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In today's high stakes world of emergency response, efficiency, speed and seamless communication are essential. Introducing Apollo, the next generation tactical software and communication tool designed for first responders. Its effortless integration through both mobile and desktop applications makes onboarding simple and straightforward when every second counts. Apollo's clarity, simplicity, next generation communication operations and adaptability allows first responders to act quickly and effectively in critical moments. Apollo empowering those who protect and serve.
B
Team for life. Good morning, it's Monday, October 20th. The antihero broadcast is here to bring you the best in information and entertainment relevant to the first responder and veteran community.
C
Absolutely.
B
Yeah, man. We got a bunch of topics man. The government shutdown, Gaza, no kings and the Venezuelan drug cartels that Trump's fucking putting a stop to that. I've been wanting to talk to you for a minute but is just kind.
C
Of been too much going on.
B
Yeah.
C
Oh yeah. And we're killing people in the, in the Caribbean. That is also happening. But all the other stuff we've got going on.
B
So give a shout out to our sponsors. Ghostbed. Go to ghostbed.com forward/antihero and save 10 on their already ridiculously low prices. They got everything from mattress toppers to pillows to obviously beds and mattresses. So you know, if you're, if you need to replace any bedding in your house, these guys support us. You support us directly by buying from them. And of course the boys over at Tasty gains, go to tastygains.com use promo code ANTI HERO. Save 20% on your supplements from everything from gummy pre workouts, gummy creatines and now their new thing, their nootropics, which is their version of alpha brain. And it works, trust me. So my ADHD ads can do all this stuff. I need the nootropics. It helps clarify everything. So go to tastygains.com use promo code ANTI AIR, save 20%.
A
Don't forget to check out our Patreon. We're very active in there. Ten new members and I'll post my leg day workout. That's the new, that's a new goal. We interact in there, we post videos, you get behind the scenes stuff. So we appreciate, we do a giveaway. And are we going to talk about Thursday?
B
What's Thursday?
A
Normally I pump the Thursday show but.
B
Yeah, it's, we're shooting to have it the night shift.
A
So yeah, our goal starting this Thursday is to have a broadcast again in the morning 11 to 1 just like today. It will be a long day for us and Then you will see the first ever, the new show on the counterculture network that will be co streamed on this anti hero channel and counterculture, which is the Night shift. New studio, new set, new format. Thursdays are still for the boys, but it can be a first responder. Military night shift, new logo, everything's new. Thursdays are still for the boys, but it's a new.
B
It's the graveyard shift.
A
It is. It's for the guys that are working. So we're going to give you the news again on Thursday morning updates for Monday. Everything is developed. Jimmy's going to use real big fancy words for you on Thursday mornings. And then come, come, come Thursday night, 8pm you're going to see the first ever night shift for the guys working. We're going to do call ins. More laid back, sitting on the couch, chilling, sitting on chairs or not couch, new set, new look.
B
But I showed it on Patreon.
A
Yeah. So that's a benefit of Patreon. We got a little behind the behind the scenes view of the new set that is rolling out Thursday.
B
We, we, we just came back from Philly.
A
Oh God.
B
Mike hasn't been home in like four days.
A
I last slept at home Wednesday night. I slept in the studio Thursday night after the show went to Philly. I slept in the airport last night. Came in 10 o' clock this morning. Go to the, can you go to the antihero inbox on Instagram? I want to pull that up real quick.
B
What is it?
A
I got Ukraine calling me. S. Ukraine calling. Are we under attack? Right there. Guy from Ukraine.
B
Yeah, answer.
A
Oh, okay. We'll pull this up real quick. Hold on one second. I'll have you on the air in a minute. All right, we're going to show you my highlight. We had a great Philly show. Good, good cause benefit for first responders and muted it. But my favorite part of the Philly trip is I'm going to show you here in a second. We're technologically advanced here. We raise money for first responders up there in Philly. We had a nice event.
C
What was the best time for you?
A
Oh, God, I don't know if I can say. I guess I can say it. We're, we're okay. This is a great Philly story. Before we show the picture.
C
That's great.
A
We are, we're doing the Philly show and we're doing a live. It's a live show, right? And we got an audience and there's some different ethnic. It's made up of very ethnically different people. And some guy. Tyler's gonna try to clip it. Some guy in the crowd, he's wearing overalls. He's got a beard. I'm telling the N word story, and he's got a beard. And he says, we're all live on stage. And this guy says he's telling a story, and he drops the N word.
B
Well, he did the thing where he's like, I don't say things like the.
A
End, but then dropped a hard R.
B
Yeah, I couldn't understand a word he said.
A
He's like, Boomhauer from the show. He was like, hey, Bob. But that word stood out. And he drops the word. And we can't hear because we're on stage. And I'm like, looking over.
B
I'm like, we're all looking around.
A
You just said N word. And there's like, there's black people in the crowd. And I was like, looking around, I'm like, oh, boy. And immediately we had a fireman from Jamaica that was black. He got up and left. And I was like, he can't say that. No, can't say that. But here's my favorite part of Philly. Not the N word. This is. This is. I finally got to meet. On the right there is Saladradi. Here's talk a lot about Sal. Indicted up in New Jersey. Bunch of bullshit. He's being paid by the Pipe Hitter Foundation. Thank you to Eddie and Andrea Gallagher for getting involved. That's Barbara in the middle. Barbara is one of the best human beings. Sal's okay. He brought me cheese steaks. But Barbara reminded me of my. My mother, my family. Open arms into the house. I got to meet the liberal grandma that gets yelled at for being a liberal. They are the. After meeting them even more so to go look at Sal's story. Help. Donate to the Pipeheader foundation to get Sal and other people like him that are indicted for bullshit help. I couldn't tell you in my 23 years of law enforcement to come full circle and have any platform. It was worth it to be able to go meet Sal and his mom and to be welcomed in that home and feel how passionate they are. Obviously, this guy's looking at serious time if he's injustly indicted. So that's kind of what we're here for, is guys like Sal. I know we talk about him a lot, but it's our baseline for the worst call ever. The worst thing ever to happen to law enforcement and then to fly two and a half hours and to be welcomed into a home. And feel like you're immediately part of the family. It was like a sitcom. They live in a row house. Like, they're in beautiful part of South Philly. Unfortunately, they're Eagles fans and all that, but we got Skinny Jim, Joe's, Skinny John. Skinny John, skinny something. Cheese steak. Beautiful. Awesome. But even more so after meeting them, it like, cranks up my meter of like, I'm ready to get arrested. I'm ready to go fight for this family because they are the nicest human beings I've ever met.
B
They're talking about your height.
C
How tall are you, Mike?
A
I'm 5 11. Like 205. Do I look small?
C
No, they're like, there's Mic a giant.
A
No, no, no. Sal's a little. Little gabagool man about it. He's a little short guy. Yeah, he's a great dude, though. You know, just. I didn't get to meet dad. Dad was. Unfortunately, which we can transition. Dad is a Philly cop for his entire life, and they work in doubles up there because of the no Kings protest. So I did not get to meet dad, who is a dedicated Philadelphia police officer. Still on the SWAT team and all that up there, but amazing people. I'm only 5 11, and I got massive tree trunk legs, as you can see.
B
I was gonna say, if we get 10 subscribers to Patreon and then you post your leg day workout, it will literally be no post.
A
You. You came in the gym late. I posted in the gym on Patreon when I was up there. I do. I don't do squats. I don't. But I do high intensity workouts with. I use like, the arc trainer or a StairMaster or something. I set it on maximum resistance, so I do legs, like 100 calories. Then I do a circuit of like, chest, upper body. Because there's a hotel gym. It's actually not bad, but, you know, I'll have my full workout. So I do like, an upper body. Gotta get jacked and tan for the night show, so. But my legs are incredibly strong.
B
There's a post in the anti hero DMS from me. But we're gonna, you know, we're gonna try every, like, once a week. I want. We get. There's a lot of outreach towards us for charities and GoFundMe and helping people that, you know, we kind of derive this show on information entertainment for the warriors, the veterans and the first responders. We're big on Romans 13. You know, that's. That's our. What we can do in the Christian community. Is just, just at least stand up for them or have a. Give them a voice.
A
So before you, before you get to that though, that what he's saying is when I was new to the platform and new to social media, I used to talk a lot about the donations. I try not to do that. I feel like people say, oh, you're bragging. We donate a lot. And I'm just, I'm gonna say this once and then we'll move on. We donate a lot and we ex. We would, we'd love to have you guys send stuff to us to help get donations out. Over the weekend, a female reached out to me and my wife canine. I posted on my story. I'm not gonna. But we donate money. We want to help all of you. So by all means, if you have a GoFundMe for something, anything that is not criminal activity, we will share it. We will help you get donations, we will push it. That's big in our platform.
B
Can I see the dms? All right. No. So go to Tyler over there on the left, right there. If you could just. If. Is it possible to post that? No sound. You don't need sound. But maybe the next picture. Anyways, this isn't so much a donation as an awareness.
C
Yeah, yeah, I saw this this morning too.
B
I'm going to read it. Oh my goodness. Sorry guys.
A
It's all right. It's a live show. Yeah, I mean, you want some pre recorded nonsense.
B
Yeah, somebody asked for it, but. All right, so this is. We got this. Reagan, you know, posted this from conduct unbecoming and it's, it's sad and I know Jimmy will be able to touch upon it, so. Sergeant Kevin Lee Lloyd, a 40 year old Marine veteran, lies in a hospital bed at Marilyn Anderson Cancer center in Houston. I guess OMD Anderson Cancer center in Houston. No one should die feeling like they're all alone, nearly blind, weak and in pain. Kevin isn't asking for money. He. He's asking for presents. For someone to show up, for someone to remember that no man left behind still means something. Sergeant Kevin Lee Lloyd, a 40 year old Marine veteran, lies in a hot. I already said that. His body ravaged by what his family says is a hundred percent service connected stage for colorectal cancer, which is rectum or colon cancer caused by exposure to burn pits during his deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan. That's a real thing, guys. Sadly, the father of three has been left without very. Without the very brotherhood he once died, would have died for. His morale is fading. His family is breaking. If you if you've ever said you stand with our troops, now is the moment to prove it. Visit him, sit with him. Let him know his service mattered. If you can't travel there, tell him what his sacrifice means to you. Right here. I'm going to post it to the anti hero. Yeah.
C
Did you, did you see the picture of him in the hospital bed?
B
Yeah. Can you go to the other picture?
A
Sure. One sec.
B
No, no, it's the same post. It's just a. Another. It's like you got to go to the next slide in the post. Yeah, that one. Yeah.
C
Nice. It's looking rough.
B
So, you know, and, and that's, that's awful, dude.
C
I mean it. There's so many of us that, you know, we're over there on deployment that, I mean the burn pit was going 24 7. You know, you're pouring diesel on the thing and I mean we were throwing everything into that thing.
B
Everything. There's no laws.
C
Yeah, I mean it was just. I mean, I think it's a. You know, dead animals, you know, you name it. And all kinds of chemicals that go along with.
B
That's where Jimmy would just bows of his dog bodies.
C
I didn't kill any.
A
Well, you know what this, this highlights to me though what I talk about with, with Jack as well. With Jack. Jack Gersmeyer who has cancer. And here's a guy laying in bed that had brothers. He had all these people that were his brothers and his war hero buddies and all that. Not one. He's not asking for money. He's asking for somebody to show up.
C
Just, just come hang out with me, bro.
A
Show up. So it's like we, we again. We talk about the Jack's the same way. Jack recently resigned. He wanted to resign. I'm gonna tell a little bit of his story now that he's done and he, he. It was important to him to resign. His agency was firing him for having cancer. Like you're getting fired from the police department for having cancer. It was five months between visits from anybody in administration. And the only reason they showed up on the last visit because they knew he was getting fired in like a week. So they're coming to, hey, we really care about you. But are you. Don't forget you're fired next week. Well, he caught, he got with me ahead of time and one of his big things was I am going to resign. They're not going to fire me. Even though it's. It would never been held against him. Right again. So he typed up like a two page, like here you are. And when they walked in, they started the brotherhood stuff. He said, don't give me that. He's like, you guys haven't been here in five months. And the chief started getting all emotional. Then he read the letter, and it was. He gave it to him. He gave it to him. He told him he's gonna give me a copy of it. I'll read it when we get it. And it was so bad that because they're trying to save face, they called him the next day and was like, hey, man, you know, we're still thinking about. Would you mind resubmitting a memo to resign with just one line that says, I resigned.
B
Oh, my God.
A
He said, absolutely not. He said, I want every single human being that ever pulls my file to read what you people did to me and how nobody showed up. Nobody cared. And I got fired. Fired for having cancer. And that is another thing I talked about on our platform on Copville, and that I'm kind of moving Copville towards this existence like that. But here's a guy laying in bed who had hundreds and thousands of brothers and people. He went to war with them. Bullets were flying over their heads together. Like Jimmy likes to say, they were in the foxhole together. Yeah. And not one person wants to go see this guy.
C
I mean, I.
B
If you live. I didn't mean. I don't want to forget. If you live in Austin, that's where this guy is. If you don't comment on the post that we shared to our stories and let him know he's not alone.
A
And I would imagine that.
C
And share it.
