
What if everything America was told about Iran was part of a bigger story? In this explosive episode of Digital Social Hour, Sean Kelly sits down with Kawa Mawlayee to break down drones, modern warfare, Iran, Israel, propaganda, political influence, AI surveillance, and why so many Americans are losing trust in the system. Kawa shares his perspective as an Afghan-born Muslim, former Green Beret, military veteran, trainer, and business owner. He explains why drone warfare is changing everything, why Ukraine became the classroom for the future of war, and why the Middle East is far more complicated than the headlines make it seem. The conversation moves from Iran and the Strait of Hormuz to oil, gas prices, foreign lobbying, media narratives, America First politics, and the growing frustration with leaders who say one thing while serving another agenda. CHAPTERS 0:00 America’s Iran Problem 0:28 Meet Kawa Mawlayee 1:02 Drone Warfare Is The Future 4:13 Israel, Iran & Drone Swarms ...
Loading summary
Kawa
This is what happens when you oppress a. When you first of all stage a coup, put a puppet in place, and then that puppet just completely neglects his own people, create these monsters. I don't support us going into a country for lies. Venezuela, Iran. Women are oppressed over there and they're killing people. Trump actually said they're cutting bodies in half. They're beheading babies in Iran. You know, these are lies because.
Sean
Okay, guys, got Kawa on today in Las Vegas, man. He's having some fun out here.
Kawa
I am. And, yeah, thanks for having me, man. Yeah, appreciate it. But it's been. It's been go, go, go since I got here.
Sean
Yeah, you've been non stop, man. Dude, I gotta drive an hour to get to you.
Kawa
Yeah. And I texted you that I have to shove this burger down my throat before I come in really quick.
Sean
Yeah, yeah. But thanks for making the time, man. I know you're busy.
Kawa
No, thank you for having me.
Sean
Yeah, you're still busy, man. You're grinding.
Kawa
Yeah, yeah. Got a lot of different stuff, you know, in the. In the pot and so it's. But it's all cooking, man. It's all good. Yeah.
Sean
What's the main focus right now for you?
Kawa
The main focus is really just the core of what we do. Training, consulting on a defensive and tactical side of things. Firearms. But we've lately been getting into drones more and more. Anything UAS with that kind of overlap. We've also been getting into, you know, state contracts and federal contracts. Really. Training Green Berets and seals. MARSOC guys.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
You know, so it's really just stuff that I was doing in Special Forces for the longest time and even really back in my Marine Corps days.
Sean
Nice.
Kawa
So it's fun, man. It's not work. It's busy. It's overwhelming sometimes, but it's still just my passion for sure.
Sean
Was there drone technology when you were serving too, or is it kind of
Kawa
a newer thing towards the last. Last few years? Yeah, it really started popping off. But like before, no, there wasn't a lot. I mean, yes, we heard about how it could be used, but that was more like imagery and, you know, passive stuff. But now we're getting into a whole different thing about offense and mitigation and detection and, you know, you had all these different drone companies out there with all these different little, like, niches focus on. So it's cool, man, because we're behind the power curve. I had conversations all day today with guys and I kept telling them and they agreed there Was like, everyone's behind the power curve here. And like, Ukraine is like the classroom for drones. And there's a lot of hard lessons learned coming out of Ukraine with drones. Mitigate all that stuff. Different subcategories, but it's been. Not to make it like a bad thing, but obviously drone warfare is the future.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
So we probably need to get schooled up on it. Right.
Sean
When you say power curve, do you mean, like, very few countries have access to this type of weaponry?
Kawa
No. Well, no, not necessarily that. Because the. It's very cheap to make a drone is what I'm learning, really. Right. Like, you can make a drone for 50 bucks. It depends on what you need the capability of this drone to do. If we're talking about military stuff, then you probably need to spend a few hundred dollars. But, like, for a thousand dollars, you can get a really nice drone that's super lightweight, gives you a long lifespan, reach and all that. And then maybe some really cool visual. Visual stuff. But you could also put a payload on there. You could put deployables, you know, and what that is whatever you need it to be. So it's getting to a place where drones, I think, are getting cheaper. But the need for drones, the demand is so high that they can charge whatever they want. At this point, what's really lacking is curriculum, protocol, you know, what do we do? Right. Okay. Like, what if we're in the woods? What if we're in the desert, maritime, you know, how do we use these drones? How do we. How does the enemy use these drones? So then we need to know how to defend ourselves. Yeah, there's a lot of that trying to, like, everyone's like, you know, everyone has these good ideas right now on how they think drones. But again, Ukraine is a good foundation for that. But we need to now employ that in different aspects of the world, different environments for different units because of the scope of work. Right. And it's really. So it's this war industry that's going to keep going no matter what. For me, it's just part of. Part of what I do. But the drones are new to everybody. Yeah. So it's kind of cool.
Sean
But are they being used pretty actively in the Israel, Iran war right now? Drones?
Kawa
Oh, yeah, heavily. Heavily.
Sean
I've seen anything on this.
Kawa
Yeah. And we're seeing anything from smaller drones that come in swarms into like, swarms of hundreds, you know, sometimes thousands maybe.
Sean
Geez, imagine seeing that if you're just standing to.
Kawa
Yeah. And yeah, it's scary. And there's that, that's, that that's a whole other thing is a psychological effect of a drone buzzing around you.
Sean
You know there's no escape. Right.
Kawa
When there's that many, I mean, it depends. Like, I'm sure you're probably safe inside of a hard structure as long as there's no way for it to get in. But a lot of these drones, if when they come into a swarm they have either pre designated targets or they have, they were, they were programmed for people or vehicles.
Sean
Wow. So it has a facial recognition to lock on.
Kawa
Well, I don't know if it's like it comes down to a facial. I mean it could maybe if that's the specific high value target. Yeah, it could. But for maybe if it's just for a general population, it could be just people in general, you know, and so it's, it's how they program them and what the objective is. But yeah, it's scary nonetheless, you know, because then obviously they have visual too. If there's visual override and they see something like a target of opportunity, then of course they would come after you. Right. If they consider you a target of opportunity, man. Yeah. Scary times, new time wearing, new warfare for sure.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
A lot of things changing because they
Sean
keep talking about boots on the ground, but yeah.
Kawa
And then Iran has other drones too. They have the Shahid drones that are big. They're probably half the length of this table. I'd say what, five, six feet.
Sean
And they fly.
Kawa
They fly. They have a weird kind of shape, but they fly. They look like those old stealth bombers that we had with a super like long nose and you know, like just the wings that were broad that connected to the back. So I think this weird kind of starfighter look. But those things have been very effective so far for Iran really in the different countries in the, on ships, for the naval vessels, for ground targets. I mean, you know, we lost, we lost quite a few aircraft inside Iran just recently. And you know, there's probably Shahid drones being used there. I mean there's obviously anti. Anti air or air to air to surf, ground to air missiles of course, and then you have personnel. But you know they're being used because they're cheap and they're easy. Yeah. And they're super expendable, so why not?
Sean
Yeah. I never know what to believe with the war, like who's winning? Because I see people have different opinions on it. Some people say Iran is winning right now. So people say America.
Kawa
Yeah. I guess it depends on what your definition of winning is. Right. Because I think the whole thing is a catastrophic loss to everybody. The only people that are winning are at the very top and they're nowhere near the battlefield. Right. So they're, they're kind of pulling strings on stuff and no one's really winning as we can see here in America. Nothing's getting better for us as this war goes on. You know, in fact, the opposite. Prices of gas. I just paid 160 yesterday, groceries for a tank of gas once, $160 for a tank of gas. Isn't that crazy, I believe? Yeah, no, it's crazy, it's crazy. I mean, I go to LA once a month and I see those gas prices and I just makes me cringe every time. Cuz I think I have it bad in Texas with like 339.
Sean
Yeah, it's like double that here, you
Kawa
know, but 339, that, I mean, that kind of started not too long ago because it was before that I think gas prices were like 220.
Sean
It dipped below 2 for a little bit, I think. Yeah, for a little bit. But yeah, it was in the low twos for a while.
Kawa
Apparently we have the highest national average ever. No way over $4.
Sean
Holy crap.
Kawa
So it just hit over $4 for the first time.
Sean
That's nuts, dude. Yeah. So how do you see this playing out with gas prices rising? A lot of people are uncomfortable right now. Trump's getting a lot of heat, most I've probably ever seen in his term.
Kawa
Yeah, I mean there's a lot of, it's self inflicted too, but I see gas prices probably rising more because we have Iran controlling the straight of Hormuz entirely now. I mean, before when the strait was open to everybody, you know, it was controlled by Iran and Oman. Iran controlled the north, Oman controls the south. And now that this has kicked off, Iran has completely just kind of taken, you know, physical control of it. I mean, Oman's cooperating by all means, but they're closing it off. And you know, now we, we heard Trump say that there's gonna be a blockade, but just this morning, apparently a Chinese tanker just went despite the blockade. Really? Yeah, it just kind of said F you and went into the straight, so. And I don't know if that's true because I've only heard in one place. Right. So, yeah, I don't, I didn't hear in two or three places, but.
Sean
Well, they're allies though, right? China and Iran? Yes. Yeah, they might be allowed through anyways,
Kawa
so they were, but that's what I'm Saying is like, for them, it never stopped, you know, because Iran gets to pick who gets to go through, like Russia is going through as well. But. And then, yes, China is definitely a facilitator for Iran because they give them missiles and rockets and other stuff that they need technology, of course. So all that is, all that's very helpful. Russia does the same thing, you know, and, and, and we know it, but we can't do anything about it because we do the same thing. So it's just like this game that everybody understands. Right. And you can villainize anybody that you want, but everyone is just as dirty as the rest.
