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A
We are live on the Anti Hero broadcast. We have a hell of a show. We got three guests lined up. We're going to talk racism, we're going to talk facts and we're going to talk communism.
B
We're going to talk what? We can't talk about that stuff anymore. We're going to talk. We're going to say it.
A
Death to communism. The information provided by the speakers and presenters on the Anti Air broadcast platform is for general informational and entertainment purposes only. Information does not represent the broadcast network and all entities involved. All information is provided in good faith. Faith. However, we make no representation or warranty of any kind, express or implied regarding the accuracy, adequacy, validity, reliability, availability or completeness of this information. Hurt feelings is not defamation. JV Team for Life Good afternoon. It is Thursday, May 28, 2026. The entire broadcast is a news entertainment broadcast for veterans, first boners and all blue collar Americans. Join us live every day on Facebook, YouTube and X at 1pm and if you like our stuff, subscribe to the channel. I think you're getting better at it. This show is brought to you by Ghostbed. Go to ghostbed.com forward/anti air. Say 10 of their already ridiculous low prices, pillowcases, mattress toppers, cooling patented technology sheets and their award winning mattresses. 60,000 five, damn it. 60,000 plus five star rating and reviews in house, customer service and free shipping on those big ass mattresses. So go to ghostbed.com forward/anti air. Save 10%. It'll tell them that we sent you. And of course elevated silence. Go to elevatedsounds.com. use promo code ANTI or 15. Save 15 on your suppressor. Get yourself a can. They have everything from 22s to 50 cows. So it's time to exercise your Second Amendment right. Go to elevated silence.com and use promo code ANTARA15. You'll save 15 and it'll tell them that Anti Hero sent you.
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Patreon. Join the Patreon. Don't forget to join the Patreon. We're still active in the Patreon. We'll always be active in the Patreon. We're going to do a live before the end of the week. It's gonna happen because we have the night shift. The last night shift ever tonight on Counterculture.
A
But whoa, you're bringing that up already?
B
Yeah, we're dropping it. We are doing the last official night shift tonight. For now, that's on camera in the Disney vault. Going in the vault. There's, there is some Disney theme tunes in there that need to go in the vault. So we're going in the vault. But don't you forget to join Patreon. And don't forget about the anti hero broadcast app. Go to the antiheroapp.com still free till Monday. So if you sign up till Monday you get the whole weekend free. You'll be charged only $20 on the first and then after that it's 25amonth to be part of the OG council where you can post. It's basically our own social media app. Everybody can post on the timeline, everybody can interact, we can post videos, Tyler can show his little tiny little arms he put up in there. We can do all that cool stuff. So go to the antiheroapp.com all right,
A
let's get right into it. Speaking of social media, one of the many platforms that you can, that you can digest our short form content is Facebook. And somebody on the reel we posted this morning decided we posted a reel and it was mainly Dominic Izzo who's going to be on later talking about how there are stereotypes for a reason. Different types of cars, different types of people, different types of elements of crime really do generally point to a specific race. Like he mentioned heroin needles and be heroin needles and caps. That's white people. The, the, that you, the scrubby stuff you put in the meth pipe. That's white people all day. You got the beer cans of cocaine. That's typically Mexican people. Typically. It just typically is. And then you know, weed and other things.
B
Are we mushrooms or.
A
Yeah, you know black people do mushrooms.
B
No, no, that would be white.
A
Yeah,
B
that's gonna be. Yeah, so it's, it's, it's, I don't think that's, it's not racist. It's common knowledge is not racism. And, and you know, then there's a whole comedy spin like we talked about the whole roasting with and like things are said funny. Pete Davidson can talk about Charlie Clark. It's white on white. So Kirk. So it's okay. Hence Cliff drops a joke about George Floyd. It's not okay to some people, but it is, especially as a cop. You go to those calls and you're like, yep, this is it. Like I know exactly what, what this is. Loud music and, and Hispanic tone music and Mexican Budweisers, Bud Light.
A
Coming from eight blocks away. That's not going to be a black person. It's not going to be a white person.
B
I got you to call it. It's a suspicious person in a plaza on a bike With a backpack. Who is it? Black in Orlando? Yeah. So if you get a call, you know, it's just going to be, you know, trespassing, Trespassing at Wawa. Homeless guy won't get away from Wawa
A
all day long. It's a white.
B
You can just go down the line and just. It's not racism to say that's. It's just what it is. And. And then. Because then you could stretch it to. If I hear a certain kind of music, if I hear rap music, am I wrong to think it's probably going to be a black person in the car playing it? Could it be a white person? Yeah. But if I hear country music, I'm not gonna assume it's a black person. I'm gonna sue.
A
It's a white person.
B
So it's like to. To say the facts, and I'm not talking about being silly and getting a little slick with it. There are just things as people, we hear and we go, yeah, that's probably what we're going to be dealing with. And that's. That's actually important for awareness as law enforcement, because I go, I'm going to a call. It's in the hood. It's about a dude smoking weed on the corner. He's wearing a black hoodie. Like, I'm probably looking for a black guy. Not because it's racist, because that's what I've seen hundreds of times.
A
Yeah.
B
White guy be like, well, this ain't right. This isn't right. Like, it would.
A
You're free to go.
B
Yes. But it's just common knowledge. If I got a call for a. A fishing people, kids fishing illegally. Who you looking for?
A
Yeah, white kids.
B
Yeah. Right. You're gonna look for white kids.
A
Like, I'd be happy. I'd be happy if it was black kids, to be honest with you.
B
I think you're gonna look for white kids with like a. Like a salt life hat on and like loafers. Right? They're gonna be in their little loafers are gonna be.
A
Yeah.
B
So it's. I don't think it's. I don't think it's racist. I think it's just. That's what we're used to seeing, and that's what we do.
A
All right, so on Facebook, someone commented on this reel, and if you want to go back and watch it later, the reel I think says, calling a spade a spade, I think is what the thing was. And so this gentleman who's. Who. His profile picture. He's black and he's in a U.S. army uniform. He posted this. And so I commend this guy for not being hateful and bringing what he perceives to be his facts. So let's look at this. Let's look at this chart. So right here, this is the FBI. He goes, hey, your statement is correct, incorrect, per the FBI. Right. And this is a total arrest. I don't see the year, but I'm assuming it's in one year of. Of different types of charges and the totals and of each race. And so let's just look at murder and manslaughter. Non. I can't. It's too small on the screen. I can't read it.
B
But murder, non and non negligent manslaughter.
A
What'd you say? What? Not what? Oh, not negligent. All right, all right. Anyways, so murder and non negligent manslaughter. All right, so it says white is at 4 million. Almost 5 million. 44.7 million people that were white committed murder and manslaughter.
B
If you go over, that's total people arrested.
A
Yeah, yeah.
B
If you go down to the number that says 3650, that's your total.
A
Oh, okay. Sorry. Okay. Yeah. I don't really know what this point was. So let's just go. Let's go. Let's go with this guy's benefit of the doubt. Maybe he didn't read the chart. Total arrests. White people were arrested almost 5 million times. 4.7 million. If you go over to the black or African American, it's 1.8 million people arrested. Now we're going to take out per capita, we're going to take out percentages we all know as logical people. I want to see you, Mike. I want to get rid of that. We all know as logical people. That does play into it. But if we're just going to argue hard facts and numbers. But I see right here is where I get confused because it says white. Then the next one is black or African American. And then we're going down to American Indian and native. Alaska Natives. We've got Asian, very low crime rate, and we've got native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander. So then I realized, okay, so I'm like, looking like, where's Hispanic? And then the guy even comments, because I knew where they. They lump Hispanics in with white. And the guy even commented back and said, weren't you a cop? Don't you know that they lump Hispanics in with whites? So I'm like, okay, so now you got two total ethnicities.
B
You can take this piece of paper and throw it away now because it's, it's. You can't. You can't use this. Yeah, can't use it.
A
And you're comparing white and Hispanic people to all other races crimes. It's, it's. I mean, again, first off, this is the federal government putting this out here. So I don't believe anything they say. I work for. What was the crime thing that we all adopted the cm, whatever, where they were trying to turn like burglaries into thefts and.
B
No, that's called the. Is that thing called.
A
I've been there. I'm sure Mike has firsthand. Where they're trying to downplay felonies and violent crimes. So that way the stats look good. So they would say if you got
B
11 car burglars in a neighborhood, pull one case number and do 11 victims in one. So that way it keeps the statistics down for like Instead of having 11 burglaries, you have one burglary. Like there's all kinds of way to cook the books on that.
A
So you can. This is.
B
This is. You can't use this because the only one I was going to look at which is probably accurate would be. And then it kind of gets skewed. Is rape. We all, we. We've conceded that white men are pedophiles, like by nature, by. By the majority. And I can say that, right? And nobody's going to yell at me for saying that.
A
But if I say that it's weird sex crimes. You nailed it. You said just weird sex crimes. Like just odd. Very violent, disgusting, but just more odd.
B
Yeah. Men, white men are notorious for sex crimes and just deviancy in that area. Horrible. I've worked again. Massage. Worked a massage brother case. We sneak and peek. We put all the cameras inside. I don't think we had one. We had not one black guy. It was all.
A
You think. All jokes aside, all jokes aside, do you really think that you're gonna find a black dude molesting an animal? Nope, that was. That's a white guy thing.
B
Hispanic for no. Hispanic too.
A
Well, we're lumped in the same category.
B
Mike with a nice horse named Mariah who unfortunately fell victim to a Hispanic male. So that's Hispanic and white. Black. No. Black. Absolutely not. White men are deviant sexual. We see white women too. White women are making a strong surge to the top for having sex with young teenage males in school. So. But that. You can say that, right? There's no problem with that. But anytime you start to go outside of your race and say, well, this one, like robbery, that's going to be. There's gonna be more black people, I believe, that are going to commit robbery. Right.
A
Well, look at rape, white is at eleven and a half thousand. Blacks are at four and a half thousand. But white is splitting that with all Hispanic people.
B
And that is a huge problem in Hispanic culture.
A
Yeah. So I mean, hopefully the numbers would be about even because that's a very heinous crime. I could, I could even, I can even logically think murder, you know, somebody passionately murdered somebody. There's just no, like, look at, look
B
at burglary white dudes break into. Right. White homeless meth addicts break in your car. Young black males do a lot of burglars as well. Young black males do a lot of car burglaries looking for guns. But also, and I think that's obvious, Hispanics, they're not huge on burglary. Hispanics aren't big on breaking into their home drinking, dude, they're chilling out, they're doing other stuff. White males, crack monster, meth addict males are outbreaking in your car looking for tools and your credit card laying around and that. And black, young, black males are breaking in your car looking for guns and all that stuff. But that makes sense to me that probably more homeless vagrant white males are committing burglaries, you know, trying to feed their drug habit. So that makes sense. Right. And it's not. I wouldn't, am I? Can I. White people get mad at me for saying that. No, it's, it's just, it's statistics. So I don't know what he. And, and, but I don't know what argument you can make when you hand me a chart that lumps two completely different demographics into one. It doesn't. I know, I get it. Are you white? Hispanic. That kind of goes together for some questions. But this case, you can't put them together.
