FULL SEND PODCAST - RFK Jr. x Nelk Boys | Ep. 133
Episode Date: September 9, 2024Make sure to register to vote! Go here 👉 http://sendthevote.com Presented by Happy Dad Hard Seltzer. Find Happy Dad near you http://happydad.com/find (21+ only). Video is available on http://yout...ube.com/fullsendpodcast/videos. Follow Nelk Boys on Instagram http://instagram.com/nelkboys. Part of the Shots Podcast Network (shots.com). You can listen to the audio version of this podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts & anywhere you listen to podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, full-stem podcast.
We're back.
Big episode today, RFK.
I'm, I'm pumped for this one.
I'm most hype.
He's a gym, bro.
That's my favorite part.
Some you get pumped for,
and then some you're just like not that excited for.
I'm excited for everybody.
Are you?
Yeah.
No, you're not.
That's a lie.
Bro, you looked like your cat died in the lobby just now.
Yeah.
Stine walks in and just head down.
Bro, every time you pull up to a pod,
I feel like you just woke out.
What's wrong?
How's it been?
I don't know.
I had action on the Ravens last night.
They lost by that.
Do you see the end of the game?
did yeah yeah so what was that not in no it was out how his toe was on the line oh
it didn't seem like that that's crazy yeah hold on how much action couple thousand
oh whatever you're good your prize picks hit though too no yeah 15,000 prize
picks mine didn't I literally gave the walk of the year oh boy's I'm still on price picks
brad too sorry man hi go puff just go puff happy dads thanks dude appreciate it thanks bro
can I have one though maybe send you back to work best place to get happy dads cold man
they deliver it cold damn go puffs
fast as hell it's actually cold let me see yes cold you're gonna have one i'll take a sip you
know who i would be a good match for gay like who i could see him dating is that harry syssen
looks like his oh my god does that not look like his type that's crazy wait you don't
the democrat kid who he's this democrat kid he looks like he's like 16 but he's 23 so it's okay
harry sysing do you know who i'm talking about given the guy that was in your pod yesterday i like
him wait you talk about to george richards yeah you've no chance with that guy what the
i'm kidding now i'm sorry sorry guys
dating a different type of Brazilian, you know?
I think he's better with that Brazilian.
Jesus, yeah.
So how's Florida been?
It's been dope.
I'm going to be out there soon.
I can't wait.
When's your gym open?
It'd be the first quarter of the new year.
Nice.
And then I'm going to move out there too.
What's the, uh, what's the joining fee look like?
Is Josh Richards an op now or what?
Oh, I was just around.
Why, did you watch that?
I did, yeah.
It was funny, right?
Yeah, it was funny.
I was just impressed him a little bit.
He's a cool kid.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, he's hopefully not an op.
What's the gym membership look like?
probably same as one out here at 125 to join yeah and then a month 125 yeah pretty cheap
it's not bad nice day pass i'm gonna join you probably day pass day pass is there like a down payment
on a house though but no no day pass 250 no that's crazy bad's the day pass master well bro it's just
like so many people come here it's like it's like a travel attraction it's yeah people go there to like
meet people and make content and train you know so i'm actually excited for that new jay
I can't wait, bro.
20-something thousand square feet, it's going to be beautiful.
And also, I just can't wait to go to Florida.
Yeah.
I'm finally ready to get the fuck out of it.
So how long are you going to post up there for, you think?
For sure, more than half the year, so I can, you know, do the tax thing.
Yeah.
Especially when at first opens, I'll be there for at least six months.
That's it.
I'm really excited.
And I'm just, like, tired of, I hate to say that.
Do you think you'll post up there in the winter at all, Stiney?
No.
L.A.?
Yeah.
I like California too much.
Yeah.
Besides Gavin Newsom, destroying the entire city, it is the best, uh,
It's the best date by far.
All right, boys, football is officially back.
If you guys remember last year, I was the fucking prize picks champ.
We're running it back again this year.
Last year, I won $100,000 and gave some money to you guys.
This year, we're going to run it back.
But yeah, boys, football is officially back.
We couldn't be more fired up.
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your entire pick. We're firing all season long. Let's go, boys. How's it been like being back here
and shit? Good, dude. I haven't drank. I quit partying. I've been celibate for like 30 days and so
just been kind of focusing. Yeah. No, I swear. You haven't fucking 30 days. You're lying.
I swear to God besides last night and it was an ex-girlfriend. So it doesn't count. That's true.
That doesn't count. And so there was no drinking involved. But other than that, it's been 30 days.
I agree with that.
Wait, but it hasn't been there is because you had sex last night.
But that doesn't count because it's an ex-girl.
So it was sober.
But you still have physically had sex.
Yes, but what I'm saying is I haven't been chasing and being a full.
It's a technicality.
Yeah.
Where celibacy is not real in that situation.
Bro, just forget about it.
Okay.
Anyway, I've been, uh, yeah, more focused on myself and just doing.
Was that, did you text yourself by the way the other day, like to make that whole story?
Oh, that happened too.
Was that real?
Yes.
How crazy is that?
I swear you text yourself.
I'm, like, trying to, like, go out with for, like, two or three years.
We just will text each other, and she's like, hey, we should go out.
And then she texted me, and I was all excited.
I was going on a double date, her and her friend.
We and me and one of my friends.
And I was at the gym right before, and she texted me.
And she said, hey, I had a re-evaluation, and I don't think we should go out.
So I'm going to cancel tonight, and, like, good luck.
Wow.
Yeah.
And then I hit a PR on bench press right after that, I swear.
I thought you said you just had the gym and you left.
No, I got the text while I was at the gym.
Oh, okay.
I started pacing around freaking out, and then I hit a PR and then...
What, plate in a five?
25.
Plating a 25.
No spot.
I just wrist it.
That's not.
I feel that.
That's sick, right?
I feel that, yeah.
So, yeah, that hurt a little bit.
What girl is it?
Do I know her off camera or no?
No, she's a smoke.
She's religious.
I've been trying to go into that path.
Yeah, which I don't think is good time.
That's the thing.
Instagram's kind of like a dating profile too, right?
Bro.
Like, you got to do what gets views, but, Steinie, you got to keep in the back of mind.
I got a hide on my posts.
It's kind of like your Tinder profile as well.
I know.
When girls come to your profile, it's a reflection of you.
And like when they see your gram with the day in the lives now, people believe everything they see on social media.
So it's like they probably actually think that you're doing that.
Yeah, I know.
That whole situation really got it.
You don't want a girl that's that dumb anyway if she can't tell the difference.
That's what I was saying.
And it's like, dude, that's why I make a living, you know.
They want to have that lifestyle, but they don't want you to put in the work.
They don't want you to put the work in.
Yeah, you're a huge booger on your right nose.
I thought he's got that off.
Throw that shit over that way, not here.
I'm gonna throw it on you, bro.
Is it still there?
What's new with you, dude?
Have you slapped any kids recently or anything that's bad?
No, no, no.
No, no slapping kids, man.
Those days are done, man.
At least you got that one out of you.
The slap of the kids?
Yeah.
How good did that feel to get it out one time?
Oh, I didn't, it wasn't even a thing like that.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Me and Ron are cool, for sure.
Yeah.
I was thinking that for a video.
How many milk?
boys do you think if it was just a wrestling match like just grappling which like all these guys like let's say me
steiny steve and selim for us to tap you out am i'm going like full force but no punching just grappling
yeah full force grappling i would get tired but like it would take you guys i think all four of us could take
him no yeah no i would take all four i was thinking that would be a good uh short video i'll do it i'm me
steve steve stevie and but i'm gonna it's gonna be a little i'm not gonna hit you no just no it's grappling no
punching you could throw us yeah it's grappling but you might catch like a shoulder or something
someone like well we're gonna abide by the rose of grappling okay yeah i'm down that sounds fun
let's do it oh good to meet you kyle it's a hey here just meet you there's grabbing
this is your product yes this and this you want to try it out sure give you an assistant
yeah we had a cameraman on this campaign who almost died from eating beef jerky really what
on me impacted in his molar and he didn't know it and it got severely infected he started getting a
headache and uh and he wasn't aware he went to the hospital and he was he had sepsis and literally
almost died oh wow not from board jerky dental health is super important man people forget that
is this beef yeah as opposed to buffalo or something it was very spicy
oh you have hell you got a spicy flavor well you're going to eat some water
in a second for real pretty hot yeah it's hot it's good it's spicy flavor at least it's spicy
i like it all right i like it all right boy since rfk's trying it i want to tell you guys about my
favorite healthy snack board jerky you guys see me i'm trying to look good stay in shape i got
sick of all the comments saying i look pregnant so i'm always looking for healthy snacks and
bored jerky is my go-to i have this in my backpack whenever i travel i love board jerky
And this is literally the best board jerky I have ever tried.
