Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - How Seven Weeks Coffee Turned Pro-Life Beliefs Into $1M Impact | Anton Krecic
Episode Date: October 30, 2025Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyJoin our community of fearless leaders in search of unreasonab...le outcomes...Want to become a FEARLESS entrepreneur and leader? Go here: https://www.findingpeak.comWatch on YouTube: https://link.ryanhanley.com/youtubeIn this candid conversation, Ryan Hanley sits down with Anton Krecic, founder of Seven Weeks Coffee, to dissect the failures of politics and reveal why entrepreneurship offers the real battlefield for values-based change.Connect with Anton Krecic:Website: https://sevenweekscoffee.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/sevenweekscoffee/Anton shares his journey from political disillusionment in Washington DC to building a mission-driven coffee business that has donated over $1 million to pregnancy resource centers. This episode dives deep into the intersection of faith, business, and culture—exploring the pro-life stance, Christian courage in the marketplace, and how to fight evil with transparency and grit. If you believe in doing more than just talk—if you're ready to back your convictions with action—this episode is for you.--Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9This show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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Anyone can take the plunge in entrepreneurship.
Like the only thing in life where you can step up to the plate and take a swing and score
a thousand runs.
Anything else in life, you know, you're stuck playing by the rules and the most you can hit
is four runs.
But in entrepreneurship, like you have this ability to score a thousand runs because you get
to control, you know, your output, your work ethic.
And when you 10x your business, you 10x your income versus you 10x someone else's
business.
You get a 10 raise.
I found it very intriguing.
that being a faith-based person,
that you engaged in politics
and there was immediate friction.
So maybe we can start with, like,
what was the first experience when you went to D.C.?
And you came into that environment
that you looked around and you said,
something doesn't feel right.
Like something is misaligned with how my values
of how I want to live and what I'm experiencing
on a day-to-day basis.
Yeah, you know, it's funny.
So Washington, it's like, I mean, it's the center of all power in the U.S.
It really is.
You know, everything revolves around what happens, you know, between the Senate and the bureaucracy.
And there's so much, you know, business around that.
And, you know, some of it's goods.
But the main thing I learn is, like, there is such a gate kept feeling in Washington.
It's about who you know.
It's about the money you have.
And a lot of it's about the money.
you can make off of it. So there's a, to me, it was a kind of a disheartening feeling, moving to
Washington, wanting to, you know, see if I can affect change with the political process, bring
biblical values into government, you know, really advocate for, um, I believe, you know,
as a pro-life worldview. That's what we're doing now at seven weeks coffee. But, um, how do you
actually live that out? And it's sad, but because a lot of it is truly status quo on both sides
of the aisle. Um, and so it's, that was probably the most disheartening things. Like, you know,
we think politics is the easiest way to affect change,
but sometimes you have to step outside of that into the real world and the private sector
to actually have the impact that you want to have.
It is truly a stagnating place.
And I still live in the area now.
And I'm not saying don't engage in the political process.
But it's not what we all think of it is where, you know, you just can come here and just
make an impact, make a difference per se.
It's pretty gate kept.
Yeah, as an outsider to that world.
Now, I lived in Washington DC for four years, but not I wasn't in the political arena.
I worked for a major accounting firm there.
So I got like a tangential taste of that.
Some of my friends were in that world.
And what I think, though, as an outsider looking into the political arena, you can almost
tell the people who came to Washington with a purpose to make change because they seemingly
are the ones who get pushed out to the side, called out,
considered crazy.
And even inside of their own party, right?
Like they, you know, it's like, oh, wait,
you came here to actually do things.
We're going to put you over here until you're willing to kind of play.
Like, when you're willing to play,
maybe we'll let you back in and you can get some of your stuff done.
But if you just thought you were going to come here and like make positive change,
you got a couple things to learn.
That's the feeling that I get looking from the outside.
Yeah, 100%.
I mean, that's how the political process works.
There's, you know, party leaders on both sides of the aisle.
And unfortunately, whatever the party leaders say is really what you're supposed to get in line with.
I mean, I'm a fan of, you know, Thomas Massey and Rand Paul and they're Republicans that are political outsiders that have a lot of, you know, enmity from other Republicans because they're very principled and there are certain fiscal policies.
And if you don't get in line with what the, you know, party leaders say, you were definitely on the outside.
an outcast and you know that's so sad because like it's it's like this never-ending revolving door of
compromise like there's never a point where you feel like people have a unifying stance and say
this is enough like red line here we're not crossing it it's like an incremental compromise
perpetually in the wrong direction i mean that's what it just has seemed to you know look like
over the last you know you know 20 30 years like we're always moving in this you know but if it's
fiscal policy whether it's you know family policy
conservativeism and the sense of social conservatism.
It's just like incremental compromise in the wrong direction.
And that's sad because at that rate,
you just are essentially on the slow bus to, you know,
a more progressive society.
You're not actually taking a stand.
Do you think that it's always been that way?
Do you think that's a new thing and that we just hear about it more
because we have a 24-hour news cycle
and you have reporters and now independent journalists
tucked in every corner and every conversation, or do you think that over the last, you know,
in our lifetime, right, 20, 30, 40 years, et cetera, this has become this policy creep kind of,
I'm only going to scratch your back.
If you scratch my back, regardless of it's better for the country or not kind of mentality
is a relatively new thing.
It feels more relatively new.
And here's why, because the amount of money in politics is just astronomical at this point.
So from the private sector, from, you know, the private sector working on within government contracts from, you know, the regulatory sector, kind of the back channels with these large conglomerate companies that have like very financial interests.
So you have the policy leaders that are, you know, either coming from the private sector that are then regulating, you know, the very companies that they used to work for or are going to work for.
So it is such a money demand system where, you know, I just think that's where it's relatively new.
And you don't actually see people who move to Washington and have like a strict view on certain policies.
They usually end up getting compromised.