A
Well, look at here. So violent crime is its own weird little category. They just, to me, all these crimes are violent, but they have violent crime and property crime.
C
I don't know.
B
Arson, I guess maybe under arson, was it violent arson or was it. I don't know. Why would they. I don't understand that box. But yeah, I guess if it's not under arson and there's a asterisk. But I see what you're saying, yeah,
A
aggravated assault, aggravated assault. White People are at 169, 169, 000 where blacks are at 91, 000. Do you know here's the deal. This is raw, unfiltered. We were cops. I went to many all Hispanic apartments and extended stays where they didn't speak English. They were all construction workers. All they did was they worked their ass off. They got off work, they crushed Modelos, they stab each other, and then they go back to work the next day. Tons and tons of violent crimes in the Hispanic community, but a lot of them go unreported.
B
Yeah, I. Dude, I went to a call where a guy's thumb was missing. He chopped. Got chopped off by his buddy. And he was like, it's okay. Like, I'm good. Like, you can leave.
A
I like the usa.
B
Like, the thumb is gone, dude. He's like, no, no, sir. Problem. No problem. Go ahead. And I'm like, huh? So, yes, they. I would White. Here's the other thing. Here's the other thing. And I'm gonna. I don't care. This is raw. White people over call the police for dumb. So that is also going to throw the numbers up because black people and Hispanic people are more likely to handle their own. White people are crybabies a lot of times. And, oh, I need to please, because I can't. I'm arguing with my mom or my kid won't get up for bed.
A
So they're my brother, My crackhead brothers that used to live here. A week ago, went inside and stole the tv. Yeah, right.
B
So white people call the police for way more things. Karen's right. We can say that, like, white Karens are a huge reason that all these cases have more. More things reported because they call the police incessantly about. Nonsense. Dude, how many times, hundreds have I stood at a call going, this is not even close to a law enforcement call. And what am I going to say? You know, I can't get. Go f yourself.
A
You can't.
B
So it's got. You got to sit there and be like, yeah, yeah, yep. Your kid won't go to school. Like, what do you want me to do? Like, discipline your kid? Like, tell them to get up, beat him. You're allowed to beat your kid, right? So it's like, what do you. But that's a.
D
That's the thing.
B
I've been to calls. Kids are running around the car. My son won't get back in the car. Like the. Is that my problem? Like, you're the. You're the parent. So that's a white person type call where that happens a lot. A lot of domestic stupid arguments that shouldn't even be called in. Like, all the Time that happens. And that. And that's where I'm going to go off the chart and say the poor cops that end up in use of forces and complaints from calls they should never even have been on is insane. Because you're snippy. Because you're like, I shouldn't even be here. You start getting snappy with them, then they get snippy. Then they call, complain, and he's upset, and nobody ever goes back to, like, you called because your neighbor's dog cut through your yard three feet and you want to have him arrested.
A
Like, stop it.
B
Like, stop it.
A
So, yep, we just thought we'd break down that chart. There it is. What it is. Whites and Hispanics are lumped in together. That is not me complaining. That's not me defending. That is just a fact. I remember being a cop. There was no Hispanic box. It was white or Hispanic. So again, again, me and Mike just bringing up facts. Dominic Izzo coming up later. I'm sure he'll have a lot to say. Bringing up just facts. And you can't solve problems in your communities without being able to address who's committing them. If there was a serial rapist running around and they were like, well, we're afraid to say he's white, well, then that's really going to be a problem. And if it's a white dude and all the victims say, he breaks in my window and he. He's white, then we're gonna narrow the search down. If we're also probably. If we don't have a race, probably predominantly are going to assume that it's a white dude.
B
Well, you knew bust my balls about using white and black in a lot of my general conversation. But that's not a habit from law enforcement. It really is. Because, yeah, I don't want to say to you, hey, I'm looking for a dude. And you're like, okay, I'll go look for the dude. Like, what dude? Like, hey, I was. Because what if it's relevant? Like, hey, I was telling this black dude earlier at the gas station, he had a black hoodie. And you're like, oh, dude. Three blocks away. After that, I had a cold three blocks from the gas station by a black dude in the hoodie. Where? Who was he? Oh, I got his name right here. Like, let me go. Look, that information is important. White, black, Hispanic. I always did that. Because in the event that I generate your brain and you go, oh, I was looking for a Hispanic guy in a red hat yesterday. You saw one today? Yeah, he was Down. Well, let's go. Look, it just. It's embedded in me. It's not racist. It's embedded in me. To be very descriptive of who I'm dealing with, it's like seeing. Saying, I'm looking for a human, okay? A human? Yeah, it happens to be a. A black girl with pink hair. Well, that would be nice to know, but I'm looking for human. I'm looking for a human that might have done something wrong. Like. No, I'm looking for this specifically. I mean, even some of the radio transmissions, people get butt hurt when they say a male black running, blah, blah. It's like, that's what it is.
A
Well, my. My first agency I went to, when you made an arrest, you said the race of the person. The second one I went to, Orange county was a little bit more liberal. And I said, I have a one black male, 1015. And they're like. My ft was like, whoa, what, what's that I'm doing? I'm like, well, I have a prisoner. So I need everybody to know in case this guy takes off running.
B
Yeah, what if he jumps out the window? Wouldn't that be nice to know up front? Literally, like, I'm. I have a black male detained. Suspects blackmail with a black shirt. I have a black male detained. He took off running. The odds. You're going to try to remember that in that scenario. Well, you already got it out, right? They know you had a black male and a black hoodie detained. Now he broke free, takes off running. You can just yell out, he's running. Everybody knows who he is. Right? Everybody knows he. Because you already called it out. Who is it this bad? Oh, he had a black male and a black hoodie. And you're trying to run down the road, the less you have to talk and the more you can just go like, we can't be that bad. We can't be that crazy that we can't say that. Like, that's. Yeah, there's no way.
A
All right, moving on. Couple small ones. I got this one for you, dude. Billionaire by Caesars in Vegas. Did you see that?
B
Really?
A
Yeah. So Caesar's right too. I guess Caesars was yesterday wrong on my episode. I don't know if it's. It's common for businesses to be in a lot of debt, but caesars had about 11 billion in debt. So the deal is being described as an 18 billion dollar deal, but I guess Caesars only sees about 6 billion of it. So. Caesar's Entertainment announced Thursday would be acquired by for for Tita for entertainment. Okay, well, a deal almost worth 18 billion, including around 11.9 billion in assumed debt. Together, Caesars and that company have shared commit commitment to operational except blah, blah, blah. That was her statement. Um, the all trans. All cash transaction is valued at approximately $17.6 billion, including the assumption of around 11.9 billion of Caesar's out standing debt. The release said. Now here's the thing is again, is that common? Like businesses being that big having debt?
B
Yeah. So if you. I follow a guy named. What the hell's his name? Ball headed guy, annoying voice. But he's. He does casino breakdowns. You don't have, you have no idea what they have to make. To give you a perspective, New York did a 18 billion dollar deal for three casinos in New York. They have to make $7 million a day to stay at the pace to make a profit. Right now they're making 700,000. So these, there's like huge licensing fees. Obviously everything that goes into insurance, maintenance, employee, all that stuff. And then they have to get everybody there to gamble. And a lot of these casinos need to make millions of dollars a day. And in Vegas, as is diluted. I think I'm using that word right because I always say colluded and that's the wrong word, diluted. Because there's so many casinos, like what makes you go to Caesars vs go to MGM vs go to win vs go to hard Rock. So they're all competing and they have to like make a lot of money. So yeah, if you go, if you follow Vegas, Paulie is who I follow. He breaks down how much these guys lose. These guys lose millions of dollars a day. Some of them because they're mortgages. Like some of them are so in debt to their mortgage company that they're their interest on their mortgage, they're not making enough to cover the interest on their mortgage a day. And they're just going to debt and in debt and in debt mortgage by
A
like the building they own.
B
Yeah, like the mortgage of the property in the building. They're not even making their interest on like a 6% mortgage on a billion dollar property. They're not even making that a day. So basically, if you really break gambling down how bad it is, and I love it, but how bad it is, they have to have millions of dollars lost at their casino a day from regular old dudes to make their money, their payment. And a lot of them are in the red. A lot of them are in the red. The ones in New York are already not making the Money they thought they're gonna make.
A
So. Yeah, it just says that Fertita is one of the world's premier hospitality gaming companies. And the All Train. We said that. All right, so under the new agreement, Caesar shareholders will receive 31 in cash for each outstanding Caesar share, according to the release. That represent. Yeah, a lot of numbers. We're not that type of broadcast. Yeah, I thought that was cool. That was Caesar being bought out, essentially. Yeah.
B
And then I told you, like, Hard Rock is building that massive guitar hotel out in Vegas now. And they're. Hard Rock's leading the way, man. They're. They're doing it. They're. They have the market in Florida. Like, when we went to. Where do we go? Boston. I go to Boston. There's that Wynn property. You go sit down at the table. At Wind, It's Encore Hotel. Everything's free. You're at the table, you're drinking free. Drinks are free. Everything is free. Because there's competition, right? There's other casinos. You go to Florida, and you go down to Hard Rock. A Red Bull Zero is $8. While you're gambling, you're losing all your money. A drink is like, $20 for, like, a regular mixture. They don't offer anything. And to give perspective, I think I'm a high roller, right? So I go down there a couple months ago, six months ago, and I lose, like, a grand. And then I hit a 3, 400 jackpot. I'm back up, right? I'm a baller, right? I got 30. I just won 30. I go over. I'm like, go to the casino comp area. I'm like, hey, I got 3, 400. You guys need me? Can I get free drinks? She's like, no, you can't get free drinks. Go back to your table. She's like, put a couple zeros after that number, and maybe we'll help you. Yeah, they definitely give me free rooms, like, Monday through Sunday through Thursday. I can go stay, like, three nights for just 40 a night. Just a resort fee. And they get you in, they give you some free play. But 3, 400 is nothing to them. So they need to make crazy money to stay in the. In the profit.
A
I've got a super chat earlier from Liz. $5. Just saying get. Just saying get. Hey, y'. All. Get Hey, y'. All. Just saying hey, y' all maybe is what you meant. But thank you, Liz. Thank you so much.
B
Appreciate it.
A
All right, so another one. While we wait for our first guest, the big one that you announced earlier, I kind of Want to say for tomorrow I want to look into it a little bit more but you mentioned a judge getting caught.
B
Okay.