A
Share it. But that's a. There's no money you can put on, like, donation doesn't count there. Walking into his room, that is more important than anything on earth to that guy. Like just some, hey, man, what you did was. Was not in vain. What you did was just, you know, we care about. Like you said, you can have all the money in the world. Steve Jobs, you know, he dies of cancer.
C
Yeah.
A
So it's. It's not the money. At the end of the day, it's like, show this guy you care about him and what he did.
C
Yeah. I mean, even if you. I mean, you don't even have to have been downrange with the guy. You can just sit there and be like, hey, bro, where are you at? When were you there? I mean, just the normal. That veterans BS about. I mean, like, if I was getting ready to go out, I mean, I can't imagine a more terrifying way to go than just Laying in a hospital bed, slowly waiting.
B
By yourself?
C
By myself, yeah. You know, and if. If I had to choose, I would want just a bunch of vets to come and hang out and talk with me and just be like, hey, dude, let's talk about our service and let's have a few laughs and tell funny stories.
A
I want them to will me to the casino. Hey, bro, just take. I mean, take me to the blackjack table, dude.
B
I mean, my buddy. I mean, he's dead now, but he died from a alcohol related incident like about 10 years ago. But when he was in. I came back from Iraq and. And he had just came back from. I met him in airborne school. He went to another unit. We actually were from the same hometown, which was crazy. He got blown up in Afghanistan and got sent home when I was Garrison, when I came back from Iraq. So I went to the hospital and I was like. And he's like, dude, I want to leave. I want to go to the gun show down the road. And I wheeled him out, didn't ask, you know, and it's stuff like that. Like, you know, no one's gonna do that for a veteran. Everyone's gonna follow the rules. No one's going to bring him something that he can't have. And I'm not saying, you know, well.
A
That'S just like Jack coming down and, you know, I'm going to talk about this. That dude's got cancer. He had. Now he has some bone marrow issues. His liver is acting up. So some of his chemo treatments get postponed. Nobody goes to see him. And you know what they said? He comes to Miami to meet his childhood hero, Jerry Worms. He takes a. He takes a break from chemo. He was in between treatments, comes down to Miami for like four, four or five days. He's got cancer. Like, he doesn't know his future. And he comes on that trip and guys were talking about the agency.
B
Oh, if you can go to Miami.
A
You come back to work. Guy's got cancer, doing 28 day chemo treatments at a time. He has no idea what his future holds. He has no idea where his health is going to go. And the brotherhood is talking about him for making a trip to Miami to meet somebody. It's like, yeah, I mean, I would. I would jack and call any contest. I guarantee that trip meant more than any millions and billions of dollars. Because at the end of the day, that goes. It's gone. You die, it's gone. Just like I said, Steve Jobs is the one of the richest men, you know, Creator, you know, Apple and all that. And he's dead from cancer, so that money doesn't mean.
B
Yeah, so, I mean, little.
C
I mean, you got that tattoo on you, don't you?
B
What?
C
Momento Mori. Yeah, you. You're gonna die. It's happening sooner or later. We all got to ride that train. And you know what you show to a person when they're getting there? Because one day, it may very well be you.
B
Yeah.
C
And you do not want to be the scumbag that didn't show up and then wonders why.
A
Yeah.
C
Why?
A
Yep.
B
So, yeah, that's a little segment we're doing every week. You know, it's important to shed light on this. Just like the news, you know, and some reflections, though. We got a lot of. A lot of it. Was it the Elba video?
A
Yeah, yeah. Dude, that went blue right down the middle.
B
I mean, it was down. We posted a video on Instagram, a clip, a reel of us talking. Was it last Monday?
C
Yeah, yeah, it was.
B
Yeah, yeah. Last Monday. Where? You know.
A
Anyway, I mean, we can. But you guys saw it. It was. It's on the page.
B
You gotta go to the actual anti hero podcast page.
A
Hit the home button up there. The home button. The one below it. Left. Yeah, there you go. And then scroll down.
C
Lizard, lizard, lizard.
A
Right, middle. Next one down, middle. Down in the middle, right?
B
Yeah, yeah. The comments were split right down the middle. You know, obviously, it was just one of those things that people just got opinion on and they're not gonna budge. Really. Let's play it. This is us recapping this video. There's policy. And then there.
A
What looks bad? What?
B
Okay, so if you were gonna kill yourself right now, do you not think I would punch you to get the weapon out of your hand?
A
Okay. Is that what you. I'm just saying we watched. We watched the same video. And you said he's punching him to stop him from killing.
B
Well, if he was strangling himself with the seatbelt or the strap. Not the seatbelt.
A
These handcuffs, right? So you can, like, reach in and, like, do it.
B
Bro, that guy was trying to kill himself, and that cop gave him distractors to the face to distract him from killing himself. What?
A
Bro, I've never seen somebody tried not to kill. How somebody killed himself by killing them Worse or attempting to kill them. He was unresponsive.
B
He couldn't move, so he couldn't kill himself.
A
So next time you see a guy. Next time you see a guy trying to hang himself, you're just gonna shoot him in the head. Be like, no, I'm trying to get you down.
B
Trying to get him down. He's kicking me away. I'm going to punch him in the face to distract him from kicking me so I can get him down from the rope.
C
What is this, the wwe?
B
When a guy is going to kill.
C
Himself in your back seat for some reason, that.
B
That video's got to distract you by doing so.
C
Distract him.
A
Knock him unconscious with elbow strikes so he doesn't kill himself.
C
This is when you deploy the ass.
A
So that's our. That's Tyler and I, the polar opposites when it comes to some things.
B
Yeah, I know there's going to be some things we talk about today that's just, you know, liberal Mike Maga. Tyler.
A
No, it just. I mean, there was a. So we were. I was having this conversation and there was a time when, you know, pre body cam that I guess it just changed. Like, that was very common when I was a younger cop. And was it Right. I was always. My wife I was talking to. She talks about how she's like, I cannot believe, like, the world walked around that body. Because she's like, what did you do? Yeah, what did you do? What did you. She's like, the stuff I see on body cam is wild. What did you guys do before when.
B
There was no body games and that's.
A
Where, like, integrity had to kick in. I always talk about, like, my. My speech to my new trainees was like, treat every call like it's your mom. Like, if your mom needs to be told to shut up, tell her to shut up. If your mom needs to report to a report. I guess there's. Sometimes you want to beat your mom up right now, but if she was.
B
Trying to kill herself.
A
Yeah, if your mom was trying to kill herself, you would distract her, hurt to the face, and break her jaw and put her unconscious. She can't kill herself anymore. She's in a coma. But sorry, mom, but she was talking about that. And you know, that's where that was that weird time when I started.
B
Oh. Oh.
A
One is when I started where the cops wrote it down. It happened. And I can tell you right now, think about this. You worked it. Can you imagine taking. And this happened to me. I got a life sentence out of it. Imagine taking a drug case to full trial. Like a drug deal case with no video and no audio.
B
It wouldn't happen.
A
Zero percent.
B
No.
A
I convicted a guy where the dude hit, forgot to hit. He was around on his phone and he forgot to hit record on the recording device for the deal. So the entire narcotics deal, no audio, no video and convicted with the CI testify, the undercover testify and the people that that case would be null prost 10 seconds after you made it. Yeah, well actually you probably wouldn't even make the case. You wouldn't even make it.
C
So. So it's. It. It's now become like gotta have it.
A
Not only gotta have it, they have. They've created apps that the bug is in your phone. Because now a lot of drug dealers will tell the informants to turn their phone off. But they create. Obviously there's always a. Another thing I'll talk about. There's always a way around it which you can power your phone down but the app is always running. So now this phone is like oh yeah dog.
B
No battery running.
A
It's on still. The phone is programmed to not really turn off.
B
Left it completely.
A
Yeah. It's like you have to jailbreak the phone and it goes around the phone's operating system and when you shut the phone off, that app has bypassed that and it's always on. But then drug dealers like leaving in the car. But. So there's. For every. You're smart. For every action there's a equal and expired. How's it go?
B
Yeah.
C
For every action there's an equal and opposite reaction.
A
There you go. So for. So because what I saw the other day as well is you know Flock and the tag readers. That's huge, right? They've already got it. My buddy sent me the website. It's called Deflock me. And all you do is put in your location, hit the button and it shows you every Flock camera within that jurisdiction or license plate reader.
B
So you know, we always talk about this too.
A
How to get around it.
B
It's probably Flock that's in on.
A
Yes.
C
Yeah.
B
Sell it to the other side.
A
Yeah. Because now there's anti Flocks and they have to buy the anti Anti Flock virus protection.
C
Yeah, I mean so I mean aren't there cameras in Yalls cruisers that pull license plates?
A
Yeah, Exxon the Devil Axon now has pulled license plates. The Axon 3, the new. I had it right before I got canned. The Axon 3. And my wife's on the phone. I can hear it. It makes this money like. Like this money sound. That thing is it's your in car camera. But there's two cameras. One is your video when you turn your lights on.
C
Right.
A
And the other one is constantly. And that thing is the most accurate tag reader I've ever seen. It'll hit cars 90 degrees and if you're driving through Walmart and the cars are parked at a 90 degree angle, that wide lens will capture every car.
B
A lot of people do not agree with that. Unfortunately. The, the easiest argument is the tag's not yours, it belongs to the state. Yeah, it's not your tag.
A
So yeah, no, I mean, remember they would argue that like you ran my tag at a stoplight illegally. Like, no, no, you're fine.
B
You are. Cops are allowed to run tags. Because here's the. Also the other thing is that if your car gets stolen, how do you expect us to find it? We run tags. Like cops just run tags. The government run tag. Tow trucks run tags. We get every time a tow truck is doing their tag readers to find repo cars that they need, it'll come to us. Stolen vehicle.
A
Do you know, I'll be honest with you. I. This is how much I did not do. Speeding and all that garbage I ran. Unless it was like a hot situation. I ran every tag of every car before I stopped it. So I'd see a car go by speed and I'd pull up and it'd be like, grandma. I'm like, not with grandma. I'd be like, no. Then I would run it and I'd see, you know, 893drug suspension on the driver's license. Here we go. So you would call that profiling somewhere that had nothing to do with the race color, creed or anything else. I just looked at like this 73 year old lady was going 11 over. I'm not going to give her a ticket anyway. Why would I even bother pulling her over and going up to the car?
C
I tell you that the. I mean if you've got a truck bed, I know that the truck. Putting the truck bed down keeps you from getting hit with.
A
There's tricks. Yeah, there's tricks. But then you know what I get you for?
C
Yeah.
A
Well, one little piece of debris flies out. Yeah. I'm like, oh, that's it.
C
But, but like, you know, if, if you've got like, if, if you're riding the ragged edge of like, man, my birthday was in January.
A
Yeah.
C
So like, I'm not talking about like I'm a criminal. Yeah, more of like I just don't want another ticket.
A
But that acts on. That acts on camera is of kind. Constantly reading every time you pull up the light. And what it does is it records video too. So it takes like five seconds before and five seconds seconds after the hit. And then there's another company out there. Not that I'm Plugging companies. But my personal favorite license plate reading company would be Recore. Recore was started in Oklahoma and it was strictly for the insurance crisis where cars were not being insured. And it takes video and it's long video. Like every hit is like a 30 second video. And what that helps you is if you don't have an LPR ahead of it, you can be like, well, it came to this intersection, but then it turned right. So. But yeah, the tag is owned by the government. We can run the tag anytime we want. We can take the tag anytime we want. You know that sometimes you can take.
C
Your driver's license too.
A
You get the hit that says seize tag, sees if drivers own our vehicle because they don't pay their insurance. And that's a racket to me. I don't agree. That's where I start.
C
That's, that's, that's what I've got a problem.
A
Yeah, that's a racket. Insurance is a racket.
B
I never took the tag. I would say, oh man, I don't have the screwdriver to take the tag off, but you need to go turn it in type thing. Because you take someone's tag off their car, they're sitting ducks. A lot of people hit financial troubles and to be fair, a lot of people also drive on a suspended license when they're not supposed to. And they know it. But they're not the type of people that have a registered vehicle.
C
Right.
B
They're just, they just, they've never had a license in 20 years.
A
So so many mistakes. So you could switch insurance companies, but if you're.
C
That's what I'm doing.
A
Gets to send it into the state, they suspend your license unjustly.
C
So I, I was involved in a vehicle accident and I have that SR21 crap. And I have, I just recently changed insurance and when I got pulled over the other night, they're like, hey dude, we gotta take your driver's license. And I'm like, why? He's like, well, we don't know, but it looks like you don't have insurance. I'm like, I'm showing you the app right here. And he's like, I can't do anything about that, dude.
A
I gotta, that's why is, is that has numerous times I stopped people and the old insurance company notified the state that they canceled and the new insurance company forgot to notify the state that they switched. And now this guy's got a suspended license for. That's criminal. You can take him to jail. No insurance Is criminal immediately.
C
Yeah.
A
So it's like, but how. Think about that. That the insurance company has so much power that they can wave a wand.
B
Well, insurance in our country is a fucking scam anyway. Medical insurance is a fucking giant scam. Driver's insurance is a giant scam.
C
I mean God help you if you got teenage drivers. Jesus Christ.
B
Did you say your license is suspended?
A
Yeah.
B
Yeah.
C
Did you notice that Lily's always driving me?
A
Yeah, but I don't see. When you get here, but I see if she's here.
