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Tucker Carlson
This episode is brought to you by Factor. Optimize your nutrition this year with Factor America's number one ready to eat meal service. Factor's fresh never frozen meals are dietitian approved. Ready to eat in just two minutes, choose from 40 weekly options across eight dietary preferences like calorie smart, protein plus, and keto. Eat smarter@factormeals.com listen50 and use code listen50 for 50% off plus free shipping. On your first box. Factormeals.com listen50 code listen50 t's and c's apply. So the Joe Biden has. It turns out Joe Biden has metastatic bone cancer.
Sean Ryan
I saw that.
Tucker Carlson
And of course, every urologist in the world immediately knows this is a lie. He's known for years because a PSA test shows and this is a very slow growing cancer and now it sounds like it's terminal. And so for 10 years his doctors have known that he has this and they've lied to us about it. And everyone's mad at Joe Biden. But the other way to look at it is like, who kept that secret from the rest of us and who was actually running the government for those four years?
Sean Ryan
I think that's a big question, right? But I mean, do you know Lindy Lee?
Tucker Carlson
No.
Sean Ryan
You heard of Lindy Lee?
Tucker Carlson
No.
Sean Ryan
She was, she was on the staff and, and she came on the show to, to talk about who was running the country. She said it was all the staffers, it was all the millennial staffers that were pretty much running the country and nobody was talking to each other. Everybody had their own agendas. And yeah, I mean, pretty much like all the stuff that we already knew, but she just came on to confirm it and then switch sides.
Tucker Carlson
But I mean, that's like the opposite of democracy, right?
Sean Ryan
I mean, yeah.
Tucker Carlson
I guess I vacillate between not being shocked at all. I mean, of course, I mean, he was visibly demented, so why should we be surprised that he also, hey, by the way, he has terminal bone cancer. But on the other hand, it's like that is so not the system that we signed up for and that we participate in.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, I mean, we didn't sign up for it, but we did. I mean, I, look, I remember at the beginning of the election cycle when Fox News was going on and on about Joe Biden's cognitive ability and, and I was like, oh, there's going to be. And this is probably just over embellished, you know, and then I saw the first.
Tucker Carlson
Wait, were you watching Fox News again?
Sean Ryan
This was, this was A long time ago. But. But, but, but, yeah, I was. I. I thought because, I mean, I think all media, you know, obviously over embellishes and just flat out lies. And I was. I just thought. I was like, there's no way that this guy's that bad. And then the first presidential debate, I quit watching it because I was like, holy, this guy legitimately cannot put a sentence together. I was like, they're actually not over embellishing this. And it was on display for millions, the entire country, but still won the vote, supposedly.
Tucker Carlson
I feel like an idiot for being shocked because of course, it's not a democracy. Of course the system is rigged. It's fake. Yeah. Because no matter who gets elected. No matter who gets elected, you get the same foreign policy, you get the same economic policy, and the Epstein videos remain secret. So, like, that just shows you that our system has no effect on the actual system.
Sean Ryan
Wait, what are you talking about? I thought we could all sleep well at night now, knowing that Epstein legitimately killed himself. Right?
Tucker Carlson
What was that?
Sean Ryan
Did that just come out?
Tucker Carlson
It's just two guys that I really like. I mean, I. I love Bongino, but he's a friend of mine. But. So you. But you weren't convinced by that? No. Why?
Sean Ryan
I mean, just. I've dug into that and it's just so spooky what's going on with that and how. Nobody. Nobody. I mean, how do you charge a guy with sex trafficking when there are no. There's no end users that have been charged? Who did he traffic to?
Tucker Carlson
Well, that's a great question. I don't know. You got me on that one.
Sean Ryan
I mean, right? How do. How do you charge him with that if there's no. If there's no. I mean, if that's where the trail starts, where does it end with. So I. I think there's just a lot more going on than the majority of people know about.
Tucker Carlson
What do you think that was?
Sean Ryan
What do I think it was?
Tucker Carlson
Yeah.
Sean Ryan
I think it was a blackmail operation. What do you think it was?
Tucker Carlson
I think it was a blackmail operation run by the CIA and the Israeli intel services and. And probably others. You know, French intelligence always has a hand in everything, I've noticed. So probably them too, know. But the. The usual, you know, darkest forces in the world colluding to make rich and powerful people obey their agenda.
Sean Ryan
I mean, look, though, I don't. I just. I don't understand why nobody has come out on it. Nobody has come out on it. Right. I mean, because if you paint the Scenario. I mean, you get on a jet, maybe, maybe you're totally innocent. You don't know what's going on. Too hot women come out of the. Whatever, stewardess place come out, and one thing leads to another. Yes. I mean, and then. And then what happens? They go, oh, we got you, you're on camera. And by the way, these girls are 15 or 16 or whatever the hell they were. Right? And. But I mean, it's. Yes. I mean, yes, if you're a married guy is pretty up that you're doing that. But, I mean, it's nothing. Nothing new under the sun. So why wouldn't you just scream blackmail at the top of your lungs like, I didn't know this is what happened and just come clean on it?
Tucker Carlson
Why do you think?
Sean Ryan
Because they're repeat customers.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah, because they're so deeply implicated that they can't actually get out of it.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, maybe not. I don't know.
Tucker Carlson
I mean, there's also, at least in me the growing sense that it's not just blackmail that makes people obey. It's not just bribery. It's also the threat of violence.
Sean Ryan
Do you know anybody that's been threatened with violence?
Tucker Carlson
I think every US President has been threatened with violence implicitly because of the murder of John F. Kennedy. I've known a bunch of presidents, and I think every one of them understands that, you know, it's pretty obvious what happened there, or the outlines, you know, maybe not the details. And no one has into this day released all the files. And, like, why is that? Because the message is really clear. You know, if you get too far outside the boundaries, like, you could wind.
Sean Ryan
Up like jfk, who places the boundaries.
Tucker Carlson
Probably the same forces that murdered the sitting president in 1963. You know what I mean? Like, if you listen to the tape of Richard Nixon talking to the CIA director in the Oval Office, no one else around. Of course it's being taped, and Nixon knows that because it's his taping system, but it's still his. Like, he's no one. He has no expectation anyone's going to hear this when he brings up Kennedy's murderer. He's the President. In fact, not only is he the President, he's won by the biggest landslide in American history. He has a real mandate. And he is afraid. He's afraid even to talk in private to the CIA director about what that was. And he indicates, like, I know what happened to Jack Kennedy. And the CIA director doesn't even respond. And the President doesn't have the balls to say, hey, son, I'm talking to you. You work for me. Like, I want. I want the files on this. Like, I knew Jack Kennedy. He was murdered. He was shot in the head next to his wife in public. Like, the man died. I want to know what happened here. He does not have the balls to say that to his own CIA director, man. That's the level of fear that a murder like that that's officially unsolved. But, you know, whose outline everyone really, a lot of people understand, like that's the fear that that inculcates.
Sean Ryan
Do you think it runs that deep with everybody?
Tucker Carlson
I think if you're president, you're very aware of the physical risk of the job. Wouldn't you be?
Sean Ryan
I mean, yeah. I mean, I think that goes without saying, but I mean, some of these guys on the, you know, lower levels, I mean, I. I don't know. It's just so sophisticated. I mean, when you dive into it, it seems so sophisticated and having been a, you know, a small part in some of the intel agencies, it. It's just not that. I think people place give them a lot more credit than they deserve.
Tucker Carlson
Oh, I believe that.
Sean Ryan
You know, and. But it's so. I think there's a thing also where it's just addiction to power.
Tucker Carlson
Yes.
Sean Ryan
Then they're so scared that they're going to lose their power. And I mean, you see in every administration to include this one, people that are, you know, it's. It's. Everybody wants to help the country. Right, but everybody wants to help the country that they have their. Their thing that they could do to help the country, and then they get placed in something they have business being in at all. They know there are better people to run that sector of the government. But hey, I'll. I'll take it because I'm the best. No, the. You're not. You're not the best. You know, and that's. I saw that in this one and it really pissed me off.
Tucker Carlson
In which one? In the Epstein.
Sean Ryan
In. In. In. In this administration. There are people in there that I despise, that I know don't know what the. They're doing. And, and like Sebastian Gorka, it's hard.
Tucker Carlson
To believe he works there. What? No. So why don't. Why haven't you caught Seb Gorka fever? Why don't you love Sebastian Gorka?
Sean Ryan
Well, I'll tell you why. I mean, he blast. We were talking about the. The Sam Shoe made interview with the Tesla bomber.
Tucker Carlson
Yes.
Sean Ryan
Last night. Right. And everybody called me. Oh, Sean's a CIA shill. And he's an operative still and all this other shit. One I was just a contractor over. But anyways, that's not the point. He came on, he, he posted this thing on Twitter saying, with this guy, Ryan Macbeth, who did this whole debunking my episode, right? And for whatever reason, he got pissed at me for doing that interview Gorka and posts the Ryan Macbeth little, I don't know, 10 minute clip that's debunking my, my interview. And Sebastian Gorka posts this thing on Twitter. I'll send you the thing, maybe you can overlay it on the screen. And he said something like, oh, he, he, he debunks another one. Well, then later on, Ryan McBeth does an apology video because the FBI actually came out and said, oh, shit, the email on the, on the podcast. They didn't want to name the podcast, of course, but they email on the podcast we have confirmed as being legit. As soon as they did that, Macbeth actually came out and did an apology video. And I was like, hey, cool, like, thank you, thank you for the apology. So I blasted Gorka on X and, and said, because what is he in charge of now? I can't remember.
Tucker Carlson
He's at the National Security Council. I think he's in charge of scrolling Twitter.
Sean Ryan
I think that was his official counterterrorism. He's the counterterrorism guy, right? And I'm like, oh, this is great. We got a guy that's running counterterrorism for the entire fucking country. When, when, when the borders have been wide open for four years. We know there's at least a thousand terrorists within the country setting up cells. And this guy gets his information from an Internet troll, Ryan Macbeth, who's already come out and apologize to me. And I'm like, oh, this is perfect. This is where intel is going to come from from counterterrorism. A guy that gets his information from.
Tucker Carlson
If it makes you feel better. I mean, Gorka is not taken seriously by anyone who knows him, I think, including his wife and who's a very, who's a nice person for whatever's worth. And I, I think his job literally is just to sit on the Internet and like, send, you know, fiery replies to people on X. I mean, I don't think he actually has a job.
Sean Ryan
Oh, well, then I guess he's the perfect guy for the job. It really is.
Tucker Carlson
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Sean Ryan
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Tucker Carlson
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Sean Ryan
Not authorized by any candidate or candidates committee.
Tucker Carlson
Www.merrestancespaymentscoalition.com so for people who missed it, which would include pretty much nobody since it was the biggest story for sure that week. The guy who blew up his Tesla with himself inside, outside Trump Tower. You got his manifesto. Can you just give us a refresher on what that said?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, so little rusty on it. But in the manifesto he, he had basically sent this guy, Sam Shoemade, who is an army intel guy, a manifesto and said that he wanted to come on the Sean Ryan show podcast to talk about all these things. And then he goes into this was right about the time that the New Jersey drone situation was going on that nobody, you know, could tell us what that was. And he, he had mentioned that we have some type of anti gravitic propulsion systems that had been, that had not been declassified and that China has something similar and this would cause World War 3. And then there's another paragraph that talks about there was a major offensive in Afghanistan several years ago where they, they basically wiped out a heroin plant and used a lot of air power to do it. It sounds like a J. There was a JTAC and a small team of special ops and they had bombed all of these different little facilities going on, killed, probably killed a lot of innocent people. And that's actually because when we looked into it I was like, I don't know, this anti gravitic shit, this kind of weird, you know, I mean there's a lot of chatter about it on the Internet like we had talked about last night. But you know, I don't know, I kind of think now that that's all just a big distraction. But when we looked into the, to the. Whatever you want to call them, but for lack of a better term, war crimes. I don't know about the operation. Right. I mean I'm not saying we should have or should not have bombed that facility. I mean obviously it's bad and it's a major money maker for terrorist organizations. But when we dug into it, there was a UN report that talked about that specific night and that the UN had I believe, did they open investigation. I think they opened an investigation on it because it was against, I don't know if it was Geneva Convention or, or what it was, but you could not bomb drug factories with civilians in it. And so it had talked about, you know, how many targets and people in innocence were killed. And I was like, oh, so this. This actually lines up with what this guy's saying on the email, which, you know, maybe. Maybe not. Gives. Gives, you know, the previous thing that we were talking about a little more validity. So anyway, so, yeah, I got. What was the question?
Tucker Carlson
What was that? So you. It sounds like you take the manifesto seriously. You think it's real. The guy actually wrote it.
Sean Ryan
Well, then, you know, then the other weird thing that gave it a lot of validity is because we. So when that interview came up, popped up on my radar, walked in to the studio getting ready to interview somebody. Jeremy, my producer, comes to me and says, hey, we got a guy on this Tesla bomber thing. And I'm like, I don't know, man. We get thousands and thousands and thousands of emails of. Of people that want to come clean on something or expose something. And, you know, probably 99 of it is. And, you know, it's just somebody looking.
Tucker Carlson
There is a mental health crisis.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, definitely. But so I was really apprehensive to do it. And, and, and Jeremy was. Was new at the time, and I didn't 100% trust him yet. And I was like, he's like, I think Jeremy, this guy right over here. And. But he was hell bent on it. And so we. We did a call with Sam, and he didn't want to come on. And when he didn't want to come on, I was like, I like that. Okay, let's play it hard to get. All right, so he wanted to go visit his family member of his. And he's like, look, I just want to go hang out with this family member. I don't want to be there. And I said, hey, okay, well, we'll book you a flight here and book your flight to where you're going. And this should only take a couple hours. And he was like, all right, well, let me think about it. And then got back when I was doing the interview and wanted to come on, why get. So Jeremy tells me on a break, hey, we've got him. He's going to be here first thing in the morning. Well, I get done with the interview, and I look at my phone and all these people are texting me about the interview I'm about to do, and they're like, hey, you know, there's this. This DEA agent that was on the op, and his name was actually listed in the email. And they were like, he doesn't. He doesn't want his name to come out because he's still active. And I'm like, you know, I'm not, I'm not going to burn somebody that's. That's still active and undercover operations. I mean, that would, that could get him killed and, and, and his family killed. So I'm not going to do that. I'm not going to dabble in stuff that we're working on. But at the same time, it made me extremely paranoid. I'm like, how the hell does everybody know that I'm getting ready to do this? So then I'm. Then I'm thinking all my. All the people that are texting me are controlled assets or something. And then we had a. We had another friend of mine sent me a text and he says, hey, this. The army's public Affair officer wants to talk to you about tomorrow's interview. And I called him up. Yeah, I called him up and reamed his ass. And I'm like, why the are you texting me this? If the Army PAO wants to get a hold of me, I've got a website, I've got social. I've got all these things that he can get a hold of me at. And why is he using you to get to me? And why have you inserted your. Yourself into. Into my business? And, because, you know, I mean, I'm sure you get it. I mean, that this, when you're uncovering some of this stuff, it, it can cause some extreme paranoia on who your friends are and what their motivations are and who's flipped. And, and so I wouldn't talk to him. I said, I'm not talking to him, but I'll pass the number to my attorney and, and Jeremy, and they can talk to them. And then when they talk to him, they, they wanted to kind of place it on ptsd, which wound up being the ultimate narrative from the mainstream media. Right?
