Communism Hiding Behind ‘No Kings’? Ft. Chad Bianco - CTI LIVE Ep 1015
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Communism Hiding Behind ‘No Kings’? Ft. Chad Bianco - CTI LIVE Ep 1015

Andy Frisella 31.03.2026 39 477 просмотров 1 711 лайков

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Start Winning Your Days with The Power List App: https://powerlist.app.link/7EwcwsRqXTb 1015. Andy, Chad Bianco & DJ CTI: Communists At No Kings Rally, Ground Operations In Iran & Tiger Woods DUI On tonight's episode, Andy & DJ are joined in the studio by Chad Bianco. They discuss the Communist at the No Kings rally, the Pentagon prepping its ground ops in Iran as U.S. Marines arrive, and Tiger Woods recent DUI charge as he's forced to crawl out of his luxury SUV. If you want to ask Andy a question and get a chance to be called for the live call-in segment of the Q&AF episode, go to this link and submit your question: https://andyfrisella.com/pages/ask-andy Order My New Book, The Book on Mental Toughness HERE: https://andyfrisella.com/products/the-book-on-mental-toughness Also check out: The energy drink that Andy & crew run on 👉 http://1stphorm.com/energy-realaf Built for Americans who still believe in America 👉https://andyfrisella.com/collections/real-american-freedom-gear Get Andy’s unfiltered advice straight to your inbox 👉https://andyfrisella.com/andygram Change your mind. Change your life. Start ♠️ 75 HARD 👉https://75hard.com Not for everyone. Only for those who demand greatness 👉https://andyfrisella.com/aretesyndicate Andy's Website | https://andyfrisella.com Andy's Instagram | / andyfrisella Andy's Facebook | / andrewjfrisella DJ's Instagram | / officiallydjohnson Official Merchandise & Books | https://andyfrisella.com/merch Subscribe to the RealAF Podcast on iTunes or Google Podcast | https://andyfrisella.com/podcast-sub

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Segment 1 (00:00 - 05:00)

Check, check, check. Hello children. Utah checking in. Andy looks more black than DJ in the pic. Okay. All right. What's that supposed to mean? Yeah, I don't know what that's supposed to mean. What's that mean? That sounds racist. You guys want to start the show off with some racism? Against me? Oh, yeah. Oh, man. We got X live. X is rolling. Hello X. Oh, man. Several from Utah. Mhm. Day 70 of 75. Hang on 1 second. I got to post uh my post workout pic here. Oh, yeah. That's mandatory. This is [ __ ] Oh, [ __ ] Uh-oh. Was it a good one? No, I [ __ ] it up. Uh-oh. [ __ ] it. I'll just post after the show. Guys, you just ruined my day. — What the [ __ ] All right, hang on 1 second. Mhm. Before the camera goes on the special guest, you guys can drop some um guesses, some educated guesses. — put it in there. I don't know if I was on the camera already. Yeah, somebody threw it up there. AJ, you're supposed to hold the show over while I do this. — I'm doing it. Yeah, no. They're guessing right now. I was letting them guess. Yeah, what you got? There we go. All right. Chuck Norris. It is Chuck Norris on the show today. — 3D printed parts. Dude, we got to get him on the show. — Yeah, I like that guy. — got to get him on the show. Yeah, he's got a lot of [ __ ] to say. Good stuff. — Drusky, yeah. Drusky would be funny. What he say? DJ's dad? Maybe. — we could [ __ ] You think we could hunt him down? Yeah, maybe. DJ's dad is wild. See, they're they're out of control. control. — Yes, they are. They need to be stopped. Hope everybody had a good weekend though. Um Somebody said BB. Oh, but okay. Gabe, stop it. That's not okay. Too soon. All right, almost. Who's Davis Clark? Who is that? From those biceps, it's John Cena. All right. I say that's a [ __ ] — That's a For sure that's a compliment. For sure. But can you really see John Cena's biceps? — see him if that was the case. His voice is familiar. Okay. — All right. Got it. — Palm Beach Pete, bro. We might need to get him on the show for real. Huh? Palm Beach Pete. — big guy? No, no. He looks just like Epstein. Oh, yeah. — Like identical. — Hey, really? It's almost scary. — Yeah. All right, let's hit it, man. What is up, guys? It's Andy Frisella, and this is the show for the realist. Say goodbye to the lies, the fakeness, and delusions of modern society, and welcome to [ __ ] reality. Guys, today you know what time it is. We have Andy and DJ cruise the [ __ ] internet. That's what we're going to do. That's what CTI stands for. It stands for cruise the internet. We put topics on the screen. We speculate as to what's going on. We have a couple laughs, and then we talk about how we the people have to solve these problems going on in society. If you're unfamiliar with the show, we have shows within the show. All right? If you tune in on Mondays, like this morning, you're going to get Q& AF. That's where you submit questions, and we give you the answers. Now, typically these questions are about entrepreneurship, business, personal development. I happen to be a little bit of an entrepreneur. I know a few things. And uh this is your chance to ask questions and get them answered. How can you have your questions answered on the show, DJ? — Yeah, guys. You can email these questions to ask Andy at andyfrisella. com. You can click the link in the description below uh for a chance to submit them there, or drop them in the comment section of the Q& AF videos

Segment 2 (05:00 - 10:00)

live on two. Other times, we're going to have real talk. Real talk's 5 20 minutes of me giving you some real talk, and then we're going to have 75 hard versus. That's where people have completed the 75 hard program come on the show. They talk about how they were before, how they are now, and how they used the 75 hard program to reclaim their lives. If you're unfamiliar with 75 hard, it is the initial phase of the Live Hard program, which can be found in its entirety for free at episode 208. The Live Hard program is the world's most famous mental transformation program, and it is free. So, you can get episode 208 on the audio feed only. There's also a book. The book is called The Book on Mental Toughness. You get that at andyfrisella. com. Uh it includes the entire Live Hard program. It is not free, but it has a whole bunch of other chapters on mental toughness, why it's important, how to cultivate how to use it in your life. Um With that being said, guys, you know, one thing about our show that makes it different, we don't run ads on the show. We're the biggest show in the world that doesn't run ads. I do that because I don't want you guys questioning uh if I'm getting paid to say what I'm saying. So, in exchange for that, we just ask very simply to help us grow the show. Our show only grows if you guys share it. So, don't be a hoe. Share the show. All right. Well, we do have a special guest that I've been looking forward to having on the show for a very long time. And so have you guys. You guys have asked a lot about having him on. Mr. Chad Bianco. What's happening, brother? I'm doing great. I'm super excited to be here. This was amazing. Just to start with, I said it already a little bit, but you've done a great thing here. Great thing. I I'm overly impressed. I kind of knew anything or I at least an idea of what you did, and I and I've heard your story and everything, but until you walk around this place, you don't really understand it, and it brings a whole new different perspective. Thank you, bro. It's amazing. We're fortunate to have what I believe are the best people in the entire world in these two buildings here, and uh I count my blessings every day I get to come here and go to battle with these guys. It's awesome, man. Good stuff. I appreciate that. — Well, I'm glad to be here. Yeah. That's why I'm happy to have you. I feel like I got to say this to get it started. You have arguably, like arguably, the best mustache I think I've ever seen. It's a good one. Like, dude. Like, I mean, it's pretty solid. Yeah, it's a good one. — It's pretty solid, man. I'm like, dude, I could I could do that. You know? I could do it. Yeah. You think? — You should. You Yeah? Yeah. You got to rock full handles if you if you're going to do it though. — That's what I'm saying though. But like, I like Bro, there ain't nothing bad more badass than a black dude with handlebars. That [ __ ] looks [ __ ] awesome. — That's like a unicorn, dude. Yeah, I've seen that. Yeah, that's why when you see it, you're like, — Yeah, that's it. That's it. That's right. Dude, the mustache is glorious. Like, I'm a I'm a hair product guy, you know what I'm saying? I think it's important. Yeah. What what's the regimen? If we just a couple of like just enlighten me, please. Cuz I don't — Scissors. Yeah? — Scissors. You just hand trim that? — Yeah. Man. Bro, it's years and years of meticulous trimming. — Yeah. So, it's — Ask me how I know. Chad, the first time I've seen you, Sheriff, bro. I've seen and I said, dude, I looked at this picture. I said, you've had to have like kicked a lot of ass. Cuz I don't feel like anybody's allowed to even have that type of mustache unless like you they done did a thing or two. You know what I'm saying? Like — Bro, Chad, you It's a fun career. — Bro, — It might not be as fun as what it used to be. — Yeah. Sheriff Bianco's got that look. Bro, He says, "GET ON THE GROUND! " — BRO, IT'S LIKE WE WE WE COULD PULL YOU GET PULLED over by this man right here. — a [ __ ] ticket. You're going to jail. — Dude, so how long law enforcement career? How long we talking? — I'm in my 33rd year. Oh, man. That's awesome. All now All that Riverside? All of it was at Riverside. I put myself through a sheriff's academy back in the early '90s. In Southern California, anyway, there was no one hiring. So, if you wanted to get into it, you did it yourself. So, I put myself through an academy, and the day after I graduated, I was hired by Riverside. Oh, man. — And I've been there ever since. Bro, Riverside's an awesome place. It is. We went out there when you guys did the detail when we went out there. By the way, thank you. But dude, every single person that came through was talking about you. So, they love you out there. It's really cool. Yeah, I'm blessed to be there. Yeah. I It It's a great county. We joke all the time that Riverside is a um it's an island in California. — Yeah. It's not — Inland Empire. So, you combine Riverside and San Bernardino, the two counties, two large counties. You know, there's probably 2 and 1/2, 3 and 1/2, 5 million people, some roughly 5 million people between the two counties. And we're an island in California. We're not like the rest of the — like normal. Yeah, it is normal. Yeah, it's very much normal. — So, let let's just uh before we get into like the show show, how'd you get here, man? Like, how What made you decide, all right, man, somebody's got to do something. I'm going to do it. It was years law enforcement

Segment 3 (10:00 - 15:00)

in the bad public safety side with California started in 2012 and it was really downhill fast for us in the public safety sector. And then I took over a sheriff in 2018, November of 2018 and because of the size, because I was vocal uh and then with what happened during COVID and riots and everything else, I became I had a voice. I had a platform. And so I was using it to fight in Sacramento just for public safety. But then it got to be well, it's the lunacy of public safety is taking over everything. It's lunacy in schools, building housing, water, everything. And then it got closer to coming up on a governor election. Thank God we're losing Newsom. But I watched all the people signing up to be next and it's like we're going to be the same or worse. — Yeah, it's worse than saying — the same people that put us here in this position to begin with. Just nothing but career politicians or billionaires that want to buy their way in. And I just said well, it's either A supervisor told me a long time ago, the first time I promoted, if you don't promote somebody else is and you never know who that person's going to be. — Yeah. And so that's how I looked at it with this. If I don't do it, somebody else is going to do it and you never know who we're going to get. So it might as well be me. Dude, we talk about that all the time on the show that there's an obligation for good people. See, like good people, they don't want power, right? They don't look at things and they say, "Oh, I want authority and I want recognition and I want power. " And they're actually sort of culturally indoctrinated to say, "Oh, those things are bad. " But what you just said is the absolute truth. If good people don't step up to do it, the the ones that end up doing it are the people that want all that stuff and they're not on our team. No, not at all. — Yeah. And I I've said over and over again, I wish there was a spot that I could get to fix California that wasn't the governor. Yeah. — there is no other spot. It is the governor spot. — Yeah. And so it's I would I don't want to be the governor, but I know I have to have that spot to fix California. I mean that's Are you from California? No, I grew up in Utah. Yeah. — Very small town in Utah. And I moved to California I was 22. Mhm. Went there for a California dream, for a better life. Leave the small town, go to California, make something for yourself. Yeah. — And I love it. I love California. It California's my home. Dude, it's beautiful. — California is a beautiful place, — people like I don't go there and like I won't go there just — Californian. Yeah, like we don't say that on the show. — I'm sure you don't. Yeah, but I do love California and it is a shame the way that it's been run. And I really it's really hard for me to understand is this is this all people just buying into like identity politics, woke [ __ ] and like not realizing like what's causing the damage or because like dude, when I go out there, man, and I meet and I'll talk to people like random people. I'm not just talking about people I know. I'm talking about like we'll be walking up the street and I'll [ __ ] you know, just talk to whoever. I'm like, "Hey, what do you think of this or that? " — He might have a man bun, but we'll talk to him. Yeah, but dude, everybody hates Newsom. Everybody. And it's like, "Dude, how why do you guys keep voting for this shit? " And they're like, "I didn't vote for it. I didn't vote for it. " And dude, I wanted to ask you this. So like do you think that this is a product of the people's will or elections consistently being leveraged for their benefit? I think it's probably both, but the biggest thing that we're finding [snorts] and you just have to go off of math. All you got to do is look at the math. — Yeah. Every election between 40 and 60% of the people don't vote. — Yeah. So it's the same 40 to 60% that are Yeah. and so the apathetic non-voters, the ones that just, you know, worry about yourself. I'll just keep working hard and I'll be fine. It doesn't affect me. But now it's affecting everybody. Yeah. It's hard to want to vote when it's so demoralizing, dude. — Yeah. I It is and I think it's probably psychological that's happened over several decades to just you believe that your vote doesn't count. And so you just don't vote. Yeah. Well, that's that I mean, look, dude, if we go back through history, that's how communism has always taken place. It's always come in through the vote because they demoralize voters to not even show up. — Yeah. And then that's how they get into power. — ones that vote want free stuff. Yeah. — want to work for anything. Yeah. It's like, do you want to vote for the guy that's going to make you work for something or do you want to vote for the guy that's going to give you free stuff? — Brother, you're speaking my language. I spent a whole career I You know how much money I could have made cuz like dude, I've been at the top of the personal development game for a long time. You know how much money I could have made like selling these people quick fixes and easy [ __ ] Instead, I go out and I'm like, "Hey, [ __ ] you got to [ __ ] work, dude. This is hard. " And Nine by nine, yeah. Yeah, like dude, it's not an easy thing to sell.