C
Yeah, yeah, Lily. That's why until that, until we get that sorted out with the state, I'm, I'm not even.
A
I know that happened to my daughter too.
C
Yeah.
A
So it's not like it happens. My daughter. Here's the other scam of an insurance go along with you. You say USR 21. I don't know what that is. I know SR 20 was. My daughter was a designated driver for a girl. They went to like a redneck bar in Okeechobee years ago. They got in a crash. The girl that owned the car did not have the right insurance. She didn't have like that pip and all the stuff you're supposed to have. Because my daughter was driving another girl's car and didn't say, hey, let me see your insurance before I drive to make sure you have the right coverage. They went after my daughter for not having insurance and was like, even though you don't own a car, you should hold your own policy for when you drive somebody else's car. And she had to do that. SR20 insurance was mandatory insurance for two years even without owning a vehicle.
B
That's crazy.
A
State imposed and said you don't pay it. Your license is suspended.
C
Dude.
A
That's kind of what you're doing.
C
Yeah, yeah, that's exactly what I'm doing. And I mean it's, it's sort of ridiculous. I mean part of it is just the, the, the, the what is it the. No, this. We're a technically a no fault state. Even though fault is still given when you, when you give a citation and come up to. You're still going to go, this person was.
A
Well, we have to give fault on a crash. If we can determine it. We have to list vehicle one is the at fault driver. They don't need to get a ticket, but somebody's at fault unless we can absolutely not determine it.
C
Right.
B
It's hard too because I mean I wasn't there. They were like, oh, you got two stories of a car crash and you know, oh, he did this and he did that. And I'm like, I wasn't here. I don't ride tickets. I mean, like I said, I lost my ticket, dude.
A
I got in a crack right before I quit. I got in a crash on my way home. Guy ran a red light, hit me.
C
That's exactly what happened to me. And I was at fault.
A
No, I wasn't at fault. But when I followed him and we went. He. He left because I was going nuts because I barely. It was what you. Oh, dude, losing your temper? Well, I lost it, and he flee. And I got my car, police radio. I was in civilian clothes because I was on light duty. I tore my knee up, and I ended up getting there. He looked dead in the face of the cops and said, I didn't run the red light. He did. Blamed it on me. Thank God my buddy was at the light on a motorcycle and witnessed the entire crash, but he didn't know it was me. So I had to go on Facebook and say, did anybody see this crash at 8th street and 2043rd Avenue? Please notify me. Then I got, like, six messages, and they're like, yeah, I was right there. And one of them was my buddy's like, dude, I saw that car run that red light. But even my own cop deputies were like, we can't figure out who's at fault, man. I'm like, bro, the dude ran a red light. Like, you're right. But they weren't there.
C
I mean, my case was. Dude was coming off 75, got off on the off ramp on 75 and was still moving out at about 70 miles an hour. As I was making a turn into the McDonald's and the.
A
Dude, where you going? To McDonald's.
C
It was because I was. Had three people.
B
My favorite place to eat, man.
C
Yeah, because I like McDonald's.
B
It's good.
A
Good.
B
Mike had McDonald's twice a day.
A
Twice.
C
So twice.
B
Somebody said the comments. Clint, actually. Clint said, jimmy's still a Joe.
A
Jimmy still a Joe, like your soldiers.
B
How many of you guys got suspended licenses?
A
Yeah, what's funny, too, is that to.
B
Drive a military vehicle, they don't require you to have.
C
I had.
B
I had a military vehicle school and.
C
Then I had a military driver's license before I had a driver's license because I was in. When I was 17.
B
Mine. My license was suspended for some back, you know, 15 years ago, and. And I was able to drive military vehicles on base and off base.
A
I am. I am the odd man out.
B
You never had your License.
A
Never had my license.
B
You ain't living, dog.
C
Yeah, I mean it. All it is. Is bureaucratic in this.
A
Well, I don't drive. I travel. Oh, there you go. I travel and I have. I'm a citizen. Call the United States and call Ukraine. We call Ukraine.
B
So there's a guy, he's. If I remember correctly, and I talked to him briefly, he's a. He was a Marine, I think.
A
I've never called Ukraine. Plus 380. And how much money is this gonna cost?
B
He's actually fighting in Ukraine, and he's.
C
Gonna give us more if it's an Internet call. It shouldn't cost you anything.
A
That's a straight up.
B
Yep. All right. Maybe he'll call back. He said he was supposed to call back. He called at the very beginning of the show.
A
He called me from Google. No, he called myself.
B
Okay. If you hear us, call back, call back.
A
Ukraine call back. Dodge the. The what? Are they, the drones?
C
Yeah, the drone. The FPV drones.
A
Jesus Christ.
C
Out there fighting for his life. What's up, guys?
B
Yeah, so running into some.
A
Actually, I got an update. We got a Chicago update.
B
Oh, our weekly Chicago update.
A
Bring out your dead. Here we go. Drum roll. We had a very slow weekend in Chicago. We had four homicides, four people shot and killed, and 21 shot and wounded, which brings our total for the year. 307 people shot and killed. 1341 people shot. And the total killed in Chicago currently is 1648 homicides since the beginning of the year.
B
That's not just guns.
A
307 shot and killed. Gun 1341, shot and wounded. Gun 1648, completely dead.
C
Just dead of, you know, hammers and knives and bare hands, cars.
B
Covid.
C
Jesus Christ. That place is a war zone. You know, we got so much for com. For talking about, like, what if a Blackhawk went down in Chicago? Yeah, and people were mad about that. Like, we look at the crime statistics in that place. It's Somali.
A
It's a long video. So I don't. We don't need to play it. But I sent it to you. I know you probably watch. It was long, but there was a. There was a black female at a meeting. And it's wild. You see it? They're like three stories. City council.
B
Oh, yeah, she called.
A
She called out the mayor completely. Like, you're catering to people, illegal immigrants, not getting arrested. You refuse to work with ice, and your black community is suffering at your hands, and you're doing nothing for us. And she laid it out on the mayor. She Went in on them, got it was very well received. So it leads me back to like, why do they keep like electing these people?
B
I don't know how they get elected. I think they, I mean he probably plays the.
C
Well, I mean this, this is, this was the plan from the very get go is, you know, the, the shift was happening for the Democrats of like they, they counted on the black and Latino vote. That's what they counted on. Right. And they're like, well we're not going to keep that vote for much longer. It's starting to spread, split. So they flood the country with illegal immigrants. They prioritize their care and make sure that they, you, they have all the ability to vote, prioritize their well being over that of American citizens, over cops, over veterans.
A
Well, the blacks have, they rely on. We're black. We always voted Democrat. Right. And they don't, they don't bother changing that mindset. So until you can infiltrate that mindset and it's tough when the media is pushing that Republicans are bad, conservatives are bad and that you should vote black because you're black or Democrat because you're black, then it never changed. You're right. So they just pushed the black people to the back burner. Completely forgot about them in Chicago and every other major city and said let's get the Hispanics in. We'll get them to vote between the two of them. Yeah. If half of them believe us from each, each race we win every time. Yeah.
C
Yeah. And I mean you can also the other part of that is just the gerrymandering that goes on and, and the way that they split up districts and everything else. So it's, it's, it's a rap.
A
It's a constant game. But, and I, I will say it goes both, both sides play the game.
C
Oh one, one side just is better at it.
A
Yes.
C
I mean that's really what we're complaining about here. So I mean like there's Chicago's just, I mean I'm, I'm waiting for it to be like Escape from Chicago with Snake Plissken number three, you know.
B
Yeah, that would be a good movie.
C
That would be a good.
A
We saw Philly too. Philly did dump.
B
Philly is a dump.
A
Like the roads are just.
B
Yeah.
C
I mean we love, we love the people in Philly.
B
No, and Philly's so historic, man. It is so cool going to a place where you're like, dude, this building's probably been up for 150 years. It's completely, it's been shut down for probably 40 years. It's just a shell of a. But it's a relic and probably historical monument.
A
Well I was driving and I'm just like this street. I think when no I rode with canine Tambo and Justin, I was like, dude, this street is never gonna be fixed. Like you. It is the sidewalk sink in the building. I'm like, you can't possibly get to this little street in Philadelphia to fix it. And they're just. I don't know, at some point what is it gonna just disappear? It's gonna fall. You're not gonna be able to go that way anymore. But like that's one little part of like we were in North Philly. Like one little section of North Philly. Like the street is like completely destroyed. It's like, are they ever gonna get to it?
B
Well, yeah. What's. What's segue into no Kings Day?
A
Oh yeah.
B
That means first off. All right, no Kings Day. What is that supposed to be?
C
So apparently people don't want kings in the United States.
A
I think we fought a war over that.
C
Yeah, we did.
A
Pretty big one, right?
C
Yeah, we. We threw tea in the harbor and told a bunch of people to off.
A
They wrote some documents and fireworks. Yeah.
C
And then. And then that was it, man. I mean were a lot of people that died too. But you know at the end of the day. But yeah. So apparently we. The irony because they.
B
They were doing this while we were in Philly.
A
We didn't know that couldn't make it to the.
B
I. I could. I didn't know to. It was every content there everywhere. But yeah, Philly had a big protest.
C
I mean it was so it's. I mean, you know, I've heard reports that it's like. Oh, there's like There was like 7 million people total over the weekend. Weekend. I don't believe that number's probably about 3,5 million over the entire United States.
A
NBC, CNN. They got caught.
C
Yeah.
A
They posted a video of an actual pro Constitution conservative rally in Boston from 2017 that had like a million people at it. And they just replayed the video.
B
Yep.
A
And replayed the video from 2017 and said look at they. Yeah, they said this is the no Kings protest in Boston. Look at the turnout.
B
And they got caught.
A
Yeah, it's all over the news. It was from. It was like an 8 year old video from a different. From an actual rally.
C
Like a Trump rally. Yeah, it was.
A
Yeah, it's like a pro Republican rally and they use the crowd size and dubbed it as a no Kings protest.
C
It's. It's, it's amazing how. How far into propaganda the, the legacy media has gone. The real media is. It is stuff like this now. Not us, we're kind of nuts, but everybody else.
A
It's honest. Yeah, it's honest work. It ain't much, but it's honest.
C
Yeah.
A
Yeah. If you, If I came up to you, Jimmy, and I said to you, I went to that rally and I did that, and you watched it and said it was complete opposite. I am no longer. Yeah. I'm no longer valued. Valid. My value, My opinion or my right. I'm a liar.
B
Right.
A
How can the news millions of times, like somebody watches that and goes, my news channel just lied. They played a video that's completely a lie and told me it was one thing. And you know what? I wake up tomorrow and I turn it back on and I watch it again. And I believe everything they say on the View the next morning. And I believe everything they say the next morning when you've. They've over. I mean, look at Hunter Biden. That was all lie. Like, they told you that, wasn't it? They told you that. How can you watch that and go, well, oh, well, they lied to me about that. But I'm just gonna watch.
B
What it is, is there's just people that. You're not going to be able to change their mind about anything. That's just. They're locked in and they don't want to change their mind. Mind.
A
I have. There was protests in my town. We were obviously not there. My buddy, he got a Trump flag and he ran down the side in front of all of them, just yelling Trump. And two purple hair people hit him and they arrested him like there was no king's protest. Yeah.
C
Did you see the.
A
I'm in Republican county. Oh, we got Ukraine calling.
B
All right, Ukraine, we'll put. We'll put this on.
A
Here we go. What's going on, buddy, you're on the air. Can you hear me?
C
Yes.
A
Are you Safe?
D
I'm a U.S. army veteran, Airborne infantry, deployed to Afghanistan, 2012. And I'm a parent. I am a conservative and a Christian. I have a lot of family ties, direct family ties to Ukraine and what is going on here? And, you know, I initially, like, I have a lot of friends back in the United States who say things like, you know, why is Ukraine our business? We shouldn't be sending all of this money over there. And I don't know about you, but my father taught me when I was a young man that a Man's word is his bond. And in 1994 the Budapest Manorandum stated that the Ukrainians gave up their right to have nuclear weapons in order for America to give us some type of security. And fast forward to what's going on today. And I understand the Russian mindset, I understand the Ukrainian mindset, I speak both languages fluently and it is apparent to me that if Russia is not stopped in Ukraine that they will absorb the Ukrainian military, which is the biggest military in Europe right now, and they will use the Ukrainians to attack a NATO country. And since Donald Trump has been in office, he has talked to President Volodymyr Zelensky and they have agreed and Volodymyr Zelensky has agreed to sign over 50% of the mineral rights to Ukraine to the United States under the conditions of the peace plan that Donald Trump is putting together. And I applaud Donald Trump for his actions in trying to move forward a direction of peace. But I am concerned right now about the Russians not meeting us at that level. I mean what is your guys take on that?
A
I mean that's an eye opening account and I'm glad that somebody who's actually there, that's not like we were just talking about the collusion in the media to make everything what they want. So Jimmy, what do you think?
C
Well, first of all, just recently President Trump already said, said you guys can have land based Tomahawk cruise missiles to Ukraine. We have depleted all of the anti tank ordinance like infantry anti tank ordinance in Europe 1 1/2 times over. I think that was the last number. So we're talking Javelins and AT4s. You know these guys have Brads, they have M1, SEP2, they have F16s which probably aren't even going to be really viable for another couple of months. We're absolutely giving them a lot. What I would want to know, my first question would be what is the conditions on the ground right now? We're getting into October, so it's going to start getting cold, ground's going to firm up and then it's going to snow and it's going to be really fucking cold and nobody's going to, you.