A
Now we've talked about police and they're all crazy relationships. Cops with relationships with their superiors, chiefs for relationships with city people. So cops are out there just sticking their dick and everything but that's what do you think?
B
It's not everybody's doing it. So let's go here to oh did I. Judge in Florida Circuit judge caught having sex in chambers Orlando, Florida A federal district judge district judge and caught hot water after an extramatter affair with a law enforcement officer in the judge's chambers. So the cops are still involved in this. A memo was filed on Friday shows special committee for the 11th Circuit which covers Florida, Georgia and Alabama issued an order against the judge back in February finding that the judge engaged in judicial misconduct engaging in extramarital affair with the high ranking law enforcement officer and having sexual intercourse in the judges chambers during business hours within hearing distance of staff. These guys are supposed to be smart man. Attending partisan political event which making false statements to the chief judge and district judge that were material to the investigation allegations. Court records reveal the complaints about the judge surfaced back in September stemming from a lawn clerk who accused a judge of having sex with an officer multiple times prior in the chamber. So isn't that interesting man. But think about from that standpoint. It started in September, we're just now hearing about it and there had to be multiple complaints for anything to be done. These people can get away with that stuff man.
A
Judges can get away with letting people off the hook for murder and then they go out and murder again. So the fact that a judge is out there just having sexual relations with cops doesn't surprise me.
B
Sounded like high ranking officer. So I would figure that's a female captain or somebody probably up that level that maybe oversees the courthouse or I'm assuming while the federal courthouse would be most likely U. S. Marshals right? Marshals usually guard. Yeah, marshals are the bailiffs of courthouse in the feds. So maybe a high ranking. They said law enforcement officer. So maybe a U. S. Marshal supervisor Iraq that's resident agent in charge for you counting at home. So it's probably the rack or somebody of like the U. S. Marshals that or sometimes the federal agencies have like DA is in the courthouse sometimes or so somebody was banging the judge and they could hear it like let's not be quiet. Let's just let it, let's let it fly right in our chambers here because we're untouchable, right?
A
So interesting stuff. All right, we have. We. I think he's ready. We're gonna bring in Hat Brosin for Brutal Facts with Pat Brosnan.
D
It's got a great ring to it. Thank you, guys.
A
It does. It does.
D
Brutal Facts, man. I love it. Hey. Hey, Mike.
B
How are you? How you doing, sir? Good.
D
Good, man. Good. Good. Thanks for having me. My pleasure. You know. Absolutely.
A
How are you healing?
D
Wow. I gotta tell you. What a freak thing. You know, I've been riding motorcycles my whole life. I build them, I race them. And I was offloading a 1936 on a trailer that I built, a little winch system to get the bikes in and out, and one of the cables broke. And I gotta tell you, the. It came down like a guillotine. I was very, very, very lucky. It would definitely have broken both my feet and could have taken off, you know, a third of my left foot and half my right foot. And the first thing, it's actually a bizarre story. When it comes down, I'm just lowering the ramp so I can get the bike down, and sure enough, it comes down on me. I'm wearing sneakers, and it pins me flat back. At the exact same moment, a young girl was delivering an instacart delivery of some bunch of Gatorades and stuff. She sees me pinned under the ramp, flat on my back, not screaming, I'm fine, I'm fine.
B
Yeah, yeah.
D
I don't want to tip. No, no, I'm cool. Cool. I'll go get you more Gatorade. But there's blood everywhere. So she starts screaming. I said, no, no, it's cool. I pull my feet out from under the ramp, I stand up, and I realized they weren't broken. So I. I honestly look at it as, like, a lesson in terms of being ever bringing a ramp down and having your feet in the way of the ramp. If a cable breaks, if anything fails, a motor fails. So the first thing I did was get a grinder, and I ground it all down so the edge is not like a guillotine. But thank you for asking. I'm good now. I'm actually jumping out in a 37 sidecar when I. When I wrap up with you guys, you know? So it's all good? Yeah, yeah, it's all cool, you know.
A
So what's going on in the world of the NYPD or New York City or that lovely government?
D
You know, it's funny, I was asked recently, you know, just how bad Mam Dani is going to be for the greatest city on earth. And I said, it's gonna be fatal. I said, he's actually gonna make de Blasio look like Winston Churchill and he's going to make David Dinkins look like Mother Teresa. And I had a conversation on my radio show, AM970 Batcave, with Pat Brosnan, with the former mayor, the real mayor, Rudy Giuliani. I was in bodyguard for a number of years. I know him very, very well. I said, rudy, what do you think of this clown? What do you think of this guy? He says, pat, he's going to be fatal. Fatal if he's able to execute on just some of his publicly stated agenda, be fatal to the greatest city in the world. Which by the way, he brought back after Dinkins destroyed it. And of course, Mike Bloomberg kept it running. Then this clown de Blasio came in and he was on a personal mission to light the city on fire. But I got to tell you, this communist fever dream that is possessing Mamdani is really a death warrant for this city, the city of New York. He's a socialist extraordinaire. He's claiming that he's reforming quotes, right, New York City, but he's importing full blown, full blown communist stewardship. And it's going to make the 1980s Bronx, right when I was running around the Bronx in 80s, going to look like a warm up act. And you guys, I'm sure you recall Larry Davis in 86, right, he had been responsible for a bunch of murders down the South Bronx, Southwest Bronx. And the guys had him pinned down. They knew it was in his sister's apartment over on Fulton Avenue. 27 NYPD officers went over there. That's how bad this guy was. And this is 1986, November. And nine went up, including a captain, kind of Captain Ridge, Tommy Ridge. I knew them all. I knew most of them. And 18 guys covered all the exits. You know, the dumbwaiter, the back window, the side window, all the ways out of a guy, big apartment in the Bronx. And let me tell you, he. He shot six. Shot six. He shot 11 officer Mary Buckley. Shot her in the face, really bad stuff. And then he vanished. And 17 days later, we cornered him in, in the 46th Precinct, which is where I was, over on 183rd Street. And he took a bunch of hostages and long story short, finally got him, put him up in prison for 100 million years. And then someone else killed him and took him out of his misery in prison very shortly thereafter. So there is justice and there is poetry and it is a Beautiful thing. But Mamdami, with his civilian, with his clipboard wielding civilian, that policy that he has, you know, sending in social workers with clipboards up into the Bronx when there's a madman with a machete or machine gun. This is, this is just Russian roulette with city workers. I mean this, this is, this is madness. I mean, he's, he's lighting the gasoline that will burn the city down.
A
I mean, when. Right when it was all boiling over and he, and he won. Man, we talked about all these. Oh no, it was, Was it Mike? Was it like a year after he won where we started talking about all the promises he didn't fulfill?
B
He just won in January, so. Or this year. So immediately he was going to lower. He was going to eliminate rates and the rates went up. He was going to say free transportation, but the transportation actually has gone up. Property taxes out of control. Pat, a lot of guys are commenting in the, in the comments and I'm going to bring this as a security guy. The Knicks obviously are in the championship first time since 99 and their potential, you know, I'm a Knicks fan, they could win the championship first time since 1973. Do you think the city is prepared for that type of response? If Knicks win the championship with Mondamini and his handcuffing of the police. If the Knicks win the championship. Because we know how those cities can get when these things happen. Do you think the city's in danger with mom Dhumi and the, and the handcuffs on the NYPD if this, if the Knicks win the championship.
D
Great question. I do not. Even though under Mamdami we have junkies right outside the Garden on all four blocks mainlining heroin in broad daylight, defecating on the sidewalk. But those are quality of life crimes. But in response to your question. No, because the NYPD is. Listen, it's the biggest, it's the greatest in the history of the human race. Even Whitman Damme trying to cripple Commissioner Tisch and trying to impose his ridiculous policies on the leadership and then by extension down to the men. No, because they're still going to do their job. He's not able to handcuff them because when they put their hand up with the state constitution when it was sworn in, it's to protect and serve. And that supersedes even draconian policies that he can impart for the safety and security of, of the fans and community members. If the Knicks do win, and I certainly hope they do, no, the cops are still going to do the right thing every Every day in and out, day in and day out.
A
What and when and when it comes. In regards to the NYPD and their relationship to Mom Donnie, we hear that the, the guys on the ground are still doing the Lord's work. Obviously admin is like any city. Admin is forming or trying to have some sort of relationship with the city officials. Do you think the NYPD can outlast Mom Donnie's reign as a, literally a communist dictator that puts his warriors lives at risk? Or do you think that eventually Mamdani will be the final nail in the casket where law and order fails in New York City?
D
So first of all, Lord's work, I love it. Appropriately categorized. No, I don't believe it'll be the nail. I believe that the police and the nypd, as, as, as an organism, as an entity is far bigger than Mamdani's twisted policies. He'll come and go. He'll come and go.
B
Will he.
D
Will he hurt the nypd? Will he hurt the city? If he executes or is able to execute on the publicly stated agenda items, yes, he certainly will. But there's great leadership and they stay, they outlast clown mayors. Listen, de Blasio was, I mean, come on, he low functioning retard. Let's be honest. I mean, he was the worst. Him and his wife were dead set on lighting the city up fire. And this came and went. You look at. I had former chief of department John Cell on the other day on my show and with leaders like that, you know, and, and other great division leaders and bureau chiefs and so forth, they. They're almost impervious to fleeting instances. Four years with a mayor because the NYPD is too big to fail.
A
Yeah.
D
My assessment,
A
I've never lost faith in the nypd. The guys and droves coming down south, you know, the last 10 years, you just quit. Not even getting to retirement. Even before, I want to say even before the COVID mandate, there was guys leaving. But I, we always talk about, I think that was a sold pipe dream that the grass was greener and the guys get to where they're going and they're like, they're like, man, like. And I tell people all the time, like the prestigery. Is that a word? No. Okay. I just made it up. I'm like George Bush over here making up words. But the, the just how prestigious the NYPD was. It is, is it like you said, that's how it survives with, you know, you put on that NYPD uniform, you represent, you know, the generations of cops before you that have literally in the last 40 years fixed a city from complete chaos and brought law and order to it. And I think that's still gonna be in the DNA of that organism that you talked about, which is the nypd.
D
Correct. I couldn't, couldn't agree more. And I lived through it with Dinkins, I lived through it with out of Town Brown, his police commissioner, Lee Brown, when the city had a hundred thousand robberies and 2200 murders. And it really was a scene out of Death Wish. I mean it was unbelievable. Or taxi driver. And the reality is the NYPD prevailed. They prevailed through two terms with Dinkins. And the fact is that. Well, no, wrong. He beat Rudy in 89. Rudy took it from, in 93. I guess I thought he did so much damage it would have taken him eight years. But no, he, he accelerated like dog ears Dinkins. But he's history. But the point was the nypd, like a phoenix from the ashes, rose up out of the ashes, rose up in, in, in the ruins of, of burnt out buildings, drugs out of control, crack on fire on fire, crackheads everywhere. Rudy came in and cleaned it up. He had, he, he dealt with it with a, with an iron fist, two fists. And the leadership was there. The great bosses remained. The weak bosses were kicked out. And we helped give guidance to the mayor on that. Myself and my partners, John Fleming, we kept an eye on the bosses who were not to remain the big chiefs. And Rudy chopped their heads off. They were either reduced to captain or forced to retire. And that's how the leadership remained constant and prevailing. And it's, it's, it's just like it really is too big to fail. And you know, I know that's a little bit of an overstatement. It is 32 000. Used to be 40 000. But if you think about it in context to any other department, in terms of sheer size and budget. Yeah, nothing, nothing like it. Not even close.