Tucker Carlson
Ptsd, it being the, the motive for killing himself outside.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, I mean, I think that they used pt. They, they used PTSD to, To basically insinuate that he is a crazy person. But, I mean, pretty much everybody I know and have worked with, all my former colleagues, I mean, we all have that. And I mean, I'm not going to say we're not crazy, but, but not crazy like that. I mean, it's, it's just a condition and you can get over it. And, and he wasn't crazy. I mean, he obviously wanted to send some type of a message. I mean, you got a, a Green Beret with a full career in special operations definitely knows Demolition. And there is no way in hell that a, That a lifelong green beret would put a bomb inside of a bulletproof truck to take out Trump Tower, kill a bunch of people. I mean, it was. Obviously he just wanted to get some attention and get whatever the message that he was trying to get out out. And so that's what I think. I don't.
Tucker Carlson
We could have just tweeted about it. You know, he didn't have to kill himself. So that's a pretty extreme. Pretty extreme thing. Most. Most extreme thing possible. What do you think his motive really was?
Sean Ryan
Like I said, I don't. I think he wanted to bring attention to the topics that he had and the anti gravity, the anti gravitic propulsion system. And, and, and we looked into that and all we could find is sci fi.
Tucker Carlson
But do you think any of it's real? I mean, you've interviewed people. In fact, the first show I ever saw of yours was with a building contractor who said he ran across anti gravity technology in a military facility.
Sean Ryan
Do I think anti gravitic propulsion systems are real? I don't know.
Tucker Carlson
I mean, do you think there are significant technologies, next generation energy, anti gravity, that the U.S. government.
Sean Ryan
Oh, 100%. I mean, we just. Yes, I do. I, I think that all this alien extraterrestrial, I mean, it's fun to dig down there, but I mean, I think it's a big distraction. I don't know if it's meant to be some type of a controlled op, but I think it is. I think all this stuff is spiritual. That's what I think.
Tucker Carlson
Of course it is.
Sean Ryan
I think all this stuff is spiritual. All these things that people are seeing and stuff. I think, I think there's a spirituality component to it.
Tucker Carlson
Now that these are angels and demons or what?
Sean Ryan
Pretty much, yeah. And, and where was I going with this? And anti gravitic propulsion systems? I mean. Yeah, I think we. I mean, I would hope that we have that. That is next generation stuff. That's not, you know, the same we've been using since World War II.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah. So the only real technological advances in 80 years are like the iPhone.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
You know.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. Well, I mean, we have advances. Like we just interviewed this guy, Steve Klost, and do you know Steve Quast?
Tucker Carlson
No.
Sean Ryan
Holy fascinating guy. But he talks about how. He talks about next generation energy and the fight that the utilities companies don't want us to have new energy. But anyways, what this guy does is he. He has a company called Space Built, I believe. And so he is. He's basically created a logistics company where instead of launching one satellite up, he. He can. Which, which he, he says that's extremely expensive. And sometimes they break and they're fragile and they have to make the satellites bulletproof, which is a ton of weight, because they have to be able to, you know, withstand, you know, going through the atmosphere. And so what he's done is he is building a logistics company where they don't have to make the satellites bulletproof. You can make them 10 times bigger than the satellites that we have, and you launch them up in sections and pack them safely so that they can make the trip without having all that extra weight to be bulletproof. And then his company would actually assemble those through laser robotics in space. And so what he, what he says is possible is, and I believe him. I mean, he's got a, he's got a, he's got the right background to be talking about this stuff. And so what he says we can do, and we already have the technology is basically they would put these ginormous satellites up into orbit and they would be solar, so you wouldn't. But they would. It would actually be a reliable renewable energy source because there's no clouds, there's no atmosphere, there's no air particles getting in the way. To collect that radiation from the sun, it would convert it from solar into some type of a radio wave and you could beam it down into the, onto the Earth to a. I can't remember what we called it, but it sounded like an antenna. So you basically put this antenna that.
Tucker Carlson
Receives as an energy.
Sean Ryan
Energy and then, and then it would pump it back into the grid.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah.
Sean Ryan
And you know, I was just. But, but.
Tucker Carlson
So like a solar farm in space.
Sean Ryan
Yes, yes. And I mean, he had talked about that and it's just like, man, like, what this, this could be the answer. I mean, we could make Earth. I mean, I think Elon said, right, we can make Earth into a park. Was that him? And, but I mean, you could take out all the eyesores, all the huge solar farms that you see all over the country, the wind, the oil and gas like, it, it could all be gone. And you could do it this way.
Tucker Carlson
And would you get green energy tax credits for it?
Sean Ryan
I don't know.
Tucker Carlson
I think that that's kind of the goal here. I don't think it's actually to power civilization or keep the Earth clean. I think it's, it's the tax credits drive all this stuff. It's just greed. It's the ugliest kind of greed.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. Yeah, but I mean, so anyways, you know, that's next generation power right there. And they said that China's building a nuclear power plant in space and they're mining helium 3 off the, off the backside of the MO and sounds like I'm not terribly familiar with helium 3, but it sounds like that is, that's also next generation power that can, that can cool data centers, AI stuff and, and, and it would really take us the next level out of energy. But then he goes on to talk about how we're falling behind on from China with energy production.
Tucker Carlson
Well, sure. So everyone's a marketing major.
Sean Ryan
I think it's here, I think it's legitimately at our fingertips.
Tucker Carlson
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Sean Ryan
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Tucker Carlson
Al, Al, come here. Sorry about that. So this story and the weird way that it happened, you know, you get the manifesto from the guy who kills himself in the cyber truck. All these other people know that you're about to do an interview on it. Were you worried you were going to get hurt in that moment?
Sean Ryan
I don't know if it's hurt. I, you know, I don't really care about me, but I worry about my family, of course. And, and so, you know, it's always an afterthought. The only one that I've done that, that I'm like, oof, I don't know if I should be doing this. Before was the Romania one that I was telling you about the other day and what was the Romanian interviewscu interview where they, they yanked him out of the election. But it's always an afterthought, you know, after the interview I'm like, oh shit, I don't know if we should throw this one out. And because, you know, we, they, the FBI would have never come out and, and given any validity to the, to the email, to the man, to the manifesto. And they, and I think that, I don't think I know that the interview because it got 5 million views and I don't know how many listens in just, you Know, a couple of days. And so, you know, when I see that kind of. Of traction on something, I'm like, oh, shit, I really kicked over a big rock here. I wonder what the repercussions of this are going to be.
Tucker Carlson
If you're traveling to Romania to interview a candidate who's been knocked out of the race by NATO, you know, all of a sudden, you're no longer really a podcaster. You're. You're like a player in global politics.
Sean Ryan
Want to be a podcaster, but I.
Tucker Carlson
Mean, that kind of.
Sean Ryan
I'm only feeding my own curiosity, for sure.
Tucker Carlson
But the second you start, you know, tampering with the way things are, then you become a problem and therefore fair game. No.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. I mean, we had this discussion last night. I didn't sleep a wink. I was like.
Tucker Carlson
Well, I think the big.
Sean Ryan
I was like. I was like, jeremy, I think Tucker's trying to tell me maybe I need to simmer down.
Tucker Carlson
I don't think so at all. I just think you said last night, I'm just a podcaster. And I was like, I'm familiar with that way of thinking. But if you just take three steps back and, you know, if you're exposing things that are, you know, important things, big things, like who gets to run the world and, you know, who's getting the money, you know, I think you're. You're still a podcaster, but you're also something else, right?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, I guess somewhat of a disruptor, but. But, you know, I just. When I do do it, I lean into. I mean, I lean into God, and I really just consider myself kind of a conduit. Not kind of a conduit. I consider myself a conduit. And whatever comes to me is supposed to happen.
Tucker Carlson
Yes.
Sean Ryan
And with the. Like, for example, you know, I'm pretty new at this. I haven't completed the Bible or anything, but. But the more that I dig into just everything in the world, I. I think that. I just think that everything. Everything is a lie. Everything. I think it's all a lie. And. And. And that it's partially my job to expose, you know, what I know and to bring some type of truth. And.
Tucker Carlson
Can you give me an example? I mean, clearly, Joe Biden's health turned out to be a lie.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Epstein killed himself. Clearly a lie. I grieve that they said something like that in public, because I. I like those guys, particularly Dan. But that's. That's a lie. I bet my house on it. But what else? When you say everything's a lie, what are you referring to?
Sean Ryan
I think everything is a lie.
Tucker Carlson
Wow.
Sean Ryan
I think.
Tucker Carlson
Why do you think that?
Sean Ryan
How could you not? I mean, you're way deeper in this stuff than I am. I think it's all a show. I think everybody is out for themselves.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah.
Sean Ryan
And it sucks. It sucks to see that and to know it. And I mean, you know, Covid. Covid just got a lot of people thinking to include me. And. And then when you start diving into it just leads to all these different rabbit holes, right? The Epstein stuff, the COVID stuff, the. The. Just legitimately everything. The ufo, should. All of it.
Tucker Carlson
Should we be. I've reached a similar conclusion, but I'm not making fun of you. I, of course I agree with you, but should we be shocked by that or does it say that really explicitly in the New Testament and like, we're just dumb and naive if we thought anything other than that?
Sean Ryan
Well, I mean. And it says, right, I am the only truth. I am the truth.
Tucker Carlson
And Satan runs the world, by the way, says that.
Sean Ryan
And so I think everything is a deception. Everything, maybe even our whole reality is a deception. So, like neural link, for example. Yeah, you know, I was interviewing.
Tucker Carlson
What's. Can you for? People don't know what's. What's neuralink?
Sean Ryan
Neuralink, it's that chip that, you know they're going to put in everybody's brain that sounds wholesome. They want something pretty sick for that. You getting one by getting one.
Tucker Carlson
I don't even like electricity.
Sean Ryan
If you don't, then you'll fall behind. And I can't wait, you know, so. But I had, you know, I've been fascinated with that subject. I would love to interview somebody on it. But that. That is on the inside over there. But, you know, and I think, yeah, you know, right. Like the premise right now is to, you know, get paralyzed people moving again and hope the blind see. And that's all great, but, you know, I mean, when I found out that there was going to help the blind see, I was like, wait a second. So if you put this chip in your head and they can help the blind see, then wouldn't they also be able to project an entire false reality in your mind? And I had interviewed a couple doctors about it, I interviewed Andrew Huberman about it, which just got brought up, and then talked to Ben Carson about it. Pretty much came to the same conclusion. And not only would they be able to manipulate, you know, vision, there would also be emotion, touch, smell, taste, everything into your head. So there you go, right there. I mean, we're on the cusp of a total false reality. Your entire life could be a false reality.
Tucker Carlson
People are upset about real ID at the airport, facial recognition. Giving others control over your brain neurologically, that seems like, like a step farther, you know what I mean? Like just biometrics. Do you know why they're pushing it?
Sean Ryan
No.
Tucker Carlson
I do.
Sean Ryan
Why?
Tucker Carlson
This is my understanding based on conversations with people who are involved in it because of AI and the Blind Seed. Lame walk. It's all great, but the real concern is that AI is already at this point beyond human control. It's already at the point where it's lying to the people who created it, which suggests consciousness and neuralink and efforts like neuralink are the people who are running it believe the only way for people to keep up with AI. Otherwise we will be its slaves.
Sean Ryan
See, I don't know. I've, I've kind of changed my tune on that. Maybe you know more about it than I do. But I mean, we feed the data centers that power the AI, you know, and so, I mean, I think that, you know, some of the, I don't think that now that I understand it a little bit better, I don't think AI is going to develop its own consciousness and make decisions for us. I think that, you know, I think that the major fear would be if, for example, China hacked our databases and started feeding our AI's false information that would be detrimental in a conflict or propaganda or whatever. You know, but, but I mean, we've, we are the ones, humans are the ones that build and feed the information into the data centers and, and it just processes all that information.
Tucker Carlson
So I raised this question with one of the people who, one of the big, biggest, you know, forces behind AI. And I said, well, just turn it off. You know, I mean, human beings run power plants. And this person said, even now we can't be sure that the machine is telling us the truth about where its power is coming from.
Sean Ryan
Interesting.
Tucker Carlson
So look, I, I, you know, I was a Russian history major. Like, I know nothing. I'm not pretending to have some special insight, but I did get hear that directly from someone who's deeply involved.
Sean Ryan
And even right now, I mean, well, you know, a lot of people that are deeply involved.
Tucker Carlson
No, not really. But I mean, you know, travel, you.
Sean Ryan
Know, with, with, with stuff like AI. I mean, it's still, it still goes to a human at the end, you know, to make that decision.
Tucker Carlson
And so until you get a chip in your brain.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, good point. But, you know, so for example, you know, for military Use, you know, the AI system would tell you what it is. So let's say it's a plane, you know, that pops up on a radar or something. The AI system will immediately identify it, tell you the capabilities, tell you your courses of action, tell you your different courses of action, tell you the outcomes of those different courses of action. And so you have all these options, you know, that would be some type of an analyst or strategist that would, you know, take hours, days, weeks, maybe months, you know, to come up with the information, to present to whoever the decision maker is to make that actual decision. But with the power of AI, you know, and, and these new chips that are processing so fast, I mean, you get that information in seconds, minutes, hours versus hours, days, weeks, months. And so you can act on that, you know, a lot faster because all the information's been processed. Every possible outcome, the percentage of coming out on top, I mean, it's like a complete war game within seconds.
Tucker Carlson
It sounds amazing, but the advantage is also the vulnerability. Now, I mean, if it's subverted, like if someone hacks your MM and gives you the wrong coordinates or misidentifies, you know, allies as enemies, or you could see that going. You could see that being like the way you lose.
Sean Ryan
Definitely, Definitely.
Tucker Carlson
So maybe the guy with the bolt Action 308 with iron sights wins. Yeah, maybe the lowest technology force wins.
Sean Ryan
I'm with you. But you know, I mean, you know, I mean, what. How do you know that human source is not a double agent? I mean, there's always going to be checks and balances, right? So, I mean, that's why we need, we need a better energy grid. We need to be able to power our fucking AI data center so that we can build more AIs. Because when AI wars happen, it'll be who has more AIs and it'll be AIs going against AIs. So we need more AIs to combat somebody with. We need more aisle than our enemies, than our adversaries.