B
Might have to reiterate that.
A
Did you get that?
D
So I, yeah, I can tell you from experience that fall moving into the winter is extremely muddy. So the ground here is basically farmland, especially in eastern Ukraine. So you have these like large open fields that are just going to be full of mud and you might even think okay, cold weather will freeze it, but actually makes it worse. And it's very difficult for tanks to maneuver around in this environment. And it seems like the Russian spring offensive has already stalled up. And it seems that, I mean, I can tell you that Russia is still stuck in the eastern regions of Ukraine, in the Donbas, Luhansk, Zheberizhia and parts of Kherson Oblast. And they have made pretty much zero headway since 2022. Actually, they have less ground now than they initially took over in the beginning of the war.
C
I mean, we literally have right now, just for you two guys to know. I mean, if you ever went to sleep watching World War II documentaries on the History Channel, we have tank fights that are happening on the same battlefield that the Germans and the Russians were fighting over in World War II II. It's in the same place and the weather is terrible.
B
Is he, is he in combat?
A
Are you, are you currently in combat?
D
I'm currently not, but in 2022 and 2023, I was involved in combat operation.
A
What, what is, what if, like, you have a decent audience listening, what would be your, what, what is the biggest spin the media is putting on all this? Or what is your take on from actually being there that you would want everybody to understand about this? That is, you know, our media tells us what, what they want us to hear. What is the, what is the fact about what's going on in, in your opinion?
D
My opinion. You know, look, the Ukrainian people, they value freedom just much as we do in the United States. They are not going to just roll over and let the Russians take what they want. These people are going to fight. They're going to fight it out to the last person here in Ukraine. And, you know, all they're asking for is for support when it comes to supplying them with arms and a means for them to defend themselves, which I have no problem with. And you know, if it comes down to it, a lot of times these Ukrainians, it's not like we're handing them cash, you know, we're handing them weapons. Many times they are even paying for these weapons. There's a lend lease program going on at the moment. So it's within our best interest to make sure that the Ukrainians are able to stop the Russians from continuing forward from where they are.
C
I mean, I, I got a, I got a question for you, brother. What was the, I'm assuming you were doing infantry stuff. What's the infantry fight like there? And how is it different from what we saw in the global war on terror?
D
So in the beginning of the war in 2022, there was a lot of maneuvers because there was a lot of, like, techniques that were moving around in Russian armored columns. And there were engagements going on from everywhere, from like, you know, 700 meters with technics shooting at each other down to infantrymen firing at each other from 3, 300 meters all the way up until doing CQB operations in villages. But today, the style of warfare has just had changed. There's so many drones going on in the AO that it makes it impossible for, you know, elements, let's say platoon size elements, to like move around within a village without attracting too much tension, having drones, you know, target them. So right now they kind of switched it up into like fire teams, kind of taking out, like, taking up different positions within the ao, kind of like, you know, keeping distance from each other and slowly, you know, pushing the Russians out. Or they use drone footage to find out where the Russians are. And then, you know, they just pound them with artillery, sending special, you know, forces type units, go in there, clear it out. But right now, you know, it, it really sucks. Like, so it's trench warfare weather, the conditions, you know.
A
Yeah, I mean, well, yep, we appreciate it, man.
B
He's gonna, can he be our correspondent?
A
Yeah, we're gonna. Do you mind giving us like a Ukrainian correspondent? You can give us an update every week and anything develops or changes that we need to get out, we'd like to get out the real accurate news. So.
D
Yeah, absolutely.
A
Okay.
D
Absolutely. I'm 100.
B
What's his. What's the name he wants to go by?
A
What's. What's the name. What's the name we can use for when you're going to give your update? What do you want us to call you? Crusader? Well, Crusader, thank you so much and I'm glad you're giving us the accurate.
B
There was what, Crusader?
A
Crusader? Not no regular Crusader.
B
No, he's.
A
Oh, I thought it's just regular Crusader. Yep.
D
Thank you for the opportunity.
A
Yep, Absolutely, man. Keep in stock, be safe. God bless your family and keep us updated, man. Thank you so much. All right, bye.
D
Bye.
A
All right.
B
God bless America.
A
Yeah, not that one.
B
Geez.
C
I mean, like, that's crazy, dude. That, that, that. I mean, can you imagine? Like, hey, we, we, we can't even get together as a platoon. We got to separate by fire teams. And, and we're Real war. Yeah, I mean, that's a real war. And, and you know, I, I agree with what he's saying. You know, I, I don't agree with sending a bunch of cash to Ukraine. But I absolutely am fine with every single bullet that we send to them that kills.
B
Here's what I was gonna ask. Do you guys think that obviously we're not sending troops? Right. You know, that's a, that's, it gets political. But do you think that we should facilitate lifelong care for Americans that go fight and come back injured? Because that would be the biggest thing is if you get up over there and you don't die, you come back to America, there's no benefits, there's no va, there's no nothing.
A
Do you think, like, Social Security and disability and all that?
C
I mean, you mean, you mean there's no, like, VA for.
B
There's just no incentive to go other than what this guy's talking about. He's talking about how, like, dude, it, it's literally we're fighting for our values over there. Because if, if, if Russia succeeds, I.
A
Mean, I think if this would have went. Trump wins the election and he supports Ukraine. Do you think this all is talked about differently because it was a Democrat idea, obviously Democrats had started with it.
B
That's a good point.
A
Do you know, do you think we would be all in, like, we are for Israel with, with you.
C
You, you know, that's, that's my argument. I mean, touching the third rail with Israel gets me in trouble a lot. But, I mean, but if you're, if you're going to tell me you don't want to support Ukraine, but you do want to support Israel. Yeah. Or any one of them, you, you have a logical fallacy that you need to work.
A
You know, a lot of the, the pro Palestine people are like, oh, my God, there's kids in D. Well, you dying in Ukraine, too. But the fact it was a Hillary Clinton and the Joe Biden that, the, you know, that started the Ukraine aid and the call to Zelensky and the quid pro quo and all that garbage that, you know, everything went to war. I wonder, you know, Trump wins the second election, it says we're all in for Ukraine.
C
Yeah.
A
Is this half? Is everybody. Is everybody else all in?
C
I, I think that if Trump had gotten reelected, I don't think that Putin would have made the attack.
B
Yeah.
A
And. But is that a political. You know what I'm saying?
C
I, I don't. I, I mean, I'm pretty middle of the road when it comes to politics. I pretty much hate everybody equally.
A
Cops.
C
Yeah, cops. I mean, like, yeah, just to hate, hate, spew.
A
Hate monger.
C
Yeah, Big old hate monger, man. I'm like the Ted Lasso Well, I.
B
I, what I respect so much about you is that you, you have a very strong passion about events and current events and global events, but you don't, you don't necessarily argue it at all with a political mindset. You don't go, oh, is it you just.
A
This is what I have the easy answer for me. And I'm not into like you know, way more than me with. You're very well versed in all the military stuff. As me, as somebody who looks like what's right is right, what is wrong. If we're going to, if we're going to support Israel as an ally, like innocent Ukraine is getting.
C
Oh yeah, they're squattered.
A
I mean so if we're going to do that and, and they got the pro Palestine people, innocent people are dying. Why wouldn't we say we're going to help the innocent people here? Here's, we always do.
C
I mean, let me, let me just paint the picture and we, we know about this. I mean just like we've got the videos of it. But I mean this is historically this time of year, Jimmy, you're dressed like.
B
You'Re going to court to get your license back.
C
I know. I, I actually wanted to, I wanted to look kind of squared away just once.
B
I'm just kidding.
C
No, no, it's fine. The, the, this time. And I've seen that in comment like three times. Like, hey, is Jimmy going to court?
A
Like, what's going on? He said they were. You were going to fight for your SR21 bag.
C
No, I actually, I have to get on a, I have to get on a zoom call.
A
I peed myself a couple times and I'm still in the same close.
C
So in that region it's, this is a notoriously muddy, nasty, disgusting time. I mean if you've ever been outside in thick ass mud and cold rainy weather in the fall, now go. Imagine you have to live in it every day, all day, no escape. And there's drones zipping around trying to blow your ass up. Living in a trench, I mean you can't maneuver anywhere. You can't get into a vehicle to get warm because they get blown the up. They're getting slayed by artillery all the time. And the Russians don't give a about pinpoint accuracy. They don't care about civilians on the battlefield. They're, they're, they're, they're just lighting it up and seeing what happens. But you know, my other opinion is what, what?
A
Get Jimmy's parole officer.
B
I love it.
A
It's really good.
B
We're gonna move into the. The Gaza stuff. Gotta give a quick couple shout outs. Do me a favor. Play the vengeance. Give everybody a chance.
E
Over a century ago, in 1910, the Flexner Report, funded by John D. Rockefeller and the Carnegie foundation, re engineered medical education from a holistic whole body approach which appropriately treated the body as an interconnected system to a compartmentalized approach. Under the guise of specialized medicine, they shut down or consolidated medical schools, marginalized naturopathic, homeopathic and chiropractic medicine, replacing them with symptom management and synthetic drugs. Allopathy is a marketing strategy rooted in fear and manipulated science. This philosophy carried into veterinary medicine resulting in over vaccination, unnecessary surgeries and manufactured food. Just like they did for people. They call it care, but it's predatory and based on profitability.
B
The truth.
E
Toxicity, compromised immunity and chronic inflammation. They're not fate. They're engineered. And so is your power to undo them. We built three targeted formulas to return the body to homeostasis for pets and people to detox, defend and restore. We are the correction to decades of corruption. We are vengeance.
C
It.
A
Yep.
B
I give a shout out to Cloud Defensive. Go to clouddefensive.com use promo code ANTIHERO15. Say 15 off your weapons. Mounted or handheld illumination. Don't use what the agency gave you. Don't use the cheap Walmart stuff. Go to clouddefensive.com and you promote antihero 15 and. And save 15. They've already got. They're. They're working on their pistol mounted light. I've played with it over at ntoa. It's really sweet. So go show them some love. Tell them Anti Hero sent you and. And save 15. Cloud defensive pushing the boundaries and illumination. Let's talk Gaza.
C
Oh God. Yeah.
A
Shooting at each other again.
C
Yeah.
B
How long did it last?
C
11 days.
A
11 days.
B
Who.
C
And so I just don't think you.
B
Can make two people that don't like here.
C
I mean I. I've got. I've. I wrote my. My ops until brief today.
B
Let's hear it.
A
So dress up for it too.
C
Let's see here. Current status. Oh, it was nine days fragile. Nine days cease fire remains in effect but is highly degraded. Current tensions are high on both sides. Both Israeli Defense Force and Hamas affiliated forces have reported cease fire violations. So apparently there was a Israeli traffic control point that came under fire but like pot shots and rocks and they went right back to airstrikes. The Israelis did.
B
Here's the thing that you. You. There's a difference between sanctioned stuff and not. You can't have an army of guys that are. Have been fighting forever who hate the other side. You can't as a politician or a general say, hey, stop this. If they're gonna fight, they're gonna fight. You can't, you can't really silence or stop the little pop shots here and there. Deposit.
A
It's not a. I mean, is it an official.
B
Yeah.
A
Shot or is it like airstrikes?
B
Probably.
C
Airstrikes are definitely. I mean. And so like you, we. When we did the global war on terror, we're in Iraq and Afghanistan, you set up a traffic control point, pretty much guarantee something bad's gonna happen, may not be terrible, but you might be like, hey man, they're fucking shooting at us from over here. We got indirect coming at us from the fucking scrapyard again or whatever it happens. And, and I'm not saying that it's right, but it. You don't want to know something the United States didn't do. We didn't call in fucking F15. Stop. Bomb the holy shit out of the village that we were outside of.
B
Yeah. Is that what they did?
C
Yeah, they started targeted airstrikes again. I can keep. So there's. There's more to go on here. So the primary risk to all of this is rapid escalation back to full scale conflict. The Israelis also cut humanitarian aid. Because of this. The humanitarian situation in Gaza remains catastrophic, creating a significant instability vector and increasing the global call for third party intervention, peacekeeping efforts and support troops. Focus remains on maintaining regional stability and partner force risk readiness. So the other part of this is politically. So that's the, that's the military breakdown politically. One of the leading members of the Likud Party, which is basically the conservative party in Israel, basically said that President Trump's trying. His ceasefire is leading them to the. This is almost a direct quote leading us to the brink of hell and we are going to take Gaza back.
B
One way or the other.
C
It's adjustable matter of time. Which is basically saying like, hey, it doesn't matter what you do. Like this is. This is going to happen.
B
Yeah.
C
Which I mean pretty much just goes like, well, I guess. What the are we doing? J.D. vance is supposed to be there today around 2:00pm local time.
A
Damn.
C
And that we're gonna see how that goes. But war's been going on for thousands of years, guys. I don't think we're stopping it today.
B
No. A ceasefire.
C
Yeah, that's.
B
Dude.
C
So that's my, that's my breakdown on Israel Quick, you know, be brief, be right, be gone.
B
Yeah, I mean, by the time Thursday hits, we'll probably have more updates.
C
Yeah.