Sean
So it's dirty business.
Kawa
This is not a, this is not a war to, to. This is not a proper war. Usually when wars are fought, we are fighting for freedom. Right. We're fighting for, for the freedom of oppression of people. Maybe not ourselves, but other people. You know, we're, we're fighting to maybe get rid of a actual tyrannical regime, somebody who's making their people suffer. But these days, all those definitions have been changed. Right. So anybody we deem like a regime needs to, needs to kind of go, you know. Yeah. And it's really just people that don't play the, the bigger game of, the bigger money game of oil and, and finances. People, though, who don't play to that and don't go with that are demonized. So think about everyone who's demonized in this world. It's not because the people are oppressed. It's not because there's a religion. It's not because of anything other than there's a person in charge that's not playing along. And we need to find a way to get rid of this guy. So let's come up with that narrative and strategy and execute. Yeah. It's been that way since the, the, you know, the beginning of time. But, but now you have a, but now you have a apparatus in place that controls the media mainstream, of course. And they control. Now social media. Yeah. And they control the finances, they control the economy, they control your health. Right. Big pharma or whatever, or just health services. They control everything. They control education.
Sean
Oh, yeah.
Kawa
So. And then anything that. And as long as we all just keep our mouth shut, it's like everything's fine. Things gradually get worse for us, but we just go with it. Or you speak up, and as soon as you speak up and you have a big enough following, then they recognize you. Yeah. And then they have to come after you in a, in a certain way.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
Because I Can't let you get too big because you're waking up people more than likely. So. So that's really the, the, the game in this little scenario that we live in in America, and both on an international level, and you have to kind of ask the question of, like, who's the actual bad guy? You know, who's really going to win from this? Right. Where's the tangible wins going and where's the tangible losses going? You know, and then. And, and that's. Once you understand that, you start to kind of see outside the narrative. You're like, wait a minute, you know, yeah, I thought they were a terrorist regime, but maybe they're just resistance. Who are they resisting? Why are they resisting? It makes you dig deeper. But if you believe that they're just terrorists, that's easy. I can throw that at anybody, and I can probably get a couple people to agree with me just because I said it. Right? So when you're the President of the United States or you're like this big talking figure in D.C. and you say something, it means a lot to people. You. You have influenced a lot of people to believe you. And so now in 2026, I think we're seeing more of an awakening from the masses because now they're, they're. They've gotten either. I don't know if it's ignorant ego or if it's, you know, maybe they just don't care. But there, There's a lot of blundering mistakes that are happening in the world that people are like, wait a minute, you know, and, and they're starting to look into it because things aren't adding up here at home. They're not adding up. Whether you're talking about, you know, ICE and illegal immigrants and what the actual narrative is versus the actual truth, or if you're talking about, you know, is the Islamification of America, you know, or if it's just that, that old left versus right, you know, classic. Classic. That's a banger. So that's. So that's. So that's it, man. We're just caught up in this thing. But it's good that people are waking up. But then we have to get to a place where it's like, okay, now we understand what's happening. Yeah, but what do we do about it now? We got to get into that solutionary phase.
Sean
Yeah, I think we're in that now. You're starting to see guys come up like James Fishback, Dan Bazarian. They're waiting for political positions. That's probably the first step. Right. Get some political influence.
Kawa
We need, I think it's, it doesn't have to be a first step, it has to be simultaneous steps. Okay, so it's like in politics. Yes. We need people like James Fishback to speak out and say that not only does he not support AIPAC or now he won't take money from any foreign lobby. Right. Okay, cool. Now, now we have to hold this guy to account because he said it. Right? Right. So now if he gets in, if we put him in office and then he gets in office and all of a sudden we hear a story about how he took some money. It's like, look man, you, we supported you because of this, but because you reneged on this, we're now supporting you. We're going to support the next guy because you lied to us or prove us wrong. And it has to be that. And also identifying just younger people that want to get into politics. People who stand for, you know, for America first, you know, not some other country or lobby or interest. Identify those people and prop them up, set them up for success, you know, show up, vote for them and then, and then continue to support them, but also hold them to account as this guy, you know, he, his career progression will get up to hopefully Congress one day, hopefully to the White House one day. And at every level we hold him to account or her to account. So that's one thing. But then also on a smaller level, and also on a smaller level, I would say that if we could just get people to organize on, in their communities. And how do you do that? It's like, well, okay, well, let's use social media to identify each other. Let's find a venue to then hang out or whatever it is. And that's kind of what we're doing with, you know, the modern exodus. And I think maybe Ian talked to you about this perhaps, but, and I'm part of that modern exodus. And so far the retreat that we did in Dallas was a huge success. The 20 people that showed up, it was instant rapport. It was understanding one another, understanding that we stand for the same things and that we want to accomplish the same goals for America and we put our country first and that's it. Otherwise we're God fearing people. And, and there's Muslims there, there's Christians there, and we're, we're open to all religions. I mean it's not a, it's not any kind of political or religious organization, but it's a, it's a group of men that want to Be America first. But then they want to do something about it as well.
Sean
Take action.
Kawa
So we identified ourselves, we organized, and now we come up with community goals. Whether that's an HOA that you want to go after because they're scamming you out of the movie.
Sean
HOA is a scam.
Kawa
We can all unite on that one. Right, right. That's like bipartisan.
Sean
I literally bought my house in a non HOA area because I dealt with it when I was renting such a skin. Oh my God. Once a month. And then they ended up finding out that the guy stole like 10 grand. HOA.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
And nothing happened.
Kawa
Nothing happened.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
And then so you have to go sit in on those meetings and we can like organize a sit in on those meetings and have your back. Right. Or it could be like in Texas, I'm so like fed up with the tollways. It's such a. It's another scam.
Sean
I didn't know there was tolls out there.
Kawa
Oh, oh, yeah.
Sean
In. I grew up in Jersey. There's a ton out there too.
Kawa
There's so many tolls. Right. And they always say, well, we're going to build this tollway to help and then we're going to pay for this with taxpayer money until it's paid for and after that it should be free. So then if it's been paid for for the last 10, 15 years, why are you still charging people? Right. I thought we were only paying for the cost of it. Right. I didn't know we were charging a tax. So it's stuff like that that gets me really riled up. Like. Yeah, I focus on big things, but then it's community again for me. So in Texas, like tolls is something I definitely would go after.
Sean
Yeah, someone needs to do that, you
Kawa
know, and, and it's a scam. There's so millions of dollars and then where that goes is also a scam because it doesn't come back to us in any shape or form. Non services, not benefits. Or we get to a place where we're going, we're. We're petitioning representatives to come to a city hall and we're holding them to account or marching on the city capital or maybe the Capitol itself. So it's all these different tangible levels of actions that we can take to then actually take back this country for America versus who is occupied and what it's occupied now, which is, you know, an Israeli led kind of Zionist movement. Yeah, yeah.
Sean
Happened after jfk.
Kawa
Right. I mean, I think after jfk, this country changed Everything changed.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
That's when I think that's when we got taken hostage.
Sean
That's what I hear.
Kawa
And Occupied was after him. Yeah.
Sean
The glory days.
Kawa
Right.
Sean
My grandparents were crying when he got murdered. And now I truly understand why. I think, you know.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
They knew it was the end of an era.
Kawa
That's it. That's it. And if you look at why or what he was doing or what he was opposing leading up to that totally, totally makes sense. Yeah. Because it's, it's the common denominator of opposing, you know, a Zionist regime or in a. An Israel is really what we should call it because everything we do in this country is in support of that country.
Sean
Well, my generation seems to really dislike them if you look at the polls
Kawa
and, and because it's, it's Gaza. Right. Gaza and other things that are starting to wake these younger people up. Because, you know, who knew what was happening in Gaza before October 7th. Right. So yes, it's a horrible thing, but none of those people died in vain because look at the entire world woke up to Gaza. The entire world woke up to Palestine. They have the sympathy of billions across the planet. And, and everyone is pro Palestine and free Palestine because, because again, it either goes back to ego or not giving a fuck. But you got Israel who is just bombarding these people nonstop. And everybody Thinks it's start October 7th, but people who are educated knows it goes all the way back to the early 1900s, you know, and you got like agreements and land being sold by somebody, you know, it's, it's all that. So it's good that, you know, we are waking up as a country. But at the same time, people really need to ask themselves, what are you ready to do? This is not a militia thing. This is like, this is not like we got to take up arms and we gotta like come together and form a militia. No, bro, we're not there yet. We're not there.
Sean
You're not even close.
Kawa
No, we still have. There's a lot of hope in this country to like take it back. Take it back. Like either you got a community or like we come together eventually. And so there's a lot of hope, but people are too busy in their phones and, and too busy worrying and too busy bitching and not, and not. You know, they're putting that energy in that space versus a space where they're like, well, what can we do?
Sean
Yeah, they're talking but not taking action.
Kawa
Right?
Sean
That's with anything. People are just like that.
Kawa
And I'm not Saying, that's all. That's everybody. Because obviously we see a lot of action being taken on social media. That's where everything goes viral. But notice that anytime you have a group that organizes and forms, whether they're blm, antifa, the Proud Boys, or just genuine people who are out there protesting something, they always get villainized by the government. The government will always find a way to say, no, they're idiots, or they're this. I mean, all the college students that were protesting for Palestine or advocating for Palestine, they were deemed domestic terrorists.
Sean
Yeah. Some of them got deported.
Kawa
They were called Hamas sympathizers. And, like, we were calling our own kids terrorists because they're exercising their First Amendment. Yeah, because we didn't agree about. We didn't agree with, you know, what they were saying, so let's just take away their freedom.
Sean
A terrorist has lost its meaning. To me, that word. Same with anti Semitism. Yeah, it means nothing. Honestly, to me.