And what I mean by compromise, I mean like you end up in situations where your financial benefit is so outlandish to like just give in on either certain issues or policies that you end up probably just, you know,
saying it's okay in your head and that's where you know most of washing hands up where they just
you know incrementally creep because of the financial incentives and I think that's the biggest thing
like we definitely you know this is a different conversation have to figure out how to remove the
financial you know incentives of just being in this area like it is truly you know a pay-for-play
scheme in a sense from your policies that you put forth in Congress to your relationships in the
private sector and it's very, you know, reciprocal. So, you know, the people that, you know,
try to take a stand of that are very much, you know, outcast instantly. It's funny, I have
previous guests that I had on the show. His name's Adam Allard, a very good guy,
advocate for men's mental health and masculinity in general and kind of reclaiming our position
in families and in the world, et cetera. He was on a show and he sent me a clip from it
just because of something we had we had talked about on the side where one of the other guests on the show
talked about how she had been she signed up for a service that basically tracks trade for trade
Nancy Pelosi's trading literally when she buys this portfolio buys and when it sells it sells
and she said she's up 58% above the S&P in the time that she's been invested in this
program. And while I know that her husband is the greatest trader in the history of the world
many times over, and, you know, he's very lucky for having that skill and being blessed with that
talent, to me, it's very hard to look at something like that and think that that individual, and the
individuals of that ilk, I don't just, she's not like she's the only one who is doing this.
how do we then trust people to make decisions on the things that impact our life on a day-to-day basis,
like the cause that's so important to you, pro-life, pro-choice, etc., right?
Like, we're supposed to believe that they are taking in data points, opinions, studies, etc.,
and then making honest both recommendations and votes for what's on our best interest.
when we know that they're, like they, it's like they want us to separate from reality.
They want to say, look, I'm always making what I believe is the best decision over here,
but then I'm also doing all this stuff over here that is super, at best, super shady,
whether illegal or not illegal is a different discussion and kind of above my legal pay grade
being that I am an armchair lawyer, not an actual one.
And I find that just, that's part of some of these big issues that is so,
disheartening, I think, just as a standard run-of-the-mill American, that how do you know
who is actually, whether you agree with their opinion or not, it's almost impossible to know
who is making a good faith decision or a good faith judgment and who isn't. Yeah, I mean,
that's the toughest one. I really think, like, the financial transparency has got to get fixed.
There's been some proposals to, you know, put, you know, congressmen on essentially a probation
where they can't invest or do day trading or do any type of stock equity trading during their time
in office.
I fully support that.
Yeah, you're right.
Nancy Pelosi is the greatest stock trader of all time.
Obviously, she has no idea about trading stocks on its own.
She obviously has insider information that relates to certain industries, which she's able to then take heavy bets on with her capital.
It's crazy to me that you can build such an amass amount of wealth from politics.
You know, that's the whole thing.
Politics and civil service, the idea of, you know,
elected representation. That was supposed to be like a service, something you were sacrificing for
to do on the behalf of your, you know, your town, your area, your constituents to advocate for that.
And it's just totally captured by, you know, financial interests, you know, so, you know,
whatever we can do to promote transparency and if that's term limits, if that's locking up,
you know, people's ability to trade, you should have to sacrifice to being in Washington.
That's the whole idea. It is a privilege to do that.
and to serve and it is a sacrifice not a you know a life-changing you know generation-changing
wealth-building machine which obviously that's what it is now and so yeah that's again that's why it comes
back to you just see this incremental you know progression in just a in a in a this uniparty direction
where we kind of wave the flag of like oh we fix this or we kind of tweak that and really no true
fundamental change happens because it's just it's the uniparty agreement.
just moving forward and until we kind of disincentivize the financial aspect,
it's just going to maintain that way.
Yeah, you know, I'd even be okay with our political leaders kind of getting theirs
if we could believe that they were trying in everything they did to do what was best for the
country, right?
So if they're like, look, this thing that this program or this bill that I'm putting in place,
like it's, this is the best for the country.
I'm going to get my little piece over here.
right like but i got but this is going to help us it's going to lower the dead it's going to you know
whatever you know you know create a uh a safety net for this you know whatever whatever we need to do
but it's like they're getting theirs and it's and it doesn't seem to be always what's in our
best interest and that's the part that that kind of bothers me it's like it's almost like we were
okay with the mafia before they went into drugs all right everyone let's talk about drinking and
driving a decision that will change your whole
world, things will never be the same once you get a DUI because legal fees, time and court are just
the beginning. Getting into a crash is another way your world could be irreversibly changed after
drinking and driving. Your vehicle may not be the only thing that gets damaged in that crash. You could
face a life-altering injury or even death, but you're not the only one who could face those
consequences. Your decision to drink and drive could permanently change someone else's world,
whether you injure them or leave their loved ones grieving. The next time you're out
drinking, call a ride share, a taxi, a sober friend, or a designated sober driver.
Always plan for a safe ride home. The only decision that will change your world for the better is
the decision to call for a sober ride. It's never worth it to drive drunk. Don't risk it.
Drive sober or get pulled over paid for by NHTSA. Right. So if you think pre-drugs mafia where
they're keeping the streets clean and they're doing this and hey, you got to peel them off a little
big and they're getting theirs over here, whatever. But, like, so if you think,
like you can kind of walk down the street and not worried about getting shot, you're like,
eh, I'm okay with that.
At least I'm getting something out of it.
Yeah, yeah.
You feel like you're actually getting something out of it.
Okay.
But it's all this like back room bullshit.
So kind of spinning that back to you, you're in this environment.
You see this.
And to the point that you made in the green room about entrepreneurship, politics aren't
the only way to make change.
And I think in our world today, maybe being an entrepreneur.
and business actually could be a more powerful way to leverage real true change.
So you go into coffee of all things.
So talk to me about that transition, that kind of idea and how you went from being in
that arena into the world of entrepreneurship.
Yeah.
So, I mean, I moved to Washington, D.C.