B
What's the deal? All right, so we've all, I mean, everybody in our generation has lived through a government shutdown. There wasn't a government when Mike served. He helped establish the American democracy. However, I remember when I was in, when I was in the army.
C
No, no, no, you're wrong. He, he was at Lexington. Oh, yeah. He was at. Shot her out of world.
B
I, I, I, I went through a government shutdown, and it was about two paychecks worth of not getting you. Yeah, we were in the same time. Yeah, they told us you're gonna get paid. It's not like we're not gonna pay you.
A
The bank don't want to hear that. Yeah, well, car dealership don't want to hear that.
B
So government, like usaa, Navy Credit, whatever the they're called, they actually have programs where they're going to loan. They're loaning out money to people that they have to be paid back so they can.
C
Army emergency relief.
B
Yeah, I mean, like you said, the fucking auto dealership doesn't care. So when you work for the government, your insurance is pretty much taken care of, so you don't have to worry about that. But, but you said, Jimmy, before the show started, that we are about to be the longest government. This is about to be.
C
This is about to be the longest government show shutdown in history. So we're coming up. The last, the longest one was 38 days. We're getting ready to be. And the reason why I say it's about to be the longest one in history is because by the, by the time that the last one was over, we already had movement to try and fix this. Both parties have basically come out and said, no, we're not talking to each other on the government shutdown. You know, if you're one group of people, this is all. I mean, I literally had. Somebody asked me this morning, why did Trump shut down the government? And I'm like, you don't understand how the government works. Trump, the president doesn't do that. The government is shut down because the Senate can't figure out, well, okay, yeah.
B
Go into about how it's. Why is it acceptable to do. And, and why does it occur so often? When I say often. I remember in, like, 2013, dude, they, they was really. It was 2012. Yeah, it was so bad, dude.
C
It was bad. And this has become sort of the impetus for a lot of the problems that we have in politics. So you have the Senate, who deals with money. Their job is to deal with budgets, passing budgets, things like that. Everybody wants a piece of the budget. The Navy wants a piece, the Defense Department, you know, all of the agencies. But then you also have senators and political parties that want to make sure that we set aside discretionary funds for. For chance transgendered hamsters. And, you know, I mean, that's a real thing. Yeah, it is a real.
B
I mean, not even joking.
C
I wish I was, but, I mean, like, that's the kind of stuff that one party is going, no, we're not going to set aside discretionary funding so that we can do a gender studies on transgendered male females in the female jail. Like, like, that's a. That's a legit thing. I mean, it's nuts.
A
It's nuts. And here, just like we talked about earlier with, you know, the Ukraine and. And is it the same as Israel? Like, all that stuff, the government has. They've created such confusion or bringing the illegal immigrants to vote, they've created such confusion that the people that are. They're voting for the people that are voting to shut the government down. So people are in cities or have jobs going, oh, my God, the government shut down. It's all Trump's fault. No, your. Your local politician or your senator or your is voting to shut the government down, but you're never going to hold them accountable. You're just going to complain that it's somebody else's fault. And that's the problem. They've created such a. A Wizard of Oz effect that there's a man behind the curtain in this government that's so confusing. You're right. It's not about funding the government. No, it's about, what can I get into what.
C
How long can I hold project?
A
Yeah, how long can I hold the other side out to go? Fine, we'll give you transgender hamster. Yeah, you got it. And we'll concede that we should open the border back up and let everybody just run in, or, hey, we need to.
C
We need to pull the discretionary funding from ICE or. I mean, but here's the thing. This is going to trickle down right now. It's federal. This is going to trickle down to states and cities. Now, I mean, I want you guys to imagine you are cops and you are not getting paid. Are you showing up to work?
A
You have to, but it's just so bad, Right?
B
Well, okay, hold on. How would local. Is there such thing as local government shutdowns where you don't get paid.
C
I never heard of that. It can happen. I've never heard of it. But I mean, I mean, my sheriff's.
A
Call, the sheriff of my county is close to causing it. Yeah. He's such a bad person.
C
So, I mean, again, the, the government, every government runs the same way. It's. They've got to have a budget. They make their money from what? They make it from taxes. They make it from speeding tickets and property tax, all that shit. Right. They've got to pass a budget. Part of that budget is the cops. They've got to pay for it. If you can't pass it, though, because.
A
Look, what is all those reserve funds in all the government is for like, hurricanes, damage to the community. Nobody ever thinks, like, what if we can't pay the cops? Because that's happened in my, like my county's at a big budget and argument over funding the police.
C
The other part of it is that. And Ja just said this. Cities and states all depend on some federal funding somewhere. And if the government is shut down, that means schools, that means cops, that. I mean, how much money did you guys get from Homeland Security?
A
Well, the grant, there's the Stone Garden Grant is like $4 billion. Yeah. That's being paying fuel for helicopters. It's paying overtime to do these home, these operations. So I'm sure that's being cut. But you're right about the. What would, what would we do? Like, I'm trying to think in my head.
C
You got to show me.
A
It's just like, cops are terrible with their money.
C
Yeah.
A
They all got the trucks, the jacked up. Nobody plans ahead. So now you're living paycheck to paycheck. Like Mo. I would say a high, high percentage of cops are living paycheck to paycheck. I'm gonna say it, I don't mean it, but you got some nagging ass wife at home. You know, you're going home. You're. You're dealing with all the stuff we always talk about. And I say that jokingly, but whatever you got at home, all the stuff you're dealing with, we've talked about over and over. You have the call to call to call. Your day is a mess. And now you go home to your, your spouse and it's like, oh, yeah, all of our bills are due Friday and babe, I'm not getting a paycheck. Like, we. Our mortgage isn't getting paid. The cars and I don't know if we have gas for the weekend. Well, I mean, how are we going to Get Jimmy to court.
C
Like, how, how.
A
How are we going to do. Like how do we.
C
And by the way, our hamster needs a transition.
A
Yeah. We need a. And. And the Susie's hamster. You can go without. You can't. You can, you can get, you can get a couple months out of not paying your car. You can get a little while out of not paying your mortgage. You can't get a little while out of not paying your light bill, your or your water bill. Yeah, they'll shut it off.
B
I mean, it would, the argument would be. The argument would be is that if this happened in like Chicago. Right. Chicago PD wasn't getting paid. The argument for, you know. Oh, well, you have an oath and a duty. I need to pay the bills. I have to go get another job.
A
I can't work.
B
I'm gone. Working.
A
Yeah.
B
Like, I gotta go. It's not that I'm pissed that I'm not getting paid. Obviously, I do this. It's not about the money, it's about the job. But if I got bills to pay, I have to go work somewhere else.
C
I mean, and that's, I mean, like, it's especially bad for, you know, guys in the military. I mean, you remember what it was like for us. I mean, I remember when they told us like, hey, it looks like the government's shutting down. Your asses are still showing up to work tomorrow. Yeah.
B
And you had a choice.
C
Yeah. Yeah, you were.
B
I think that's all federal.
A
I talked to a US I talked to a U. S. Marshal the other day, but he's not getting paid.
C
And, and that's the. They've already, they're already looking at furloughing federal and like federal court employees shutting the courts down one. One day a week, you know, furloughing.
B
Marshall, that's some long term.
A
Like I talked to a marshal who said I'm going on murder hits, like putting my life on the line and I'm not getting a paycheck at the end this week. Like, I gotta still go do all that stuff, but I'm not going to get paid. I'm gonna have to go home, not have money and deposit in my bank, but continue the mission.
C
But.
B
Well, conservative chocolate podcast just said the VA is still paying.
A
They are. I went to appointment.
B
Yes. Here's the crazy thing. What if VA payments to all the disabled veterans stopped being. Because that. I'm telling you, they already. Last year they did try to pass something. I don't know if it worked. They. They kind of suggested that if You're a veteran receiving DA Virginia disability and you make X amount of money. It was a lot of money. So don't get me wrong, it was a lot of money. Really? The average veteran doesn't have to worry about this, but they were saying that your, your VA is going to decrease because you make so much money and that caused a storm.
C
Yeah.
B
Of blowback. Can you imagine if they were like, the government is still not back up and now we're not going to pay veterans their disability money. We will pay you, but the veterans that rely on it. Nope.
C
I mean, I mean that dude that I need my VA paycheck. I mean I, I mean you guys hear me cough all the time. I got the burn pit lung, I got a, I got a big problem.
A
But, and then it's like, okay, we'll keep paying you, but now we're shutting down the clinic because we can't pay the, the secretary.
B
So now all of your appointments, all.
C
Of the medications that like, so my father in law who's got a heart condition, who's got agent Orange from Vietnam, like what, how's he going to do this? I mean we are, we are so close to anarchy. People don't understand it. And that's why 12 meals away.
A
And how, how many, how many trillion are we in debt?
C
38, 39 trillion. Ridiculous. And so, you know, to the, I mean this kind of brings us full circle back to the guy who called. He was like, you know, you should stand up for us. And yeah, I hear you. But, but at the same time I also hear the people that are going like, dude, we are massively in debt, we need help. We got to stop paying out every, all this stuff to everyone and start worrying about ourselves. They have a point too. And I don't know what the right answer is.
A
Well, it be the stuff we're talking about now that we're able to talk about it because we have media. And, and come this was going on for 40, 50 years when the news was only on three channels and you didn't have any social media. Social media, yeah. Think about what they were doing then. They were doing everything. It was a madhouse. Now even with it, even with it on TV going, this is all wrong. You're all breaking the law. You're shutting the government down for all the wrong reasons. We just go, okay, we're just gonna sit here and talk about it on the show. But like nobody. What, what do you do?
C
I mean, and you know the worst part about it is the senators and congressmen they still get paid.
A
Yes.
C
That's the crazy part, because that's. So there is no incentive. Incentive for them.
B
Yeah.
C
Even if they really did rely on their paychecks, you got to go down.
A
The other rabbit hole that they're working for special interest groups. So it's more. They're getting paid anyway. You could really take it away. But their reason they're so stuck on keeping the government shut down for a cause is because that transgender clinic is donating millions of dollars for a re election fund. So we have to draw this line, or they're not going to. We're gonna pull your funding. And now. Okay. Oh, shit. We can't lose that. I mean, it's all a. It's a racket, dude. It's Rico, dude. It's racketeering.
F
It's all crime.
C
You know, Michael Francis, who was a mob boss, he was a. A capo for, I want to say, the Colombo family. He talks about it. He's like. He's like, you think we were a racket? That's the biggest freaking mob.
A
They protected you. The Mafia.
C
If you paid the mafia, you were safe, dude. I mean, the argument can be made that New York was a safer place.
A
100. 100.
C
I mean, at least, you know, it's like you got that line from Goodfellows. You got here and here.
B
Here's what would happen if, in this type of situation, when the. When the five families were in control a lot more than they are now, you know, they would take care of the people that didn't have any money. There would be program. I'm imagining there would be programs. There would be logistical things set up to take care of the people because they also want their money as well. So if the.
A
And back then shutting down just as crooked as the mob.
C
Yeah. I mean, guys were on the take. I mean.
A
But then they're just like cops, though. There was the whole thing. Like, they had. They could. They could do all that stuff they were doing, but they still had to maintain some level of. Like, you couldn't go too crazy. Like, some of those guys got power crazy. They're beating people that didn't be killing people that need to. To be killed. The Mafia was founded on almost like a statue book. These are the rules. If that guy's following the rules, you can't kill him because you don't like him.
B
Yeah.
A
As long as he's paying his money and he's on time and, you know, you've seen the movies. This guy, they're paying their dues. You gotta. You got. You can't not like it.
C
That's why it was organized.
A
Family was. It was. Family was off limits. Yeah. Like, cops will bang your wife like they don't care anymore. This whole brotherhood that there's not. The family's like, you tell you one of those dudes wives, you were done.
C
Dude killed you dead.
A
So there was like, rules that were really able to be enforced in it. And it.
B
We don't.
C
And we don't do business with the drug cartels.
B
Yeah.
A
And it was, you know, it was like.
C
And now. Now we're. I mean, I didn't mean to, but. Good segue into Venezuela.
B
Let's do it. Man, this is a. This is a big one that. Obviously it's the. It's the topic of the thumbnail because it's just. It's been ever evolving this last two weeks.
C
Yeah, it's. It's been going on for probably about kinetic operations. Been going on for about 44.
A
We're throwing our. We're flying planes over there and stuff, Right? Let me pull up my.
B
Throw me in.
C
We pull up the office intel reef here.
A
Yeah, we sent planes down to fly around down there.
B
Planes.
A
Yeah, we had. We sent a B52 to like.
C
Yeah, we flew three B52s with escorts 12 miles off the coast.
A
Like, hey.
C
We're just like, hey, bro. Well, they flew an F16 over one of our destroyers at, like, low level.
B
And so we're like, venezuela did.
C
Yeah, they flew an F16 straight over one of our Arleigh Burke class destroyers. And so Trump was like, oh, I'll fly three B52s off your coast. Like, what do you think of that? I could have. Nukes, could not. We don't know.
B
So a B52 is not set up for engagement. It's set off to drop bomb. That's why they need.
F
Yeah, it's.
C
It's a. It's a bomber. So, you know, I mean, that pretty much carries fucking everything. I went through a lot of different stuff here, so I got to back it up.
B
You're good. I didn't even know this was a thing last week.