Try it for yourself if you don't believe me.
It's the best quality board jerky.
The original flavor is my favorite because the macros are fire.
The carbs are decent.
The sugars are low and it's high in protein.
There's almost like 40 grams of protein in this bag.
I also love this spicy one too.
This shit's hot.
I love it.
I'm always snacking on this when I travel.
This is my absolute go-to.
It's available on Amazon right now.
It's the best board jerky.
Try it out for yourself.
You don't believe me.
It's on Amazon.com.
The link is in the description.
For jerky, my favorite healthy snack.
Thank you later, boys.
It's got a lot of seed oil in it, though.
I'm joking.
Oh, here we go.
I'm joking.
I'm glad I do want to talk about that.
No, I know.
We're going to get into it all.
So how's things been recently since I know the transition to kind of endorsing Trump?
How's everything been, like, post kind of going that angle?
You know, my campaign hasn't changed that much because I'm still on the road.
I got three days off.
I went with Cheryl down to Mexico for three days, kind of off.
And now it was the first, really the first day off I had in almost 17 months.
Wow.
And that felt good.
And then, but I've been back on that campaign trail since then.
I'm just, you know, now I'm working to get, to get Donald Trump in office, which is something if you had asked me
a year ago whether that would ever happen I would have said no way no way why did that change so
drastically well you know I gave a long speech about why that changed that that kind of traced my
evolution and it's hard to summarize it but um basically I saw that the Democratic Party that I grew up
with has disappeared and um you know I grew up with the Democratic Party that was any war it was
really resistant to the domination of our government by the military industrial complex and by
other corporate interests and large aggregations of economic power. It was on the side of the American
middle class, the cops, firefighters, labor, small main street businesses. It was opposed
directly to Wall Street. It was on the side of civil rights and particularly constitutional
rights and most importantly the First Amendment and freedom of expression. It was utterly
antithetical to censorship. In fact, the word liberal was derived from a term meaning
freedom of speech and free discourse. And all of those
And then, you know, it was opposed to anything that would, you know,
toxics in the environment, anything that would harm children or vulnerable populations.
Today, it is, it's inverse all of that.
It's now become the party of war.
Vice President Harris's speech, the Democratic Convention was extremely bellicose.
she was preceded and I was shocked at this
on this end they let a former CIA director speak at the Democratic convention
that would have never happened in the Democratic Party that I grew up with
they had a bunch of military leaders talking you know who were you know
military contractors essentially they had and it's become the party of all
street being become the party of big tech big ag big data
big pharma and it's and it's become the party of censorship and you know if you look at what
happened in 2020 and this is a really good sort of a good indicator president trump in 2020 got
approximately 50% of the american public voting for him president Biden got 50% but the
50% of the president Biden got represent owned 70% of the wealth in this country
the 50% that President Trump got owned 30% of the wealth.
Oh, you've had this inversion where the Democratic Party has now become the party of the wealthy
and of, you know, big economic interest, financial interest, and the Republican Party has
become the party of the poor.
And that's a direct inversion of the situation that I grew up with.
And then finally, it also has become extraordinary.
early anti-democratic. When I grew up my father and uncle who were fighting for voting rights
to make sure that every American can vote for the candidate that they wanted to vote for,
whoever you were. But today's Democratic Party is, there's no democracy left. I mean,
we had the abolition of all the primaries, essentially. They got rid of the primaries to make sure
that I couldn't run against Joe Biden. And in order to conceal the cause of the
cognitive deficits that he had, which he could not, you know, which would be revealed and were revealed
ultimately as soon as he debated. And then when he was, when there was essentially a palace
coup against him, he was replaced not by any kind of election, but, you know, he is essentially
a picked, his successor, Vice President Harris was essentially chosen by an oligarchy of elites
who we don't even know who they are. We have no idea how that price.
process happened. And suddenly without winning a single primary, without winning a single vote,
we were told she's the only choice. I remember about two months ago, President Biden and
Vice President Harris were ridiculing Vladimir Putin because he won his election with 88% of the vote.
And they said, yeah, he only did that because he got rid of all of his opponents, so he didn't
have to run against anybody. And he controls the media.
country. Well, the Democratic Party is in the exact position now. I had, you know, when
Ross Perra ran, he won, he had 34 interviews in 10 months on mainstream media. In the 17 months I was
running, I had only two live interviews on ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, and MSNBC. So those networks are
now controlled by the DNC. And I, and they're all talking off of
talking points that are given to them by the DNC, and they would not allow me to talk to their
audiences, and then they conspired with the DNC to keep me off the debating stage.
Well, these are not the indicia of a robust democracy. They're really, you know, it's a,
it's a party that is fundamentally anti-democratic. Boys, I know a lot of you guys are thinking
like me, you're seeing what's happening in this country. Everything's just getting really, really weird.
in women's sports the borders wide open this election might be the most important election in
u.s history i know you guys feel the same way that's why we're teaming up with sendthevote.com
to make sure that everybody votes sendovote.com is neither left or right it's about making sure
that everybody votes and when you vote we're making sure that your vote is actually counted we can't
just be tweeting and posting about all this stuff guys everybody's voice has to be heard this election
you guys need to get up off your f*** and actually vote if you know someone
that's not registered to vote, wake them up
because everybody needs to vote.
So guys, go to sendthevote.com
if you're not registered or you don't know how to vote.
Seriously, guys, this is our last chance.
I know you guys feel the same way as me.
Sendthevote.com.
Make sure your vote is counted.
How did they get away with that?
Like, what was their reasoning for not having a proper primary?
Like, what was, how did they legally get away with that?
I mean, they got away with it because there's no indignation in the press.
They were able to, normally you'd have a media that would say,
wait a minute.
There'd be an outroar.
The president has to come out of the basement, out of the bunker, and talk to us, and they'd be outrage about it, and they wouldn't let him get away with it.
And then when he canceled the Florida primary, when he canceled, you know, they made a rule in order to get rid of me, because I was going in New Hampshire, and I was doing really well in New Hampshire.
And that, you know, that's the bellwether primary. It's the first primary.
And it was, it is the bellwether historically for what's going to happen in the other primary.
And that's the primary.
And in 1968, when my dad ran, Eugene McCarthy ran, I think 40%, he didn't win it.
But he went enough that he embarrassed the sitting president and Johnson had to resign.
And I was in the same situation where I was running up big scores in the polls.
So they made a rule that said that any candidate who steps foot into the state of New Hampshire,
which I had already done,
that anybody who voted for them
that their votes would go to President Biden.
They made that rule.
And, you know, we were sitting there saying,
they're not going to get away with this.
People will be outraged.
But there was not a ripple.
It was all, you know, okay, that we're okay with that.
Wasn't the same thing with, like,
trying to keep your name on the ballot in the states
that you were running, like you were in?
And they weren't trying to remove them.
So didn't recently they just.
Yeah, they pivoted now.
Yeah.
They were trying to, I had to get it, I had to do, they rigged the system to keep independent candidates off the ballot.
So I, they didn't, you know, after Ross Perot ran, they rewrote all the rules to make it.
He only had to get 300,000 votes.
It was on every ballot, and they all had kind of uniform rules, and it was pretty straightforward.
You just had to get the petitions out there.
I had to get a million votes.
and actually more than a million votes.
And they had made it almost insurmountable
in some of the states where you had to get,
you know, I had to get 47,000 votes
in five weeks in New York.
But we went and did it.
And in New York, we got 150,000 votes, signatures.
And we got a million nationwide.
We did what everybody said that could never be done.
And the DNC then began suing us state by state,
not because they thought they could win the suits because they couldn't.
Our signatures, we got two to three times the number of signatures that we needed.
So they knew they weren't going to win.
But they were trying to bleed us white to make sure that, you know,
all of our money was being spent on litigation and that we couldn't get our message out.
So I had to spend about $15 million on litigation.
And for us, that's huge because they also wrote the rules.
that say that they can get each donor can give them $750,000, you know, maximum contribution.
Each donor can only give me $6,600.
So I had to, you know, they were raising billions and we were raising, you know,
we would raise a huge amount of money.
We raised between my campaign and the Super PAC.
we probably raised about $150 million.
We had to do it in $6,600 increments,
and they were doing it in $750,000 increments.
More than 10 times per donor what we could get.
Then they didn't give me a secret service,
and that was costing me almost a million dollars a month
to pay for my own security,
because you've got to buy them airplane tickets,
you've got to put them in the hotels, you know.
