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The air terror broadcast is live. We got a good show for you. Trump Iran garbage ceasefire lifted. Imagine that dangers. Yeah, it's an immediate danger that he presented to himself. So we'll talk about that.
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And we have a special guest today in studio, former street goon and Lauder Hill police officer Sean Lozano, who is now on the ticket with James Fishback. Fishback's running for governor. Sean Lozano is running for Lieutenant Governor of the state of Florida. It's gonna be a hell of a show.
A
You're at the Antero podcast. We'll say what you can 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. However, we make no representation or warranty of any kind, express or implied regarding the accuracy, adequacy, validity, reliable reliability, availability or completeness of this information. Hurt feelings is not defamation. TV team for Life Good morning, good afternoon, good evening. It's Wednesday, July 8, 2026. The entire broadcast is the news entertainment broadcast for veterans, first bonders and all blue collar Americans. We go live Monday through Friday, 1pm Eastern Standard Time on YouTube, Facebook Connect. So if you like the show, give us a like and a subscribe. This show is brought to you by vengeance. Go to Vengeance.com use promo code Anti Hero for 15% off. Go use that promo code for their new protein that is made from cows in New Zealand but processed and done everything here in the States. There's no soy, no GMO, no artificial sweeteners, flavors or colors, no GMOs. It is the perfect protein. If you're looking out for your body and you're looking out for animals, Vengeance has made that protein. So go to vengeance.com that's V E N J E N Z. Use promo code antihero save15 and elevated silence. I tricked you Eli. I know I did. One before the other. Eli had it ready to go to go to elevated silence.com it's promo code Anti Air 15 Save15 on your suppressor. They have cans from everything from 22s to 50 cows. Exercise your second amendment right. Get yourself a can. The process is not that hard and Jim will walk you through it. And elevated silence.com use promo code anti or 15save15 on your presser. Join us on the discord we go. We're in there almost every night. Somebody from the 99 if it's 12 of us, if it's two of us, it's A good way to get to know everybody. And we'll be doing a UFC watch party for 329 this Saturday in the Discord. So don't wait till Saturday to figure out how to get in there. If you're like me and you don't know how Discord works, hit one of us up. We will get you in there.
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And don't forget to check out Patreon. You'll see pictures and Patreon of me from 1995 when I was looking like a gangster with my boys. We post behind the scenes stuff, our personal pictures, workouts, interact with everybody there in the Patreon. There's two tiers and if you want to be a super OG, you go to the antiheroapp.com you go to antiheroapp.com you will see the 99. What is the 99? It's the boys. It's the boys. Boys in Discord. It's the boys that watch the show. It's the watch parties. It's our own social media app. Within there you'll see again, pictures, links to our shows, all the stores, all the OG stuff. Everybody posts their own stuff on their on our own timeline. So check out both of those really cool places.
A
All right, first up on the docket of to talk about is Trump and Iran. So apparently Trump now it's officially done with their BS Iran's inability to uphold their agreement with a ceasefire. Eli, go ahead and share that screen. Make sure it's the right one. I think it's that one. Yep, Yep. All right. U.S. hits Iran with powerful strikes after attacks on commercial ships in the strait. Let's see. President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he considers the tentative ceasefire with Iran to be over, telling reporters alongside NATO Secretary General Mark Root at the alliance annual summit in Turkey that the agreement had become a waste of time. I could have told you that. For me, I think it's over, Trump said. As far as I'm concerned, it's just a waste of time. Trump said he no longer believes Tehran. That's how you say it, right? Tehran. Tehran is negotiated in good faith. Accused Iranian leaders of agreeing to terms privately before publicly denying them. They're liars. Trump said. We make a deal, we go outside, talk to the press. They say we never even talked about it. As far as I'm concerned, it's over. He said u. S. Negotiations could continue talks with Iran, but predicted they would go nowhere. Trust me, in the last month, I could have predicted that they can talk, but I think they're wasting their time. They're liars, they're cheats, they're sick people. I could actually hear Trump saying.
B
I can hear it. And then I, I read this looking at as well. Trump says he doesn't think Iran war will start again. I didn't think we were ever at war.
A
No, that's.
B
We were told we weren't, but he said, he said. Trump says he doesn't think the Iram war will start again, but he says, I think it's going to. We're going to end it very quickly. They hit a couple of ships and we hit them much harder.
A
But do you know anything about the ships? I missed that part.
B
I guess they're hitting cargo ships again in the Straight, so, so we hit. We hit them, I guess, Wednesday.
A
What do you mean they.
B
They struck them like. Yeah, hit them, blow them up.
A
Are there people dying on their ships?
B
Probably nobody cares about.
A
Are they US Ships now?
B
They're bringing oil out in and out. When they hit, we hit 10 times harder. You know, we hit much harder than they do. The US Might hit Iran tonight. And anything that happens is going to be over very quickly. It was going to be over very quickly months ago. Gonna be the best bombs you ever saw. Biggest bombs. Best bombs.
A
So, yeah, the best bomb.
B
Here we are again in July, post 250, and we're. We're not going back to war because there was never a war. But in the event we do something, it's going to end very quickly again.
A
I think the chances of us going to an actual war probably in the future of mankind is slim to none. It's going to be all different variations of war. But do you think we ever enter an armed conflict with Iran?
B
No. I look at this just like I say about the Ukraine, Russia. I know we have the capability to end everything really quick. I don't know how far he's willing to go with it, but it's interesting. The war won't start again, but we weren't at war technically, but it won't start again. And I don't know, man. Everything kind of settled. Gas prices were hitting low. We were decked down to like 330, 340.
A
I still couldn't tell you what the, the politics behind the Straight. I know you guys are, well, more educated in the strait of hormones where
B
all the oil's coming from. And then.
A
Is there any way the oil can come from another route? No, we can't just blow another route up and.
B
No, it's kind of, kind of, kind of right there.
A
So and that's controlled by Iran.
B
There's multiple countries that surround that. But they have to pass through the very close, that little straight part.
A
So it's like, everything's cool. But Iran's like, you just got to get through the Iran part.
B
Pew, pew, pew. Yeah, you got to get through. Gotta get to that. A rampart that, you know, it's gonna be the greatest bombs we're gonna bomb.
A
What stops us from giving them U. S. Military escorts? Is that like an act of war? Probably. It's probably some kind of political reason why.
B
I'm sure we have, we have a lot of people there.
A
I don't know.
B
It's feasible.
A
Dude, in 2026, how do they keep all this information from us? Like, we only literally get one article from fox news or CNN talking about how, you know, they bombed a bunch of oil vessels. Who do we bomb? What did we bomb? Who died in the bombing? He's like, what do we not get this stuff anymore?
B
We have one, we have one person associated with this network that is a very huge fan of the president. Very huge fan. And I look at this and I see, you know, Trump says dealing with Iran is a waste of time. And he warns more strikes that. But he's been threatening and threatening and threatening and threatening and threatening, threatening. It's almost like, you better believe I got pocket aces and he just won't show them to you. And he keeps saying he does. Like I said, I'm a fan of the, you know, I like Trump for most part. I would like, you know, I love the country, but we keep hearing the same thing over and over. And at what point do you go, bro, what are you doing? What are we doing here? Is it over? Is it not over? Did we, are we at war? Are we not at war? What, what's, what's going on, dog?
A
I feel like that's how the 99 feels about my life.
B
Yes, We like creatine. We don't like creatine. Making shirts. We're not making shirts. We're sponsoring. Yeah, just.
A
We're in their comments. We're not in their comments.
B
I, I, I, again, there's just it. I don't know. I don't know.
A
I want to give a shout out to Maggie Meg, 2991. She says she's in the live for the first time. Looking for forward to it.
B
Awesome.
A
Thanks for letting us know.
B
Let us know how you got here.
A
Let us know what you actually think of the show.
B
Very, very.
A
I can't ask any of these in here. Because they'll tell me it sucks. Even though it might not suck, but I think Meg would be honest.
B
I just want to know how you got here. Like, what degenerate found you to tell you to come look at this? Yeah, we want to know. We want to know so we can. So we can have Jay Draw make an AI program to target more people like that.
A
Yeah. Also, if you know anything about us bombing Iran, let me know, because Fox News gave us one article about it.
B
Trump's in danger. We heard that.
A
Yeah. Nick called us last night and said. Or he texted us. Nick. I will give this to Nick. Nick G Money. G Money podcast. The G Money show. Very well entwined in politics. Like, he's. I tell you, dude, he's that guy. You see memes about where they're. They act like all the time, and then they just say the wildest, most educational. You're like, how did that come out of your mouth? That's it with politics. He knows everything. And he also knows what's going on in the world. Nick's very well connected in real time. So, like, I almost thought, like, man, are we going to an emergency broadcast? Because he was like, trump's in Turkey and we're bombing Iran at the same time. Is Iran and Turkey close to each other?
B
No, we're good.
A
A little far away.
B
They're a little further away. But wait, Trump knew he was going to be Iran when, like, they didn't. We didn't just bomb him randomly. Trump knew he was going to be where he was going to be and he has to obviously order the bombing as well. So I. I wouldn't think he would be in danger per se, but.
A
Oh, Mark. Rtf tfmo said Trump. No, that's not what he said. He said, they said they hit a Ukraine. A Ukraine UK markship right here. They hit a couple UK March ships.
B
And UK's not sticking up for themselves.
A
Dude, it's the fucking UK, man. SJ, they're all over the place.
B
We gotta save them. We celebrated a big birthday because of them. Now we gotta save them.
A
But, yeah, so we'll keep you updated on anything. I'm waiting for us to just pummel Iran. I think at this point, that's the only thing that would warrant an emergency broadcast.
B
I got a reflection.
A
You do?
B
I do have a reflection. I'm on the ball. Strickland re spoke up again about Poirier and said, I spoke with Dustin and he is legitimate. He legitimately messed up by his actions. I thought he was just doing A PR cleanup. I guess not everyone is a piece. Is not. Is a piece of, like, me. So, yeah, I repent. That's John Strickland.
A
What's the part about Bud Light?
B
Well, he's. He's hoping that. He said he hopes that Strickland doesn't. Yes. He's hoping he doesn't lose that sponsor. Then Sean Strickland said, I thought, I'll drink every other beer.
A
But.
B
But, like. Because he doesn't even drink, he's like, but I'll start drinking and drink every beer. But. But Light, if they drop Dustin Poirier.
A
See, that's the beautiful thing about leverage, is Bud Light, if they were gonna drop them, and Sean Strickland stepping up and saying, like, dude, this is what you got to be in entertainment. You've got to be the guy with nothing to lose and a big platform. So let's say, like, hey, we're gonna do that. We're gonna appease the masses and, you know, drop Poirier for, like, six months or drop him for a while. And then Sean Strickland's like, hey, I'll just make it a sport to tear you down. There's nothing that could tear down Bud Light faster than Sean Strickland's posts, to the point where I think it would get on WWE very quick. And Dana would have to call him and say, you cannot do that.
B
Well, that's what I'm saying, because they're a huge sponsor of the ufc, but
A
do they sponsor fighters as well? Individually?
B
Possibly. Well, then, I mean, definitely Poirier. I don't know if that's allowed to happen while they're working or. Or post retirement now, but obviously, they dealt with the Dylan Mulvaney bull crap, and Dana White stuck up for Bud Light, even though they were going through all that. They're a huge, obviously, sponsor, so I still look at that video of all the things celebrities can do and people can do. I know we. You know, we got clipped. You clipped it very well again. Yesterday made us look like we hate Dustin Poirier and people.
A
I even took out the part where you're like, I'm not trying to. On him. Yeah, I didn't mean to. I thought it was just gonna be fluff, but turns out that would have been good to put in there. Yeah.
B
So we got. We got on again because people think we hate everybody, but I stand by it, dude.
A
And John Constantine backed me up in his post by saying, it doesn't give you a pass to be an. And he wasn't John Constantine wasn't so much going in that route, but then I started going in that route. I'm like, you can't be a cop and go do that on your off time. You'd be fired. Nobody would care.
B
You can't go to the bar and shove an old lady around.
A
Yeah, you get.
B
Yeah, I know. But of all the things that everybody's working through it.
C
Guys.
B
Regular people do every day. It's like, it wasn't that bad. No, he didn't hit anybody. He got mad.
A
I'm a firm. I'm. Dude. Firm believer, dude. Who cares? He's a USC fighter. Leave him alone. You're lucky he didn't knock you out. But I just. But I also was gonna call a spade a spade and say that you can't blame depression on outbursts like that. And him going and taking care of. I think is great. And. And depression is. Is the root of what caused the drinking. I guess we didn't go that far down the rabbit hole yesterday.
B
Oh, we gotta. Maggie gave a update.
A
I found y' all from the podcast. Things police see. True crime. That. That likes to hear the truth. I'm. I'm a Christian Republican, married mom of three. Appreciate the show and humor. Wow. I did that show a long time ago.