I spent a couple years fundraising for Republicans and candidates, PACs, not benefits,
you know, truly, you know, believing, you know, everything we were doing in terms of raising
money for stuff that I thought would really, you know, impact the political system. And again,
it's not to say these organizations are bad or anything or the people. It's just, it's just like,
it's so hard to see like the long tail result because like, again, everything, the political
system is gate-keep. If you have the most, you know, honorable intentions and the, you know,
for me, a pro-life worldview and you're trying to push that through in Washington, it just gets,
it seems to be blocked and blocked over and over again. And so, you know, I had the idea, you know,
instead of asking people for money, what if we provide people or good or service and support
the pro-life cause? So again, I was super passionate about it. I wanted to support the pro-life movement.
Years ago, I got to visit a pregnancy center and just see what they worked. They did. I was so moved
by the life-saving work. And when you think about what does it actually mean to be pro-life?
What does it actually mean to live out a pro-life worldview?
pregnancy care centers are doing that day and day out there in all cities you know have a local
you know community they serve and they are there for women who face unplanned pregnancy so like
what does it mean to actually help save lives well it might not actually be you know the law
in washington which which we obviously want to pass pro-life legislation and it's just very difficult
but in the more literal sense it can just be supporting a woman facing an unplanned pregnancy
and doing that through a pregnancy resource center.
So I had that experience of seeing what they do.
And I was like, that's who we want to support.
Like give dollars, you know, take dollars from like this, you know, corporate entity level,
like the government where it's like dollars are all funnel the top and give those down
to like local people.
And so that's what Seven Weeks Coffee does.
I started it with the idea donating back 10% of every sale to our local pregnancy resource center.
We sold $8,000 that first month.
I dropped off a check for $800.
I said, here, here you go, we sold coffee, and this is for you from our customers.
So that started with one local center.
Now we support over 1,000 across all 50 states, and we've raised, if you can believe,
a million dollars in funding.
And so that's what I'm talking about, where the private sector, you know, it's all
things to our customers who just made the decision to switch to 7 weeks of coffee,
we're able to give dollars, give real resources to moms who are facing unplanned
pregnancies, all without dealing with, you know, any government, you know, be a lot of,
Yes, we just give locally, we give to those local centers, and they're able to use that money to really help save lives.
And so, you know, that's what I'm talking about, like, you know, entrepreneurship and business can truly be a ministry opportunity.
And you don't have to wait for some policy or some legislation to, like, bring about the worldview.
Like, you can start living that out, you know, immediately with what you're doing and work.
So that's what I'm super passionate about.
That's why I love what we do at Seven Weeks Coffee.
And, you know, my biggest thing is, like, what other businesses are out there that people,
want to start or, you know, bill that can advocate for, you know, a worldview that they believe in,
a conservative worldview, a Christian worldview. That's what I believe in. And we need more of that,
not less. I completely agree with that. I got in trouble on X the other day. I mean, by trouble,
I don't feel like I was in trouble, but certainly people had different opinions when I just
posted the world needs more Christians, right? I just had this, you know, sometimes,
there's probably some
I have no problem posting that thought
I have no posting what I honestly believe in who I am
I'm a major believer
and share probably many of the same worldviews
that you do but what was funny was
the reaction was just the polarized nature
of the reaction to that like one guy literally said
like why do you hate Islam
and I was like well I didn't say
all I said was the world needs more Christians
I didn't think that it was like a zero-sum game,
which meant that, you know,
there needed to be less people of Islamic faith,
certainly less jihadists, but, you know, true.
I think it's okay, Ryan.
I mean, I'm just sorry, like, it's okay to advocate for, you know,
what we believe is true.
Like, I'll go out and set it.
We need more Christians in this country,
and I'm happy to say we need that less Islam
because, like, this is a Christian country.
That's the original what we were founded on.
So, you know, I totally agree with you.
Like, count.
on that tweet.
Yeah, yeah.
And I guess my-
People to speak up.
I,
yes, and I completely agree.
And my point was more like,
because we're in lockstep on the idea.
And I think more people need to be vocal
about what they believe.
And I actually was at a mastermind group
with about 60 people the other day.
And I brought up the topic in this,
in a discussion around,
um,
uh,
they were talking about,
you know,
what to share,
how to share around your business.
It was a business oriented mastermind group.
And I said,
I think we need to be more vocal about our belief structures.
Like what is it, who are we as people?
It doesn't mean we have to wear every single thought we have on our sleeve.
However, bad ideas spread when good ideas remain quiet, right?
And I think, unfortunately, there are certain modernized versions of Christianity in which
we have been taught or people have been taught, not me, that, you know, our role is to always,
is to always concede, to always step back, to always turn the other cheek, which is a very
misunderstood verse in the Bible, and, you know, somehow always placating others and always, you know,
kind of stepping aside for others is a virtue. And when the idea is bad, that is not a virtue.
It is not a virtue to allow bad ideas to go unchecked. It doesn't mean people should not have the
right to have those bad ideas, but we certainly shouldn't have them be able to vocalize them
and we remain quiet and then sit in our house and ask like, well, I'm living my Christian
virtue by sitting here in silence. That's not actually, in my opinion, a virtue at all. It's
cowardice. And when I use that word in front of that group that I felt that it was cowardice
to remain quiet in the face of bad ideas, you should have seen the freaking reaction.
It was like, it was, it was, it was like I gut punched 59 other people simultaneously.
And the reaction was very like, well, you know, this is my business.
And what do I, you know, what if someone doesn't do business with me because of what I believe?
I go, if someone doesn't believe in, and I know you believe this and I'm kind of preaching to you, but whatever, you got me all fired up here.
If someone doesn't do business with you because you're a Christian or you believe in pro life or you believe in whatever the hell you believe in.
It could be the other side, right?
It could be the, if you believe in liberal views in someone and a conservativeism.
Who cares?
That person wouldn't have been a good client or a good, you know, customer of your business
anyways.
Like, why do you feel today so many individuals and particularly businesses are unwilling
to stand up for the things that they ultimately believe in, like the business that you've built?
Right.
You know, it's so true.
Like just in spinning that on its head of the idea of like, what have we seen the last, you
five years post-COVID is radical, you know, corporate political ideologies being advanced.