And I was traveling every day.
And so they were using, they were weaponizing the institutions of government and their control of the system to do everything they could to make sure that I couldn't get on the ballot.
You know, so that was part of the reason.
And then the other reason that I, you know, President Trump, I don't want to dominate this conversation because I know you guys are really entertaining.
No, you're, no, go ahead.
We came to listen.
We came to listen to you.
But what happened was it became clear to me that if I stayed in the race that I was going to get Kamala Harris elected because about 57 to 60% of my voters, if I dropped out, we're going to vote for Trump.
So I was taking away Trump voters.
And in the battleground states, I was taking, you know, I was getting, depending on what time it was, but between 5% and 20%.
But even if I only got 3%, I would flip the election because the margins in those states are, you know, 1%.
Is that unprecedented as an independent, like your numbers are what you were getting?
Well, what was unprecedented is if you put all the polls that put me in a head-to-head race with either candidate with just me,
them, I beat Biden 39 states to 11. So if it was just me against Biden, I would, you know,
I would run the table. And when I ran against Trump, I beat him by 14 points. If it was just
me against Trump. So that's never happened before. But when we ran three of us, my
support went down to, you know, double digits or single digits.
because people were voting out of fear.
They were saying, oh, if I vote for Kennedy, then, you know,
Trump's going to get elected.
If I vote for Kennedy, Biden's going to get elected.
It's going to be the end of the republic.
But I was still getting enough votes that I was going to change the election results.
And I was going to get Kamala Harris.
And I have a lot of fear about Kamala Harris being in the White House
because I don't think that she's capable.
of standing up to the military industrial complex.
And I think she, I also just don't think
we should have a president of the United States
that can't do an unscripted interview
that cannot talk to the press.
That's crazy.
What did you think of the CNN interview?
The CNN interview, they didn't even release it, right?
It wasn't even mine.
First of all, it was a softball interview.
And it was, and they, CNN somehow edited,
and my understanding is they won't,
don't reveal the parts that they cut out, that they cut it down from, I think, 40 minutes to 18 minutes.
And they won't show us what happened the rest of it.
But, I mean, I would, I just want, you know, look, I do probably on average about seven interviews a day.
And I do them, you know, they're not, they're with unfriendly reporters.
They're not scripted.
I don't know what's going to say, what people are going to ask me.
I welcome any kind of questions.
President Trump does the same thing.
Yeah.
And, you know, you want a leader that can articulate a vision for this country,
that can articulate it for us, for the American people,
that can inspire us with that vision,
that can defend our country and our interest to foreign leaders,
somebody who is articulate, who's committed to something.
And then you can disagree with what they say,
but you can disagree with Trump.
And you can find all kinds of errors and, you know, and horrors and the things he says,
but at least he's going out there and he has confidence and he has a vision.
Yeah.
And to elect somebody who is, you know, and I don't want to be harsh towards her because I don't want to feed into the vitriol.
But I just, I found it astonishing that you would have somebody who's been in public life their entire life.
and they do not have the confidence with their handlers
don't have the confidence to put them in front of a camera with an unscripted event
that to me is shocking and I don't think I think the rest of the world is looking at this
and saying what is happened to America well yeah it all just feels like a show I mean did you
see where it feels like it feels like somebody else is is managing it exactly like it's a producer
say this do that and it's that's the sad part about it too did you see when she stood up
and she talked about there needs to be repercussions
for social media sites that post this sort of content.
It's like, astonishing.
Where the fuck are we going?
When was that?
And what was she referring to?
She was referring to Elon Musk and Twitter
and being like basically like, we need to like have grounds.
Shut down the only free speech.
She said she actually said that Elon Musk was going to lose his privileges, right?
Like free speech is a privilege now instead of a right.
right it's something that the government and that it's a government's job to decide what
misinformation and disinformation and that's insane considering what just happened with the whole
COVID thing it's like Mark coming out and saying I was getting pressure to do this and I did this
and I censored it it's like how are we how are people hearing that and going like this is the leader
we want the person who's going to make sure there's no discourse around anything that they don't
want discourse around like how can we have a world where we go this is a lot of people just don't
believe that like a president can be a puppet like to me comal harris is just clearly like a puppet like
she's not running the show but i think a lot of people like trust the government and they
they don't they don't want to admit that their government might not have their best interests at hand
yeah i i don't i you know i didn't want to use uh you know any kind of pejoratives or you know
like puppet or useful idiot or anything like that to describe um her but it's hard to if you can't tell
people who you are, then what, you know, who is, who are we voting for? We're voting. And
if you talk to Democrats, and I have many friends who are Democrats who, you know, who are just
horrified by me, you know, supporting Trump. And I say, well, you don't even know who you're
voting for here. You have no idea what policy she, she's supporting you ever, you have no
idea who this person is. And what they, what it comes down to is they say, well, we're voting for
the apparatus. We're not really voting for the person. We, we trust a Democratic Party apparatus.
And there's so many problems with that concept, you know, that in a democracy you're voting
for, and by the way, the apparatus has not performed that well. The apparatus, you know, is
led in 10 billion people across the border and, you know, you've got the highest inflation. And,
We have, we were in wars, you know, we're, we've sent almost 200 billion to Ukraine.
And it's, and you have now, 60% of Americans can't put their hands on $500 if they have an emergency in their family.
Like, do you, do you think that this, this is ever going to change, this printing of money and the, the ruining of the money that we actually earn?
Because, like, they take all our money in taxes and then they send it over places or they print money and they send it over places.
And then do you think they're ever going to make the government more efficient?
Like, is that actually something that's going to happen?
Or is it just like, all smoke a mirror?
So they just say shit that they make you think, oh, it's going to be better this year or next year.
And it never actually changes.
Like for all the people who like watch this stuff and people who are living their normal lives,
like it just feels like it's only gotten worse over time.
Unless you're in like the higher, higher earners and you could earn or you could earn
because of the sort of conflict or the shit that's going on in the world,
most normal people are just like, how do I even stay afloat?
And it's just like if we vote for you or if we vote.
we vote for Trump or if we vote for Kamala, like, is the government ever going to get
its shit together or do they not give a fuck? And it's just like, well, we can keep people in this
conflict and we can just keep making more and more money and send money here and lobbyists
here and the military industrial complex can make more money here. Is it ever actually
going to change?
Theoretically, you can change it. I feel like if I had been president that I would change it,
I think that some of the things that President Trump is talking about could actually change
that system, but I think you're right. There's somebody kind of built-in perverse incentives
because you're electing people who are in this incredible situation where they can spend
money without any accountability. And spending that money and printing that money keeps them
in office. It used to be that if a leader was going to start a war, declare war, they'd go to
Congress, and Congress would decide on it, and then they would fund it. And funding a war,
you have to go to the public and say, you know, will you, will you, we're going to raise your
taxes in order to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq or, you know, in order to go to
Ukraine, which most of you've never heard of and couldn't find on a map. And you're not going to be
able to send your kid to his greatest school. You're not going to have money in your retirement
account, but it's worth it. And they'd need to sell us on that, or they'd need us to buy war bonds
to fund it. None of that has to happen anymore. Right now, there was no war declared in Ukraine,
even though we're at war with Russia right now. It just printed $160 billion now that we've
sent there. And they're sending it there with, you know, congressional funds.
and all those Congress people who are voting for it, Mitch McConnell, et cetera, are all in the tank
with General Dynamics, North of Grumman, you know, Boeing, Lockheed, all of the military
industrial complex, the contractors that are all making the money. That money is going to the
most corrupt country in the world, and they take a cut. But most of it is going right back
to these military contractors. All of those military contracts,
are owned by Black Rock, and Black Rock is, you know, then donates to the Republican Party
and Democrat Party. And they have the contract to destroy Ukraine, and they also have the
contract for rebuilding it. Is the military industrial complex, like when we talk about big
pharma and you talk about, like, you know, the food and stuff, is the military industrial
complex? Are they the biggest, like, puller of strings when it comes to corruption like this?
I would say that in the pharmaceutical industry. But the military,
The military industrial complex also includes the pharmaceutical industry because so much of the medical cartel is tied to the military.
Almost the vaccine program, you know, all of these, the public health service, which is essentially the CDC, is one of the five uniformed military services.