B
Well, make sure you tell all your friends that we. We're definitely gonna tell you things that police see and have it. Have some. Here.
A
We got a couple videos lined up later.
B
Yeah, we got some stuff we gotta get. Yeah, yeah, we gotta. One of our guests has got a viral video, so check out Cottville today. There's some body cam breakdown of myself.
A
Did you film it this morning?
B
Doesn't matter. Check out Cottville. You too, Eli. It's body cam of me. My own body cam broken down.
A
He knows you, dude. It's not cool.
B
It's cool. But, yeah, I watched it.
A
I saw you in the Instagram comments this morning. I just had one. No, it's like five.
B
No, I only respond twice, dude.
A
No, four or five. No, two pro.
B
Go ahead.
A
All right, I'm gonna pull it up.
B
I can tell you. I was driving. I responded to. I had to delete them. That's why you saw so many notifications.
A
No, dude.
B
Yeah, I commented. These guys suck on one reel. And then I responded.
A
Why'd you delete them?
B
Because I'm spelling things wrong. I. I commented back to the guy that has the bad profile picture that threatened you.
A
You threatened me?
B
Yeah, he just said something.
A
Man, I love it when people get really upset about Instagram posts.
B
Yeah. You called him out about his profile picture.
A
It's like a teenage boy.
B
Oh, I responded because his profile says, don't add me unless you know me, bro.
A
It's all that you responded. Oh, right here. Boom. Four of them in a row.
B
There's no. Those guys are losers.
A
Okay. So you respond.
B
Make sure we update it.
A
I did. So it says, these guys, these dudes are losing because somebody commented, anti hero sucks. You said, I've been saying this to the American infantryman. He said, anti air sucks. Which mine and Mike's funnest thing to do is go in there because they don't know that my personal account and cop Bill are the host. They just like you. So we'll be like, dude, these guys sucks so much. You said you taxed me, said, don't add me unless you know me.
B
Yeah, that's the guy you were making fun of.
A
And then you Canadian, you call the Canadian Canadian chick. Which part? You know when, like, I'm always right, when me and you debate.
B
You remember except for the shot shooting in the. I don't remember. I have a lot going on on my phone.
A
Definitely just two.
B
I. Well, I remember deleting one like three times. I kept spelling something wrong, so I don't remember.
A
You can't look stupid when you're talking.
B
No, you gotta. Number one accurate. Some more reflections. World cup yesterday, there was a game, people. Tom Brady compared it to the 283 comeback in the super bowl against. When the Patriots came back. I can't watch soccer, it's so good. Argentina was down 0 to 2. Late, late, late in the game and came back and won 3 to 2. Messi scored the tying goal. Argentina won. And Tom Brady himself compared it to the comeback. You know soccer, there's not very many goals. Usually it's in these games that are so tight. Like the second game was Colombia and Switzerland went to 00 shootout. Switzerland won, but Argentina was down 2 0. It's like 79 minutes left in the elapsed. So like 15 minutes or 10 minutes left in the game. They scored twice and then once in, I believe extra time.
A
And they call it soccer. Extra time.
B
Yeah, they. When they go over, I watch it in Spanish and it's the most exciting thing the world. Like, my wife walked in me and they talk fast. Me and her son are sitting there on the couch. Columbia's playing Switzerland. It's like, why is this in Spanish? I'm like, because the Americans are like. And Messi kicks it over. And it starts building. Go they start screaming and it's like the. And I'm like, I don't even know what they're saying, but it sounds cool. So I will only watch World cup soccer. I don't watch any mls, Any other stuff. I watch World cup soccer and I only watch it in Spanish, so I have no idea. I hear cabeza once in a while. I know that that was a header. Other than that, I hear the names, they say the name. I'm like, all right, here comes. And then.
A
Did you see Keto sent that? That Viking looking dude is.
B
Oh, yeah.
A
Like carnivore or something.
B
Yeah, what's his name?
A
Starts with an H. He looks like a caveman, dude.
B
They do the thing with the drum. Do you ever see. You see the end of the game? So all the Norwegian people are in the crowd and he's got the Viking, like, drum, and he's like, boom. They all go whoosh. And they act like they're rowing. And then he's like, that's cool. And then, like, there's. I saw a great video because Mexico lost. I had a Mexican guy on the couch crying, practicing the road. He's like, I'm rooting for Norway when they play England tomorrow. Practice in my row.
A
Is America out, gone? Yeah, they got beat the other night, right?
B
Yeah, they got beat last night. Like I said, yesterday was Argentina, and who the. I just said it.
A
I don't know.
B
I don't know.
A
How long does soccer Super Bowls go for?
B
The 19th is the last game. It's every four years. So it's once every four years and
A
it's all over the.
B
You got the thing. You can't. You're just like. You're.
A
Well, there's a lot of.
B
You have a good memory. You have a good memory, but you don't. And my wife doesn't either. You don't understand the gravity of the World Cup.
A
No, I don't.
B
You don't. It's. It is. The Super bowl times 1,000 times. Every country times for every one of those other countries. That's not us. We have football, we have base. Like, we're not that interested. One of the goalies from some obscure team did some cool and his Instagram following went from like 30, 000 to like 30 million in, like, one day. Ronaldo Messi, they have like 500 million followers.
A
I forgot. People outside of the US have Instagram. Crazy Canadians don't like us.
B
Well up, but these guys. This is like, just getting to the World cup for a country is huge. And then when they win a game, advance to the round, the knockout rounds. They are like, this is their world. So it's like the Super Bowl. But imagine the super bowl is only played every four years instead of every year.
A
So to answer questions about the shirt, this is the first. I'm not even going to call it an early batch. I didn't offer it to anybody. We had to. We're, like I said, we're rebranding, redistributing, we're doing. So I've made a batch of shirts that I'm not physically sending out. I'm just kind of giving them out. But these will be out in about a week. But it's the, it's the OG counterculture. So this is on the back. Too big on the back. So. And Keto said, who's gonna get the. Who's gonna be the first one to get the skull? So I'm gonna vow to be the first one to get the skull.
B
What do you mean, get a tattoo?
A
Yeah. Nick Dick beat us to the 99, so I gotta be the first one to get. I wonder if there's a Cotville tattoo out there. Nah, you said it like.
B
Nah, nah, nah, there can't be.
A
No way.
B
People hate me too much.
A
I would do it. How hard would that be? Look at your shirt. How hard that wouldn't be the. Like, that would be a 10 minute tattoo. You can't use pink, obviously. You'd have to do like maybe black in it, surrounded by the pink or the. Yeah, but I would do it. Get it right on my butt.
B
No, no, don't do it.
A
Kids do it.
B
No, I'm not cool enough. Get a, Get a tonal art tattoo instead. I'm sorry.
A
Yeah, we got, you gotta. We got a big middle finger the other day.
B
No, see, I don't look at it like that. I don't look at it like that. You got every. Other than what Khabib said. Khabib says I can't befriend those who are not friends with my friends. Right. Khabib is like keeping it real. Like he can't be friends with, like, he talked about that with Jon Jones and Daniel Corbet. Daniel Cormier and John Jones can't befriend those who cannot. Who are not friends with your friends. So like John, he's saying he can't
A
be friends with them.
B
Yes. Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier hate each other. Right. So when asked, Khabib said, I won't talk to Jon Jones because I'm Loyalty, yes, but you can't apply.
A
You can't expect loyalty from everybody. It's 2026. Everybody stabbed each other.
B
Not for certain levels. You can't be mad at everybody. What else we got? Reflections.
A
Somebody asked if we know if Joseph's color and tattoos is for homos. If we know who Axl Rosen is. The predator poachers. You're like, can you look that up?
B
No, I don't.
A
I can actually look it up. You're good.
B
My Nick Praw hoodie should be here. I keep checking.
A
Is it coming here?
B
No, it's coming. I mean, here to me. What else do I have?
A
Alex. What was his name? What did I say? Predator poachers. Yeah. We might take our break early. Our guest is coming probably around 1:40, so we'll probably take a break in, like, 15, 20 minutes and then. Oh, I said, do they do. Is it, like, beat up each other PDFs? Beat it.
B
Yeah. That's good stuff. Yeah, there's a bunch of those.
A
I've seen it. Yeah. I don't know. I don't. I don't, like, brand them out and, like, have a favorite predator poacher, but I've probably never come.
B
When I start scrolling and those videos pop up, I like watching them when they catch those dudes. They deserve to be dealt with accordingly.
A
Imagine if they caught the wrong dude. Like, the guy was in the other aisle and they came up and they're
B
usually pretty good about it. They're like.
A
They're usually on some old man for no reason.
B
They're usually on the phone as they're approaching. Like, it's usually pretty good.
A
A lot of people ask me why the police can't arrest on site. And I'm like, you can't. You can't have a civilian make your probable calls for you. You could do an investigation on site. But most likely, it's like you said last time, the. There were sex crimes would come out, so you wouldn't even be making it.
B
But you see sometimes that they let them completely go and say they can't do anything. That's false. You could take the messages. You could take the messages. You could rip it. Because, I mean, there are some hurdles, obviously, that you have to have a witness. You have to have a chain of custody of the text messages. Whoever was actually physically texting, you have to worry about.
A
It's a. It's an investigation. Sure. Like, I don't think you can make an arrest on site, just a street cop.
B
No. Well, you could, but I would Call detective. Yeah, but they can. They can detain on site. Yeah, like, hey, this guy was pretending to be a, you know, younger and actually doing xyz. You definitely can detain everybody. But the arrest part, you would want to get some more investigation. You'd have to get all the messages.
A
Oh, this guy gets pedos to confess on camera, then hands off the evidence to cops. He doesn't beat them up, though. Well, here's the other thing about civilians. As I've noticed this. I had one case in particular that I thought was going to get thrown out. And then they were like, hold on a second. Wait. The civilian asked them, it wasn't a. It wasn't a pedo case, but they were like, wait. So the civilian witness asked them the incriminating question and you heard it? And I was like, yeah. It's like. But you didn't ask them. A random civilian asked them when they weren't detained or they were detained. And I was like, yeah. They're like, well, you need to go re. Ask them. But you spawn. That's considered spontaneous utterance.
B
As long as they're not working as an agent of you. Like, you can't hand him a note and be like, hey, answer this question. And you can't solicit. Like, you can't. Like, there was the old days. There was the old days where you'd be riding them to the jail and you would, like, dance around some question and statements to get them to say some things, and they. They frown upon that, which that whole. I'm. I'm not a huge fan of Miranda. I. I think we've all had. I'm talking about having to read it. It doesn't make sense to me. You know, as an adult.
A
I'm not a big fan of your rights.
B
No, no, your rights. I'm a fan of. You know your rights, though. Everyone knows that. You get a lawyer.
A
Know that I.
B
Exactly. Exactly. Everyone.
A
Let me ask you this question, Eli. First off, nobody can hear you talking, so. I know, but I have headphones on. So, like, when you talk, if you don't want to use a mic, we can't. Like, you could turn the mic on and talk. What do you think about. The states have different rules about it, but do you think people under 18 should be questioned without their parents? You think they're mature enough?
B
Yes.
A
Really? Yeah. I don't want anybody talking to myself.
B
That's why you tell them that you teach your teacher. Kids just don't talk to the cops. Yeah, no problem with that. But what Everyone. Everyone's a street lawyer. Every person you've ever run into has said something about their right. I know my rights. I know my right. Everyone has said it.
A
When you.
B
And. And I'll be. I'm. I'm gonna go both ways with this one. You're right. Don't talk to the cops, even as a witness. I'm like, hey, man, you knock on my door. Did you see your neighbor get shot? I didn't see nothing, bro. Like, I want a lawyer. Like, I don't want to talk. Yeah, that's fine. That doesn't matter. I don't want to say anything. I'd incriminate myself. But at the same time, I also look at it like, everyone knows you're an adult. You know your rights. You know when somebody asks you a question, the fact that you decide to answer without that paragraph of Miranda that basically says if you answer any questions, you're a. Is what it tells you. That's what it should say.
A
So you just think people are so stupid, they deserve it.
B
That's stupid.
A
You.
B
You're.
A
You think they need to know their rights and don't need to be reminded.
B
Like, everyone know. Nobody forgets they have the first Amendment. Nobody forgets to have the second amendment right. Do you know what you're allowed to do and not allowed to. We learn in school. Even Eli in 2020, whatever. Learned it in civics about your Miranda rights. We were taught things,
A
Lacosa. I don't know what that means.
B
No, I don't either, but I. I just. To stop to lose a kid. This is my point. Someone does something heinous, child crime, whatever. I get drugs and all that, nobody really cares about it. But if somebody does something silly and you're asking them questions and then you lose the entire case because you didn't stop and read this piece of paper to a grown human who knows that they have these rights. It's not a trick. It's not, like, made up.