Like corporate America and like, you know, Fortune 500 companies have taken a hardline political stance,
you know, a very leftist, a very, you know, progressive worldview.
They're not silent.
Like there's this idea of like bipartisanship in business where a business owner just kind of sit back
and don't have any like outspoken beliefs that is definitely gone like we've seen the direct
opposite of that so like yeah i'm all about having more believers and christians stand up for what they
believe and it's not about it's not necessarily about putting it on the front of your website like
how we do it it's about as an owner having direct influence on the people that work for you
and the people you engage with in so that you're promoting everything you truly believe like yes
compromising to this like degree of just silence is like the death sentence of believers because we will just
compromise and agree with the very people that want to see our worldview shut down and extinct.
And it's so sickening to me.
Like be there to stand on the line that says this is what I believe as a business owner, as a CEO
and how we're going to live out our values, you know, whether that's who we work with or how we work
with people. It's okay to be confrontational in that way because beliefs are by nature confrontational.
Just, yeah, I can't agree with more. Like, we need more people that are just like okay with standing there
on their beliefs and letting the results like fall as they may. And what happens. Like for us, like,
we saw so much success over the first, you know, three and a half years of our visit. We're four years
into this now. I mean, it's grown wildly in terms of growth as an e-commerce company and just like this
idea that there's so many people that you actually don't realize who support your worldview and are
just dying for like you to say something so they can support you. Like we're so quiet, but once you
actually do stand up, like there's a rally of people behind you. It just takes the courage to do it.
Yeah, I agree. And I'll give you a microcosm of that. Right before the last election,
I bought a new house, moved into a new neighborhood. And I put out in August before the 2024 election,
a Trump sign on my front yard.
And I also, I will also say mostly because I'm cheeky about 20 feet away, I put a
presidents are temporary, but Wu Tang is forever sign as well, mostly because I just have a
humor, a sense of humor like that, and Wu Tang is forever.
But I had no idea.
I live in New York, right?
I live in a, I live in Albany, the, maybe the second largest liberal cesspool after Washington, D.C.
and I had no idea what the reaction was going to be.
To a T, I had almost every neighbor,
no one said anything negative, no one egged my house, right?
I was a little worried, you know,
hey, the new guy moves in, puts a Trump sign out.
But the number of people that walked by
while I'm playing wiffle ball with the kids in the yard or whatever
and said, I love your sign,
I wish I had the balls to do that,
or I wish I had the guts to do that.
And I would look at them and I'd go,
it costs $24 on Amazon.
Like they'll bring it right
right to your house.
Like it's not really that hard
to get one.
If you want one,
I'll pay the $25,
I'll drive it down
and stick it in your yard.
And to your point,
like they're walking around
and they're trying to fit in
because they don't want to deal
with any of the perceived flak
that they would get,
yet they believe
exactly the same thing.
And it's like,
it made me,
like at first I was happy
that my house wasn't getting egg
and all my neighbors hated me
because not that I would necessarily
care, but no one wants that.
But it was more sad when I really thought about it in so much as, man, you are just so willing
to be quiet.
When the local public high school has 13 furries, they have litter boxes in the bathroom,
the janitors had to go on strike because they wouldn't change the fucking litter boxes.
And you have boys, you know, playing in girls' sports and all this crazy shit going on in
the high school.
Like, these are the kids who are going to take care of you when you get old.
like this generation, and you're letting them know that it's okay for people to walk around
with dog tails and dog ears and speak and bark at people as a way of communicating
in sixth grade, sixth grade.
And you think you're willing to accept that, but then you'll go to church on Sunday.
Like, I don't know how those things coordinate.
Like, I can't be quiet about the fact that I think it's bananas that we allow things
like that to happen.
Was that happening in Albany?
Yeah, yeah.
That's crazy.
I mean, we had the transgender stuff.
here in Loudoun County, like, with some boy in a girl's bathroom and it caused, you know,
it was national news, like that controversy behind it. But yeah, that's insane. That's, I mean,
that's the whole thing. It's like, if your religion, if your Christian faith is just within the
four walls of the church, like, you were literally not living out your faith. Like, you were,
like, failing miserably, in my opinion. Like, if your faith is just comfy enough to just, like,
enjoy a nice, quiet Sunday morning, come home and just go about the rest of your life. And,
while you watch like literally the world around you go to hell and you sit there and say,
I'm okay with what I believe.
Like I'm not worried about anything else.
Like you are a failure in my opinion.
Like not to put it more bluntly than that, but that's exactly it's like it's like you were called
to be like the most outspoken person.
Like if you believe like the biblical worldview that Jesus is Lord and this idea that like
his ways are the most, you know, transcendent truth that we have, we should be wanting to
promote that at every stop we can.
And if we're not, it's like, what were you, then, like, what is your calling at that point?
You're calling at the most fundamental levels to live out this worldview, a biblical worldview.
And so if you're not doing that, like, you were just, like, failing miserably in, like, your faith.
And I just think that's, like, the biggest thing is, like, church wake up.
Everyone who believes, if you actually claim to believe this, like, get it, like, believe it in public.
Believe it, you know, in conversation.
Believe it as you're engaging with your neighbors.
like tell people about this.
Like if you just tell each other,
like you're getting and accomplishing nothing.
Well, I actually don't think,
I think far fewer people actually have faith
that call themselves Christians.
Right, right.
And I think, you know,
so much of the nonsense that we are dealing with
on a day-to-day basis today,
to me, is secularism and the loss of God.
It's that I may present myself as a Christian if asked,
but I'm not even sure that I really believe, right?
Like that's, that I think is,
is a much more predominant position
than people want to let on.
Because as you said,
if they did actually believe,
there are things that they would not stand for.
Just point blank.
If you actually believed that God exists,
that you are connected to him,
that faith is real,
that Jesus was the son of God,
if you actually believe these things
in the teachings inside the Bible,
then there are things that you just absolutely 100% would not stand for.
And when you let those things happen, what you were saying is I don't actually believe.
I'm not actually truly connected or I would not be able to be silent.