Segment 4 (15:00 - 20:00)

sell. It's not an easy thing to sell. And you're right, man, people I well, we're going to talk about No Kings, right? I got lots to say. — Absolutely, yeah. Absolutely. — But uh But dude, summing this up, man, it's refresh it's super refreshing. First of all, I want to thank you for what you did for COVID. Okay? DJ and I, Ian Smith, a few other select people were really on top of COVID hard. And you were the first law enforcement official in the whole country to step up and say, "Hey, I'm not enforcing these things. I'm not with this. This is not freedom. It's not right. " And I think that like truly set the tide for the rest of the law enforcement to feel okay. You know, cuz then we had some guys in Florida. out here. Then we it started to spread. And all we needed was that one thing and uh you know, I'll never forget that, man. Cuz that was a very stressful time in my life and you know, as you know, when you're standing up against like everything and everybody believes it, it's not fun. And then part of it is like, "Am I wrong? " — Yeah, I know. Well, at that time then you have to think about it. And you start getting the haters. Yeah. — Yeah, I mean immediately — [snorts] — all and it was vitriol hate. It wasn't just we don't like you. — it was, "Dude, you deserve to die. " — Oh, yeah. You're killing my grandma. — Yeah. The blood on your hands and all of those things. And then so yeah, I mean you have to think about it. It's like, "Oh my god, what if I am wrong? " And it's like, "Well, I thought about that a lot. Like I cuz like dude, you know, my uh you know, I want to [ __ ] save people, bro. Like when they're all getting this vaccine and I'm like, "Dude, like I'm like living in this twilight zone. Like what the [ __ ] are you guys doing? " And then I'm like, "Shit, well, what if they're right and I'm wrong? " And my mind just kept telling me and my gut kept telling me, "Dude, this is not right. " Cuz like as you know, we're both old enough to have lived through other pandemics. You know, these younger people, that was their first pandemic. They never shut the [ __ ] world down in previous years for pandemics and [ __ ] bro. You You put the old people and you kept them safe and everybody else washed their hands and took precautions and that was it. — Yeah. You know, it was just uh Don't sneeze on nobody. Like it was simple rules. — Like don't sneeze on nobody. That's what I said. I said you we're adults. I believe in Riverside County we can all be adults. — Yeah. Uh be careful. Care about your neighbors. They might not think like you. So just give them a little courtesy. — Yeah. You can be an adult. — Well, dude, you made a big impact during that time and I I'll never forget it and I appreciate it. Well, thank you. — So. So real quick before right before I do want to ask this you. So you're running for California governor. How has the race been so far? It's been good. The support that we've gotten across the state is overwhelming and it's a it truly is a grassroots just swell of people saying we've had enough. Yeah. And I think that I mean I think it I mean I don't want to say it's Chad Bianco. It's the whole thing. It's the Sheriff Chad Bianco thing. So I've always said that we don't trust politicians. It's something like 13% trust rate is what politicians have. It's like it might as well be zero. — Yeah. And so I think that I think people especially today with misinformation and just straight up lies, they're just looking for someone to actually that they can trust. I want to trust somebody. I want to believe somebody. — Yeah. And they there's nobody that they can put their faith in. And in I guess deep down you want to believe and everybody doesn't believe this, but that cops are good and our sheriffs are good. We're electing this guy to do good for us. He's doing a great job. We can trust that the sheriff is doing the right thing. And I think that appeal is is adding to what California is experiencing right now of just complete failure. And then it's like, "Oh, wait. We're the worst in crime. We're now corruption. " And it's like, "Wait, but we got a sheriff over here. Hey, let's vote for that guy. Let's put that guy in and he can fix it. " Well, I also think that real honestly, you know, I think a big problem with the politicians especially is that you know, 10 years ago, 12 year not even that long ago, 10 years ago, okay? We're not talking about 30 years ago. We're talking about 2016, 2015. When a politician came out to like do a presser, there was communication that was happening. And I think one of the things that you do extremely well that I think makes you trustworthy is how you handle those pressers. You come out, you communicate clearly, you say the good, you say the bad, you say how we're going to handle the bad and that's it. And we don't have that at any level of government really anywhere anymore. It's been totally abandoned. And we talked about this on the last show. You know, if you watch and you know, you watch Trump try to communicate and it's always these jokes and these snippy things and all these things or truth social post. Yeah, it's it's not correct communication

Segment 5 (20:00 - 25:00)

and then you watch Pete Hegseth come out and he's like boom boom boom boom boom boom. This is what we're going to do. And you know what? Even if you don't agree with it, you're like, well, [ __ ] at least he told us something. At least somebody's talking to you. Yeah. So like I really think, dude, listen, I'm rooting for you, man. I think I think we're going to do it. I think I hope so. California's ready finally. Bro, if you win, I might buy a spot out there. I'm not even playing. Very good. Cuz I love California. I just cannot stand what they do to like with the taxes and [ __ ] bro. Everything about California is great, no matter what. The geography, the ocean, the food, the people, the businesses, everything about California's great. It's the politics that kill it. The politics, the taxes, and the regulation is why people are leaving. They just muddy it up, dude. I learned through this and I I'll admit that I didn't wasn't really paying attention, didn't even care to even look into it, but as long as I've been in California, I've heard of the sunshine tax and I didn't really know what it was. It's like, well, that's a tax on something. I don't know what it is, but whatever. But then I realized doing this, the sunshine tax in California is what's it worth for you to live here. What is California worth? How much can we take from you and keep you down and you're still going to want to stay in California. And I think that the answer to that question was 2 years ago. It was like, we found what we how much what it was worth and it was 2 years ago cuz we're done. Yeah, you saw that mass exodus. You know what's funny, dude? How can how can Newsom stand up in front of national TV and act like that's not even a real thing happening? You've seen his interviews. Nobody's leaving? Oh, we got the biggest we got the third biggest economy IN THE WORLD. OH, AND THAT'S A FACT. YEAH, you can always tell when Newsom's lying because he always says that's a fact right afterwards. That's [ __ ] Yeah, and his his best is hard stop. If he says hard stop, everything he said for the last minute and a half was all a lie. — Yeah, 100%, dude. Dude, I love you, man. I I If you were to I truly Google sleazy politician, he pops up. Oh, and him and Lindsey Graham right next to each other. Like and they're holding hands. You know what I'm saying? Like I'm rooting for you, too, man. — Yeah, I am, too. We're going to make it happen. We're bringing you out there. Well, dude, if Annie's getting the house, I was going to say like I could I like probably open like a hospice center or something. — Those might not be as profitable once I win. — Yeah, we want to get in on that daycare. Oh, man. Dude, no, I do love Cali, man. The people of Riverside, dude, was awesome. The people there were absolutely amazing. And I know they're behind you, dude. I've done hundreds of events, probably thousands of events. The people of Riverside were some of the best I've ever met. They were all different kinds, all different people. You know what I really liked about it, dude, was that it was it was like what I think of when I think of like what America's supposed to look like because it's not it's all different types of people, but they all believe in America and they're grateful for it and they love being here. And dude, that's what the [ __ ] America's about. — refreshing, dude. I'd say it was definitely refreshing. I was I remember our first time we went to Cali together. I think it was like That wasn't as nice. That was not It was different, but that was also LA and it was just different, you know, but I was really impressed. I was very refreshed from the people of Riverside. So It's very patriotic. Yeah, so like and I was not prepared for it. that, dude. I was At first, honestly, I was a little nervous, man. I'm like, all right, so we're about to go stand at a 7-Eleven for 4 hours in California. We've been talked all this [ __ ] Like I'm like, all right. Dude, the people were amazing. It was absolutely amazing, dude. Um so yeah, man, we're all rooting for you. Yeah, we are. Let's do some cruising. Yeah, shall we? Let's do it. — Yeah, We'll do a little Q& A with the chat for sheriff here as we get going. So you guys be patient for that. Yeah, it's coming, man. Well, let's get into it, man. Guys, remember, if you would like to see any of these pictures, articles, links, videos, go to andyfrisella. com. You guys can check them link there for you. Thus being stated, headline one, let's dive into it. We got no kings. Got to talk about it. Oh, man. Yeah, we got no kings, dude. No kings. Headline reads, "Communists Democrats use #nokings rally to call for May Day strike. Shut it down. " Um so this was a uh another Soros pushed backed uh US tax dollar paid for protest going around the country and it was kind of everywhere. I mean, every place pretty much had something happening. Excuse me, uh St. Paul, Minnesota, uh from Times Square to here in Minnesota state capital, "Communist and socialist activists at the nationwide no kings protest escalated their anti-America campaign and openly called for a nationwide economic strike on May 1st, an international communist holiday known as May Day as

Segment 6 (25:00 - 30:00)

key Democratic activists joined their call. " Um So they're not going to spend our tax dollars on May 1st. That's right. That's right. Okay, cool. That's right. It'd be great. All Yeah. It'd be great. — Yeah, maybe we can spin it that way. Yeah. You're not going to get any of your benefits for the day. Hey, man, that's what it is. Yeah, freeze on everything. I'm fine with it. Um I mean, what are they buying? Do you know what I'm saying? Like what would they be buying anyway? They're not buying — in capitalism. They're not buying deodorant. I mean, maybe hair dye. That's it, man. That's about it. They want things for free. — That's right. They'll buy [ __ ] anyway. Dude. It's crazy, but I mean, everywhere. New York had it. I got a clip here. LET'S CHECK THIS OUT. THAT'S UNBELIEVABLE. NOW, I personally and I won't poll you guys, all right? Andy chat. Personally, I feel like if I were president, okay? It would be illegal. I don't care if you're an American citizen, I don't care who you are. If you wave a communist flag in this country, straight to jail. I mean, nothing screams freedom like authoritarianism — and so much freedom of speech. Nothing says no kings day like a good communism rally. Yeah. Yeah, this is insane, dude. And what's insane about this is how [ __ ] stupid these people actually are. Not a single one of those people understands what communism actually is and what happens to them if communism actually were to materialize. Do you think any of those people can work? have skills? Do you think any of those people contribute to society in a meaningful way? [ __ ] no. Okay, you know what communists do with people like that? They kill them immediately. They call them the useful idiots. They use them to get in power and then once they're in power, they eliminate them. So because this is really their life and what they don't understand is they can sit here and protest something they don't even know anything about, then communism's going to take over and because they're the little protesters and they don't work anyway, they're going to go out and think they can do it again. Oh, yeah. — And they'll get gunned down in the streets. Yeah. That I mean, dude, this is what happens over and over. It's just a it's just a complete ignorance of of really reality. Yeah. I think it's gone on for such a long time and if you when you try and figure out why, you got to how did we get here? Why when you're talking about how stupid that is to sit here in the United States of America and say we want communism. But you have to think of how did it get here and how could that possibly have happened? So you have to research history and then you realize that in the early 1900s, this movement of communism into the US was it had to be infiltrated. It wasn't we can't just come in and take them over. You have to take over their education system, their medical system, all of those different things and they've done it. Yeah. And then they get brainwashed. The the sad part is probably most of those people there college degrees and who knows what, but then they got that ideological Yeah. trash that they now believe. Yeah, man. Yeah, I just it it's so crazy like — I don't know like I don't know to your point, DJ, like communism is such a dangerous concept and it's such a deadly concept. I mean, it's killed more people than literally everything else combined. every everything. Every war, every everything. The [clears throat] the And here we are in Times Square. Yeah, arguably one of the greatest one of our greatest cities or used to be. — How do you fix that? Yeah. Because clearly And dude, these people And what's interesting is that none of these people are equipped for violence, yet they all call for violence. — Yeah. And it's like if I think that's what's going to be the bringing point. I mean, I'm I would never call for a revolution or anything like that and I think that our system was set up that we just vote people out when we're sick of them, hopefully. But you look at that. Mhm. As soon as the violence comes to that crowd, they would be laying on the floor, curled up in a ball. — Yeah. And crying for the police to come help them. Dude, they do that now. I mean, how many of these Antifa protests have we seen where one of the you know Antifa people finds out what it's all about and they're on the ground crying I didn't do anything. They called the police. [ __ ] dude, I just saw you throw a rock at that cop's head. That's right. You just did that. Call the police.