Kawa
Yeah, it means nothing. Somebody calls me an anti Semite, I'm like, whereas.
Sean
Like.
Kawa
Whereas, like three, four years ago, you'd be like, oh, my God. Yeah.
Sean
You'd be walking on eggshells.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
But now it's like, now it's literally a compliment to me.
Kawa
It is people. That's like a war cry. It's like anti Semit of the year. I feel honored.
Sean
I'm sure you've been nominated for that.
Kawa
But, I mean, it's good. I mean. I mean, I have a lot of people that, you know, send me a lot of hate messages. I get death threats. I get people that are like, I'm gonna figure out, like, what your company is. I'm gonna sue you. I'm gonna figure out who you work with and tell them not to work with, you know, such an inside semi.
Sean
They go after your sponsors and partners.
Kawa
Right. And I'm like, okay, go ahead. Doesn't work. I don't work. I don't work for anybody. You know, like, when I left the military, I was done working for people.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
Right. So I. I started my own company, and that's. I work for myself, but if you want to come after me, fine. And. And the death threats don't mean anything, but it's like, I don't waste my time on those people. But when somebody asks me, like, a legitimate question, I'm like, okay, this person, like, took time. And it's a good. It's a good question.
Sean
So I'll.
Kawa
I'll answer it. Productive. And sometimes I. That goes into conversations and people kind of wake up. From that sometimes it goes nowhere. Yeah, but, but we got to continue to do that basically. Right? It's like we just can't let this fear of being called an anti Semite or that you're going to get canceled, that can't be the fear that, that keeps you to shut up. You know, need to speak up. And a lot of people say, well, k, you don't work for anybody, but I do. And if my boss hears this, then, you know, it's like, okay, understood. I'm not telling you to get. Put yourself in a dangerous place where you do lose a lifeline, but it's like, what are you going to do? Yeah, right. Because you're going to be old and gray one day and you're going to look back and be like, dang, I could have done something. I should have done something. And so you, you have that opportunity now and find your place, man. Just, just find your place and find your space and, and start speaking up and that's it. We just got to educate each other. Yeah. Yeah.
Sean
I've given up millions in, in sponsorship just to be able to speak my mind and have my guests speak their mind. I've lost a lot of sponsors because of that, though.
Kawa
Yeah, but you take, you've. What you gained is so much respect from everybody who sees that.
Sean
Yeah. It's a trade off.
Kawa
And now you're, you're attracting the right people. Right. So.
Sean
Well, I want my guests to be able to speak their mind too.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
I don't want them to hold back, dude.
Kawa
And that's why I respected your show when Ian told me and I checked you out and I was like, dude, this guy brings on everybody. He just lets everybody express their opinions. There is no bias here. And so. Which I appreciate. Right. But at the same time, you're not going to be biased as well, because then what's the point of all this?
Sean
Yeah, for sure. Was it a bit of an identity crisis for you when you found out Israel's influence in some of these wars that you got deployed to and spent a lot of time fighting in?
Kawa
Yeah, that was, that was like a hard pill to swallow. But then it's also therapeutic because, like, yeah, we went to Iraq for the wrong reasons. We went to Afghanistan for the wrong reasons. Lies, basically. And I deployed to both places several times as well as several other countries in the Middle east. And I gained a lot of knowledge and experience out of those wars and all that time in the military. And I made a lot of lifelong friends and I. And like a brotherhood for sure. And I became an asset to. To. To my unit. Just like we all. We were. We were all assets. But once I. I mean, once I kind of came to this realization, I mean, I wasn't really for the war in the beginning, because even after 9, 11. I mean, I was a Marine. I was a young Marine when 911 happened. But I knew. I was like, this doesn't sound right.
Sean
Barely. Back then you knew?
Kawa
Yeah, even back then, I was like, it doesn't sound Right. Like, 19. 19 dudes. Okay. Could have been 19 dudes. Right. And then all these, like, little holes in the story were kind of showing. You know, you see something missing here or there, and you're like, wait a minute. This doesn't sound right. And just from a. Just from, like, maybe six months in, I was convinced. I was like, nah, man, this was like an inside job. Yeah. You know, like, a lot of that information came out, and I was like, no, it's inside job. But that gets me to a place where it's like, I did everything I did for my country, and really, at the end of the day, I did it for the guys to my left and right.
Sean
Right.
Kawa
It's like, it doesn't matter where we were, what we were doing. As long as we get home from this, we get back to the base, I'm good. But then you think, you reflect on all that, and you're like, you know, you kill people for the wrong reasons. You terrorize people for the wrong reasons. You burn down homes, you blew up buildings. You basically became a tyrant in. In a neighborhood that's not your own, to a people that's not your own, you know, because, like, when we're fighting insurgents, that's one thing, right? Like, I don't feel bad about fighting insurgents because there's. Iraq became the playground for a lot of insurgency from different countries. People from Africa, people from Chechnya, people from all these places came to Iraq to fight Americans. Same thing with Afghanistan. But what I feel bad about is, like, during the invasion when I was fighting the Iraqi Republican Guard, who had a uniform and a rank and a name, dude, those guys signed up to defend their country, just like I signed up to defend my country. So who, like, who was really the good guy and the bad guy? Right, right. Because I feel like I'm more the bad guy because I invaded their country because I'm just doing what I'm told, and they're just defending their country. You know, who's wrong and who's right. So all that, like, you know, that. That kind of weighs on you a lot. But it's good to at least be able to say, I don't. I don't support that anymore. Like, I don't support wars. I don't support, like, this military industrial complex. And yes, I just talked about how I'm, you know, I basically have contracts or training and stuff. I want to continue to train our guys for sure, you know, and continue to equip them with, like, the best stuff in case we do have to fight. Right, right. But then at the same time, I don't support us going into a country for lies. And Venezuela, Iran. Like, I don't support us going to Iran because they're like, well, the women are oppressed over there, you know, and they're killing people. They're cutting bodies in half. Trump actually said they're cutting bodies in half. Wow. And they're. Oh, the latest one he said was that they're beheading babies in Iran. So now Iran is also beheading babies, guys, just to give you a fuller picture. And, you know, these are lies. Because if anybody who studied the history of Iran knows that Iran has always been very progressive, they. Like when the Shah was in power, when we staged a coup in 1953, and we took away the people's actual elected leader, Mussoude, and we put in the Shah, we. We did that for a reason, because we knew the Shah would give us the oil and he would. He would basically be controlled. Right. And so. But what did the Shah do to his people for the next 26 years? Up until 1979, he ruled with an iron fist. He had his own secret police. He killed a lot of people, but he mainly starved his people to death.
Sean
Jeez.
Kawa
A lack of jobs, a lack of education, a lack of actual food, while him and his elitist circle got richer and richer and richer off the backdoor deals for oil. None of that. He starved his people. The illiteracy rate was, like, below 20%. So then when you have 26 years of being oppressed, anybody that's been oppressed for 26 years would at some point say, look, man, if nobody else is coming to our rescue, then we need to do something. Right? So when you have enough of that, then people organize and they arm themselves and they take to the streets, Right? And so what happened in 1979 was the Islamic revolution, where the people literally took their country back by force. Now, when we talk about, like, staged coups and we like our militias to, like, Libya. Libya is a good example of us initiating a Revolution, which was really just a paid revolt to take out Gaddafi. But in Iran, the revolution was real. The people actually took their country back. And who they put in charge was who they wanted to put in charge. It was the Ayatollah Khomeini. But the Ayatollah Khomeini, just like from Obama to Trump, swung so hard to that anti America side, because what he saw before him for 26 years was a very pro America, pro Israel person. So he swung hard the other way and said, we're anti America. So then he. There was the attack on the embassy, there was the Beirut bombing. There's other ways of attacking Americans. And he did that. And he attacked Americans in Iran or in Iraq and I think in Afghanistan, too. But that's what you get when this is what happens when you oppress it. When he, first of all, stage a couple, put a puppet in place, and then that puppet just completely neglects his own people. It you create these monsters, right? If nobody else is going to come to rescue them, they rescue themselves. They have to. They have to be worse than the people that are oppressing them. In order to achieve some kind of success, they have to kill without mercy. You know what I mean? Yeah. They don't think about kids, they don't think about, you know, any innocence. They just. They're just like, that's the target. We have to kill them. But then anybody that's looking in that doesn't understand says, these are terrorists, you know, when in actuality there could be a resistance. Now, what happened in Iran was part resistance, part extremism and terrorism, because again, the Ayatollah took such a hard approach on America that it created that. And so now, ever since the Ayatollah took office or took control, we had to demonize Iran because again, that's not our guy, and he's not going to be our guy. He already said that. Right. So we have to demonize.
Sean
That makes sense now.
Kawa
And the demonization of Iran starts in 1979 and it goes all the way to today because they're not a threat to America. Yes, they chant, death to America, but they don't mean death to the American people. They mean death to the leadership and the. The entity that is America.
Sean
The government.
Kawa
The government. Right. Well, it's also Israel, too, because we give Israel all this money, all these arms. The whole world sees that anything Israel does is associated to us. We're guilty by association and facilitation. Iran knows that. But they're really a threat to Israel. They're not a threat to America. Yeah.
Sean
Their missiles can't reach here.
Kawa
Right. They can't reach here. I mean, they can attack us in other ways, like our bases, sleeper cells, or, you know, just terrorism here. Like, but they can attack us that way. They can also attack us Cyber. Cyber. They can attack our infrastructure, like waterways.
Sean
I heard that. I heard they were planning that if Trump nuked them.
Kawa
So that. That would be. That was. If I was Iran, that would. That's what I would do. Because my forces can't touch Iranian forces, can't touch American forces. But I can hurt you in other ways.