C
Yeah. So here we go. So currently, right now, we're in the middle of a posture shift. US Relations with the Maduro regime have rapidly degraded from diplomatic pressure to overt kinetic action. Kinetic means we're killing people and blowing shit up. We're killing people and breaking things. We are the U.S. the United States. Okay? And we've authorized covert actions. President Trump confirmed that the. The authorization of the CIA's covert operations office inside Venezuela on 15 October and has given them permission to conduct any and all operations that they seem necessary. All right, so I mean like they just got a.
B
What's the rules?
C
There is no rules. CIA.
B
I know, that's what I'm saying.
C
He justified this move by citing the regime's alleged emptying of prisons and a surge and narcotics trafficking between Venezuela and the United States through Mexico and through the Caribbean. Kinetic strikes started in early September with US forces primarily. Primarily Navy have conducted at least six lethal strikes. One of them we don't have a video of because they did. They killed it with something new. So they killed a semi submersible drug. Drug running craft and they killed it with an. It's basically makeshift submarine. It doesn't just. It basically. Only the little cockpit is sticking out of the water. The rest of it's under the water.
B
Okay.
C
And so we killed it with something else. And we don't want the narcotics traffickers to know what we can see.
A
They just blew another one up couple days ago. Yeah. Keith Pearson posted all those videos.
C
So. So.
B
Holy.
C
Yeah, we just don't want them to know what their vehicle look like on our sensors. That's the only reason we haven't posted it yet.
B
Okay.
A
So.
C
Strikes. Suspected drug smuggling vessels in the Caribbean Sea near the Venezuelan coast. At least 32 fatalities have been reported across the six strikes as of 19 October. Target vessels have included speedboats and in one instance a narco semi submersible vessel. US justification frames these as narco terrorists and linked to everybody's attention transnational criminal organizations like Trend. I can't even.
B
So they're trying to smuggle drugs into the us.
C
Fentanyl specifically. Yeah.
B
Where.
C
Fentanyl.
A
Fentanyl.
B
Fentanyl. Okay.
C
We blow them up and we blow them up good.
A
That sounds like very easy. Yeah, that's probably why it's not getting so much heat. Is like you can't. How do you really.
B
I mean, you can't argue that.
A
Can't argue that. I got some breaking news because this is a. This is a broadcast for all my Glock lovers out there. You hate Sig, right? Everybody's a Glock fan. Everybody's a Glock fan, right?
B
Yeah.
A
Glock.
C
Well, let me.
A
Let me, let me, let me read to you about your Glock company. This from Glock store, official site of Glock. Huge news. We have received news that of. No, as of November 30th, all Glocks are. Are discontinued except the 43 43X and 48X. All the. All those Glocks will be replaced with a new V model that has changes to prevent the switch conversions. So your beloved Glock has caved to the Democrat switch.
C
God.
A
Liberal push. Sig didn't do that. Sig shoots you in the leg and still pumps those guns out left and right.
B
They're saying they're gonna put a safety on it.
A
They're gonna.
C
Yeah, remove the guns.
A
They're not gonna sell the other gun. The only guns that are gonna remain on the market right now for Glock are the 43, 43X and 48X. And they're going to redesign the V model. The new V mod. It's gonna be a new V model. That is.
B
It's a V model.
A
It's gonna be a new gun.
B
Oh, okay.
A
So they can't put a switch on it.
B
Yeah, so wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. They can't put a switch on it. Oh, they can't make a pulley auto.
A
Yeah, yeah.
B
Okay. All right.
C
Yeah, the Glock switch.
A
Dude thought this was America.
C
I thought this was America. Guys.
A
I guess I could argue this both ways, though.
B
So they're not going to. With the Glock 43 and the 43X. So you can still.
A
You can't. You can't. You. 43, 43X. I guess you can't put a switch on.
B
Oh, so they're already good to go.
A
Yeah, but.
C
So. But like California.
A
California has Glock now. Changing their tune.
C
Yeah, my Glock. But I mean, the good thing about Glock 19 is that they may discontinue selling the gun, but the gun ain't gonna die. So I'll still have it.
A
No, it ain't gonna die. But it's just. I mean. Yeah, that's a California liberal.
C
Oh, God.
A
You know, they don't. Yeah, it's just another rabbit hole. So instead of enforcing the law and putting these people in prison and going full blown, let's enforce the law in these places where they're shooting everybody. We attack the gun company. It's just common in the United States. I mean, what.
B
Okay, so could you argue that in 10 years this will. Will solve a lot of the. The fully automatic gun issues?
C
Dude, here's the. Here's the other side of that equation is people are trying to get rid of the NFA anyway. And, you know, and if the NFA goes away, it won't matter.
A
The same AG that's going after Sal is also suing Glock for. Because of the switch. So instead of going first we're going to put good cops in prison lock them up that shoot people with guns that have guns illegally and it shouldn't be pointing guns at the police. We're going to put the cop in jail then because I have to say this carefully because people manipulate the firearm and use it illegally. Illegally. The gun owner, the legal gun owner and the legal gun manufacturer have to get sued and alter their firearm because pieces of use it in a way it shouldn't be used. But we don't go after them. They get arrested. 1820. I believe I heard a stat in Philadelphia from good cop back cop Nick that the just in Philly they can attribute 71 dead bodies to the lack of prosecution by the attorney general in Philadelphia.
B
71 just went up the other day.
A
Yeah.
B
Two days ago it went from 70. That's the not a Jackson.
A
When I say that that means that the people who committed the crime of murder were arrested for a crime that they should not have been allowed out of jail or they should have been accumulated enough crimes in their. In their score sheet that they shouldn't be walking the street and they had their 71st being tracked by I think their unions up there.
B
Yeah.
A
71 that's in Philly, Pennsylvania side jersey. Piece of that runs New Jersey Attorney general's office is suing Glock. Going after cops. It's everybody else's fault but the piece of the. I thought it's slobber. I'm a mess dude.
B
I'm showered.
A
I caught the reflection of this and I thought I was slobbering. I haven't slept in like two days. But they're. Instead of going after the people enforcing the law you have cops. Their hands are tied. They can't do their job. They can't go put bad guys in jail. They can't use for. I believe they said Sal said his use of force policy went under his old policy when he shot that guy it was like. Like seven pages. That same agencies use a force policy is now like 30 some pages. Plus you can't physically remove somebody from a car in New Jersey. If they look at you and say I'm not getting out. Pennsylvania versus MIMS doesn't apply.
C
And and, and all while all of this crime is happening and we're. We're trying to. We're at the point where we're dropping bombs on people coming out of Venezuela.
A
Yeah.
C
Everybody else we're worried about a drug company how much of the or a gun company how much of this drug is fueling the Problem over what? Whatever you can do.
B
Start getting conspiracy side of it. Because I, you know, do, do they. Do they want fentanyl to stop completely when I say that? Because.
C
Hold on. Did you. Do you remember. Oh, you didn't go to Afghanistan. I keep forgetting. Did the amount of. Do you know where the majority of opium comes from?
B
Afghanistan.
C
It does. Why do you know, people are like, well, we didn't go to Afghanistan for oil. No. We went there for opium and big pharma. Anyway, continue. I'm sorry, you got me on that.
A
Here's the thing here. Okay, here's. We're bombing boats from Venezuela or submersibles. But we allowed the border to be open for the same type of people to bring the drugs. Just walk in the country free and clear. Why didn't we bomb the border? I mean, am I allowed to say that?
C
I, I like.
A
Why don't we shut down and treat it like this?
C
I have, I have always been an advocate of taking the alligators out of Florida and putting them in the Rio Grande. Like, good luck. Maybe hippopotamuses, you know, they're nasty. They are nasty.
A
Nasty.
C
You know, we put hippos and crocs in that thing.
A
Let me clear that up. Because we're well watched now.
B
Yeah.
A
I don't advocate for bombing innocent people at the border. Let me back off of that. Yeah, I'll be on somebody's YouTube channel or something. Next thing you know, I'll be a terrorist. So I don't, I don't advocate for that. But that, the fact, the fact that we're, we're taking it serious enough to bomb vessels, which I agree with. I agree with stopping the, that aggressiveness of. Bob, it's international waters. It's out in the middle of nowhere. Like, don't bring it here. But then we let just anybody walk in the country that could be smuggling the same drug in and just don't do anything.
C
I mean, there, the, the amount of problems we're going to have if we don't. I mean, there's, there's no, there's no options anymore. We have to start killing people at, you know, blow. And I'm not talking about at the border. I mean, we got, we got these people trying to bring in submersibles. And where do you think they go, by the way? They go to Florida. That's where they drop this off.
B
Yeah. I mean that when you, when you sink, when you bomb and sink a submersible, they're dead, right?
A
They're not. Oh, yeah.
B
Oh, yeah, we're not sending arrest, actually.
F
No.
C
In this case, there was survivors. There were POWs.
B
What do we do with them?
C
They're going to get mo, baby.
B
Well, they're not, are they? Are they POWs? Are they criminals?
C
They're. Technically, they should have been taken in as POWs.
A
War criminals.
C
Yeah, because they're terrorists. Okay. People are saying, well, there's no act of war. There's no, you know, declaration of war. They're terrorists.
A
Grab a fentanyl can kill more people than a bomb.
C
Yeah, they're terrorists. So they're detainees until we decide that they're there. Anything else? But, I mean, we basically got to give them the same treatment under the Geneva Convention we gave the detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan. So they got. They got fished out of the water. And I'm sure that they're singing like birds right now because they got some CIA dude with car battery hooked up.
A
Go smuggle fentanyl into Iran. As an American, I want to see what happens. Dude, you can't even go to China and smuggle. We're so. We're so soft. This country is so soft.
C
Yeah, well, you know what, though? I mean, you know that, that saying, you know, good. Good men or hard men create good times?
B
Yeah, yeah, we're.
C
We're in the.
B
We've been in the wrong one for a while because even, like, guys create.
A
No, it's hard. Weak men create hard times.
B
Hard times create strong men.
A
Yes.
B
Strong man became. Become. No, there's four.
A
Keeps going.
C
Yeah, Here, I'll find it. Hang on. Let me, Let me go to where Worker. Weak men create hard times.
A
That's my saying on my. Because my sheriff is a weak man. He created times.
C
My bio says that hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. Weak men create hard times.
A
So go. Yeah, just look at a no kings protest. You'll see the weak men.
C
Dude, did you see the guy with the running rolling coal on those dudes with the diesel? He went right past him. Just, just.
A
You know, I'm. I live in a conservative county. It's not real big. We have like250,000 people in the whole county, and it was a massive turnout. And I just think I, I get the concept of, like, if we don't.
C
Want kings, but I, I.
A
There's no king. What is the point?
C
So I guess the. I think the point is just in their. From their perspective that Donald Trump is doing things that, like a dictator.
A
That's been. But that's Been thrown. That's like racist. Saying he's racist. It's just been thrown around so much that it doesn't hold any well.
C
And remember that's, that's why Charlie Kirk's dead.
A
Yeah.
C
I mean that the rhetoric is the problem. The rhetoric is the problem. And there isn't really, I think that the genie's kind of out of the bottle. We've already gone over the cliff. We're just waiting for, you know, we're Rome waiting on Caesar.
A
But here's my point, here's my point. To go back to what I said about the government, the government being shut down. These morons go out and do a no Kings protest. And half of them, I watch videos where they walk up to them, they ask them questions. They have no idea why they're standing there. They have no idea what they're protesting. So no idea.
C
There's videos of, of like, because you had a, you had a mix of people, you got the blue haired septum ring knuckleheads. And then you've got these boomers who are old school Democrats and like they're trying to do the chance, but the old people don't have the cell phones. And to know that the chance are. And they're not handing out flyers like.
A
They used to, but they're out there doing that. They're not, they have no idea. But instead of holding your government officials accountable so the government doesn't get shut down. Shut down and put all that effort into something that could actually help. They'd rather just go hold a sign that they have somebody else wrote for them. They have no idea what it mean. I watch, I love when the guys walk up and ask me like, well, what, what are you here for? Well, it's right here on the sign. Well, explain what's on the sign. I don't have to. Well, what are you doing?
C
So the, you know, the other thing too is that if you look, I mean the, the no Kings protest has swag. A lot of swag.
A
Yeah.
C
Which, which implies that this is not a grassroots effort. This is, this is absolutely central.
A
Yeah.
C
Oh yeah.
A
They're driving people in, they're paying for hotels and like that. We saw it. The hotel rates were insane because if it's a real protest from the community, they would go home afterwards.
C
Yeah, there was such a good point.
B
We were in all the hotels.
A
We were in North Philly. We were in, were 20 minutes from downtown. The hotel, the people said, never full, completely sold out. Because people had to come and stay in big cities. And. And stay in hotels because they're. They're bringing protesters in from other places to make news. We. We saw it firsthand.
C
Clinton.
B
Clinton said he's tried calling twice.
A
Jesus Christ. What is he got?
C
Do we.
A
I don't have him stored. Does he have a story? We have time for that story?
B
Yeah, we got time.
C
Yeah, we got time.
B
Yeah. Clint, we're gonna.
A
We're gonna. Clint. Clint. We're going to set a clock. Set a timer. All right, well, I'll get to my phone.
C
He's got.
A
The second I call. Clint. Here we go. Ready? Here we go. Get ready. Everybody talk to me.
F
What's going on, bud?