Segment 7 (30:00 - 35:00)

— Yeah, it's insane dude. I want a female officer. — And you're right. No. You're right dude. It it's it's not a actual physical formidable opponent. Yeah, no. But the ideology is a real dangerous because how many of these people have kids? are spreading this? Right? And it wasn't like this was just in New York. This was in a lot of places. A lot of places dude. And now I will say not all the places were cop total communist but I mean it was everywhere. Enough of them dude. Enough of them. And the other thought too it's like you know genuine like what percentage of this crowd genuinely wants and are believing of that and versus the amount that are there because they got paid 20 bucks an hour to do it. You know what I'm saying? Like that that's a whole another aspect to it but um some of the other uh they've had some notable uh characters show up for these things. Um a lot of Hollywood jumped in on it. Yeah. Um that came in to support it. Oh Robert De Niro. Yeah. The usual cast of characters. irrelevant — retards. Yeah. Yeah I say this all the time and I like some of their movies and everything else but they're every single one of them is just a modern day jester. It's like I just want you to entertain me. You're a good entertainer. Go back to entertaining me. I don't care about your opinions. Yeah. You shouldn't have this platform to try and influence all these other people because everything you do on screen is all fake. You're good actor. That'd be like me going to the the Screen Actors Guild and giving a [ __ ] talk about acting. They don't know what they're talking about. And it sucks dude to see De Niro cuz like I love De Niro's movies. I love them. Every one of them. They're all good. — Yeah. But like that but that to your point like He's the most obnoxious dude in real life though. Is he? Oh my god dude. The most obnoxious. The most He gets bullied in his own [ __ ] neighborhood. He lives in TriBeCa in New York. He gets bullied in his own neighborhood. It just like but it's important to remember like yeah no these people are actors. Mhm. Like that like they can play a big bad tough character. That does not mean that their actual core values are truly aligned. Well I think I think he might have I think he thinks he's a real gangster. I think he does too. Yeah. Um one person that kind of shocked me this was like a childhood hero of mine. I know I'm a little younger than you guys. Bill Nye the Science Guy dude. What? Bill Nye dude. Is he a communist? Yeah. Really? Yeah. And like it's so crazy dude because like I looked forward to those days in school. Yeah. Like we had a sub and they rolled that TV in on the cart and they play [ __ ] Bill Nye bro. Like Bill like that was my [ __ ] and this dude's That's where you learned all your science. — That's where I learned my science dude. — Same here. Extraordinary times require extraordinary actions and uh we are living at a very unusual and troubling times. Well What this administration is doing is exploiting uh not really loopholes but uh violating traditions or ignoring traditions and taking advantage of uh things that are in the laws that were never intended to be used this way. Not in as we say not in the spirit of the game. Such a joke. I remember Yeah. Yeah so that's this is what my problem with everything about this is I'm so sick of being lied to. These people what he just said there really said absolutely nothing but then people got off and was like oh yeah Bill Nye said it so he must be correct but he said absolutely nothing. And then they get up and the whole idea of the No Kings movement anyway you're protesting kings if we had a king we're just talking about he'd be dead already. You wouldn't be allowed to out here be out here protesting. — Not only that dude. No kings no kings. GIVE ME MY FREE GOVERNMENT [ __ ] And king? King. — King may I please have some more free [ __ ] LIKE WHAT THE [ __ ] YEAH. — Like am I the only person that sees the hypocrisy in that? — Dude. It it's Well here's a good thing. I mean maybe not a Don't remember last time they did this the government was shut down right afterwards. Yeah. And then they didn't get their [ __ ] This was like the beginning of November and they all freaked out like the next week after no kings. Yeah. Right? King Trump can we please open up the government again? Like — May I please have some more porridge? — It it's so crazy. Um but this thing like you know this resurgence of communism though it's not just here in America. — Mhm. They got it going on up in Canada too. Uh — Did you guys see the uh the progressive political parties conference up in Canada? No. Oh all right. Chat full disclaimer uh be prepared — Minority groups got equity cards huh? To cut the line. All right. Yeah. Yeah so if you had you if you had the equity card you get to cut the line that you're in. All right? But if somebody Like any line? Yeah any of the lines in the meeting they had. Yeah these comrades. What about this card? What's this give me? — Not as much as the other one. This is my white privilege card.

Segment 8 (35:00 - 40:00)

I get to cut the line? Lines of cocaine that's all you can come up with that right there. This has other benefits. That's right. Um but dude you might lose some brain cells watching this clip but this just goes to show like these are the people who truly believe in these values these communistic ideals. Your people. Not my people. Um check this out. Thank you delegate. There's a point of privilege on microphone one then we'll go to microphone three. Go ahead delegate. Yes. Hello. I was standing here with my gender equity card before you called on the previous speaker. That's my point of privilege so I would like to earn I will explain the speaking order which is fixed that I cannot amend which is the pro con rotation. You can move yourself up a line that you're standing in. — I am pro and I was we went um You went pro We went pro con. Pro and my plan was to go con. The speaker at con mic three also has a speaking card. Yesterday this card was used in an inappropriate matter and while I understand in Ontario we note this is equity even if that this was also used inappropriate in terms of gender. I want everyone to be mindful that these cards for individuals like myself who identify as a black woman have no value outside of this space. No [ __ ] — No [ __ ] Kind of like everything else you believe in. That's right. Oh dude. Dude you know what man? — You know you can understand why these younger people think this is a good idea. Oh yeah. Right? Like They've been lied to for 20 years. They've been told that the world's going to just open up and give them everything they want. They've been told that they don't have to compete because they're special and they're delicate little flowers and you know all you got to do is show up and try your best and the world give you everything you want. And they teach them all these things about the world that aren't true for 20 years and then they put them out in the world and they're like whoa this is not what they told me. Which makes them say THIS IS ALL [ __ ] UP WE NEED TO FIX IT. RIGHT? And they've been indoctrinated to do exactly what's happening right now. This is so sad. Your feelings matter. Everybody gets a trophy. You don't have to win but as long as you tried then you win. Yeah. And now in adulthood reality slapping him in the face. — And they can't figure it out. — Yeah. So it makes sense right? Like it makes sense to me why they believe this but like I don't know how you fix it. Mhm. — Yeah. I will say I'll just give you a glimmer of hope. We hire young. We hire at 18. Yeah. For And I will tell you that the what we have noticed in the last several years the 25 roughly around 25 years of age and younger far more conservative than anyone. And like probably even than my generation. They're tired of it. So I think it's I think what has been pushed down onto them they all figured it out and I think it was probably COVID that did it is they all realized they're in school they're in high school those kids were in high school their high school years got ruined then they go further and then the protest ruined their college career and their college lives and now they're like wait a minute we've been lied to all along and so now they've become just very conservative so I think we're going to eventually switch back that direction anyway but I think our problem is going to be controlling the pendulum from going too far. At which we really have to. Yeah I know. I mean you we can we get it very conservative we get it back to the middle but the pendulum is supposed to just like swing at the bottom not these big and huge The problem is you know I think everybody who's upset right now you have a right to be very upset. But I also think it's very important to remember the ideals of what this country is supposed to stand for and not let it get so extreme that the I guess the Americans the pro-Americans turn out to be like these people on the other side and [ __ ] exterminate them. What do all of them do? Because like dude that's what happens too. Like history swings back and forth and you get these big swings and eventually someone catches it and they kill the entire other side. And I mean you know I don't want to see that. I don't think anybody wants to see that. — No. — You know. Especially here. I mean you wouldn't think that in our country nothing like that could ever be possible. — Yeah. Dude, totally, man. I also think, to your point, I think you are right. I think there's like an age bubble there. There it's like 25 to like 33 or so. Maybe 30 are like these they're more like this and then everybody

Segment 9 (40:00 - 45:00)

outside that bubble is is like, "Dude, we're totally tired of this shit. " — saw them all cut their dicks off. I mean, that might have had something to do with it. I don't want to do that. I got to do that? — Believe this? No. Yeah. I'm okay. Well, yeah. It's quite disgusting. Yeah, you can take this down a whole path into a big old rabbit hole with stuff like that, but — [clears throat] — one of the pictures that was back there about the communism thing about when we were talking about they just roll over and cry. The toxic masculinity thing. The moving away of toxic masculinity and all of that stuff. That's somehow bad. Yeah. That made us this country great. Yeah. I mean, you may not like it, but that's what made this country great. It's required. It's a requirement for civilized society. — Yeah. You have to have men. That's right. And then you talk about why don't we have men? Now you have men that are trying to be women and everything else. It's There's testosterone levels have purposely been That's right. almost eliminated where [clears throat] young kids now have the same average testosterone that in 40 years ago a 60-year-old man has. That's correct. Yeah. It's it and then you wonder why we're in this position of just followers of people that are being told what to do and they just say okay and Well, and then you look at like the action stars in the movies from our era, right? Who were they? Jean-Claude Van Damme, Arnold Schwarzenegger, uh Sylvester Stallone, uh you know, you could go on and on down the list. And now Tom Cruise. That's all we got. No, I like Tom Cruise. Tom Cruise makes good movies. The guys that they're putting in these roles now are like um What's that one dude's name? Uh who plays the Hulk? Oh, yeah. Rufio. Yeah, Rufio. Mark Mark communist Rufio. Right? It's like, "Dude, we got all these weak men like portraying the It's like you could see it's intentional, but if you were 20, you wouldn't be able to see it because you didn't see it before. Yeah. — Right? So, it's uh it's super interesting, but you know. Yeah, lady, I'm I'm shocked that your card doesn't work outside that. It didn't work at Target. I'm guessing It doesn't work in the real world. And then you look at the look on her face. I think she tried to take it somewhere else and it didn't work for her. — Oh, she tried. She for sure now I don't know where we I'm we can I'm sure the chat could have some guesses of where she tried to use that card at, but uh But the thing that threw me off is she said she identifies as a black female. — Yeah. You don't say. — But it makes you wonder though. I mean, what is it for What is that a dude? I don't know. — Yeah. Dude, look, man. I mean, I just I I'm so glad that where we are culturally right now is like able to look at those people and laugh at them. — Mhm. Right? Like that was the one thing I couldn't stand about the woke [ __ ] Yeah, don't laugh. — "Dude, I cannot deal with this. You guys are insane. You're talking crazy [ __ ] It's never going to get accepted. And now it's a joke, right? Like now here it's a joke, but apparently up there they're not joking. They're not joking up there. No, no. Yeah, I think the the insanity because it's insane. Mhm. And then the complete lack of common sense — Yep. Yeah. is just it's just disappeared. There's it's rare to get into a conversation, especially if you're going to talk about government and people making decisions and everything else where common sense is actually being used. — Yeah. It's That's not just for these people. That's for any people. Everybody's been so radicalized that like you can't have a reasonable point of view. Yeah. Like any reasonable point of view is attacked from both sides, which actually I think tells you you're probably in the right spot. Mhm. You know. Yeah. Now Sheriff, you know, you guys we were talking a little bit earlier about the state of California, how it's looking, where it's at. I did find this new report came out today um about a mass exodus from Los Angeles. And they actually included Have you seen this yet? — Mhm. I saw this Okay. So they actually put in here. So not only are people leaving Not everybody's just purely leaving California. They're leaving some of the really bad spots, I guess you would call it politically. Um but they do address that there is a massive resurgence of Riverside and San Bernardino that is the population's rising. Mhm. Right? — [clears throat] — Um What do you think that is? Why I think it's what we I kind of mentioned earlier where we're a little island that we don't our even our government isn't like California government. I mean, my government, my county government, they're and then I have 17 contract cities that I deal with. So I deal with city councils. Nobody cares if they're Republicans or Democrats. And those for those kind

Segment 10 (45:00 - 50:00)

of races, you don't run as a Democrat or Republican. You just get elected and you go in. But I can tell you that politics has never come into play. Everybody's doing the right thing for the for the residents that voted them in there. And it's I think it's unique. There's other places in the state, too. It's not just Riverside and San Bernardino. There are some fantastic places in the state. And if you look at like — [snorts] — after the last election, the majority of the state is red. It's just the big the monster cities, Los Angeles 17 million people. — Yeah. Those are the blue places. And so they're leaving those places that are being completely destroyed because of politics and they're going to the places that aren't. And I and we've been seeing We've really been seeing that since 2020. It was a COVID thing. When those people come, do they That was my next question. — Do they continue to vote the same way they used to? — Well, I some of them no, but we I will say one of our what used to be one of our most conservative areas is has a lot of blue now. And just the crazy school board members that it it's We're seeing that in Austin. Nashville. Yeah. And it's all they're not people that have grown up there. Yeah, right. — It's all people that recently moved in from wherever it was. They sold their house in LA or the Bay Area and moved to Temecula because Temecula is almost like the same almost the same environment as like wine country. So it's massive wineries and grapes and everything else. So the the it's people leave where they can't afford in the Bay Area and oh look, Temecula looks almost the exact same, but they brought their politics with them. Now, I know I just left this [ __ ] storm down here. — do that? Yeah, I don't get it. Like what is that? Like you [clears throat] leave because you know it's bad there and then you go somewhere and you take that [ __ ] with you and continue to vote for it. — just didn't do it right at the where I was at. They just didn't do it right. Yeah, it was good. I think that has for sure something to do. — it's that their identity is so intertwined with a D or an R that they can't think outside of that label? Yeah. I I think it's that. I think they it's just been ingrained into people that if you're a Democrat, — Yeah. you have to hate Republicans. And it's almost the same way the other way. I've been saying for years, we're never going to we're never fix our politics until we do away with political party. And where you're going to have to force people to actually research who they're voting for and vote for character. If you took the R and the D off of ballots and you made the name and then their key issues right below, it would change a lot. Yeah. Because and don't identify if they're Republican or Democrat. Like, "Dude, that would change a lot. " Yeah, cuz you got a lot of people on both sides. They they all these The problem is on the Democrat, they'd be like, "Free shit. " That's right. — Yeah, it makes it hard. Yeah. What are you voting for here? Free [ __ ] Well, this one says free [ __ ] This one says I got to work really hard. It's a story I don't even know if it's true or if it was just a story, but the high school president running to be the president of the school board or the the school the student body and won because they said that everybody gets free ice cream. And hands down won. It's like, of course they're going to vote for the person giving them free ice cream. I don't know. Probably not. I'm telling you this. They got to pay for it. It just didn't get there. You know. What What is your What's been your position on that like as far as boots on the ground? You've been seeing the stuff. I know Nick Searcy's been pushing some stuff out. Um you know, California's kind of under the spotlight in that sense. And a lot of the fraud has been getting exposed. The We joked about the hospice stuff a little bit earlier, right? What's your take How How do you look at that and how do you fix it? I think it would be easy to fix. And I say this, you know, people have asked me, "How are you going to fix the homeless? You know, all the people stealing all the money for homeless. " And it's going to be the same as with these medical problems. Or the hospice cares or whatever else. We're going to find way more other things. — for sure. But so for homeless, every single bit of money that's been given to the homeless industrial complex, the NGOs, the nonprofits, and everything else, you end it. Soon as I day one that I get there, I get sworn in, all of that money stops. Within a few days, there's going to be a handful of people that come to you and say, "Hey, you got to give us our money back. We're going to have to kick these people back out into the street. They're doing so well. " Everything else. It's like, "Okay, you get your money back. " But then, the 10,000 that don't come asking for their money back or for more money, those are the ones you go arrest and file on because those are the ones that were stealing it in the first place. The legitimate ones are very, very few. And so, that's how you're going to have to stop it. And no matter