A
It's.
B
You know your driver's lane, right? You can't drive without a driver's license. That's like saying if I pull you over on a suspended. I have to remind you first. Hey, you knew you were supposed to have a license, right? You get away with this one.
A
Don't. They're stupid, dude. They don't know their rights.
B
They do know their rights. They scream it all day on the Internet. All you hear is, I know my rights. How many times I've heard that? I know my rights.
A
I'm going to make an index of all the stupid you say and sell it to your competitors, that's fine. Do your competition.
B
I don't.
A
I believe on July 8, Mike said he doesn't believe it.
B
Not in Miranda. I think that you are an adult. You get asked a question by a cop. You know, that's like being able to do it to your wife. Like, she asks you something like, why'd you put them on? I want a lawyer. Like, I would love that. Yeah, I would do.
D
But.
B
But I'm saying, you know that like when she asks you a question and you know, like, I must have forgotten,
A
you know, why I want to know her? When I talk to my wife is because my wife's smarter than me, so I have no idea what she's talking about. And I know she's setting me up. So I'm like, I just don't want to answer because I know nothing I say is going to be right.
B
Exactly. You know that. Right? It's common sense. Just like, you know, if you shot somebody and the police come and ask you, why did you shoot that guy? You go, oh, man, do I have the right? Do I have to answer this? Do I not kill somebody?
A
The state has to prove the evidence against you. So if you're wrongfully accused of something, I would, I would lawyer up and make it harder on the state rather than complying. Because the state is also. When I say the state, I mean your state attorney's office, the government. And they also want. They want things solved. They're a business. Like, at the end of the day, treat it like a business. Like they don't really. Nobody personally cares if you're going to be affected for being wrongfully accused of. I think the chances of you actually doing time and getting a conviction is probably some of the smallest numbers ever.
B
But, but here, let me, let me clear this up. On July 8, 2026, I don't believe in like, lot trick. The things that go with Miranda are kind of parallel at our lying, trickery, you know, coercion. I don't believe in any of that. My point is you should still have those rights. You know, I can't lie to you and be like, hey, man, I got this DNA test result back on my super DNA machine like 11 seconds ago, and it's. Your fingerprints are all over everything. Your DNA's on everything. It's all made up. I don't believe in that. I don't believe in like threatening it old school.
A
There's another do it. But then you're starting to with somebody. Yes, because you said after a certain amount of time, people start getting crazy
B
and going, there's that one fall asleep and threaten to put the dude's dog down. They're like, we're gonna put your dog to sleep. Your dog's gonna die if you don't tell. So, no, you still have to be a decent human. That's where a lot of things I say require people to be decent human beings and good cops. I just don't think stopping somebody from telling you that they killed somebody to go, hold on, bro, you really should get a lawyer. I'm gonna read you this thing, and it's gonna pretty much tell you not to talk to me. Here you go. And then you read it and you're like, yeah, man, maybe I should get a lawyer. And it's like, that's not. I don't think that was the point. The point was to make sure. Like that. What Eli just posted is that you're.
A
You're.
B
You're right to self. You know, your right to self incrimination, which means. And you know you have a right to an attorney. Everyone knows that, dude, it's on every TV show. It's on everything. They even go as far as read Miranda, like on tv when they make an arrest to make everybody think. That's when it really applies.
A
You don't have to read Miranda. Lacosa said, I respect you guys, but your opinions are too steeped in violence. I lol. Cops shouldn't be doing some of the. They're doing. That's why they're getting their. Turned upside down. He recorrected himself when he said he missed. He. That's why they're getting their beep turn up. I want.
B
Yeah, I'd love to hear that argument.
A
I. I respect the. I respect you supporting us and watching. I respect you respecting us. And I love con. I love debates and different opinions. I know Most of the 99 aren't cops, and I think we resonate so well with people because we have different takes on police work. And we're just. We're individuals that used to be cops. And so.
B
And here I'll show you how they were super relatable. I think I'll show you an example.
A
But I do believe in violence. It does solve a lot of things. Keeps order and peace.
B
No, what did he say again? Seen the video? No, I haven't seen that one.
A
Oh, you talking about what?
B
Sal sent me one recently of a. They shoot a homeowner that's involved in an argument with a repo man. That one's kind of tough, too. We'll cover that one tomorrow because we got a guest coming on.
A
But have y' all seen the video of a homeowner who steps out of the house and lets off a warning shot? And the cops who were there in the immediate position he run towards the homeowner?
B
Well, he probably should.
A
Yeah.
B
I need a lot more context than that.
A
Yeah, I do, too.
B
You can't pop shot out in your front yard. Not expect with the cops out there. Cops in the area.
A
Because you ever seen that video where a guy was standing over a shark and threw blood in the water that jumped in? Yeah, it was like crazy. Kind of. Tell you what's going to happen.
B
Oh, we never talked about the follow up.
A
Never mind. What?
B
To the lady that got bit by the alligator.
A
Is there more? The picture. What picture?
B
Oh,
A
do you have it?
B
No. Did you send it? I sent it.
A
Did you text it or send it to me on Instagram? I think I texted because I had to screen grab a screen, record it or screenshot it off the news article. There is an update about the alligator victim we covered last week in Florida. Some of you guys might know what we're talking about when you see it.
B
I mean, it's just a picture.
A
Tmf. Tfmo said that's the entire context. I don't.
B
I don't. So a guy ran outside and fired a warning shot at what, an alligator, a snake, an alien.
A
And then the cops ran at him.
B
They were there out if he first, I mean. Okay, so I don't know what this means. I don't know why you sent this to me.
A
Eli. Put it on both of us. Eli. Put it. Eli. Yeah. And then go figure out what the hell he needs out there. Maybe the person's here now. He looks worried, like he broke something.
B
Like last time when he said, I broke it.
A
Yeah. Hurry up.
B
All right, so.
A
But Lacosa says it's all love. And I get it. It does keep order. Just don't want the cops Free Willy.
B
No, no, no.
A
Getting out of hand.
B
And you have to watch more. I'm on. I'm on the I'm on sometimes with Sean Paul Reyes, long on auditor who does exactly that audit. I believe in the Constitution. I believe cops have to do things properly. Absolutely. There's no run crazy police state out here. When I say things like about the Miranda rights, I believe the cops have to follow the Constitution, have to do things right. I just look at the way you have to stop in the middle of questioning to Read some nonsense that everyone knows already. It's kind of like your driver's license. You know, you're not supposed to drive drunk. You still have to read implied consent to tell them again that they're not allowed to drive drunk and then ask them to submit to a breath test. It's kind of silly, but here is the. Tyler sent this to me. I don't know why. The alligator lady who got bit. This is. This is a picture before. Maybe the alligator likes McDonald's.
A
No, that's burger King.
B
Oh, that's. Yeah. No, Maybe he likes McDonald's. That's why he bit her. Oh, she has a Burger King crown on. I don't know.
A
Maybe she's a fan of Burger King.
B
Maybe. Yeah, she must like.
A
Maybe she had her birthday and at Burger King that day.
B
Maybe. But that is a picture.
A
That is a very telling picture that tells you all you need to know
B
about somebody willing to jump in a river with alligators. Probably would wear.
A
They grew up next to the river.
B
Yeah, yeah. So that is. Unfortunately, she's no longer with us. We're not making fun of that. She just happens to wear Burger King
C
crown for some reason.
A
You know? You know.
B
So
A
what else we got? You got it? Oh, I got one. It's actually in there in the banners. This was from yesterday. We just didn't get to it. The National Guard gets a conus kill. Let's talk about that. Let me pull it up. Two members of the Tennessee National Guard shot and killed an armed man early Sunday in Memphis, law enforcement said. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said today that Memphis police and National Guard soldiers who are in the city as part of a federal task force responded to reports of gunfire just before 4am Memphis Police officers were chasing a man armed with a handgun. Tennessee National Guard soldiers joined the chase for the armed man, identified as 20 year old Tyron Johnson, white male. No, I'm just kidding. For reasons under investigation, the situation escalated, resulting in two National Guard soldiers firing upon Johnson, striking and killing him. The Tennessee Bureau investigation said in its statement. The Memphis Police Department said that Johnson turned toward National Guard members with his weapon. The Tennessee National Guard soldiers discharged their weapons, striking the mail. The mail was pronounced deceased at the scene. The bureau is now investigating the fatal shooting at the request of the District Attorney General. The Tennessee National Guard did not immediately respond to requests for comment from Task and Purpose, which is who's covering this? But in a statement shared with a local paper, the Commercial Appeal said that the National Guard medics prove provided first aid, but Johnson Died at the scene. So that is no joke. No coverage of Memphis. Memphis is such a hole. Like you were saying that they get. They have active National Guard in the streets and no one cares, knows.
B
Nobody even knows.
A
That's nuts.
B
Memphis, Dolph World.
A
That's in Tennessee.
B
Dolph World.
A
What's Dolph World mean?
B
That's where Dolph, the rapper, Young Dolph is from. He got killed there too. He was like really famous rapper. He got murdered and fitting.
A
Ah, man, I thought that was a country singer. Never mind. No, definitely not wrong part of Tennessee.
B
Yes, he got unfortunately murdered in his own hometown. His own people.
A
What?
B
Yeah.
A
No honor amongst thieves.
B
The goat. Rest in peace, Dolph.
A
Yeah, but I thought that was cool. You know, I'll be cynical. I don't care. We got a lot of veterans on the show. Imagine getting a conus kill. Not a lot of people get that.
B
No.
A
Not even most cops get that.
B
No. Before we should have to guess anymore, I got one story. We've been keeping this theme out of Florida, right? We have cops in Florida that, you know, this is right up there with La Casita. We're going to keep cops accountable. Right. So I'm going to talk. This has been happening a lot. You want to throw that up, Eli? I haven't. A lot. A former officer with the Lakeland Police Department, which is in Polk county, has been arrested after he reportedly falsified his time slips for off duty assignments. Michael AC Miguel Acevedo is facing grand theft and scheming to defraud. An investigation revealed 54 separate incidents from July 7, 2022 to May 26, 2026, where he either clocked into her or signed details while outside of the approved boundaries of his work site. Lakeland Police Department. About 1 406.1046.50 in compensation being paid to Acevedo for time associated with attendance discrepancies and location irregularities. The police department said Osita showed a pattern of repeatedly representing he was present and working assigned details with electronic records showed otherwise. So this is pretty simple. Here's my point of this. A regular cop like that breaks the law. I agree. Breaks the law, deserves to be punished. Deserves to be arrested. Thousand dollars. It's not groundbreaking amount of money. It's over a thousand dollars over four years. It's stupid. I can't imagine that the $27 or $30 per paycheck, whatever it was, came out to be, was worth getting arrested. And. And it's. He deserves to be fired, prosecuted, and treated like a criminal because he is. My point though is if he was the sheriff or the chief and let's say he used county gas money illegally to drive out of state, or if he used county funds to buy hotel rooms or upgrade hotel rooms, they wouldn't
A
do anything because he's labeled different, but
B
it's the same crime. Would you agree? Is there any difference?
A
We talked about this. I'm not, I'm not comfortable. Once we get in a conversation about a minute and a half, I end up agreeing with you. But at face value, as like a listener, I have to go. This guy was, I don't care. Maybe not enough to criminally charge somebody with grand theft or anything like that, but he definitely, if it's one penny,
B
it's too much, it's there. I agree.
A
Yeah.
B
Thousand percent. And now this guy goes to jail. This guy goes to jail. I agree. But when you're the sheriff does it to me, is it not like a double standard? If you can, you have a 80, 90, I think like 100 million dollar budget and use it whatever you want.
A
That sheriff treats it like a tax write off. Like how you're like, oh, I'm gonna go to the studio, I'm gonna write the tax write off. That's what he. I mean, I, the only sane part of my brain is like, when I'm like, when somebody commits fraud or theft, I'm like trying to think like, how do they justify it in their head? So I'm like, all right, they're wrong and they would lose in court. But how does somebody justify doing wrong? And I would imagine that they're just like thinking like, oh, it's like a tax write off. You know, I'm, I'm going on a personal trip, but I took one phone call and that's how we do it with our taxes.
B
That's fine.
A
But.
B
But that's your personal business.
A
Doing that comes from the taxes of the government, not from the taxpayers of accounting.
B
Correct. So when you do that and you, you bomb Uncle Sam for a trip to Boston, like, that's really not okay. When you're in triple whoppers on the highway in Boston and you're writing it off as a business write off, that's something.
A
But the BMW rental got this job
B
as a business plus the rims. But this guy is, yeah, he's illegal. He's doing. He deserves to be arrested. But I look at a thousand dollars over four years. But when a, when a, when a head of a department goes on vacation and goes you know what? I'm gonna bring my, my in laws and I'm gonna book a second room on the government credit card. To me, it's no different than skimming 30, $40 off a job site. Like, it's both, they should both be treated the same. If, and like you said, the easiest way to account for it is every penny matters. It doesn't matter if it's $5 or $5 million. I think you have to, it's the integrity.