B
And I think unfortunately it's a obviously massive agency. Nobody posts the good stuff. Nobody posts the good videos. Right. The good videos aren't important. We posted one, we went over one a couple. They have a whole unit that like repels off the side of buildings to rescue people.
D
Yeah, I saw that. That was dynamite.
A
Right?
B
That's great. You're not going to see that. You're going to see the two cops that maybe aren't the best. They're getting cussed out or they're doing something silly. It sells.
A
Right?
B
The lady with one arm that yesterday, that whole video that Went viral.
A
Like that girl. The girl smoking weed outside her precinct.
B
The amount of contacts with the police in New York are astronomical for our brains to even comprehend. And they do. Well, right there. There's. We see only the worst of the worst. Or the things like, you know, Durant that they want to spin the wrong way, and we get those ones shoved down our throat. But in reality, you're right. They're. You know, it's a big agency. They do a lot of stuff. Every day that most people that are cops can never fathom is going on daily in New York from 1am to 1pm there's happening that most people will never see. So great. It's a great group of people. We support them. And, you know, they catch hell because they are led by a mayor and they're in a city where a lot of people don't respect them and care about them, but they still show up every day in that nasty weather and those conditions, and they do their job.
D
Yeah, and they have a good leader. With Jessica Tish.
B
They do.
D
She's tough, she's gritty, she's very intelligent, she's articulate, she's informed. And she backs the guys, and she gives them the benefit of the doubt. And that benefit of the doubt is absolutely critical. And even the Supreme Court has decided that as it relates to shooting and use of force and so forth, cops have to get the benefit of the doubt. They have to. It cannot be 50, 50. It has to be 5,149. It's just by virtue of the fact that the job that they do, with all the vagaries and complexities and rules and regs and protocol and policy, I mean, yeah, we can outlast any moron, even for two terms, God forbid. And it will still rise. Will still rise. And to your point, you know, Mike, every single goddamn day and every minute of single goddamn day, while we're sleeping, cops are doing great stuff. They're rescuing babies, they're rescuing cats, they're rescuing civilians. They're shooting out with bank robbers. They're walking old ladies across the street. They're tending to car accidents. Just absolutely amazing. By the way, they're underpaid.
A
Vastly.
D
If they made double or triple, they'd still be underpaid. Vastly. But, I mean, our teachers, Right. So are firefighters.
B
Yeah, we're critical. We're the same way.
A
We're news.
B
Right? And. And we try to highlight those good events, but most good cops don't even want that press. They just want to do their job. They want to go do it, whatever it is and go, go home. And then you know, there's some that do pump it up, but no real citizens anymore really. It, it's, it's not seen as much to send accommodation in or we've gotten lazy with technology, we've gotten lazier. Where back in the day, in my days when I started even 20 years ago, I got letters all the time. You know, got. People would write letters to the station and send in combination. People don't really do that anymore. It's kind of like it's wayside. But yeah, nobody's posting the heroic stuff. The regular. When I say regular stuff, it's heroic, a lot of stuff. But it's just, oh, they saved another baby. Oh, they saved another burning building. It's just another call. Right. And if they do something wrong, oh look, his shoes run tighter. Oh, he did something. Then it's like, oh, let's make fun of him. So it's unfortunate that that happens. But no, every day there's, you know, we joke. We use this platform to generate content and get people here for the right reasons. They're doing the.
D
Thank God for you, Mike. You know, thank God and I salute and God bless you guys. The reality is, and I do the same with the radio show and up podcast, we. And so do a lot of other great guys and great Americans like yourself and Tyler. But thank God for that because we're informing and we're educating. Let's just say civilians or other than law enforcement, individual personnel who might not have family in the job or whatever, we're informing them. Hey, wait a second. Yeah, they might be, you know, in contextually use of force might be a little extreme in this, some endless tape that they play. You know, they play it up. But what about the hundred thousand great things that they do every day and now, and fortunately it is guys like you that bring it to light and shine a light on it. And it's amazing and great by the way, fantastic work. Yeah, well, listen, it's important.
A
The, and I guess the hardest part is we've talked about this a couple times is you know, the NYPD and in. And law enforcement agencies across the country are not filled with the same type of guys and gals that were here in the 90s and maybe the 80s. It's, it's a different generation. Just like every, every job, every. These kids are. I think crime is getting out of control. Out of control. Mental illness and crime. Mental illness crime and domestic terrorism is out of control.
B
Absolutely.
A
And the generation of Kids coming up to combat that are just my opinion at face value before training are not up to par with what they're about to be fighting. And it.
B
I.
A
That's why I think Mike harps on training so much, is that, yeah, we get these soft kids that we're getting old now. We call the next generation below us soft. Right. You know, hey, you guys don't have it like we did, but it's so important to be like, to. To showcase like, guys, this is. This is what you're up against, dude. Guys with machetes coming at you while you're sipping your coffee because you're in uniform, you know, and. And having people adapt that warrior mindset and be like, this isn't a joke. This is. This is real 100%.
D
And, you know, it's interesting because, you know, what's old is new again, right? Time kind of is cyclical. I'm certain. When I came on in the 80s, I know it was a fact that there were some really, really tough, disciplined officers who came out of Vietnam and tough, disciplined officers who came out of Korea. You know, they would have had some time on. They would have. But they. They were. And they looked at us as, you know, a weak, soft generation.
A
Yeah.
D
And, you know, and the. The difference was.
B
Imagine what they'd think now.
D
Yeah, precisely. Just goes to show how relative it is, you know, but the difference was a guy come and then. I'm sure I can speculate that when the guys from World War II saw the Vietnam guys come in, they said, these guys are soft. You know, they didn't. They didn't beat the Japanese imperialist, and they didn't, you know, get involved in World War II. 60 million people murdered and, you know, Nazi. Nazi Germany and so forth. So I think it is relative, but I concur. But crime is. Crime is a stubborn devil. Crime is a stubborn devil, and it just waits for weakness. And leadership. And guns, as we all know, guns never stop operating. So a gun from, you know, 1926 will operate just as well today in 2026 to discharge around. If you rub it with a rag every year with a little bit of oil, it'll still fire just as well. And they don't vanish. Guns don't vanish. And by the way, as I often say, the bad guys didn't go and colonize the moon. You know, they just stand back when the leadership is strong and the police are very forthright, and they wait and they wait and a clown like Mamdani comes in and I. I predict and I hope I'm wrong. I predict that crime will skyrocket, especially gun violence. Yeah. You know, do it because they can. And look at Chicago. Look at last week. My God, the place is. Al Capone ran it better. It's unbelievable. It's unbelievable, right? I mean, look, there was a 21. 21 shot in 24 hours. I can't even keep track of it.
B
I got the Unreal last weekend.
A
Mike has an app.
B
41 people shot last weekend, Memorial Day, 41 people shot.
D
Well, you know. And you know what they did, Mike and I, and I, I. I was watching Chicago pretty closely because we did some work in Chicago at Brosnan Security, and we had to learn a bit about some of the projects being way too dangerous to deploy unarmed civilian officers. And we could only send in, like, you know, retired SWAT guys, you know, bulletproof vests and so forth. We had to assess the. The vulnerability to my staff, Right. The folks that were on my paper. I didn't want anybody getting hurt ever, except bad guys. And what I learned was they let the gangs take over. They let them in. Let them in a few decades ago, and the gangs got a foothold and they became stronger than the collective might of the police and even strong leadership. When Gary McCarthy was there. Gary is a good buddy of mine, was a 46 officer with me. Outstanding guy. Rose to the ranks to two stars. And then he went and became the commander, the equivalent of PC right, in Chicago for a number of years, then ran for mayor. And Gary said, man, he would tell me, he'd say, the gangs just own it. They just. They own it and it's tough to get back. And New York never had that gang infiltration that took hold. We're very lucky. You know, we had the, you know, the, the different gangs, the various different gang, but they never. They never really controlled, you know, which is a big deal.
B
Yeah.
A
Yeah, man. Well, God bless New York City, man. Yeah, I think it'll come back. And it is the city. It's the city that you think of when you think of America.
D
So, well, you know, if you, if you look back, just in the last. Go back to February 26th of 93, right? When the towers got hit for the first time and six Americans were murdered and hundreds went to the hospital. A lot of people forget that one, you know, and then this 9, 11 in 2008, and then Covid and this and that. Our obituary has been written many, many times. And every time, we rise above it. And that's why I'm so. Why I'm so, so positive about it. I really am.
A
Awesome. Pat, thank you so much for coming on. Enjoy. Enjoy your motorcycle ride.
D
Absolutely.
B
Beside you.
D
I gotta break out a sidecar today, guys. I'll take out a 37 sidecar because of the debt. Well, the damage to the feet, bro, I. I can't. No, I'm with you. I get you. I get you a side car. Next thing you know, I'll be on a trike. But I'm on the men. I'm on the mend. I mean, this. That was something else with the ramp. But hey, you know, listen, I'll take it. I got, you know, I'm a lucky Irishman. So listen, have a great one, guys. Enjoy the weekend and look forward to joining you again and keep up the great work. And you're doing a great job, man. You're informing thousands and thousands. And that's. And that's the real deal. Great stuff. Thank you.
A
Thank you. See you next week, Pat.
D
Cheers.
B
Guys, my phone is going crazy with what I put. Put it on Facebook. Oh,
A
Sheriff Dilks. All right, we'll be right back for this commercial break.
E
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A
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B
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A
Oh I, I think they just emailed me the other day. They actually texted me and they, they think they fixed the code issue.
B
Somebody go buy a goon tape use code ANTIRE15 and let us know if the if the issue is fixed. Just don't watch their last reel.
A
Yeah. Big supporters of us. Mike's about to lose his mind. Does Dominic know when to come on today?
B
Hope so.
A
Also did you tell Dominic to come on today?
B
Yeah, last night.
A
We're on a tight ship here guys. Are we? Hey, do you want to go. What are you doing today? Do you want to go live on Patreon in like mid afternoon or. No?
B
Yeah.
A
All right. It doesn't have to be forever. Just give us some updates on some things going on.
B
I gotta eat after. Oh, I want to go to the gym. How about five?
A
Yeah, five's fine.