And that, that, that, that, that lie that we've started to, I think, accept just to, to creep, right,
through this, this idea of creep is that, hey, maybe, maybe God doesn't exist.
Maybe this secular bullshit is all there is.
Maybe, you know, now we can start believing things like, like, fucking socialism.
Like, we're going to elect.
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A jihadi socialist who literally has said out loud
that he wants to take away property rights,
that he's going to, you know what I mean?
Like the things he's saying are so much the antithesis
to everything that we know is actually practical
and real.
I just, how about it?
It's like this idea that, like, as believers,
we don't believe we're a lot of be biased to our own beliefs.
It's like we have to be compromising and everything,
agreeable with everyone,
and have no biased to our own beliefs.
Like, this idea of, like, I am right
because I believe that, you know,
what the Bible says is true.
Therefore, when I promote what the Bible says,
like, that is what is the truth and that is what I believe is right.
That is what I believe should be the default.
like worldview that everyone should accept and you know we want everyone to accept a relationship
we believe we're right which means automatically you believe someone else is wrong when you have a
competitive worldview and so it's like that means you should embrace this idea you can have a bias
towards your own beliefs like you can actually say like like this is why we think what's right
and like that let that propel you to action but it's this idea that like we're just like
deference at all costs and have no like you know conviction within your own heart and
or people even, I mean, that's the, yeah, I agree.
So many people probably don't even actually believe what they say they believe.
And but then there's like this percentage of people that do believe it,
but believe they're not allowed to actually have like influence with it or like a bias towards everything they think and speak around it.
Like they're just like this idea of like we'll just compromise with everyone to maintain the peace,
which ultimately never maintains the peace and just brings and seeds evil.
Like every time like like you said earlier.
when good people do nothing, like just evil will persist.
Well, they've been guilted into believing that somehow being faithful is bad and evil and wrong.
And that because if you're a, you're a Bible beater or you're this.
And look, there are, there are, the beauty, in my opinion of faith is that you get to have your, your relationship with God.
If you are, in my opinion, if you're truly connected.
Now, you could choose Catholicism, you could choose, you know, whatever part of that spectrum works
for you, but you get to have that faith.
But however, or not however, when your belief,
you don't have to be guilty for that.
There's like this guilt.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
That, like, somehow, if I believe in God, that, like,
I'm, I'm, that because somebody else who also believed in God
did something bad in the past,
I need to feel guilty as a Christian for a Christian who did something bad in the
past or because a pope,
which I'm like half Catholic.
I was raised half Methodist, half Catholic, whatever.
But I feel zero guilt for the absolute abominations
in the Catholic Church who did despicable things.
But I feel zero guilt for going to Catholic Mass.
That was a human who made a deal with the devil
and did a horrible, awful thing.
And the people that protected them,
they're in the same boat.
But I don't need to feel guilty
because someone else who's,
white or and the same thing goes for any race, right? No black person should have any guilt for any
act that any other black person ever did. No white person should feel guilt for some act that any
other white person did. We all are our own individual units and should be able to voice our
individual feelings without that sense of guilt or anxiety or fear that that because I'm part
of some group, I am then responsible for every other single human who's in that group. And
and I think that's why we stay quiet.
I think the other part is,
and I'm interested in your take on this as well,
like I also think the world today is very hectic
and where in the past,
we had brain cycles to spend on some of these things.
We are spending so many brain cycles on things that don't matter
or take up our time throughout a day
that then these really important intrinsic core value type items,
they don't get the brain cycles that they need or deserve or warrant.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, no, it totally does.
I mean, it's just like this idea of, yeah, where does our attention and focus go to?
Have we as individuals come to like the fundamental beliefs and the most important things?
Like the view of family, the view of money, the view of the sanctity of life, how we view
government, how we view our relationship with others and how we view our relationship with the Lord?
like all those have a very like a deep you know universal truth that i believe you know is ultimately
found in the bible and so if you don't actually have a concrete worldview on those different
topics you will just flounder in every single direction possible and that's what happens you just
get co-opted by whatever is the secular culture of the time and you just fall down the rabbit hole
of whatever they're promoting um which is exactly what's happening right now yeah i know someone
someone asked me the other day um why like my faith was so
important to me. And it was a very honest question. And they're struggling with their faith, right?
They were raised Christian and were like kind of quasi-athias for a while. And now they're considering
coming back and, you know, whatever. And we're just having a conversation, very, very honest,
very open conversation. And I said, look, even if you don't believe, the Lindy effect is true,
right? The longer something has existed, the longer it will exist. So if you think about the Bible is
nothing more than the best self-help book that has ever been created in the history of the world,
right, and just operate, like, like, I think Jordan Peterson does this best, right? He says,
when he first started talking about the Bible specifically and the public forums, people would ask
him, do you believe in God? And I honestly think he was toying with the idea at that time,
you know, he was playing with it. And he said, I act as if, right? Now when you ask him, he'll
say he does. And my point is the, the act of following the word brings you into God. Like,
you don't have to believe before you start following the word. You can follow the word and then allow
yourself to be brought into it over time. If, like I said to my buddy, I was like, dude,
if nothing else, it's just the best self-help book that's ever been written. So just do the things
in there. And you'll probably be happier than you are today. And,
And that's kind of the way I've always approached it with people who are struggling.
And you can't convince, you know those things that you can't convince someone of God.
I can't prove to you, God.
I can't prove to you that I have like, what does it mean to have a relationship with the Lord?
Personally, I can't say this is, this is conclusively how like you can know, like, you know,
God is real.
It's like, this is a act of faith.
Like, I believe that there's the most evidence that God is real to the Bible.
And I'll say this, like, life has unanswered questions from the moment you enter the
world. You know, what am I doing here? And what happens when I die? Like, those are the most fundamental
questions that no matter what you're born with and have to answer. And the Bible has the most
conclusive answers to life's most difficult questions. Now, whether you accept those or not,
but there's no other way around it to say, like, yeah, the Bible answers those the best way possible.
So you can struggle with them on your own or you can accept what I think is, you know, clear,
which is these are the best answers to life's most difficult questions.