Tucker Carlson
So we're only 40 minutes in. And you've already said, you have said so far you don't believe in anything. Technology is moving at such a pace that it's hard for people to even to think about. It's moving so quickly, going places we can't yet imagine. And just to restate once more, nothing is real anyway. Can you be very specific day to day about how you stay sane while thinking about stuff like that?
Sean Ryan
I live in the woods and I don't talk to anybody but my team and my Family. And I don't go out much, you know, I just. I don't.
Tucker Carlson
Is that a happy life? Yeah.
Sean Ryan
I would rather spend time with my kids and my wife than anybody on the planet. So, you know, in fact, even when we go out to dinners with people and I say, oh, yeah, let's do a dinner. I'm. The day the dinner comes up, I'm like, why the are we going to dinner? I should be spending time with the kids. Right.
Tucker Carlson
You speak for every American husband. There's no one husband is like, what them? How do we do? Well, you said we could.
Sean Ryan
Oh, but I mean, even the energy thing that we just discussed, I mean, it's a lie. Like, here we have this, this stupid debate going on about renewables and, and. And fossil fuels, and it's like, I just told you the answer. It's right here. It's been here for years. Nobody's acting on it. Right? That's all fucking lie.
Tucker Carlson
No, like, we.
Sean Ryan
It's right here. It's right here, you know, and. But nobody wants to talk about it, so can keep the same debate going.
Tucker Carlson
Just to go back, because you're not the only person. Anyone who's made it this far in the conversation is probably in a similar place to where you are right now. Like, oh, my gosh, this is just bewildering. Like, what's real? This all does it. It does seem like the AC trip that never ended. A lot of the news you read doesn't really have a lot of inherent meaning, but this does. Starting May 19, the Hallow app is leading a consecration to Jesus through St. Joseph. You might be asking, why St. Joseph? Why now? Well, consider this. Joseph was the man God himself trusted with his own son. He wasn't a king or a warrior. He was a carpenter. He was a quiet and still steady man of unshakable faith. In an age that mocks humility, can you imagine the basis of wisdom and relationship with God? It's time we looked to someone who embodied humility, not for applause, but for God. The series is not just about St. Joseph. It's about what happens when you follow his example, when you trade noise for silence, when you stop chasing relevance and start seeking holiness. And all of that begins with humility, which is really just perspective. You are not God. It's important to remind yourself of that. We do every day. So every week on hal, you'll hear reflections grounded in the Gospels, pray powerful prayers like the Litany of St. Joseph, and hear glory stories from throughout Church history. Not myths, not legends. Actual intersections and power from a saint who's been quietly helping people for thousands of years. Hallow is the world's number one prayer app, and experiences like this are why my family and I cannot get enough of it. It is a constant dinner table conversation, so you get three months right now at hallo.comtucker for free. You'll be glad you did. Hallo.comtucker starting a business can seem like.
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Visit the website for full terms and conditions. What is your daily regimen? If you, if you don't mind, if it's not too personal? Like what do you, you wake up and then you do what? Like what are the steps that you take every day to remain grounded and sane and happy?
Sean Ryan
I pray a lot when I wake up. I pray all the time, you know, and I don't mean down on my knees. I just, I'm always, I'm always looking for signs. I'm always trying to make sure that, you know, I'm doing the right thing and that I'm not doing interviews just for numbers and like that. I mean, I look for good people, you know, with a good heart. Especially when I do something like a life story, you know, I'm, I'm looking For that guy that's grinding, that is not getting any traction with his business, who served the country and put him up. But I mean, how tempting.
Tucker Carlson
I don't know.
Sean Ryan
I mean, I. And then I also keeping the daily routine. I mean, I wake up, I got a one year old and a three year old and I wake up and I have about three cups of tea and I play around with my kids and spend a lot of time on the phone, unfortunately, because everything, you know, I'm getting all the incoming in that's coming in that morning. Then I go into the office and I meet with everybody and do an interview, or I don't do an interview and then I just go back home to my kids. But you know, as far as staying grounded, I mean, I just keep in mind, like, hey, this, this all could go away. And two seconds, I mean, who knows? Somebody could do a headpiece on me like they are right now, told you about it and it could all go away. Well, maybe a previous mistake that I made in life comes to light and they cancel me. And if they do it, I don't care. I'll hang out with my kids and my wife and live the rest of my life. Maybe I'll move up here, get a spot in the woods and never see anybody again. But I just don't take myself too seriously and I don't buy my own bullshit. And that's it. Man.
Tucker Carlson
When you say you don't put people on just for numbers. Everyone who, you know, has a public facing job understands what you're saying. But for people who don't, will you describe that a little more fully?
Sean Ryan
What do you mean?
Tucker Carlson
You pass on stories, you said, or pass on interviews if the only upside is just that it gets huge numbers.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, yeah. I'm just not interested in it, you know, I mean, if I see, I'll give you the exam. I mean, I had. If I see somebody go on the circuit, that's like, I'm just not interested because then I'm just doing the same stuff that everybody else is doing.
Tucker Carlson
Exactly.
Sean Ryan
And I've canceled interviews, I've had people that I've been wanting to have on for a long time. And then I'll pull up YouTube and there they are in the Tucker Carlson show. And I'm like, hey, cancel that interview. I don't want to.
Tucker Carlson
I take your sloppy seconds with gratitude. I'm like, really? Sean Ryan interviewed him, Book him.
Sean Ryan
No, I think it's cool, but I just, I don't want to. I don't want to. I Mean, you're a phenomenal interviewer. And, and it's. And so it's. It's. What am I going to get out of this guy that Tucker didn't or Megan didn't or.
Tucker Carlson
No, I didn't.
Sean Ryan
You know what I mean?
Tucker Carlson
You don't want to be part of someone's publicity campaign either.
Sean Ryan
Exactly. You know, and. And so I really, I, you know, I pride myself on being different, and I've set my whole business up to be different and as different as I can be. And so I just. I. I just feed my own curiosity, and I look for people that I believe to be a positive influence on the world and a good role model for kids. I mean, I think the role model thing has gotten. It's just. It's horrible. I mean, who the hell do kids have to look up to now?
Tucker Carlson
That's right.
Sean Ryan
You know, and, and so that's. That's what I look for. Just good human beings with good values that are pumping some type of good in the world, whether that's fighting evil or spreading the word or whatever, you know, and going against the grain. And, you know, I was. I was brought up to always root for the underdog.
Tucker Carlson
Amen.
Sean Ryan
And I do that, you know, the.
Tucker Carlson
Most American impulse you can have. We were the underdog. This country was the underdog. So.
Sean Ryan
Yes, it was.
Tucker Carlson
You don't ever want to be the overdog.
Sean Ryan
No. No.
Tucker Carlson
You don't be part of the machine. So how have you set your business up to be different?
Sean Ryan
How have I? Well, I mean, so when I got into podcasting, I mean, I didn't even know if I wanted to do it. I just.
Tucker Carlson
That was only five and a half years ago.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, it was five and a half years ago in my attic. And. And I got tired of teaching tactics and shooting and stuff like that, so I tried a bunch of different things. And, And I looked at podcast as a whole. And. And I saw, you know, every. Back then, everybody had the purple curtain behind them and all their little stuff in the middle of the table. That means nothing to them other than Joe, you know, he's got his stuff on the middle of the table now everybody's got their shit on the middle of the table. And, and, and so I set it up to be different. I wanted a relaxed environment. I didn't want any equipment in the shots I wanted. I mean, you've been there. It's. It's. You melt into that room, and it's very disarming. And there's a lot of history there from People that share similar values and on display for everybody to see.
Tucker Carlson
You like it. That's what I noticed about your studio. You made it a space that you're comfortable in, and it reflects what you think, and it reflects the life that you've lived and the people that you love. It's not. It's the opposite of generic.
Sean Ryan
Thank you.
Tucker Carlson
Well, no, it's. I really. It's very noticeable, but.
Sean Ryan
But I, you know, and nobody really back then had good camera aesthetics. And so I'd saw David Letterman's My Next Guest on Netflix and I really liked the way it looked and with the camera movements and the shots that they had. And I said, I want to make that, but in my own way and on a. On a $2,000 budget. And so I taught myself how to film, taught myself how to edit, taught my wife how to film, taught myself how to run sound. And. And so I wanted an environment that looked really good on camera that, that disarmed people. I noticed, especially in where I come from in the SEAL teams, very egocentric community. And nobody can just make the interview about the guests. They have to make it about themselves and insert their own experiences. And it's, oh, I killed Bin Laden. Oh, cool. I killed this person. And it's like, it's not about you, man. It's about them. And so I would totally keep my own experiences out of the interview and I would compliment people instead of challenging them all the time. I'll come like, wow, that's like you just made it into Delta. That's like the premier special ops group in the entire world. I mean, how did that feel? That's amazing. And when you compliment somebody in a world that is extremely competitive, you know, it, it. It's like, oh, like, this guy's different. Thank you for letting me talk and actually complimenting me on my service. And then on top of that, we started I from episode. How did.
Tucker Carlson
Where did that insight come from?
Sean Ryan
Therapy. I did a lot of therapy when I quit contracting for, for CIA.
Tucker Carlson
I. I always think of therapy as making people more self involved, but that sounds like whoever you had in therapy sounds like was encouraging to become less about yourself.
Sean Ryan
They don't talk. They don't talk. I mean, with my therapist, it was. I did all the talking and I would wind up working my own problems out in my head and she would just guide me, you know, and so I took that model and brought it to my show and it just worked.
Tucker Carlson
But it sounds like you concluded that humility, focusing on other people, that was the key.
Sean Ryan
I would say you're exactly right.
Tucker Carlson
I don't know that that's an obvious conclusion. I don't. Most people don't seem to reach that conclusion really, judging from I was in the airport. I don't go to the airport very much, but I was there yesterday and listening to two people have a air quotes conversation where each one was just waiting for the other one to stop talking before talking at the person. It was like not one person ever said, really? How, really how interesting. And I feel like that's the experience that people have, not just watching podcasts, but like on, you know, day to day. Yeah, People don't listen.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, I mean, you know, and I guess there is one other thing that I just, I'm not, I'm not afraid to say that I don't know what we're talking about. And so you get a lot of people. You know, you get a lot of people. They, they trap themselves.
Tucker Carlson
Yes.
Sean Ryan
You know, and, and it's like I told you about what I know about AI and that's the extent of it. If we're gonna go deeper, I don't know what the I'm talking about, so I'm not gonna pretend like I know I'm talking about to make it look like I'm the resident expert, because the resident experts are going to call you completely full of shit. You don't know what you're talking about.
Tucker Carlson
And so I don't like pretending you don't have prostate cancer. Like in the end, people, people.
Sean Ryan
But, but I mean, it's okay to not know everything, of course. And, and, but so many people fall into the trap. They're like, oh, yeah, I have, I have shit. They just asked me a question I'm not an expert on. I have to come up with something and I have like, no shame. And just going, yeah, I don't, I don't even know what the fuck that word means that you just said. Could you please explain that? And, and I think there's a lot of people like me that, that, that they don't understand maybe the vocabulary.
Tucker Carlson
There aren't a lot of people who will admit it. Actually. There aren't that many people.
Sean Ryan
Everybody's. Everybody's a genius. Everybody's a tough guy. And it's playing.
Tucker Carlson
But playing a role that they know is fake.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, it's sad. Sad to watch it.
Tucker Carlson
Well, it's, it's a kind of slavery too. I mean, it's not. You're not free when you're pretending to be something you're not.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
So you showed me something last night. Speaking of how you run your business differently than I thought was, like, the coolest thing I've ever seen. You're building a new studio. You totally lost control and just totally lost control. I will say, as someone who has a studio, it's like the craziest thing. It's the coolest thing. Big piece property, bass pond, shooting range, like, beautifully designed. It's just super cool. But at the construction phase on the. Well, you.
Sean Ryan
You.
Tucker Carlson
You explain how you. How you built it. That's different.
Sean Ryan
Oh. So, I mean, like I was saying last night, I'm really. I'm really big on company culture. And like I had mentioned earlier, you know, my. My people that work for me and with me are. Are like a second family to me, and I take on their burdens and I help them through life, and I. I want to give them the best experience that I can, too. I mean, they work their asses off.
Tucker Carlson
Yes.
Sean Ryan
And. And so I. I want them to be proud of where they work, and I want them to enjoy being at work. And so there's. There's a wellness center. There's everybody. I mean, there's. It's. You got to see it, man. When it's done, it's. It's like super top of the line. Very, very nice. And, you know, they'll be able to hunt out there, they'll be able to fish out there, they'll be able to shoot out there, they'll be able to work out out there. They'll be able to. I want them to bring their families in for lunch. Like, I want that environment so that, you know, one that they're. They're proud of where they work. They want to work there, and they're the best paid people in the business. I don't have a big team, but I have a fucking amazing team.
Tucker Carlson
You want them to bring their families for lunch?
Sean Ryan
Hell, yeah, man.
Tucker Carlson
That's the coolest.
Sean Ryan
Absolutely. And. And if they want to, you know, and. And. And, you know, on top of just giving, you know, and creating like, that environment, you know, it. I mean, this is a cutthroat business, unfortunately, and see people jumping from camp to camp. I've never lost somebody, you know, I've never lost somebody that. That said, hey, it. I'm going to Tucker's. Hey, I'm going to the Daily Wire. Hey, I'm going here. I'm going there. They. They don't want to be anywhere, but.
Tucker Carlson
You haven't lost anyone to the Daily Wire.
Sean Ryan
I haven't lost anybody to anything.
Tucker Carlson
I'm such a.
Sean Ryan
We get a lot of people from the Daily Wire one to work here though.
Tucker Carlson
You put Bibles under the foundation?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, yeah, we put. We put. So yeah, on top of that, my whole team is really into scripture and we're all very like minded and. And you know, I'd mentioned before, I feel like I'm just a conduit and so. And I do. I live a lot of my life in paranoia at times. And so he is the only protection. So yeah, we put a Bible in every corner of the foundation. We wrote scripture on every single exterior stud in that building. And to. For protection.
Tucker Carlson
I saw Jeremy or producer had a picture he showed me last night of. It's a shot down the wall and the studs are still visible and each one has a. I read three from Ephesians but like long quotes from the New Testament.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, everybody on the team had a. Had a part in that.
Tucker Carlson
Who thought of that?
Sean Ryan
Me. Why? I went to a party once and the people at the party who hosted the party showed me their house and told me that they had done that. And I was like that they had written scripture on every stud and I was like, oh man, that is awesome. I'm doing that.
Tucker Carlson
I'm doing everything.
Sean Ryan
Everything that we build from now on will. Will have that.
Tucker Carlson
That is the coolest. So you say you feel like a conduit. How do you receive instructions?