B
All right, I'll go to the gym after. We're here. Lift. Deal with these 3000 phone calls.
A
All right, so we'll, we'll see at 5 o' clock Patreon live also it'll stream through the app too.
B
But let's go here. I got something for everybody wondering right here. I, I fixed the picture as well so just so you know, my arms aren't massive on this picture. This is the real picture entry on the Vera beach vote any river county in New York county election site. There is the contact information for me, my picture and the candidate statement. As a United States army veteran and someone who spent 23 years serving this country, this county backing people up and telling it straight. Now it's time to step up again for this community I'm running for inward county sheriff accountability and transparency matter. Facebook comments will be turned back on because the community deserves a voice even when it's not flattering. The days of silence, favoritism and hiding from the public are over.
A
Whoa, you put the Facebook comments in there?
B
Yeah, but the public deserves to have the comments on. And this guy hides, hides behind a desk. He never does anything live. He's. Everything's pre recorded. No interaction with the community. He runs away from events because he's had affairs that he can't face people in public and. And it's. It's time. I'm not going to do all them. Can't see fancy catchphrases. Not about that. It's not strength. Yeah. It's gonna be like you know who I am, you know what I'm about. You know, the policing. I've put people in prison for the rest of their life. I've investigated crime, written wiretaps, done all that kind of stuff. Either like it or you don't. I don't have a college degree. I have a ged. I have education. I learned from working the road. I know how to manage people and how to put people in jail. It's a very simple job and it gets. It gets muddied with politic politics and trips to North Carolina and trips to Florida Sheriff's association and blowing money and accreditation. All these things that don't keep people safe and don't keep people for, you know, being able to walk to their car and not get, you know, not get robbed or not have their car broken into. It's very simple. And they've turned it into a political machine. And it doesn't have to be that way. It just needs to be basic law enforcement.
A
What's your day?
B
Dominic is out today. He has a medical emergency so he will not be able to. Come on. He's good. He just let me know that he has another issue to attend to. So I will add.
A
Huh.
B
I will add aerosol to my bio for job. I did. I forgot to bring that up. My first shirt is going to say Michael does for sure. It'll be the air salt wings.
A
What are. What is your uniform? A sheriff going to be.
B
Would I wear.
A
Yeah. What is it? If you were sheriff, what are you gonna wear?
B
Same that everybody else wears.
A
You know, nobody's green.
B
No, we wear the. They wear the. I'm gonna. I would tune it up a little bit. I listen to some people. The beards are out of control. I think they've gone nuts. Like your beard is fine. Those guys walk around with like ZZ Top and like professional. I don't mind if the beard would stay. Tattoos are fine. I don't care about any of that stuff. You gotta look. You know how I'm gonna be about fitness and training. You got can't look like a bag of ass. So you can't have five elevens that are droopy and like three sizes too big. They wear Under Armour shirts, T shirts. I don't have a problem.
A
I may.
B
Would maybe throw a collar on it. Maybe, maybe not. I don't have a problem with the shirt the outer carrier. None of that would change. I would wear.
A
Listen, here's what I've learned about elections. When you're running for show everybody else the, the in the crappy part about being a deputy for a new sheriff coming in or sheriff trying to stay your votes don't hold a candle to the population.
B
You don't have to win.
A
Yeah. You don't even have. You don't even have to win your own agency. It's. It's that you could be like, yo, we're going back to green polyesters. They could all vote for not you and it doesn't matter.
B
So in the history of this county, that's what happened. We had one 20 years ago we had an election where the, the original sheriff who was. I got hired under. He. He retired and an FA Tre trooper Daryl or came in and ran against three guys that worked here. They made a huge mistake and they chopped the vote up between three candidates. So there's four. Daryl Lore one. The next election was a big one. The entire agency supported Bill McMullen who was the former jail chief. And they went one on one. All the deputies supported McMullen lore one. And it was brutal for us because we. He knew everybody did. From that point forward I realized it doesn't matter what the building cares that now Eric Flowers, when he won the first time the building supported him. This last time I would say it was probably 50, 50. And nobody will speak up because they're all. There's a lot of cowards, but a lot of people. Most of the people I would say 50, 50 right down the middle supported another candidate and it didn't matter. He won. So yeah, I could. I'd say we're gonna wear pink polyester and drive, you know, bikes to calls all day. And there, there's nothing. If the public goes, man, that saves a lot of money. That seems reasonable. Public's going to win the vote over the deputy. So you don't need the deputies, but you also don't. I've worked there. I don't want people thinking, oh this guy coming in. And you know what if I don't like there's. There's a lot of people. I don't like there. I don't care. Like, if you can do the job, there's no fear. I'm not going to go, hey, I don't like this guy. You're out of here. You know, you're good at your job. You're going to get. You're going to stay. It's not. It's not like I'm, you know, I don't plan to commit a fire. Everybody but you got to be a reasonable human dude, and nobody ever wins. I think the closest we got is Sheriff Sanders, who we had on, who was a regular dude who won. Right. He won the election. He's a young guy.
A
He.
B
He gets down, he makes arrest. That's what the people need, man. You don't need a guy. Guy that got his degree on duty. So he's got a degree. Great. He stopped doing his police job and went and got his degree on duty while everybody else was working. Does that seem like a good guy to vote for? Do you want somebody? You know, I never made it to get my degree. I was too busy making arrests and working and running task force and putting bad guys in jail. You know, like I said, it comes down to what the public is going to want. We've all got dirt, but I'm transparent. This guy hides behind it. This guy won't talk about it in public. He's never apologized for some horrible things he's done to people. I will. I'll be right up front. Yep. Yep. Could have done better there. That wasn't my best day. Yep. But it is what it is, man.
A
All right.
B
Sure. They're not gonna like that.
A
Yeah. So everybody remember 1pm Monday through Friday. Every weekday we go live here on YouTube, Facebook and Annex. And if you haven't subscribed, please click the subscribe button. Definitely help us out. So here's something that I thought was pretty cool. An ex CIA, they usually call them agent. But an ex CIA employee, federal agent ended up with $40 million in gold in their house when the FBI conducted a search warrant, I'm assuming. So let's check. How did that get there? Yeah. So let me share this. All right. So, Fed sees $40 million in gold bars from XCIA agents house in Virginia. Ex government official with top security clearance has been arrested after federal agents found hundreds of gold bars in his Virginia home worth at least $40 million, according to records. David Rush, who is facing a charge of theft of public money, which, you know, there's more coming down the pipeline if that's all. Oh, yeah. Was arrested last week and remains in federal custody pending the detention hearing next week. His attorney declined to make a statement. During a search of Rush's home in Virginia, FBI found 303 gold bars that weighed about 2.2 pounds. Blah, blah, blah, blah. We already talked about that. The documents identify Russia's former senior executive service level employee at the United States government agency who has a top secret clearance and access to classified information. The FBI sees the gold bars from Russia's home as well as about 2 million in cash and 35 Rolexes and other luxury watches. But the current charge that Rush faces isn't related to the gold or the money seized at his home. Here's what we know about the case. Between November 2025 and March of this year, Rush asked for and received a significant quantity of foreign currency and tens of million dollars in gold bars for work related expenses. A review of the government storage space where Rush was supposed to be storing the bars and money showed that most of it was missing. The records don't say why Rush would have needed to Rush Gold and cash for work. So much gold and cash for work. During the course of the investigation, the affidavit says that the FBI learned that Rush lied about his academic credentials for his government jobs and fraudulently took $77,000 in military leave after lying about being an active member of the Navy Reserve. Rush had been in the Navy but was honorably discharged in 2015. The the Nate the Rush claimed that the Navy Reserves. He was in the Navy reserves through 2025. The CIA media relations did the media really with a statement. In a joint statement to the New York Times, the CIA and the FBI said that an internal CIA investigation identified possible violations of the law. So the director referred the information to the FBI for law enforcement investigation. That's all we had.
B
I'm gonna play your game from earlier. What color is. What color is he?
A
That's a white dude through and through.
B
Okay. Right. It's simple.
A
Yeah.
B
How would you imagine having that kind of to go, hey, I need 2 million in gold?
A
Like, there's a lot of weird things to take away from here. I don't know if you're working for the CIA. I don't know how long your leash is. Right. So the more you work for the government and the more involved you are is just like law enforcement. Narcs that have been in the unit for 20 years have a little bit more of a leash to use assets and to have connections with people than your patrol guy who's been there for a year. So I don't know if he's. If he's doing his work. And the feds were like, the CIA is like, do your thing, John. And he was rightfully at one point in receiving the gold. But it kind of also goes right back into the integrity thing, where you say, a trooper taking a MacBook home, although worth billion or millions of dollars less, it's the same concept of, hey, John, why aren't the gold bars in the storage unit where they're supposed to be?
B
Why they're in your house, bro.
A
I do what?
B
I can't believe. I can't believe I loaded up 30 pounds worth of gold and that's just happened to drive it. I was working cash, too. That. Yeah.
A
Oh, God.
B
Yeah. I was just. That's a crazy thing. I was just gonna tell you guys about that. It's wild.
A
So I don't know if there's any treasonous activity. I don't know if there's anything like that or espionage or.
B
But take your mind.
A
Take.
B
I want you to grab your mind for a minute and think, the CIA, there's people that they can obtain, like, hey, hey, Tyler, I'm working a case. Can you give me, like, 40 billion in gold? I just need to throw it in the room. I'll take care. Yeah, man, we're good. There you go. Sign there.
A
Yep.
B
For 40 million gold. It'll be there tomorrow. Like, what could he have been working on? Like, what? Massive deal. And this guy could be working. Like, what could he be doing to get access to that kind of. Kind of resources? That's insane.
A
Dude just got too deep, man. Too deep.
B
Deep as a shark.
A
This is the angle I was discussing with you about my neck. See, I kind of don't like the lighting and the angle because I feel like it makes my neck look fat.
B
It does. It's kind of like the tattoo and the beard kind of run together, and it kind of looks like a fat neck. I got something. So, you know, we talk. We see a lot of traffic stops. What do you. I know how I feel about this, but it's not popular down here. But some I know up Kenny's way and up in that Midwest area. What do you think about. They throw people in the front seat of the car uncuffed when they interview and they talk to them and all that stuff.
A
Don't troopers do that here in Florida or.
B
No, I don't think they do. Maybe it's a trooper thing. But what do you. What do you think about that?
A
I think. I just honestly think they're so used. I'm sorry, Kenny, I'm, I think they're so used to people probably white runner, white drug runners that are not going to fight you, just complying and sitting there. I don't think that those types of cops have ever been with somebody that is not going to go to jail under any circumstances.
B
So here, I'm going to play a video where that, this is, this, this happened. They, they put a guy in the car and they're searching. I'm going to let you pick it up there.
A
It's just weird.
B
Like it's not connected, you know? Now, Driver sitting in the front seat. Why does he have it in the back seat?
