Escaping the Drift with John Gafford - The Power of Giving and the Fight Against Exploitation with Paul Hutchinson
Episode Date: July 22, 2025Paul Hutchinson, a successful entrepreneur turned passionate advocate, joins us to shed light on the urgent issue of child trafficking. From his transformation from a wealthy businessman to a determin...ed rescuer of children, Paul's journey is both heart-wrenching and inspiring. As an independent producer of the film "The Sound of Freedom" and the author of a forthcoming book by the same name, Paul offers a unique perspective on the global crisis of child trafficking and the pressing need for proactive measures to protect vulnerable children. He shares how a mission to rescue over a hundred children in Colombia profoundly changed his life, redirecting his focus toward impactful philanthropy and meaningful action. Our conversation explores the intersection of wealth, philanthropy, and societal responsibility, with Paul reflecting on the mentor's advice that spurred his commitment to giving back. By dedicating a significant portion of his income to charitable causes, Paul discovered a new sense of purpose and fulfillment, challenging conventional notions of wealth and success. We delve into the societal impacts of technological advancements, the importance of open family communication to prevent abuse, and the hidden dangers lurking in digital interactions. With heartfelt personal anecdotes, Paul emphasizes the crucial role each of us can play in combating trafficking and exploitation. Listeners will also gain insight into Paul's transformative experiences during healing retreats, which shaped his approach to both his personal and professional life. From confronting personal demons to gaining a deeper understanding of empathy and interconnectedness, these moments illustrate the power of introspection and growth. As we navigate topics ranging from religious affinity fraud to the importance of finding true happiness through giving, Paul's story serves as a poignant reminder of the profound difference one person can make in the world. Tune in to be inspired and motivated to join the fight against child trafficking, armed with knowledge and compassion. CHAPTERS (00:00) - Rescuing Children From Trafficking (04:14) - Philanthropy, Wealth, and Giving Back (14:54) - Advancements in Technology and Society (19:46) - A Rich Playboy's Heartfelt Transformation (32:14) - Protecting Children From Human Trafficking (35:23) - Online Dangers and Blackmail Extortion (39:26) - Sound of Freedom Book Discussion (42:39) - Healing and Transformation Retreat Experiences (55:24) - Religious Affinity Fraud and Morality (01:00:39) - Finding True Happiness Through Giving 💬 Did you enjoy this podcast episode? Tell us all about it in the comment section below! ☑️ If you liked this video, consider subscribing to Escaping The Drift with John Gafford ************* 💯 About John Gafford: After appearing on NBC's "The Apprentice", John relocated to the Las Vegas Valley and founded several successful companies in the real estate space. ➡️ The Gafford Group at Simply Vegas, top 1% of all REALTORS nationwide in terms of production. Simply Vegas, a 500 agent brokerage with billions in annual sales Clear Title, a 7-figure full-service title and escrow company. ************* ✅ Follow John Gafford on social media: Instagram ▶️ / thejohngafford Facebook ▶️ / gafford2 🎧 Stream The Escaping The Drift Podcast with John Gafford Episode here: Listen On Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7cWN80gtZ4m4wl3DqQoJmK?si=2d60fd72329d44a9 Listen On Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/escaping-the-drift-with-john-gafford/id1582927283 ************* #escapingthedrift #paulhutchinson #childtrafficking #philanthropy #wealth #givingback #technology #society #transformation #impactfulphilanthropy #humantrafficking #wealthy #success #employment #advancements #digitalinteractions #sextortion #blackmail #soundoffreedom #healingretreats #transformationretreats #religiousaffinityfraud #morality #happiness #giving #childexploitation #onlinepredators #blackmailextortion #childliberationfoundation #ayahuasca #psilocybin #greekgods #affinityfraud #utah #liberatinghumanity #actsofservice #findingtruehappiness
Transcript
Discussion (0)
you know, how are we not solving this more aggressively?
It doesn't make a lot of sense.
Well, and here's the sad thing too.
It's not just people in power that are involved.
You walk out on your front porch.
I don't care if you're in an apartment complex
or a super affluent neighborhood,
you walk out in your front porch anywhere in the US
and you look left and you look right.
There's a very high chance that one of those doors
is a dangerous place for children.
And now escaping the drift,
the show designed to get you from where you are
to where you wanna be.
I'm John Gafford and I have a knack
for getting extraordinary achievers to drop their secrets
to help you on a path to greatness.
So stop drifting along, escape the drift,
and it's time to start right now. Back again, back again for another episode of Like It Says
In The Opening Man, the show that gets you from where you are to where you want to be.
And today in the studio, I got somebody that's really interesting, man. He uses the same PR firm
I do for my upcoming book, Escaping The Drift. So we're helping the fam out. And sometimes it's
easy to help the fam out
because you get some really high profile folks
come to the studio.
This is a guy who had had immense success in business.
I mean, immense success, huge, huge exits at the age of 29.
And has just continued to build those things
but made it his life's passion to rescue children
that were abducted, taken
into trafficking. He is the independent producer of the largest independent film ever put out,
The Sound of Freedom. He is the author of the upcoming book by the same name, The Sound
of Freedom. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the program. This is Paul Hutchinson. Paul.
Thank you, John.
How are you, man? Super program. This is Paul Hutchinson. Paul. Thank you, John.
How are you, man?
Super excited to spend time with you today.
Yeah, dude, it's gonna be good.
It's gonna be so interesting.
And there's so much to unpack with you.
And it's interesting that it seems like
the universe provides me with the right guests
for the right time.
And the Netflix always tends to be in vogue
and send into the universe.
What is everyone talking about at the moment in pop culture?
And last night me and my wife watched a movie about what happened to Amy.
I don't know her name who got abducted off of a cruise ship on Cardinal.
And I thought to myself, man, if this, if you watch it, it's like,
and I know you haven't seen it cause I just asked you about it,
but if you watch this thing, it's like one person after the next, like, why
are you even on this documentary? Cause it's like, I ran into this girl in a, in a, you
know, a bathroom and Barbados and she told me my name is Amy so-and-so and I need help.
And then I didn't do, I went back to the cruise ship and we had dinner. What, why didn't you
do anything? Why didn't you tell anything? Why didn't you tell anybody?
Why didn't you say anything?
And it just seemed to be this never ending row
of people that sat there and said,
oh, I saw this person, but I didn't do anything.
I knew there was a problem, but I didn't do anything.
And you're the dude that does something, right?
Many times.
Many times.
So before we get to what changed that life,
let's give some color to that early 29 year old exit and what
you did and how your life was then how you got there. Right?
Well, I am. Thank you. I've been super, I'm going to say blessed
in my business world. I was at a very successful company in my
20s. We help people overcome anxiety, depression,
PTSD, addictions, childhood trauma. I owned a company called Midwest Center Marketing.
We, one of our clients was the Midwest Center for Stress and Anxiety, but we had 50,000 people a
month calling in off of an infomercial for them to get help with this program, help dealing with anxiety, depression, et cetera.
And so that was my passion for a long, long time
and sold that at 29 years old for a lot
and many, many, many millions.
And a lot of it was restricted stock,
but I was rich on paper.
So it made me feel good about myself
and started investing in real estate.
Realized if I didn't hire guys smarter than me,
I was gonna lose all my money in real estate
and put together a power team.