So that's why you have, you know, people over there with military ranks like Surgeon General that we're.
uniforms because it is a it's a military agency and a lot of the CDC is the yeah the
public health service which is the parent organization for CDC is a is one of the five
uniform military services and a lot of the the programs particularly the vaccine program came
out of the military the vaccine program is a you know was a set was created and iH came out of the
Navy, a naval lab, but it was created as a national security defense against biological attacks
in our country. So they wanted to make sure that if the Russians attacked us with anthrax or some
other biological agent, that they could quickly formulate a vaccine and then deploy it to 200 million
Americans with no regulatory impediments. And so they abolished the need for safety testing
because they wanted to do it quickly. And that's one of the problems.
you know, that you see throughout, but the bio-warfare bio-weapons programs are all tied in with
NIH. NIH is managing those. And so there's an integration between the medical cartel and the
military that, and when Eisenhower gave his famous speech on January 17th, 1961, my birthday,
I was six-year-old at that time, and three days later, I attended my uncle's inauguration in Washington.
and Eisenhower gave a farewell speech where he warned Americans against the emergence of a military
industrial complex that would destroy our democracy. In it, he included the federal health agencies.
And, you know, there's a whole paragraph where he says this includes the public health agencies
and the scientific agencies who are going to, who are going to weaponize federal science against
the American people. He stated that in his speech. Yeah, go read that. Wow. That paragraph. It's right
after he talks about the paragraph, the military industrial complex. And the next paragraph, he says,
and by the way, this includes the federal science and health agencies, and here's what they're
going to do to us. So it's very, very pressing. I love talking about this shit. Yeah. Thanks for coming.
This is dumb. So if you're elected or Trump's elected, because obviously Kamala doesn't really
want to change this, as it seems. How does it actually change when there's so much money being
exchanged in hands of those companies? Like, they would just never let it change. So deep. Yeah.
I mean, there's one thing that we really need to do in this country, which is that to have
something the president himself can't do, I agree, or even the Congress can't do. But we need a
we need a constitutional amendment that essentially overrules the Citizens United decision.
So you know what Citizens United is?
I do not.
This was a federal court decision that's really a monumental decision that was made in 2010.
And I'll give you history in the end of the after the Civil War, in the 1880s and 1890s, there was an era that was that historians called the Gilded Age.
And it was when you saw the emergence of these, what they call robber barons, the great wealthiest families.
on Earth, John D. Rockefeller, who was the first millionaire on the planet, the Carnegie's,
the Morgans, the Fricks, the Wittneys, and all of these big families were sitting on interlocking
boards that controlled all the industry in our country.
So there was a railway trust, there was a steel trust, there was a sugar trust, there
was a cotton trust.
these same people were sitting on all of them and they were calling the shots and at that time there
was not direct election of senators the senators were picked by the state legislatures and the state
legislatures were owned lock and stock and barrel by these gentlemen in fact it was said about the
Pennsylvania state legislature that it was the only legislature that was not for sale because john d rockefellow
owned every one of them and he wouldn't sell any of them and that's how corrupt they were and they were
choosing the senators, and then the senators were controlling the political parties who chose the
president. They controlled everything. And then you had essentially a revolution at the beginning
of the 20th century, or you had a guy who was part of the oligarchy, Teddy Roosevelt, come along,
who was not scared or intimidated by the oligarchy. And he was tough, he was brave, and he saw what was
happening. And then you had a populist movement in the countryside, which was farmers organizing to
take back rice and a progressive movement in the cities, which were Republican reformers who were just
good government people. And you had women's movement, and they all came together. And then
there were a bunch of muckraking journalists like Ida Tarbell and Upton Sinclair. And they began
writing these devastating articles in a magazine called McCleurs about 10.
taking down the robber barons and exposing them and all, and the public really rose up, elected Teddy Roosevelt president, and they passed all this extraordinary legislation. They got the five-day work week. They banned child labor. They gave women the vote. They created the first income taxes so that rich people suddenly had to pay their share. They created corporate taxes and graduated income taxes so that the richer you were, the more you had to pay.
And they, the most important thing they did is they made it illegal for corporations to donate to federal political candidates.
And they restored democracy because we had lost democracy.
America at that point was no longer democracy and they restored it.
We're in the same situation right now.
But what happened is almost 100 years, 104 years after that law was passed, that banned.
and corporate donations to federal political candidates.
A very business-friendly Supreme Court
passed or issued a holding that said
that donations to political candidate
were a form of free speech
and they were therefore protected
by the First Amendment of the Constitution.
So any effort by the government
to stop a corporation from bribing,
essentially legalized bribery to political
candidates was now illegal. It was unconstitutional. And this unleashed a tsunami of corporate money
into the political process. And ever since then, and that, for example, I think that year,
the entirety of what we spent on the presidential campaign was about $300 million. Today, that
wouldn't buy you a Senate seat in New York. And this presidential campaign, there's been about
$15 billion of donations. Oh, and if you're running for office, like if I ran for
Senate in New York, I have to raise $300 million. So the only way I'm going to do that is
by sitting in a room all day, which is what candidates do now, and dial millionaires
and trade for favors. And ever since that bill has passed, you've seen this, this systematic
shift in wealth upward to the new class that's actually.
actually running our country because the politicians are completely dependent on millionaires
and billionaires fund them. There's 800 families in this country that donate about 70% of that
money. Really? So how is this considered democracy? So it's not. Those 800 people are calling
the shots. And that's why you're getting these policies that are anti-labor and that are, you know,
that are systematically shifting wealth upward.
And when they, you know, both, when they shut down our businesses in this country,
they shut down during COVID, 3.3 million businesses.
But they only shut down the smaller businesses, right, Main Street.
Jim opens.
They left Amazon open.
You know, they closed the churches.
They let the liquor stores open.
They left, I remember that.
They left Walmart open.
They left Facebook open.
And all of those inherited the money from those small Americans.
business. And 41% of black-owned businesses will never reopen. So they obliterated the black
economy in this country. It was like Black Wall Street times a thousand. And a lot of those businesses
had, you know, three or four generations of equity in them. They'll never reopen. And who inherited
that? Jeff Bezos and Amazon inherited all of that business and wealth. And we all got a two
year lesson on how to use Amazon. I literally did not know how to use Amazon before that.
If I wanted to buy something, I went downtown. And then I learned, I had to learn because you
couldn't get anything else. And it's so seductive because you just find a picture of something
that you like and you, you know, swipe and it's in your driveway the next day. So of course,
it's great. But guess what? You know, I was shopping. I lived in a small town all my life.
And I might, you know, if you went into the local sporting goods store in my town, Mount Gisco, New York,
he had blacks on his wall from, thanks from the local boys club, from the Boy Scouts in O&N.
That was the guy I was paying for my kids' hockey uniforms, right?
My kids were playing 100 hockey games a year.
And that guy paid for their uniforms.
He paid for my kids' little league uniforms.
he was hiring my kids in the summer for summer jobs of them he was charging a little more than
amazon but that money was recirculating in our community and enriching us and then he paid local
taxes amazon shut him down and now amazon doesn't pay any local taxes anywhere the question is
do they pay any federal taxes the answer to that is no last year amazon paid zero federal
taxes. So you're seeing, they're doing this right in front of us. They're just strip mining the wealth
from the American middle class, shifting it up where to this new oligarchy of billionaires.
And during COVID, they do their shutdowns. They created a billionaire a day in 500 days, 500 new
billionaires. And they shifted $4.3 trillion north from the American middle class, which they obliterated
to this new aristocracy that we have. And, you know, that is.
But so if that power is so, the 800 people and it's so like, the power is so insurmountable,
how do we then pass a law that doesn't let that continue on?
Like, how do you make it stop?
I think you need a president who's willing to go in there and who is not part of that system.
You know, and I think that's President Trump and President Trump, I think, tried to do that the last time to drain the swamp.
And he was well-intentioned, but he didn't know how to do it.
And he said that to me, said, you know, I didn't know.
anything about governing.
And he said, we won this election.
And then all of a sudden, you've got to fill 60,000 jobs or something like that.
And he said, I was surrounded by people, by lobbyists and business interests who were saying,
you've got to appoint this guy, you've got to point that guy.
And that's what he did.
And, you know, he brought in Scott Gottlieb, who was a Pfizer business partner to run the FDA.
Gottlieb did a $100 billion favor for Pfizer,
and then what did he do?
He went back to join Pfizer's board
with all the stock, you know, dividends that he got.
So it's just a payoff, you know, revolving to our payoff.
And there was, you know, they brought in a telecommunications lobbyist
to run FCC.
They brought in oil lobbyists, Ryan Zinky,
to run the Department of Interior,
a coal lobbyist to run.
run the EPA, another pharmaceutical lobbyist, Alex Azar, to run HHS. You go across the board
and all of these agencies were being run, and that's what they all do. That's what they all do.
And Trump, the last time, got locked into that, and he told me, I don't want to do that again.