A
Right. They look fresh holes, too. So they're just sliding out.
B
Yep.
D
Good, good. Shots fired. Shots burn.
A
Fire.
B
Excellent.
A
Reload.
B
Shots fire, shots fire. So as he walks up, back to the car, as you saw in the video, they, they hit the jackpot, right? He says, yep. So the guy's watching the entire search from the front seat. He sees them going into the speaker box where the drugs are. They find the drugs. Yep. They make the beeline, the police beeline back to the car.
A
The urine trouble.
B
Beeline. Yeah, you're in trouble. Beeline. And then take rounds. I have no idea on God's earth why there would be a human being in the front seat of a running police car, uncuffed, unsearched, while you search a car. That is the most insane thing I can think of in my life. I, I don't know. I don't know why that would happen. I don't know. And I'm not. You know, you know, the video said, please, you know, this is a learning moment. Let's not go crazy. But I, I, I don't know why you would, why you would do that. Like, everybody's got a gun, right. You should always be on the mindset, everybody's got a gun. You're looking for. You're suspecting drug trafficking. This is like an advanced interdiction stop. You start looking at holes and speakers going, hey, this is new. This is fresh. We taught, I was taught that I went to a interdiction school a long time ago, and they teach you look for, like, the screws or newer car, but the, you can tell the screws have been unscrewed. You look at the dash, you look at all the little everywhere, and you do. I'm sure Kenny teaches all that stuff. You look for that. So you see it. I'm thinking, all right, I see this, this looks as if let's get maybe, I don't know. I don't know how you get them in. I don't understand the point of, hey, man, get out. We're gonna search your car. Go sit in our car uncuffed. Like there's. That's, that's a zero. There's no to me.
A
That's the same as going, hey, man, you got anything illegal in the car? I'm, I think that you might be doing illegal activities while I search the car. Just stand behind me real quick and don't do anything to hurt me. Like that's the same thing. It doesn't make any sense.
B
He could have jumped in the driver's seat. He could have took off. He could have. Obviously, it looks like these guys both come.
A
Let's, let's talk about this. And I want my constitutionalists in the, in the, in the crowd, in the chat to, to chip in with what they think, right? So I'm a cop. I pull you over, I'm by myself. I'm in a rural area or whatever. I think that. Or I have probable calls to search your vehicle. Right? I have probable cause to search your vehicle. Now I remove you from the vehicle. Now, barring things that give me the reason to search you. Right? Barring anything specifically that I can now search you. Do you, do you advocate for. Well, if I'm searching the car, that I'm searching you to put you in the car, because I have to put you in my car handcuffed to search your car.
B
That it's tough because you got, you got the fourth. You get the fourth Amendment in the way there because if you could alert to the car, but doesn't give you a right to search the driver. Right? You got it. So now you get into. But you can't search the driver. You can't search a car under officer safety. But officer safety doesn't give you a. The right to handcuff anybody.
A
I would run it.
B
That's where all the time you're going to deal with that is if you have probable cause for the vehicle.
A
I mean, the man.
B
Because you have, you only have that reasonable amount of time to get a dog there. Now, if you have probable cause, you're good. The car doesn't go anywhere. But then you have to worry about the reasonable amount of time for detaining the driver. Obviously, a passenger could get out and leave. Like, if he's wearing a seat belt and he's in the car, he's like, hey, I'm out of here. Like, he can literally Walk away like you can't stop him. Driver, I think you have a little more leeway to detain. It's his car, but you still don't have a right to search him. But now you're talking interdiction. You might have backup, what, 30, 45 minutes away. And I know up in that area, it seems like it's that area of the country, they have a little more rules and they're a little better at articulating like suspicion, reasonable suspicion or probable cause to say we're gonna wait 32 minutes for a dog. Because I've seen sweating, I've seen nervousness. He can't tell me where he's going. You have enough to detain everybody, I think at that point. So if you can get like the driver to that point where he. I'm going here. Where are you going? I'm not sure if you can articulate all that. I think you have enough to detain the driver and then the vehicle. But yeah, you're getting into the fourth amendment issues. When you start, you just can't hook the driver up and arrest them and put them in the car. So it's a wild situation to deal with. And you know, that's when you're working interdiction though. You shouldn't be a one man show. Right. You should have backup. You should have like all those things should be thought out.
A
Yeah.
B
And he had two people there. So it's like, why do you need both guys? You know, one guy watches the bad guy.
A
Are you sure that a. In the middle of a traffic stop, the passengers should just get up and leave and you can't stop them. That's flip flopped a lot.
B
You have. If there is no Violet, like if a passenger is wearing a seat belt, he has. You did not stop him for anything to do with the passenger. There's no. You cannot keep him there.
A
If they want to leave you, and I think you can. They flip that you. They don't have to identify themselves, but they, they can't leave.
B
Flip the lead part. Maybe you're right.
A
They don't have it went back and forth like four times.
B
My wife would know. Maybe you're right. I do remember. I know that they don't. The stop isn't on them, so there's no, there's no right.
A
They don't have to identify themselves.
B
As long as you're not. You can just stay silent. But maybe you can't leave. In the old days, I remember you could leave, but maybe that's an error on my Part. I will research that for everybody, and I'll have an answer tomorrow.
A
Yeah. And if you want, I can just run for share for you.
B
You already been fired once, right?
A
They get fired.
B
Oh, yeah, that's right. We both got voluntold.
A
I thought I got. No, I left on great terms. I want to put that out there. I don't even want to remember. I had the. The lunch, everything. What do you mean? I didn't leave on good terms.
B
Not gonna. I'm not gonna come. I'm a politician now. I'm gonna let you say.
A
Well, I never. I. I was in and out.
B
The extra duties deserve his workout.
A
Well, they told me they didn't want me back.
B
Oh, that's great terms. Hey, man, we don't ever want to see you again. But we're like.
A
That's like that. Here's what it's like. And I'm gonna bring Ryan on. Just a second. But here's what that's like. I'm at your house, chilling, bro. What's up?
B
What's up? What's up?
A
And you're like, damn, dude, I want Tyler to leave so bad. And I go, mike, I think I'm gonna head out. And you go, tyler. All right, dude, I've. I will see you later, Tyler. I'll see you tomorrow.
B
And you can never come. No, no, no, no.
A
Hold on. And then I go, and I'm about to leave. I'm at your doorstep, and you're like, thank God Tyler's leaving. I want to go to bed. I'm. And I'm like, I'll see. And I go, oh, wife just texted. I'm good to go. Can I. And then you're like, get out. That's essentially what happened.
B
I mean, that's cool. That's what happened to me, too.
A
You quit, too?
B
I did quit.
A
Retired.
B
Oh, we got city Ryan
C
out here in the elements.
B
Are you. Is it less stressful outside?
C
We're having a little unit maintenance at the moment. I'm just a humble, landless rent peasant. And so whenever the property owner wants to, you know, do its thing, I
B
have to bend the knee. I do unit maintenance, too, but it's completely different.
A
Is that masturbation reference, Mike?
B
Anyway, we are, right? They can throw you anytime they want and do maintenance. They can actually show up at your house and come in anytime they want with an appointment. When you rent, you don't own. Right, Ryan?
C
Yes. And I think I sent you guys an article in the past couple of weeks where landlords can call the police. To evict tenants, but tenants can't call the police to enforce the lease.
B
Yeah, it's civil. Right. They throw the civil card on that side. It's criminal if the man calls and it's civil. Hey, go get a lawyer and go to court and spend more money to go after the man. See, we, we're always going to agree on this side of things. We're going to never disagree about that for sure. It's not fair. Yeah, it's not fair. I'll give you that too. It's like complaining on the government.
A
I've.
B
I am three months into trying to make a formal complaint and I actually had a situation yesterday where the, I filed a complaint to the head of Florida Department of law Enforcement and they referred the complaint back to the person I'm complaining on to investigate. I'm like, that seems, that seems pretty government of you. Like maybe they'll find some fault in that. Right. It's very difficult to complain about the government.
C
And I imagine you can predict that that government agent will investigate themselves and find zero wrongdoing.
B
Yeah. They recently investigated another complaint from somebody I know very well. And you're not going to believe this. They determined they did nothing wrong. Yeah. No, no. No notes or details on the investigation. That was five pages of complaints. Just a simple email back with three sentences that said we looked into this and we did nothing wrong. If you can believe that. I mean, I know that's hard to understand, but yes, that did happen.
C
I'm curious, can you speak to the, the phenomenon, I'm not sure what it's called, like this thin blue wall or basically this culture where cops don't like hold each other accountable.
B
Essentially that's Thin blue line is gone. But there are, I run into a lot where there are cops who will basically ignore anything negative that a cop does. And just. And there are citizens, honestly, there are citizens and cops that will, you know, it's the old. The cop shot the guy 11 times for no reason. And then hypothetical. And then they go, well he shouldn't have been resisting. It's like, well, yeah, I get it. But you also can't go that crazy. So there is a, there is a group of people and the problem is they. About administration and how bad it is at the top, but they refuse to speak out about them as well. So they just, they're just double whammied. Right. They won't hold each other accountable and they surely won't hold their boss accountable for mass treat, mass negative treatment of everyone. So that's where we'll probably disagree, because I think at the core, the guys that get hired really believe they're getting into this job for the right reasons. They quickly find out it's not. But I will fault them for not speaking up and allowing it to continue.
A
And it's a brotherhood, so, I mean, you wouldn't. You wouldn't turn your back or snitch out one of your comrades, would you?
C
If they're committing a war crime, I probably should. Or that makes me complicit.
A
A. Whoa. War crime that escalated quickly?
C
Well, it's the veteran, like that military equivalent of police.
B
If one of your communist friends was doing something wrong, would you tell on them?
C
Tell who?
B
Is the question. Yeah, you're right. I forgot. You got me. I think I knew the curveball was coming. Who are you gonna tell, right?
C
Yeah, totally. And also, I am open to being wrong. I don't just, like, avoid things so that people can, like, gotcha. Or I'm worried about my community sort of holding me accountable. I am totally, you know, I want to be considered open and approachable, that if folks do have any concerns, even if you are a leftist on my side, please bring them to my attention. And I'm open to either explaining myself or even apologizing and adjusting.
A
Yeah, well, I mean, I saw you kind of commenting on the last couple reels about, like, calling a spade a spade or crime. Crime. Is that not good? Now, can. Are you okay with me and Mike saying, like, white guys commit weird sexual crimes and white guys typically do white collar crimes?
B
Yeah, that's a common thing.
A
Right, but that. Is that okay to say or.
C
I think it is important for us to acknowledge the crimes of our own community. Absolutely.
B
But I can't acknowledge something outside of our own community.
C
I would say nothing. I think you have to be careful. I think you have to really avoid amplifying racist pseudo science. I think the last guy mentioned something about laziness, and there's a psychological diagnosis called drapetomania. You ever heard of that?