Yeah, the only other acceptable answer comes from the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy,
and that's 42.
So it's one of those two.
I don't know that one.
Because you're often.
No, it's a, it's a, I don't know, so if you've never, it's a book, it's a great book.
They also made a movie out of it.
And it's got a ton of biblical overtones.
And like there's like their whole point of the movie is, and I know we're off topic,
but this is just interesting.
The whole point of the movie is they're searching for this like mega intelligence,
which is essentially God, right?
And they finally make it to the mega intelligence
and they're standing in front of this big orb thing
and you get, you know, you get one question
and, you know, what's the secret to life?
What's the point?
And the machine starts cranking and whatever
and just responds 42.
That's it.
That's all.
That's it.
So, you know, it's just funny.
But on that.
So, okay.
So you,
you know, back on onto the entrepreneurial path,
you go with coffee and you're giving to specifically pro-life organizations.
I'm interested in both of those decisions.
Why coffee versus any other product?
Right.
And why pro-life organizations versus any other type of charitable organization
or enterprise that you could possibly focus on?
Yeah, you know, coffee was interesting.
I didn't have like a background in coffee except I liked it.
I had some like base knowledge of it, but I didn't come from, you know, some type of like specific background in it.
It's just, you know, like it's like anything in business, like the most successful businesses find, you know, where there's an open opportunity.
And then you provide a quality, good, or service where that opportunity lies.
And then there's a lot of success.
So I literally Googled pro life coffee thinking, oh, there's got to be someone doing this.
You know, there's a lot of values-based coffee companies, you know, black rifles is a very large Second Amendment.
you know kind of angle um but they're as like okay so there's got to be something like for like
believers someone who's like a biblical worldview christian i'm like for my mom for my dad like
what what coffee would they drink right inside google pro life coffee nothing comes up on google i'm
like that's it i'm going to start you know a pro life coffee company um and like provide it and so
you know i started the search we ended up finding you know we work with an amazing coffee
you know importer and we have you know some of the best coffee in the market and that's
a really important caveat is like you know what's been successful for us is like you know you can't
just slap pro life on a bag of coffee like we have a superior good or service that's 10 times better than
anything mainstream out there is the highest high grade specialty coffee you know mold free pesticide free
it's you're getting a better product on its own and then you have this amazing mission on top is which
it has led to a lot of our you know rapid growth so there's just no one doing it and that's just like
the amazing thing, there's so much opportunity out there when you look for and providing goods and
services, you know, obviously you have to provide those goods and services well. But once you do,
like, you know, people are going to resonate with it immediately. And that's what happened with us.
And so you mentioned giving back to the centers. Yeah. So that's the heart behind it. It's like,
okay, what does it mean to be a pro-life coffee company, right? And so instead of just saying, like,
we give back a portion of our sales or, you know, part of the pro se is an ambiguous kind of amount,
which just means we could donate as little as we want at the end of the year and say we
honor that commitment for us we said let's be as transparent as possible donate back 10% of every sale
this is not 10% of profits is 10% of every sale which means it can be upwards of 50% of our
profits you like that simple idea move the decimal place over after you buy that's how much we're
giving back and so we started doing that and just like posting each month you know we've varies
$800 this month there's another thousand dollars next month a few thousand the next and so it kept going
up and up and up and every month. We just update the total on our website to show how many dollars
we've donated. And now it's been over a million like I mentioned. And that all goes to local
pregnancy resource center. So this idea of like giving money back to the people that need it the most,
you know, for me, local PRCs, the more money can get into like the actual hands of people that
are doing the ministry or work, the better. So when you think about donations in general or charities
in general, you know, the larger organizations have more of a corporate structure. So the dollar
have to funnel down before they actually get into the people's hands that need them.
And so when you donate to like local organizations, it's literally like the three people that
work at that center that are using the funds that provide, you know, assistance to a mom
and need.
Like it's a very direct impact.
So that's what's been, you know, awesome is like we give hyper locally, you know,
throughout the U.S.
And that I think has been, you know, why people just love our cause and allows us to really
make a direct impact.
Yeah, I love that.
because one, it's probably way more work for you to find these individual centers and to get it down
versus just picking some big umbrella company.
Write one check at the other year.
We write like 40 checks, maybe 100 checks a month, basically.
Like literally like every month, you know, they sign up.
So we have a lot that obviously reach out to us.
How do you receive support?
We have kind of a quick vetting process just to make sure they're 100% pro life.
And then we get them enrolled and say, hey, you know, pick a month.
You'd like to receive funding from us.
We get them signed up.
And then, you know, we're cutting them a check, you know, the next month.
so they can receive funding immediately and continuously.
Yeah, that's fantastic.
I think a lot of people who haven't like spent any time in the nonprofit world
or sat on boards or give a ton don't realize that oftentimes,
and this is a broad stroke, but oftentimes the larger the organization,
the less of each dollar that you give actually goes to the cause.
And some of that is in good faith.
It just large organizations take more headcount, more overhead to distribute funds,
et cetera. And I think there's a place for the large organizations, especially again, the ones that are
operating in good faith. But you have some organizations where, you know, I know there was a big,
a big story that came out with like the goodwill were only something like, it was like sub-70% of
every dollar was going to actually help people who needed clothes, et cetera. And like,
I think that that shocks people. So you're not just like giving money as a show. When you're putting it
in the hands of those boots on the ground people, you are truly changing.
lives. And that's phenomenal.
Yeah. Did you find anything about growing a truly mission-driven business like seven weeks
different from, say, a normal entrepreneur? Like, were there any obstacles that were maybe
different or that maybe unseen that a standard, maybe tech entrepreneur or someone who's
just starting another kind of product-based retail D-to-C business?
wouldn't have to face that you guys did.
Well, you're definitely, you know, for us, you're cutting your customers in half immediately.
You know, like you think about it, you know, half the country, be probably even less,
is like pro-life align.
So you're definitely eliminating, you know, a handful of potential customers.
But I would say it's been nothing more than on the positive side.