Segment 11 (50:00 - 55:00)

what, I say this all the time, the best way for you to be a leader, be a coach, or be a dad, and you realize that there's personalities and everything else that you have to mold and you have to manage. Everybody is different. But as a dad, if you want productive kids, if you let your kids do whatever they want, they're not going to be productive. They're going to run amok and they're going to be problem children when they get old. You absolutely have to have a consequence. If there is not a consequence for bad behavior, the behavior's never going to change. There has to be arrests. public arrests with video cameras watching you go into jail and get strip searched and thrown in a jumpsuit and thrown into that cell or somebody else is going to keep doing it. But when you do it, you make an example or a dozen examples, and then people are going to say, "Oh, man. " And then he's People are going to sit back and say, "Oh my gosh, I guess he was serious and we can't do that anymore. " And then you're going to stop the behavior. But otherwise, it and especially with money and greed and everything else, people wanting free things and or easy money, it if you can steal money steal money. I mean, that's the mentality. — think that we've had a lack of accountability like across the country with these kind of things? — I think it's because there's too much money in government. There's so much money in government that like you just the California budget is $500 billion. You can't really imagine what $500 billion is. I know, you know, Elon's a probably I don't even know how much he has, but 100 billion maybe. But when you look at the difference between a million and a billion, I can imagine a million. Right. And then you can even think, "Okay, 10 million, 20 million, that's a lot That's a lot. " But when you get to a billion, that's so far away from a million that we don't even realize it. And then when you have these governments, that's why California is so much worse than Minnesota because we're so much bigger. And when Who's managing it? Like you the legislature in California, there's 120 people. 120 people and a governor managing all that money, sending all of that money out. Nobody's watching it. No. They're just It's a good idea and oh, social project or a pet project. Give them a billion. And it's even By the way, it's my brother-in-law. Well, [snorts] you then you have that, too. I feel like that's the other piece, right? Cuz it's like everybody's kind of in on the take. Like we're all playing the same game, so I can't call you out cuz I'm playing the same [ __ ] game. You know what I'm saying? Like and I think that's what really runs rampant. Um and it's not unique to California. It's not unique like that's every single state. We've had a big problem here even at the local level. Dude, they arrested five of our aldermen in an FBI sting. Like And it was it made massive Yeah, it was a massive story. Like our aldermen are who oversee our wards in our local local city here, you know, they were doing these backdoor deals and like, you know, selling gas station plots to You know what I'm saying? For Like, bro, FBI came in, got them all. Got them all at the same time. It's because we're not electing people into these positions — [clears throat] — based on their past, their integrity, their leadership ability. I mean, we don't even pay attention who we're voting for. You either vote for the D or you vote for the R or the last name if it sounds like a the last name that you like and you have no idea who you're putting in there. And yeah. And then there's You look at the builders or you look at a developer any other business that wants something from government, if they're going to make $500 million off of a massive, massive project, it's worth it to give 500 grand in a brown paper bag at a meeting in a bar somewhere. — Right. And that's the type of people that we're electing. And when you put people in there that don't have character, that don't have the integrity, that are in it for themselves instead of other people, then that's what we're finding. So, that's why it's so, so bad everywhere. And there's so many different arguments. It's like, "Well, you know, the elected officials, they don't make money, so that's why they steal. " No, they're a bad person. That's why they steal. It It's There's so many excuses. They shouldn't make money. It's supposed to be service. Yeah. You know? Beyond like them living, Yeah. right? — Yeah. That That's also Yeah, I mean, that's something we've lost, right? That's something that You know, we talked about this a little bit ago, you know, um the opening of the show, you know, the best and brightest are not the people running for office, right? The best and brightest are in the real world doing the best [ __ ] that they can possibly do. And those people have lost that. In America, we used to have almost like a patriotic obligation for people to serve, right? And not just in the military, but like if you're successful in business, you take a few years and you serve, right? In politics. And we're not seeing enough of that. You know what I mean? We're not seeing enough small business guys. We're not seeing enough entrepreneurs, people who can at the local level run and take

Segment 12 (55:00 - 60:00)

you know, school boards or county seats or, you know, state government or a governor, right? And we got to get that back together, too. Yeah. It has to be that because when you look at California, the majority of the people that get into these positions have never really had a real job outside of their government position. So, they started as — They started as a staffer. Yeah. And then they moved up from staffer to something else and then they put them in these maybe a school board position for 2 years so they could run for a now city council. And that's the people that are running our government instead of I guess, you know, just how you explained it, qualified people that could have been doing it. You have to take a hiatus away from building your empire and help Yeah. Or how about all these guys who've exited their businesses in their 40s and 50s? You know what I mean? They're not really doing anything now. Like instead of instead of, you know, moving to Florida, maybe take 4 years or something and try to do something, you know what I mean? I will I will say that I think that that's turning around. I think I see that in city council seats that we have in my county that people are running for in local Southern other local Southern Californias. And that And that's even what their campaign slogans and their campaign platform is, "I'm stopping my business. I was an accountant for 20 years, but now I'm Now my kids are gone and now I can do this. " And so, I think it's changing. There's a We have a fantastic assemblyman in California. He's And he's not running again, which was a disappointment to a lot of people, but I'm sure he's probably a billionaire. I don't know how much money he has, but it was exactly for that. He's like, "I'm I'll let my business run itself for a little bit because somebody has to go in and do this. " And he did a great job. I mean, he was only in there for a couple of years. Listen, I think that's how it's supposed to be though. It's not supposed to be this like career politician thing. You know what I'm saying? Go You see a problem, pause your stuff, you go fix the problem. All right, it's fixed. All right, guys. Next. Who's up next? I'm going to go — you look at the how the country was formed, the people that formed our country, that's what they did. — They were They gave up some of them gave up everything they had to then go form our country, the government that we that they formed. And they lost everything. They lost their farms, they lost their wealth. Yep. Some of them got killed. Yeah. Right? It was uh It was a I don't know. I'm glad to hear that you feel that's starting to change a little bit. Yeah. I do. You can see it. — Yeah. — Good. That's exac- I feel like, you know, California specifically, dude, it could be I feel like that would be the best place to kind of be a leading example for this turn. Mhm. — Going back to to what America's supposed to be like. I think you have a great opportunity. — I say this all the time in California, we have to fix California so we can fix the rest of the country. Because what happened in California 20 years ago then spread to the rest of the country. It didn't start in New York. — And I mean, it didn't start in all of these other places. It started in California and then spread. And California is such a such [clears throat] a cultural influence on the United States. Yeah. — Right? Like when you when you're from Europe or Asia or the Middle East, they think of two places. They think America is literally New York and Los Angeles. That's right. Nothing in between. No. Like which is fine. Please don't come here. I like it here in Missouri. But, you know, it makes sense that it was spread that way. You know? And I really think that it got so bad now in California. And I think over the last couple of years, I think it was a contest to see who was going to destroy their city first, New York or California. And or their state the fastest. And I think New York is winning. They overtook us. But I think that I think California's primed in this coming up election that we can make some massive changes that's going to affect positively the rest of the country. — out? He's out. — There's probably six or seven prominent Democrats. And that's their problem right now. — There's too many. And I think that's I think Newsom is going to be the downfall of the Democrat Party in California because what's supposed to happen or of any leader surrounds themselves with people that you get hit by a truck today you got to have people underneath you that are going to keep it going. So you're building leaders underneath you to take over. And he didn't because nobody's as good as Gavin Newsom. Just ask him. Exactly. And so when he's supposed to be molding that

Segment 13 (60:00 - 65:00)

next person he couldn't because he's too worried about himself. So now that he's leaving there is no heir apparent in California. So all of these egos jumped in to be the next take advantage of a vacuum really. And now there's just too many of them. How does that work in California? Like do they allow like let's will they pair that down to where there's only one candidate? So they're going to split the Democrat vote and do you have any other Republicans I've mentioned that are running? Who? So there's I think there's probably I think there's 60 people total that are running for governor and probably 15 are Republican but there's only two that anybody even knows. So it's you have and that's why we're at the top of the polls because the Democrats are splitting the rest and the way California works is it's not a Democrat and a Republican race. It's everybody runs and then the top two people in June go to November. Could that be like two Republicans? It could be two Republicans. And so I mean statistically if you want to look at it right now it's it's a very good chance and the Democrats are even they're completely afraid and now even their own strategists and their own like far left media outlets and everything else they're all warning of it that you know they were trying right before the filing deadline to get some of the other Democrats to get out but their egos are so big. It's like I have just as good a chance as you and I'm better than you so they all stayed in. What's that one lady's name is it Susan Collins I think we covered her on the show I think she's California. — No. No she's not? — Uh-uh. She's um Oh gosh. Man where was she? Cuz she she's terrible. I think is that her name Susan Collins? There is yeah but that's not California. — Oh no not this lady. There was you guys have what's the lady out there? — Katie Porter. Do we cover her? Is that called Katie Porter? We covered her. Yeah. What she do wrong? Bro oh bro she was the one in the interview. Remember that interview that she did and — Oh she got mad that they were asking her questions. Well that too but then she was in the video where one of her staffers way across the back walked across and she yelled at her get out of [clears throat] my shot. Yeah. This lady right here. Everyone knows and we've known for a long long time she came to prominence in politics because of the of a horrible system Orange County is a very Republican county very red county and you have too many Republicans winning running and only one Democrat and then the Democrat wins. So that's how she won her first election. Yeah. But she's she I mean she's horrible. Oh yeah. I mean you can watch one or two interviews of her and you're like holy [ __ ] Why are you asking me that you're not supposed to be asking me that. Yeah. She's very arrogant she's very socialist she's and she's trying to right now she's trying to she's in major damage control because you know she's not a nice person and everybody knows it. So now she's trying to pretend like she's out petting puppies and [ __ ] She's trying to be Hillary now you got to give it a couple of years. And now she's talking about you know we have to lower you know taxes and we have to do all these things but when you really get down to it and you listen to all of them talk when you get them together they're all fighting for the same base. So they want more taxes they want more regulation they want more cap and trade fees and all of this garbage and more tax the rich and tax the billionaires and all of that stuff. Well that's what you get when you got people running for office to manage 500 billion dollars that have never run a snow cone stand. You know. And yeah her claim to fame she's a professor. Shocking. Yeah. It's crazy. Yeah. Can they all see this picture? Yeah. On the screen. I don't think I have to say anything. — Just leave it there for the people for a little bit. If I do she's going TO HEAR IT. ALL RIGHT THAT WAS A GOOD ONE. YEAH. THAT WAS GOOD. [clears throat] HELL yeah man well guys jumping on this conversation down in the comments let us know what you guys think. With that being said let's go cruise the chat let's check in with the chat see how the chat's doing. Chat you guys still alive? Here we go. Julia my question for Sheriff Bianco when we vote you in are you going to open up investigations against Newsom? I'm in Calimesa California and fully support you in winning this and making California great again. Absolutely. So that and it kind of went back to what I was saying before there has to be a consequence and my entire existence my consequence is are you a good person or are you a bad person or you a victim or you a suspect and when you're a suspect your

Segment 14 (65:00 - 70:00)

us again. And nobody just because he's the governor I guarantee you he's done quite a few things that are not quite legal. — So the bad part knowing that I've what I've seen in government and some of the bills that they've made into laws they make it legal for them to do the things they're going to do. So they things they do this year two years ago they made legal and then or they made it to where they can't be prosecuted for it. So there's I mean I want to I tell people all the time if there is a way that we find in an investigation that Newsom needs to be arrested I'll be the one to put handcuffs on him. I'll still be a cop and I'll be the one to put handcuffs on him but all of the people that benefited from his decisions and the things that he did they're not exempt. So all of his friends and absolutely they have to be held accountable. There's got to be a lot of people there does and there has to be consequences so you can show everybody else that you're not like them. You're not like that you you're putting me in there to be the cop to clean up corruption and crime in California. I'm certainly not going to do the same thing they did and then have everybody say oh look he's you know same same circus different clowns. Yeah man. Wow dreamer. I'm with it. Somebody don't give your don't give away your ideas that's when the ball is in our court. You know there's one of the things there it was talking about Mayor Bass and everything else and a lot of people will say that you know I can't do what I'm going to what I say I'm going to do and the cities aren't going to you know they're not going to comply and you can't control Mayor Bass and it's like really I can't control what she does or I can't control certain mayors but I can expose the crap out of them. And that's what it's going to be the platform I have with the as the governor it's not like I'm going to like the media is not going to want to talk to me and I will be telling them constantly what's stopping California from being better and it's going to be these horrific policies that Mayor Bass won't change or Mayor X from whatever city. Absolutely. And we have to realize with politicians that's a good one I'll answer that one in a second. But the politicians in anywhere politicians are only afraid of two things and that's it not getting elected again and an informed voter base. An informed voter but well yes — then maybe they wouldn't we wouldn't have to worry about the other two. So if you expose them for the truth of the person that they are and what they're doing then they're not going to get elected again and then that power thing that they get or they feel like they got for being in that position then it goes away. So they're going to do everything they can. So that one right there I just when you were scrolling through there I just saw that just because they were bold and capital letters CARB. CARB is California Air Resources Board so it's basically the federal EPA on absolute steroids and that really truly is destroying our farming community it's destroying our construction companies any big business with big trucks diesel trucks basically. If you have any business that has to do with diesel trucks or big engines you're [snorts] getting forced out of business with CARB. I just somebody today on my way on the airport I got texted a ticket they their company and it was for one of their trucks it was a smog they did something wrong with their smog on a diesel truck. $25,000 fine. $25,000 fine for one and I just with the name of the business I guarantee you they got more than one truck. Yeah. And this is just a $25,000 fine for one truck. And it's destroying our state. The trucking industry. Didn't they walk back the recently or they're talking about walking back the restrictions on like diesel engines? Yeah. I think I read that they're removing the requirement for death additive in they're going to allow dirty diesel engine again. Which dude, I hope so because the ones that don't have like my '95 Ford right outside is a hell a lot cooler than the 2020 F450 I have at home that [ __ ] has no power because they don't let it have it. — Yeah. And you have to look even that your truck out there Yeah. is not operating and it's not emitting the emissions that it did back then. — Yeah. Everything is better now. I mean that no matter what when you build something