A
No.
C
Yeah. Well, this is what early psychologists would diagnose runaway slaves with. Laziness. Right. Avoidance of hard work. Okay. So we have to be really careful about the languages.
B
I'll give you that one.
A
And that's. That's. And that's. That's good for us to know because we would have never. We would have never put that correlation.
B
I take that out of it, and I say, like, drug sales. In my experience, black males tend to sell more drugs than white males. What I've Seen, I'm being honest. And then I can break it down even further by type of drug. Like white males would sell LSD and probably mushrooms, whereas I've not in my career. I think one time in 23 years I had a white guy sell crack cocaine. It was not very popular for that to happen. So I'm not, I'm not trying to be racist. I'm just saying from my experience. Can white people sell crack? Yes. Are they more likely to. Yeah. Use it? For sure, but more likely to sell lsd. So if I hear we're looking for a subject that sold lsd, I'm going, that's probably a white guy. Right? That's where my head's gonna. Or mushrooms. Like, that's probably a white. So when I. Yeah, I don't try to use that in a negative way. But like I said earlier, if you tell me if I'm in a minority neighborhood and you say I'm looking for a male in a hoodie, I'm probably going to think I'm looking for a black male in a hoodie based on the amount of people of that demographic in that area. And it's not, I'm not saying it because I think black men in hoodies are guilty. I'm just. That's what I would probably look for. So that's kind of how I try to navigate it is based on my experience, where I'm at and what type of substance or what type of crime. Like I said, pedophilia is primarily white males. And now white teachers, white female teachers are making a run for it. Like it's going crazy with white female teachers that are molesting kids. It's, it's, it's nuts. Right? So, but that if I say that, I don't think anybody's gonna ever have a problem with it.
A
Right.
C
You might, you might notice in the comment sections around these cases that we sort of minimize child molestation when it happens to boys on behalf of women. Right. Oh, suck it up, kid. You know, like that kind of.
B
I wish my teacher was like that. Right. That's the joke.
C
So we need to, like, be mindful of that. Around 50% of troops are survivors of childhood sexual trauma, myself included. So we need to be mindful of these conversations. And also there's this idea of drug exceptionalism where, like you said, the psychedelics might be associated with the white folks. The quote, unquote, hard drugs are associated with minority populations. And then we kind of look at these where, oh, some drugs are good and some drugs Are bad, but then what do we associate that with? Some people are good and some people are bad. And if we're reflective, you ever heard of a guy named Gary Webb? So this was the journalist in Southern California that brought forth the scandal that the CIA was smuggling cocaine, converting it to crack and distributing it in under resourced communities. So let's like be totally real that white folks distribute drugs.
A
Yeah.
C
High rates, you know, high level.
B
I agree with you. The mass amount of drugs that come in the United States I believe are smuggled by rich or upper rich white people. They don't.
C
Yes.
B
I don't think, I don't think minorities are flying to Colombia buying kilos of cocaine and bringing it back. I think it's being smuggled in by white people and then distributed down to the other people.
C
Yes. Thank you for that generous concession. Also, white folks typically buy drugs from other white folks.
B
Right?
C
Black folks buy drugs.
A
Yeah.
C
At the high end, even at the street level. Maybe you've been to a college campus at some place in your life and
B
that's probably more of the example. But we don't talk about that because it's just right, it's a college campus. It's not a ghetto, it's not a hood. We don't really focus on it because it's normal. Right. For normal for kids to buy LSD from each other at college or mdma. And we don't really lump that into the same kind of drug sales. Right. We focus more on, I'll give you that, we focus more on hard drugs in a, in a different community.
C
And why might that be right? Because if we do over police these under resourced communities, then we can put the scarlet letter of a felony on a young person and then we've removed their ability to vote, to access social safety nets, to carry a firearm. And we can do this systematically in a whole community. I don't think it's disenfranchising firearms. The whole community.
B
Yeah.
C
Stops them from carrying a firearm legally. Absolutely.
A
Well, let's go back. Let's. Let's keep it fun. You. No, I never get to talk about this, this with anybody else. Ryan. The fact that I'm a soul, a hundred percent believer that the CIA introduced crack cocaine into our streets, I. That sounds at face value, that sounds nuts. And then you start looking into it. And when I worked, I worked in, we called it in part in my language, but we called it the old hood. I prefer the old hood because the old hood takes care of its own. They very rarely call the Police. They don't want the police in there. They police themselves as a community. They don't like. They don't resort to violent crimes for narcotic sales, as they don't have to. So they like to keep the police out. Younger areas with younger people in them tend to. To go to violent climb very fast. So it's very, you know, it's chaotic there, but. And I worked in the older areas and they were all owned by their parents, right? So all these houses were beautiful parts of Orlando. And the crack epidemic hit, Everybody got addicted to crack, and the parents left the houses to the next generation who were all. And when I say all, I don't mean all, but majority of them have become addicted to crack. So then that's what happens, is the community depreciates very fast within a couple decades, and it becomes the quote, unquote hood when it was the more prestigious area. And I mean, when you're talking about influencing the market, the economy, like just influencing the country with the most, hey, all we have to do is bring in this, this with this, and it destroys everything.
C
I love this. Right? Because let's notice the difference in which the quote unquote crack epidemic was resolved or greeted differently than the opiate epidemic.
A
Okay?
C
Maybe you'll notice that when the crack cocaine was associated with black folks, it was greeted with criminology.
A
Right?
C
Tough on crime, law and order. When it was white communities that were suffering from this opiate epidemic, then it turned into compassion and sympathy and then accountability. We have to go after the Sacklers.
A
Yeah. He's not wrong, Mike. He's not wrong. Now, if. Here's the thing where I came from, the district court determined that if you. If you were. If I was there to assist you in a medical call, not even a real overdose. So an overdose is a real thing. You can be having like a medical episode due to narcotics or you're overdosing. There's. There are two separate things. If I am there for a call for service that originates as a medical call or some kind of self, sorry, a welfare call where I'm not going there to investigate crime, and you have large amounts of narcotics on you, you can't be charged because people were afraid that your friends wouldn't call the police to save you if you have dope on you. Now, some could argue that's fair. What's someone's life versus our narcotics case? Right? But you're right, the sympathy card started coming out during the opioid epidemic where these people are victims. So we need to start. We need to start hitting the distributors right where the crack at the time. You nailed it. It was. I mean, they were creating things like the crash units and stuff where they were just going out there and, you know, kicking indoors for. So I, I kind of see that. I mean, what do you think, Mike?
B
Yeah, I mean, the, The. The previous story we were able to see, the CIA is able to get a hold of $2 billion in gold and have it in his living room, so they're capable of distributing cocaine. The Pill epidemic kind of got interesting because that was a white heavy for a while. White heavy sale, too. White males going to the clinics, reselling drugs. Eventually it got a little different when they started getting sponsored by, I believe, black males started sponsoring multiple people. But it wasn't just black males. There was. There was what? So the Pill epidemic kind of gave you a different view of all of it, because now Big Pharma was a drug dealer, and I believe wholeheartedly they deserve to go blow up. They did. Big Pharma killed millions of people with these drugs and special interest groups. You know, lobbyists allowed and politicians were bought. You know, there's Netflix documentaries on this stuff, so. But again, that is one that will still go jump out on drug dealers right in the hood on the corner and grab a black. But we still haven't gone after Big Pharma all the way and stop them from producing this mass killer of oxycontin that people are getting it because their leg hurts when it's for people with cancer with severe pain. We've never finished attacking that. And now all of a sudden, it's kind of like gone, right? Do you hear anything about big pharma selling OxyContin and 30 milligrams? It's gone, right? It's gone. It's gone.
C
The Sackler family is still free, and the Sackler family is still rich.
A
You.
B
Many people, I would love if. Can you imagine if you could put a number on how many people Big Pharma killed? It's on. It's ungodly.
A
And I know, and I know you think we were a bunch of goons out there, but I. I loved being a street cop because I loved my area. I loved. I. Like we said, I called it Zombieland at one. One point. And, you know, but my big thing was the taxpayers. We separate. Hey, we. We keep everything away from the taxpayers if they can go to the stores and the gas stations. So a lot of the addicts would hang out in certain areas, in which case I Would not go there to look for them using or anything. I would go there and almost do a welfare check on them, let them know that this is going to sound queer. I swear to God I did this. I would let them know that the police are still there, that we're here to check on you. Sometimes people would overdose and they would just kind of put them really far away and they're you to get a dead body. But, you know, you go check on the camps, go check under the bridges, go check out the railroad tracks. And I would talk to them just out of general curiosity. I'd be like, so how did you get here? And most of them were. They had regular lives and they were taking painkillers. And once the money ran out, because the prescription ran out first, then the money runs out to get them on the black market. And then you're. Then you have to buy heroin and then you start buying fentanyl.
B
I love this topic. Let me tell you what happened. Big pharma reeled everybody in, right to these pill clinics and they allowed them to open. And then the government came down on the pill clinics, not big pharma. So now these people are going these clinics, getting the drugs, and instead of going, well, this guy is giving these pills to these people and they don't need them. We're not going to mess with them because they're donating billions of dollars to political parties and we're. They're control. Let's go after the middleman again. Let's go after the dudes that went. Because I've investigated it, a bunch of firemen got together in the case that I'm involved in and they were like, hey, these people are making millions of dollars. Nobody's cared about it. Nobody's doing anything about it. We're going to open clinics now. There were some very, very shady clinics. The very beginning. They were hustling people and bringing them in on buses. But eventually it got a little tighter and they were just in a loophole. We're going to own a clinic. We have no interest. They all go to prison, federal prison, a lot of them. They get arrested. No one went after big pharma. No one went after the mass distribution of pain medicine that was killing people. To this day, nobody's going after them. So that's a very slippery slope when it comes to, like, allowing drugs to be sold on a mass level because people donate money to people's campaigns.
C
Yes. And thank citizens United is the law that made it basically corporate personhood, where a corporation can invest Just as much as a citizen can in a political context. So yes, in a capitalist system where these corporations can lobby the policymakers, it's corruption is an absolute predictable outcome.