A
I look at it like this. In business, when I have business partners, you have to be able to very easily articulate every cent moved or spent. If it goes into a long like drawn out, like, but there's, it's like,
B
so, okay, perfect, perfect transition. So as now you come to me and I spent fifteen hundred dollars on antihero. It doesn't say what it's for. You just know I took 15. Or you're going to ask me, right? Like, hey, and if I just go, hey, you know, I did something like if I don't give you a straight answer, you're gonna be like, bro, what did you spend the money I need to like, so kick it to the sheriff. If, if, if I come to the sheriff and I'm a citizen, a taxpayer, and I see that he spent X amount of dollars as a voting member of the tax of the, of the taxpayers. And I believe that he works for us, right? We voted him in. He's accountable for his budget. And I were to say to him, hey, Sheriff, you went on this trip and you spent like, it's not bullets, it's not whatever, or even if it was, I see that you spent $4,000 on personal things. Like, can you please tell us as the public, we elected you, we have a right to know why you did that. I would think that's the same right. He's a business, it's a government entity, he's audited. Nobody asked that question though. Or I get this, it's just 5,000. It's not 5 million. It's not 3 million. It's just 5. You're willing to blow 5 grand illegally, how much? What other. That's my point. What else are you. And if this guy's willing to blow a th, that's why he goes to jail and gets fired, you can't go, well, it was only a grand. He's a good cop. We're going to let him slide. No, if he's willing to finagle a thousand, is he willing to let drug dealers off? Is he willing to do something.
A
Him on a big rip.
B
Correct.
A
He would take.
B
Yeah, so that's my point.
A
So, great movie, by the way.
B
GU is here.
A
Yes. All right, we're going to take a quick commercial break and after that we have our guest, Lieutenant Governor candidate Lozano. So we'll be right back after these messages.
D
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C
Flips it.
A
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B
Awesome. Eli, bring it here. Because I'm excited to announce the guest that's finally here in the studio. We've been waiting for him.
C
It's.
B
The wait is over. I don't get an opportunity to introduce real street cops every now and then, especially one that's running for lieutenant governor with. With James Fishback, who is running for governor, who I'm supporting for governor. So make sure you understand that. That's who I believe should be the next governor of Florida. But Sean Lozano is here, and he is a street cop from the streets of Lauder Hill. If anybody knows the old cops episodes down in Broward County, Jerry Worms. Lauder Hill is a mess, and this guy was out there pounding the pavement like a real cop. And now he's on the ticket with James Fishback to be the next governor and lieutenant Governor of Florida. So, Sean, thank you for coming, man.
C
Thanks a lot. Mike.
B
Let me tell you, the most exciting thing was when I clicked and saw you followed Cotteville already. And I was like, yeah, this is awesome. So tell us who you are. Give us a little background on you and how you ended up on the ticket for lieutenant Governor of the state of Florida.
C
Yeah. You know what's funny is I've been following Copville since I was a cop. I mean, for years I've been following Copville. And I was just telling Aiden. I'm like, man, this is like a. Like an old school. Like, this is like. Like we're real cops, like for Instagram, like real cops, you know? And so, yeah, man, I. I worked for the city of Lauder Hill until December of last year. It's really funny actually, because everybody's like, how did, like a regular, like, cop. You weren't like a major or like brass. How'd you get involved in public politics? Right? So I was sitting my patrol car. It's probably a year ago now. I'm sitting my patrol car when it's like 2am I work nights, of course, and I'm scrolling Twitter in between probably arrests or jump outs or whatever, and I see James Fishback tweeting about how he hates H1B visas. And like, it was like a base tweet. Like, he's like, H1B visas are a scam and we need to get all of these people out of our country. Like, something like, you know, awesome. And like, man, this guy's cool. I liked it. I retweeted it and I followed him. And from there I just kind of like, kept up with him and we talked a little bit. Just like, man, like, you're really like, I'm a cop. And you're just like, you kind of say all the right things. And this was long before he announced his governor race. And then in November, obviously he announced he's going to run for governor. And I'm like, man, I got a little bit of time. Like, I could volunteer, help, help this campaign out. And it literally started as, like, me just being a regular volunteer. And then I took over Broward County. And then he was like, I want you to run the region. And then one day he's like, look, dude, I want you on my team. Like, I want. I want you to do this.
A
At one point were you like, yeah, this is awesome. I just have a little bit more volunteer hours.
C
Yeah, it was like that, basically. And he was like, no, dude, like, I just want you full time. Like, you know, just come on full time and run. Help run my campaign. And I did that for a while. Obviously. I've been with him since now. Basically the end of December, beginning of January.
A
Okay.
C
Full time, really? Since, like, January. And the, the running mate thing happened in May. We had a serious conversation. He's like, look, dude, I want you to be a running mate. And I was like, what? What? I was really stunned. And I said, like, look, James, I have no political experience. Like, I'm literally just like a street cop. And you're like, no, that's exactly why you're perfect. Like, I don't need. I don't need like a politician on this ticket. I'm the business guy. You're the street cop. And we're gonna, we're gonna win because of that.
B
And that I think that's where you resonate with, when I watch you resonate with normal people because the politics, we know that the, the guy that you're running against, the guy dodges you guys and won't debate. And we've seen all the videos now on, on Facebook where I'm not gonna say his name, but one guy just will not man up and debate because they don't want to talk to real people. They want to run this politicians game. So how does that, how does that play? You think your guys favor that you're so willing to be right up front and out in the open and these guys are hiding from you?
C
Yeah, well, look, I mean I commend Lieutenant Governor Collins, I commend Speaker Renner in that they showed up last week at the debate with pbd. I was there myself and I think that I commend them for showing up. Obviously we all saw how the debate went and it couldn't have really, in my opinion, gone better for James. But what I would say as far as the other guy who is not willing to do it, I would say it's worse for him. Look, we hear from people almost every day who say, you know, I was supporting you, but I really think you should debate. I think normal people, everyday people want to see that. We all remember what happened in 2024 when they installed Kamala Harris. Right. That no one chose her. No Democrat said, I voted for this person. And so how did it turn out?
A
I forgot about that. She just came out of nowhere.
C
The same thing. You know, they just installed her like, like Joe Biden dropped out after his disastrous debate performance.
A
Yeah.
C
And they just picked her like, no, you should hold the primary. Quick one just to see how do
A
they not have to hold a primary.
B
There's some rules they skated around. Okay.
A
That blew my mind.
C
Yeah. I think it was a timing like because of how late he dropped. It was like, oh, it's too close. We just have to put her in. So who knows? I mean, I'm not saying I would have went differently and obviously we're running a race here in Florida. But look, maybe the people would have been like, no, we want, we want Gavin Newscomb. Like I don't know.
B
Yeah. And that's where I agree because obviously in the social media world world now and being on the Internet, we often talk about how when somebody disagrees with us, we absolutely are cool with that. But we'd like to talk to you.
C
Yeah.
B
About why you can't just, you know, crap on us and say all these nasty things and then, you know, you gotta. We want you to step up and for another candidate that is unwilling to just get in the same room and, and iron out issues. To me as a voter, I look at that concerning that. Why would somebody be hiding.
C
Yeah.
B
From facing another man if you're not. If you're not willing to face another man at a stage on a debate, or what are you hiding? Or what are your flaws that you don't want exposed? Is that how you guys feel about the situation?
C
Yeah. I mean, and I think that after that debate, by the way, I think that his team saw that and I. I think that just like they're probably would never let. Even if he wanted to, I don't think his team would let in his handlers, the people he's owned by, slate, by his. By his donors.
A
So sometimes I think you say stuff, but you mean to and then you correct it's quick.
B
That's the street copy, the body cams. All right, there you go.
A
Did he say newscoop?
C
But he's. Look, he's owned by these people. And so even if he wanted to, I think that they saw how well James did and look at what happened to, to Collins. I mean, he just got dismantled. So I'll say that he got just totally dismantled by James and even Paul jumped in there and had some fun. So I would say that they don't want him to debate because they know he'll look bad. And the truth of it is, is he's not really allowed to say. He can't say things like, I will prevent data centers from opening and I will not let a data center open. He can't. He's. He's got so much money from data center packs from guys like Zuckerberg, he literally cannot say, I will not allow data center open in the state.
B
I'm gonna ask you a tough question because this is one of the ones I keep getting. James is big on a lot of things, but one thing he talks about is the elimination of Flock. I know that's a hot topic in the United States, a hot topic here in Florida. What does that mean to you? Or what is his message when he says he's going to eliminate Flock? How does a voter. What do we think about that?
C
That. Well, look, I think that first of all, obviously, as a police officer, I made a lot of good arrests on Flock. I did. I made. I made a lot of good signal 10, auto theft, you know, recoveries and, and auto theft arrest. So as far as that goes, I would say that there is merit or use. I think the problem with flock is where does it go too far? And you see in some communities, they start putting these cameras in and just like neighborhood areas, right? Like some flock cameras are pointing towards parks and schools. Why does a flock camera have to be there? And so that's kind of where I think people are like, whoa, hang on. Because, look, we hear from people who are like, oh, isn't flock supposed to be good? It's. It's called Flock safety, right? It keeps us safe. Well, the Patriot act is called the Patriot act, right? You're a patriot, and if you're not a patriot, then you don't support. Cool.
A
Awesome Safety act, right?
B
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
C
And so I think that Flock man, like, obviously we say we're going to block flock, we're going to stop flock from. From spreading in the state and the, the Palantir sort of. Sort of state of being able to invade your privacy. But I think that, look, there are some areas where flock could have use where it's not pointing anywhere near a, A school or your private, you know, privacy of your home. But I think by and large they're adding. They're putting so many flat cameras in places where they're not needed that I think that's the fear is that we would rather not have any fly cameras and allow them to exist in places where it invades your privacy.
A
Has there been any major cases that Flock without Flock, they wouldn't have been solved. Just out of curiosity.
B
I don't think Flocky. I know that. So not Flock in general. What I think and he's getting at is the, the overreach by the databases. Right. The government may be spying on you. I know that we're headed down that way because I don't know if you saw that Google. The Supreme Court just ruled that the Google search warrants are illegal for Google location.
A
Right.
B
So that was a win for Constitution people saying, you're overstepping our boundaries. Obviously, I agree with you about Flock. We find when you find one missing child or one abducted child, it's worth it. But then there's also the question, I know Tyler's brought this up to me. Where does the Constitution play into that? How far over the Constitution do you reach to get one case solved? So you guys are more. More so saying you. You might block it now to make sure it's fixed. Is there any plan like bringing it Back if it's monitored better or is it. How does that work?
C
It's. Look, I think there's nuance to it. I don't want to sit here and say, oh, we're going to backtrack and bring flock in.
B
Okay.
C
I think that it's something that we would be open to. To exploring if there's a way to have it in, like I said, in places where it makes sense, where there's no potential that it's going to be misused. Spy in a. We're a place where there's just no need for it. Like, like I said, if it's pointed at a playground, what's going on here? You know, the whole thing with lock is it was great as an lpr. Right. We were a license plate reader. They worked really well for that. Right. Because if you're not doing anything wrong, what's the difference anyways, your license. You're in public roads.
A
I think one of the best arguments for license place readers over anything else is that it ain't your license plate.
C
Yeah. Yeah. Correct. Yeah. It's not your license.
B
Yeah. There's no expectation of privacy tag. But I think what he's getting at is the overreach of the government that may be watching it live or tracking yourself. Yeah. Like doing some other things.
C
We had this issue at my agency where it was like, oh, we're not going to use your body camera to. To get you on like a policy violence.
A
I've heard that too. I think everybody, everyone's heard that.
C
Right. So. Well, we're not going to use your body. But then it's like, oh, and by the way, you didn't have your. I'm like, dude, what's going on?
A
Yeah. So men. And I call anybody. I'm sorry, Captain, enough as a politician. Captains might be politicians in training, but. And lieutenants are brass in general. I, I think they're. They start off as good people, but when you give somebody power and you say don't abuse this, they don't intentionally do it. But once they have. Like, while I was watching this five times, I noticed you had a dip in. Yeah. Now here's your one more. You know, hey, it's just. It's just this. It's just that. But now you're on record. We already talked about it once. It's like, man.
C
Yeah.
B
Speaking of body cameras. Speaking about it, I want everybody to understand that we're not dealing with some guy that sat behind a desk and some guy that Copville on the Cobville side Of things. I don't put my name on people unless they're street goons or og. So I'm gonna play a video of Sean Lozano in the field and show you the type of police work that he. He does.
A
Yeah.