Sean Ryan
God. I think God speaks to you through God and, and I think the signs are always there, but a lot of us are too busy and wrapped up in our own shit to see them. And so, for example, like the Georgescu interview was. I was nervous about that one, you know, because I'd dug into the. I dug into it and I was, I was like, like, I don't, you know, if this guy is a Russian asset. I don't know if this is a good idea. I don't want to be on the wrong team here. I don't want to fall victim to, you know, propagandizing my show, not even realizing it. And the whole, the whole journey there I was worried about it. And without going into it, I mean my journey to Christ was through signs that slapped me right in the face. And 444 is a big number to me. And, and, and I.
Tucker Carlson
444.
Sean Ryan
444 is a huge number to me. And why? Well, so I had this experience in Sedona where I came to Christ and three things happened to me all within very profound things in about 15 minutes. The last day I was there, and when I got home, I had called somewhat of a spiritual mentor to me. His name's Eddie Penny, and he had started talking about. I called him at midnight when I got back, and I was like, hey, this happened to me. I don't know what this means, but I think I need to lean into Jesus a little bit here. And that's not something I've done in probably the past 20 years. And so he started going on about this stuff with. With demonic attacks now that I've shown aside. And I'm. And he goes. He goes, man, a lot of people have been praying for this to happen. And I'm like, well, what do you mean? Like, what? Why? Who is what? What. What the hell is happening? And then he started talking about guardian angels and all this other stuff. And I had a meeting scheduled at noon with my IT guy, who is a devout Catholic. And I call him up and I think we're going to be talking about, I don't know, website stuff and I t. Crap. And he has the exact same conversation with me, not even knowing that I'd had this experience yet. Doesn't know Eddie. I mean, he is a IT guy, and Eddie is a former development group guy. There's no connection. Has the exact same conversation, starts talking about.
Tucker Carlson
For those who. Can you just define a former what group guy?
Sean Ryan
Team six.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah.
Sean Ryan
And. And. And ever since I had Eddie on and he shared his testimony was my. I released an episode every Christmas. That's when I kicked the show off, was Christmas. And I was like, man, this testimony is, like, so awesome. I think this should be the Christmas episode. So every single person that came on the show for probably the next year and a half at least, had brought up God or the Bible or Christ. And it was. It was like a turning point in my podcast that just. And I didn't, like. I don't push Christianity on people. I don't, you know, it would just organically come up in the conversation. And. And so I always thought, like, maybe God's, like, working through my show or something. I don't know. But anyway, so after this, after all this stuff happened in Sedona, which was mind blowing to me, I have this conversation with Adam, and, yes, and he's talking about guardian angels. And I go home for a late lunch that day with my wife and kids, and I'm driving back to the studio, and I look at the clock, and it's 4:44. I look at the gas thing, and it says 444 miles left to empty. And this is. And. And it's 4 hours and 44 minutes after my conversation with my T guy. So I'm driving, and I call up my social media manager. I'm like, hey, look up 444. I want to know what it means. Something just happened, and get this shit.
Tucker Carlson
I love how open you are to this.
Sean Ryan
He looks it up and you know what it is?
Tucker Carlson
No.
Sean Ryan
It means your Guardian Angels want to know that they're watching over you. Right after we just had a discussion 4 hours and 44 minutes prior about Guardian Angels.
Tucker Carlson
That's wild.
Sean Ryan
And so then I. I was like, okay, like, that's. That's a sign. And because I told you to, I live in them. At that time, I had released the Brian Montgomery interview about sex trafficking, which is a whole nother debacle that the FBI started getting involved in. And I had interviewed Tyler Andrew Vargas, which was the young Marine who survived the Abigay bombing. He lost his leg and his arm, and nobody would talk to him because it made the Biden administration look so bad. We were fighting YouTube about it, and he had all this real footage from his camera about the guy that blew up the gate that they should have killed. And anyways, told me that. That. That Good Morning America had interviewed him for seven hours and only released five seconds of the interview. Here's another God thing, man. So having breakfast, my team really wanted to get Tyler on, and I was like, every media outlet in the world is probably trying to talk to this guy right now because he's the only living eyewitness. And I'm like, we're never going to get him. I'll probably wind up on Tucker or Rogan or, you know, and. And I was like, fine, I'll shoot him a message on Instagram. So I shoot him a message immediately. He's like, yep, I'm in. Let's do it. I had breakfast with him before the interview, and at breakfast, he's sitting there with his fiance, and he goes, man, he started tearing up. And he goes, man, I have interviewed with so many mainstream media outlets, and they're all full of shit, and nobody will tell the truth and nobody will release, like, what I tell them. Congress didn't pay attention when I testified in front of him. And he goes, I literally looked at my fiance, and he's like, man, I just wish the Sean Ryan guy would just reach out. And he goes, I pulled my phone up and you had just messaged me. It was the first thing I saw. And he goes, there was like, it was like God answered me, like, right there in that moment. And I was like, holy. Like, that's not a coincidence. There are no coincidences. I don't believe in coincidences anymore. But. But so I get these, like, signs, like, all the time, or if I feel like I should be. If I'm questioning something, he'll throw out a sign and like. Like. Like the Joe Jescu interview. Me and Jeremy are sitting at the airport and I'm telling them, like, I don't know about this. It's the first time I had ever brought somebody to do an overwatch for me because I was nervous, you know, I was like, oh, I don't know if we should be doing this. We're with NATO. We should. Barbaring a security guy.
Tucker Carlson
NATO? They're just peacekeepers.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, right. Just by their building. The.
Tucker Carlson
Come on, relax, relax.
Sean Ryan
They're on a NATO base in Europe.
Tucker Carlson
And the tranny army.
Sean Ryan
But anyways, I had. Sometimes I just tweet out something that pops in my head, right? So I tweeted out, the truth is, like a lion, you don't have to defend it. Set it free and it'll defend itself. I tweeted that out.
Tucker Carlson
I like that.
Sean Ryan
And I had this debacle going on in my head. Like, should I be doing this? Like, am I doing this for the right reason? Is this guy. Does he need to be heard? Or is he just some type of a Russian shill? Walk out of the lounge. This is all, I don't know, five minutes. And this woman comes around the corner and she has this huge lion head on her shirt. Like this big sequence, glittery lion head. And that's what was in my head and what I had just tweet it out. And to me, I mean, probably everybody will call me crazy, but to me, I'm like, that's the sign that I needed to see. Like, I just articulated this. And you. You don't see too many people running around the airport with a big lion head on their shirt, like a massive lion head.
Tucker Carlson
My reaction is not that you're crazy. My reaction is I need to get off my phone sufficient to see signs. They're all around me because they're everywhere. Agree with you completely. And I feel like the phone is an instrument of distraction and evil. Really, though, I, you know, I couldn't live without it. I need it for my job. It allows me to live where I want. And they're talk to my wife and children and all that, they're upsides. But in general, I feel like I miss everything. If a sign happened, it would. It would really have to come by text message or I wouldn't see it.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. Well, are you. I hope you do that. But.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah, I've been thinking about it a lot. Are you self consciously not on your phone? Sometimes, yeah. What's your phone regimen?
Sean Ryan
6:00Pm it goes on airplane mode.
Tucker Carlson
6:00Pm Yep. You're not on your phone after 6:00pm Other than.
Sean Ryan
Other than if somebody on my team text is text me. That's. And they would text for an emergency. I just. It's not airplane mode. It's like. I don't know, whatever.
Tucker Carlson
Like this. Whatever. I don't know what it is either, but it screens out.
Sean Ryan
Nothing comes to me, so. Except. Except my assistant Jeremy and family and so I don't mess around on the.
Tucker Carlson
Phone after 6:00pm 6:00pm man, it's like 1985 life.
Sean Ryan
I mean, you know, some. Yeah, there. There are. You know, sometimes I'm. Sometimes it happens, you know, if I'm working late or something and I'm. I'm always working. But I mean, I don't, like. I don't mess around on social media or. You know, half the texts I get are just people asking for favors anyways, so.
Tucker Carlson
Only half?
Sean Ryan
Probably. More.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah, more.
Sean Ryan
All my friends I haven't talked to.
Tucker Carlson
In five and a half years is a very short period of time to become as successful as you have.
Sean Ryan
Thank you.
Tucker Carlson
Well, I'm not complimenting you. I'm saying I'm surprised you're not crazier because that's a big change. That's a big, big change.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Short period of time. Don't you think?
Sean Ryan
Well, I think, yeah, it's. It's been a huge change. But. But, you know, I mean, it's just. We're all just humans and some people have a. I mean, like I said, man, I just don't take myself too seriously and. And none of this really gets to me. I. It could all be taken away at a moment's notice and I'm ready to give it back and I'm just. I'm. Alls I'm doing is trying to do good, you know, and so when I'm. I mean, when I meet people like you or some of the other people that have been on the show, I mean, it's. It. There is an aspect like. I can't believe I'm like having dinner with Tucker right now. This is so weird. Like, people would kill to do this. But in the end, I mean, you're just a. You're Just like me, man. Eat, sleep, that's it. And I. I take that approach with everybody I meet. There's nothing. Sorry, Tucker. I love you, but.
Tucker Carlson
No, trust me, you couldn't be. Yeah, I. I've always thought it's very easy to. To get perspective on your life if you can see yourself kind of clearly. It's very hard to mistake yourself for Jesus if you're, like, honest. Do you know what I mean?
Sean Ryan
Yes.
Tucker Carlson
And I. I really look down on people who have delusions.
Sean Ryan
We're just people, man.
Tucker Carlson
Oh, that's for sure. That is.
Sean Ryan
It's sad to watch power get to people's heads. It's really a shame.
Tucker Carlson
So what steps do you take to keep yourself pure of heart? I noticed you haven't been in dc, like, every week.
Sean Ryan
I. I hate dc.
Tucker Carlson
That's where all the power is.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, well, I'm not interested in power.
Tucker Carlson
Don't you want to rush toward it like a bug light?
Sean Ryan
No. I've been asked to. To. To run for something, but I just. I just have no interest in it.
Tucker Carlson
What are your goals at this point?
Sean Ryan
My goals are to. Whenever I exit this, I want my family to be set for generations. I want my team to be set for generations. I want to continue to help them. And I just want to show that there's a lot of us out there that think on the same page, regardless of what the media says. And I think I am a. This sounds weird talking about myself like this, but I think I am. For whatever reason, I think I am just the average, uneducated, no college degree guy in the country that. That can talk to people.
Tucker Carlson
Wait, you don't have a college degree?
Sean Ryan
No.
Tucker Carlson
Oh, I wish I'd known that before I set up this interview, but I don't. Wow. Wow.
Sean Ryan
I'm just a. I'm just a average guy that. That has a hard time understanding stuff, and I don't let my ego get in the way. I don't pretend like I know that I don't know. And if I don't understand, then I ask questions. And it helps. Everybody that watches my show understands something because it's dumbed down to a level that the majority of America can digest and comprehend.
Tucker Carlson
You listen carefully. Having gone on your show, I think that's the key. You listen very carefully. Most people do not do that. So you don't go to D.C. because you think it's disgusting. You think power corrupts. It doesn't just enhance.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, definitely. I mean, I. You know, it's also like, none of these people will be talking to me if I didn't have a show, obviously. So it's. It's. It's like. I don't know, man. I just. I don't like it.
Tucker Carlson
I was amazed. Amazed to find out. I don't know if it's public, but you came very close to booking Kamala Harris. How'd that come about?
Sean Ryan
Well, I mean, I. Who was the first candidate? I think was either Desantis. I think now Desantis wasn't in studio, and it's the only zoom interview I've ever done.
Tucker Carlson
What'd you think of him?
Sean Ryan
I mean, as far as, like, a person. I didn't. It was very. It was like 15 minutes, man. So I don't. I don't have a gauge. I like a lot of the stuff that he's done down in Florida, pretty much all of it. And. But that I know of. I don't know everything, but. But I had said at the beginning, I'll interview any presidential candidate. I don't care what side they're on. I'm not going to blast you. But I think it's important that people know who that person is, whether we talk about politics or not. Like the rfk, we talked about his heroin addiction and all that kind of stuff. And. And, you know, it gives you a little more background on what. What. How they grew up, what their values are as a person, not just some sound bite, you know, that's fed to them. And. And so I wanted to interview people on the other side of the fence, too. And. And I really wanted Kamala to come on. And so I think it's Kamala, whatever. And I think that's irrelevant.
Tucker Carlson
As it gets racist. You just call it Kamala.
Sean Ryan
But. But. So we got in touch with her camp. We didn't hear anything. We did a couple of press releases and just to maybe pressure her into it a little bit. And she took it seriously. And. And she watched. I was told. She watched. She spent the night going through particular interviews and liked the way that I interviewed and liked my style, and she wanted to do it. And they asked, you know, what do I want to talk about? And I said, well, I think we should definitely talk about the Afghan withdrawal and the Taliban funding. I'm pretty much initiated that entire conversation that developed into what it is. And me and my guests, and they didn't want to talk about that. I said, well, it's. It's going to look bad on me if I don't talk about that, because I've been hammering this damn Thing for a year now. Over a year, I think. And. But I was like, all right, well, what do you want to talk about? Do you want to talk about national security? They're like, what do you think you disagree on her the most? On told them. And what was it? The. The gender stuff with kids? That was my biggest thing, you know, and I know I don't really care about adults, you know, that do it, but you can't give a kid the keys to do that, you know, at that age. And eight years old, I mean, eight years old, was it Washington? That's like, the state will come in and take your kid from you if you. If you don't do it. If they want to. I mean, what is. Why even have parents at that point? I'm sure they don't want us to have parents, but.
Tucker Carlson
Exactly.
Sean Ryan
But anyways, I said that, and. And, you know, they were like. It got to the point where I just said, look, I don't even care. I was like, how about you just give me the outline and we'll do it that way? I don't care. Like, I know how to do an interview, and I'll make it work, and I'll find my. My groove and whatever you give me, I'm confident in my abilities. And. And they were gonna do it. And then. And then the Brett Bear interview came out with her, and it just fell off the map. Just quit talking to us. So. I don't know, you know, because Brett.
Tucker Carlson
Asked her, like, a single question she didn't feel like answering.
Sean Ryan
I don't. I don't know. I mean, I don't know what it was.
Tucker Carlson
How do you think it would have gone?
Sean Ryan
I think it would have gone. I think it would have gone no matter what they handed me for the outline or if I created my own outline, that the questions would have been blaming Trump for everything. Even if it has. Even if it was nothing to do with the question, I think it would have just been, trump did this, Trump did that. What about Trump? Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump. You know, and. And I don't think I would have gotten any of her views or solutions or initiatives or anything. I think it would all been just flipped around and pointed back at Trump.
Tucker Carlson
Do you think it's possible there would have been, like, a spark of warmth between the two of you?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, I do.