Sean
And our electrical system is outdated.
Kawa
Right? Outdated and heavily overwhelmed.
Sean
Oh, really?
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
Wow. That's why it keeps going up. The prices.
Kawa
The prices keep going up. But also, California has scheduled blackouts.
Sean
Really?
Kawa
But the unscheduled blackouts has far superseded the scheduled blackouts. Now they have so many unscheduled blackouts throughout the state that everyone's just like, what the.
Sean
Dude, I always wonder if that shut down for a week, what the. What would happen?
Kawa
Yeah, and we saw what happened when we lose power for a week, because I forget what year it was. 20, 22, 23 in Houston. We had, like, a bad snowstorm.
Sean
Oh, snowstorm.
Kawa
And a lot of people lost power for two weeks.
Sean
Jeez.
Kawa
I heard up to 1 million Houstonians lost power for a week. Wow. And like, in that week, a lot of older people died. There's other people that got hurt. I mean. I mean, kind of. It was kind of chaotic for the community not to have power for, you know, for that long. So, yes, they can hit us in different ways, but Iran is a threat to Israel, and that's why Israel has to push America into doing something about it. Because I. And they're. And if you ask, like, well, why is Iran a threat to Israel? It's because Israel is. Is a expansionist state. They can. They want to continue to take. That's why they attack south Lebanon and they try to occupy it. That's why they attacked Syria. They stabilized it.
Sean
Greater Israel Project.
Kawa
Right, Right. So that's. That's. That's the Greater Israel Project. And Iran doesn't want that. Nobody does, really. But you can't control Israel. Israel is like this. This wild card that nobody, not even America, can control, which is crazy, because
Sean
if we can't do it, no one can.
Kawa
No. And so what happens is, if we allow Israel to continue to just do whatever they want, then once they get to a Greater Israel Project, it doesn't stop there. It continues to Grow because they will be so powerful by then that who's going to be able to stop them? And America won't, because America is occupied.
Sean
Yeah. It's crazy to me because I'm a numbers guy. I just don't get it. Because they don't have the numbers to pull this off.
Kawa
No, they don't. That's why we have the numbers to pull this off. Why. Why were they not in Iraq? Why was the IDF not serving Iraq? Why were they not in Afghanistan? Why were they not in Libya? No, Mossad is an international agency. They go everywhere.
Sean
Right.
Kawa
But the IDF stay local because they don't have the manpower. Plus, that's not their. That's not their MO. Their MOs to drop a bunch of bombs and then cry victim.
Sean
That's their go to. You ever have any run ins with Mossad when you were serving? I've heard some wild stories. Without those guys.
Kawa
No, not that I know of.
Sean
Yeah. You wouldn't know probably, right. Yeah.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
John Kiriakou has said some crazy stuff about.
Kawa
Yeah, I love John.
Sean
He's a good. Good. Fighting the good fight.
Kawa
Shout out to John. I think so. Yeah. They try to villainize him, too. Call him a traitor and this and that, but.
Sean
Yeah, well, trader has lost its meaning to me, too, because look how they paint him. Edward Snowden. Anyone they're saying is a traitor is like a hero to me.
Kawa
Aaron Bushnell, right. The kids set himself on fire in front of the Israeli embassy as a way to protest.
Sean
Oh, that was Aaron. Yeah, Yeah, I saw that. He killed himself, right?
Kawa
Yeah. Jeez. I mean, imagine getting to a place where you feel so bad for a situation that you would inflict that kind of harm and pain to yourself.
Sean
That's one of the worst ways to go, right? Burning.
Kawa
It's like he didn't even recruit people. He didn't put out, like, a thing. What is it called? Like a manifesto or whatever. He just said one. He had one letter that said, the people of Palestine are suffering, and this is the only way for me to get my message across. Yeah, dude, that takes a lot of balls.
Sean
I mean, the people are speaking, man. It's looking like this term with Trump right now is ruining his legacy. Yes. I think if he stopped after his first term, he would have gone down as a decent president, and.
Kawa
And he could have continued in this presidency as probably the greatest president in history, but he had to completely go against what Israel wanted. Yeah. That's why we see a hard shift in him this time. After the butler thing, we see A hard shift. Now, whether that was fake or not makes no difference. But that's where the shift happened. Right. He either. If it was real, then he felt threatened and he's like, I need to play it. Yeah. I don't want to get jiffed. If it was fake, then that was his. That was like the beginning of the game. Right. Because now everyone's backing Trump, so whatever Trump says can't go wrong now. He's been. He's been divinely saved by God. Yeah, Right. And you see his latest stunt with him putting him.
Sean
He had to take it down.
Kawa
He took it down instead. He thought I was. I thought I was a doctor, bro. I know you're 80 and, like, you know, degenerative in your mental state, but, like, you knew exactly what you were doing. Right. So it's just these things. He's constantly putting his foot in his mouth. But honestly, like, when you're a sociopath and a narcissist, you, over time, you can't help but to expose yourself.
Sean
Yeah, naturally.
Kawa
And. And everybody else is just a yes guy because there's. Everyone's so scared of them. Nobody has to get fired.
Sean
It doesn't seem on the president level much will change on either side. But I think you're right about the local levels. We start there, get some people representative and work our way up.
Kawa
Yeah. So don't feel, like, overwhelmed. Like, what can I do? Well, first of all, identify three, four people that feel the same way, and then. And then pick a place. You know, for me, if I ran or ran for office or even anything, it would be for the tollway. I'd be like, let's get rid of.
Sean
You Might win just off that alone.
Kawa
I mean, it's, it's. Again, it's a bipartisan issue. It's not. It's not just affecting one demographic of people. It's affecting all of us. This is all just like the tariffs and everything else. That's a scam.
Sean
I think you have to pay 30 to get into New York now in tolls.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
Isn't that nuts? Imagine if you're working there and you live in Jersey. You got to drive there and back every day.
Kawa
In Texas, there's like seven different toll companies.
Sean
That's weird.
Kawa
So you just can't, like, pay the one there's local and you get. You have to pay, like, to each. You have to create accounts with these.
Sean
Yeah, that's a scam for sure.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
That doesn't even make sense.
Kawa
Yeah, but again, that's what it is, guys. Don't like. This doesn't have to be a huge thing. Just start on. Start with your family, you know, start with your inner circles.
Sean
Texans are speaking up. You guys do not like that Crenshaw guy, right? I think he just got outed.
Kawa
No, a lot of people didn't like Crenshaw. Him. And I got into it, too.
Sean
Oh, yeah.
Kawa
And then. But nobody likes Abbott anymore because Abbott governor. Yeah. Because he's completely showed his ass, you know, like everything is Israel first with him.
Sean
Did he take APAC money?
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
Not surprising then if he's Israel first.
Kawa
Yeah. I think. I think I read from Track APAC that Texas gives $89 million to the state of Israel every. Every year.
Sean
What?
Kawa
And it's not like. It's not like a check that says to the state of Israel, but it's when we. That that money is being tracked and getting counted and saying, well, that's what's going to Israel. Because we give Israel every year without them asking for extra. We give them up to 20 billion every year.
Sean
So Texas is one of the biggest Israel donors.
Kawa
No, it's not.
Sean
Oh, it's not.
Kawa
I think Florida is. Or it's another state, but Florida makes sense. If you go on Track apac, you can see what each state pays.
Sean
I need to.
Kawa
That goes into. Yeah, there's a great page. Dude. Yeah.
Sean
Florida doesn't surprise me. There's a lot of Israel presence in Florida. I'd imagine New York up there, California probably.
Kawa
And it's. And it's an APAC thing. So it's like, you know, APAC is the American Israeli Public Affairs Committee or whatever they call themselves now. But really they were just the old. The design is Congress. Yeah, that's what they were called back then or something like that. So they changed their name. But they. They own both sides of the aisle. This is not a conservative lobby. This is not a liberal lobby. This is an Israel lobby. Right. And they need to register under fara, which is the Foreign Agent Registration Act. They need to register because if they registered, then we would. We as a public would see. Have to. We would get transparency into where the money's coming from and going. But if you look at APAC now, they give money to candidates as individual donors, but they still get. They're still part of APAC because APAC gets its money not just from rich donors, but also Israel gives. Right. You know, because the cycle is America. American politicians give all this money to Israel. Israel takes that, uses a lot of it, kicks some of that back to apac. So APAC can buy more politicians because why do they own 338 Congress members out of 435?
Sean
Yeah. Like almost 90%.
Kawa
Right. Well.
Sean
Crazy. It's actually insane.
Kawa
So how can you be, how can any of these people be America first when you're pretty much bought and paid for? And their only ask is they only have one ask Sean unconditionally. Right. Your unconditional support. And that's just not in your. Just not. That's not in just legislation and laws or bills that would get him more money. But that's the way you speak. Yeah, Right.
Sean
Big ask.
Kawa
If you ask a politician America first or Israel first, they can't even say America First. A lot of them don't answer that question.
Sean
They don't, you know, which is crazy.
Kawa
Their flags are all over their, their flags are all over the halls of Congress. I mean, and you know, we, we want to talk about the Islamification of, of America and people have a problem with that. But yet when we have the lighting of the Menorah happening in the White House, when we have big APAC dinners and all these Jewish people in the Oval Office, when you have all these politicians who go and kiss the wall in Israel, it's very, it's very clear to us at this point where you stand, right. I don't need you to say you're America First. I've seen it. Like it's. Remember what is. And you know, in Christianity they say that you're, it's, you know, you measure someone by the fruit. Right. So if your fruit is constantly in a rotten direction, Right. If it's just constantly rotten, then, then I know where, where you stand. But like I said, these up and coming politicians, they're. The biggest work right now is I don't take APAC money and I never will.