C
What's that white stuff? Tobacco is white, huh? That must be a new kind of tobacco. Oh, okay. I didn't tell you to drop it, did I? Why don't you do me a favor?
D
Hop up.
A
Stand up.
C
Put your hands behind. Yo, what are you being stupid for, man? Put your hands behind your back. Quit being stupid. Lean forward. Stand up.
B
Yo,
C
keep your hands behind your back.
B
Oh, motherfucker. You're getting safe.
C
Don't move.
B
I'll shoot you.
A
Don't return to me.
C
Ah,
B
don't Lynch.
C
I'll smoke you. 665. I dropped my cuffs.
B
All right, so for those wondering, that's police work, right?
C
Yeah, that's.
A
That's police. The difference between that and what you were doing is that there is the average everyday cop on patrol at 3:00pm, you know, out with the public. And when you respond to calls for service, that's not the effective communication nor. But at from 9pm to 4am you proactively go out and search for, you know, bad people. And so when you have to do that, it's. It's kind of like the verbiage and all that stuff is, is kind of important.
C
Yeah, I would say it's certainly important. I mean, look, obviously, yeah, you're responding to a 38 or, sorry, your response like a domestic or if you respond to a service call, you know, maybe you're just going to a civilization complaint, right? I'm not gonna swear at these people. Probably pretty much 99 of the time.
A
Yeah.
C
Yes, sir. Thank you, sir. Can I have this? Can I have that? But this person, first of all, we were just so you understand, I was actually working OT with our street crimes unit. I worked with them usually twice a week. Our street enforcement team. That area that we were in had six shootings the prior weekend. That neighborhood, that apartment complex. So we were out there to be, you know, hey, look, we gotta, we have to be divert. We have to stop this, you know, and so we, we show up just to kind of do proactive sort of work. And I got lucky sitting behind that gas station, as you saw. And so I don't know what this guy's reaching, as you guys know. I don't know what he's reaching for a Monday morning quarterbacks and say, wow, he was unarmed. Well, I don't know that he's unarmed. He's reaching to his waistband for being stupid, right?
A
Yes.
C
I mean, I already had PC to make the arrest, so probable cost to make the arrest.
A
So what I was getting is like flashbacks is like people doing stupid things and then not committing. So I'm like, what do you have right now? What are you thinking right now? Like you're stupid and then you stop and then I have to re. Engage you and like, why are you being stupid? Like, just take off running.
C
Yeah.
A
At this point, show me that you don't want to be arrested rather than act all fidgety because to me, they might be making a decision and thinking about the, the effects of the decision they're about to make. Installing.
B
Did you get any troll for that?
C
No, the, the. From. From Command from the top, though, it was like, oh, by the way, they weren't happy with what you said and, you know, putting your gun to his head and look, that probably saved that guy's life. Maybe he didn't. Maybe he wouldn't believe the softer officer. And maybe he does something that, you know, he makes a quick movement and I end up another officer ends up shooting.
B
Did you any discipline?
C
No discipline.
B
Okay. So that's good because I did an episode today about body camera and looking into that, would you agree that it takes, in the law enforcement world, it takes somebody who's been through that scenario to even watch that video and make a determination on if that was proper or not?
C
Yes.
A
Okay.
B
Because what I see now, and I'm sure you've seen it, I don't, and I don't know the breakdown a lot here, but overall, you watch the Internet, you watch what I post, you might get a guy who's been off the road 25 years, who's never made a drug arrest, never had his gun out, watch that video and be appalled and tell you that you're the worst cop ever. And there's no room for that. What would you say that?
C
I would say that. I would say that's completely wrong and we need to actually remove that person from service because they are probably. They're definitely doing more harm than good.
B
Yeah. And that's, that's the thing, is it's not always pretty. It's not always pretty to tell somebody, I'm going to blow your head off. I'm going to shoot you. Because normal people just don't really. Normal people don't realize even down there don't know that's going on every. That's probably every night in Lauder Hill Every, every night. And like you said, it's, there's a time to use those words, there's a time to say those things. And, and maybe he's got a gun in his waistband like you said, and he thinks, dude, this guy's crazy. I'm not pulling this gun out on him. Or he looks at that guy and goes, this dude's soft. This is the night I'm not going back to prison. I'm gonna take this dude. Yeah, yeah.
C
And by the way, he was on probation for possession, so same thing.
A
So imagine that.
C
Yeah, imagine that.
B
All right, so let's get back to the politics. So what, what would be. If I'm, if I'm sitting here, I'm watching, we got some, a lot of people in Florida. What would be, what's the. I'll give you the layup. What. Why would we want to vote for you and Mr. Fish back to run the state of Florida?
C
Well, look, I think before I, I have the firm, full answer to that, I would say you just said it. A guy who's been doing this job for 25 years hasn't been on the road in over a decade or longer. That's exactly why James Fishback didn't select somebody like that. He wanted obviously the police background. He didn't pick brass or retired major or something for that exact reason. That person is so out of touch with what police work is like today on the, on the ground, what this job actually is. He didn't even. That guy didn't work with body cameras. He doesn't know what this job is like. And so to do this job today, that's why James Fishback selected a real police officer. To be clear, why should they vote for us? Look, man, I think it's really simple. Law and order is the, obviously a cornerstone of this, of this ticket. We're going to keep Florida safe. Governor DeSantis has done a great job. 50 year low on crime. I can't gloss over that. Obviously, he's done a really good job. But here's the difference between our administration, what we're going to do differently from Governor DeSantis. He can't be everywhere. And the governor doesn't know obviously the ins and outs. He doesn't know that places like Lauder Hill are as bad as they are. I do. Riviera beach in Palm Beach, Miami Gardens down in Dade, there are places that need direct attention. I intend to give those places direct attention. That's the first thing I would say. The second thing, James Fishback is serious about preventing data centers from coming to Florida. He's not going to research them like Jay Collins wants to do or look into them. He's not going to kind of, oh, well, let's see how they could be like maybe. Speaker 1 Speak. No, we are going to stop data centers. If you vote for James Fishback, you will not have a data center anywhere near your neighborhood. And then I have a question. Yeah.
A
About data. I'm not a Florida native. I've been here maybe 13 years. So is there, is there farmland in Florida B. And then what, if not so much farmland, what are the harm that data centers bring to Florida?
C
Yeah. So first of all, there is, there is farmland. There's a big ag, obviously a big ag aspect to this state. Mostly cattle now, but there's, you know, there's other things. You know, there's fruits and vegetables. There's watermelon and blueberries and blackberries. But the harm of data centers is this. If they were just the size of say, the building we're in now. Right. It wouldn't be that bad. The problem is the average data center makes a Costco look like a 7 11.
A
Really?
C
So, yeah, they are massive. I mean, they are massive and they use a lot of water. They don't use 500,000 of. 500,000 gallons of water per month. They use 500,000 gallons of water per day. And so that's a lot of water just for one of them. Just.
A
Is that just for utilities or do they need it for cool, okay.
C
Cooling? Yeah. So these data centers are packed with, with CPUs and GPUs that require serious cooling. They, they can't be cooled with air cooling. They need water cooling.
A
I love, and when we covered it, I loved how it spun. I really do believe in a good narrative and I think we got kind of spun up with it because we have a lot of blue collar followers and we were like, the jobs that these are going to bring for the blue collar community and they're the data. Yeah, the blue collar. And then the, the farmers are out here and all that is they kind of get screwed over.
C
Yeah. And the jobs aspect of it is a joke as well. Look, we of course want to promote more jobs for the state, but here's the thing. Thing. Each data center, as massive as they are, they're going to create maybe 50 jobs. And also, who do you think they're going to bring in? H1BS from India, from Pakistan. They're going to bring them in from hyperbad.
A
Well then. And Once it's built.
C
Exactly.
B
Right.
C
And they only need a handful of people inside running the data. They don't need people in there. So it's not going to bring thousands of jobs. Like, like, man, an Amazon warehouse is massive. But they're going to bring tons and tons of jobs. So do you want to push them out?
D
No.
C
I mean, not. There's a balance to it. Right.
A
So, yeah.
C
Who benefits? Who profits from the data center? You have to ask.
B
Yeah.
A
Who is it that profits?
C
Zuckerberg. Right. I mean, you know, look, look at the people that are donating to, to our, our rivals can't campaign. You know, he's gotten money over $5 million from a data center super PAC backed by Mark Zuckerberg, George Soros. There's money that comes in for these data centers that again, you have to ask yourself, I don't like to be one of people who's like, oh, anything Zuckerberg does has to be bad. Right. But if he's pouring millions of dollars into his campaign and he's not willing to say data centers are not good for the state, you have to ask. Well, obviously, why saying that.
A
Yeah, yeah. I mean, follow the money.
B
And I'm looking at both campaign sites and one of the big things I noticed, if you're watching your, you know, one of the boys. 99%, James Fishback was born in Florida.
C
Yes, he was.
B
Which the other candidate was not born in Florida. He's a plant from Brooklyn.
C
Correct.
B
Okay. And the other thing I see here is he, Fishback mentions law enforcement, which he has you on the ticket, but supporting Law Enforcement at Corrections is one of his key bulletins that you won't see on anybody else's bullet points. As far as governor goes, which is very important, the way we're seeing crime, the videos we're watching, I believe I'm bringing you on shows your commitment, your commitment to law enforcement. You mentioned to me yesterday, he wants you to, like, oversee the entire, like, yeah. Law enforcement in the state.
C
If I jumped on that real quick, first of all, I think that the average Republican today, like, they love to use the word Republican.
A
Right.
C
Because it's like, oh, that means I'm aligned with whoever. Right. But Republicans today, I just feel like, use platitudes, like, I back the blue. Well, what does that mean? How do you back.
B
It's easy to say. It sounds cool, right? Yeah.
C
Back the blue, you know. Well, what does that mean? How do you back the blue? Here's how we're going to do it. We are going to expand benefits for law enforcement in the state. We want to raise pay by 25% statewide. We want. We want to expand FRS. And I know there's a lot of agencies, mine included, that we're not an FRS agency, but I believe by really strengthening frs, it's going to force these local municipalities, have their own city pension to come to the table, because otherwise you're going to lose good, good officers. Right. So by expanding FRS, here's what we mean. One, we want to lower the retirement age to 20 years without affecting the multiplier.
A
Whoa. We're bringing it back.
B
Listen, that, that. Listen to me. If you're. If you're a voting citizen, that's huge. That is one of the most important things you're going to hear today. One, yes, I love cops, but that creates better environment for turnover because cops get burnout near the end of the career. That gets us fresh new cops turning over. It gives you a little bit more light at the end of the tunnel sooner. That is bravo. I didn't know that. I didn't know that. And I was going to ask that question. That is an amazing thing. Not just for cops to be out sooner and get retired quicker, but for the overall performance. If you shrink that window down to 20 years, it's a little bit more mentally, mind you.
A
When I came in, it was. Rick Scott had made it 30.
D
30.
C
I know.
A
And that was. I was like, wait a minute. So I went for the. So obviously. And I'm like. And at the time, I was not thinking about retirement. And then I was sitting there, I'm like, man, I gotta do 30 years.
C
30 years. Yeah.
B
Keep talking, man.
C
You're making me happy.
B
20.
C
Yes.
B
20 years. FRS. So regardless of age.
C
20.
B
20 and done.
C
Yeah, beautiful. 20. Done.
B
Okay.
C
And then, of course, look, if you want to drop still, we're gonna have the drop. And in fact, I. I support even expanding the drop at that point to, say 10 years, because why not? You can. If you want to stay on, you have the option to. And then we want to also bring in a cola. I think it's time to get some kind of cola done to. What percentage? I don't know, cost of living, adjustment.
B
Okay.
C
They have them in place like nypd.
A
I was asking because Mike didn't know what that meant.
C
Oh, yeah. James and I argue about this. I'm a Pepsi guy. James Love.
A
Really?
C
I'm a Pepsi.
B
Oh, you came down a notch there.
A
But that's.
C
James loves.
A
You gotta have differences.
B
Balance, Balance.
C
So bringing in a cola like I said to some degree, some percentage, we have to get a cola in. I mean, look, I talked to a fireman up in Tampa a few months back, and he was telling me they had a guy who retired, maxed out, like he did 30, whatever years maxed out in his pension. And that was, say six years ago. He's like, today his pension is worth 76% of what it was worth five years ago or six years ago. Like, dude, that's ridiculous.
A
Yeah.
C
So, I mean, what do they expect you to do? I mean, get another job, I guess. But, man, I did 30, whatever hard years. I got to go get another job. I gave my life and my body and my mind up.
B
And when we say frs, I make it clear that's fireman first respond. That's everybody across the board. It's not just cops. Yeah, that's everybody that's in the Florida
C
State Everybody that's in the Florida State Retirement system. So this last one I will say is just for first responders. We're going to look to do some. Whether it's subsidized. I don't have an exact plan for this yet, but I'm going to announce it here. Whether it's subsidized entirely or we just pay for it partially. Healthcare post retirement.