Like, it's so cool to see that, like, we provide a good and service that literally resonates
now with over 100,000 Americans that, like, love what we're doing.
And then get to empower them, like, the idea, like, they're a part of them.
which they are because they're helping fund it, you know, through every order.
They're, like, supporting these centers.
So I think it's been nothing more than positive.
Like, that's what's so cool is, like, you can really use your business as this, like, tool,
this ministry tool for, you know, a cause that you really champion for us as the pro-life cause.
And, you know, it's been nothing more than just amazing support from people all over the country.
Like, we're empowering people every single day to make a difference and to help save lives.
Why pro-life?
You know, you think about, like, what's the most, you know, fundamental travesty and important cause in our country.
And I can't get over that the right to life is the most important cause of all time.
Like the idea that, like, right now, every single day, you know, thousands of babies in the womb are going to lose their life and never be able to, like, breathe on their own, have a future.
Love a family.
Love their parents.
Enjoy, like, being snuggled in their mother's arms.
Like, all these, like, most basic human, you know, emotions and needs are never going to get met because we don't believe, like, life is a human right from conception.
And so if you don't have that fundamental worldview, like, how can we actually build upon all the other humanitarian crisis if we can't just agree upon that?
And so to me, it's just the most important thing.
Like, let's solve this first and then we'll move on to, you know,
other, you know, obviously important needs as well and, you know,
protecting human dignity and, um, and all of that.
But yeah, how can we not just agree that like the right to life is just not a,
a given?
It's still not, you know, in this country.
And it's so sad.
So that's why it's so important to me, you know, we need to change that before we,
you know, move on to other human rights issues.
Yeah.
Have you seen this guy, um,
He's a kid. I didn't even say guy as a kid. He's in his 20s.
Nate Lieberman, I think, is his name. I'll double check on that. And for everyone,
anyone who's interested, I'll have him linked up. He's, you can find him on Instagram,
but he goes to some of these, like, human rights rallies, and they tend to be more leftist,
liberal rallies. Right. Irony there.
Yeah, and he's got the cameras and he's asking him about human rights. And, you know, he'll say,
like, hey, human rights are important. Yeah, yeah. And he'll say all human rights are important.
and he'll be like, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's why we're here.
And then he goes, what about unborn babies?
And people literally turn their back on them and walk away.
And some of them said, and look, I, well, the listeners of this show,
understand who I am.
Like, my issue with leftism is not even so much the things that they believe.
Because if the things that they believed worked, I would be willing to consider them, right?
But there's no receipts for the value structure that they operate in that show long-term
success and really any metric, right? Outside of my own selfish need for gratification and aggrandizement,
right? So outside of, outside of my own intrinsic need to feel like I am important,
there's no long-term societal benefit to really any of the philosophies or policies that they
espouse. So that's kind of my general take on leftist. Well, I also think some of the shit is
completely bananas. Um, you know,
at a very practical level if you could present me.
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With a receipt that said, hey, this society, right, was completely gender-fluid, and they
were also incredibly prosperous and successful and happy, and it just doesn't exist.
It's literally a trigger for the downfall, it's one of the triggers, or leading indicators
of the downfall of every great society is gender fluidity.
So, you know, you can say what you want about it and rights and all this kind of stuff,
but at the end of the day,
it is in terms of Roman,
Russian, Greek,
and those are just the ones that I've looked into,
all of,
as soon as gender fluidity
is entered into the culture,
it is literally a leading indicator
for the downfall of that society.
So, okay, so it's hard for me to believe
that that's something, okay.
So when you think about the fact
that then, moving into this idea
of pro-life versus pro-choice,
I don't know that there's anything
that causes my heart more pain
than when you see women on videos and in interviews bragging about the number of abortions that they've had.
And acting as if this is somehow a badge of honor that they are, they are, look at how, look at how, I don't even know what they're going for.
Like my brain can't even wrap around like what, what badge they get to wear in some group by talking about seven, ten.
I heard one woman talking about 15 abortions,
15 abortions.
Like, we're not talking about miscarriages, abortions.
And it's like, I'm like, what is the prize that you win for that?
I just, I can't get my head around it.
And it comes back to this idea of where is the receipt?
Show me the receipt where in a society,
the mass abortion of human life.
has yielded positive societal change or growth or prosperity over any given period of time.
I just, I can't wrap my head around.
There's no logic to this idea.
Yeah.
I mean, it's so sad.
I mean, it's like it's the oldest form of like the devil's the devil's influence,
which is child sacrifice.
Like the oldest forms of pagan traditions were child sacrifice.
And this idea of like killing the most vulnerable.
Like that's the ultimate like goal of evil of the devil in my opinion like attacking the most vulnerable, which obviously at its core will be a child in the womb.
Like that is the most vulnerable state we could ever possibly be in.
And that's what their worst industry does and they want to promote it, not just, you know, allow it but celebrate it.
And it's a form of, you know, child sacrifice, in my opinion.
That's as clear as I can be with it.
Yeah.
I want to ask you a very honest question you can answer any way you want.
I'd say there's two scenarios that I struggle with.
I know where I stand from a faith perspective,
but I also living in kind of the world that we live in and just not,
I struggle around my head around it,
which is young rape and incest in minors, right?
Right.
I struggle with those scenarios.
It's terrible.
Yeah.
I mean, it's the whole problem with that argument is, first of all, it's used to, it's the 1% of the time that's used to justify the 99% of the time.
Completely agree.
So no justification for the rest of it.
All right.
So, yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
So people always end up like, what about, you know, rape or incest?
And it's like, used to justify.
It's like, okay, how about we agree that the 99% of elective, I just want to get an abortion because I don't want to be pregnant is the reality.
is the reality of the situation.
Now obviously there's a lot more influence around there.
I think, you know, there's people that pressure people in abortions.
Again, that's terrible.
This is not like a women's empowerment thing.
These are people that are getting like pressured or financially, you know,
struggling where they feel like they have no other option.
Like that's, again, what we're doing, providing all resources we can.
So people never have to make that decision.
Then you come down to this awful, you know, 1% issue,
even less than 1% issue of rape and incest.