A
How you doing?
B
What's up, Clint?
F
Super duper. So here we go. I got a note card to keep.
B
Me on track, my man.
F
So I was da select. Select to be a recruiter, and so you don't have any input on where you go. So I asked for North Carolina, and they got me as close as they could, and I got Arizona.
C
That sounds like the army right there.
A
Right next door.
F
Yeah. So I did 36 months, and I hated every month of it. And I was down to my last month, and I had ran into this girl at a community college that was my fishing hole. And she said she was interested for girls and recruits.
C
That's what I was thinking, but I.
F
Didn'T want to say it.
A
Okay, okay, okay.
C
All right.
F
So anyways, she lived about an hour and a half away. This is in the middle of the desert in Arizona. And so I was driving out to her house to give her the test, and I had to take my partner with me because it was a female, and you can't be in a female's house by yourself.
B
Wait, testing her for what?
C
The asvab?
A
Like, yeah, like, okay, okay. This sounds way different. If you take it.
C
We could clip this.
A
He's got cards today. Stay on task. Go ahead. Hey.
F
I'm like. I'm like, two thirds through, man.
A
I'm gonna have to have you called back in and out in 20 minutes. Go ahead.
C
All right.
F
So me and my. Me and my partner, we were walking out, and I told my boss, I said, hey, I'm taking him with. With me. He said, what for? And I said, well, it's a female's house. He was like, come on, man, just go by yourself. I was like, nah, man, I ain't trying to go out like that at the end, you know? And he said, okay. And then he turns to this brand new E5 that you got there, and he said, he'd only been there two weeks. He said, if you don't find somebody to join the army today, I'm kicking you out. And me and the other dude walked out of the. The office, and we got in the gov. We're pulling out. And the. The brand new recruiter calls me on the phone. He's like, hey, man, if this E7 gets in my face again, I'm gonna knock his ass out. And I said. He said, can I go with y'?
B
All?
F
And I said, yeah, man, I don't give a. So I pulled around, and he got in the car. So there was three of us in the car, which is unheard of. We drive an hour and a half away to this house, and we're pulling in the neighborhood. It's a nice neighborhood. But as we're pulling in, we pull in the driveway, we get out, and there's a. What I would deter. Well, my. My description as a novice would be a Latino street gang.
C
Latino, 110 degrees outside.
F
And they had benches in the driveway and couches, and they were lifting weights in the driveway.
A
Just like the movies.
C
Yeah, it was like Fast and the Furious out there.
F
When we walked by him, the one dude did the. The gangster, both arms up, looking at us.
A
Yeah, what's up?
F
Essay. And the new guy goes, hey, what's up with that? I said, oh, man, don't pay no attention to that. Keep. Let's keep moving. So we walk to the. The front door of this house, and you can hear the music through the door.
C
It's.
F
I mean, jamming, jamming inside. 1pm and we ring the doorbell, knock on the door, and then this. Now, y' all being cops, y' all have experience with this? I don't. I was a recruiter, and this was my first interaction with a meth head. So this dude opens the door, and he is literally like Tyrone Biggins, but he's a white guy and he's scratching his face. He's like, hey, guys, what's going on? Yeah, it's like, hey, I think I'm here to see your wife about taking a test to join the army. He's like, yeah, guys, come on in. Come on in. And we walk in, there's not a light on in the house. It's pitch black. And on the floor is a. Is an old school wood tv. The big tv, it just sits on the floor.
B
Yeah, yeah.
F
The side of it is two car amp, you know, carpeted boxes with the gigantic boom speakers. And he's got this cranked to 11, and it's on the home screen to a motocross video game. And it's playing the introduction to a Godsmack song. And it's just repeating over and over and over and over. And so the wife comes out.
A
How long, how big is this card in front of you, Clint, that you wrote this on? This is a big card. Go ahead.
F
It's about, hey, it's about to get good.
B
All right.
A
We were two thirds a little while ago.
F
So I, I, I said, I said to the wife, where could you take this test? She said, in the back. So I walk back there and I, I throw the laptop in her bedroom and I, I haul ass out of there. When I walk out, she pawned it. The, the guy goes, the guy goes, hey, guys, sit down. And so me and my partner, we sat down, we sat down right on the edge of the couch because you don't want to relax because it's filthy. And the brand new E5 standing there, and he, and he goes, he turns to him, the music's blasting. He goes, hey, man, sit down. He's like, nah, man, I'm not gonna sit down. He gets like an inch from the dude's face and screams, set the down. And I'm just sitting there, I'm looking and, and my partner turns to me, he says, clint, what are we gonna do? I said, we might have to beat this dude's ass. The dude goes, I'll be right back. And he walked out of the room super fast. And I said, hey, guys. He comes back with a gun. We're out of here. That computer, we're gone.
B
Right? All right, you waited for a gun.
F
Here it comes. Here comes with the music blasting. He comes back, he's got a damn seven foot snake that is white and orange, and he's holding the head up parallel with his head and he's dancing to the music. And I'm sitting there on the couch, I'm looking at it, and I'm think I'm stone cold sober. One o' clock in the duty uniform. And I'm sitting there like, what choices have I made in my life that has taken me to this spot?
A
Yeah. Yeah.
F
So he comes over and he's dancing, I mean, right in front of me with the snake.
C
He's like, no, man, I'm not touching the snake.
F
So the wife comes out and she says, I can't take this test. The music's too loud. They get into this big domestic argument. They're getting ready to get her disqualified right in front of me. And she says, I Can't take the music so loud. He's like, all right, I'll turn it down. You. So he turned it down one notch, so still blast. So she runs out of the room, and he goes, come on, boys, let's go outside. And it's his house, so we don't have no choice. So we go outside. It's 110 degrees, and I'm staring off into the. The desert, just. Just dreaming that I'm gonna be gone in one month. And my partner is. He's a Mormon, so he doesn't cuss, he won't lie, but he will make make fun of. Of a civilian right to their face, and just stone face it. So he's talking to this dude. He's like, so tell me, man, why aren't you joining the Army? And he's like, well, guys, I got, you know, substance issue, and I'm bipolar schizophrenic.
B
You know, I got some issues.
F
And so.
A
And then.
F
So then my partner starts running just as his spiel that dislike to get information from people. He's just practicing, and he's like, so when you're not playing video games or playing with your snake, man, what are. What are you into? He said, man, I'm really into performance automobiles. I love cars and this and that. And I. I. In my mind, I'm like, oh.
B
And.
F
And my partner goes, oh, man, that's Sergeant Ludwig's thing, man.
B
He.
F
He had a Mustang with a supercharger, and now he's got a Corvette with nitrous. He knows all about that shit. Tell him about your car. And dude's like, yeah, man, my car is. It's what I like to call a sleeper. It looks like a regular car, but, you know, it's. It's all done up, 100 inside. It'll just blow the doors off anything. He starts talking about all the modifications, and it's real. Like, what he's saying makes perfect sense, except for the last 10, which is the horsepower numbers, which are like double what anybody's ever gotten out of a car. And so I'm just. As a recruiter, you don't call people out on their. You just nod along. So. So he's telling about his race car. And then my partner goes, was the race car here? He said, yeah, man, it's in the garage. Well, can we see it? So we go in the garage. He closes.
A
You were airborne, right? Yeah, one minute. One minute.
F
So then we're looking at the race car, and it's a Kia Sofia or a Kia Sorento. I'm not sure it's a car. And this is covered in dirt. It's never been washed. And when we walk up, the tires are so bald, you can see the belts in the tires. And my partner leans over, says, hey, man, your tires are looking bald. You must do a lot of drifting, huh? And dude's literally scratching his neck going, yeah, drifting man. Dresden. And so Kobe, my partner says, hey, man, pop the hood on this thing. He pops the hood. This car has never had the oil changed in it. There's not one single thing.
A
30 seconds, Clint.
B
What's the butt of the story? Huh? What's the what? How's the story end?
F
Oh, he drives a car off a cliff and he almost kills himself in front of.
C
All right, we can clip this into like.
A
I got. I got a real good idea. Thanks, Clint, for calling in. We appreciate it. That's your 10 minute story.
B
Thank you.
A
Thank you.
F
See you next two minutes later.
A
I have, I have. I have an idea that's going to blow everybody's mind.
C
I got an idea too.
A
I have, I have it. I have it. I need some help from somebody, but I have it.
C
So wait, wait.
B
Are you going to tell us what?
A
No, I don't want to say it. I want to do it going. Tell you when we're done.
C
Okay, so here's my idea for the Clint stories. We're going to. We're going to clip those and it's going to be tw. You know, the SpongeBob. 20 minutes.
B
Just get to the punch line.
A
He drove it off a cliff and almost killed.
C
We're going to be like, what in the. I'll have to come in and listen.
A
I got something better. I'm telling you, I got something better. Let's talk. Let's stop talking about it.
C
Okay. All right.
A
That didn't happen. That was a. That was a dream.
C
Yeah, he's A.I.
A
Let'S see.
B
That is the A.I.
A
Today, Jimmy.
B
We're gonna have a. Put a.
A
One of those lung things on. You'd be like darth vader, dude. 10 minutes. It was 10 minutes.
C
His.
B
His story was 10 minutes.
A
10 minutes. All right, we're working. I want to know how big did. Like I said, how big is that? He said he had a three by five card.
C
That's what somebody said.
A
I don't know, I don't know. What font did he use to. And the voice, the meth head. I didn't know method. That's a methad voice. That was good.
B
Ah, before we end, want to give some shout outs. Flatline Fiber Co. Flatlinefibercompany.com use promo code ANTIHERO15 say 15% on on your. On your rifle, slings, your ifax, your dump pouches and your baseline bags. Go to flatlinefibercompany.com use promo code ANTI HERO15. Save 15% on that. And I don't have a cool little image, but counterculture ink threads go to counterculture incthreads.com use promo code antihero say 15% on all your favorite counterculture graphic tees, stickers, hats, flags, ranger panties, zip up hoodies. The ranger panties and all sweatshirts right now are on sale for like 40 off or something like that. Getting out of summer going into fall. Counterculture Inc. Counterculture Inc. Threads.com use promo code Anti or 15 say 15% I.
C
I forgot to mention one more thing about Venezuela.
B
What?
C
The combatant commander of U.S. southern Command just resigned.
B
What does that mean?
C
It means he quit. He quit the job. He was a four. He was a four star admiral and he quit the job. Doesn't look like it was politically motivated. It looks like he was just like a dude who was like, you know, hey, I'm a four star.
B
I didn't want this, man. I'm trying to retire.
C
Yeah, exactly. He was like, dude, I was trying to be down in south.
B
What happens to a general when he resigns his position? Does he go somewhere?
C
They just. He does a change of command and then he does paperwork and on goes on terminal leave like everybody else.
B
So he was at it. He. So if you're a General, you're past 20 years.
C
Oh yeah. So you can retire four star. I mean Sergeant Major Bass was up there with them and he had done 30. Yeah. I mean, so I mean this dude, this guy. So let's let me go find out about this chucklehead real quick. I mean, I just forgot to mention that in the midst of, you know, the biggest concern genetic thing we have going on right now, that the combatant commander resigned, which although probably not going to hurt the forces too much because this is all happening down at the tactical level. But yeah, so we got that going on too. But you know, people are saying like, oh, he resigned because of hegseth and it's like, no, he resigned because he wanted to golf for the last two years of his military career in South America and you know, go shake hands with people.
B
This causes a problem. Problem with that.
C
Yeah.
B
Blowing up Venezuelan drug smuggling submarines.
C
Yeah.
B
Puts a little kink in that plan.
C
Well, I I. I honestly think the submarine got hit by a red eyeship. One of our subs. I think one of our subs sunk it.
B
Really?
C
That. Well, here's why. Like, this is. Okay, this is speculation, but the way that they were running it, there's. There's only a couple of ways you could have found it. Right. And I'm not, you know, know we're not giving out OPSEC here to the FLIR or sonar. Right. The whole reason it's submersible, so we can't pick it up on radar.
B
I have a feeling if the anti hero broadcast knows it's a thing, it's definitely not opsec.
C
Yeah, yeah, exactly. Yeah. If we know, they know.
A
I.
C
But that being said, what they engaged it with is probably something. Something way more interesting. And you know, I don't think it was like baser, but it might have been like, you know, swarm torpedoes or some, you know, something. Some new crazy weapon that we're like, hey, we don't want them to know we have this just yet.
A
There's.
C
I mean, America just be building weapons, man. We should be building.
A
We should start out. Clint needs his own show.
B
It can go on forever.
A
Yeah.
C
The dude from.
A
We go off the air at one o' clock on Monday and Clint keeps it going till the next Monday.
C
He's just, just, just over here telling stories, man.
B
All right, so Thursday, I mean, I think. I, I don't know. It's got to, it's got to stay Thursday for now, but Thursday night, trying to have the. If you see us in here, that just means we, we weren't able to get up in time, but we're hopefully gonna have the night shift up and running.
C
Right?
A
Huh?
C
Yeah.
B
Well, we'll discuss all that later. But are we, when are we doing double broadcast for the week? When are we doing that?
A
We're gonna start Thursday.
C
I thought I got. I was under the impression we're going.
A
I'm ready.
C
We're going full bore.
B
All right, 90 chance we are going to broadcast Thursday, Thursdays at 11 as well. So Mondays and Thursdays. Give you a couple days.