John Pennington and I are the co-founders
of a company called Bridge Loan Capital.
Bridger's father?
Bridger's father, huh?
Yeah, Bridger's father and I are the co-founders
and Bridge Loan Capital morphed into what is now known as Bridge Investment father. Yep. Bridge's father and I are the co-founders and Bridge Loan Capital
morphed into what is now known as Bridge Investment Group. I retired just under 20 billion in
asset center management. Now I still retained ownerships and interest, GP interest in the
funds, still get checks even today. But there was 4,000 people who were smarter than me
that were running it just fine and I can can focus full time on philanthropy company is now well over 50 billion in
NASA center management. So I retired almost 10 years ago.
So at what point did you, I mean,
obviously you're running this huge company that's doing extremely well.
And at some point something happened.
To say I can focus on philanthropy is one thing.
You know, philanthropy to me is a rich lady giving money to the opera house in New York
so they can get good seats.
Right?
That's philanthropy.
What you do is a whole other level of that.
So did that find you?
Is that something you sought out?
How did that become your life's calling?
Oh yeah.
I had no idea it even existed.
I will say this, I had a mentor in my early 20s
who said, Paul, if you're gonna go into business,
he said, here's a handful of things
that I think are gonna make a big difference.
And one of the things that he told me,
he said the average person donates about 2%
of their annual income to charity.
He said sadly millionaires donate less than 2% of their income.
He said if you make a decision today that that number isn't 2% it's upwards of 5, 10,
15, even 20%.
He said you can call it karma, you can call it the universal law of exchange, you can
call it God, you call it whatever you want to. There's a higher power, very interest in us doing good. He says,
I promise you, your ability to create will be multiplied. And I said, well, you know,
that's why I want to get rich. I want to get rich so I can be charitable. He said, no,
you should be charitable so that you can get rich. I'm like, what? He says, I'm telling you,
it's a principle that works.
And so here I was in my early 20s,
earning $2,000 a month thinking, okay,
I'll donate 20% of that.
Now I have to live on 1,600 a month instead.
But I truly believe that that decision,
that decision made all the difference.
How does somebody become a partner,
let alone a founder of a $50 billion investment firm?
You're not a University of Utah dropout, right?
That's what I am.
The statistical probability of me being where I am is zero.
The only way I can understand it is that
there were certain things that I did early on,
including that decision to be charitable,
to give until it hurt, made a huge difference.
So fast forward, I mean, I'm donating money to some, you know, guys on the side of the
street asking me for drug money.
I'm thinking, okay, am I making a difference?
I don't know.
I can't judge.
Maybe I could be them if I hadn't had a healthy home growing up, right?
But over time, I recognized that my passion was helping those who were what I'm going to call truly innocent, you
know, a nine-year-old child in a position completely outside of any decisions.
She didn't make bad decisions that made her on the side of the street asking me for drug
money, right?
She's a nine-year-old child in a hospital with cancer, whatever.
So I served on multiple child-related charities.
I was on the Make
A Wish Board of Directors for seven years. I was the incoming chairman in our region
for Make A Wish when I received a phone call from our attorney general. And he said, Paul,
he said, I know you've been very involved with child-related charities. He said, I need
to talk to you about something that's pretty dark.
It's the fastest growing criminal enterprise in the world and good people don't even know
that it's happening. And he started talking about human trafficking, how there's literally
more today than all 300 years of the transatlantic slave trade put together. And then he starts
talking about some operators that he wanted to introduce me to who were helping to rescue children who were in slavery,
being sold in sex slavery in South America.
So that phone call was the beginning of my transformation.
Now, you mentioned something before, and I want to go back to something you said, because
I think it's interesting.
When you said that the majority of millionaires give less than 2% of their income.
When you look back at the tight, the first Titans of American industry,
the Carnegie's, the Rockefellers towards the ends of end of their life,
they tried to out give each other is what it was.
When do you think that shifted from people of wealth being
credible, charitable, and having a responsibility to just being the me culture.
Do you think it was the greed of the 80?
I mean, what do you think?
When was the hinge point that changed that?
Well, here's the extra little piece
that I forgot to mention.
Millionaires donate less than 2%.
Decca millionaires sent to millionaires
and billionaires donate more.
Okay.
Okay, so that's the key.
He said, Paulie says, if you want to be a millionaire, that's fine. You know,
you can, you know, have a D you know, a millionaire in our, our world, really,
you're not living the lifestyle.
Exactly. There's, there's, there's so many people in that space.
However, however,
if you really want to make an impact for multiple generations,
be a deck of million or be a cent multiple generations, be a decamillionaire, be a centimillion,
be a create massive wealth.
And so for me, he knew that I wasn't going to play small.
He knew that being worth a million dollars was not something that was going to get me
out of bed in the morning.
And so he gave me all of these tools. And so, so yes, I do think that, that, um,
the key to really becoming successful is,
is by using some of those multipliers. But you're right. There's, there's,
sadly, there's, there's a lot of, um,
a lot of people who are millionaires that are, that are
still in that state of greed and ego and It might just be fear of loss. That's what it might be. Exactly. Because a million dollars doesn't get you very far.
You know, it's funny.
I told this story to my wife.
One of my good friends is coming into town on Thursday and called like you always do,
invited us to dinner.
We're going.
And last time we went to dinner, they came to town and we went to Delilah and I got us
a table short notice, which is very hard to do if you know anything about food.
And I was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And she was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And I was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And she was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And I was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And she was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And I was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And she was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And I was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And she was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And I was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And she was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah.
And I was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah. And I was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah. And I was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah. And I was like, oh, I'm going to go to Delilah. And I was like, oh do, invite us to dinner, we're going. And last time we went to dinner, they came to town and we went to Delilah
and I got us a table short notice,
which is very hard to do if you know anything about Vegas.
Got us a table right in front of the stage for six,
in front of Delilah and it came around,
he's like, let's play credit card roulette for the bill.
Right?
And of course, me that's, you know,
schedules the whole thing, puts it all together,
dude, I get the bill.
And it was a chunk.
And so we're going to dinner.
My wife's like, you know,
we're not doing that stupid credit card thing again.
I was like, favorite does it, you know, whatever.
And she's like, you know, I love them and that's great.
You know, they came to town and they didn't spend anything
and we set everything up or we ended up having to pay for it.
And I go, but babe, there's no, there's a malice to it.
Like the guy just sold his business for $128 million.
He's not even thinking about a check at a dinner.
He's nothing, right?
You get to a point where you cross a line
of just money never being a thought again.
And I think that's when, for me,
I think anyway, looking at it,
I think it's probably more fear of loss.
Yeah.
When you get to a point, you're like, okay,
there's nothing I could really do to screw this amount of wealth
up, right? I'm just going to ride this out and I'm fine.
Right. And when you get that level of wealth, whatever that is,
there's no number. Everything is different for everybody. I got a
friend of mine that retired in Florida being a traffic
controller that just invested in stocks, owns his house, right?
And just doesn't like, I'll never work again. And he's fine.
He's not, I wouldn't consider him incredibly wealthy, but he's totally happy.
He didn't care. So I think for me anyway, looking at it,
it's about hitting that understanding where people's point of enough is enough
is. And some people, like you said,
come from that ego spot where there's never enough. It's just more.