B
Yeah.
C
So one, somebody I'm really close with, and I won't say his name, but he was a lieutenant in the city of Lauder Hill, and he was kind of my mentor and we're still good friends, was telling me, he's like, man, you know, Sean, I'm gonna drop in October and I'm really only staying on because my health insurance would be over eighteen hundred dollars per month. I feel like that's not manageable. Like, even if you're, even if your retirement's 10k a month, right. 18 or 20 of it has to go towards paying health care. That's madness.
A
Oh, health care. Nowadays, a lot of people, I mean, because that's why people stay in the National Guards Reserves is because they can, they can have that health care. But I. One of my big proponents for deciding to leave law enforcement after nine years was because I just kept meeting cops and cops and cops that retired and they're working still. And their biggest thing was health. I can't afford health insurance. And I get. And I retire in my 50s. So of course my health insurance is through the roof.
B
Right.
C
And so look at that. Like, how does this make any sense? Hey, we're gonna let you retire at, say, like, for me, if I was. If I had stayed with Lauder Hill and did a whole drop, I'd have been 54 at retirement, right?
A
Yeah.
C
But at 54, let's say by the time I'm there, what's it going to be? 2, 3 grand per month to have health insurance?
A
It's insane.
C
Completely insane.
A
Yeah.
C
It's completely insane.
B
Yeah. I watch a generation of FRS guys go out from. You know, obviously pay was very low. I started in 2004 in the FRS. I think I was making 36 grand at the sheriff's office when I came, and those guys had been at the sheriff's office, and they were in the middle of their careers. One guy walked up to me at a football game about three years ago. He says, yeah, man, I'm retiring soon and I'm ready. And he's like, my monthly pension is like 3, 800 or something like that. I'm like. I'm like, that's a paycheck for me.
A
Yeah.
B
I was making 300 a paycheck. I'm like, how are you gonna. How are you gonna live on that? When you're working now, you're making double that. So I hear that. So your cost of living thing is. Is excellent. And then you're right. 20, you get in at 22, 23 years old, you're done at 43. You've worked your career, you collect a full pension. That gives you time to do something more if you want.
C
Yeah. Do something more if you want to continue in the drop. Like I said, you know, look, expect. Look, what is it? There's no cost to expanding the drop because you're. They're still working, right?
A
Yeah.
C
So you're just bolstering your retirement. If you got in that young and say 22, you could be done at 42 and you could drop for 10 additional years. By 52, you could be totally separated, have a really healthy drop. Maybe you're 457 is looking good, you have a full pension, you've got benefits, and you've done your job. Here's what that does. It attracts the best in law enforcement. We know this statewide. There is a retention problem. There's a retention problem. A. And there's like a man. That's like, the quality of people coming in today just low.
A
They're.
C
They're the standards.
A
It used to be. It used to be the quality, but we had the quantity. Now we have the quality. And the quality is like, the quantity and quality are both extremely low.
C
Yeah.
B
Yes. That's a. That's a huge. Because you Know, as bad as NYPD has become, we've seen all the issues. That was still. Their retirement was 20 and out, right? They're done quick. Now you come to a state of Florida where our, I believe our, our constitutional rights are better here. We have more, you know, stand your ground is better here. Weapons, Second amendment is better here. Now you go, hey, move here. Not only are you coming in, but now you only have to do 20 years. Even if you're 30. You go, well, I'm 30 already. Yeah, but 20 years, you're only 50.
C
Even 30 is not crazy, right?
B
Yes, but. And then the healthcare is super important. You're right. A guy retires, that same guy I'm talking about goes 44,200amonth. And it's like, well, then there's option one and two in FRS, which if you want your wife to get the money, you're losing about 2 or 300amonth off of that. Then there's your insurance, which is 15, 16. Now, now, now. And as things increase that look forward, that creates. That sounds like, oh, they're being friendly cops. They are. And all cops, first responders, everyone should want to vote for that. But what that does for you as a community is it creates a better, more mentally healthy cop who knows there's an actual end in sight where he's not going to go for 50 years of work and go, man, I'm barely going to make it. It's just fireman.
C
It creates.
B
All the first responders can have a shorter time. And then when they're, when they're banged up at 45.50, they can afford the insurance and they can go get fixed because they do deserve a payback for that time and service. I know you agree with that. 20 years is miserable, man.
A
It's a hard job, man.
C
It's a hard job no matter where you're doing it and especially in a place like Lauder Hill. I can tell you right now, a year in Lauder Hill is like five years probably anywhere else. I mean, look, the call volume, you're averaging like 15 calls per day. You know, we did like 30 plus homicides a year. It's like just in a city of 80,000.
B
Yeah, that's not, it's not Orlando. No. It's a little bitty city.
C
So it's crazy to think, you know. So I can tell you definitively, James Fishback stands with law enforcement. It's not just platitudes.
A
That's good.
B
And that, that, that again creates an atmosphere for everything. It's like the military. A strong military creates a safe country, a strong police force throughout the state that knows they're being taken care of, creates a better mental, mental health for cops and first responders. They know their bills are going to be paid when they retire. And just like everyone's a human when you know you're screwed up and you're not getting the, the right thing by, you know, retirement. Some of these cities is outrageous. Like 30 years and they're not really taken care of. It's like, well, you beat me up for 30 years and I don't even get my health care for free.
C
It's like, here's your badge.
A
Yeah, yeah.
B
You get a gun, you get a clock. I'm gonna need the clock. I need to come with bullets. I'm going to need that.
A
This is general questions about. I've never really asked about a governor race in any state. Is that when the, the, the sitting governor is on done, do they endorse another one typically, or do they have to stay with, like, rules? Do they say they have to endorse their party? Like, how does that work?
C
So you're asking basically if Governor DeSantis will have any sort of endorsement, Is that sort of where you're going? Yeah. So first of all, I would say it should. Should for anybody who's thinking, well, the natural choice should be the Lieutenant Governor. Right. Because Governor, Lieutenant Governor Jay Collins is also running. He has not been endorsed by Governor DeSantis. That's why Collins puts in all his Little Flyers, his AI flyers DeSantis appointed. Because Governor DeSantis has not endorsed him. He's been very clear about that. In fact, let me be clear with everybody watching. Governor Santis has not endorsed his Lieutenant Governor. He's had all the time in the world to do that. He has not endorsed Speaker Paul Renner. In fact, he said, when asked about Speaker Renner, he said, what race is he running in? He said that was ill advised, he shouldn't be running and I wouldn't vote for him. That's what governor said about Speaker Renner. When asked about Governor, Congressman Byron Donalds, he said, he said, what has he done for the right in this state? He said he's been campaigning up in D.C. yeah.
A
Yeah.
C
He's not said anything negative about our campaign, which is, to me, positive because he said negative things to say about everybody else.
A
Yeah.
C
And yes, he does have the power. He can endorse in this, in this race, in this election. Will he endorse? I don't know. I think his bigger aspirations, and rightfully so. Governor Santos has done a great job as governor and he probably has bigger aspirations, maybe either presidential or, you know, attorney general, who knows?
B
Yeah.
A
Yeah.
B
And where this is important for me is don't be fooled by the ads because the, the money that's being pumped from out of state to Donald's is. You're seeing him a lot.
A
Lot.
B
Look at the guy if you want follow, make sure you follow James Fishback and, and Sean and look at the Facebook and look at him trying to, he's showing up to, to try to talk to Byron. He won't talk to him. He's out on the street actually making a difference. He's doing the grassroots. He's all over the state of Florida at these little mom and pop shops. He's popping in to talk to people. That is the guy, just like the guy that's going to run somebody down in a parking lot over some cocaine and, and pull his gun out ready to take action. That's the guy I also want leading this state is somebody who's willing to get on the ground and get out and do it. So would you agree? Just don't be fooled by this facade of TV ads and all that stuff you're seeing. Look at the actual facts of who's running and what they're running on and the guys that are willing to get out and actually do it.
C
Absolutely. And if you go to our website, actually, fishback2026.com you will see that we have visited. We're the only candidates that have. James Fishback has campaigned in all 67 counties statewide. We have not missed a single county. We've held an event in every single one of them. We've met with voters, shook their hand, took pictures and we're the only candidate that can say that the other, the other candidate in this race are the front runner. They say, at least with the polls, however much you want to believe them, has not done that. He's. I don't know how many counties he's been to, although he doesn't hold almost any events. And when he does, he doesn't get nearly as many people to show up as we do.
B
And then he blocks you from coming
C
and then he blocks you.
B
I think it was yesterday the video dropped. Yeah. Byron was in Naples and they showed up and they were thrown out. They were, they weren't allowed in even talk.
C
And you know what's crazy about that is if you are a registered Republican in the state of Florida, you have a right to Go to any Republican executive committee in the state. We showed up.
B
We have.
C
We had supporters there as well. We showed up just to. Just to see. We weren't there to do anything. We're there to see and want to see Byron speak. And they would not let us in. In fact, they used physical force to prevent us from entering the. Some would call it a battery.
A
That, to me, is. If I'm trying to be the best, I. You have to openly welcome. I mean, competition for me is because of what we do. But it might not be the right word for politics. But anybody that's running a post or has, you know, that wants to beat someone else, you have to be able to show that in front of everybody because that, to me, looks like I'm hiding something.
C
Yeah.
A
I don't. I can't confront this guy because he's going to basically ask me some very simple questions that I already have the answers to and I don't want to answer them publicly.
C
Yeah.
A
Or.
B
Or does he have the answers to him. You have to look at. Does he. Does he have to. I believe Byron's from Brooklyn, New York. He's a New York plan. He came down here, went to college, and now he's the face of Florida, apparently.
C
Convicted felon as well.
A
No, he's not.
C
Yeah.
B
I didn't know that.
C
Yeah. He committed a check fraud in 2000. He was arrested for check fraud.
B
I didn't know that.
C
Yep.
A
Wow.
B
So now we got to trust him.
C
And now. I don't know if you guys saw this. He actually just had. There's a. There's a lawsuit against him for assault on a woman. Her name is Kelly Mason. She's on the school board. Yeah. Out in Naples. He confronted her. First of all, Byron's almost 300 pounds. This woman is like 5ft tall, 120 pounds, probably soaking wet. And this video is horrible. He's like inner space. And he says to her, I'll crush you. I mean, he's this massive guy who could easily kill her, probably with just one strike of his fist. And here he's crowding her space. She's, like, getting cornered by him, has no way to defend herself. And this guy's. Again, he's an elected official. Congressman speaking this way to this woman. We couldn't be more different tickets. It's actually. It doesn't even feel like we're running against a fellow Republican, to be honest.
A
Yeah.
B
And what do we say to fun, fat politicians? Right. We got two guys that are in great shape. James is in great Shape. You're in great shape. We got.
A
Well we got a guy that's common knowledge defund felon politicians.
D
I remember.
A
I can't believe it's been this long but I remember the DeSantis race was very scary because somebody else was running against him that was under investigation for financial fraud.
B
Well the other, that guy just got arrested kill him. He got caught in a hotel room with a dude doing meth and now he just got arrested again, wasn't it? He came very close to winning.
A
How close that was?
B
It was very close.
A
4% openly being investigated by the feds for financial crime.
B
Yeah. Then caught with drugs and then caught again with drugs just the other day.
C
Twice arrested in Alabama.
A
Yeah.
B
So we have to make sure that bullet.
D
Yeah.
B
If you're watching and you're a flight Florida or you're anywhere make sure you check out. Check out. Was it James website?
C
It's fishback2026.com and look what I would say is to be clear, just like you said Mike, eight years ago we were that close. We were that close to having Gillum as our a Democrat who is obviously, I mean a drug riddled problem who would have been a serious problem for our state. We were really that close. And now eight years later I think we take Governor DeSantis for granted because we're faced with the same challenge right here in our primary. It could really be that close.
B
Yeah. And, and I look at this like everybody says this kind of like in, in sheriff's office or, or people running. We want that, we want that street guy. We want that one guy that we know we can count on to go into office. But it seems like they never pull it out. This is an opportunity state of Florida to put two guys in office that are just like you. They're just regular dudes who have a mission. They've out pounding the pavement. They're doing the right thing. A street cop, another guy who believes in a street cop enough to put him on the ticket that are showing up all over 67 counties willing to do the work on the ground. If I'm going to do with anything else. If you're going to pick a long guy, you're going to pick a roofer, you're going to pick a company. You want the guys that actually do it or out there on the ground doing the job. You don't want some massive company with AI generated all this. That and the other saying yeah we'll get it done and then they show up and they don't do the Job. You want two guys like this Fishback and Lazana who are out doing the job for real and care about you guys. You're not politicians. I can. I've watched the ads. I watch you guys. You're the furthest thing you happen to be in a political arena, but you are just two dudes that care about the state of Florida enough to go out and put boots on the ground in 67 counties.