Segment 15 (70:00 - 75:00)

and you engineer something. — be a little might put out a little more. Well, maybe it used to. But not what it would back then if you would have done the same thing. That shit's all a lie anyway, bro. The earth is the greenest it's ever been because of the amount of carbon that we're producing. That's the key. We there is not any — that little diagram in like [ __ ] second grade? Like carbon dioxide and then it the trees make oxygen and [ __ ] gets green. What do you think green [ __ ] lives off of? Yeah, right. Yeah, but carb is going to go away. Yeah, Bill Nye definitely forgot about it. Carb's going away because carb is a belief in California that they would that we had it's like the EPA on steroids. But if you believe any of that, then you have to expect that when you cross state lines and go into any place, then the sky's going to be black and there won't be any everything's going to be dead [clears throat] because you're not doing California emissions. And it's just a lie and it's a way for California to get more money for people. The whole green thing's a lie. It's all [ __ ] We have another super chat here from Nicholas Capellano. He says, "Chat, I sponsored one of your tables in Corona. I appreciate you and believe in your mission. More and more policies are getting passed killing businesses. What plan do you have once you get voted in? " Yeah, that's a business is probably I mean as a business owner there's if works perfect because I'm in government obviously my have a career in government and in public safety which we spend a lot of taxpayer money. I mean we're that's the number one role of government anyway is public safety. But I have a strong [snorts] love for businesses because you can't have a thriving city, town, or state if you don't have businesses. Small businesses particularly. So what we know in California is everybody is leaving and taking their businesses elsewhere because of taxes and regulations. So it doesn't take a rocket scientist to say, "Okay, then we need to remove the regulation and lower the taxes if not eliminate them. " So that's how easy it's going to be. And the good thing about California or any government really. Calif but California the way that they changed from taxes to fees is it went through the regulatory process. So everything that's bad 60% probably 70% of what's bad in California for businesses is regulatory. And I can sign all of those away as the governor. So you make all of those go like carb. Carb is a it's a We're going to get rid of the sound pollution [ __ ] on the highways so we can actually drive our cars. — Regular cars. Yeah. I got one. Do that. Can we get plastic straws back? Yes. My god. And plastic bags The best the I saw Those [ __ ] paper straws, bro. Like it's just something I can't What about that uh What's this you know, I have some friends that live out there that have recently moved. And is there some sort of weird tax like 5% tax on like a wealth tax on the real estate or something like that? What is that? It was it was actually a lie that California government put on the ballot for people to vote for so the people made it a law. But they lie about what it is and people don't pay attention. They don't read the fine print or real thing. They trusted the government to tell them the truth on the little form that they sent you on what to vote for. And then you voted in this massive increase in taxes on selling your property. When you sell your property, the amount of taxes that you have to pay and then what your kids are going to have to pay even if you inherit it or whatever it is it's everybody's losing everything. You can't afford to do it. Like even wealthy people cannot Yeah. Cuz you're talking like 5% on the on top of the house price, right? — Yes. And then so now the people that have that they're like, "Okay, well I'll just not going to sell it. I'm not going to buy anything and sell anything. " So now you lose out on that normal on that turnover of properties. Yeah. Because nobody's going to lose that much money. And that's what that's where California politicians that greed for money it's so short-sided because it's just where can I get money and they don't think of the consequence or they unintended consequence which is the billionaires tax. Yeah. I mean who would have ever thought Zuckerberg would leave California? Nobody. I nobody. Yeah. So as soon as but then you say we're going to tax the billionaires and he's like, "I'm out. " Yeah. I'm going to — talked you talked to Zuckerberg in person. I mean he's a normal dude. I mean people hate when I say that but I've met him and he's a [ __ ] regular guy. Who was threatened and manipulated and coerced for 20 years. Yeah. I'm not making excuses but I'm just telling you that's true. Well, if he's a normal guy and you know him, can you ask him to stop shadow banning my Facebook — and my Instagram account? — I tried to get that done for me. IT DIDN'T WORK. I WOULDN'T SAY I KNOW HIM. I've just met him and my impression of him was was much much better than what I expected. — Yeah. You know. Yeah, but all of these people well, I mean he did a great job. I mean he's a I mean you look at what he did, what he

Segment 16 (75:00 - 80:00)

built, and everything else. I mean you have to admire him for it. Yeah, I mean as an entrepreneur for sure but you know, the thing is you got to be ethical with that stuff, too. Right. And what are you going to do with it? That's right. And that's my dig at him. But you know, when you think about it, dude, like the guy was a billionaire at 21 years old, okay? Imagine being 21 years old and being worth like 10, 20 billion dollars and everybody telling you they're going to do this and that and this and this. Just do this thing and do this thing. And then by the time you're 30, you're [ __ ] intertwined in this [ __ ] that you didn't even know existed. You know what I mean? So it's hard to it's hard to imagine. Yeah. That's all I'll say. Yeah. You know, he's starting to associate with people who think like we think. And I think that's changing who he is and his perspective. Yeah, there's a when you think about that I it makes me like him not that I didn't like him. I [ __ ] I'll tell you straight up, dude. I did not like him at all. Like that's coming from someone who literally was like, "Fuck this dude. " And then when I met him and like he got humanized, I was like, "Whoa. " But then it if it's what you're saying where he's starting to see and changing, I'm okay with anyone like that. Absolutely. — If you're enough of a man to say, "Man, I was wrong. " Holy crap. Yeah. And say, "Well, I made a mistake but I'm not going to do it again. " And then make it right or change. That's you got to respect that. Yeah, we'll see what happens, man. The enslavement into AI isn't looking too promising. No, it's not. — But yeah, man. Anyway. Yeah. On to topic two. Let's keep it cruising. We'll come back to you guys. Stay with us. Let's keep going. I got headline number two. Got to give a little update on what's happening in the Iran situation. Got to talk about it. There's some updates there. So headline number two reads, "Report Pentagon preps weeks-long ground ops in Iran as US Marines arrive in theater. " Wasn't going to happen. Just a few days. 14 days to stop the spread. Yeah. Not there. Yeah, we're past it. Yeah, the Pentagon is preparing for what could become weeks-long ground operations inside Iran including special operation raids and limited infantry missions as US forces including a Marine Expeditionary Unit now in theater continue to build up for a potentially more dangerous next phase of Operation Epic Fury according to a report published Saturday. US officials told the Washington Post that the plans under discussion would stop short of a full-scale invasion and instead center on targeted ground missions involving a mix of special operation forces and conventional infantry. US CENTCOM tweeted this out a few days ago with some pictures. US sailors and Marines aboard USS Tripoli arrived in the US Central Command area of responsibility March 27. The America class amphibious assault ship serves as a flagship for the Tripoli Amphibious Ready Group. 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit composed of about 3,500 sailors and Marines in addition to transport and strike fighter aircraft as well as amphibious assault and tactical vehicles. So this is a conversation moving up and my understanding I was talking to a few guys in these circles and they are simply preparing for the possibility and for the green light coming from Donald Trump, right? And so they are putting those things in position in the event that Trump says, "Okay, yes, we're going in. " Right? Okay. It's more involved than it was originally you know, slated out to be. We're still at a point where the vast majority of Americans do not support the situation going on over there. But then another report comes out today actually that Israel has declined to join any of the ground operations — [snorts] — that Americans might launch in Iran. You mean [clears throat] like every other war they've been in quote unquote ally with of ours before? You mean how they've never put [ __ ] soldiers on the ground ever, when we have ever ever ever. You know, and so like, you know, just looking at this 10,000 foot view, right? This was the situation that we got involved in at the behest of Israel. Mark Rubio said this, like, "Well, they were going to attack first and Israel said that they were going to so we had to do something. It was right. " And now we're transitioning into this being a prolonged extended ground operation and Israel's sitting this one out. And I personally I don't feel like that's okay. That's not right. — I don't think that they think it's okay. the administration thinks it's okay. There's a huge fight going on right now between J. D. Vance. Well, actually it's between

Segment 17 (80:00 - 85:00)

Trump and Netanyahu, but this is what I've been trying to tell you guys for a couple months. There's a huge battle happening right now behind the scenes between Trump and Netanyahu. And while everybody's saying, "Oh, yeah, Trump's just sucking Netanyahu's balls and blah blah. " There's they these people are not getting along behind the scenes. And J. D. Vance now got placed in the middle of this. And J. D. Vance [ __ ] unloaded on Netanyahu like 3 days ago. Uh just regarding this. Basically saying, "Hey, you gave us bad intel. We went and acted on this intel and now there's this, right? So, it's not as simple as like what we think we're seeing, right? You know, in all of this, I think my perspective being in law enforcement and all I deal with is bad people. Bad people and victims. I deal with good people a lot, but you're we're going after the bad people. You can never the problem that you have when you're doing any investigation is determining what the truth is. And the problem for I feel all of us right now is we don't know what the truth is. We have the complete go in and take ground troops into Iran and wipe them off the planet. And then the ones that we shouldn't even be there and we're and it's all for Israel and everything else. And you the truth is in the middle somewhere. It's not either one of those. It's always in the middle, but the problem is it's almost impossible and it may even be impossible for us to know what the truth is. So, we as regular people, we fill in for ourselves, you know, the natural if you have a gap, it's like, "Well, it has to be this then. " And but this is a tough this is I'm glad I'm not the president. Cuz dude — [clears throat] — I get so like we talked about when we were in the gym earlier. I call how I see it, dude. If Trump does good [ __ ] I'll say that's good. If he does bad [ __ ] I'll say, "Nah, that's [ __ ] up. " I have a unique perspective from running businesses my whole life. Okay? See that little office over there that you guys passed it, the one that my brother lives in? What happens in that room what the rest of the company knows, they probably know 10% of the discussions that happen in that room. We're here to lead. We put the fires out. We survey the situation and then we get everybody organized. We don't bother them with the minutia. We say, "This is where we're going. This is what we got to do. " And that requires us filtering out all of the [ __ ] before we direct action. And that's just the people in our building. So, if you were to take someone outside the building, they probably know 10% of what the people inside the building know, which is 10% of what's actually going on. Now, that's with any business. That's not an unethical business. That's called knowing what the [ __ ] is going on and making a plan to get there and not letting your team be distracted with all this other [ __ ] and let them do their thing. My job and Sal's job and the executive team's job is to take all the [ __ ] and not let them worry about it and just give them a directive, right? And if you think about that 10% 10% thing and you apply that to the biggest organization that's ever existed in humankind, which is the United States government as it sits today, think about that. Okay? People don't think about that. They think that what they see on the [ __ ] news or a podcast on the internet is everything that's going on. And while some things may be very obvious and you can be like, "Yeah, that's wrong. " There's still other [ __ ] happening that you have Dude, you just can't know. You can't know. Bro, one of my very good friend, United States Senator, he [ __ ] doesn't know. — Okay? Like so there's bubbles here. A little bubble, a bigger bubble, and a bigger bubble. And we're in that biggest bubble. So, so like if you play what we're talking about here, let's say Trump's office is my brother's office there, right? And they know 100% of what's going on. Then the rest of the people in Congress and [ __ ] they only know like 10%. They're not allowed to know all that [ __ ] And then what we know is like 10% of that. Okay? And most of that's muddied up with [ __ ] narratives and lies. So, I totally agree with what you're saying. We don't know and that's the hardest thing to like communicate to people who've already made up their [ __ ] mind about what's going on. And that's something I say — I say this all the time, bro. We don't

Segment 18 (85:00 - 90:00)

know. How do you Like people will say [ __ ] in the chat. I'm like, "Oh, really? How do you know that? " And they're like, "Well, I I'm like, "You don't know. You don't know. " And dude, if you if to be a leader, real talk, you have to understand that there's [ __ ] you don't know and you're making a guess, an educated guess around the the delta of what information may not be there. And I think one of the things you said it was just a it's about honesty and it's about the truth that gets out and the things that you don't know that don't get out. And I look at it and — [snorts] — what you said is exactly right. You can't a you can't the problem that we have sometimes is swearing loyalty to like unbridled loyalty to a person. to anything. I mean, I believe you can do it to our country. I can have un fettered loyalty to my country. And but I say it in law enforcement, you're loyal to the patch, badge, you're loyal to the brand, not yes, not to a person. And that's and with the president. I mean, there's so many people that hate him and don't. And there's so many lies that are being said. And I look at it like in with the this whole thing about Iran and in Israel and the link and and we can make a assumptions and we can put things and we're probably right and we're probably it's a good guess. But I look at myself and I look at the organization that I have to run. 4,500 employees and 1. 3 billion dollars a year of a budget. And everything that is every everything that is coming out bad about me now is an absolute lie. But these people act like it's the god's honest truth and they know for a fact and they know nothing about the workings of our organization that got to Yeah, that's a perfect Oh boy, and the ACLU said it, so it must be right. Cuz they're so honest. But things like this and then I realized going through this process that the media and the propaganda machine to get people to like us, to get us to believe something, it's a machine. Yeah, it's not even an accident. It's their purposely using social media and the media to influence our opinions to make us hate President Trump, to make us make hate Netanyahu. And whether you whether there's good reasons to do both or not, that's irrelevant because somebody's trying to convince you to think that way anyway. And that's what we don't know what is real or not. I mean, my stance has been pretty clear on this the whole time. And by the way, um you don't have to be very high IQ to be able to say um "Yeah, I don't think that it's a good idea that we're there and I don't think anywhere when our country looks the way it does. But if we are there, I want to [ __ ] win and I support our troops and I don't want them to get hurt. " Like that's not a that's a that's a very like you don't have to be hyper intelligent to [ __ ] say those things. And it seems like it's the polarization around this issue is like if I say, which I believe, that we don't need to be in any [ __ ] conflicts when we look when we have to go up down the street in Los Angeles, California and see all these veterans and all these people who are brothers and sisters, people who have played by the rules their entire lives and try to do the best they can and they can't make it here, but yet, you know, we're going to give our money and our funds to Ukraine and Israel and all the dude, that is [ __ ] wrong in my opinion. I actually I just think everybody thinks that's wrong. I think that we need to [ __ ] fix here and then once we fix here, we can talk about going back to helping these other people. If we were in a better position Yeah. locally Yes. then I think it would be a different outcome. Yeah. But when you can't afford gas, groceries, when your kids have to live with you into their 30s because they can't afford rent, Yeah. there's something massively broken. And then when you learn of these hundreds of billions of dollars going to Calling the [ __ ] out, dude. So, you then you see how hard you're working and then to know that, you know, half of the money that is being stolen from you through taxation. I think part of all of it is being given to [ __ ] It's like I think part of all of that is part of the demoralization of this country. I think it's intentional. I think it's it goes right along with the indoctrination of these people that we saw in the No Kings protest. And they want to make it so that it cuz dude, I'm going to tell you right now and this is just real [ __ ] I've seen in the last three or four days, I've probably seen 30 posts of people saying, "It's so much harder to get ahead now and this and that. " All right. You're basically pretending like