It's always just more.
Well, I'm, I'm, you know, I have a book coming out in a few weeks.
We'll talk about, but I have one in a few months
that's on, I don't know what I'm gonna call it.
It's basically it's on compassionate capitalism.
And it talks about how our perception of money
is what keeps a lot of people broke.
We think we live in a world of scarcity,
where in reality we live in a world of infinite abundance
and we can create a true win scarcity, where in reality we live in a world of infinite abundance and
we can create a true win-win-win-win.
If people think that the only way that you can make $100 million is if $100 million has
to come out of the pockets of other people, then subconsciously you're going to sabotage
your success if you have any goodness in you at all.
However, if you realize that you can create a hundred million dollars in your bank account
for your family, for your future, while creating two or three hundred million dollars worth
of value in the world, then you understand that we live in a space where literally we
are making money.
We are creating money with our ideas, with our projects, with what we're contributing
to the world around us.
Yeah. I think one of the problems with like the crypto markets is that is a zero
sum game. You have to, somebody has to lose for you to win.
And especially in those meme coin markets and all that crazy stuff,
it just people ask me, Oh, you don't invest in crypto. I'm like, no,
cause I don't like a business where in order for me to win, you have to lose.
I don't like those businesses. right? Um, for me,
it's always been about growing others wealth to see them do well helps me do
well, which is wonderful.
And I think it's one of the unique things about being in the real estate space
is you can change people's lives through either investing or teaching
them how to work in this industry and make money, which is great.
One of the things you talked about when you're book coming up,
the compassionate capitalism, I just, which is great. One of the things you talked about when you're book coming up, the Compassionate Capitalism.
This is totally off script, I just wanna know.
Because I had Perry Belcher in here last week,
his podcast goes up.
Actually, it's running right now.
By the time you hear this, it'll be a couple weeks back.
But Perry, who's very involved with AI,
we were talking about, you know,
he said the stats that are coming out
of some of the reports are 40% of the American public
will be completely unemployable in the next five years.
And that's like scary dystopian stuff to think about.
But he said, you know, I'm like, well,
what's the solution for that? And he goes, well, it's,
you know,
it's going to be some sort of living wage that the government
has to give these people to survive. And I'm like, well,
isn't that just not American? Like,
is capitalism going gonna die here?
Is that what we're looking at?
What says you, Mr. Hirote,
book on compassionate capitalism?
Here's the story that will answer that.
I got this from a good friend of mine, Paul Pilser,
but imagine there's 10 men on an island,
10 families on an island.
And every day those 10 men go out and they go fishing.
And they got their spears, they got the fishing poles,
and it takes them all day to catch enough fish to feed their families. They come back
every day. After years of this happening, two of the women, because they're all more creative than
us guys, right? Two of the wives, they get together and they're like, you know what,
there's got to be a better way. So they come up with this idea, this advancement in technology,
they come up with the idea of a net, right? So they sow it with all the reeds and stuff and
pretty soon their husbands go out and
they're able to catch enough fish to feed the entire island.
Now the immediate problem that occurs on this island is 80% unemployment, right?
Because you got eight guys that no longer have to fish.
Now a dysfunctional system would vote in a government that would tax those two men 80%
of their fish and their other guys would sit around. These guys would have a you know an
income that would be consistent but they wouldn't be doing anything right. A
well-functioning society, one of those men would get better at building huts,
one would get better at building boats, one would get better at learning about
herbs and gardening, one would get better educating the children. Lifestyle as a
whole for the entire island will
increase because of the creativity of those women with the net. Right.
So today, today we live in a world where literally all of us,
all I don't care if I don't care if somebody lives in a one bedroom
apartment, they live better than Kings did thousands of years ago. Right.
than Kings did thousands of years ago. Sure.
Right?
You gotta reach for it.
Hot showers did exist 80 years ago.
So because of that,
realize that because of the creativity
of the women with the net
and everything else in our world,
all of us are living like Kings did
thousands of years ago.
Meaning, as technology continues to displace
those guys fishing every day
and allows them to use their creativity
into more productive things,
then literally globally, globally,
everybody can live as good as you and I do today
in 10, 15, 20 years.
I think you're too aspirational about the ingenuity
of most of the people in this country.
Well, if they choose to be lazy, that's fine too.
They can sit on their asses and not work, if they choose to be lazy, that's fine too.
They can sit on their asses and not work,
but they could be creative.
I agree.
And use their time and say,
oh, I have an extra 40 hours a week.
What do I want to do with it?
Do I want to sit around?
You're welcome to sit around and be lazy, do nothing.
You can sit and meditate, whatever it is.
But if we were productive with our time,
we could create an increased lifestyle for everyone.
But the problem with that is as much as I love the utopian view on everything is if you look at like, look at COVID, right? How many people sat around,
took their checks, did nothing, went and bought Gucci purses, did what, you know,
just did whatever they wanted to do and got real used to not having to do
anything. And I would say that the level of apathy that runs through every
business, every industry, every interaction you have with people
started at COVID and is still not recovered
four or five years later.
So going out and telling all of the people that,
hey, you can't fish anymore now,
so you're gonna have to learn how to build huts.
That to me is the equivalent of when, I don't know,
what presidential nominee was like,
oh, tell the coal miners and the truck drivers
to learn to code.
It just depends on if we have a dysfunctional government
or not.
If we have a dysfunctional government with the tax those two guys 80% of their fist,
then yes, the new advancements are going to keep the entire island as it is.
Nothing will progress and everybody will get lazy.
Yeah.
Well, my thing was, if you give everybody 10 coconuts on the island, aren't the coconuts
worth less?
If they don't work for the coconuts, there's no value to the coconuts.
So, so I don't see how that works.
And I said to him, I said, wouldn't it be easier to go to the corporations
that are, that are automating and doing these things and say, like for every
human being that you outsource or get rid of through technology, you have to
pay a little bit higher tax.
That was my thought.
And you know, that way you're keeping people employed by incentivizing through
tax rebates, right?
Through companies.
And he said, we can't do that
because China's not gonna do that.
He goes and China will just eat us for lunch.
And it was like, oh man, this is a dystopian.
I mean, I'm gonna stop watching Black Mirror now
because this is gonna be terrible and get real.
It's gonna be awful.
But okay, that's just, yeah, that was sorry.
That was a side note.
I was just, I don't know what else you're curious about. Come back on when that book's out and we'll go.. That's just, yeah, that was sorry. That was a side note.
Come back on when that book's out and we'll go. Yeah, no dude. I love that conversation. No, all those things. I'd love that. But let's get back to the matter of him, which is the movie
we're talking about. So you got exposed to this from the attorney general, the problem with human
traffic around the world. And he introduced you to some operators. And I don't know, you know,
again, if you've told these stories a hundred times on podcasts, let's talk about something different.
But you know, I'm more curious in, I don't the actual stuff.
I don't, I know it's terrible.
I know it's horrible.
I can go watch the movie if I want to see it portrayed on the screen.
I can read the book if I want to see it in detail.
I'm more, I'm more concerned or more interested in the thought process in you that you can literally want to place
Financially that you could have done anything in the world and this is what you chose, right?