Sean
Yeah, that's the biggest flex right now
Kawa
because everyone's like, oh, okay.
Sean
I think people are going to win off that.
Kawa
Yeah, I think so too. We'll see with the midterms, but 100% agree with you.
Sean
I think there'll be a couple. And I think it'll be increasing.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
And I think eventually it'll reach the president level where they're gonna have to start thinking about it. Maybe not in 28, but maybe in, in 32.
Kawa
Congress just recently had a chance to basically bring an end to APAC and make them really like, make them register under Farah. But, but they all.
Sean
That's not surprising.
Kawa
They all voted no on that.
Sean
Yeah, that's not surprising. We'll see what happens. I think we're treading in the right direction, though.
Kawa
I think so.
Sean
I think overall, I know it's easy to get caught up and negative and go on Twitter for five minutes and.
Kawa
Yeah, I know, I know it seems like times are bad, guys, but just remember that all of this is, it's not, it's not happening in vain. Like, you know, yeah, some people are wake up because they can see past the narrative and headline. Some people, you have to take their lifeline in order for them to start waking up. You know what I mean? So, so yeah, it's, we're heading in a good direction, but it's the muddy. The water is constantly muddy. Yeah. And, and it's like hard navigating your way through this.
Sean
Absolutely.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
So you align with the America Verse movement.
Kawa
I align with. I'm, I'm like, I used to be a conservative, but, you know, I can't, I can't. Like, I'm not a conservative, but I'm not a liberal either.
Sean
Yeah. With the files. I just can't say I'm conservative anymore.
Kawa
I am a constitutionalist, though.
Sean
What's up?
Kawa
A constitutionalist is I, I, like if I have, if I'm going to give my unconditional support to anything, it's going to be to the Constitution. I think the Constitution upholds everything. When we talk about, you know, the First Amendment and what that means, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, freedom of protest. I, I, I give that to everybody. You could be a KKK gang and you're standing on the street saying, kill all black people or kill all brown people. And I'd be like, hang on, guys, before you villainize them, I get it. But that's still their First Amendment. So allow them to say it. Who cares, really? Like, who cares if they say it? Who's it affecting now? You can. What they want is they want attention, Right. So if they're targeting you say. And they're saying fuck brown people and black people. And you say, well, wait a minute, man, that's me. You give them exactly what they want. Right. You're feeding that troll. So is there hate speech? Yes, 100%. The harder part about hate speech is who gets to define hate speech?
Sean
That's a good point. Who gets to the point right now? It's definitely bias, those definitions.
Kawa
It always will be, though.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
Because me, my hate, and your hate and somebody else's hate. The definitions are subjective.
Sean
Right.
Kawa
Subjective. So, so it's that. So, yes, I agree that there are certain things that you people shouldn't say. And I think that not only is it offensive but it should be deemed almost criminal. But at the same time it's like it's their freedom of speech to be able to say that how you react to it is what you can control.
Sean
So do you think social media would be better if you could just say whatever?
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
Do you think there should be limitations?
Kawa
I mean, I think it'd be. No. I mean I think you can just, you could probably just say whatever. But here's the thing. If you're constantly just dogging on people, certain demographic, Muslims, black people, white people, then I don't think you're going to grow very much. That you'll grow, you'll grow with an ignorant crowd that support you. But who's going to, who's going to, who's going to be your sponsor? Right. And how are you going to grow? How are you going to monetize this? I think yes, you give people the freedom of speech, but if they start to abuse that freedom then I mean there eventually affects that.
Sean
I'm with you. Yeah. I'm all about it until it gets physical.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
When you're inciting physical harm and violence.
Kawa
Yeah. That's different because now you're crossing into like a different, a whole different arena of stuff, you know, getting physical people, physical harm and all that. So. Yeah, I agree with that. And honestly man, I think like blm, antifa, like these could have been peaceful protest or peaceful movements. But I also think that the people that were funding it also paid people to agitate. Yeah.
Sean
Human greed got involved.
Kawa
It only takes one person, right? It takes one person. Hey, hey. I'm gonna give you 20 bucks. Go break that window. Yeah.
Sean
BLM was a scam. I donated to them, but then I found out they bought mansions and shit.
Kawa
Exactly. Right.
Sean
If I haven't looked into. But Trump obviously labeled them as a terrorist organization. I don't know what's going on with them, but.
Kawa
Yeah, so, but well they're, they're hibernating right now. Yeah. So they'll be activated when they need it. But I believe in that. I believe in the second amendment. I believe everyone should have the ability to own a firearm. That's your God given right. That's your constitutional right. You should have the ability to be able to defend yourself. Because, because you know, if you don't, now we can talk about like what it means if we didn't have like a tyrannical government. If we just had like this really great government then, then we could maybe there would be like gun control would have a leg to stand on. But we have a government that is Putting us on 27, 247 surveillance. Yeah. Through your phone, through security cameras, TVs, Palantir flock. Name it. Right. You have a government that is choking your lifelines. Gas is up, groceries are up. You have a government that's oppressing your freedom, oppressing your freedom of information. Right. Where you get your information from, if it's biased or if it's not, if it's, you know, not aligned with theirs. So you have this government that is heading in a very tyrannical direction. It may not happen in my lifetime. It may happen in your lifetime. It may happen at the pace that we're going now. It's probably going to happen when I'm just old enough where I can't like hold a gun. I'm gonna be all like fragile and stuff, you know. But if it does ever happen, then the Second amendment gives you the right to pick up arms that defend yourself against a tyrannical police state or military or just a government in general.
Sean
It's one of the first things I bought when I moved here.
Kawa
But there's a lot of people that, you know, I think the Constitution, they're, there's this like underground push for the Constitution to be amended.
Sean
Yeah, I've seen that actually.
Kawa
I mean, look what Israel did with the whole anti Semite thing. They made a whole task force to go after people, basically. It's a, you know, they're, they're, they're going after your freedom of speech. But because they have so much influence, it's okay. Like if they deem you an anti Semite. Did you know, in most states you have to sign a contract that says if you're going to do government work, you cannot boycott Israel.
Sean
What? I did not know that.
Kawa
Wow. So dig into that one.
Sean
Yeah, I'm going to look into that.
Kawa
Right. You cannot boycott Israel or Israeli products
Sean
just for getting into government contracts.
Kawa
They won't. They won't. It's part of the contract.
Sean
Wow. So I would probably get denied if I applied for a contract.
Kawa
So I mean, and, and like, I, I, there's no Israel Israeli products that I even use. But I also have the choice of working with companies that either work with Israel, they don't. So I can still contract with the government, be like, cool. I can just stay clear of that whole thing, you know, depending on the niche or whatever.
Sean
Got it.
Kawa
In this, in this industry, basically defense industry, Israel has a lot of presence in the defense industry.
Sean
I've heard that.
Kawa
So it's like, I just, I mean, I wouldn't work with anybody that is from Israel or supports Israel anyway. Wow, that's your line. The statement that I've made to everybody and I'm here making it now, that I will just like when I tell people I will train every agency in our government, minus Department of Justice and the atf.
Sean
Atf, which one's that one?
Kawa
The Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Right. Because they're, because I feel like both of those agencies are highly, highly corrupt. I mean, the DOJ is, come on, it's a, it's a sham by now. Yeah, thank you, Pam Bondi for that one. Cash Patel. And then you got the atf, where Cash Patel came from, that's also a joke and a scam and all it does is suppress Americans rights. So those are like the two companies or two agencies that I would never train. And I'm saying it here again, I've said it several times. I, I stand on everything that I believe in and, and I execute by that. But you know, that doesn't mean that I can't work in this industry either. Yeah. You know, like I'm a Green Beret. All I've known is fighting war and, and doing that for 23 years. It's like if I took myself completely out of that, what am I? You know, I'm like, I'm a warrior in a garden. You know, I'm just like, I'm all kitted up, but I have nothing to do but admire the beautiful flowers. Like, I can't do that.
Sean
Yeah, I feel that. So would you train FBI or CIA?
Kawa
I have trained FBI and CIA.
Sean
No issues there.
Kawa
No, I mean, look, I have my, I have, my problem with the, with the CIA. Yeah. But it's, again, it's not, you can't blanket, you can't put a blanket statement out for every agency. Like, you can't say all Muslims are terrorists. You can't say that all CIA is bad. Right. Because a lot of the Central Intelligence Agency has very important jobs that actually do help us with protecting Americans in this country. And in order to protect Americans in this country, they're not just waiting for that info, they're going out there to get the info.
Sean
They're putting their life on the line.
Kawa
They're putting their life on the line to collect intelligence. Now you could say, well, that's spying on people. Okay, we do the same thing to ourselves. Let's get over, let's get over that. But they're out there collecting intel that could be dangerous to Americans. Right. So there's a lot of, part of the, there's a lot of the agency that I support and I think they're doing good stuff, protecting Americans. Then there's also the dark side. Yeah. Of the agency.
Sean
Deep State, they call it.
Kawa
Right, right. And so it's the same for really almost every organization, really. But so there's nuances. I guess what I'm saying at the end of the day is I'm very nuanced in everything that I do and everything that I believe. Like, I don't have to hate Trump because I didn't like his, his photo, you know, of him depicting himself, but I also don't have to hate him just for that. I don't have to. Like, for me, it's a pattern of recognition. Right. It's you telling us who you are through your actions that gets me to either they hate you or dislike you or support you. So like I can, I can be, I'm so, I'm so nuanced that I'll sit there and I'll listen to a pastor preach gospel. And I'm like, yeah, I like that, dude. Really? Because to me it's, it's a principle based guidance. It's saying, be good, do good, expect good. Right. But. And it's saying to, it's saying positive things. It's not saying, well, Paul said this and, and you know, or Prophet Muhammad, you know, peace be upon him, said that. It's like, so I can agree with that stuff, you know, and I can be very nuanced towards my own culture and my own, my own religion too. You know, that doesn't mean that I'm not going to be a Muslim. I think people have a problem with that. They just, they just. Ben, they like bandwagon for people. They're just 100% in, you know, 100.