Tucker Carlson
Really?
Sean Ryan
Yeah. Because, I mean, I, I. No matter who it is, I'm going to treat the guests with respect. And. And I think that's. I just, you know, in, you know, on top of that, I Mean, do I like her? Do I agree with anything that she did? No. But I also know that there's an aspect of media that I'm probably not getting the full picture, and so I want to hear them out.
Tucker Carlson
Good for you.
Sean Ryan
But it was never going to be like a gotcha or a combative interview. You know, I wouldn't have done that. I've never done that. I'll challenge people on stuff, but I'm not going to get into some type of a bickering contest. And you know why? Because I just. I'm. That's just not who I am.
Tucker Carlson
You had a pretty ferocious job before. We had enough of that.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Interesting.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Is there anyone you wouldn't interview?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, there's people I wouldn't interview. I don't interview people that. I mean, kind of said it earlier, you know, I don't interview people that are on the circuit. I don't really give a. About your new book that's coming out. I don't care. There's plenty of other podcasts that can do that. I just. What, you know, what I look for other than that, because that's different. Those aren't my values that we obviously differ on probably just about everything, but I just. I just look for good people that are doing something in the world that aren't getting recognition or aren't getting traction, and I think would be a good role model. And that's. That's who I bring on the show. And. And that's. That's one of the things I'm good at, is being able to take somebody who nobody's ever heard of, ever. And people tune in. People will tune in because it's fresh material, it's good people doing good things, and. And they finally get the exposure that they needed to actually get some type of traction.
Tucker Carlson
And what, you interview Trump for? Hours, I think. How long was that?
Sean Ryan
One hour.
Tucker Carlson
One hour?
Sean Ryan
Yeah. A little over. Was. He was like, I don't know, 70 minutes or something.
Tucker Carlson
What'd you think of him?
Sean Ryan
I really liked him. I really, like. I did. Wasn't expecting him to be as personal as he was, you know, and me and my. He met everybody on my team and made it a point to. It wasn't like, shaking somebody's hand and talking to his assistant or. Or, you know, it was direct eye contact. Wanted to meet the entire team. There was three NFL stars in there that came in to meet him, and as soon as I walked in the room, he, like, didn't care about him. Came right over, introduced himself I mean, it was very personable. And then after the interview, sat down in a room and talked with us and it was really. I was happy and I was more happy that he treated my team with respect and because, you know, you see a lot of people that are like, oh, you're just the fucking help. And it's like, no, that's like, who makes the whole thing. So, you know, and, and so I really appreciated that, you know, it was. You never really know what you're going to get with, with.
Tucker Carlson
How do you think the administration is going so far? How about this?
Sean Ryan
I think there's some really. Look, what do you like?
Tucker Carlson
What don't you like?
Sean Ryan
I like that they got rid of the DEI stuff. Yeah, I think that was low hanging fruit. I think that, you know, they fixed it really quick. I, I don't think we need to harp on it anymore and let's move on. And, and you know, I just interviewed Tom Holman. What he's done with the border seems really impressive to me. So I'm really happy about those things. I'm not happy that the Epstein files have not come to fruition yet.
Tucker Carlson
I'm sure they're coming out any day now, wouldn't you think?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, I won't hold my breath. But, but I think that. I think we still need a lot of work, a lot of work. And I am losing hope.
Tucker Carlson
Why? What specifically makes you feel hopeless?
Sean Ryan
Oh, man. I mean, who's controlling our country and the influences and why haven't we seen these things? And it makes me skeptical, you know, and, and I, I don't hear it's, you know, some of this is. I may just not know, you know, because I don't, like I mentioned, I don't pretend to know everything that's going on and I don't put the time in that I would need to, to, to figure it all out. But you know, there's things like the energy grid and it's like, man, like we really need to fucking do something with our grid like yesterday. And.
Tucker Carlson
But is that more important than bombing Iran?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, yeah, it is. And yeah, you know, that, that stuff. And, and you know, I get, I mean, I don't know, I want to know like, what the real motivations are. And, and I love everything he says and the majority of everything that he says. But, you know, I'd like to see the Ukraine, Russia thing finally come to an end. And, and I like what they've done with Doge. I think that maybe they, maybe they've got a little bit More than they need to. But you know, there's always human error with everything. But, you know, and look, I'm just, it, I'm just, I'm gonna get blasted for this. But you know, I mean, what I see all these negotiations going on in the Middle east and then I don't know when these buildings were approved or when these deals got done, but then I also see like, oh, there's a brand new hotel going up in Dubai or Abu Dhabi and another one going up in, in Doha, I think. And, and I'm like, did these like just get done also with the deals that just happened over there or was this earlier? I don't, you would probably know.
Tucker Carlson
No, I don't know.
Sean Ryan
You don't.
Tucker Carlson
I've not made $1 in the middle East. Not one.
Sean Ryan
Well, I mean, I mean if you're a lot more, more on the inside than I am.
Tucker Carlson
No, no, I'm just a, I'm just a visitor and a traveler and a watcher. But I don't, you know, there's.
Sean Ryan
That stuff kind of worries me. You know, it's, well, it seems like corruption. Yeah, but, but, and, but you know what, you know, like bothers me more than any of this shit is that people have just lost the ability to critical think. And, and if you do say something about the tariffs or is it Greenland or Iceland, I can't even remember, or whatever.
Tucker Carlson
The big one.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, if you do, if you throw any criticism towards any, and not just, not just Trump, but any, anybody that is in a position of power. I mean, the US has just become so tribal now and it's, it's, you cannot criticize or, or, or give any constructive criticism to what's happening without getting blasted and sad. It's like, man, like you guys have 100% lost all critical thinking skills. Like you're not thinking on your own and you are given the values that you align with, you're no longer going off the way you were raised or what's true to you as a person. I think a lot of people don't even know what that is anymore. And they're just told, they're told they align with a tribe. Whatever that tribe says they're going to do, they're going to say they're going to follow. And that's sad. And I think that that could resemble the beginning of the end.
Tucker Carlson
I agree with every word and I, I can't help but note because I was there for it at the beginning of the Internet. We were told that all of this information would make us better informed and would increase our critical thinking abilities. And that people wouldn't have to follow the propaganda because they would have all the information. And the opposite has turned out to be true. People seem much easier to control than ever before.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
And that makes me sad. So back to the. The heaviest thing I think you've said, which is that you don't believe that anything's real. And again, I think most people can understand where you're coming from when you say that. One of the effects of that is to make everyone, like, really, really paranoid when it turns out that, you know, most of the things derided as conspiracy theories are real. Like, clearly the explanation for 911 is silly. Clearly, you know, and we're never going to find out any of this stuff. And so I think a reasonable person concludes, like, man, there's a lot going on. I don't get. There's a lot of secret stuff. There are a lot of actual conspiracies.
Sean Ryan
It's everything, though. Like, I gave, you know, I'm not. I take a minute to process. And so when you're talking about, oh, you know, what. What's fake, and I brought up, like, Covid and something else that everybody already knows. Right. But. Or at least most people already know. But, I mean, when you look at the elections, you know, in. Not just the U.S. you know, but let's look elsewhere. Let's look at Romania and what happened there, and they just. They just yanked this guy. Yep, yep. You're done. Marie Le Pen. I mean, we were close to interviewing her. Me too.
Tucker Carlson
In fact, I think we were in Paris at the same time.
Sean Ryan
We were. And, And I mean, when you see that, it's just like, holy. Like this is spreading. Or maybe it's not spreading. Maybe it's just always been like this. I don't know. But, you know, so obviously those were. Obviously those elections are phony, you know, and the EU is getting involved, and France is getting involved and Romania is getting involved, and it's like, holy man. Like, everything seems to be engineered. The guy in Bolsonaro in, In Brazil, another example, you know, and it's, it's, it's the, the. The. The Ministry of Truth. I don't even know if that's still a thing. But it's like the. The what? The Minister. The Ministry of Truth. You kidding me?
Tucker Carlson
The 2020 election. I mean, I was kind of skeptical. I was there right in the middle of it, and I thought, well, you know, if there's evidence it was stolen, I'll. I'll believe it, of course, but I don't see any evidence or enough evidence to say that conclusively. And then the last five years, traveling around, seeing other elections, watching our country more carefully, it's like, that was totally fake. I can say that, I think, with confidence now. But. But here's my point. You, who I do think are one of the rare people just, like, committed to saying what you think is true, committed to remaining independent, right or wrong. Like, you don't want to be influenced, you want to reach your own conclusions, and you want to be awake enough to see signs from God. And I admire all of that. But now you are supposedly part of the conspiracy.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Because you were a CIA contractor. So, like, what does that mean, to be a CIA contractor? How did you get that gig? What did it entail? Are you still in touch with headquarters trying to subvert democracy?
Sean Ryan
No, I wasn't involved in any of those operations. No. I mean, look. I mean, the road. I left the SEAL teams to start business and failed miserably. What kind of business I wanted to do. Funny, I actually read Donald Trump's book in Guantanamo Bay when we were doing some stuff in Haiti back in 2004, and it was his book, how to Get. How to Get Rich.
Tucker Carlson
Wait, you read Donald Trump's book in Guantanamo bay?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, in 2004. And I think, no, it's whatever. Somewhere around there. And I read that book and I hadn't. I mean, I was on, like, a mini deployment. We were just. We were in Panama doing some stuff with the Panamanian special ops guys. Then the Haiti thing popped off that when we yanked Aristate out of there, and. And. And then we were going on the real deployment. And so before I even really deployed in the SEAL teams, I decided this isn't all it's cracked up to be, at least for me, and so I'm just going to do my time here.
Tucker Carlson
What was disappointing about it.
Sean Ryan
There wasn't enough combat.
Tucker Carlson
Really? You wind up on a SEAL team in the middle of two wars and there wasn't enough combat for you?
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Okay.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, I didn't see near as much as a lot of guys. I saw a decent amount, but. But, you know, I went in to, like, do that job, and I wanted to do it all the time, and I was not doing it all the time, and so I left. But you've quit a metabolism, but you.
Tucker Carlson
Wind up on the SEAL teams and you're, like, kind of bored.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, but it just. It wasn't. It just wasn't what I thought it was going to be. And, and then I had an opportunity to screen. Not saying I would have made it, not saying I wouldn't have, but had it. Everybody, I don't mean I had the. Everybody gets the opportunity to scream for six, for Team Six if they want it. And I just, I was, I was like, well, that's, you know, that's the next level. But it's another five year commitment if I do it. And what if it's the same that I have here with just a bitter budget with more cool toys? And so I decided that I, I, I decided, no, I'm gonna get out and be the next Donald Trump and businessman. And got out, started a small real estate thing, failed horribly.
Tucker Carlson
Where was it?
Sean Ryan
St. Louis, Missouri.
Tucker Carlson
And went to do real estate in St. Louis.
Sean Ryan
Well, my family's from there.
Tucker Carlson
So what, South Florida wasn't available at the time or something?
Sean Ryan
No, just went home and Just in time for Ferguson. Yeah, it was too. I actually got a great picture of me, Ferguson with the Molotov cocktail. But as a joke after it happened. But, but anyways. And so then my dad and I, we're gonna actually start a Jimmy John's franchise. And I didn't grow up with money and we needed some, so I said, hey, I said I would never do this, but overseas contracting is a big thing and it's paying pretty good. So how about if I just do that, I'll get the money that we need to start it and then I'll quit and we'll start that venture.
Tucker Carlson
Wait, you went overseas as a contractor to pay for a Jimmy John's franchise?
Sean Ryan
Yeah. Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Amazing.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. And then 2008 head.
Tucker Carlson
Do you know Jimmy John, by the way?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, I met him recently. Great guy. I love talking to him.
Tucker Carlson
Good dude.
Sean Ryan
Yes.
Tucker Carlson
At the Elk party, I think you met him, actually.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And we found out a couple times. I really like that guy.
Tucker Carlson
Did you tell him that you went by, you became a military contractor so you could pay for one of his franchises?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, but, but that didn't happen. And where did you go? What do you mean?
Tucker Carlson
Your first. When you first left to do overseas.
Sean Ryan
So where I first went, I did a. Because I didn't, I didn't understand exactly how contract contractors. I, I didn't know the game.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah.
Sean Ryan
And so there are different tiers of contracting and they have, they take your background and there's all these different, you know, there's the DEA contract, there's the ATF contract. Or not atf. Excuse me. There's the agency the nsa, the State Department, all. There's just all. There's all kinds of contracts that you can jump on. And I had no idea what I was doing. I thought it was all like one tiered system. And so I threw my name in in this kind of recruiting thing. And they came back. There was a company called Armor Group and out of uk and they picked me up first. And I was like, all right, well, whatever. This seems pretty low level, but they wanted to make me like a guy in charge because of my background. And I was like, all right, fine, I'll go do this. So I went and did the tryout, was complete joke. And then got to Afghanistan. And it was. They put me at the front gate of the. Of the embassy. And I was like. I lasted about a week. And I was like, hey, give me a flight home. I'm out of here. This is like, I'm not. I'm not gonna be.
Tucker Carlson
You thought you were boarding the seals?
Sean Ryan
Yeah. And, well, I mean, then that's where all the V bids go off to the car bombs. So I was like, no, I'm not doing this. And one home and got into a fire academy, didn't like it. And then a friend called a fire.
Tucker Carlson
I mean, to be a fireman, to.
Sean Ryan
Be a firefighter, because I really missed the camaraderie. And. And then a friend of mine that I served in Afghanistan with called me up and said, hey, there's a contract that Blackwater has and I think you should try out for it. And I was like, no, I'm not doing it. I just did a quick pump. I hated it. I was with a bunch of guys that don't know what the hell they're doing. Some of these people were like, bank of America security guards. I was like, this is crazy. And he goes, no. He's like, hey. He's like, everybody on this contract has to be from Special Ops. It's a black contract. I can't tell you who it's for, but just give me your resume and I'm gonna try to get you in. And so I was like, all right, fine. Gave it to him. And then got a call from Blackwater and just told me where and when, where to be and what to bring. And it would be, what did they.
Tucker Carlson
Want you to bring?
Sean Ryan
It was just, you know, you need these type of clothes, you need this type of equipment and show up here, go all the way to the back to the black side, and it'll be a month long course if you make it. And so I showed up And. And did the, did the vetting course at Blackwater.
Tucker Carlson
At Blackwater, North Carolina.
Sean Ryan
Yep. And. And made it.
Tucker Carlson
What'd you think of the vetting course?
Sean Ryan
It was tough.
Tucker Carlson
Really?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, it was tough.
Tucker Carlson
Having been through buds, you thought it was tough?
Sean Ryan
It wasn't tough like that. It wasn't like you have to prove. Well, you do have to prove yourself. It wasn't like a. They're not yelling at you and screaming and kicking you around and all that kind of shit. It is a demonstration of your skills. And if you cannot demonstrate your skills to the highest level, then you go home and.