I'm more interested in that thought. So here you are you hear that this is happening and
Like walk me through the process of talking to your family about what you want to
Telling your friends what you want to walk me through that.
You know, at the time I, I was in a, in a, what I'm going to call a dysfunctional marriage.
You know, we, uh, uh, we didn't have a healthy relationship. I was working 14, 16 hours a day and, and, uh, um, thought that happiness was going to come from one more car, one more helicopter, one more
party and felt some emptiness because of that.
And I was still in my big ego space, you know, 10, 12 years ago, I wasn't Paul Hutchinson.
It was Paul fucking Hutchinson.
I was flat out.
I had a house.
My house had 10 bathrooms, 8 private suites, 7 fireplaces,
3 kitchens and a basketball court in my basement, right? And my basketball court in my basement
wasn't enough. I needed to build the DJ booth in the corner of it. This DJ booth had massive screens and a stage and stripper pulls on
my stage. Yeah, I was out of alignment.
Utah love this folks.
And I was in Utah of all places.
In Utah.
So you know, I get this, I help to fund some of these missions.
And then I get a call from one of the operators saying, hey, there's a whole bunch of kids.
I'm going to go through all the story here, but just on the high level, over a hundred
kids in Cartagena, Colombia, between Cartagena and some of the other cities, we can rescue
them all.
We have this plan, but I need your help.
And I'm like, well, how much do you need?
He's like, I need you.
Can you be in Colombia in two days? He said, I said, why me? I'm no Navy SEAL. I'm
no Green Beret. He goes, yeah, you're a rich playboy. You need a rich playboy. Yeah.
But they can Google and you look fit the part.
I fit the part. I got pictures of me with the hot girls and Ferraris and Lamborghinis
and jets and yachts and all this shit. Right. And, and he said, and I had some training
that made me somewhat safe in a dangerous place, but
the head trafficker had this plan that he wanted to develop this project. He needed some millions
of dollars to do it. We needed to con him into thinking that I was willing to fund it
under one condition if he called all the traffickers and brought the kids together.
So that was kind of the plan there. And I'm like, well, yeah, I'll come down. I'll play the part of a rich playboy. That sounds fun, you know?
An hour later, John Pennington called me. He's my co-founder of Ridge at the time, right? John
calls me and he's like, Paul, I heard about what you're thinking of. He said, have you thought this
through? He said, this is dangerous. He says, you're set.
You can sell out today, buy an island,
be happy the rest of your life.
I said, John, would I really be happy
if I bought an island, if I bought another car,
if I bought another plane?
I said, tell me this,
if I was doing something else dangerous,
if I was climbing Everest tomorrow,
you and I would have the same conversation.
He goes, yeah, we probably would. I said, and when I'm climbing Everest tomorrow, you and I would have the same conversation. He goes, yeah, we probably would.
I said, and when I'm 95 years old, I look back at my life and I'm like, I've climbed
this mountain.
I built this multi-billion dollar company.
I helped on a rescue mission, rescue this many kids.
Which one of them matters?
He said, yeah, Paul, I understand.
He said, if they need you, if you can even, Yeah, Paul, I understand. He said,
If they need you,
if you can even help one,
then you should go.
But that mission changed everything for me.
And I won't go into the details,
but this one, two things changed everything.
Number one was the first time one of the traffickers
was sitting there with him,
and he shows me a picture on his phone of this 11 year old.
I'm like, what the hell? It was the first time where I knew that I was being shown
a child that was being abused and he called her a zero kilometer mile. And I'm like, what the hell?
I mean, it was just so dark. And in the movie, in the sound of freedom movie, you know, my character
is the producer of sound of freedom is Eduardo Verastegui and
he plays a part of the multi-billion dollar fund manager who quits his job to help fund
the mission and rescue kids.
And my character in the movie was like said to Jim Cavie, so I don't want to, I don't
want to go on.
I want to be a part of it.
And it wasn't until he gave a picture of a little girl to my driver that I look at that
picture and I, it changed my, my mind.
I decided to go in real life. I was already there. I was with the traffickers, but him look at that picture and it changed my mind. I decided to go in real life.
I was already there.
I was with the traffickers, but him showing me that picture, I'm like, oh, game on.
You tell me what I told the operators, like, what do I need to do to make sure that little
child is never ever goes down the road that they have planned for?
But then the other thing that changed everything was sitting on a chair
At that rescue mission itself and they had all these kids there and they brought that same little girl out in front of me
She had she had
Braids long red hair braids her makeup was all smeared and she had a kitty cat
It was on her shirt. She was a child. She was 11 and standing in front of me scared to death.
I'm like, how is this okay anywhere?
And at that moment I made a promise to myself,
to my creator God, to that child,
that I would dedicate my life to eradicating that evil
from the face of the earth.
So that's really what transformed me.
I literally at that time I had a, on my vision board,
one of the things that I had had for a long time,
I wanted a Lambo and I had a white Aventadora convertible
with the doors up.
I had the one picked out, I was gonna buy it that spring.
I'd hit a couple of goals and boom,
I always set those things.
I took his $350,000 car.
I told the operator with me, I says,
bro, I said, I'm not gonna buy that.
I wanna write you the check.
I said, I spent my whole life making money,
making rich people richer.
I wanna make a difference.
You tell me what I need to do to help with this mission.
And that's when he very first told me about Jeffrey Epstein.
This was 10 plus years ago.
He says, sadly, there's a lot of guys with this mission. And that's when he very first told me about Jeffrey Epstein. This was 10 plus years ago.
He says, he says,
sadly there's a lot of guys who have big egos,
arrogance, greed, and lust
that are driving a lot of this industry.
He said, he said,
I know you're not doing anything illegal, Paul.
He says, but I'm sorry to tell you,
but you have the look and feel
that these traffickers are looking for.
If you're willing to be the bait, I'll change your whole life.
It's believable for a reason.
Yeah, exactly.
In previous experience is probably the reason.
Yeah.
Jesus, oh man.
So when you, when I hear that story,
and even though you haven't seen the documentary
that I was talking about,
about the girl that got abducted off the cruise ship,
you know, does it even, like, how can you hear, like,
those people that I was telling you about, like,
oh, you know, what am I going to do?
Like, how can that even, does that even resonate with you
as like they're the same species as you?
Like, how, I just, yeah.
How can you be so apathetic when,
when somebody says they need help and not,
and not do something, say something?
This is, this is why a lot of the campaigns, you know, even you, you go through the Atlanta airport, as they need help and not do something, say something.
That's why a lot of the campaigns,
even you go through the Atlanta airport,
every few minutes you hear the,
prevent human trafficking.
If you see something, say something.
That's the key, it's super simple guys, just say something.
Even if you're not gonna take out a blade
and take out all the bad guys, say,
hey, what can I do to help?
You don't have to be John Wick here.
Yeah, exactly.
You just gotta tap on somebody's shoulder.
Exactly.
It looks like they are, they might be.
Exactly.
Man, when this movie came out, it was like two years ago,
I remember there was this lot of this really weird
aggression against the movie.
A lot of people saying, oh, this is nonsense,
this is, you know, this is sensationalized,
this is just fiction.
Like, why, why?
It's because it doesn't fit with the narrative
that big media and Hollywood want to feed us.
And it's because so many of them are involved.
We're starting to see just the tip of the iceberg
with the Diddy scandal, right?