Sean
Anything Trump does.
Kawa
And that's MAGA. Yeah, we're describing MAGA right now. A very, like, I mean, it's a cold. Let's, let's call what it is. It's a cult. If you, and you don't realize you're in a cult because you're in the cult. Right. And people who are defending him with this picture of him depending himself as Jesus, peace be upon him, then
Sean
they'll defend anything he does.
Kawa
Are you, are you actually a Christian? Like, I, I just, I don't understand. Like. Yeah, because Christianity says to. That Jesus is the son of God or that Jesus is God himself. Okay. So if that's what you believe and this man is clearly depending himself as that, and you're okay with that, then are you even like, are you a good Christian? Right. Are you a good faithful person? Yeah, I don't question, I question your faith, right? So, like, Trump is not a faithful person. He's not a religious person. He doesn't go to the church. He would be bored of the church, listening to some pastor glorify somebody else for an hour. He would be angry that that's not him.
Sean
100% right.
Kawa
He's like, what? This whole hour is going to be about somebody that's not me? No, dude, when do I get to go out there? Like, he's not a religious person. He doesn't read the Bible, but yet evangelicals will prop him up like he was divinely saved in Butler or that, you know, so it's, it's that whole thing, man, it's crazy. I don't know. And, and this, this is a, like a, like that third strike for a lot of people. I, I do. I've been, I've been listening to people, I've been like hearing things on, on social media, watching people talk. And like all these conservatives are like, this is it. This is the strike.
Sean
This was a bad one. I mean, he took it down quick.
Kawa
First strike, Epstein files.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
Second strike. I ran third strike. You putting this photo up for this
Sean
photo, I think Israel, Palestine, he handled pretty bad too. Yeah, that could be another strike.
Kawa
I mean, that's, that's. Yeah, that could be definitely a third strike. I mean, there's more strikes. Venezuela.
Sean
Yeah, but Venezuela, he was able to control that narrative, I think, pretty well.
Kawa
Yeah. And like, nobody asked about Maduro now.
Sean
Yeah. No one.
Kawa
Where's Maduro?
Sean
I feel like he handled that well. Ukraine, Russia, he got some heat, but no one talks about it anymore.
Kawa
Well, he handled it well because it goes by to back to the same playbook, distract. Maduro was supporting Palestine. He said it publicly several times. He condemned Israel several times. And, and you can't do that. Right. Because you have Argentina. That's right there. They're heavily pro Israel. You have all these different southern states. I mean, look at the president of Mexico. She's Israeli, Zionist.
Sean
Yeah. That's crazy.
Kawa
Like, how does that happen in Mexico? In Mexico, you know, and we still want to think the cartels are bad guys. Right.
Sean
So didn't they take out someone in
Kawa
the cartel too, to distract us?
Sean
Yeah, a couple weeks ago.
Kawa
Yeah, because, you know, they, well, they took out, they took out A member of the cartel that was going against the cartel. Like the cartel, he was getting too big too fast. And you know, the cartel works with the Mexican government. It's. There's a whole exchange there. Just like they work with our government. There's a whole exchange there. But like when somebody is stepping outside of that exchange and as like a lone actor or independent, you know, then it's like, wait a minute, he's up our process. We gotta crazy.
Sean
And they demonized him.
Kawa
That's it. So they take him out, they take out Maduro because again, he's disrupting the process. They took out a bunch of people because. Disrupting the process. Saddam, Noriega, name it. Yeah, right. Gaddafi. Yeah.
Sean
It goes on and on.
Kawa
Right, right.
Sean
Osama. It makes you wonder like who was actually the villain.
Kawa
The villain's all the same, man. So it's all these rich elitist 1 percenter types that are at the very top that have so much money control that they can just do whatever they want. They can make fake meat. Yeah, right.
Sean
Doing that.
Kawa
They can, they can, they can throw something out there that gets the entire public going. It's. It's always them. They can start wars and they start wars for. He's a bad guy. They're oppressed and this, that. But at the top, they're like banking oil, you know, like they're just like controlling their currency. Like it's just things that gives them control. You got. When you got people like Bill Gates talking about reducing the population, he doesn't mean when people get old, they die. Right. So it's like he's literally saying that he wants to kill people.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
In order to reduce the population.
Sean
The next weapon I'm worried about is AI. I think they're gonna control everyone with AI 100. It's already been shown to lower your IQ.
Kawa
That's why it's free. Right now. They want to flood the market. Yeah, they flood the market. They get you dependent on it. Right. And you're sucking on that teat for so long that when they, when they come back and they say, oh, now it costs, you know, for every one hour that you want to use, it costs $5.
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
You're like, oh, shit, wait a minute. But I'm dependent on it. You know, my brain stopped working a long time ago because everything's AI.
Sean
It's. Yeah, it's been proven to make you dumber. They're slowly making the AI models dumber on purpose. Also, Claude just got exposed yesterday. They're reducing its effectiveness by 67% already.
Kawa
Wow.
Sean
So you're going to slowly get used to dumber and dumber answers. Basically makes sense over time.
Kawa
I saw that with, with chat. That's why I left.
Sean
Chat sucks.
Kawa
Now open AI.
Sean
That's terrible.
Kawa
And I went to Claude and I was like, okay, Claude's not as smooth, but it's. It's way better.
Sean
It's better, but it's getting worse now.
Kawa
It's getting worse or something.
Sean
Yeah. And a lot of these AI agencies are not agencies. A lot of these AI companies report to government agencies, of course, as well.
Kawa
Of course.
Sean
So they got a lot more information on you.
Kawa
Yeah, I mean, OpenAI works with the government. We know that. We know Palantir is a big database of, you know, painting a pattern of life on you. Right. That's what Palantir does. And, and so between that they have AI targeting systems and they have a pattern of life on you. It's the perfect way to control people. Yeah. 24 hour surveillance. Right. And, and that's where it's going. It's a digital age of, of surveillance. And it's a digital age of, of some kind of imprisonment. But it's also like, why they push all these green programs. Bluetooth this and, and, you know, like electric that. Like, you should have an electric car. Okay. And you're in your fridge, talks to this and you're smart. Fridge. Yeah. So everything that talks to your network, they have control of now. Right. Just like Tesla can recall your car overnight, have it back in the morning in time for you to get into it. Right. These guys can, can now say kawa, that social media post you made last week was bad. So we are, we're gonna punish you by. You're not gonna be able to drive your car this week. It won't turn on. Or we're not gonna allow you to go buy certain groceries because now your money's digital.
Sean
Digital dollar.
Kawa
Digital dollar.
Sean
That's common.
Kawa
That's. Yeah, I mean, the, you know, it's common because it's easier to control.
Sean
Yeah. You know, that's why I'm going towards community, towards homesteading, towards bartering.
Kawa
That's it.
Sean
You know, that's the answer. Stacking up some heavy metals, some crypto, doing what I can.
Kawa
Yeah, that's, that's my advice to everybody, is to get into real estate, get smart on it. Go buy land, learn how to establish a family trust and put everything into that family trust. Go buy some land and then, you know, build as many homes as you want because the trust Owns it, you don't. And then bring your whole family there, turn into a compound, you know, grow your own vegetables and all of that. Dude, that's where it has to come down to. Because even your groceries now, you can't trust no organic.
Sean
Organic's a scam, right?
Kawa
GMO or non GMO or GMO verified or whatever it is. Like all these labels are all, everything is.
Sean
Even grass fed is a scam. Grass fed, they only have to be fed grass once.
Kawa
Open range. Like everything is a scam. Yeah.
Sean
They did a study on pasture raised eggs and they were actually worse.
Kawa
Right.
Sean
Than some eggs. Isn't that nuts? And you pay 5x the price.
Kawa
And, and like to me I'd be like, well, the, the more orange the yolk, the more fresh or organic it is. But in that same case, didn't they, didn't they realize that the yolk was being dyed or.
Sean
Yeah, something like that. I saw that. And then you go to countries like Bolivia, where my wife's family's from, they don't even refrigerate the eggs there because they're so natural. You don't have to.
Kawa
And you don't. I mean, when the chicken lays an egg is also what's on that egg is a coating that allows that egg to survive and even hot temperatures for weeks. But as soon as you wash those eggs, then that coating goes and now you have to refrigerate it. So that's why your eggs are in the fridge section. Because if they were fresh eggs, they wouldn't need to refrigerate them.
Sean
Yeah, the food's dead at that point. Yeah.
Kawa
But when you wash that coating off. Yeah, yeah.
Sean
Even the chicken, they sell you, they, I think they put in chlorine or something. All the meat. Yeah, something crazy like that.
Kawa
They'll inject like, like salt water or whatever in there. Like they, they puff it up. Everything's fake. Guys, we know this now, right?
Sean
Yeah.
Kawa
So what does that tell you? Like, you gotta do something about it.
Sean
Go to the farmer's market.
Kawa
Go to the farmer's market. Establish some rapport with the farmer. Go, go, go buy locally. Right. Or just again, go homestead. Because, you know, it was harder and harder to own a home.
Sean
So it's expensive.
Kawa
They're making it that way, right?
Sean
Oh, for sure.
Kawa
When you, when you sell your house next, you're not going to sell it to some young couple.
Sean
No.
Kawa
You're going to sell it to some corporation vc.
Sean
Yeah, they're eating up Vegas, man. Eating up. Like, yeah, dude, it's super hard to own a house out here.