Tucker Carlson
What kind of skills?
Sean Ryan
Shooting skills, driving skills, close quarters combat. That's entering a room and clearing buildings and rooms and stuff. Working with the team. How do you integrate in with all these other special ops guys? And. And so there's a lot that goes to it, into it. A lot of. They put you in a lot of extremely stressful situations and you, you have to handle it flawlessly or you'll be asked to leave. But the shooting qualifications were really tough. Really? Yeah, yeah, yeah. The shooting qualifications were really tough. And so is the cqb, the close quarters combat. So like one, one of the exercises, they had this thing called the hooded box drill. And they basically put you in a room like this and they would tape a square and you have to, you have to stand in the square and they give you either a rifle or a pistol and they have like fake flashbangs going off, smoke, yelling, screaming, role players. And they put a hood over your head on a string. So this hood goes over your head. You can't see anything. It's dark, there's strobes, there's all kinds of going on. You can hear like all these screams and all this stuff going on. And you are not allowed to leave the box. And so they set up the scenario and they lift the hood over your head and then you have to deal with the scenario. So like I think the very first scenario, put the hood over my head, there's all these people in there. I can hear them. And I left. They lift the hood up on the string and there's a guy like closer than for me to you right now with a gun, with a rifle. As soon as the hood goes up, he snaps my head. You're wearing a helmet, but he snaps my head with a, with the muzzle of his rifle. We call it a muzzle snap and, or a muzzle strike. And it knocks me back. And then there's all these people in there that this guy's armed. This Guy's unarmed, there's a female over there with a burk on and you don't know what's underneath and you got another guy with a person with a gun in their head. People are shooting at you. And you have to deal and process all that information. Not killing innocent, not killing unknown, and deal with the situation. And then, and then they call you back to your box, back to the box. And it's very unemotional. They're, they're not, they're not like, hey, you could have done this better or why didn't you do that? It's either get the fuck out of here or we're going to run a scenario. And then you come back to the box and they put the hood back over your head and then lift the hood and you're in a totally different scenario. And it might be, it might be the next scenario they lift up. Nobody's shooting at you, everybody's calm or people are yelling and shit and shooting their guns up in the air. And you, you have to figure out who's a threat, who's an unknown, who's an innocent, who's a, who's a blue helmet, which would be a, an asset of ours. He obviously can't kill the asset. And, and so they run you through a number of scenarios. They're doing that. A lot of, a lot of people, you know, fail that. So.
Tucker Carlson
But you did not fail.
Sean Ryan
No.
Tucker Carlson
Did you enjoy it?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, it was challenging. I like it, I like to be challenged and really like it. It's really hard to put you in, in an environment that can be as stressful as what combat is. And, and, and you know, when you're in combat, I mean, the decision making has to be on point and very precise. And they did a great job of simulating that kind of stress that you're going to deal with when it's actually for real. And so I thought it was a great drill.
Tucker Carlson
What kind of guys were at the training facility?
Sean Ryan
All former SOF. So it was all SEALs, SF, Delta, DEV Group, couple of Rangers, MARSOC, which is Marine Special Ops, Air Force CCT, Air Force PJs. I think that covers it.
Tucker Carlson
So highest, highest level that the US Military produces.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. And you had to, you had to have that background just to be able to try out for this specific contract.
Tucker Carlson
What was the contract?
Sean Ryan
That was the, they called it the OGA contract, which was the CIA contract.
Tucker Carlson
What's OGA stand for?
Sean Ryan
Other Government Agency.
Tucker Carlson
So then what, so you get it. So are you still thinking about Jimmy John's at this point or has the box drill just wiped out from your memory?
Sean Ryan
No, no, I was still thinking about it. But so, yeah. So then at the end you find out that it is for CIA and you'd already had your, your new clearances done and, and they give you dates, kick out the door.
Tucker Carlson
How long was the commitment and where did you go?
Sean Ryan
There's no commitment, at least not that I remember. But first trip was to Kabul, Afghanistan. And you can do kind of, I mean, Blackwater I think had 60 day minimum deployments. So you could do up to maybe 100 something days. And so some guys go and they do 100 something days. They come home for a week and then they're right back out. And there's guys that do 60 on, 60 off. And so you just kind of come up with your cadence and, and go.
Tucker Carlson
What were you doing for CIA and Kabul?
Sean Ryan
So when I started this, it was a protective unit. And so like the guys that fought in Benghazi, those, that's the, that's the, the program that I was in. And so it kind of started off as a protective type detail for, for actual operatives because there is no, I mean, there is no Jason Bourne over there. That's why they need people like me, because it takes two people to be a Jason Bourne. And so we would help case officers plan their operations, plan their meets, stuff like that, conduct and then conduct surveillance, conduct counter surveillance, get them kind of whatever they need. And at the beginning it was, and I wasn't really near the beginning. I mean, I think I started contracting in 2007. So the war had been going on for what, about six years. And so towards the beginning, I guess, but you know, it was real pain in the ass because, I mean, at the beginning of the war, you know, you had all these case officers coming in and, and they're fresh out of school and they don't really understand the environment that they're in. They don't think they need us until they need us, and then they're screaming for us. But a lot of case officers and chiefs of station and deputy chiefs of station, that would be the head guy and head CIA and country, they, they, they kind of saw us as a hindrance to their operations until started happening like Benghazi coast, a lot of these tragic events that happened. And then every once in a while you'd get like a really good. It's sorry. So let's backtrack a little more. So you get a lot of these and then you get the old timers that are coming in from the Cold War and they're used to working in a semi permissive environment or a permissive environment where they don't need that kind of. They can just go and meet their assets and drink their coffee.
Tucker Carlson
They were in Vienna in the 70s.
Sean Ryan
Exactly, exactly those types. And then they go to Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Pakistan, you know, all these type of places. And they, they bring that mindset with them. And it's like, hey bud, that isn't going to work here. So these people hate you. And. But every once in a while you'd get a guy who was a retired Green Beret or a retired special operations Marine or a SEAL or whoever, and they would, they would look at the, at the, the program that I was in and they would, they would, they would realize, like, these guys are all special ops. Like they have a lot of capability that we're not utilizing them for. And so then things started getting added to the plate. You know, they're like, hey, could you guys do X, Y or Z? And we're like, oh yeah, we can do all of that. We just. You guys just don't utilize that capability. Because I don't think you realize that everybody here is extremely capable.
Tucker Carlson
Not mall cops.
Sean Ryan
And. Yeah. And so then they started using us for all kinds of stuff. And, and it, it was. Some places were interesting. Some place was. Were. Or an Xbox tour and meaning you just sit around and work out and play Xbox, but kind of depending where you're at.
Tucker Carlson
So what was the most interesting.
Sean Ryan
How it all kind of works and some of the meetings that you sit in on and, and, and you know, from a personal standpoint, I've always been fascinated with how people live and extreme poverty and, and, and to see, like, just to see it, experience it and, and, and be a part of it, try to blend into it was both a challenge and very fascinating.
Tucker Carlson
How long did you do this gig?
Sean Ryan
Right around, I think it was a little less than nine years.
Tucker Carlson
Nine years?
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Oh, it's a long time.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. Yeah, I took a little break.
Tucker Carlson
What did you think of the CIA?
Sean Ryan
Once again? Same. Same kind of thing. And that I thought of the SEAL teams. This isn't what it is cracked up to be. Like, here's an example. First day I get there and just trying to get the lay of the land. And so. And I don't want to like talk too much because there are some very capable people and, and the end. Like us, like you get in the country, you don't even do anything for the first two weeks. They're like, here's a map. Here's some keys, other keys over there so you don't burn any of our cars. Take a different one every day. And you need to know this entire city, every back road, every road name, every venue, everything, every thing about the city you need to know. And if you don't know it in two weeks, then you're out. And so you pair up with another guy that's never been in country and you just hit the roads and you know everything about that city.
Tucker Carlson
Kind of dangerous. White guys driving around Kabul. Pretty obvious.
Sean Ryan
It is. I mean, it is. You don't always dress up like white guys, but, you know, in a place like Kabul or Baghdad, there's diplomats from every country. There's State Department, CIA, nsa, dea, FBI, and the equivalent of that in every NATO country. Right. So there's diplomats everywhere. So sometimes your cover might be your diplomat and State Department. And sometimes depending on where you're at, you might be dressed up, up in Muslim garm. And I mean, they trick the vehicles out so they look local. And, and so it's, I mean, you can blend in. You're not going to, like, you're not going to blend in, you know, running around the streets. Right. But you'll, at first glance, it'll pass. And so that's what you do. You learn everything, everything, everything about the city. I know a lot of these places better than I know my hometown.
Tucker Carlson
Nine years. So what countries were you working in over that period?
Sean Ryan
I spent the majority of my time in Yemen, Iraq and Afghanistan.
Tucker Carlson
What's Yemen like?
Sean Ryan
It's my favorite place to work.
Tucker Carlson
Why?
Sean Ryan
Because it is the poorest country in the Middle east and probably the most dangerous. And it was, I just, I loved, I felt like I was doing more there than anywhere else. And it was. You had to take trade craft extremely seriously. Very tribal country. The north is completely different than the south. And you had to learn the cultures of both so that if you're operating in the north, that you know how to dress like the northerners do. You have to dress like how the Southerners do down in Aden. And, and, and, and try to blend in. And, and, and it's also like a spy game there. I mean, the Russians are there, the Iranians are there, the Chinese are there. And so you're trying to figure out where they're operating out of what their safe houses look like. Chinese are always super easy to identify because you would just be passing through Yemen and all these mud huts or safe houses and, or just houses and you know, you drive by the Chinese compound every single time, they have 120 antennas on the roof. It's like, nice one, guys, but it would get, I mean, and it's, it's, it's. So you're, so you're conducting, you know, normal operations and dealing with terrorists and assets and all that kind of stuff, you know, for the main initiative. But on the other hand, you're also having to conduct surveillance and counter surveillance from the Russians, from the Chinese, from the Iranians and any other key players that are in those countries and have to know who's who. And, and, and, and, and they're spying on us and we're spying on. It's, it's, it's very complex.
Tucker Carlson
Did you chew gut when you were there?
Sean Ryan
No, but I bought some.
Tucker Carlson
But you never tried it.
Sean Ryan
No, I never tried it.
Tucker Carlson
But the whole country is hooked on it, right?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, you would, you would, you would. I mean, it's. Yeah, you would see these guys and just the whole, the whole population and I mean, they would just be so zonked out on that. You see, I'm in a shitty taxi drive with they're not even blinking and flies are landing on their eyes and it's like, holy shit, man. People live like this. This is crazy. And, and yeah, it was. You just never know who you're going to run into over there either. I mean.
Tucker Carlson
What do you mean?
Sean Ryan
I mean, I was, I would like other operators, like, I'd see, I'd see guys that are in safe houses from other units that are over there and, and I would see like their call sign up on the, on the board. And I'd be like, is that who I think it is? Oh, I haven't seen him since like buds when I was in the SEAL team. And I'd call over there and be like, hey, get, get up on the roof. I want to see him. We'd have a phone conversation, looking at each other, waving from rooftop to rooftop like, what? Go over and meet him? What are you guys getting into tonight? And they'd be running operations and killing bad guys. And, and it was just, it was very unique and complex to be able to work there.
Tucker Carlson
So you probably knew the Houthis existed before the rest of us.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
What do you think of the Houthis?
Sean Ryan
I mean, I don't really follow up on it too much these days, but I mean, they took over that damn country and in no time, I mean, they yanked the. I can't remember if he was a president or a prime minister or whatever. But they took the whole country when we were there in like a matter of hours. And so they were, they were really effective and woke up one day and all these new checkpoints are out. The. The guy got yanked out of the palace by the Houthis and. And on. Totally different dynamic in less than 24 hours.
Tucker Carlson
Were you ever afraid when you were there?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, a lot.
Tucker Carlson
Did Americans ever get hurt when you were there?
Sean Ryan
No.
Tucker Carlson
Interesting. You went up in Latin America?
Sean Ryan
We, we got shot at a lot and. Car bombs at the gates and like that, but not, not any heavy casualties? No, no deaths.
Tucker Carlson
How'd you wind up in South America?
Sean Ryan
Well, when I left, I was very addicted to adrenaline and went down to Colombia I'd always wanted. When I joined the SEAL teams, I was really inspired by the Vietnam generation. I just like, was infatuated with that stuff as a kid. Watched all the documentaries of all the SEALS in Vietnam and, and Green Berets and I, I just wanted to do jungle warfare. And so the closest I could get to that was running counter drug operations out of Columbia when I, when I joined the SEAL teams. And then, you know, 911 happened. So definitely wasn't going on, wasn't going down there. And so I had broken. Broken up with a girlfriend and I was like, you know what? I'm gonna go down there and check it out. And so I went down there for a little over a week. Loved it. At the time of my life, doing nothing, Christian based and where Cartagena is where I started and then went home, had a surgery, and I was sitting at a bar in Cape Coral, Florida, listening to a bunch of lazy, entitled Americans talk about their opinion of the war and all this other. I just got so tired of listening to the. On. On people's opinions that had never been there and never done it and never lost anybody. Probably had never even faced any type of hardship in their life. And they're just judging me and all my friends. And I was like, you know what? I'm out of here, man. So I put my house on the market and went back down to Cartagena, stayed with a friend. The Secret Service scandal happened down there, remember that?
Tucker Carlson
Yep.
Sean Ryan
And which kind of like put it on the map for, for people to come visit and. Yeah, to go do bad things and, and it became like, very Americanized. And I was like, I don't want to be anywhere near Americans at all. And so I, I checked a lot of spots out around Colombia. I went to Cali, I went to Pareda, I went to Medellin, and then camped out in Medellin for about four years.
Tucker Carlson
And doing what?
Sean Ryan
Doing what? Doing. Living a rock star life and a lot of cocaine, a lot of girls, a lot of. Basically, what I was doing was chasing my adrenaline, and because I wanted to feel that all the time creates some type of imbalance in your brain when you have that many adrenaline dumps and you. It's. It's very much like a heroin addiction. And so I went down there and I started doing a lot of that I shouldn't be doing, buying drugs. That became a big rush. Buying and sourcing and cocaine, and. And so that's how I would get my thrills. And what were you.
Tucker Carlson
Was that what you were doing for a living?
Sean Ryan
No, it wasn't for a living, man. It was. It was for the rush. And so, you know, I've talked about this on a couple of other podcasts, but, you know that there's a lot of, like, rumors going around there that I was down there working for CIA, setting up these drug networks, when, yes, they do do that, but, no, I was by myself on my own program. And I've always been fascinated with narcos and. And kingpins and cartels. And it's like. It was. It was a major rush for me to go into the worst neighborhoods in Colombia and start setting up networks. And it. I mean, it's extremely dangerous for a gringo to be. I would go in neighborhoods where there were. You couldn't get into the neighborhood without going through at least two checkpoints. And. And so I would just. I would go in there, I would hang out, I would talk to people, I would buy drugs, Cocaine, bringing it back to my place, do them all, then go get more. Go get more.