He said those were bad guys, and this time we're going to do something different. And he doesn't,
he said you know last time he brought john bolton in to run nsa and he's now
understands who the neocons are and what you know what the he's anti-war he wants to end the
wars and he did a pretty good job this last time there was no you know u.s um combat deaths
during his um during his administration but uh you know i i think that
He wants to leave a legacy.
He's not going to run again.
He's a lame duck president.
And he wants to do something that's good for this country.
And I can help him do that because I have sued all these agencies.
I've sued FDA, CDC, NIH.
I've sued the FCC.
I just want a big case against the FCC in the Court of Appeals.
Aligned to the American public about the dangers of cell phone.
radiation. And now they have to redo all of those regulations. I've sued the USDA, the Department
of Agriculture, and most of the big agricultural producers. And when you sue these companies,
when you sue these agencies, you get a PhD in how corporate capture works and how to unravel
it. And, you know, I know how to do that. And he's asked me to help him do that. So if we do
that, if he does what he says, I'm very optimistic that we can have.
actually remediate remedy a lot of this corruption.
I have a question I've always wanted to know too.
Because yeah, like you said, it's obvious that wealthy people are kind of like making the
policies in this country indirectly, but why are the policies like anti-American too,
whether it be like, you know, open borders or like defunding the police?
Like is it like foreign money that's trying to like destroy like America?
I don't know the answer to that question.
And the border policy seems so crazy to me.
Like what's the special interest behind that?
Or is that just stupidity?
It's hard to even imagine a rationale for it that is not sinister.
But I never speculate about things that I don't have evidence for.
So unless I saw the conversation or the documents where people are saying,
yeah, let's open the border to help China or whatever, or to cause.
chaos in this country, I would never say that, but I, and a lot of really bad government
policies that the most parsimonious explanation for them is probably the, the accurate one,
which is just sheer incompetence and disinterest and negligence and neglect, but, but some of it
may be sinister, and I don't blame people who say this has got to be sinister because it's so
messed up and you look at what's happened. I've been down to the border and just seeing this,
you know, this insanity of people coming through and then, you know, I watched 300 people come
across in Yuma during my first trip down there between 2 o'clock a.m. and 4 o'clock a.m.
So I arrived at the border at 2 a.m. and I watched the first, they were coming on white buses at
that were sleek, shiny, brand new.
They were all owned by the Sinaloa drug cartel.
And there's 55 people in each bus.
The first two buses were Africans from West Africa,
young African males, military age.
And they all come through.
And when I got there, they were coming through,
and they were being processed.
The Border Patrol, and I didn't actually talk to any of them,
The next two buses that came through were all people from Asia.
There was only two Latin Americans all night.
There was one family from Colombia, one from Peru,
and they were the only ones that had asylum claims.
I talked to all the other ones,
and they all said, we're here to get jobs for the money.
So there's no reason to let them in.
Because you have to give a hearing to somebody who has an asylum claim.
Somebody who openly says, I'm just looking for a job.
There's no reason to let them in,
But the Biden administration had ordered the Border Patrol let everybody in and stopped the catch and the catch-and-return program.
It's a catch-and-release.
The Border Patrol, nine of them had committed suicide the previous year because they were, you know, what they were being ordered to do is to not do their jobs.
And they were, their job was now to process those people as they come through, which means
they fingerprint them, check them from a criminal record.
If they do not have a criminal record,
they bring them to the Yuma Airport
and put them on a plane to any destination
they want in the United States.
Well, who's money?
Some of them have money coming across.
The people were not poverty-stricken, right?
But a lot of them have been robbed by the cartels.
They're charged between $10,000 and $35,000 to come across.
By the cartel.
By the cartel.
The cartel is, you can go.
Can you explain that to us?
You can go on TikTok and see the advertisements by the cartel.
What?
Holy shit.
And they're advertising.
They're all over the world.
These guys were coming through and they knew exactly what was going to happen to them.
Did you see Kamala use in something about her, like the Trump's wall in like her new campaign about putting a wall up now after the wall, the wall.
So stupid all this.
And now she's flip flopping and saying, okay, we're going to have a wall.
And she's like using the wall that he actually built as read.
reference point. Did you see that clip? I didn't see it. I heard about it. I was astonished.
But, you know. Because her job during the whole resident, her presidency was. That was her big job.
I was the job, the most visible job that she had. And then I think she was asked one time, have
you ever been to the border? And she said, no, but I think she said, no, but I've never been to Europe either or something like that.
Yeah. Does that have that? And she said something like that. I don't know exactly what it was.
but I don't know, maybe you guys can take it up and play that clip.
We are going to the border.
We've been to the border.
So this whole thing about the border, we've been to the border.
We've been to the border.
You haven't been to the border.
And I haven't been to Europe.
And I don't understand the point that you're making.
But that's not an answer.
Oh, how can, and she was given this very, very visible job right at the beginning of the, of the, of the,
before all the problems started.
So there was a minor problem,
but now she was in charge when it became a major problem.
And then I'll tell you,
and I don't want to dominate this discussion so much,
but I'll tell you one of the things that the Border Patrol guys told me,
he said,
we have been begging Alexander Mayorkas to come down here,
and he refused to come.
and see what's happening.
Finally, we got him to come down.
And he said, okay, you can build the wall.
Because when they came in, there were 27 gaps in the wall.
So, you know, and I was against the wall when Trump was talking about it
because I was just basically very skeptical of Trump.
And I didn't know anything about it.
When I went down there, it's clear, yeah, you need a wall.
You don't need a wall all the way 2,200 miles from Brownsville, Texas to San Diego.
Diego. But in the major urban areas and cities where somebody can just walk across and disappear
immediately, yeah, you need a real big physical barrier. And in the countryside, you need
fences and sensors and monitoring systems and long-range cameras and night lights and
these. And the Trump administration had put all that up. There were 27 gaps in the wall. The
material was already purchased. It's sitting there. And the day that Biden came in, he ordered
all construction stopped. So you can go down there today. And I have, you know, photos of it,
all of the material for Trump's walls is sitting next to the gaps in those 27 gaps in the wall.
There's a big pile of material that costs hundreds of millions of dollars to finish the wall.
And they wouldn't do it. So then, Mallicus comes down, sees,
this flood of humanity coming through the wall and says them, okay, we're going to finish the
wall, but we're not going to use Trump's materials. We're going to use our own materials. We're
going to buy new materials. You can go down there now and you'll see the Mayorkas wall,
the Biden wall, and it is, so there'll be a gap in the Trump wall. The gaps are pretty small.
Some of are like just 100 feet. All they need to do is,
up that gap with the material that's sitting there.
Why do they not do this?
But instead, they bought new material, which is a different color.
It's a kind of, it looks like almost a chain link.
The Trump wall is reddish orange.
It's like rusty iron, you know, and it's these big, sturdy barriers.
But the Mayorka slash Biden wall, it looks like chain link vets, the color of chain link
fence, and it links the wall.
So you'll see Trump wall and then a little gap with the Biden wall.
But the mine wall doesn't go into the ground.
So the people are going right under it or cutting through it because it's flimsy.
So why do they not care about doing this?
There's got to be some special interest with that.
I'd love to put one of these guys under oath and do a deposition with them.
Also, why spend millions and millions of more of our dollars on something that was already there?
Yeah, exactly.
Wow, what a great.
I mean, that just seems like petty politics.
It just seems like what the fuck are they doing with all our money all the time.
It's just like, it's just, that's so frustrating as someone who just like lives here.
It's like what is not even so much like, oh, no one should ever come in here.
But it's like, why the fuck are we constantly having to pay for just like random shit?
And there's like no rhyme or reason to anything.
But there's got to be some reason that we're just not aware of that like they're letting and allowing this to be the case.
There has to be some special interest.
Obviously the money there is like, well, we can give more money to that company to make this wall.
Like obviously there's an interest there.
But why allow all the people to flow in the way that they've allowed them to flow in and create the circumstances.
that we're just talking about, like it's a problem.
You know, the argument, if you, the liberal argument for it is that our country should
be kind and compassionate and, you know, allow people in.
But it's not, they've created a humanitarian crisis.
They're not solving anything.
They're creating a humanitarian crisis.
And either way, we have an immigration policy, okay, and people are waiting in line.
It's far from perfect, and we need to fix it, but it's fixable.
And we need to make it easier for immigrants.
There is a labor shortage in this country.
There are about nine and a half million jobs that small businesses are looking to fill
that are not going to be filled by Americans.
And you need to bring people in because we need to keep Social Security intact.
We need a base of people who are paying taxes and creating things and serving businesses
and serving the community.
we should be able to pick who they are.
We shouldn't leave that to the Mexican drug cartel.