Kawa
They're going to shove all of us into like little one and two, two bedroom apartments. Yeah, that's what they want.
Sean
I just saw a documentary on Vegas actually because like all the vc, the hotels now, so basically you used to be able to come to Vegas and be treated like a king. Twenty, 30 years ago, I'm sure you might have experienced that. Now it's like you don't get anything.
Kawa
I gotta be honest with you. No, nothing against Vegas, but I, I can't stand this. Like for me I'll get here on a Friday and by Sunday I need to leave.
Sean
Yeah, I don't blame you. The Strip is, takes the energy out
Kawa
of you, you know, and, and it's just. But like I, but like in Henderson, you know, it's like any away from the Strip though. But the only people, the only reason people come to Vegas for the Strip, so. But yeah, it's just that man, I can't live here, I can't live in LA anymore.
Sean
LA for sure.
Kawa
I love, I love visiting, I love my 3, 4, 5 day trips and I go, you know, my favorite food spots, I go to the beach or whatever. But then I leave and I'm just like, man, so glad I got that place.
Sean
Yeah, no, I'm with you on that. Yeah, well LA is not even safe anymore. You can't even walk around there. I was trying to walk to a dinner out there and I had to get an Uber because it just didn't feel safe.
Kawa
There's definitely some places in LA that I would say have become less and less safe, especially on the coastal, some of the coastal cities because a lot of homeless people aggregate there. But you know, that goes right back into, well, why are they homeless? You know, and how did this get this bad? So policies goes right back into that, that, that, that politic politics topic.
Sean
Yeah, yeah, we'll save that for the next episode. Yeah, but dude, how can people support you, man, watching this? How can they find you and all that?
Kawa
Yeah, I mean, I mean my main platform is Instagram still. Like I've lost a lot of followers since October 7th.
Sean
Really?
Kawa
I started like, I kind of took a hard shift on my social media and I went from just gun stuff and tactics to now talking on politics.
Sean
And I thought you would have gained from that. That's surprising to me.
Kawa
I did. But I've been, I've been. But I've lost a lot of followers because you know, I'm coming after Israel hard. I'm coming after Trump hard. Yeah, I'm coming after conservatism hard. I'm coming after a lot of things. I also have to defend my religion all the time, you know, because I get all this. I get all these people thinking that Muslims are here to kill everybody. So every day I have to, like, say something, right?
Sean
Sharia law is going to end America.
Kawa
Yeah, Sharia law. And by the way, guys, Sharia law is never going to happen in this country because the Constitution says that religion has no place in politics. In fact, I think it was the. The Tripoli Treaty, and it's like 1791 or whatever that was that basically said that all religions are equal.
Sean
Interesting.
Kawa
You know, and if you think about it, you know, then. Then if. Because. Are there biblical laws in this country, Sean?
Sean
No.
Kawa
Torah laws? Canon laws? No. So why are we afraid of a religious law when we have gone all these years, all these centuries with no religious laws? The Constitution guarantees that Sharia law will never happen. No religious law will ever happen.
Sean
I didn't know that was in the Constitution. Because Christian nationalism seems to be pretty grown right now.
Kawa
It's. Yeah, it's growing.
Sean
Which is ironic.
Kawa
Right. It's because they're pushing Islamophobia hard. They have to push Islamophobia hard because they have to get people to sympathize with the Iran war. Right, right. We can't see them as humans. We can't see them as good people.
Sean
They be doing that programming for decades, by the way.
Kawa
Of course. Because we've been in the Middle east for decades. Yeah, right. You've been there for 50 years.
Sean
At least nine. Eleven was.
Kawa
Yeah.
Sean
That could be the start.
Kawa
Right, Right. And then we. And then we wonder, well, why do. Why do Muslims not like America? I don't know, man. Maybe it's because we've been in. We've been destabilizing their entire region for five decades. Yeah. Is because we've been destroying their homes, we've been killing them, we've been displacing them, we've been destroying their infrastructure for five decades. I mean, would you like somebody after five decades of that? No. So, yeah, they don't like us. And they're like, well, you know, Islam is. Muslims just want to kill everybody. It's like, you are starting a book in the middle, and you're not. Like, you just picked up this new book and you just flipped to a random page and you're like, this is where I'm going to start. Muslims like to kill everybody. Right. You know, Forget the first 80 pages. That I missed. But you have to go back to the beginning of what happened. Muslims don't just dislike America. They dislike America for a very specific reason that we perpetually give them a reason for right. When we're over there all the time. So it's that, it's that whole campaign. And that's why Christian nationalism or Nash. Yeah, Christian nationalism has grown and spiked because they give them this talking point that everyone is just drunk off this Kool Aid. And until people wake up and look, if you, you know, there's a lot of people out there that will bash Islam and they have big followings. But you know what happens a lot in these when you see a viral story and you're like, wait a minute, really? That's Islam? That's crazy. I didn't know that. Do me a favor and just like open up your little chat right GBT thing and just say, show me the verse from the Quran and show me the surrounding verses too. Like give me some context. Right? Because when you read the context in the Quran, nowhere does it say kill Christians. Nowhere does it say kill infidels. If it does say kill infidels, non believers, it says to kill them because they did something to you first. Like you have to go back a couple verses because somewhere in there something happened. And you also have to understand that the Quran was revealed to Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, over 23 years and in a timely fashion. Every verse was given to him to address an issue that was happening, a obstacle that he ran into, a conflict that he had to address. That's when the verses were revealed to him. So he knew how to handle it. So when you look at violence in Islam and in the Quran, there are parameters around that violence and most of it is in self defense. A lot of people will quote like chapter two, verses 190 or 191, right? It says kill, slay all non believers. But they don't put the rest of that in there. And they certainly didn't start at 190 and they certainly didn't go all the way to 193. Because when you read all four of those chapters or those verses, it says that you can only kill people when they are killing you first and then you. And then even then when you gain that superior over them in this conflict, you have to offer a treaty as the Muslim. Once you gain like the edge of the, of the battle, you have to say, look, you're outnumbered now or we're winning now we're offering you a treaty and if they turn your treaty down and they continue to attack you, then of course you can continue to slay these non believers. Right. And it wasn't Christians that were attacking Muslims in the beginning, it was pagans. So this isn't even directed at Christians. It's directed at paganistic Arabs, of all people.
Sean
Wow.
Kawa
Right? Not Europeans, not blonde hair, blue eyed people. It was these. These were given to Prophet Muhammad to say it. Whoever from your bloodline or whoever from your tribe is attacking you. Whoever from your region is attacking you. That is who this applies to. Well, I mean, as time goes on, it applies to more and more people, right? Yeah, so, but it's that. So people just, you know, I'll just say that, just go into the Quran, look that verse up, but then read the surrounding verses and if you still have a problem with it, great. You know, hit me up.
Sean
I'm reading that next. I'm wrapping up the Bible right now.
Kawa
Okay. Yeah, yeah.
Sean
I've been moderating a lot of debates, so I feel like I should have a basic understanding of both.
Kawa
Yeah. And it keeps you sharp, man. Honestly. Because you're like, why are you still talking about religion? Don't. And they're like, well, honestly, it kind of keeps me sharp. It makes me go look for things. It's that whole thing, right? Like if I just chat gbt, that's one thing. But if I pick up the Bible or the Quran and I really read it, then that's a whole different thing.
Sean
Going straight to source.
Kawa
Right? Source, Exactly. I'm not sure how we kind of came off.
Sean
Yeah, I was saying where could people find you? But yeah, I mentioned Sharia law and we got on a tangent.
Kawa
Oh yeah, I feel like I had to like say something about that because it's just so misused. Yeah. People can find me on Instagram. Kawam official. That's where I post most of it. I do it really just for relationships now, not for growth. We have a YouTube channel for two Alba training group that we kind of post inconsistently, but there's still a lot of good stuff on there. And then I have kind of separated this political segment of my pieces into another page called the weekly debrief Podcast. So that's on Instagram as well. But you guys can go to 2alphatraininggroup.com check out the website, just kind of see what my company's about. We're a training company. We have. We don't just train law enforcement and government. We train open enrollment to civilians. We train concealed carry stuff for civilians. Pistol, rifle, low light, cqb, lasers, anything they want. They want anything that there's a demand for in the civilian world. We would like to train. Because I enjoy training civilians more than I enjoy training anybody else because again, it goes back to the Second amendment. I encourage people to go buy a gun. Now, should everybody have a gun? No, but we encourage most people to go buy guns and exercise your rights and then go train with that. Because if you're going to pick up a new tool, you got to train, right?
Sean
Absolutely.
Kawa
So go train with that and get good at it. And then, you know, like, either use it as a concealer, use it as a range gun, who cares? But so we, we kind of train everybody but 12. A training group is what gives you a good picture of the company. For myself, I mean, I mean, I didn't get to introductions earlier, but Afghan born Muslim all my life, 20, 23 years in the military. I owned my company for the last eight years and. And that's me in a nutshell, man. Otherwise, I'm very family oriented and I. I try to stay home as much as I can, but, you know. And that's it. What else can I plug? No, that's it. Oh, I mean, I did some movies. Go check out, Go check out the Guy Ritchie movie. We did the Covenant with Jerry Gyllenhaal. That was cool. Greenberries in Afghanistan. Cool movie if you like Guy Ritchie. And then there's a Vietnam movie that's coming out soon. It's a Japanese and Thai production. Whoa. But it's interesting. It's an American movie about. With American actors, about Vietnam. America's in Vietnam. Whoa. And it's based on a true story.
Sean
I'll check that one out.
Kawa
Yeah. So right now the working name is Mr. Nelson. Did you kill people? But that might change for the movie. So we're getting close to a premiere. So.