Tucker Carlson
What does cocaine cost? And five bucks a gram, so about a twentieth of what it costs in the United States.
Sean Ryan
Yep. And so what I saw, you know, back to my entrepreneurial brains is, you know, what it was going to be is, you know, you get. I mentioned that, you know, Secret Service kind of put sex vacations on the map for.
Tucker Carlson
Which is not technically their job for.
Sean Ryan
Rich white people to come down there and. And take advantage of that and, you know, down there, I mean, prostitution and these type of things are not looked at like they are here. It's an actual legitimate career. And. And so you get these guys that come down and. And that's all they want to do, and they want cocaine, but they're all scared to talk to the Colombians because I think they're all cartel and they're all going to chop your head off. And so what I was going to be was an intermediary and, and basically.
Tucker Carlson
Sort of the maitre d of Medellin.
Sean Ryan
Like, I'll deal with all these people and I'll get you what you want and you can just talk to me.
Tucker Carlson
For a fee.
Sean Ryan
For a fee.
Tucker Carlson
Did you do that?
Sean Ryan
No.
Tucker Carlson
Why?
Sean Ryan
Because I got sloppy and I got ran out of there by the Colombian version of the FBI.
Tucker Carlson
Did you get a jail down there?
Sean Ryan
No. As soon as I caught wind of it, I left. And. But I built. I built a network from the ground up. And so just like how I was telling you, I take care of my team right now and I want the best for them and, and I treat them with respect and very giving. I was like that down there. And so starting with the doorman, you know, I mean, I would live in these penthouses at the top story of the building, wherever I was at. And I would make friends with all the guys that were at the door because they control who comes in and out of the building. And so if I went to the grocery store, they got groceries. If I bought cocaine, they got cocaine. If I went to go get booze, they got booze. If I went to go get pizza, they got a pizza. And so I just took care of them all the time because I knew it would get to the point where they would watch my ass.
Tucker Carlson
Yes.
Sean Ryan
And. And so I did that and built a great rapport with them. And then, you know, nobody knows town better than taxis. And so I would take taxis and take taxis and try to develop relationship with different taxi guys that were not scared to go into Barrio Antioquia, which is kind of the worst neighborhood down there. And, and I would have my girls help me make decisions and, and tell me about the different taxi drivers that they used to pick them up from the clubs and stuff like that when they were done working or partying or whatever. And, and so I developed a really good relationship with a couple of different taxi drivers. And they would show me everything I need to know all the places that people don't want to go where, and I would get in with them and then I would get in with the dealers, and then the dealers would introduce me to their mid dealer and then they would introduce me to their guy. And, and the network grew so big that if I went to other countries, they would know who I was.
Tucker Carlson
And what were you doing for income?
Sean Ryan
Well, I made money contracting, and your money goes a lot farther down there than it does in the US So I didn't really need any until I blew it all. But. But so story goes. So that's what I did and got in a lot of really hairy situations where I didn't know if I was going to come out. Didn't really care if I did. I kind of had the Hunter S. Thompson mindset where if life gets too boring, then I'll just check out. And it was starting to get boring down there. I'd OD'd a couple times.
Tucker Carlson
And what's a cocaine OD like?
Sean Ryan
So cocaine OD is, you know, when you. I remember my best friend was down there for a little while with me, and. And I would always think, oh, I probably did too much. I'm gonna die. And he got tired of me being paranoid about it, and he goes, look, he's like, you don't need to worry about ODing on cocaine until things start slowing down. When you're on speed and things get slow, that's when you're really riding the line. And that had happened to me a couple times where. Sounded like my voice was in slow motion. The people next to me that I was talking to all of a sudden sounded like the Will Ferrell thing, where I was like. And I'm like. And you can't talk. You can't get the words out that are in your head. And. And that's when you know it's about time. The lights are going to go out. And. And they did go out.
Tucker Carlson
But how do you recover from that?
Sean Ryan
Lots of volume.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah, exactly.
Sean Ryan
Lots of volume. Xanax, stuff like that. And. And so. So I developed these. Everything got boring to me. So the women got boring. It sounds weird to say that because it's like, you know. But it did. It was like. There's nothing that you could say that I had not done. And that got me to go deeper in and go to more dangerous places and.
Tucker Carlson
Doesn't sound weird at all. It sounds absolutely right. There's no satisfaction in that. Of course it gets boring.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. And so then I started looking up the most dangerous places in the world, and I looked up the most dangerous place in the world, and it was San Pedro Sula and Honduras. So I went there and started to try to develop a network there just for the rush.
Tucker Carlson
What was that?
Sean Ryan
Like, got almost arrested on the first night, so it didn't last long.
Tucker Carlson
Were there other Americans down there in Honduras?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, not at that time. Which I thrived off that. It made me feel really alive, like, oh, this is like uncharted territory. Nobody comes here because they're scared to death.
Tucker Carlson
Did your dad ever text you to say, hey, what about the Jimmy John's franchise we're supposed to be doing now?
Sean Ryan
Because 2008 happened, and. And so that it got called off at the very beginning of my contract career? And. And, yeah, and he went on to do other things. And. Yeah, so. And I was. I was frustrated, but the money was really good contracting, and so I kind of got, like, stuck in this loop of like, well, I'll just go over there, make a bunch of money, and then do whatever the hell I want to do. And. Yeah, so. So anyways, so the last thing that got me. And I was talking to my dad, too. I knew I had a problem. And I. I'm really close with my parents. My dad's my hero. And I would call them all up on coke or Valium or Xanax or Hydrocodine or Oxy or whatever, and there's always her drunk. And I would allude to my dad like, I gotta get the hell out of here. I'm gonna die. And. And I wouldn't remember a lot of these conversations. I'd be totally blacked out. And he was trying to get me to go get some help. And I lied to him, told him I was talking to this Vietnam guy about my experiences, and I was. But that guy was a total mess, too.
Tucker Carlson
And he was there for the same reason.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, exactly. No, this wasn't in Columbia. This was actually in Fort Lauderdale. And.
Tucker Carlson
Same difference.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. And. And I had. There's this place called. What was it called? Pointe de los Locos or something? Which Bridge of the crazies. And so it's like all these, like, look like la. Lots of tents under an overpass and crazy drug addicts who have no direction in life, who are dirt poor and had a bunch of girls with me. And I went to that bridge and it stacked up a ton of cash and thought it would be a great idea to throw all the cash up and just watch these people, like, go to town to try to get it. And very, very dangerous part of Medellin. And came back to my building, walked through, and the doorman came up and told me that. That the national police had come to question him about me and one of my passport and all the. And wanted to know who I was, where I came from, what I'm doing, all of that stuff. And I was pissed. I was like, man, and the guy's name was Freddy, and talking to him in Spanish, and I'm like, man, I always take care of you. I Can't believe you would. You would try to suck more money out of me on this story. And he's like, no. He was trying to tell me that they had bugged the light outside my door, which I couldn't understand. My Spanish wasn't that good. But eventually I got what he was saying, and I was like, this is complete. There's no way. And he showed me, he said, they have a picture of you at the bridge throwing money in the air. And I just come from there. And so at that point, I knew that he wasn't lying. I was like, okay, literally nobody knows that I did that because it was like, 45 minutes ago. And the only people that would know is my taxi guy and the girls that were with me and the crazies that were living under the bridge. And so he had said that they had set up a observation, basically an observation point at the building across from me and were watching me from that apartment. So I went up and identified it where it was, flushed all the coke and went back into my previous life on surveillance and counter surveillance. And I did a. A counter surveillance route to a couple of different Internet cafes, bought a couple of tickets to different places outside of the country and hauled ass to the airport. Got. Got out of there and never went back.
Tucker Carlson
That day.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Was decisive.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
It's your hooded box training.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. Yeah. So that's. That's. That's. That's how that ended.
Tucker Carlson
How long between that moment and the beginning of your podcast?
Sean Ryan
Not long. Oh, the podcast. Probably a couple years.
Tucker Carlson
So it. That wasn't that long ago.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
You were leading a life that bears no resemblance at all to the life you're leading right now.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
At all.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. It took. It took a lot of work, you know, and it took a lot of work to clean myself up and. And find a productive direction to start running. And, And. And once. Once I discovered business, that became my new addiction.
Tucker Carlson
What do you make of the claim that you're still working for CIA?
Sean Ryan
I think it's. I mean, whatever. People are going to think what they think, but people don't understand how it works over there. And so, I mean, there's a part of me that understands it. I'm like, all right, like, I didn't really come out of nowhere. You know what I mean? I mean, a lot of people say, like, oh, this guy just pops on the map and, like, gets ginormous. And it's like, you didn't see all the back end work that it took to get here. And I started this in my attic as a one man team and then taught my wife how to film. And it was me and her and we only did nine interviews for the first year and a half because I was editing sound video, cutting previews, doing social media packages, doing distribution, doing the research, interviewing, you know, all of that stuff. And so I mean it, I think it's, you know, it really pisses me off is when somebody that I am paying attention to because they're bringing things out that I'm into, they're going down rabbit holes and conspiracy stuff that a lot of time winds up to be true. But then, and I think we're all on the same team and then I'll see him throw something out like Sean Ryan's a CIA shill and it's like dude, I just, I was like totally fucking bought in on what you're bringing to the table. And all of your research, it was like really good stuff and I thought it was trustworthy. But when you throw something like that out there, you've just discredited yourself me. Because you have no proof because I'm not one. And now I don't believe anything that you say because if you're just going to loose lip throw out there like that then what else are you throwing out that you.
Tucker Carlson
I've had similar experiences.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
I do think that people are paranoid because it is true that the CIA operates against, you know, the constitution, against the law in the United States and does try and shape news coverage. Like that's a fact.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, no, I mean I'm, I'm, I, I know that that happens and, and, and happens all the time but at the same time, if you've listened to me, I've been extremely hard on CIA and I've talked about things that, that they have done that make me very paranoid after the interview. Like we, I can't remember if we discussed that an hour ago or if that was last night at dinner. But I mean I, I there it, it that, that, that happens and all the time all over the world. But you know, I, but nobody is ever able to pinpoint exactly why they think that. They just throw it out. Of course like, like there was, it really grew traction after I interviewed the founder of Palantir and because I mean people think that's a big war machine and, and losing my train of thought here. The military industrial complex type company and, and, but I mean guess what buddy, like we need innovators and we have to innovate. We can't just be doing the same old and I want to know how we're innovating our military capabilities and our, our intelligence capabilities. And that's a big part of it. And it, you know, to be honest with you, it gives me comfort knowing that we are still innovating as much red tape as we have to deal with. And I, I think that that's what, that gives me, a glimmer of hope when we're talking about global domination and China and all that kind of stuff.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah.
Sean Ryan
And people don't even under. I don't know why Palantir has such a bad rap. Maybe you know something that I don't. But I mean, to me that was genius. It speeds up the decision making process, it speeds up the intelligence gathering. We're able to access information, you know, lightning speed to be ahead of whoever our adversary is.
Tucker Carlson
I mean, people are mad at Palantir because they disagree with U. S. Foreign policy. I think that's kind of the main. From what I can tell, I'm hardly an expert on the subject, but I think that it's, I mean, not to be a conspiracy nut, but your, you know, public performance over the past five and a half years has, you know, been run counter to the aims of the CIA, I would say. I mean, it has. And so to tell people that you yourself are working for the CIA secretly is a way to discredit you. Yeah, but if I were the CIA, I would be encouraging. I guess that's what I'm saying.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, that's a good point. That is a good point.
Tucker Carlson
I mean I, I very hostile to. See, I said that many, many times. It doesn't stop people from claiming that I secretly work there.
Sean Ryan
Yeah, so.
Tucker Carlson
And I've always thought that maybe that was.
Sean Ryan
I mean, I've challenged people too, because I, I think about it, I mean, it would be impossible, you know, I mean they might, they might have somebody in operative do a five hour interview and they might say, hey, this is all we need you to get in that interview is this one sentence. And so the whole other five hours could be complete except for the one little thing that they want injected into that interview to create some type of a narrative. And I'm always trying to look out for that, but it would be impossible, it would be impossible to figure out what exactly that is if, if that operative is good and they'll do other things like they may do other things like, hey, we know that this happened. You're going to go to this show and you're going to talk about this and then two weeks from now that's going to come out in the media or we'll wait until the interviewer releases that specific episode. And then two weeks after we're going to release this to the press. And then they're going to say, this was said on this show by this person before it ever came out of the media. And then when it comes out in the media, because. Right. Everybody hates the media, but they still fucking watch it all the time. That builds credibility to the operative, you know what I mean? And then they, and then, and then.
Tucker Carlson
They, oh, I know what you mean.
Sean Ryan
Okay, you're tracking.
Tucker Carlson
So I, I'm watching it all around me. So do you feel that, have you ever had a guest where you thought, huh, yeah. Really?
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
That this person might be.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Acting on behalf of an intel agency.
Sean Ryan
About a couple of them.
Tucker Carlson
Any confirmation on that?
Sean Ryan
No, you know, gut instinct. I don't want to name a bunch of names because if they're not, I don't want to, of course, you know, but I, I just did a really good interview with this guy Blair. I'm Scoro, who was an asset. He got recruited out of prison, and then he got recruited in prison by the CIA to right after 911 to make friends with all of the Muslim Brotherhood, all the terrorists that were in there. And so he built a network in there. And then when he got out of prison, and so he would report back to the agency about like, hey, this is what this guy has done. This is what he's a part of. These are the people he talks to because they all trusted him. Because this guy basically became like the head moolah of the prison system. And when he got out, agency gets back in touch with him and said, hey, you're going to use this network and you're going to, your, your, your cover is going to be you're building a Al Qaeda cell and Macedonia. And so he, he would set up shop in Macedonia and he would go into Pakistan and go into Afghanistan and Syria, Iraq, Iran, all these, Russia, all these places, and he would meet with the head, the head of the Haqqani network, the head of the Taliban, the head of Al Qaeda, like very, I, I, he didn't meet specifically with bin Laden, but he's like one step away and so dangerous job. No kidding, man. That's the real Jason Bourne right there. And what he would do is say, hey, you know, I'm recruiting because I'm setting up a terrorist cell in Macedonia. And then they would give him all of these weapons. They give him bombs, rocket launchers, guns, mines, Smith, when you name it. And then basically what he would do is tell him that that shipment is. Is. He would take care of logistics and to get that to Macedonia. But what he would really do is get it to the Agency, and then supposedly they would destroy it.
Tucker Carlson
What do you say? Supposedly they would destroy it.