Segment 19 (90:00 - 95:00)

everybody else that's ever created anything just [ __ ] got there. Like, dude, I don't real talk, I don't know how much harder my path could have [ __ ] been. Like, I had to give everything to get where I'm at. You know, I had to give up pretty much everything that makes you a normal human being to get That's me. Now, maybe I'm a dumbass and maybe it just takes me longer, but I'm also too dumb to quit. So, I show the [ __ ] up even if I suck. And maybe that's me. And maybe it is harder. I don't know, but I can tell you this. This [ __ ] was hard as [ __ ] dude. And like, I can't imagine it being any [ __ ] harder and I personally think that we are in a position right now to where young people if they're willing to learn and educate and get in with the times and the trends of what's happening, there's more opportunity to become successful than there ever has been for young people. But they're caught a lot of them are caught up in the boohoo. Boohoo. It's so hard. So, [ __ ] it's always been hard. It has always been hard. Has it always been this hard? [ __ ] I don't know. Like, I'm in business still. It didn't get any easier. Like, it's not like Well, I think it's one of those things where you didn't give up. I mean, you had I didn't have an option. Yeah. Well, and then I had to go Dude, if I a regular person, I mean, that's that is your option. You you're not you can't give up. Just because you fail or just because something broke, well, you wake up the next day and you go back and fix it and you make it bigger. I real talk, the straight honest truth. I'm not willing to be poor. [ __ ] that's it. That's [ __ ] it. I'll do anything. I'll [ __ ] I will I'm 100% committed to being successful and I have been my whole life. And that's what it's taken for me. And I believe that's what it takes because everybody I know who is moderately successful or mega successful, it's their life. It's everything they do. Their life is their thing. And I think there's been this mentality that's been cultivated especially through social media with all these people that are like, "Oh, you got to make a million dollars in two weeks and all this shit. " That you know, the average person who's out there, you know, working their way up the same way all of us did believes that there's no chance for them to do that anymore. It's like, "Bro, you're doing the same [ __ ] I was doing then. " You know what I'm saying? Like, this is just hard [ __ ] Yeah, I'll tell you probably right now an 18-year-old, easiest way to be a multi multi-millionaire, be an electrician. Start an electrical company and five years you're going to have a [ __ ] empire. Absolutely. You're going to work your ass off, but that's what it's supposed to be. Yeah. And is it I think it's the with the internet and influencers and everything else, it's that you don't have to work hard for that. So, it's that easy money that people see. That's what they want. There's a reason they sell that message, bro, because they can sell it, right? It's very hard. Like, I have this big problem with the therapy industry, okay? I feel that the therapy industry in general is the most predatory [ __ ] industry on the face of the planet. I They have no interest in making you any better because they lose their income. So, they have a direct interest in keeping you in victim mindset. exactly where you are or worse so that you think that you need them, okay? And that's how That's how these people are making money. And I know people on the internet that are making millions and millions of dollars a year propagating victimhood and it's a [ __ ] I think it's the most slimiest, disgusting [ __ ] thing in the entire world. I watched a doctor, a psychiatrist, talking about that saying they're creating what we have today because it's giving people that option of blaming somebody else, blaming their circumstance, and then it becomes okay. That Right. How does that make you feel? You know, whatever it is, but it's not to get you better. No, it isn't. And dude, when we think about that and message, okay? And then let's let's compare that to a message that would be like the real message, which is, "Hey, [ __ ] this going to be the hardest [ __ ] you ever did. It's going to be harder than anything you could possibly comprehend. But if you keep showing up every single day, you're going to chip away at this and in 10 years your life's going to look so much different. You're going to be so glad that you did everything that you did. " Do you think that there's ever a minute You know me really well. Do you think that there's ever ever a minute where I'm like, "Man, I wish I hadn't have [ __ ] done all that work. " No. There's not a single second that that happens in my life. Now, when I was doing it, when I was like in it and I wasn't getting paid and the [ __ ] sucked, I always thought, "What the [ __ ] am I doing? Why am I doing this? Why am I What is this for? "

Segment 20 (95:00 - 100:00)

Why am I doing this? " But then something starts to click and then you start to win a little and then things start to happen and you're like, "Oh. Oh, that's how it works. You got to put in all this time in the beginning where you don't get paid and everybody laughs at you and everybody makes fun of you and everybody thinks you're a joke until they don't. " And that requires the ability to show up year after year. And the thing that really like burns my ass about this whole thing with like entrepreneurs in general is like, "Bro, you guys got it easier than anybody's ever had it. " Like, there's never been an entrepreneurial opportunity like there is now. You have the ability to literally text anybody in the world. You have the ability connect with anybody in the world in a [ __ ] second. You have the ability to market down to a geo-fenced zip code neighborhood your Dude, that didn't never existed in my day, okay? You know how you did that [ __ ] You went door-to-door and knocked on the [ __ ] doors, bro. And like, "Hey, I'll — Hey, I'm Andy. I sell [ __ ] protein. " Like, I did that for years, dude. And it's just like when I hear these people cry about this [ __ ] I'm just like, "Dude, you have no idea how [ __ ] good you have it as a potential entrepreneur right now. " It's a mindset. It totally is, dude. And we're never going to turn losers into winners. It's it is what it is, but man, it gets frustrating hearing that [ __ ] cuz it's like, "Dude, [ __ ] I made $58,380 my first 10 years combined, not every year. The first 10 years, I made $695 a month for seven [ __ ] years. The first three years I didn't make shit. " Like, and you tell people that and they're like, "What do you mean? " And I'm like, "I mean that. " You know? That's how it was. But Steve over there says he's making a million dollars a month in six months. Yeah, well, that's cuz Steve's a [ __ ] liar. — You know? So, it's just I don't know, man. We're getting back to it though. I agree with you. The young the younger generation, they're hustlers, dude. I love I actually really I'm excited about that. Are you for California, are you going to have any special incentive incentives for businesses to come back to California? Yeah, I mean, my whole thing is we're going to be the number one business-friendly state in the entire country. And the way you make that happen is you eliminate the regulations that are preventing it from happening now. And that's what I mentioned earlier. It's all with stroke of a pen. And you have to realize that the current governor could do it today if he wanted to. Yeah. They don't want to. They don't want businesses there. And it's that whole socialism thing. It's that it's they want government control of things. They want They don't want private ownership of business or homes. That's You can't have socialism with three things. Businesses, private ownership of business and homes, and independent law enforcement. There's That's why the all out assault on law enforcement across the country is because you can't have independent law enforcement. You have to get everyone so pissed off at law enforcement that they're all crooks, they're all bad, and then the good government's going to come in with their own law enforcement and here, we'll take care of you. Well, they don't like that either. They don't like having ice. Well, yeah, they don't like that. Yeah, it's not the Yeah, it because they're not going toward the whole socialism thing. Let's get all the people that aren't supposed to be voting out of the country. And they're not going to be able to vote. It is. Because you got you One of your One of the things that people hit you on is that you did an interview where you talked about the deportations. Let's talk about that. What's your position on that? Well, what is the stance? The stance is the So, the big issue that was put out there is that I'm for amnesty. An absolute freaking lie. I mean, I there is no one getting amnesty. So, so what we really have to get to is the governor of any state can do absolutely nothing about immigration anyway. Absolutely nothing. It's the federal government's role. President can do something. Congress can something that they choose not to. But state governments can do nothing. The only thing I can do as a governor is I can make sure that we're not a sanctuary state anymore. — Mhm. Which that will go away. Mhm. Currently, I'm suing the state because it's unconstitutional. We have to wait for it We're in a limbo land right now with a court ruling waiting on a superior court or a Supreme Court decision so we can continue with our appeal because a liberal judge threw ours out. But, we're still in that appeal period. Anyway, we will get rid of sanctuary state status. Mhm. I am a law person. — Mhm. There is consequence for breaking the law. Yeah. — Nobody get It's There's no king's X. Right. There's If you're here in the country illegally, illegally and you're going to suffer a consequence. And when you came into this country illegally, you knew that if you ever got caught, you were going to be deported. — That's right. So, why is there Oh, you've been here 3 years, so you get

Segment 21 (100:00 - 105:00)

amnesty. No. Because then where are we going to draw the line at murder at 5 years? — Right. So, you could kill somebody and as long as I don't catch you in 5 years, king's X. Right. No. You're not. There's absolutely no amnesty. If you're in this country illegally, — total [ __ ] It's total [ __ ] — Well, I'm glad you addressed that, brother. — Yeah. So, this is where the problem with the lies come out in politics and everything else. And I am a huge fan of hour and a half 2-hour podcasts and interviews and everything else. But, the problem with them is — With the clips. — Yeah. And so, you — Trust me, I know. — Yeah. I know a thing or two. — Yeah. And so, I go — or two. I go and do these hour and a half 3-hour interviews and then you take those little clips and you say, "Oh, look, he wants amnesty. " — Yeah. — Well, I have never even said the word amnesty other than I'm against it. But, you I made a comment that was I believe that there should be if you're only if you're here legally though. If you're here legally, there should be a very rapid pathway to get your citizenship. — Mhm. And I say that because I have friends that have been trying for 10, 15, and 20 years — Yes. doing it the right way and they still are under the fear of being deported from their families that they have here, from their 15-year-old kids and their wife that they've been married for 18 years — Mhm. and they still can't get citizenship for no other reason than government red tape. Yeah. And they don't have enough money to buy it. — Yeah. And that is absolutely wrong. So, those things have to be fixed. But, if you're in this country illegally, sorry. — we were talking about in Riverside. We We met a kid in Riverside whose dad had been detained. He was in that exact position. — Mhm. He had been here for 25 years. He His whole family was born here. And then his his dad, am I right? — Yeah. His dad got I think it was a DUI or something. — pulled to a ICE detention facility. I And I think he got out. But, uh but he even he was like, "Well, he was I mean, technically he's illegal. " He did [ __ ] up. He did do Yeah. You know, I thought about this, too. It's like cuz I think the biggest problem when people talk about immigration is like how do you do it? Right? Like or de-immigration, let's just say, right? Like how how exactly does it do it? Because you if you leave it up to the government, it looks like, you know, the Alex Prettys that we've had, right? Like and that's not good optics, right? People It's not palatable to people, right? And I was thinking about this, dude. I have an idea. Okay? If Donald Trump was to come out, make this very simple statement, okay? If you're in this country illegally, you have 60 days to go report to an immigration facility. 60 days. All right? I think And so, if if the people who are here illegally, if they get to those immigration centers, right? Within that 60 day, they get a priority status on re-entering legally. For those that choose to not do it at all, and after that 60 days is up, if you get caught, you're out. Forever. See, I I think it should have been See, I think Trump [ __ ] up here. Because Trump got elected on basically two issues. — Mhm. Okay? One Well, three. One was the illegals. — Mhm. Two was no new wars. Mhm. And three was the economy. Yep. And it was like 70% of voters including Democrats — Mhm. at the time of the of his inauguration were for mass deportations. — Yep. And when you're going to do something that is visibly unpalatable to the average citizen, you've got to do it when the [ __ ] momentum is high. When you got the support. — When everybody's like, "YEAH, GET THEM OUT OF That dude, he should have said, "Okay, for the next 60 days, we're doing mass deportations. And this is what it's going to look like. And like uh that movie The Siege where, you know, they put people in a pen and they get them all in there and they work through the paperwork and they [ __ ] do what they got to do. If he had done that when support was high, the problem would have been solved. — Mhm. The problem is he waited a year before anything actually happened. And then he let the public opinion on those two small situations that happened [ __ ] ruin the whole thing. — Erode. Yeah. Erode. — So, like dude, you got to act when people are ready to see that action. — Mhm. You know? That's my opinion. I think he [ __ ] up on the timing. Yeah. Probably so. Yeah. Appearance is everything and then you let the narrative spin to where the Democrats made it into something that it wasn't. — Playing with a man. Yeah. They show a little [snorts] thing and make it out like it's a big thing all across the country. — Right. And for us in California, I mean, I had the It's the whole riots and everything else because of ICE. We had them there. But, they were only in sanctuary state states. Yeah. And that's because before sanctuary state in 2017, the immigration officials would just come into the jail and get them. They're all criminals. They're all victimizing us. Mhm. — for me in my state, I have to let them