C
That's it?
B
Yeah. That's awesome, man. What's your time frame look like?
A
You good? I'm good.
B
Okay. Yeah. So we move on with the show. If you want to start breaking down some videos and stuff and. And some news, and we'll keep you out of trouble, I promise you. Won't let you get too much trouble. But remember, remember, you see a guy run down a drug dealer in the middle of Lauder Hill, you want that guy representing you, you want him over top of law enforcement. I think I started to touch on that.
C
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
B
Let's go into that. What?
A
He.
B
He also talked to you about reforming some law enforcement issue. What are your. What does that look like for you when he talks to you about reforming law enforcement in the state of Florida?
C
Yeah, I have some priorities there. I think the first thing that we need to really do is go after these really soft saos. We. We have to, man. And. And I'm gonna start county, because that's what I know. It's really. You know, look, I know good officers. I work with good officers who are just demoralized because, you know, they've been on the job for five, eight, 10 years, and they're like. Like, they see me come into work every night, and they're like, man, Lozano, why do you. You know, they hear me on the radio. I'm 1031. You know, I'm doing my thing, and that means chasing somebody. And they're like, man, why do you do this to yourself? Like, you know, they're just going to get out in three or four days, so why are you doing this yourself? I'm like, look, I do it because
A
I love the game, baby.
C
I was going to say, took the words out of my mouth. Tyler, I do it for the love of the game. I truly love doing it. I miss doing it. And so I understand why those guys, though, those guys and girls are kind of demoralized. You're like, what's the point? You know, they're just going to get out. And so that starts with the weak, soft SAOs who need to be swiftly Removed.
A
Let me ask you about this. Yeah. Desantis did remove. What's her name? Monique's Worrell. And then the people of Orlando voted her right back in. So at what point did you just buy time? Because we were all excited, dude. She had guys we knew personally on the chopping block for murder, and because she did what they all do, they go and they go, give me a couple cases where it's questionable, not even questionable, but. And let's fry some cops. And I. It's just. It was nuts to me when I found out she was. She was voted back in. Right, Mike? Yeah.
B
But what you're saying is you guys are planning. You're planning some oversight over cases in all counties to make sure this doesn't continue.
C
Well, look, I'm going to come in to come into Broward county, and. And you can't spread yourself too thin, right? So the first one I would start in is. Is Broward County. Be clear. What's your prostrate? Yes, you know, what's your prostrate?
A
I want to know.
C
There are people I've made arrests personally for.
D
For.
C
For possession with intent to distribute. And why is this guy. How is his bond set so low? Like, I literally want to look at the PC and how you're making. How'd you come to this decision? I don't mean to say, like, I'm just going to do a general oversight. I'm going to be sitting in your office. Explain this one to me. I'm going to pull a PC. Explain this one to me. Go ahead. How'd you come to this conclusion? Myself, the Lieutenant Governor. I will go there myself. And so I think that when your direct oversight into. Into really making them sweat and explain their actions and their decisions in their thought process. I think that probably people like, you know, the SAO and Broward will probably face removal, but it's not just doing the sao. I think it's everything the judges. How are you making your decision?
A
Yes.
C
Why are we setting bond solo? Why does this person who is a convict, he's already convicted felon for possession with intent. He's now been arrested for possession with intent. Why is his bond so low?
B
Yeah.
C
Why are we just letting him get back out?
B
And, and, and this is perfect because we've talked about this.
A
We have.
B
Pat Bronze brought this up with judges and attorneys, but who gets blamed the cops, right?
C
Yeah.
B
Why? Because you use force on that guy who's out for the 33rd time, who should have been in prison 20 years ago, and he does something Stupid. You end up on the news for dumping them. And it's like, why is he still out? Why is he not in prison? And I don't think it's a big. As big of a deal as you're like. You say it's not hard. It's not hard to put somebody over every state attorney's office. It's. And start asking for those public record stats and just say, oh, you guys have a 97% conviction, right? Great. But you only go to trial like six times a year because you're not willing to go out on the line. As a cop, I used to say this all the time. I go out there, you chase that guy down like you did on video. You tase him, you threatened to shoot him. You do all this stuff. He's got drugs. And then they drop the case three days later. And you're like, oh, it just didn't look good. Well, it doesn't matter. We have to go to trial. We have to put these people through the criminal justice system and take the risk. The risk is more to me. Correct me if I'm wrong if this is what your mindset is. The risk of making sure we take these cases to the fullest is better than just letting them out to re offend.
C
Absolutely. I would rather go through the risk. Hey, look, go through the risk. Sure. Oh, oh, man. That evidence is going to get dismissed or you're going to. Fine, let's go through that with all of these people. Let's put a cop on the stand who's maybe not comfortable giving testimony because how are they ever going to get comfortable? You think that week that they spent in their mock courtroom and the academy is going to be enough for them to be comfortable giving testimony? Hell no. So put them on the stand, let them give testimony and be hard on everybody from the top down. And by the way, that includes investigating and auditing local law enforcement in all counties, including in Broward county, which is where I come from, because I can tell you for sure there is a soft on crime attitude in some of these places. Why are we soft on crime in places like Lauder Hill where you have a. A 2 to 1 chance to be a victim of violent crime in a city of 80,000 and we investigate over 30 homicides per year. Why are we soft on crime in place like that? Yeah, it's because of the people in place who are. Who never worked with a body camera, but they're giving you a hard time because you swore at somebody. Yeah.
B
Oh, man, I couldn't like, if you knew my life and we talk a little bit, but if you knew what somebody I know close to me is going through, like, that is the. The biggest problem I see is that just. I call. You see my. You're out of touch post where you're out of touch. People are just out of touch. Like, people are just out of touch with the. What is going on with an agency. But you're right. But. But back to it is the cop always gets blamed. And nobody oversees the state attorney's office.
A
Do you.
B
I. I did it.
C
One month.
B
I did. And this is how simple it is. I did a public records request for every email that went from the state attorney's office to the sheriff's office on why cases were dumped. Yeah, some of them. There was just no reason, right? Just no pro. No reason. It's like this guy had 40 grams of fentanyl. That would have been the prison the rest of his life. But you dropped it because of trying. Like, you didn't like the spotlight, the way the spotlight. Take the chance, right?
D
Take the chance.
C
Yeah, take the chance. Look, I'd rather the. I would rather the prostrate be lower and the. I'd rather the conviction rate be lower, rather, because the trial, whatever. It got thrown out and the trial rate be high than the other way around. I just. You take the chance. Let it get thrown out. Let them dump it. Because otherwise, these people are just. They know when I arrest a guy, I've had conversations with some of these people, he's like, I'm just gonna be out. And we had this guy, this usual guy on. I won't say his name, I guess, but that I. We've arrested as a unit. I don't know. The street enforcement team is arrested as a unit, probably. I'm not even kidding, a dozen times at a. At a convenience store. It's called Star 7. It's at 55th and Oakland Park Boulevard.
A
I love it. Dude, when you know the. You know, the Intersect, you'll never forget the Intersect.
B
I know.
C
That was one of my honey holes. And I remember one time I arrest this guy, I do a jump out on him, and maybe that. Maybe that body camera will be available soon. And I jump right out on him. And before we can get on his little thing, I grab him, I throw him on the ground. I'm like, put your hands on your back, mother. And, you know, I get him. I get him hooked up, and we're driving to the jail, and you know what he says to me in the back of My car. He goes, I don't know why you guys waste your time like this. I'm just gonna be back out there dealing again. And I said. I'm like, brody, oh, man. I'm like, why don't you. Why don't you go to another city or go to another place? Like, you know, we're gonna keep coming back.
A
Yeah.
C
And he's like, that's where I. That's where I deal.
B
And he knows that It's. If they're soft on crime, they're gonna back out. Some of the other highlights I'm noticing here. You were a narcotics investigator. You wrote your own affidavits. That's important. I see that in your. You're not cookie cutter. You're doing each investigation in and of itself. And Tyler's gonna love this one. I'll let you talk. You guys talk about this. You are openly and unapologetically Christian. God is very important to you.
C
Yes.
A
Why don't you want to talk about it?
B
Because that's your wheelhouse, man. I know crime and Christianity. No, you know the Bible, man. You tell me all the time about them. No, I think it's important.
A
I think it's very, very important that people are. Are. It's important to me to see that in somebody that I'm trying to relate to, because religion is so unfortunately, divisive. Has it become less divisive as a counterculture? Esque kind of has happened in the last couple years, like. But I remember maybe five, six years ago putting openly crisis king, openly Christian on your bio was like, oh, man, he's got some balls, you know, there. But now I think that it's. It's definitely unifying. And I've said this before. Somebody's gonna have a problem with me saying, like, just let you know, I'm. I. Christ is king, and I'm openly Christian. If they're gonna have a problem with it.
C
Yeah.
A
It's probably not somebody that is ever going to support me or I want to do business with anyways.
C
Yeah. Look, And James has the same feeling. This is a Christian nation. Neither of us are afraid to say Christ is king. We were founded by Christians. That's not to say that you're not welcome here to live in this state if you are a Muslim Floridian or a Jewish Floridian. And we're going to protect your rights just the same way we're going to protect. Protect everybody else's rights. But that's. That is to say we should highlight the largest form of religious Prosecution, persecution, which is against white Christians. Yes, that's 100 true. And anybody that wants to try and say that that's not true or say, oh, no, it's worse for Muslims or Jews. That's not true. It's not accurate.
A
Around the world.
C
Around the world, Christians are prosecuted. More are persecuted. We keep saying prosecution. We've been talking about prosecuting all these people. I'm excited to get back to prosecuting.
A
No, no.
C
Persecution against Christians is bigger than, than any other religion. And I think that there's a, there's a coordinated effort to try and convince people otherwise. Like, no, no, Christians are free and fair.
A
Let me ask you this. My. Well, it doesn't seem like, you know what, to anybody else it would be a very tough question. But to you, it doesn't seem like it'd be very tough at all. What was that statute?
B
Oh, the statute one we have been. The Florida statute one talks about, it defines anti Semitism and has an. Its own individual first statute telling you all about the Jewish community. But it doesn't, you know, and what we said was we feel it should fall into, like, hate crimes because everyone should not be treated that way. But there's one specific statute at the very beginning of the statue book now that just outlines the Jewish community. I mean, have you seen that? Do you understand? I mean, what does that say to you?
C
Yeah, I would say, look, I think that that's wrong. Look at that. That woman who down in Miami Beach a few months ago, she had said some negative things, I guess, about Jews. And I get maybe about Benjamin Netanyahu. And next thing you know, she's got police knocking her door for, for comment she's made on Facebook about Israel. That's wrong.
A
That's like England.
C
That's insane. And, and so my view on that is this. If you want to criticize Donald Trump, criticize Donald Trump. If you want to criticize Kamala Harris, criticize Kamala Harris. If you want to criticize us. And they do, of course, criticize me. If you want to criticize our police. If you want to criticize Christians, Jews, Muslims, you have a right in this country. It's called the First Amendment. You have a right to criticize anybody you want. I don't believe we should live in a state anywhere in this country where you are going to be in trouble in any way, shape or form for your words. I really don't. Word policing is bad.
B
Yep, I agree.
A
Yeah.
B
Second Amendment, big deal in Florida. How do you, how do you. For anybody watching, how does the governor and yourself feel about the second Amendment that that's not going anywhere.
C
We're good with that. Super simple. In fact, I, well, it's not going anywhere. I think we're going to embolden it. James Fishback is clear, shall not be infringed. That includes force, reset triggers, bum stocks. That includes. Look, if it's part of your gun that falls under the second Amendment. I hate this idea that well the founding fathers, they didn't have it in mind that you were going to have an AR15. Well, the founding fathers also didn't have in mind that our own government were going to have those weapons. They didn't have in mind by the way.
A
They didn't have tanks back then.
D
Right.
C
They didn't have in mind that the, that the average person might be subject to violent crime the likes of which Thomas Jefferson could never imagine in his wildest nightmares.
A
Let upon us by our own government. It kind of right to me, I mean I know that's a very, very, very crazy, crazy concept where I say it's led upon us by our own government. But it was of course for an overreaching, overextended and what's the right word? Imperial style government with the second amendment. But when your own government can't protect you against evil and crime, right or
C
chooses not to or choose in war,
A
that's how I feel. Anybody signing that 250 years ago or whenever it was made would have been like oh, we also mean that too. If they're failing to protect you from violence, crime and evil, then you need to be able to protect yourself.