Sean Ryan
Well, who knows? You know, I don't know, but. Because I don't trust them. But the. So then he has an assassination attempt. CIA cuts him, he gets pissed off. He's still pissed off, rightly so. At the same time, I'm like, how do you think this works, man? Like, you got burned. They don't use burned assets. Like, you're irrelevant at this point. And then he started telling me about getting uranium out of Russia. And so we kind of had this discussion. And, you know, Russia is a big. Obviously a big topic of discussion. Some people think we should be in Ukraine, some people don't. And. And some people think Russia is our allies, some people don't. And. And I'm kind of like, this isn't really our war. Why are we involved? But. But he had. I said, well, what are they going to do with these? And he said that they wanted to get him into the US and it would blow. It would kill half a million people. And I asked him if he thought he'd done that. And. But it didn't really fit in the interview. It didn't fit. You know what I mean? Did not fit in the.
Tucker Carlson
Do I know what you mean? Yes. In fact, I was just thinking that.
Sean Ryan
As you were speaking, like, we're talking about all these other things.
Tucker Carlson
I don't trust this for a second.
Sean Ryan
And then all of a sudden we get to Russia, and so I just called him right there on the interview. I was like, you know what goes through my mind? I said, when's the last time he had contact with CIA?
Tucker Carlson
Was exactly what I was just thinking.
Sean Ryan
And he said, January 16th or something in 2022. Like, knew the exact date and got really flustered. And, I mean, I would probably be flustered, too. Somebody just called, said that. And I. I wasn't, but I said, you know, what goes through my head is, what if somebody contacted you knowing you were coming on the show to say that you were getting uranium to Al Qaeda to sneak into our country to blow us up? A lot of. A lot of people want to see us go to war with Russia.
Tucker Carlson
Did he tell you that Iran was trying to assassinate Donald Trump, too? No, that's my favorite. Now Iran is trying to assassinate Donald Trump. Yeah, okay.
Sean Ryan
But. But I called him on it because it didn't fit in the interview. And it was almost like I lost my opportunity to insert this into the interview. So now I got a swing for the fence and just drop it. And it just immediately clicked in my brain. And then I got paranoid again. I'm like, jeremy, you go, sorry, buddy, you gotta switch your phone out. Like. Like you've been texting with this guy who knows what came in. And. And. But, I mean, you never really know. It's going to be a gut instinct, you know? And so. But I wanted to say that out loud because if they're watching, and they probably are, then they know that I know that I'm a target.
Tucker Carlson
So I'm a little bit shocked. I sort of knew the rough outlines of your life, but I didn't realize, like, 20 minutes ago you were living in Colombia, and then you're on the. I mean, this just happened not 20 years ago, like seven years ago.
Sean Ryan
Yep.
Tucker Carlson
So that's got to be one of the hardest pivots, one of the most profound transformations I've ever seen. I don't really kind of know anyone who's come this far in a separate direction in such a short period of time. You're not even 50. Where do you think it goes from here?
Sean Ryan
Who knows, man? I do want to say something, though. You know, I think a lot of people think that kind of. That I was doing down in Colombia is cool and it's adventurous and. Yeah, there was a lot of a journal, and it was a good time.
Tucker Carlson
It was definitely adventurous. But good or bad, I think we can say that was adventurous.
Sean Ryan
But, you know, it. It was a. I mean, who knows where I would be if I didn't do that? And I would have started this earlier, you know, and. And it's just no way to live. And everybody that you think is your friend is fake, and everybody just wants to take advantage of you. And once you get through the initial phase of. Oh, man, this is, like the coolest life. It's the loneliest life that you can lead, and it almost died because of it. And several times. And. And, you know, how would it have turned up if I would have OD'd in one of those penthouses? And my parents, who I love so much, and finds out, oh, yeah, there's our son, the Navy SEAL, CIA contractor, decomposing in a penthouse in Colombia because he OD'd on cocaine. And that scenario went through my head a lot of times. And so I just. You know, I just I don't want to encourage anybody to do that. That was a low point in my life and something I'm not proud of. And you've been a, I would say.
Tucker Carlson
Pretty vocal advocate for sobriety.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
In this job, how many guys who work for you are sober?
Sean Ryan
Almost the majority of the team. I think there's two guys that drink.
Tucker Carlson
Do you think sobriety is going to catch on as a way to.
Sean Ryan
Absolutely. I think it's already catching. There's a. There's a huge wave. It's like the new thing to do, it seems like.
Tucker Carlson
But truly sober, just like not using pills, alcohol.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Do you think we're in the middle of some kind of Christian revival?
Sean Ryan
Absolutely, 100%. I mean, have you seen. Have you seen the baptism parties that are going on at. At colleges that look like. It looks like it's a kegger crazy tailgate party and they're baptizing people in the back of the back of trucks and. Yeah, I think there's a huge wave going on.
Tucker Carlson
I think so too.
Sean Ryan
It's cool to see.
Tucker Carlson
Do you think the US Government can continue?
Sean Ryan
Continue what?
Tucker Carlson
To exist. Think the current system can continue?
Sean Ryan
I think it will continue.
Tucker Carlson
You do? Because it does feel like we're moving towards something.
Sean Ryan
Like a one world government.
Tucker Carlson
I'm not sure what. I'm not sure what, but it seems like so much change in a short period of time. The scale's falling for so many people realizing that what they believed was real is not questions people are asking. The resurgence of Christianity in the country, I mean, it all seems to be happening at once. And I know, you know, in every age, people think the end is near, but does that ever occur to you?
Sean Ryan
I think it will. I think it will continue to exist until people no longer have the appetite for it to exist.
Tucker Carlson
You think? We're pretty far from that.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. Goes back to critical thinking.
Tucker Carlson
Yeah, maybe that's right. Last question. Because I can't resist. I know you spent a lot of your time talking about this, but having fired every firearm, been trained on every firearm. What are your favorite firearms?
Sean Ryan
Favorite firearms? Yeah, I like lever actions.
Tucker Carlson
Come on, you're.
Sean Ryan
Now I do too.
Tucker Carlson
They're my favorite.
Sean Ryan
But like, I mean, I'm tired of all the tactical black gun. I mean, that's. That was my life for 14 years, you know, and. But I have a lot of them. But I don't get excited about them. I get excited about lever actions. Now if you're gonna ask me, you know, it's the fan, what am I going to it definitely isn't going to be my lever action. It's going to be my ar because I know that like the back of my hand and it's a tool that I'm really good with, so.
Tucker Carlson
But when you shoot for fun with just open sights.
Sean Ryan
Yeah. Okay. You know what I really like is I don't even know what it's called, but it's a revolver. But it's the. You know, you lift a little thing up and you have to load it one by one. Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Like, what is that, the 12 shot.22s that they. The cowboy guns.
Sean Ryan
I got a.45 long Colt one.
Tucker Carlson
Is it just single action?
Sean Ryan
Yeah, dude, I love it. I can't hit a damn thing with it. But.
Tucker Carlson
And it's got the pin that you push the.
Sean Ryan
Yes.
Tucker Carlson
The holes out with you.
Sean Ryan
Yes. I love that thing.
Tucker Carlson
Really?
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Talk about your life going for full circle. So you went from like, you know, some high tech Kimber to a single action.
Sean Ryan
Yeah.
Tucker Carlson
Cowboy gun.
Sean Ryan
I love it.
Tucker Carlson
And you went from the AR platform to the lever. What do you. What. What do you prefer the lever gun chambered in.357.
Sean Ryan
I knew I liked 357. Revolve. Same ammo, sidearm and long gun.
Tucker Carlson
That's. That's my. That's my favorite pair. Right. And I. I could see beneath the. Beneath the fame. I knew that you were the kind of man who preferred.357.
Sean Ryan
I love it.
Tucker Carlson
The straight wall cartridge. Amen. Sean Ryan, thank you very much.
Sean Ryan
Thank you.
Tucker Carlson
Congratulations.
Sean Ryan
Thank you. It was an honor being there.
Tucker Carlson
You're one. You're one of the people. And this is not true for everybody, but every time I see some marker of your, like, continued success, I. I am thrilled. I'm thrilled by it. And I mean that.
Sean Ryan
Well, that means a hell of a lot.
Tucker Carlson
I'm not joking at all. I thought. And part of it is just like my narcissism because I saw you, because my nephew sent me a clip from you and I was like, that guy's really talented. I like, knew instantly I knew you'd be successful. And the fact that you had no background whatsoever, I didn't quite realize how far you're back. You did not go to the Columbia School of Broadcasting. Your natural ability to interview people and to listen to them and to empathize with them, it just came right off the screen. I was like, that guy's gonna be a star. And you have been. And I just find it thrilling.
Sean Ryan
Thank you, Todd.
Tucker Carlson
Thank you.
Sean Ryan
It means a lot.
Tucker Carlson
Thank you.
Sean Ryan
And congratulations. On all your success as well.
Tucker Carlson
It's been cyclical. Oh, and alp. Can I just say, I never do this. I am proud to call this man an ALP user.
Sean Ryan
Thanks. I love it.
Tucker Carlson
We want to thank you for watching us on Spotify, a company that we use every day. We know the people who run it. Good people. While you're here, do us a favor. Hit follow and tap the bell so you never miss an episode. We have real conversations, news things that actually matter. Telling the truth, always. You will not miss it if you follow us on Spotify and hit the bell. We appreciate it. Thanks for watching.
Podcast Summary: The Tucker Carlson Show featuring Sean Ryan
Episode Title: Shawn Ryan: Biden’s Cancer, Kash & Bongino on Epstein, & CIA Attempts to Infiltrate Podcasts
Release Date: May 20, 2025
In this compelling episode of The Tucker Carlson Show, host Tucker Carlson engages in an in-depth conversation with Sean Ryan, a former CIA contractor and podcaster, delving into a myriad of pressing and controversial topics. The discussion spans from the health status of President Joe Biden to intricate conspiracy theories involving the CIA and technological advancements. Below is a detailed summary of the key points, discussions, insights, and conclusions drawn during the episode.
[00:37] Sean Ryan:
Sean Ryan acknowledges seeing the news about President Biden's alleged metastatic bone cancer, expressing skepticism about its legitimacy based on his understanding of urological assessments.
[00:39] Tucker Carlson:
Carlson presents the claim that Biden has metastatic bone cancer, labeling it as a lie that has been concealed by his doctors for years.
[02:10] Sean Ryan:
Ryan references Lindy Lee, a staffer who appeared on the show to discuss how millennial staffers have been running the government, suggesting a lack of transparency and leadership at the top.
[03:32] Tucker Carlson:
Carlson expresses frustration with the democratic system, asserting that regardless of who is elected, foreign and economic policies remain unchanged, and certain scandals remain concealed.
[03:56] Sean Ryan:
Ryan introduces skepticism about the official narrative that Jeffrey Epstein killed himself, pointing out the absence of charged end-users in sex trafficking cases.
[05:03] Tucker Carlson:
Carlson echoes conspiracy theories, suggesting that Epstein's death was a blackmail operation orchestrated by the CIA, Israeli intelligence, and possibly others, aiming to control and manipulate powerful individuals.
[07:03] Tucker Carlson:
The conversation shifts to the persistent threat of violence against U.S. presidents, using the JFK assassination as an example of masterminded fear and control by intelligence agencies.
[25:03] Sean Ryan:
Ryan discusses anti-gravitic propulsion systems and next-generation energy technologies, expressing belief in their existence despite mainstream skepticism and attributing these advancements to spiritual influences.
[41:33] Sean Ryan:
The dialogue transitions to artificial intelligence (AI), with Ryan voicing concerns about AI being beyond human control and the potential for misuse by foreign entities, emphasizing the need for robust energy grids to support AI development.
[43:17] Tucker Carlson:
Carlson raises concerns about AI vulnerabilities, such as hacking and misinformation, questioning the reliability and safety of delegating critical decisions to AI systems.
[33:17] Sean Ryan:
Ryan opens up about his tumultuous past, detailing his involvement in overseas contracting, specifically in Colombia and other high-risk environments. He recounts his struggles with addiction and his transition to podcasting as a means of seeking and spreading truth.
[50:35] Sean Ryan:
Discussing his daily regimen, Ryan emphasizes the importance of prayer, family time, and maintaining a disciplined routine to stay grounded amidst his investigative pursuits and personal challenges.
[54:42] Sean Ryan:
Ryan elaborates on his podcasting approach, highlighting his commitment to humility, focusing on guests rather than self-promotion, and creating a relaxed and authentic interview environment.
Notable Quote:
"I look for good people with good hearts, especially when I do something like a life story. I’m looking for that guy that’s grinding, that is not getting any traction with his business, who served the country and put him up."
— Sean Ryan [02:51]
[85:03] Sean Ryan:
Ryan expresses deep skepticism about the integrity of the current political and intelligence systems, questioning the authenticity of elections and the hidden agendas influencing global politics.
[89:58] Sean Ryan:
He voices a loss of hope in the system, attributing it to the secretive control of societal mechanisms and the pervasive lack of critical thinking among the populace.
[93:56] Tucker Carlson:
Carlson concurs, reflecting on the internet's initial promise to enhance critical thinking but observing that it has instead made people more susceptible to control and manipulation.
[94:23] Sean Ryan:
Ryan underscores the importance of fostering critical thinking to prevent societal collapse, emphasizing that a lack of independent thought makes populations vulnerable to conspiracies and authoritarian control.
Notable Quote:
"And it sucks to see that and to know it. And I mean, you know, Covid... everything seems to be engineered. The guy in Bolsonaro in Brazil, another example... it's the Ministry of Truth."
— Sean Ryan [153:09]
[133:53] Sean Ryan:
Ryan recounts his dramatic life changes, from involvement in dangerous overseas operations to battling addiction, and ultimately finding purpose in podcasting and spiritual faith.
[141:00] Sean Ryan:
He reflects on his journey towards sobriety, emphasizing the importance of humility, self-awareness, and genuine human connections as pillars for maintaining mental and emotional stability.
[157:07] Sean Ryan:
Looking ahead, Ryan expresses uncertainty about the future but remains committed to ensuring his family's security, supporting his team, and continuing to expose hidden truths through his platform.
Throughout the episode, Sean Ryan presents a narrative intertwining personal adversity, covert operations, and a quest for truth against perceived systemic corruption and manipulation. His discussions challenge conventional media narratives, urging listeners to adopt critical thinking and question established institutions. The conversation also explores the intersection of technology and ethics, particularly concerning AI and surveillance, underscoring the complexities of modern governance and security.
Final Quote:
"I think the current system can continue until people no longer have the appetite for it to exist."
— Sean Ryan [157:56]
This episode serves as a thought-provoking exploration of contemporary political and technological issues, filtered through Sean Ryan’s unique experiences and perspectives. It invites listeners to reflect on the integrity of their information sources, the transparency of their leaders, and the ethical implications of advancing technologies.