And there are so many people that were involved there
and that's a whole other subject that just pisses me off that he's, you know, he didn't be, they didn't prosecute the way that they should.
There are so many people involved there that there is significant, significant evidence
that Hollywood, a lot of Hollywood elites, a lot of political leaders, a lot of those
people in power positions in the
media are involved in this stuff. And so, you know, we had finished Sound of Freedom. It was
completed five years before it actually was distributed. We got cut off everywhere,
everywhere. So Fox International had the contract because they had helped us with some
of the filming in Columbia and Disney bought them out and locked it. We could not, we could not have
any distribution. So then we had to raise some more money and be able to buy them out and battling
back and forth a bunch of stuff. Then another former Disney exec ends up tying it up for another
six months. It was crazy.
And then after that, then we had gotten blacklisted.
We went into places like Amazon turned us down,
Netflix turned us down, all of these guys.
We turned, we were like, listen,
we just spent like 14 million on this.
Oh, we want, just make us even.
Obviously we did a shitty job.
Nobody likes this movie other than us.
Just make the investors whole.
And we couldn't even get that.
And then finally, when we decided, you know what?
We're gonna take this to the people, by the people.
A grassroots movement with a group like Angel Studios,
who had millions of people who were already supporters
of Jim Cavie, so they did that because he did
Jesus, Passion of the Christ, and they were, they were the ones that put out the, the chosen.
And so we knew that we had a solid audience there.
And sure enough, the only people, I mean, literally we beat out Mission Impossible and
Indiana Jones out of the gate.
Yet the main street media, you couldn't hear anything about it.
If you were just listening to the news, you wouldn't have known that the movie even existed.
The only way that you knew it existed was millions of good people on
their social media pushing that narrative.
You know, again, I just you look at it. From a government
standpoint, like why is you know, when I was watching that
thing, again, the Netflix special, we saw there was a lot
of, well, it's foreign country, there's not a lot we can do.
They have sovereign citizens.
We can't just show up as the FBI
and start questioning their citizens.
I mean, it seems to me the United States
can pretty much do what the United States wants to do
regardless of where it is, if it really wants to do it.
I mean, we did kind of send a SEAL team into Pakistan
to kill Osama bin Laden in his house.
They tell me you can't go grab this dude
that was a bass player on a cruise ship
and ask him questions?
Because he's in Trinidad and Tobago.
I mean, what are they gonna do?
Are they gonna cut us off for the trade war?
It's like, it just seems a little far fetched
that this stuff gets stopped like crazy.
Is there, what could be the turning point
that the government says enough?
Like what do you think needs to happen
for that to happen?
There's way too many people in power who have secrets to hide. What needs to happen is for
good people everywhere to rise up and say, no, the Epstein situation is a perfect example.
We I'm not going to go into all of my theories on that on this show, but good people everywhere
need to demand transparency, period.
That's all that it is, just transparency.
Of course there's no official list, but who was on the planes?
Who was there?
What's on the 14 terabytes of information on all of the videos?
Why did we have a redacted version of the video outside of his cell?
There's so many questions that the American people simply needs to demand transparency.
Once they do, then they will understand why there is so much apathy in fighting this at home or abroad.
Well, I will say it seems very strange that one of the things that Trump really ran on was releasing this stuff.
And now he's sitting in a room going, you're still talking about this?
Yesterday's news.
What are you talking about?
It's like, Whoa, wait a second, man.
You were all about releasing this.
Why the about face?
Yeah, we're not buying it.
The American people is not buying it.
And I think that we're at that turning point now where good people everywhere are saying,
listen, you know what?
I can understand.
You've got the politics about save the trees versus save the wells versus whatever else.
But when it comes to save the children, yeah, this is something we can all get behind right,
left, black, white, rich, poor, doesn't matter.
This is something we can all get behind children are not for sale and should not be used for
blackmail situations ever, ever.
Well, you know, you look at it, there was another Netflix show a couple of years ago,
I don't know if you saw this one,
it's called like, Don't Fuck With Cats or something,
where some guy put out a video on the internet
of him killing a cat.
And like the internet rose up and found this dude
and like basically ruined him over it, right?
And I'm thinking to myself, that's cat.
Now that's a cat. These are kids.
How are we not solving this more aggressively?
Doesn't make a lot of sense.
Well, and here's the sad thing too.
It's not just people in power that are involved.
You walk out on your front porch.
I don't care if you're in an apartment complex
or a super affluent neighborhood. You walk out in your front porch anywhere in the US and you look left and you
look right, there's a very high chance that one of those doors is a dangerous place for
children. Here's the statistics. One in every four women that you know was a victim of this
kind of abuse as a child, many of them in their own homes. With men, it's a little bit
less. It's one in every five at some time in our lives. Even them, one in every four of them, it was under the age of 10
years old in their own homes. So, if there are that many people who have gone through that kind of
abuse, the number of abusers is astronomical. And so, here's the thing, people will leave
Sound of Freedom and they'll be like, okay, I want to do something.
I want to go help, you know,
I want to be like Paul and Jimmy Rex.
I want to go undercover, rescue kids.
The worst thing you can do is go to Mexico
and try to go undercover.
You're going to get arrested.
You're probably going to get shot.
The best thing you can do is go home and hug your kids.
People are like, oh, how does that fix it?
Well, the majority of children who are being taken
and sold into these things,
they come from broken homes or runaways or broken foster care program.
They're at risk children.
And what's super scary is there's a huge percentage of kids in these situations that are even being sold for these things that sleep in their own beds at night and their parents don't even know. So parents need a relationship with their children where they can very comfortably come to you and say, hey dad, I don't like it when we go to this
cousin's house because her dad is, her stepdad is doing these things. Or this babysitter is
telling us we should trust her more than you and she's now showing us pornography and now says that
we need to, when you're gone,
that she's gonna invite her boyfriend over
without telling you.
I mean, these things happen all the time.
And what's really scary and even bigger than that
is what they call sextortion.
Online, you need a relationship with your 12 year old
where he can very comfortably come to you and say,
hey dad, I kind of screwed up.
I was chatting online with this girl. She sent me some pictures and I sent her some
and she sent me more and I sent her some videos. And now I, I'm not even sure it is a girl.
I think it might be some 45 year old dude, which it probably is. Right. Because now he's
telling me that I have to send him money and less say else he's going to send these all
over the school and, or, or I have to meet at a certain place and there's kids committing suicide over this. So it's so important that we recognize
that the dangers for our children are not lurking in some black alley. The dangerous for our children
is in their backpacks, in their back pocket, in their phones, on their digital connections
and, and helping them know how to navigate that in a way that's healthy and safe.
So, you know, these are all the bigger picture stuff,
but the reason I got into this is recognizing
that all of us, all of us need to look in the mirror
and say, how am I adding to this toxicity?
What do I need to do to change it?
And who do I need to be careful around
that may be a harm for my children?
Yeah, you know, you look at it and dangers are everywhere.
Like, it's so funny, we just got back from a cruise, right?
And like all the teenagers on this boat,
now luckily my daughter has my son,
who's kind of, you know, running with her a little bit,
but all the teenagers kind of run and do their own thing.
You're like, oh, it's a controlled environment,
we're on a cruise ship.
Not really.