C
Person has a right to self defense. And James and I are absolutely on the same page with this. Look, you should be able to go into your local gun store, purchase a rifle with a suppressor and a bump stock if you so choose. All in the same place at the same day without having to do a tax stamp or any kind of foolishness and leave with your items and enjoy them. It just shouldn't be treated the way it is. I think even the idea that you have to get a tax stamp is ridiculous. I applaud that. The, the governor's work, Governor Santa's work on making tax stamps free effectively zero dollar tax stamps. You have used to have you know, 200 tax sample on a suppressor. I'm glad that that has gone away. But I think we can do even better and, and rail against the, the ATF in, in cases where it's like man, I gotta even now look, it's, they're like, oh, wow, it's only 10 days to wait for a suppressor.
B
Now.
C
It used to be weeks. Not good enough. I should really get my suppressor today.
A
It's can. It's aluminum, right?
C
It's ridiculous. No, it's ridiculous.
B
You.
C
Look, if you think it's. If the federal government wants to get their hands on suppression, you think you have to wait 10 days. No.
B
Yeah. Done pretty quick.
A
I think scrub anomics asked. Obviously some of these guys ask like funny questions. And what about a tank? And I. I will answer this. If any state is going to have a human being that owns a tank, it's going to be Florida.
B
Yeah. So you can drive them down here, right there. Places you can go. Tanks, that's the tourist thing. Have a tank for real here at some point, look.
C
Yeah. I think you should be able to have all of the arms that your. Your government allowed. Is allowed to have. Why not? Is there a realistic aspect to it? I mean. No, because where are you going to drive your tank or how are you going to have a missile or whatever.
B
But I want an A10.
C
Yeah. Yeah.
B
All right. I'm gonna. One of your quotes here. I want to. I don't want you to expand on this. You said that the best officers are the ones that who do the job for the job. You never woke up thinking that you had to go to work. You got. You woke up that you got to go to work. What does that explain that to me? What does that mean?
C
Yeah, I'll tell you what that means, actually. That. That's a quote from my uncle Vince, who he works for Publix. He's worked for Publix over 40 years in South Florida. Smart guy.
A
My FTO took me to Publix and met his high school friend. He goes, this guy's set for life.
C
Yeah.
D
Yeah.
C
And so is he. He's a really good man and he has such a strong work ethic. He's a Christian. And something that my uncle told me one day was I never wake up thinking I have to go to work. I always wake up thinking I get
A
to go to work.
C
And that really resonated with me because when I was a police officer, I felt the same way. Even on bad days, even when it was raining, even when I was having to work a shift. I maybe didn't want to have to work or was an 18 hour day. I knew I was going into an 18 hour day every day. I put my gun belt on, I put my vest on. I got in my patrol car and I was really excited to work as a police officer. And so to me it just means being excited for all aspects of the job. I mean, sure, there's some calls we all hate. I hated working for us by accidents. I hated doing accidents. I really did.
B
But we all do.
C
Yeah, right. You know, I never saw, I never thought I was gonna go to the motors unit. Of course, because I don't want to work th eyes talk about that, but
B
glad you didn't do that.
C
No. Yeah.
B
You've been on Copville if you did that.
C
Yeah, well, it's not for Copville.
A
Right.
B
All right.
C
But yeah, that's what it means, man. I just excited to go to work. I loved it.
A
Yeah. There's always. Here's one thing, this is really not politics related at all. But I was thinking about this yesterday, right? Basic crash reports. It doesn't matter if they say, hey, you know, it started getting to the point where sheriffs almost rightfully so. So in. In just preface it real quick. In Florida, the sheriff is a sheriff of the county. There's all kind of municipalities with chiefs in it. If a crash happens in, typically in unincorporated city falls under the sheriff. That's where he, he does the policing and stuff. But traditionally we wait on fhp. Fhp, Florida highway patrol comes in as long as it's not inside a city limit. And they, well, FHP might be coming. They might be stacked up with two, three crashes and they might be coming for an hour. And so we would always be like, all right, as long as everybody's good, wait on fhp. Well, who are they calling? They're not calling fhp. They're calling the sheriff saying, why the am I waiting, yes, five hours for a simple crash report. So the sheriff started going, we can't handle this anymore. We cannot be letting my, my constituents be sitting there on the side of the road for a simple fender bender. So, so I started thinking about this like goons doing like streetcar. You got to go to your crash. All right, I'm just gonna get it done. Right. All right. Yep, yep, yep. And you're not doing a bad job or anything. But then I saw a lawyer talking the other day and he's like, police reports don't matter anymore because guess what? Every single car now has a box in it. And they tell us who was doing what, how fast they were going. And I'm like, how much before there's going to be a new software that says we have to download it and learn how to digitally analyze. Yeah, crashes probably.
C
I mean, you know, look they have those little plugins. Right. Like I would never, My personal vehicle is a 2024 Mustang GT. I would never put one of those like snapshots.
A
Yeah.
D
In the car.
C
I don't drive it, I guess probably the way Progressive wants me to.
A
But
C
what I would say, a lot
A
of feedback from your car. This.
B
Yeah. Your insurance is $13,000 a month.
C
Right, Right. Geico whoever have Progressive, please.
B
Cars made by SpaceX.
C
Yeah, but, but what I'll say about that is, I mean, I think that what we should be doing and look, this has to do with law enforcement and maybe from a political standpoint is we should expand in my agency and a lot of them nowadays have the service aids. Right. We should have more service aids. We should expand that because no police officer, a real cop at least should be having to respond, respond, waste 30 or 40 minutes of your time. And I hate to say waste because yes, the people need their report. Right. And in some cases they really don't.
A
But Mike doesn't like them.
C
Yeah, I, I don't in some cases. Look, in all those, a simple crash report should be handled by a PSA. So get enough PSAs out on the road and let cops know.
A
What's funny is the, the amount of people that are applying to do that. So they go, hold on, wait. I can get all the benefits of a government employee but not have to go through the dangers essentially. Like, you know, you're not high risk. Okay, that's fine. But still, great pay, great retirement co. Nothing like Kobe is going to shut me down. Like, no. And they're like. So we had more applicants coming in to like young people, young men coming in and doing that job. They're like, I'm not gonna be a cop.
B
I, I, I get that. I look at it though as the minor crashes. Like we don't really make a determination on fault anyway. So why even have anybody from the sheriff. You call your insurance company and you call your insurance company and the two billion dollar entities can send a dude out and they can fight it out in over. Because at the end of the day.
A
Yeah.
B
And one thing I want to touch about with Tyler Reports is all that when you talked about the goons writing reports though, they'll knock out an amazing drug report. Right. And detail it all up because they want to look up. But come crash reporter, burglary report, you know, it's like, yeah, yeah, do the picture.
C
The picture.
B
But so we're gonna wrap up the show. You were going to give you an opportunity to tell us again. The platform where we can find you on social media and you can send us away with your parting words to end the show today. And we appreciate you so much for
A
coming on, but thank you for coming.
B
The floor is yours.
C
I really appreciate you guys for having me on. You guys have been awesome. This has been great. Like I said when I cut, when I, when I first sat down, I've been following Copville for a while, so this is exciting. Actually, what I'll say is this. You can find us@fishback2026.com James Fishback is the candidate for you if you want to stop and prevent data centers, if you are against abortion, if you want to have a free and fair Florida, if you want to continue Ron DeSantis legacy. And it's really been an incredible eight years. We have new challenges coming on the horizon and I believe only one candidate is right to tackle those challenges. His name is James Fishback. He will deliver on the things we've talked about today. Guys, go to fishback2026.com to learn more about us. And again, I really appreciate you guys for having us on.
B
Awesome. And the last question we have to ask you because our chat is making it mandatory. What is your favorite shark?
A
Don't overthink it.
B
Don't overthink it. There's nothing. But it's, it's an important question.
C
Favorite shark. You know, I've been shark diving before actually so. And we had a bull shark pull up on us like an eight foot bowl, I guess I'm gonna say A bull shark.
A
Yeah, you know what, you know what's funny is the eight foot bull shark's like, oh, that doesn't sound that big. Can you imagine an eight foot.
C
No, dude, it was scary.
B
Bigger than his desk. That's huge, dude.
C
Yeah, but when the bull shark showed up, I was like, oh yeah.
B
So we're putting the website up there again, man. It's like I said, we have guests after guest. This was an amazing experience for us as well. I, I, I, as much as you were excited when I saw I clicked on your name and I was like, he follows Copville, dude. I'm like, this guy, this is automatically the guy. I know. This guy gets it. Because a lot of your police people, when they're not in this realm of police work that we did, they won't follow because they don't understand the content. They don't understand what it means to be like a real street.
C
Oh no. Your stuff is so niche.
B
It's very targeted because it's from pain and suffering.
A
I know you.
B
Like I said, I can watch that one video, and I'm sure Tyler can watch that one video and go, that's the guy we're getting down with.
C
Like, that's the guy.
B
Yeah, he's on the squad. He's on the team. So, yeah, we appreciate it, man. Sean, thanks so much for coming on.
C
Thank you.
A
All right, guys, tonight it is. What's today? Wednesday Me tonight Hot Topic with cope Counterculture Inc. Network. And of course, we will be back tomorrow. Anti Air Broadcast, 1:00pm Eastern Standard Time on YouTube, Facebook and X. Have a good day.
B
Fish back was. Sav team for life.
Date: July 8, 2026
Host: The Antihero Podcast
Special Guest: Former street cop and Florida Lieutenant Governor candidate Sean Lozano
This episode focuses on breaking news involving President Trump's public abandonment of the Iran ceasefire agreement, the recent U.S. military strikes, and the political and security implications of ongoing Iran tensions. The second half centers on Florida state politics, featuring an in-depth interview with Sean Lozano—a street cop-turned-Lieutenant Governor candidate—opining on law enforcement reform, campaign transparency, data centers, blue-collar jobs, and the state’s law-and-order future. The program retains its blunt, blue-collar tone, mixing veteran, police, and everyday American perspectives.
Discussion Begins: [03:52]
"We make a deal, we go outside, talk to the press. They say we never even talked about it. As far as I'm concerned, it's over." — Host, recapping Trump on the Iran talks ([04:27])
“They hit a couple of ships and we hit them much harder… Gonna be the best bombs you ever saw. Biggest bombs. Best bombs.” — A, channeling Trump’s rhetoric ([06:05])
Discussion Interspersed, especially [09:25], [15:07], [17:16]
Segment runs throughout, especially [23:01] onward
“You think they need to know their rights and don’t need to be reminded.” — A ([27:55])
Key sections [33:33], [39:10], [41:06]
“A regular cop like that breaks the law, deserves to be arrested. Deserves to be fired... but if he was sheriff or chief... they wouldn't do anything — but it’s the same crime!” — B ([41:09])
Begins: [48:44], Main interview: [49:26]-[107:06]
“I said, 'I have no political experience.' He’s like, ‘No, that’s exactly why you’re perfect. I’m the business guy. You’re the street cop.’” — Lozano ([51:22])
On Political Debates: Criticizes opponent for dodging public debates, compares it to 2024 Kamala Harris scenario.
“Why would somebody be hiding from facing another man if you're not willing to face another man onstage at a debate?” — B ([54:00])
‘Block Flock’ Stance: Skeptical of Flock cameras/LPRs (license plate readers) over privacy concerns—says the state should prioritize citizens’ constitutional rights over law enforcement convenience. Open to sensible, narrowly-tailored tech use but critical of overreach near homes, parks, schools. ([55:28]-[58:49])
Big Tech & Data Centers: Calls out the dangers of data centers—massive land use, huge water consumption, few blue-collar jobs, undue influence of outside money (esp. Zuckerberg/Soros) on local politics. ([66:44]-[69:05])
“The average data center makes a Costco look like a 7-11... they use 500,000 gallons of water per day!” — Lozano ([67:07])
Law Enforcement Benefits and Retention:
“Lower the retirement age to 20 years... That is one of the most important things you’re going to hear today.” — B ([70:36])
“We want to expand FRS... fireman, first responders, everybody.” — C ([69:46])
SAO Oversight & Reform:
Will personally oversee soft-on-crime state attorney offices (“SAOs”) and urge higher rates of going to trial—calls out specific failures in Broward County, rampant recidivism, and the blame shift from prosecutors/judges back onto cops. ([86:15]-[91:47])
“The biggest problem I see... is out-of-touch people... Nobody oversees the state attorney's office.” — B ([91:00])
Faith: Unapologetic about Christian values (“Christ is King”), sees open faith as a unifying quality, not a divider.
“This is a Christian nation. Neither of us are afraid to say Christ is King. We were founded by Christians.” — Lozano ([94:19])
First and Second Amendments:
Absolute defense of free speech and gun rights, vowing to “embolden” Second Amendment protection in Florida (“shall not be infringed includes force, reset triggers, bump stocks... suppressors...”). ([96:49]-[99:00])
“Shall not be infringed. That includes force, reset triggers, bump stocks. That includes... all in the same place at the same day without having to do a tax stamp or any kind of foolishness and leave with your items and enjoy them.” — Lozano ([96:59])
End of Episode Summary