B
Can you imagine this? Imagine this. Cap the donations to any candidate even for president to like $500,000. And don't allow a pact. No, no political PACs. Now you got to run on your actual reputation and your actual character. Not 30 billion dollar campaign where you're all over the TV where nobody else can be seen. Can you imagine if you cap those numbers and people had to actually run on integrity and their values and their morals, we would have a completely different nation where we all maybe even got along. Ryan. Maybe we'd all go sit at a baseball game together and have fun and have a drink because maybe the, the world wouldn't be such a bad place. But until you cap that and stop allowing special interest groups to influence politicians and put them in because of whatever reason, we don't agree on the reasons because we're going to be far off on that. But for whatever reason, the fact that people can spend millions and millions and millions of dollars to get somebody elected is already seems very corrupt and very not, not like a good system. Right. There's no character in that. If you get a guy shoved down your face. I'm not gonna say the other word because Rob o' Neill said it. If you get a guy in your face on a baseball game or everything you watch, it's a this guy, this guy, this guy, eventually like, well, that must be the guy. Right? Like I've seen him a thousand times on this TV show. You have no idea that he's a crook or he's in bed with whoever. You're just gonna vote for him because he's got the most money. That, that's a broken system in my opinion, that special interest and lobbyists can. And then the other problem is obviously we had no politicians go in making 170000 in Congress and come out with $40 million in their bank account. That, that doesn't seem like a very honest system either.
A
Yeah, thank you. Smartest thing I've ever heard you say.
B
Thank you. I'm apologizing and I just want to
C
acknowledge I am from California where we elected two actors, Ronald Reagan and Arnold Schwarzenegger. We had the Governator at one point. So I think, yes Americans, we have this irrational fascination with celebrities. That's why this former reality star is in the lead in LA for the mayor race.
A
Yeah, I saw that.
C
So we have this irrational Kind of attachment to celebrities and power and the elite and yeah, campaign finance reform is probably one of the most prescient issues. And I think it's because if we want to call ourselves a democracy and if we want to promote democracy through bombs all around the world, then we have to really look at is this truly a representative democracy when aipac, a foreign lobby group, has such a powerful influence over our United States elected officials. And then you also made a great point. When the chairs of the Armed Forces Committee, these senators and congresspersons, are making stock investments on war profiteering companies, there might be a conflict of interest there. I think there's corruption there.
B
Just not war, just anything. Pharmaceutical products that the government can buy. Anything that has to do with a contract to the government where somebody buys them. We had it right here. We had a, just in his little town in Melbourne, Florida. The, the mayor, his brother's roofing company got the contract to redo the, all the roof for, for every county building. What are the odds? You got a better chance of winning the Powerball, right, with a thousand roofing companies and the brother of the mayors, you know, gets that contract. So, and that's something. But back to what I just said at the beginning. Who the do you complain to? There's nobody to complain to. You can't, you can't make that complaint. We can talk about it, we can about it, but who do you actually put your finger on and go, this guy's going to take our complaint on that. There's nobody, there's nobody to do it.
C
And some people will say, oh well, when you vote, that's your opportunity to complain and have your voice heard.
A
Right.
C
And that's why leftists believe that this institution of voting is an illusion for proletariat participation. When, you know, these leaders aren't necessarily elected, they are selected by, like you said, these special interest groups.
B
Yep. Yeah, I agree. Did you know I'm running for office?
C
Hey, best of luck to your campaign.
B
I'm running for sheriff of Indian River County. Try to make a difference.
C
I'd love to hear more about your policy positions, what your intentions are to disrupt the prison industrial complex and racialized policing.
B
We'll get to all of it. It's two years out, so I gotta take it slow. So I announced today and fill out the paperwork and then we'll go from there. You can. I, I will appreciate your assistance because I know you'll be very hard on me and very fair when you ask questions. So we'll, we'll definitely maybe Even offline. We'll have to practice. So I can. I can get. Get drilled and happy to give you
C
some campaign consultancy if that's within your budget.
B
We're. We're capitalism at its best.
C
I'm just a poor, landless rent peasant.
B
Me too.
C
I live in the most expensive city in the country.
B
That was. That was actually funny. That was good. That was really good. Yeah, that was good.
A
All right.
B
Yeah, well, yeah, I did say drill. That was a. I got to be careful how I talk.
A
Yeah, we gotta. We gotta. We can't. Can we still say retard, Mike, or. No, no, no.
C
The preferred term is developmentally delayed or developmentally disabled. Also, I want to gently invite you to replace the black market with the traditional market, the unregulated market or the legacy market, because as we are well aware, it was black folks that are targeted and victimized by the war on drugs.
A
Okay. Like anything that you just black market in general. Just black market when you refer to drugs.
C
I would avoid the phrase black market as an American. As a white American.
B
Dark market.
C
Legacy unregulated. Legacy unregulated or traditional, hard to see in market terms.
A
Can we say. What about the dark web? Is that okay?
C
This is probably. We're nearing our time and conversation for.
B
It'll cost money. That'll cost money.
A
Yeah.
C
Like, this is a good sort of thing to think about, right? Like, how do we frame whiteness and how do we frame darkness in our, you know, mythological conversations?
D
Got it.
A
All right, Ryan, thank you so much for joining us. We'll see you next week.
C
Thank you, comrades. Thank you, Chad.
A
Yeah, I mean, we can end it now because we're gonna go on Patreon later.
B
So if I show up,
A
man, I'm already going to start putting it out there that you're influenced by communism. So we said that would be a good play. That would be a good play. 1. That's how it is, dude. One side, one brain will see. He's literally negotiating or. Or openly talking with people to understand where they come from. Right. Other people will go, he's associated with communism. Right? Like, they just. That's what type of both.
B
Both scenarios do what? Bring attention. This is an attention game. Now my phone has gone bananas and it's gonna, you know, it'll be whatever. But I wanted to get this attention thing out early. That's why most people don't announce until a year out, maybe a little over. But I'm two years out. More than two years. It's election is August of 2020.
A
8.
B
But I want all this garbage. People are gonna, you know, whatever. And then, you know, we're gonna get serious, man. We're gonna start.
A
Yeah. You don't want them trying to pull the. Oh, he said in 2025, on a podcast, you don't want. You want. They get that out of the way. I hope, I hope the kids comedy this is.
B
And I, I'll stand on that. This is a comedy. This is. This is entertainment. To bring a group of people together to have tough conversations in order to raise awareness, raise money, help people. Like we talk about every day. If we just sat here and talked and dancing mountain, what are the cool things that cops are doing? Like, nobody's gonna pay attention. We have to be edgy. We have to be all that. But at the end of the day, every one of those guys, they're scumbags, dude. The, the politicians, these guys have to work at the sheriff's eyes. They're terrible people. They just, they just hide behind the fact you can't report them, you can't do anything. So it all good, man.
A
It's all good. I hope the kids understand that. So they're. You're kind of like. You sound like the dad that's gonna be. I'm taking the new job. I'm gonna be at every baseball game and nothing's changing at home.
B
I'm not, dude, I'm here. Dude, like, somebody keeps telling me, like, if the sheriff can go blow tax dollars driving to North Carolina and illegally using tax dollars and upgrading hotels, I can't go on a podcast for an hour a day. That's what. I don't have a day.
A
No, you just dropped it down to an hour. An hour and a half, maybe 45
B
minutes if I got time. Like, you know, I mean, what you
A
do though is you make it a point. You take it out of your, I don't know, you could be salary, so you really can't.
B
Oh, vacation. Dude, listen. But, but listen, these guys under sheriff right now, people haven't seen him in months. They have no idea where he is. I get calls all the time. We haven't seen undershirt in months. We have no idea. This dude makes 200 some thousand dollars. He's got 1600 vacation hours. He's getting ready to annihilate the county with when they made everybody else cut their vacation hours down to 800-500-400. He makes like a hundred dollars an hour. Whatever it comes, massive money. He's getting ready to cash out and take a huge chunk of the county's money. He doesn't hold himself accountable. Nobody knows who these people are, where they're at. They don't see them if you don't have to. That's not the point. The point is to be out every day in the public at the sheriff's office, out on calls. Just because you're the boss doesn't give you right to be fat out of shape. Absent you lead from the front like the sergeant major. That's exactly my platform. That's what I'm talking about. You have to be present for the guys. That will give you the ability for so many to go. So he. He's on a podcast in his office. He's available right there every day. But he's out here on patrol. He's. He's here in the building. He's taking complaints. He's on Facebook. He's engaged with the community. Simple, dude. This isn't rocket science. They just make it look like rocket science. And they use their status and platform to make themselves feel elite, to attend meetings and stuff. Gotta go to the this club and that club. No, dude, you're the top cop. You're supposed to be out there leading from the front. That's the point. Dude, simple. This simple stuff, dude. Rocket science.
A
All right, we'll be on Patreon later. All tears can can view it and we'll put it through the app too. Every. All the OGs on the app.
B
Yeah, tears, Patreon. And then tonight, 8pm the final. The final ever Night Shift. It's a new name, right? We're not gonna tell them about the name yet. You have to say, all right, we're gonna have a new format.
A
It's not a new name. It's a new concept.
B
Allegedly. Allegedly. That's the other thing. Pitting Cart. The name. The name. My name does not go on anything. I don't have a building. I'm not. I'm not nobody. Every sheriff comes in and changes the name and puts his name on every piece of thing. Bro, you work for the people. It's the people's building. Just like the people's champ. The people's building. You don't put your name on everything. We pick cars. Tonight, 8pm we'll talk some more. We'll let it down. I'll be a non politician tonight. We'll hum songs. We'll do all kinds of cool stuff.
A
All right, guys, don't forget life, like. And subscribe tonight and then tomorrow, 1pm. Jv team for life.
This episode of The Antihero Broadcast, a show catering to veterans, first responders, and blue-collar Americans, dives into controversial and gritty discussions about race, crime statistics, law enforcement experiences, media narratives, and political corruption. The hosts and their guests dissect whether stating statistical or experiential "facts" about race and crime is inherently racist or simply common knowledge, all while maintaining their characteristic raw candor and comedic edge.
| Timestamp | Segment Summary | |------------|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 03:25 | Open discussion about stereotypes and their policing origin | | 06:55 | Challenge to crime stats and breakdown of FBI reporting methodology | | 11:04 | Specific crimes associated with certain races—debate over fact, fairness, and reporting | | 14:58 | Over-reporting by white communities, impact on crime stats | | 28:37 | Guest segment—Pat Brosnan ("Brutal Facts") on NYPD, crime, and socialist politics in NYC | | 35:03 | NYPD’s handling of large public events and “handcuffing” from political leadership | | 45:21 | Generational change in law enforcement and increasing crime complexity | | 55:01 | Host B announces candidacy for sheriff, platform, and priorities | | 65:10 | News segment: Ex-CIA agent arrested with $40 million in gold—integrity in government roles | | 79:04 | Guest Ryan on police accountability/“thin blue line” | | 84:10 | Further debate on race, crime, and how different drugs and criminals are perceived | | 89:03 | Crack vs. opioid epidemic: Race, policy, and cultural response | | 95:19 | Campaign finance, special interests, reform | | 101:02 | Correct use of terms: "unregulated market" instead of "black market" |
The Antihero Broadcast confronts taboo topics head-on, challenging both progressive and conservative orthodoxy. The episode’s sharp, irreverent style invites listeners to reflect on their own biases, acknowledge systemic failures, and consider that provocative questions—however uncomfortable—are critical for honest, productive discourse.