And, you know, the answer to it is that there's no answer that's ever going to make it right.
And so this is like the ultimate fallacy with it is.
like someone who experiences, you know, rape, you can't undo that. You could only be, you know,
receive God's grace to have healing, but you can't undo a rape. And there is so little talk
about the rapist in the situation that it just infuriates me. Like the idea that like,
why aren't we using all the resources possible to punish any sick and twisted person who commits a
violent act of rape to the nth degree to where that unspeakable thing is not a part of our society
more. Like they're they're automatically not in the conversation more. And so going back like you can't
Anton it's not their fault. They're minor attracted. Yeah, exactly. So it's sick people that then justify
which perpetuates this even more. And so why not bring them in the conversation, hold them accountable.
You can do whatever you want to them, you know, chemically castrate them, not.
innocent children, which is happening now.
So it's like they need to be brought into it.
We have to understand you can't ever undo a rape.
You can't fix it.
And an abortion is never going to essentially bring any type of healing process or undue process to, you know, what happened.
And so at that point, like, why not see how we can provide every resource possible?
So if that ever happens, that there is financial stability, there is.
counseling and emotional support because at the most base level in abortion the violence of an
abortion being taken against the child and also in the woman's body is never going to solve
or undo a rape it just it just doesn't there's no evidence that promotes or suggests that that's like
emotionally beneficial to go through the horror of rape and then to go through the horror of abortion
right after that as some type of solution yeah so I'm all for holding the people
are responsible way more accountable providing all resources possible for moms who if
they are in that situation so there is like complete and total support financially what
of that means you know abundance of like you know financial support for the child financial
support for the mom and everything we need because there's no there's no solving it there's no undoing it
and like that's the whole point of like the idea of like we're fighting a battle against evil like we want to
stop rape and the saddest part about it
is the abortion industry covers it up.
It is a perpetual cycle of more violence against women
because of the abortion industry, not less.
Yeah.
I know.
I look at these things like when we talk about poverty,
we want to give people money, right?
But we don't, no one talks about how do we actually help them find prosperity
in their lives, right?
Like I came from a very downtrodden.
I was one of the few lucky to get out of the community that I was born in.
I mean, we used to say, and I've said it before on the show,
you could leave the doors open at night because the criminals lived in our town.
They didn't rob in our town.
And, you know, what no one wants, and many people that I know,
some of which were friends, especially early in my life, didn't make it out.
And went all different paths, many of which were not good.
And what we don't talk about in these scenarios is we talk about, well,
how can we get them money so they can serve?
survive. But that's just a, we forget that that's a control mechanism. That's a control mechanism
versus how do we develop the programs, maybe short-term safety nets? How do we develop the systems
that allow people to pull themselves out or be guided out, right? There's always just pull yourself
up by the bootstraps. I get why some people would be, would get frustrated by pull yourself up by
the bootstrap. While good advice, I get why some people would be frustrated by that. But why can't we
guide them out, take their hand, take their hand and help walk them out, right, so that they can
live a lot, whatever life they want to live, but it's their, it becomes their choice. And instead,
we just want to, we just want to gloss over the actual problem, throw things at people, which
ultimately just becomes a control mechanism. And then we find ourselves in a country, which has an
unsustainable birth rate. And we're essentially decimating our civilization in this world that we
think that this amazing country that so many people have come behind and built, we're going to
run it right into the side of the mountain because we're simply not going to have enough people
to sustain it.
And it's just, you and I may never solve either one of these problems in its entirety.
But I'll tell you what, man, I'm glad that there are people out there like you who are
seemingly taking this, who are taking this challenge on in doing.
doing it in a very pragmatic, thoughtful, and faith-based way.
And I, dude, I love the fact that you are going right to the source.
And like you said, cutting 40 to 100 checks and giving it to the people who are actually
going to put this money to work and help people.
And, you know, God bless you for that, my friend.
Thanks, man.
I appreciate it.
You know, it's funny.
I never like to say, like, we're out to change the world.
It's like, that's kind of like a hyperbole.
It's like, no, we're here to make a tangible impact supporting life-saving services at
pregnancy care centers.
It's a very defined niche of good that we're doing.
And I think if everyone just finds their defined niche of good, we are going to change the world.
But it's not just me.
It's going to be a collective effort of everyone finding their niche of what they believe
their call to and using it for the glory of God.
And that's how we make impact.
While giving people delicious coffee at the same time.
They get to enjoy that along the way, exactly.
So people are interested in your journey and are interested in the coffee.
where do they go both for the coffee
and I don't know if you have any
specific content veins around your journey
with the business etc that you'd like to send them
let them know where to go. Yeah just our website
and stuff that's where we post all our content
but seven weeks coffee.com is that you can find
us. We're on Instagram as well
we can keep up with our content there too.
Dude, appreciate the hell out of you. Thank you so much for coming on
and yeah enjoyed it.
Got a jam-packed gift list this year.
Let half-price books help take the pressure off.
Our shelves are full of great gifts that'll have you checking that list off in no time.
Games, toys, comics, check.
Gifts for record collectors, check.
We even have gifts for regular collectors.
Head to your local half-priced books or search millions of items online.
And while you're there, you might as well pick up a gift for yourself.
You know, for all the hard work.
Find a store near you or shop online at HPB.com.
When you walk into a Burlington, you're walking into amazing prices and great gifts.
That's main character energy.
Because at Burlington, the holiday savings aren't the only things turning heads.
Discover quality finds and perfect presents for everyone on your list,
even those who are hard to shop for.
Toys and jewelry to new beauty brands and styles,
these gifts go seamlessly from our stores to under your tree.
Seriously, with these savings, why shop anywhere else?
You've finally broken loose from work.
Three friends, one tea time, and then the text.
Honey, there's water in the basement.
Not exactly how you pictured your Saturday.
That's when you call us, Cincinnati Insurance.
We always answer the call because real protection means showing up,
even when things are in the rough.
Cincinnati Insurance, let us make your bad day better.
Find an agent at CINFIN.com.