Segment 22 (105:00 - 110:00)

go. go from my jail back out to victimize us again because it's illegal for me to cooperate with the federal government and turn them over to — That's crazy. immigration officials. So, I could be removed from office. No way. Yeah. And so, — wait. So, you're saying So, in 2016-17, you would arrest one of these dudes. They would You would just hold them. ICE would show up and take them to wherever they came from. Yes. If anybody came into the jail system that was in the country illegally, they got deported. Yeah. And it should be like that. Yeah. Why isn't it like that right now? Because we're a sanctuary state. And that's the same thing in Minnesota. Yes. And so, they make it illegal for law enforcement to cooperate with the federal government on immigration. No [ __ ] — I as the sheriff So, so I'm in the Constitution, everything else as a constitutional officer from for the state and everything else. But, I'm not the top. In the Constitution, the attorney general is the top. And the attorney general oversees sheriffs and DAs. And then that's then it's us. But, it their attorney general's higher. So, if I violate the law, I can be removed from office. If I violate sanctuary state law, the attorney general can remove me from So, if I cooperate with ICE and turn And this is how bad it is. A I have a guy in custody, all right? And I'm going to lose my job. If this guy gets out of jail, I'll lose my job because I'll gladly give it up. This guy's not going back out into society. He's had three DUIs. His fourth DUI. And he's been released from jail and deport He's been deported already once in his past. And just let back into the country. But, this time, he killed a 13-year-old kid. Oh, man. — Hit him on a bike. Hit and run on a bike. Killed this kid. And now he's back in my jail for a DUI, but now he killed a kid. And if that if he gets out for whatever reason, the judge can let him out on his own recognizance, whatever pending trial and all those things. I'm not letting him go. Yeah. I am turning him over to ICE to get him out of the country. And you can gladly take my job. Yeah. But, the common sense has left the building. And these sanctuary state laws are absolutely harming us. So, as the governor, that absolutely has to go. There is no amnesty. If you break the law, you got to go. And there's If I was president, there would be a flat income tax and it would be low. And then all of those IRS agents would now be immigration agents and they can process all of these people and either keep them out or if they're good and they're going to be contributing to society, then let them in. I mean, that's how our country — it was working before, yeah. And but nobody wants to tackle it. Nobody wants to make that What are all the sanctuary states, D? There's a lot. — California, New York, Minnesota, obviously. I had no idea it was like that. — They're all blue. There's no red states that are sanctuary states. New York, uh California, Chicago, so Illinois. — Some of them are cities. There's a lot of cities that made themselves cities. But, you and you Why they do that? Uh they just pass an ordinance or they pass a law. — Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Colorado, Oregon. — These people are legitimately to endanger their own American citizens — 100%. I'll make it worse for you. — a [ __ ] vote. In 2017, when they were That's when California became a sanctuary state. We absolutely told the law enforcement told the people voting on it, "This is what's going to happen if you do this. ICE is going to have to go into communities to find these people because they're criminals. They're victimizing us. Right now, they just come into the jail in the safety of a jail. Nobody knows it's happening. And they just deport them. — Mhm. If you make this law, ICE is going to go into the streets and this is what you're going to have. That's where our grandma's going to get taken away because they're going to go look for grandson and grandson's going to be who's robbing people blind. And he's going to be in the house with grandma. Grandma's there illegally. Well, they're not going to just let grandma stay — No. because she's here illegally. — Right. — Yes. So, that's what we're really seeing right now, is Democrats purposely, knowingly made sanctuary states and cities to force ICE into the on the ground so they could create this. That's [ __ ] insane. Absolutely, it is. They knew it was going to happen. For a vote. — can continue to stay in power, so they can continue to get paid and embezzle and steal and bribe and all this [ __ ] — And it's such an emotional argument that people lose their mind. So for in [snorts] for me, now I have a POS candidate running against me from my own damn party, willingly, knowingly lying to everybody about my beliefs and about what I do and what I would do for his own benefit. And then and people believe this [ __ ] It drives me absolutely nuts. That's insane, man. That's [ __ ] up, dude. So you have a deputy and let me tell you

Segment 23 (110:00 - 115:00)

this is This is what I want people to hear. Local law enforcement has never been involved in immigration enforcement. Ever. In the jails we have, we always say, "Hey, these people are illegal. They robbed us. They did whatever it was. They raped, murdered, killed, steal. " To my personal belief, there's nothing worse than a thief. But if they're in the jail, we call them up and ship them back out and it should happen like that. Right now, and so on the street though, it never happened. I was a deputy for a long time. I couldn't care I answer 911 calls or I go arrest drug labs or drug dealers. And then when they get to the jail, they're illegal and they get deported. But when I'm out handling calls, I can't care and I don't care whether somebody's here illegally or not. You're either a victim or you're a suspect. — Right. — And if you're calling for my help, I don't care if you're in the country illegally or if you're even a visitor from from New York. I yeah, I don't care. It's you're a victim and I have to help you. So this is why local law enforcement can't be involved. When I say local, I mean the ground deputies, the patrol police officers. We know this is happening right now because people are so afraid of cops because [snorts] they think the local that law enforcement is deporting them. I cannot have a 14-year-old girl getting repeatedly raped and threatened that her and her family are going to be deported if she tells anybody. And then she just has to be repeatedly raped over and over because she's afraid of being deported. She has to be comfortable to see a person in uniform and run to that person and say, "I need help. " Yeah. And we don't have that right now because people are afraid. The politicians have made people afraid of the cops. So it seems like the system that we had before worked pretty well. — perfect. It worked absolutely perfect. You never before 2017, you never heard about any of this. — No. Any of this because it was all happening in the jails. Yeah. Damn. They wanted the optics. They did. Yeah, crazy. They did. And they we know now in hindsight that they wanted the optics because they knew it was going to happen. It was obvious to all of us and we were telling them. They were acknowledging it. Yeah. — did it anyway. — [snorts] — It is it's all for politics. It is. — That is evil [ __ ] Ugh. Yes, it is. [ __ ] man. And then we get lied to about what it really is, about what's happening. Listen, dude. I you know, we we've just gotten to know each other a little bit the last few months. But I have trust for you. That's the truth. Because of the COVID thing. I don't really have to know any much more. Anybody who's willing to stand up during COVID and say, "Hey, no, we're not [ __ ] doing this. " That's the kind of backbone we need in leadership. Yeah. Real talk. So I really hope this works out for you, dude. I think it's going to. People are seeing it. They're seeing through the lies. I mean, especially when they when you they look at my career. — a governor dinner or something? — Absolutely. — Yeah, all right. Absolutely. The — [clears throat] — the inauguration party. — go to In-N-Out Burger, bro. That'll be the governor dinner. Yeah, I keep throwing this out there. He's hated so much by Newsom. I keep saying that I'm going to for my inauguration party, we're going to have a massive celebrate California party. I'm going to get Kid Rock there. Oh, yeah. I'd be sick. — Yeah, for sure, dude. Hell, yeah. Everybody wants California to come back, bro. I know everyone does. — Yeah. We're going to make it happen. Good. Hell, yeah, man. Well, guys, jumping on this conversation, let us know what you guys think down in the comments. You want three? Yeah, let's do. All right. Third and final headline. Do you golf? I do golf. Yeah? You scratch or you know, where you — At one point I was. — Oh, no [ __ ] — Really? I don't golf I golf scratch. — as police officers California, huh? You guys scratch golfers. — It's 80 deg It's 80 degrees year round. All right. Uh you're not going to talk about Tiger Woods. We got to cover it, man. Come on, let's dog on Tiger. — I don't want to. All right. — want to dog on him. All right. He's a dog. — Let's Well, He just shouldn't drive. It's the problem. You know, I I'm a cop. In today's day and age, — Yeah. Bro, get a driver. — anybody I know. Not well, him, he should have a driver and he can pay for a driver. But anybody else, it's a $20 Uber ride. — Yeah, dude. It's like this is not Yeah. You know one thing I would like to see, man, like this is just real [ __ ] It'll never happen. It This is how you know that most attorneys and politicians are totally full of [ __ ] — Mhm. Okay? If you want to do eliminate drunk driving, which is a massive [ __ ] problem in this country, it would be very simple. A year in jail, no matter what, Yeah. first offense. No matter what. Nobody's ever driving again drunk. — No. Okay? It'll never happen. I'm for that. — Yeah. I'm for that. So

Segment 24 (115:00 - 120:00)

I'm going to tell you about consequence and you make it hurt. Yeah. And for cops, money hurts. I mean, we don't make a lot of money. Deputies So they work overtime and everything else to take [clears throat] care of their kids and their wife and buy their toys and all of those things. So money hurts. — And they play golf. We can play golf. You those courses are expensive out there. — And so we were having a time where it was just like I have to learn everything that goes on with employees and everything else. So you get told all of these things. But we were having a time where it was like it just seemed like every single day a deputy was getting arrested for DUI. Yeah. Getting a DUI. — Yeah. And it's like, "Okay, well, everybody gets DUIs. " But then it's like it's constant constant. So I said and we put out this department-wide instant memo, this it's over. It's an it's you get a DUI, it's an automatic 1 month off, no pay. You're just gone for a month. So you're losing a month of your salary. It's been 10 months now, not a DUI since. — Yeah. And we were having them And that and that's several a week. — And honestly, dude, like that's mild. Like, you know, like Look, dude. I'm going to tell you right now and I I'm not This is not something I'm proud of. I don't do this anymore. But when I was younger, I drove drunk all the [ __ ] time. Okay? You know how many times I woke up at home not knowing how the [ __ ] I got there. Okay? And as I got older and got more mature, I started realizing how seriously irresponsible that was. — Yeah. And I just think like dude, I know for me, like if the law really was written, a year in jail for DWI, there's no [ __ ] way. Oh, yeah. — No way. I'm ever I wouldn't even drive after I had if I was around people that were drinking. But here's the key. You have to have known somebody that happened to. And know that it was real. Yeah. Oh, yeah. There's still laws out there that are just never enforced. — Yeah. — So you have to like, "Oh, yeah, that isn't going to be me. " Do you hear about Bill — Yeah, he's still sitting over there. Yeah. And then that make you'll never ever do it. — Yeah. And then in the case of Tiger, dude, I just don't get it. Well, I do. But Let's talk about it. — into it. Yeah. Headline reads, "Tiger Woods forced to crawl out of luxury SUV, charged with DUI after rollover crash in Florida. He's crashing out. " Uh car crash prone Tiger Woods was forced to crawl out of his luxury SUV after rolling it Friday in yet another Florida roadway washout that resulted in DUI charges. Woods not injured in the crash just before 2:00 p. m. by the way. Pretty early. Um in Jupiter Island, 4 minutes from his house. Um Martin County Sheriff John uh But Buttinseck? Buttin seck? Buttinseck? Uh the sheriff said Woods attempted to drive around a flatbed truck which was pulling into a driveway at a high rate of speed, uh but then swerved to avoid an oncoming car. He then allegedly clipped the truck, which prompted the Land Rover to flip. After crawling from the wreck, Woods was greeted by cops who quickly noticed the golf star seemed unusually lethargic. Quote, "Mr. Woods did exemplify the signs of impairment. " Sheriff said Woods appeared to be under the influence of some type of medication or drug as a breath test showed absolutely no sign of alcohol. Uh the golfer faced charges of driving under the influence with property damage and refusing a lawful test. Uh the fender fracas comes days after Woods 50 made his golf return at the TGL finals. Um Now, apparently, one of his close friends told us told the news station why he didn't want uh to hire a driver. Um Now, this again, this is not coming straight from Tiger. This is somebody who knows What he say? Um he doesn't want employees to quote "watch over him" or know what he is doing. — Yeah, you know why? — You want to know why? I know his whole I can tell you the whole [ __ ] reason of what's going on here. — What's the inside — more? No, that's it. — Okay. Number one, the reason that people do this [ __ ] is because when you're that rich, you don't you're usually not held to the same standards as everybody else. Tiger Woods. You're usually walk in everywhere, you sit down where you want, the cops are real nice to you, you kind of get away with a little bit of privilege. — Mhm. And when you're that famous, I mean, bro, you start to believe like, "Hey man, you know, these laws don't really apply to me. " How many times you dealt with that in your career? A lot, right? So, that's the first thing. The second thing is he don't want a driver because he probably has 10 [ __ ] — That's what I was thinking. And he wants to go around and do his thing without being [ __ ] watched. — Yeah. Oh, yeah. — So, if he has a driver, then somebody knows what he's doing. That's right. He I mean, he said it right there. He doesn't want know what he is doing. It's not watch over him. It's know what he is

Segment 25 (120:00 - 125:00)

doing. — Yeah. And the only thing that you wouldn't want people to know what you were doing if you're that guy is seeing all 10 of your girlfriends at the you know. They don't work. If it's if it's bad. Well, and yeah, bro, and we know he has 10 girlfriends cuz he had 30 before. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? So, Oh, Tiger, man. It's a it's unfortunate. — I listen, I still like Tiger Woods. Yeah, I mean, he's a goat, dude. You got to make some Yeah. Dude. I really — take an Uber. Yeah. Stop. You know what? Eventually, he's 50 years old. Start acting 50. — Yeah. You're not 20. — You're not [ __ ] 25. — Yeah. Well, dude, like the the thing is too, it's like, you know, I feel like a lot of people in that situation take the same like kind of go down that same they all get to that point that you just mentioned like they get to this point of like privilege and public you know, publicity, right? And it [ __ ] ruins them. I was pulling up some names O. J. Simpson. Mhm. Right? Mike Tyson even, right? He had a massive downfall. Mike Vick was another one. John Daly. Aaron Hernandez, we know how that turned out. Lance Armstrong. They get to this point where like they don't feel like certain [ __ ] just applies to them, dude. It sucks. Dude, when you're at that level, like Look how sad he looks in this car, man. [ __ ] man. Tiger, come on, bro. It sucks, man. And it's so crazy, too, cuz like you said, he just came back to golfing. He's in the TGL now. And I know there was a clip that was going on I think Thursday, literally the day before. Uh and he was talking to I guess one of the up-and-coming golfer kids or whatever. He's like, "How many uh you know, championships have you won so far? " And he's like, "I don't know, like two or three. " He's like, "This is my first one. " He's like, "How old are you? " He's like, "I'm 22. " He's like, "I won three by the time I was 22. " Like he's a [ __ ] talker still, you know what I'm saying? He's still got it, dude. Yeah, he's a competitor, bro. Oh, he is. Yeah, he just said it so nonchalantly, too. He's like, "I had three by that time. " I don't know why I'm thinking this, but I feel sorry for him knowing that he blew a zero. So, it's not alcohol. So, he wasn't out drinking. He's it's drugs. Yeah. So, if he's lethargic, then it's some type of a narcotic. So, he's either taking pain pills or It looks like sleeping pills and pain pills. Yeah. And so, And that [ __ ] You know he's had his surgeries. issues and everything else. Is he addicted to drugs? More than likely. — Yeah. And so, I almost feel sorry for him because it's like, dude, you the it what you were saying about what you had to go through and everything else. Imagine what he had to go through to get to be the pinnacle of where he was, the best in the world for 30 years, 40 years. effort of doing that. Bro, he's been this good since he was 10. But he can't beat addiction. Yeah. Well, we see it happen over and over, man. I mean, he could beat it. He'll beat it. — But uh you know, he hasn't wanted to yet. Yeah, maybe this will be the thing for him because and the other thing about Tiger, too, I think with these high-level high-drive high-competitive people is that this might actually be what he needs to get on his game again, too. Like, "Fuck you. " Yeah. You know, he needs a big dose of [ __ ] you and [ __ ] everybody. — Got to have that chip. That's what he always used to have. And then when he got entangled with that uh he wrecked his Escalade and they found out he had all those girls and his wife moved back to Sweden or whatever, you know, he went in a dip. Um I just you know, dude, the guy's a great He's probably the greatest golfer ever. Like, I would like to see him be great again. You know what I mean? Yeah. I'm rooting He probably could. Can you imagine him in the senior league? It's like he's I mean, I think crazy. Yeah, it [ __ ] sucks, dude. Dude, it sucks. — to see people that you really like go through things like that. Mhm. You know, but like you said, dude, the law's the law. Yeah. You know, and you can't be driving around all [ __ ] up, man. And he's lucky he hasn't killed I mean, Dude, for real. He's wrecking these cars like good wrecks. Like some serious wrecks. He's lucky that he's not dead or that somebody else isn't dead. Yeah, man. Yeah. [ __ ] that. — Get it together, Tiger. Tiger, come on, man. — you to be great again, bro. Calm down on the ladies and the pain pills. Dude, just get a driver. — don't understand how people can get addicted to those pain pills, dude. I've had to take them a few times. I hate taking them. Dude, you can't [ __ ] Well, Yeah. You can't. You guys know what I'm talking about? until you try and stop. Uh yeah, like, dude, you can't [ __ ] — Yeah. It's like you got to reach back there and like get I mean, that's what you want to do, not that you actually do it. I thought I had to do it before. — MAYBE I DID IT ONCE. — I WON'T TAKE PAIN pills anymore because it too I was young, but I had total recon- reconstructive surgery on my knee. Yeah. And I wanted to do everything the doctor told me to do. So, I did like whatever he said, I did it. Well, one of the things he said was take two of these every 4 hours.