And there's a lot of bad people coming across
who we don't want in this country
and we ought to be able to say to them, no.
And then, you know, you have all these people coming across now
and they're given an asylum court date.
I watch this happen seven years in the future.
They're told.
You come in, check back in with us,
but there's here they're here and nobody knows where they are yeah they're like yeah I'll be
there yeah sure I'll pull up bro and also recently you saw the $150,000 sent to to buy homes it just
seems like you mean in California yes in California it's like what that was insane like are we giving
so we're giving $150,000 to what about all the Americans who need homes well also yeah my kids
it's insane because that that idea and my kids shouldn't be getting that from the government right
and they have good jobs and stuff but they can't afford a home you have a whole whole
whole generation of American kids, the first generation in history, who cannot afford a home.
And that's going to destroy this country.
What it seems like, it's more nefarious because it seems like if you, you know, whoever's
applying for that $150,000, right?
It's an immigrant, right?
They can get it, $150,000 and get a home.
And now they buy a home.
And I'm sure that's probably track somewhere.
What are the chances that, like, that home goes into foreclosure and some rich billionaire
just buys it for pennies on the dollar?
It's almost like that's what the intention behind that is.
Now we get more real estate for the rich people.
For black rock.
For black rock.
So it's like, if it's so, because I look at it all, I'm like, I'm reading it.
I'm like, this is so obvious.
How come people are being like, yeah, we still want that person who's going to allow all
this dog shit to happen and fuck the American people.
I don't understand how people don't see it.
Yeah, by the way, it's ironic that California passed that law because California has the highest
homeless rate of any country, of any state in the country.
In fact, 50% of the homeless in America are in the state of California.
Yeah. And these are people, a lot of times you pass homeless people and say, well, their drug addicts are, you know, they have mental health issues.
But there's been all kinds of studies done here in California on the homeless. And the big, the major correlation has nothing to do with drug addiction or mental illness. It is the price of housing.
And people cannot afford a homes.
And they're in a rental, and they have two flat tires on their car,
and they cannot put their hands on their rent.
And they cannot, you know, they can't repair their car.
They can't get to work.
They lose their job.
They lose their home.
And now they're out on the street just because they had a little bit of bad luck.
They had an engine light come on.
And more than 50% of the people in our country can't put their hands on 500 bucks
if they have an emergency.
and if you're in that cohort
and the engine light comes on in your car
it is the apocalypse
because you know you're going to be on the street
and that's what happened
the correlation you look at the place
where there's homelessness in our country
and it's always places where there's high housing costs
California is the highest housing costs
and you know that's why we have the biggest
homeless rate in this state
and
and so you know
if you're going to get buy homes from people
How about the American homeless?
They, you know, let's get these people back in their homes.
They're people who already, you know, who are already here.
We don't need to bring people in and buying them homes.
It's crazy.
It's, I hear it.
And I'm just like, how is this, how are people not like, this is clearly a massive issue?
But people like celebrated are like clearly some side believes that it's a good thing.
Like it just doesn't make sense.
It's like, well, yeah, what about the veterans that need homes?
Like people who died for the country, people who.
who fought for this country.
It's like, how are we?
I just don't, I'll never understand it.
And then it just seems so weird.
And then we just talk about what I said earlier about the censorship is like,
is it so that we can never have this conversation about it and they just keep on,
keeping on?
Pretty much.
Just so strange.
I don't, I don't get it.
And I don't get how people don't see it.
I think it's a lot of people just don't want to admit that there's like an evil at the top,
I think too.
You know, they, this, this week in Brazil, we're seeing this submergence of totalitarian
and all the Western democracies now, and since COVID particularly.
In Brazil, this week, they banned Twitter.
Yeah, it's all that.
Okay, this is insane.
This was, you know, one of the model democracies in Latin America,
and they're banning free speech.
And the European community, they told the European Commissioner,
this guy, Thierry Breton,
two weeks ago told Elon Musk that if you interview President Trump live on Twitter spaces,
on X-spaces, I guess they call it X-spaces now, that we are going to prosecute you,
and we are going to prosecute you for penalties of 6% of the value of your company.
if you talk to a former president of the United States
in a live interview, a guy who is the nominee
of one of our two major political parties.
So, and then France arrests
Pablo Derov, who is the founder of Telegram.
You know, he stops in the country for a fuel stop
and he's dragged off his plane into prison.
Or what?
They already have the European, you know,
free speech doesn't exist in Europe anymore.
they're directly, openly censoring content on the internet.
They're penalizing people who put,
they're putting people in jail in England
who post things on the internet
that are critical of public policies.
And France, by the way,
has as robust a commitment to free speech
as the United States has.
You know, France passed all these laws in 1789,
during the French Revolution, guaranteeing free speech to French citizens, and then they had
another group of laws they passed in the 1880s doing the same thing. And they love free speech
as much as we do, and now it doesn't exist anymore. And so they're doing in our country. We have
a presidential candidate for the Democratic Party who does not believe in free speech.
Her vice president also has made very, very similar statements saying that,
There is no, the First Amendment, here's what he said.
The First Amendment does not protect misinformation or disinformation.
Well, guess what?
That's the scariest statement you can name.
It does.
It protects, the First Amendment protects lies.
It protects.
You're allowed to lie, and that is protected by the First Amendment.
The First Amendment was put there to protect all speech,
and particularly speech that nobody wants to hear, right?
All the inconvenience speech, the embarrassing speech,
the disinformation, the misinformation, the misinformation, the lies.
They're all protected by the First Amendment.
Because everybody knows that if the government takes the job of telling us
what is true and what's not true, all we're going to get is propaganda.
And they're going to control it, and then we're all screwed.
And the fact that they don't.
know that, that, you know, that there's never been a time in history when the good guys
have been the guys who have been censoring speech. We all know that. When somebody starts
censoring speech, they're already over, they're already sliding down the slippery slope
of totalitarianism. A government that can censor its critics has a license for every
atrocity. And, you know, we saw what they did during COVID, where as soon as they censored free
speech, they then went after religion. They went after, you know, they closed every church in our
country with no, or a year with no scientific citation, no public hearing. They then went after
freedom of assembly. They made us social distance without any scientific basis for that.
They then went after property rights. They closed all of our business.
businesses with no due process, no just compensation.
And then when after jury trials, the Seventh Amendment says no American shall be denied
the right of a trial before a jury of its peers in case their controversy is exceeding
$25.
That's all it says.
There's no pandemic exception.
And yet they shut down jury trials for any corporation that was engaged in a countermeasure,
no matter how negligent they were, no matter how many people they kill.
or injured, no matter how reckless they were, no matter how grievous your injury, you could not
sue that company. It's crazy. I feel like this is like, do you think this is the tipping point
for America? Like, I feel like this is the most important election in U.S. history. Do you feel like
that? I do. And I think we've said that about every election up until now, and I think it was probably
true. But this is the most important because, like you say, we're at an inflection point.
Now, because of the rise of totalitarianism globally
and the capacity for totalitarian elements
to exercise utter total total total total
comprehensive control of every aspect of human behavior
because of the emergence of these new technologies like AI,
which is gonna give the intelligence agencies
the capacity to distort our reality,
to control, to surveil us at level,
at levels that have, you know, it's been the ambition
of every totalitarian regime in the history of mankind
to control every aspect of human behavior,
our religious beliefs, our interactions with each other,
our transactions, our movements, our sexual, you know,
choices, whatever.
None of them have ever been able to do that
because you could always, you know, get under the radar.
But now with AI,
with facial recognition systems everywhere, with these, you know, we've given now permits to
415,000 low altitude satellites. Bill Gates said his 60,000 satellites can look at every
square inch of the earth 24 hours a day. Oh, you're not going to be able to hide. You can't
hide in your home. They have, they have technology that can look through walls. They can find you
in a forest. There's no way to hide from them anymore. And, um,
And then, you know, they have the capacity now to warp and distort and dictate our realities
and to, you know, and to, you know, and to control us through, you know, through AI technologies
that can do predictive behavior.
Do you think we're just, like, even if, like, for example, Trump wins and fights back
against some of that, right?
Do you think at some point regardless it's going to be a reality that it's like,
Because it seems like someone comes in, someone else is going to come in eventually,
you know, every four years thing, it's like,
are we just going to end up in the same situation regardless?
I think if we have the right people in office, we can change it.
And, you know, AI can actually democratize us.
You know, the same way we were told that the Internet was going to democratize us,
and it turned out to be this tool for totalitarian control, right?
It was going to democratize the spread of information and the access to information.
But it had the capacity to do that.
I think AI has even a greater capacity to actually democratize us,
to make government more transparent, to make it more responsive to,
to make it more efficient, and to make it the servant of people.