It's like, they're like,
this is a floating city in the middle of the ocean
where the only law is the captain. Yeah. Right? And me and my wife really. It's like, they're like, this is a floating city in the middle of the ocean where the only law is the
captain. Yeah. Right. And me and my wife were like, instantly like, dude,
should we've been letting them run around like that? Maybe, maybe we shouldn't
have, you know, thank God nothing happened. And that's fine. But I think,
I think, I think you just are so unaware of what's around you.
And I think anytime, you know,
one of the funny things about being in real estate is you will occasionally have
a client ask when they're looking in a
neighborhood about sexual predators.
And if you don't believe what we're saying, dude,
just go on right now and look at the registered sex offender, a list around you.
Exactly.
There's a lot of, there's a lot of red dots on the map, no matter where you look.
There's no place that is, that is uniquely safe from those red dots, which is crazy. Do you think when it comes to the government, this isn't,
you know, as we're talking about this, I'm thinking this is my philosophy,
right? I don't want to jump to the conclusion that every single
person that's blocking this in our government has somehow done something wrong to
a kid. But I think there's varying,
there's various degrees of wrong and potentially
the same person that is the bad guy that would do something to a kid also maybe has 25 year
old women that look like they're party girls. And so all of a sudden you're hanging out
with a 25 year old and now you're linked to this person who's like, okay, cool. But if
you screw this up, I'm going to rat you out about this. You think that's? Absolutely. Yeah, that's the problem.
Yeah. There's, there's a lot of, a lot of that, um, blackmail and extortion and et cetera,
it's going on everywhere. And, um, and you're exactly right. I mean, I, I, I,
I truly don't think that a lot of the people who are making decisions on the list today,
I don't, I don't think any of them are involved like we would think involved, you know,
you were there at the island doing things
with the 12 year old, no.
But is there powerful people that they know that are?
Is there other dirt on them that could come out?
I mean, it's all over the place.
The CIA's book of dirty tricks is full
of how do you blackmail people into a position
where you can control their votes.
You wanna control the votes of a senator,
of a congressman, of a federal judge, you can control their votes. You, you want, you want to control the votes of a Senator, of a Congressman, of a, of a,
of a federal judge. You want to control their votes forever.
You get that kind of blackmail on them and, and, and they're your puppet forever.
I got to tell you, it's this,
when he was sitting in that room saying, still talking about this is ridiculous.
Bye bye. It's the first time I thought, holy shit, they got him.
Somebody's got him. Yeah.
And in a way that he really thinks you got me.
Yeah.
Like he's been Teflon until that moment.
Cause I just don't see any reason for that hard
of an about face.
Now, of course it's, well, we're going to go out
and do this, but are we really going to do it?
Are we really going to do it?
It's dude, it's, it's scary stuff to think about that.
You know, I want to ask you something. So next
question is the book is coming out. Obviously the movie came
out two years ago. Normally that happens in reverse. The book
comes out, somebody licensed the book and makes it makes it. So
for people that have seen the movie that might think I saw the
movie down, I don't need the book. What is different about
the book or what's in the book that you didn't get from the
movie? Everything. So, you know, again, the movie, the movie created global
awareness with 70 million people have seen sound of freedom and hundreds of
millions of children are safer simply because of the awareness. However,
there's very little there that's going to teach parents what they can do to keep
their kids safe. So glad you're going. This is the majority of the majority of
the sound of freedom book is is filled with tools that parents can
use.
The whole first section of it, what we call the making of an undercover operator talks
about the training that me and the other guys went through, including situational awareness
and how to read a room, how to identify.
There's foundations that we have, the Child Liberation Foundation.
There's other foundations that we help to fund
that have teams in different places around the world
at the borders, et cetera,
that are looking for kids, people that could be at risk.
They have over one of these foundations,
over 27,000 victims, potential victims,
have been rescued before they're ever victims
because they knew
what to look for, right? So we have a bunch of certification programs to teach doctors what to
look for and medical personnel and even people in hospitality what to look for, etc. And so
those are all things that we cover here. In addition to that, of course, we go through the
emotional transformation that I went through. I go through the details on the
Columbia rescue mission and some of the others and so taking the reader through it so they can start
to identify, okay, these are the things to identify potential abuser. These are the things to identify
kids that could be in danger, etc. But the last section I think is the most important. The last five chapters of the book
is all about liberating humanity.
You can spend, we spent 10 years pulling children
out of hell.
The only way to fix this is to pull the hell
out of humanity.
We have to take away the demand.
Jimmy and I realized that every time we went in
and pulled 20 kids out of this horrific situation,
if not enough was
being done to fix the demand side, then it would leave a vacuum. And 20 or 30 more kids were being
sucked back into the deepest recesses of hell to fill that demand. And so I found myself looking
and there was two major things that changed for me. Okay, like I talked about earlier, in the beginning, I was Paul F. Hutchinson, you know,
this is why it worked when I was in this place.
I was filled with all of this arrogance, greed, and lust.
And then I recognized that the common thread in the traffickers wasn't earrings in their
noses and tattoos on their necks.
The common thread with the traffickers and the perpetrators
was that same arrogance and greed and lust.
And I looked in the mirror, I'm like,
okay, I'm doing great things, I'm helping these kids,
but how have those things showed up in my life?
And that transformation actually happened,
it was about two and a half, three years
into the rescue missions.
And I got a phone call from two of our operators,
Jimmy and Andy. Jimmy had done 13 missions, Andy had done 22 with me. And they said, Paul,
do you trust us? And I said, yeah, I trust you with my life. Literally, when we do these missions,
I'm in charge of talking, they're in charge of marketing, try I don't die. Right? And they said,
you need to come to this transformational retreat. I'm like, I don't need it. What do you mean? They says it's
a healing retreat. I said, I don't need to heal. Everybody wants to be me. They're like,
no, you're on your second marriage headed for a divorce. Your kids don't talk to you.
You think that your happiness is going to come from one more girl, one more party, one
more, whatever. One more, one more, one more, one more. And so, so I, uh, I went to this retreat with them and it changed everything for
me, everything in every way, how we approach the missions, how we approach
everything, and especially my personal life, my happiness, everything changed,
recognizing that same toxicity in myself
that I was fighting in the world of trafficking.
So obviously I know what you're talking about.
I do.
For those of you listening at home,
like what kind of retreat is this?
If anybody has watched, what was it?
Not Brett, not Brett Favre, what's his name?
The quarterback, just went to the Jets.
Measurable year.
Aaron Rodgers.
Aaron Rodgers, yeah.
He didn't see his special.
We're talking about the Aaron Rodgers retreat
is what we're talking about.
So when you went on your first,
and obviously there's a lot of backyard shamans out there,
so tread lightly with this, I will say.
Well, and I have a real big problem
with the backyard shamans. Yeah. Well, and I have a real big problem with the backyard.
Yeah, I, we, we become master facilitators and have now hosted and facilitated over 80
guided meditation, plant medicine, healing retreats, using it in the right way.
I am not a fan whatsoever of recreational use because it can be dangerous.
And I can explain why.
Yeah.
Going to four, four, grateful dead shows
in three widespread panic shows does not make you a shaman.
It does not.
And there's a lot of people that think that.
So yeah, let's talk more about this, obviously.