Segment 26 (125:00 - 130:00)

— Oh, dude. And so, I did for 2 weeks. And then in my head, I was still supposed to be taking them, but in my head, it's like, "I don't think I hurt anymore. I can stop. " Well, in taking that many pills every 4 hours in 2 weeks, I got addicted. So, I'm in the restroom. Yeah. And it wasn't good. And knowing what it was, I told my wife I said I well, first I said I'm sick. But then an hour later when it was worse, I called her and I said, "Holy crap, I'm addicted to pain pills. " — Yeah. And in 2 weeks. And so, I just went back and weaned myself off. But from that point, I mean, I had my I had neck surgery. My neck is fused. It's like, "I'm not taking any pain pills. " I'm not taking them. — it, too. I had a my shoulder reconstructed in 2021. And it was like a bad reconstruction. I tore everything, supraspinatus, labrum, rotator, bicep, all [ __ ] gone. I had to have it all re- totally re- rebuilt. And my buddy Nathan, who's my surgeon, great surgeon, great surgeon. — I am totally against pain pills. So, we're sitting in the Do you remember this? recovery room. And he's like, "All right, dude. " He's like, "Here's the deal. I gave you a nerve block on your shoulder, so it it's You're good for right now. You feel okay right now. He's like, "But listen to me. He's like, "You need to take two of these pills every 4 hours starting right now. " And he said, "If you don't, it's going to hurt. " And I'm like, "Oh, dude, this is no big deal. This is [ __ ] fine. I'm fine. " Bro, the next day I wake up and I'm like in so much I'm like so much pain. And I like called him and I'm like, "Dude, you [ __ ] up. " — Something wrong. — "You did something wrong, bro. It's not supposed to hurt like this. " He's like, "Did you take the pain pills? " I'm like, "No. " And he's like, "This is what I told you. " So, I started taking them. But dude, like I hate the way they make me feel, dude. I get itchy. I get real itchy and like it's just The brain fog. I just don't like don't see how that's fun for people. Yeah. Like, I could see getting ripped out of your mind drinking [ __ ] 18-pack of Bud Light, you know, and having a par- I get that. I also get smoking weed. I get that, too. I don't understand the pain pill thing. I don't get it. I don't get how people live like that. — Is weed a big thing for Cali? How's that What's your stance on that? Yeah. I mean, I'm not a fan of weed. I mean, it's I I see the downfall of weed. I mean, right now we have people dying of fentanyl overdoses because fentanyl's in weed. It's it fentanyl's in everything now. So, you think you're smoking weed, but really there's fentanyl in there and you're going to get it too much one time and I mean, we're having people die. And it's like marijuana, hm, how'd you die of fentanyl? Well, it's because they're putting it in it. But then, the problem with California that we're seeing with legal marijuana is it's no longer the marijuana of my day that was 6% THC. Now they're trying to 40% right, 50%. I mean, the regular weed you're smoking and then but you can go further and do the vaping and everything else with the oils and the concentrate that's closer to 100. And we're seeing instant psychosis. People that don't smoke weed, and you smoke it one time and just that Cuz it's so strong. Yeah. So, it's not the marijuana that oh, I'm just going to you know, go smoke a joint and relax. So, and then it's the whole thing with it affects your body and everything else. Why would you want to affect your mind? That's what it is for me. It's real it's really bad for people under 25. Like really bad. Oh, yeah. Dr. Amen, who's the basically the number one brain surgeon or brain study guy in the whole world, he talks about marijuana and he's like, "Marijuana's all right, but you shouldn't ever smoke it before you're 25 because it takes that long for your brain to fully develop and the effects on marijuana before 25 are drastic. " — brain, yeah. So, when California made when we passed the stupid law that made it legal, they used California to say look how great it is and you get tax money for it and everything else and there it is. It's like how can we get more money from the for the government? Let's get everybody stoned and tax them for it. But one of the things that they were saying was this tax revenue. Well, Colorado, what they hid from California, they didn't hide it, California just chose to ignore it, was that the majority of the money that they were making was going to psychological care for high school kids that needed it in school for all of their mental issues now that depressions and everything else. — Yeah, you want to talk about a real problem? The real problem is the pharmaceutical [ __ ] that they're putting in people. Every and the food. I mean there we could go go down the Maha movement rabbit hole too. Yeah, they're all gay frogs. That's Dude, that shit's real. When Alex Jones started talking about that, everybody's like, "Ah, dude, he's crazy. " Now come to find out it's literally the reason, like you said, that a 20-year-old man have the testosterone of a 60-year-old man 20 years ago. It's crazy, dude.

Segment 27 (130:00 - 135:00)

— Yeah. Well, I mean California I won't talk about religion. It is a religion though, but the whole I'll blame this Well, I got to blame this on you because 3 years ago, 3 years ago in February, my wife and I did 75 hard. And so that's why you're freaking jacked. So we've relatively been healthy. We ate good because my wife went through some cancer and we went down the food route anyway and we were relatively healthy. But so it's like, "Okay, you got to pick a diet for 75 hard. " It's like, "Well, we already What are we going to pick? The McDonald's diet? We can't pick that. " So I come home one day and my wife said, "Hey, I found this. It's carnivore. " And I'm like, "I get to eat steak? " It's like, "Okay. " So we we've been carnivore for 3 years now. But you feel great. Absolutely. So but during that whole process We've been lied to about a lot of things. — Oh yeah. And so the whole food and healthy and all of those things that we eat Have you read [ __ ] RFK's books on this [ __ ] Bro. I not all of them. I wish I could read all of them. And I don't even want to say this, but I'm going to say it anyway. And you don't laugh at me. I wish I had the time to read No, I get it. I get it, bro. It and trust me. Yeah, but it he's on. I mean he's exactly the work he's done for so many years for decades fighting an industry that made us unhealthy. But the whole testosterone thing, back to that comment, was it's carbs. It's and it was started because a religion didn't want their kids obsessed with sex. So it's like, "How can we lower their testosterone? I know, let's start Kellogg's cereal. " Give them carbs. — Yeah. No, no. It started with the low-fat movement. — Yeah. Right? Remember like in the '80s, dude? Like now we're really talking about How old are you? 58. Okay, you're a little older than me, but remember that. Remember how it was all low fat? And then if as long as it had low fat, it could have a thousand grams of carbs and it was good. Yeah, a thousand grams of sugar. And then it went the other way. It went low carb, higher fat and it just shifts back and forth and back and forth. And the reality is that most people are deficient in their protein sources. I mean, and if you get enough protein, dude, like it's funny because all these kids now, you know, they're they're going on testosterone at 20 years old thinking it's going to fix everything. It's like, "Bro, protein is the most anabolic [ __ ] you could ever put in your body, dude. Like if you put a lot of protein in your body, like more than what they tell you, you're going to get [ __ ] yolked. It's reality. So we were going through blood tests because of my wife and cancer and she gets it all the time, but I would do my yearly blood test. And my testosterone and I was 55 at the time was 640. We started carnivore and within a year, I was at 950. Dude. I believe it. — the mustache. That's where you got it. I couldn't even grow a mustache — Bro, I can't believe you're [ __ ] 58. — look great. — Yeah. 58. — great. — I thought I'm I'm 46. I thought you were maybe like a year older or two than me. Yeah. I'm 42. Yeah. No, you're not. He's [ __ ] 30. He believed it though. No, I didn't. As soon as I saw you, it was like, "Is he one of my kids? " Just saying, you know, black don't crack, dog. I could be. All right, we got thumbs up? We do got We got our final segment, guys. Final segment of the show, as always, we have thumbs up or dumb as [ __ ] This is where we bring a headline in, we talk about it, we vote on it, we give it one of these two options. Um and I figured since we have law enforcement here, we have sheriff of Riverside, there's been a crime that we have to talk about. Uh headline reads, "12 tons of Kit Kat bars stolen in chocolaty heist in Europe. " 12 tons 12 [ __ ] tons, dog. That's a lot of Kit Kat. It's not enough. — Do you like Kit Kats? [ __ ] right. Bro, they're pretty decent. Who doesn't like Kit Kats? Yeah, those little wafers. I don't like when they do the weird [ __ ] though. If freezers good, man. Yeah, that's a fat boy move. I get it, dude. Bro, cuz it melts by the time you get it. All right, here's the question though. Do you eat the Kit Kats? I know you don't. Do you break them off one at a time? — Yes. No. Wait, what? You don't Wait. — Wait, I just [ __ ] get in there, man. I just get in there. Is that what you guys do? That's illegal. It should be illegal. I'm gay? Oh. I'm gay cuz I don't break them? Joe, do you break them? All right, I didn't think so. Joe breaks the wrapper. — You're telling me you break one off? — them off, yeah. I break them off. Unless it's like the two like the little minis, you know what I'm saying? Where it's just two of them. The Halloween ones? Yeah, it makes it last longer. Oh man. Well, I mean I try to just keep eating. — That's where that 12 tons went. 24,000

Segment 28 (135:00 - 138:00)

lbs. Now that's not the main story the main thing on this topic, guys, has been the public response to this because they have a few suspects that they've pinned on social — Well, it's not Lizzo. It's not Lizzo. She's on Ozempic now, so. That's right. But yeah, so dive into this. A massive 12-ton shipment of Nestle's Crunch Kit Kat bars were stolen um in a heist that risks causing a shortage in stores right before Easter. Kit Kat, owned by Swiss food giant Nestle, told AFP on Saturday that quote, "A truck transporting 413,793 units of its new chocolate range has been stolen during transit in Europe. The shipment disappeared last week while heading to heading between production and distribution locations," the company said. Um we've always encouraged people to have a break with Kit Kat, a spokesperson told AFP referring to its famous cat phrase catchphrase, quote, uh "But it seems thieves have taken the message too literally and made a break with more than 12 tons of our chocolate. " Um now they've put a statement out. Uh this is Kit Kat's official statement. Um and they uh reassured people that they are working closely with local authorities and supply chain partners to investigate. The good news Here's where they [ __ ] up. What? It was going to Poland. What's that mean? Poles don't [ __ ] around, bro. Oh no, they're going to get you? Yeah. Yeah, you. Polish men are [ __ ] hardcore. Yeah. And they're serious about the Kit Kats. Yeah, bro. Well, I mean who isn't though? You know what I'm saying? Like this is a I'm going to tell you this, out of all the countries in the world the ones I wouldn't want to [ __ ] with Poland? [ __ ] right. Well, they say — Everybody I know that's Polish is like 6'4" — and they're they like they're scary. Yeah. You know? Like You know what I'm saying? Yeah, you don't [ __ ] with them. No. Or their Kit Kats. Let them do their thing. That's right. Let them you know, it takes three of them to change a light bulb, but it's okay. Just let them do it. it. — You know, but they — But uh Kit Kat does say that uh that the good news — joke, don't you? Yeah, yeah. How many Do you know the joke? — Yeah. What is the joke? Well, it's about their IQ. How many Polacks it take to screw in a light bulb? It's three, right? Yeah. One to I don't One to hold the bulb and two to spin the ladder. That's right. Yeah, that's right. Um but they say that the supply chain's not affected. Everybody will be fine. Now here's the thing, social media being social media uh they've listed out a few suspects. Um this is on Kit Kat's official Twitter. Uh they got — Guilty. That's what they find. Yeah. He definitely did it. — He did it. Yeah, he did it. The main suspect. Um and then the the comments — on their [ __ ] thing? Yeah, bro. What comments? No, it's in the reply to the comments. Yeah, right? I mean, but [ __ ] the post has over a hundred million [ __ ] views. So who else was a suspect? — Okay, so you got Randy Fine, then you got people posting [ __ ] like this. Yeah, not him. It's not about the chocolate, it's about sending a message. Nobody gets a break. — Jordan Belfort, he got in the conversation. — Oh yeah? He put Floyd Mayweather. — Bro, you say what you want about him. I know him real life. That [ __ ] is funny as [ __ ] — it. I believe it. Hell of a life. He is funny as [ __ ] — Uh they did the Breaking Bad situation. That's funny. UH THEY GOT UH — BRO. YEP. IT'S PRITZKER and Fine. — They teamed up. Okay. All right. It's got to be. They also had this going. Nah, it's not him. Do you That's racist. — That's racist. It You guys can all clearly see that Bobby has chocolate on his face, but y'all vote for Jamal cuz you're racist. That's right.

Другие видео автора — Andy Frisella

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