But it also has the capacity to turn us all into slaves.
And, you know, Elon Musk said it the best.
He said, first, it's going to steal our jobs,
that it's going to kill us.
And I think it has that that's not,
that what he was saying is not hyperbole,
that it is true.
That's,
how do you,
what's the timeline,
if we collect,
if we elect useful idiots and sock puppets
to be present in the United States,
the people who are the same people
are going to be controlling AI
and its development.
Skynet.
Skynet.
Terminator is coming, dear.
I feel like that's the,
30 years.
This world is getting scared.
If that much.
Another thing I want to talk about, I feel the whole Make America Healthy again, your speech
when you came out and endorsed Trump was like electric, by the way, too.
I think you just, you added so much to the Trump campaign because you're just hitting a
totally different spectrum of ideas with like Make America Healthy.
And it's just like, could you tell us about like what's behind that and the whole corruption
with the food industry?
Yeah.
I mean, well, thanks.
You know, I've been working on this issue for.
or 19 years because I see this chronic disease epidemic.
We have, I mean, kids are sick today.
I don't know why I notice it and other people don't,
but maybe it's because I had 11 siblings, brothers and sisters.
And I had about 70 first cousins.
And so I, and then I have seven of my own kids.
And I know what children are supposed to look like.
And what I see today, they're not, they're all damaged.
A lot of them, right?
I think almost all of them are damaged.
Have you seen Big Justice in the Rizzler?
What?
Have you seen Big Justice in the Rizzler?
No.
On TikTok, those kids?
The Costco guys.
The Costco guys.
No, I got to go watch it.
What do you mean, though, when you say that?
They're eating chicken cakes and chit.
Well, there's categories of diseases that I never saw as a kid.
They just weren't, you know, they weren't around.
The major categories, of course,
obesity. And obesity is, you know, when I was a kid, I think, you know, maybe eight or nine percent
of Americans were obese and now 77 percent are. I thought the solution was Ozambic, though.
Yeah, exactly. Oh, and that's the thing, is that, you know, the most valuable asset in America right
now is a sick child? I think Osambic costs, is it $1,500 a week or $1,500? Maybe a couple people in
room I know, but it's a lot of money.
Well, it just seems like it's another derivative of like that military industrial complex.
It's just the pharmaceutical industry.
Right.
And it's shifting wealth upward.
And it's poisoning us.
They have the food industry poisoning us on one hand and making us obese.
Americans didn't suddenly become lazy and gluttonous.
You know, we're being mass poisoned.
Yeah.
And it's obesity and it's three other major categories, neurological diseases, ADD, ADHD,
these are all things that I never heard of as a kid, okay, ADD, ADHD, speech delay, language delay,
ticks, Tourette syndrome, narcolepsy, ASD, autism. Autism rates when I was a kid were 1 in 10,000
or 1 in 1,500, depending on what study. Today, one in every 34 American kids is diagnosed with an
autism disorder and in California one in every 22 kids.
That's one category, neurological, autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, lupus,
Crohn's disease, all of these, and then diabetes, which is the biggest.
When I was a kid, a typical pediatrician would see one case of diabetes in his lifetime.
Today, one out of every three kids who walks through his office store is diabetic or pre-diabetic.
One out of three, 30%.
what happened. It's now costing us more than our military budget, mitochondrial disorders.
And we're, you know, on the other end, another mitochondrial disorder is Alzheimer's disease,
which is now called type 3 diabetes. It's all being caused by the same thing, poison food.
We know what's causing it. It's poison food. It's all the, you know, it's all the seed oils
and the ultra-processed food, processed sugars, and flowers, and, you know, all this stuff that's,
and we have a thousand ingredients in our foods that are illegal in Europe, okay? And we're the only
country that allows this stuff. And then the last category is allergic diseases, which are
like peanut allergy. Did I ever know anybody with a peanut allergy? No, I've never heard of it.
Nobody in my generation ever heard of it.
And now it's every classroom.
I do five of my seven kids have allergies, right?
None of my siblings did.
I didn't know a single person in my generation who had it.
And so all of that, and then eczema and all these other asthma,
all these other allergic disease that exploded.
And Congress actually said to EPA, tell us what year,
the autism epidemic began, and EPA came back and said it's a red line, 1989, that's when it changed.
That was the change year.
And if you look at all of these diseases, it was all around the same timeline.
Suddenly in 1989, they all exploded.
And so you look at what happened in 1989, and it was the beginning of really this cascade of processed foods that we started eating.
and, you know, also the vaccine scheduled change.
We went from three vaccines to 72 vaccines, and that's part of the issue.
But it's mainly, you know, we're just mass poisoning.
Our kids are now swimming around in a toxic soup.
And it's costing us.
The cost of chronic disease when my uncle was present was zero.
There were no medicines for it.
It was, it just, it's essential.
did not exist and it was so rare as if you know effectively not exist and today it's costing us
4.3 trillion and nobody else has this like us right there's some countries that are
starting to climb but during COVID we had the highest body count from COVID in the world
so we had 16% of the COVID deaths in this country we only have 4.2% of the
world's population. We had by far the worst record of any country in the world. And it's impossible
to understand why people are getting awards in this country for managing COVID because they did
literally worse than anybody on earth. And CDC says, well, it's not our fault. The problem is
Americans are so sick. And CDC, right? CDC says the average American who died from COVID,
had 3.8 chronic disease.
Ovid wasn't killing healthy kids.
It was killing injured people.
It was killing people who were already, you know,
extraordinarily damaged.
They had asthma.
They had obesity.
They had, you know, diabetes and one other disease.
And we died because nobody else has anything like this.
You know, so make America health again is about addressing what's causing it and eliminating those causes.
And, you know, I know how to do that?
So how are these departments like corrupt?
Like they're purposely, what's their motivation for purposely putting the bad stuff on the food?
The U.S.
It's cheaper, right?
That's what, yeah.
Yeah, FDA is utterly corrupt because it gets 75% of its budget from pharmaceutical companies.
So it's not working for the American people.
It's working for pharma.
NIH is corrupt.
NIH is the scientific research organization.
And when I was a kid, it was the gold standard scientific research organization on Earth.
Everybody looked to NIH for the best scientific research.
Nobody else in the world had anything like it.
There's a lot of nations that just say in their constitution or in their laws.
whatever NIH says is what we're going to do
because everybody trusted it so much around the world
and in 1980 Congress passed an act called the Bidol Act
and that act said that if you work at NIH
and you work on a new drug on developing a new drug
that you get to keep royalties from that drug
and that NIH gets to keep royalties
so I'll give you an idea
what that means. The Moderna vaccine was developed by NIH scientists, and 50% of that vaccine
is owned by NIH. So NIH itself is making tens of billions of dollars on that. And then there
are six individuals at NIH who are chosen by Anthony Fauci who get to pocket $150,000 a year
forever, not just for their lives, but their children, their children, as long as MRNA
platforms on the market, they're making money. These are the individuals that are supposed to be
looking for problems with the product and saying, you know, you can't do it. But they're paying
for their mortgages and their kids' education and their boats and their alimony from that
vaccine. So how vigilant do you think they're going to be and telling the American public if they find
a problem with it? How do you, how vigilant do you think they're going to be about looking for
problems. They're not. And that, you know, is the problem is that they wanted us to use that
product and they are making lots of money on that product. And this is true for now most of the
product, the new drugs that are approved and licensed by FDA came out of NIH researchers.
No, NIH is no longer a scientific research organization.
They're a drug development incubator for the pharmaceutical industry.
And it's all corrupt.
These are perverse incentives that, you know, we need to end.
They need to be looking at and saying to, instead of spending a $42 billion budget,
they distribute that money, $56,000.
scientists at universities all over our country to study scientific disease, but what they're
doing now is they're getting those scientists to develop new drugs that they can collect royalties
on. And what I would do in there is I'd go in and say, wait a minute, we're not going to do that
anymore. What we're going to do now is we're going to figure out why we have the highest autism
rates in the world. But how are you going to win that battle with all the money you just explained
and all the people buying it? Like if I were running NIH or if I were running HHS, I was
I can change everything.
Yeah.
I can just say, we're not going to do that anymore.
And, you know, if you think a lot of people are going to support that?
I don't need anybody to support it because if I was running it, I would just tell them what to do.
Is it that simple?
But does it's what?
It is that simple.
Yeah, if you, and by the way, I know a lot of the individuals in these organizations,
these agencies who have to be moved or corrupt or crooked,
I understand the perverse incentives that need to be unwound, that put.
put corporate capture on steroids.
If you're the head of the agency and you're fearless, you can do it if you're willing
to take the, you know, the heat.