So what have you seen, like in your own self,
when you went through,
this is a Hiawaska ceremony you went through.
When you went through that, what was the immediate,
what was the mid and what was the long-term effect on you?
Immediate was, and it was a combination of psilocybin and Ansemaya, but it was used
with breath work, meditation, trained facilitator, coming in with intentions, et cetera, et cetera,
et cetera.
So for me, it was the most beautiful, horrific experience of my life. Horrific because the medicine showed me pure
empathy. I felt, John, I felt in every cell of my body, I felt the pain that my children felt when
I cheated on their mom, as if I was them, right? And it was, it felt like, like the devil himself had his foot on my chest and
it was 600 miles in the earth. And, and I couldn't breathe. It was, it was so hard feeling
as if I was them. And then, then I could feel the pain of the family that, you know, broke
up because some guy was at my, my party and slept with a cheerleader and his wife left
him. And then I felt the ripple effect of those actions where, you know, years down
the road,
maybe his daughter gets knocked up or his son gets addicted to drugs because he's in
a fatherless home.
And the ripple effect of every word and every action, everything became so real in my personal
life as if I was them.
And then I, then, you know, the facilitator helped me.
I changed the music to this beautiful—I
call it my Jesus list, right? But there's different songs and I can feel this redeeming
grace of God just pulling me out of this hell. And I can feel all this dirt coming off of me.
And I recognized that everything, every dollar that I spent, every word that I said, every party that I threw, every action
had a very real effect on the world around me.
And so that was the beginning.
And then the second thing that happened, this was pretty powerful.
I walk out and I'm sitting there with a facilitator and just kind of reeling from this.
I'm still in my ego space.
And I had these statues of these Greek gods,
there was Poseidon and Zeus,
and there was Atlas holding the world on his shoulders.
And I said to the, I'm on mushrooms, right?
I can barely walk.
And I said to the facilitator,
I feel a lot like Atlas.
I got the whole world.
And at the time I had 4,000 employees in my company, right? I said, I feel a lot like Atlas, you know, I got the whole world and at the time I had 4,000 employees
in my company, right?
I said, I have the world on my shoulders
and I feel like if I don't continue to bring in
the investment, I says, you know,
but look how God has made me so strong.
I've pointed at the stomach of this Atlas statue
and the facilitator smiles and she said, you know, Paul,
I honor that you're seeing some, you know,
positive traits in those Greek gods, but you know as well as I do that those are
mythological gods.
She said, what about your relationship with him?
And she points to the statue of Jesus.
And I had left the church of my youth.
You guys can guess what that is.
I grew up in Utah, right?
I left the church of my youth about 10 years before.
And she says, how about your relationship with him?
And I said, oh, I don't qualify for a relationship with him. And she said, well, why not? I said,
well, I don't keep all the commandments. When I left the church my youth years ago, my bishop told me until I was rebaptized in
that church, I wouldn't have the Spirit of God with me. And she said, do you really think that
that's true? I said, well, no, I feel that inspiration even when we're doing the undercover
work and helping the kids. She said, why don't you work on that relationship? So here I'm high as fuck. I can
barely walk, right? I try to grab this statue and she helps me bring it down. I sit on the beanbag
and for the next two hours just cried and reestablished a relationship that I had lost a
long time ago. And so here's the 30 seconds high level, just so people understand. So when we're children, zero to nine years old, our brains are in a state of hyperneuroplasticity.
Very, very impressionable.
We can learn three or four languages at the same time that we're learning to ride our
bikes and all these other things.
Well, if something happens during that stage, we're touched by our uncle, or even something
simple where our dad just tells us we look
fat in that outfit.
Those things get imprinted in our subconscious mind.
95% of our life is run by that subconscious mind.
And it comes out, it comes out in anger issues, low self-esteem, anxiety, depression, PTSD,
addictions.
All of these behaviors are coming from things that are deep in our subconscious.
And to change things later in our subconscious mind, it takes 21 days to create a new habit.
It's very difficult, especially if they're super embedded, it takes longer than that.
Well the proper use of psychedelics, whether it's ayahuasca, whether it's psilocybin,
the proper use of them creates a temporary state of neuroplasticity like when you were a child very impressionable and a trained facilitator using breath work
meditation coming in with the right intentions can can create emotional
surgery and pull things out that would take 10 and 20 years worth of therapy
now the same thing if you you go to a you know a rock concert you go to a you
know rave party and you get high on mushrooms there,
that's dangerous, why?
Because you create this neuroplasticity state
while somebody's, you know,
having yelling at his wife over here,
rap music going on over here,
and it literally can create a negative impression
in your subconscious in that neuroplasticity.
So be careful who you open the door for.
Really careful, you know?
So finding
the right, so we realized that this was incredibly powerful in helping our undercover operators work
through their PTSD because a lot of these guys were green berets, Navy SEALs already had PTSD
from being in the service. Then we started working with women who had been abused as children 10 and
20 years worth of therapy weren't helping them. And then we continued. Now we work exclusively on the Liberating Humanity
website. We give parents the tools they need to keep their kids safe. You get
a link to the book, Sound of Freedom, and you get lots of information on what
liberating humanity is about, starting with the man in the mirror. What do you
need to do to release those things that no longer serve us so that we can step in to be in the highest and best version?
We do that, we save millions of children in the future because we help people
work through their shit. Even if you and I would never ever hurt a child, how is
our toxicity in how we show up in our with our employees and our family etc.
How is that contributing in a way where maybe
somebody does go over the line because they already have an
addiction, they all have some other issues they're dealing
with and we push them over that line because we hadn't fixed
our shit yet.
I could walk through it and I walked through that.
It's like that image of the one match sets the next one on
fire sets the next one on fire.
Exactly. I call it trauma transfer or even tension,
as simple as tension transfer.
Tension transfer is you go to work,
you yell at the guy at work, he goes home,
yells at his wife, she yells at the kid,
the kid kicks the dog.
Literally that kick of that dog came from us, right?
Cause we yelled at the guy at work, right?
But now let's just say that that guy we yelled at,
what we didn't realize is that he was abused as a child. He's been dealing with major addictions
to pornography and alcohol. Let's say his pornography addictions have progressed to the
point where now he's looking at some illegal things online with his pornography. Let's say,
and it happens. I'm telling you, those progressions happen a lot. There's millions of people addicted
that shit. And let's say his wife just left him because of his alcohol addiction.
She doesn't know about the hardcore pornography stuff and the illegal stuff.
And let's say that this is the weekend that he gets his 12 year old daughter and her cousin.
Now you and I acting out of integrity and yelling at him at work instead of ending up kicking a dog.
In reality, we're hurting a child.
So all of us, all of us, I love the story. a dog, in reality, we're hurting a child.
So all of us, all of us, I love the story.
I love the story of the guy sitting on a couch,
just like this, and he's reading his newspaper.
And his little boy walks in,
daddy, daddy, let's play baseball.
Oh, I'm busy.
You know, he's reading the news, but he's not busy.
Pretty soon the boy comes in,
hey, daddy, it's beautiful outside.
Can we play ball?
So he turns the page and there's a map of the world there
on one of the average.