Sean
Nice.
Kawa
But I do a little bit of consulting in Hollywood too.
Sean
Cool.
Kawa
Otherwise, that's it, guys. I appreciate.
Sean
Yeah, that was great, man. Thank you so much. Thanks for your service.
Kawa
Also appreciate the time. Appreciate you bringing me on.
Sean
Yeah, check them out, guys. We'll link all that below. Thanks for watching all the way to the end, guys. It means a lot. Please click here here if you want to watch the next episode and please subscribe to the show. It helps us get more guests and helps grow the brand.
Digital Social Hour — Episode Summary
Episode Title: When Did Protest Become A Crime?
Guest: Kawa Mawlayee
Host: Sean Kelly
Release Date: June 2, 2026
Podcast: Digital Social Hour (DSH #1995)
In this thought-provoking episode, host Sean Kelly sits down with Kawa Mawlayee—a former Special Forces Green Beret, military trainer, and outspoken political commentator—for an unfiltered conversation on modern warfare, the criminalization of protest, and the complex forces shaping American politics and foreign policy. The discussion explores the evolution of warfare (notably drones), US and Israeli influence in the Middle East, the blurred lines between resistance and terrorism, and the urgent need for grassroots civic engagement. Kawa shares hard-earned insights from his military past and calls for critical thinking, community action, and defense of constitutional rights.
Kawa’s Current Focus:
Kawa discusses his move from training elite military units to consulting on drone warfare and state/federal contracts. Drones are rapidly transforming modern battlefields, especially in Ukraine, Israel, and Iran.
“Drone warfare is the future... what’s really lacking is curriculum, protocol, what do we do? How does the enemy use these drones? How do we defend ourselves?” [01:04–04:16]
The “Power Curve” in Drone Tech:
The low cost and accessibility of drones have erased technological barriers between nations, but there’s a global lag in tactics and countermeasures.
“You can make a drone for 50 bucks... for military stuff, probably a few hundred dollars, but the real challenge is knowing how to use and defend against them.” [02:50–04:16]
Psychological Effects of Drone Warfare:
The spectacle of drone swarms can be deeply frightening:
“There’s a psychological effect of a drone buzzing around you... you know there’s no escape.” [04:34–05:34]
Strait of Hormuz & Oil Control:
The Iranian control of the Strait is driving up gas prices and global tension; allies like China and Russia bypass Western-imposed blockades.
“Iran has completely taken... physical control of it... Iran gets to pick who gets to go through.” [07:58–09:36]
Winners and Losers in War:
Kawa argues that only the elites profit from ongoing wars, while ordinary people at home and abroad suffer higher costs and fewer benefits.
“The only people that are winning are at the top, nowhere near the battlefield. As we can see in America, nothing’s getting better for us as this war goes on.” [06:46–07:25]
Redefining ‘Terrorists’ and ‘Regimes’:
Kawa urges listeners to question official designations of enemies, highlighting manipulation by politicians and media:
“Think about everyone who’s demonized in this world... It’s not because the people are oppressed... It’s because there’s a person in charge that’s not playing along with the bigger money game of oil and finances.” [09:37–11:31] “Once you understand that, you start to kind of see outside the narrative.” [11:31–13:36]
On Organizing and Taking Action:
Kawa stresses multifaceted, simultaneous political engagement—from boosting principled candidates (e.g., James Fishback) to building local action groups (e.g., the Modern Exodus initiative).
“We need people... who stand for America First, not some other country or lobby or interest... Identify those people and prop them up, set them up for success... But also hold them to account.” [13:45–16:05]
Criminalizing Protest:
There’s heavy-handed state backlash against student protesters, BLM, Antifa, etc.—branding them as “domestic terrorists” or foreign sympathizers for exercising free speech.
“All the college students protesting for Palestine, they were deemed domestic terrorists... we were calling our own kids terrorists because they’re exercising their First Amendment.” [21:02–21:16]
Loss of Meaning in Labels:
“Terrorist has lost its meaning to me, that word. Same with anti-Semitism. It means nothing, honestly, to me.” - Sean [21:16] “It’s literally a compliment to me... it’s a war cry, anti-Semite of the year. I feel honored.” - Kawa [21:32–21:39]
APAC, Politics, and Influence:
Major critique of the bipartisan grip of AIPAC (Israeli lobby) and how foreign entanglements warp US priorities. Most of Congress accepts AIPAC funds, prioritizing Israeli interests.
“APAC... owns both sides of the aisle... This is an Israel lobby... Their only ask is your unconditional support.” [39:26–40:59] “If you ask a politician America First or Israel First, they can’t even say America First. A lot of them don’t answer that question.” [41:00–41:11]
Pro-Palestine Awakening:
Global outrage over Gaza is changing public opinion, especially among younger Americans.
“People are waking up. The entire world woke up to Gaza, Palestine. They have the sympathy of billions.” [18:52–20:00]
Reconciling Service with Truth:
Kawa openly grapples with having participated in wars under false pretenses. He expresses regret for invading other nations and “becoming the tyrant” in someone else’s land.
“We went to Iraq for the wrong reasons, Afghanistan for the wrong reasons—lies, basically... You kill people for the wrong reasons, you terrorize people for the wrong reasons... you become a tyrant in a neighborhood that’s not your own.” [24:09–25:38]
Historical Context: Iran and Manufactured Enemies:
Kawa explains the US/UK coup in Iran (1953), the Shah’s oppression, and the roots of today’s hostility.
“When you stage a coup, put a puppet in place, and that puppet just completely neglects his own people, you create these monsters... If nobody else is going to rescue them, they rescue themselves.” [27:18–29:34]
“OpenAI works with the government... Palantir is a big database painting a pattern of life on you... pattern of life on you. 24 hour surveillance. It’s a digital age of surveillance and some kind of imprisonment.” [58:00–59:09]
Kawa’s Identity:
No longer identifies as conservative or liberal, but as a constitutionalist—committed to upholding the Bill of Rights for all, even speech he disagrees with.
“If I’m going to give unconditional support to anything, it’s the Constitution... I give that to everybody. You could be a KKK gang... I’d be like, hang on, before you villainize them... That’s still their First Amendment.” [43:31–44:33]
Limits of Free Speech:
Kawa draws the line at incitement to violence.
“When you’re inciting physical harm and violence, that’s different because now you’re crossing into a whole different arena.” - Sean [45:39]
Second Amendment:
The right to bear arms is crucial, especially given an increasingly tyrannical government.
“The Second Amendment gives you the right to pick up arms and defend yourself against a tyrannical police state or military or just a government in general.” [47:50]
Bartering, Homesteading, & Trusts:
In a world of digital currency and corporate land grabs, Kawa and Sean recommend investing in land, setting up family trusts, growing your own food, and supporting local farmers to reduce dependence on corrupted systems.
“Go buy land, learn how to establish a family trust and put everything into that family trust. ...grow your own vegetables... go homestead.” [59:26–61:04]
Food & Housing Scams:
Distrust of organic/farming labels and rising real estate costs driven by institutional investors.
“Organic’s a scam, right? ...Even grass-fed is a scam. Grass fed, they only have to be fed grass once.” [59:56–60:10]
On Sharia Law and American Values:
Kawa refutes claims that Islamic law threatens the US, citing constitutional protections separating law from religion.
“Sharia law is never going to happen in this country because the Constitution says religion has no place in politics…no religious law will ever happen.” [63:49–64:34]
On Islamophobia & Propaganda:
Anti-Muslim sentiment is manufactured to justify endless war in the Middle East.
“Christian nationalism... is because they’re pushing Islamophobia hard... because they have to get people to sympathize with the Iran war.” [64:41] “Muslims don’t just dislike America... it’s because we’ve been destabilizing their entire region for five decades.” [65:00–65:46]
On the Power Structure of War:
“This is not a war to... Usually when wars are fought, we are fighting for freedom... But... anybody we deem a regime... needs to go; it’s really just people that don’t play the bigger money game of oil and finances.” — Kawa [09:37–11:31]
On Free Speech and Activism:
“Anytime you have a group that organizes and forms—whether BLM, Antifa, Proud Boys, or just genuine people who are out there protesting—government will always find a way to say, ‘they’re idiots’ or ‘they’re this.’” — Kawa [20:25–21:02]
On Israel & US Politicians:
“APAC... their only ask is... your unconditional support.” — Kawa [40:59] “If you ask a politician America First or Israel First, they can’t even say America First. A lot... don’t answer that question.” — Kawa [41:00–41:11]
On Coming Clean About War:
“You terrorize people for the wrong reasons... you become a tyrant in a neighborhood that's not your own.” — Kawa [25:39]
On Labels Losing Meaning:
“Terrorist has lost its meaning to me... Same with anti-Semitism.” — Sean [21:16] “Now it’s literally a compliment to me... anti-Semite of the year. I feel honored.” — Kawa [21:32–21:39]
On Social Media Censorship and Cancel Culture:
“We just can’t let this fear of being called an anti-Semite or that you’re going to get canceled— that can't be the fear that keeps you to shut up. Need to speak up.” — Kawa [22:25]
On Food & Real Estate Corruption:
“Everything is fake guys, we know this now... Establish some rapport with the farmer... Or just again, go homestead.” — Kawa [61:11–61:25]
Throughout the episode, the tone is blunt, raw, and unapologetic—mirroring Kawa’s no-nonsense approach to both geopolitics and domestic affairs. There’s a call to vigilance and action: question mainstream narratives, defend constitutional rights, foster genuine community, and resist both state overreach and corporate manipulation.
This summary captures DSH #1995’s urgent and wide-ranging dialogue, offering a guide for listeners seeking clarity in an era of misinformation, manufactured enemies, and eroding civic rights.