looking at them like, sorry,
your thanks for the ride, your gig's up. That's happening,
in my opinion,