A
Thursday night at 8 on the new. On the new show.
B
We're expanding.
A
Yeah, yeah. And most likely by November, there should be a second. A counterculture show that I'll be doing. Doing.
C
Between.
B
Yeah, by November.
A
Yeah, between. So you'll have 8, 11 broadcast. You'll have a fight club where we're gonna break down all those cool videos you see on the Internet. Kind of talk about the tactics and police stuff that goes into that. A lot of people question that. You'll get it from Liberal Mike. Not the stationary blow Tyler. You'll get the. You'll get it. You'll get the truth. Let's put it that way. You'll get the truth. On breakdowns of videos from a.
B
If I. If I produce it, can I have a mic?
A
Yeah, you have a mic.
B
Yeah.
A
He's gonna be a producer, so he's just going to chime in and say, I'm looking for a co host on that one. A permanent co host that can. That has some knowledge of the. Because I don't claim to be knowledgeable in that area. I have. I'm very knowledgeable in. In narcotics investigations, homicide investigations, street crimes investigations, but I'm no expert in, by any means, in use of force. You won't hear me talk about building clearing.
B
But the goal. Yeah, the goal of this breakdown at.
A
A very basic level, the goal of.
B
The show is to tie and fight culture with law enforcement maybe, or. Or people that aren't cops, that don't agree with cops. They. But they're fight enthusiasts because, well, you know, we're gonna be trying to tie in bjj, tie in ufc. You know, it's a fight culture that breaks down cop videos, whether they're right or wrong. Like that video would have been, if we hadn't got to it first, would have been a perfect example of, you know, what's acceptable.
A
Yeah, we're definitely.
B
Because people were saying the elbow strikes were garbage.
A
We're. I mean, that was an older video where Bob behind it. I know there's other pages that. So in the social media world, and I'm. I'm guilty of it when a meme. A meme trumps everything. So if I see something that's like, this could be a great breakdown video, my dumbass just gets it out with, like, some bad caption. About 30 by 30 DEI chief sucks. These people autistic.
C
Yes.
A
But then you got your other pages that take the time to go, this is why it failed, or this is the breakdown side of it going to kind of go in between that. It's going to be funny. We're going to laugh about it, we're going to break it down, but it's not going to be so serious that I'm trying to tell you, like, you have to, you know, mortgage your house to go sign up for Jiu Jitsu. I know I push it a lot, but I'm not going to make it. Like, All About Holly's all I got. To talk about. We're going to take it. We're going to. We're going to have the funny side of it, the real side of it, and then somewhere in between, like, this is why I failed. This is why I didn't fail. But I'm not going to sit there and argue tactics with people. It's going to be a. Just a presentation, kind of like a broadcast. Here's the information, here's the video. Let's talk about it. Let's. As long as we're talking about something that's usually good, you know, whether we agree or disagree, like Charlie Kirk's message was let's have conversation. You can still get this on my site. I'm donating proceeds from these Freedom shirts and freedoms hoodies and all the gear from that. Anything that says freedom on it, the money gets donated to Turning Point USA for Charlie and his family and all that and that good cause.
B
So, yeah, Night Shift for counterclockwise culture. Night Shift will be for now still be anti hero. That there's a lot of things I have to go into that move over. But trying to get the girls that unfilled it on phase to go live. So we're talking with them about, you know, turning their show into a live show right now. They're pre recorded, but yeah. And then, you know, some other things going on.
A
Tomorrow's. Oh no, it's tonight. Is Tonight Sports Canine 7:00 Counterculture.
B
You have kids happy with his. He's really.
A
He knows sports.
B
He knows sports, but he's also putting a lot of the. Into the show. He had a reel that did really well. He's taking, you know, he's looking into getting better at social media.
A
If you guys check that out. I mean, if you're into sports at all, just, just give it a watch. It's very in depth.
B
Canine's got one of those lovable voices.
A
Yeah. Hey man. He's actually relative of mine. That's not the reason I push it, but he's my cousin and he does a really good job and I watched him. The reason I'm so excited for him in that area is I watched him. I used to make fun of him. He was podcasting long way back, even before you. He thought it was cool. He's on. He's getting 11 views, 12 listens on Spotify. And I used to come bust his balls. Oh, you're a celebrity or podcaster. And he sold his equipment. Then he bought it back. Then he sold it again, got rid of it and When I saw this opportunity and you mentioned sports, I was like there's a guy who has struggled, made $0, worked hard, produced his own show and let's give him a chance. So he does very good. Check that out. Tuesday night is our human performance.
B
With with HPTRT and Phil. They just talk.
A
Usually a different guest. We're doing that Wednesday you have I dropped my recorded show at noon on Wednesday on Copville G. And then Wednesday nights on Counterculture is the hot topic with Jordan Ennis and we kind of and myself, we kind of take anything that's developed between today and Wednesday, any videos, any hot things and we get his take on it. Jordan's former YouTube star on from the Georgia State Patrol. He now works for Sandy Springs Police Department which in my opinion is one of the best police departments in the United States that is has their guys backs.
B
Is he your official co host?
A
Yes, he's 100. Unless he's gone. It's official. He's a full time co host of that show and it's really cool because I have the, the production side, I have the background, the lights. Jordan throws his BDU's his T shirt on, hits record on his phone or flips his phone around and it's straight tactics. He's got the resume, he does the work. He can back it all up with everything's on video, everything he's done. So he's that Thursday we have obviously we're going to have a broadcast and a night show and Friday open mic is coming back on counterculture at 9. Justin's going to take lead on that from Donut Shop.
D
Podcast.
A
Podcast.
B
Wait, wait, when's. No, I don't think it's gonna come out at 9 or Fridays.
A
Fridays, sorry, time is wrong.
B
We're moving. Open mic is supposed to be a show. It kind of turned into a video breakdown show and just with everything and everybody's schedule and obvious nine o' clock on a Friday is just the worst time to go live. Everybody in the world is done with their week. I'm done Friday at 9pm I mean it not only the target demographic out doing, they're out arresting bad guys, they're out partying and drinking. They don't want to watch a podcast at 9pm so probably moving that to early afternoon on Fridays. But yeah, that'll be good. I, I think Nick from Good Cop Bad Cop is going to be a permanent host on that.
C
So yeah, and we need it. We still need a farm and we do.
A
We had one. We have got up and Left during the. No, during the live.
B
During the live in Philly.
A
We talked in. But yeah, we do definitely want to reach. We need to get into fire culture. You know, somebody that is a fireman that's retired or can talk. And we will give them the platform to start bringing all the issues. With FD and fire department issues, they're a little different than law enforcement.
C
And breaking down fire videos.
A
Breaking down fire videos. We absolutely have a.
B
A way they come out with about one a year. So we'll break down down.
A
We can show them like stage dub waiting.
C
You need to clip this part so I can send it to my buddy Jimmy, who is a Philly fireman. So I could be like, hey, dude, they're calling you out.
A
Our goal is to have the first responder realm covered with some type of show, some type of news. So I told Sal if he moves down here, he can be part of the show.
B
Is he still staying in cop work?
A
No.
B
Good for you, Sal.
A
I think we had. I had that conversation with him and his mom when we were up there and I looked at him and I was like, well, when you get back. When I get back to work, it's like especially up there with that.
B
He.
A
He lost his certificate and everything. So he's got to go through winning. If it goes to trial or it gets dropped, then he would have to reapply. That would follow him around forever. What happened? Kind of like Dog the bounty hunters on Gary Chapman. Gary Chapman, if nobody knows Gary Chapman has Dog the bell bounty hunter's son. He got out of all that work and he is a cop. Huge supporter of anti hero. Huge supporter.
B
Thank you, bro.
A
Counterculture. And he got fired. He got a pursuit, got fired. And the only reason he got fired was because of who he is. And TMZ picked up the pursuit and he went through his thing, got his appeal, he got his job back. But what they did was they gave him the oldest car in the fleet.
B
And they're.
A
They're still with him, but yeah, they're going to, you know, like, it's just guys. He loves to do the job, so he, you know, he fights. So it's always a struggle for cops. You, even if you do the right thing, you lose your job or you get indicted or you get let go, you have to fight all the way back, you know. And I've had guys on like Greg Lacera down in Broward, three years of hell to get his job. That's dedication, man. When you get hosed by this job and you fight three Years to go back to doing it again. Like I would, I, I would. You know, Sal gets a pass in my book. Man, this job did everything, you know.
B
No, he needs to come work for counterculture man.
A
Yeah, yeah, we got a spot for him.
B
We gotta start getting his weekly cheesesteak review.
A
And you know who, you know who would be a hit.
B
He needs to get with Nick.
A
No, you know. No, you get his mom on a show.
B
She's been on like 80 shows.
A
She needs her own show. She's very laid back than the person that Barbara I met. She's great, great person.
B
Sounds like I'm not doing a podcast with my mom.
A
Let me tell you how funny it was. Mom. Mom comes in like a ball fire short, you know, or you met her and she starts, you know, and then grandma comes. Her mom comes. Her mom is a liberal. So every time mom goes to talk she's like, shut up, mom. You don't know anything. You're a liberal. You have no information. Everything you've been told is a lie. And this is how it really is. And it's. And she's a. Her grandma was very, very nice as well. Great family, but no s. Sal's wrote he should get some type of retire full retirement for what he's gone through and what he's dealt with for you know, he, I always say, you know, like the military, there's no unlike the military, there's no disability for cops. There's no rating. Sal had to take somebody's life justifiably. That's in it of itself. That'll you up to kill somebody is probably it. You should be medically retired.
B
Yeah. If you have to kill somebody in.
A
The job, you should be full retirement, go do something else. But instead he gets indicted and then deals with all this. He, he when this is all. And if the Republican governor wins, please, if you live in New Jersey, do your research, vote for the Republican. He's going to take care of that case. So that's, you know, that election is looming, but you shouldn't have to worry about an election to save.
B
When's his next corte?
A
October.
C
All politics is week from today.
A
What week from today?
B
A week from today?
A
Yeah, Monday.
B
He needs get it continued, Sal, and not on a Monday.
A
Well, it's going to keep getting continued because there's not a use of force expert on earth that will take the case for the prosecution. I can't find out why.
C
There's a whole argument about Dracula in the comments.
A
We want to. They're probably like we got Halloween coming up. Somebody's got to be Dracula. Jimmy, you make it. The hair.
C
Oh, yeah.
A
You make a good.
C
I was going for Jesus.
A
Joker from Batman.
C
Which one?
B
Which one?
A
All right, guys, that's it for the.
B
The broadcast. We'll see you Thursday.
C
Thank you so much for your support.
B
And we love having you here, man. So we'll see you Thursday. And stay safe out there.
C
Out.
B
JV Team for life.
Episode Date: October 20, 2025
Title: Trump Combats Venezuelan Drug Cartels, Government Shut Down Continues, NO PEACE in Gaza
This episode dives into the whirlwind of current events affecting first responders, veterans, and the broader American public. The hosts break down the ongoing U.S. government shutdown, the deteriorating situation in Gaza, the intensification of American actions against Venezuelan cartels, and shifts in political and street-level dynamics from Chicago to Philly to the Ukraine front. Blending dark humor and streetwise candor, the show delivers hard takes while spotlighting the struggles and sacrifices of law enforcement and veterans.
"After meeting them ... I'm ready to go fight for this family because they are the nicest human beings I've ever met."
— A, 07:24
"No one should die feeling like they're all alone ... If you've ever said you stand with our troops, now is the moment to prove it."
— B, 11:05
"You guys haven't been here in five months ... I want every single human being that ever pulls my file to read what you people did to me and how nobody showed up."
— A, 14:26
"These people are going to fight it out to the last person here in Ukraine ... All they're asking for is support when it comes to supplying them with arms."
— D, 46:15
"I want you guys to imagine you are cops and you are not getting paid. Are you showing up to work?"
— C, 64:27
"We've authorized covert actions...President Trump confirmed the authorization of the CIA's covert operations office inside Venezuela ... they just got a blank check."
— C, 73:27
"The rhetoric is the problem...We're Rome waiting on Caesar."
— C, 86:04
Philadelphia Fundraiser & Meeting with Saladradi
04:02–07:58
Sgt. Kevin Lee Lloyd Story
11:02–18:26
Ukraine Frontline Call: “Crusader”
40:47–49:43
US Strikes on Venezuelan Cartels
73:06–84:30
No Kings Protests and Media Manipulation
37:47–39:21, 40:16–43:14, 86:04–88:06
Glock News and Legal Irony
76:44–80:17
Government Shutdown Stress & Fallout
60:24–67:14
The hosts are blunt, irreverent, and often darkly comedic ("we're killing people in the Caribbean..."), voicing frontline perspectives from law enforcement and military service. They’re willing to take controversial positions, skewer both political parties, and lampoon protest culture as well as bureaucratic absurdity. The episode is fast-paced, skeptical of media narratives, and full of personal war stories and unfiltered opinions.
This episode pulls back the curtain on how the “antihero” class perceives America’s current crises: the breakdowns of brotherhood and institutional trust, the cynical exploitation of police and the military, the blurring line between policing and warfare, and the frustrations felt by those risking their lives at home and abroad. Current events are filtered through lived experience, not just news headlines.
Stay tuned, and as the hosts say — “Stay safe out there.”