He tears it out, tears it up a little piece of paper throws it on the floor
He goes son, you need a lunar you learn your geography you go get some tape
You you tape together every country where it's supposed to be and I'll go play ball
He's thinking it's gonna take a few hours like five minutes later
The little boy comes back and it's taped together perfectly and the dad's like what why how do I your mom help you?
Little boy said no there. He turns it over. He, there was a picture of a man on the other side.
I just put the man together
and the whole world came together.
That's really the answer to the riddle right there.
As soon as each one of us look in the mirror,
and that's what the last part of the
Liberating Humanity of the Child Liberation Foundation,
I mean, sorry, of the Sound of Freedom book,
I don't know what I'm talking about,
but that's what the last part of the book is all about, is what does liberating humanity
look like?
It starts with the man in the mirror and what do we need to do to fix that?
Well, I want to go back to something you said.
You said that, you know, you didn't have a relationship with God because it was taken
away from you when you left the church.
And I saw something the other day that I thought was really the, I'd never thought of it this
way, but they were talking about what makes something a cult. And this is not about the church bashing,, but they were talking about what makes something a cult.
And this is not about the church bashing,
but they just pretend that what makes something a cult.
And the answer this person gave was anything,
anything you cannot leave with grace is cult.
If people are not gonna talk to you
because you're no longer part of this, that's cult.
And I don't care if it's a motorcycle club or a church
or whatever it is, if you leave and they will no longer speak with you, that is not okay.
And, you know, I look at the power that it has, and this is going to be again,
because I'm bringing this back around because obviously you and John Pennington
did some amazing things for a lot of people and continue to, um,
as far as the financial investment world.
But it has become very apparent over the last five or six years
that Utah is the Ponzi scheme. It's the Ponzi scheme capital of the universe. Yeah, I'll tell
you why insane. I'm dying to hear if somebody has done so well financially for others in that state.
Hi, John. John, I almost started things out of the state because of that very thing. I was friends with our former attorney general and he pointed out that we were the affinity
fraud capital of the country, if not the world.
And here's why, here's why.
When you wear your religion on your sleeve and use it as a blank check on your morality,
okay, this is the key.
Say, okay, I've got a picture of
God behind me, I've got a picture of the temple behind me, whatever else you should trust
me. There we have a problem. So the second that somebody says, okay, you know, let me
tell you, I'm in this position in my church and this whatever else, and then they start
talking about money, that's the first red flag right there. The second that they try to use any kind of religious
affiliation for you to give them a blank check
on their morality, run away.
Well, it's almost like you talk about this person's
guilty by association.
They're trustworthy by association.
And that's where there's a problem.
If you're giving somebody a blanket pass,
because you got a certain picture on the wall,
probably an issue.
Cause dude, it seems like every time you turn around,
another, and some of these guys are guys that we have known
that kind of came out of nowhere and did very well.
And you know, all of a sudden they've got a fund
and all of a sudden they're in jail.
Yep, exactly.
And so I guess I understand the morality clause
of that of why people get wrapped up in this,
but what makes it, is it just straight greed
that makes people, because it seems like
there's a large percentage of people
from that part of the world that start these things.
Sadly, there's a, you gotta be better
than the Jones's attitude there.
There's so many people that are trying
to keep up with others. And sadly,
especially in Utah, to be in a place where you get called to be the leader of your congregation,
or you get called to be the leader of multiple congregations, etc., you have to be in a financial
position. And most of those guys are well off cetera, you have to be in a financial position. And most of those guys are well off financially.
You have to be in a financial position
where you can start donating 40 plus hours a week
of your time to your church.
And so a lot of people see that as,
okay, this is part of my spiritual salvation
is I need to get rich.
I literally had the goal.
When I was in my twenties, I had a goal.
I'm gonna be a millionaire by the time I'm 30.
I'm gonna be a billionaire by the time I'm 40.
I'm gonna be the president of the United States
by the time I'm 50.
I'm gonna be the prophet of the church
by the time I'm 60, right?
I threw that out as, you know,
there's my high level goals
because you kind of need to have one before the other
before you get there.
Did you, so that's like,
I mean, it's a bunch of cuts.
So to keep it in religious terms, that's coveting.
Were you coveting?
I mean, is that what you saw?
Is that just, is that the mentality of kind of at that time?
The problem is I'm just going to throw it out there.
All my Mormon friends are going to hate me for this,
but the big problem is the whole word of-
They're not listening.
They're not listening.
Worthiness, okay.
I have to be worthy of God's love.
I have to be worthy of your respect.
I have to be worthy.
What is worthy is all about, okay, I have to perform in these certain ways.
To your standard.
Yeah, to your standard in order to be accepted because I'm trained from the time I'm a little
kid that I have to, I can't drink coffee, I can't drink tea, I can't say these bad words,
I have to do these certain things, I have to follow this thing, I have to be in church this many, but I do
all of these things and I can get worthy of being in this place where God can accept me
into His kingdom, right?
It's this mentality of and it's okay, it's okay to pursue a valuable productive life,
right?
There's nothing wrong with that.
I tell people there's nothing wrong with having two helicopters, which I had at one time, what a retard, right? There's nothing wrong with that. I tell people there's nothing wrong with having having two helicopters which I had at one time. What
a retard, right? What there's nothing wrong with having a house with ten
bathrooms. There's nothing wrong with those things but if you do it so that
you can have massive parties with 150 half-dressed girls and put put
stripper poles in your basement and lose your connection, your true connection
with people and your family, now you're going down the wrong road, right?
So it's okay, it's okay to create value.
But if you're doing it in a way that is for,
so people can look at you and you can be worthy
to be in those rooms and you can be worthy of their praise
and worthy of anybody's love and worthy of God's love,
now you have a problem.
So I just threw the worthy thing under the bus.
Well, there you go. Well, the book comes out with, I mean,
you can pre-order it obviously now everywhere books are sold to Amazon.
You can go on Amazon boom all over the sound of freedom. I promise this is going
to, this is,
I believe this has the keys to eradicating child trafficking,
not just creating awareness,
but what do we need to do as humanity to fix this problem?
It's not a call, it's a calling.
It's a calling.
Yeah. Perfect.
If they want to find you, how do they find more about you?
Any liberating humanity.
I didn't want it to be about Paul Hutchinson.
So everything is all what I believe the mission is,
which is liberating humanity.
You can go on to any social media, liberating humanity,
liberatinghumanity.com is, is gets links to all of the shows.
It'll have a link to your show and everybody else
so that you can see that stuff there
and get information on how to keep your kids safe
and about the retreats as well.
Love it.
Well, Paul, thanks for coming, buddy.
I hope you'll come back in three months
when the new book comes out.
The next, dude, you're, it took me like three years to get my first book done.
You're whipping out too. And like,
no, I've been working on this for a long time.
Well, if you listen to this look, man, I think this is the number one thing I
would take away from today's conversation is if you want to find true happiness,
right? It's not always about the stuff.
It's about the stuff that you can do for others. So find something that is a calling in you that you just cannot say
no to and chase it with everything. We'll see you next week.
What's up everybody? Thanks for joining us for another episode of escaping the drift.
Hope you got a bunch out of it, or at least as much as I did out of it. Anyway, if you
want to learn more about the show, you can always go over to escapingthedrift.com.
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Hopefully you'll be here for us.
But anyway, in the meantime, we will see you at the next episode.