Right.
Most of them aren't.
And usually the guys who are running NIH are pharmaceutical reps.
They're not, they don't want to rock the boat.
So taking the heat, let's talk about that a little bit.
Obviously, like the assassination attempt on Trump, the historical assassinations as well,
you don't think that that's something that those people would be willing to go towards
if they feel like that's going to be changed because it just seems like I think there's trillions
of dollars at stake and that you know anything is possible and they're not good people yeah do you
ever get scared I don't get scared because that's not the way my mind functions so but you know
I also don't you know I take precautions I don't I don't discount the possibility that somebody
would want to, you know, commit violence.
What do you think was, was there any, like,
conspiracy behind the Trump assassination?
You think like that?
Again, I don't know.
Yeah.
You know, I've read some of the analysis on the, you know,
there's a couple of scholars who are kind of scholarly people who look at it,
and I read it with interest,
but I don't know enough about it to really, you know,
make those kind of assessments.
I've, you know, I put a lot of study into my father's assassination and my uncle's assassination.
And, you know, I know a lot about those.
But I don't, I just don't have any information about the Trump.
Yeah.
About what happened with Trump.
But I think there's a lot of questions that everybody asks about, you know, how that happened.
Yeah.
It seems like, you know, I had a security detail, and we were watching it in real time.
And they were saying, you know, we would know.
put you in that situation without having drones in the air and without having people on every
building. And they said, like when we were in Philadelphia and they put, I was in a situation
where they didn't like, but they said, we can put people on these buildings. We can just
hire $18 an hour of security cards and put them on every building within rifle shot
of the site. And that's what we would do. And that kind of
situation, even if we had no cooperation from local law enforcement. So there's a lot of questions
about what happened in that situation that I think anybody's going to ask. And I think it is,
you know, President Trump has said that he's going to create a commission to look at those
issues. And I think, you know, that's a good thing. We should look at all these questions that,
you know, people ask. Because you said that earlier too, like you're scared Kamala won't have the
the guts to stick up to the military industrial complex.
Or the intelligence apparatus, which is, I'm more frightened.
Is that, like, it seems like those are the big no-noes.
Like, anyone speaks out about big farmer or even like, yeah, your uncle, too, like,
I know he was very, like, standing up to the military industrial complex.
Like, it just seems like they're not going to let that happen, right?
Yeah, I think that there are, that they will be very, very resistant to it.
I thought it was funny at that whole situation, how Democrats call themselves the Party of Joy,
and then you have their biggest endorser saying,
oh, you should have got him,
like Jack Black, for instance,
saying next time make sure you get him.
All that.
Insane.
But the people are making jokes like that.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's just like, yeah,
that seems very,
it just seems insane to say that.
No matter what,
like, no matter what you believe,
it's like,
what are we doing?
Yeah.
Because that's the least from democracies.
Yeah,
that guy should have died
who's running for a presidency.
Yeah.
But I'm,
but I'm,
but I'm Democratic.
You're the party of doorway, bro.
Oh, what the fuck?
You can't even.
make that make sense. I want to ask you about going back to Kamala, it seems like Trump, every
time you see something about her, she just worsens her case. Like, anytime I open my phone,
anything she does, people talk about her changing her accents where she is. There's a video
of her getting off, getting out of a car with her headphones in, avoiding the press. I don't know
if you saw that as well. But it just seems like for Trump, it's like he should just almost play
the silent game and let her just continue to worsen her case. Like, does he really even need
to do much at this point? I don't know. I mean, I think,
I looked at the, and Nate Silver on today, you know, Nate Silver has, he does, he aggregates,
he's kind of the most respected pollster, and he aggregates all of the polls and weights them.
And he has a very good track record.
And he gives now Trump a 70% chance of winning.
And I think that was up from, I think he was like 48% right before the convention,
before you know my endorsement your endorsement was huge yeah no i think that helped them 100%
you know the other thing that's it's huge because yeah like it's it's kind of cool because like
trump doesn't really speak on you know environmental type issues or like make america healthy type
issue so it's so cool to see yeah it's like you you guys joined forces i was like Batman and
spider man like when you when you went there like but it's cool it's cool that justice
i think we need more that too yeah like and then Tulsi gabber too it's kind of just like
And I like how he's potentially bringing Elon in to help with stuff.
Like it's cool how there's a bunch of smart minds now teaming up and, you know,
speaking on different issues and tackling different things.
That's what like, and I'm just scared too.
I feel like if Trump doesn't win, like the World War III shit just scares me.
Yeah, that really scares me too.
Seeing everything going on.
I saw China said that didn't President Xi say that like by 2027 like he's going to take
back Taiwan like he said that point blank?
Yeah, I mean, I think that I don't think that China wants to have a hot war with us.
No.
And Russia doesn't either, but we're doing everything we can to get them into a hot war.
Did you see Putin endorse Harris?
Yeah, that was funny.
Pretty funny.
That was pretty funny.
Really funny.
He's like, yeah, let's keep him weak.
Let's keep him censored.
Do you have any opinion on, like, what's been going on with aviation and how we have, like, Boeing has the rocket, two astronauts in space?
I don't know anything about that.
No.
Oh, what's your theory?
The DEI, stuff like that.
Just they're hiring people that aren't capable to be in that position.
Because you're seeing there's been plane crashes, close calls of planes colliding.
It's just been very bizarre.
That's frightening.
Yeah.
Tires exploding.
It's very weird.
Yeah.
What about the fentanyl problem in the United States and the opioid addiction?
Do you think there's anything that is ever going to fix that or change that?
Is this another pharmacy problem, you know, it's like...
I mean, fentanyl is not really a pharmaceutical now.
It's now, you know, an illegal drug that's coming in from labs in Mexico and China, et cetera.
It's hard to prevent it even if you make a build a wall because you could, you know,
fentanyl is so efficient that, you know, I think it's 200 times as powerful by weight as opioid.
So you could smuggle enough ethanol to kill everybody in Los Angeles.
you know in a briefcase and so it's hard to block it from coming across but i mean the real issue is
why you know we lost 106000 kids last year to overdoses most of that was fentanyl yeah and why is this
generation of kids you know so utterly hopeless and alienated and dispossessed and you know
and just um despairing about their future and and unconnected to community
and, you know, how do we really repair that?
Because other countries are not, you know,
looking at this level of addiction and despair.
And we have a, you know,
and a lot of it is linked to the health crisis,
the chronic disease and the hopelessness
that comes from that and the damage.
And I, you know, these pharmaceutical,
I mean, my daughter-in-law, Amarilis,
who was a former CIA,
And, you know, she was in the Klanstein Services for her career, and she now runs my campaign,
but she has three kids.
And she was looking through her, because of what we're spending so much time talking about this now,
she was looking through her cabinet for red dye, you know, the red dye.
There's study after study that shows that at that, at that,
red dye causes ADHD.
Like the red 40,
whatever that stuff is?
Red 40 Lake.
Is it red dye number six or number 40?
There's a bunch of different ones for it.
I think a lot of them have problems,
but there's a couple of them that are really
like absolutely linked
in the scientific
literature, all these behavioral problems
and kids. I was going to buy some gum and it said
Red 40 Lake and I was like, I'm not going to have that gum.
That's not a true story. I swear to God today
when I can, I swear to God,
I was looking at trying it.
saying that because you're here just no this is the most bullshit i've ever i left my gym you're not checking ingredients
no bro bro you could check you could check the damn like the surveillance bro ask the fes they probably
watched me do it he watched right straight through the building you saw me do it i looked at it
i swear to god it said red 40 lake and i was like not how i don't even what the fuck is that i know my
my daughter-in-law told me she found it in almost in all these products like her kids toothpaste and
all this and and she was looking she was saying i you know i was looking at the literature and it was
and they were taking kids who were on it and you know and then kids who were not on it and using
a placebo control trials and the the the difference between them was so dramatic and immediate
as soon as you take it away they get better and yet it's in everything you know and uh i mean i
That's why I stopped eating this stuff because it looks like maybe there's some in here,
but this is all natural, right?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, there's no red eye, no seed oils.
Good.
Yeah.
Yeah, I saw a clip of you at, uh, you were at Mussel Beach recently on that, bench press?
At Venice, yeah.
Yeah, Venice.
Brad wanted to ask, what's your PR on?
Yeah, I'm actually really curious.
I know, I don't live heavy.
I live really like, but was your all-time PR, bench press.
I had like two plates on each.
A 225, yeah, Jimbrough.
Serious Jimbrough certified.
Jimbrough certified.
I love it.
I don't, I had both my shoulders done.
And I have both, I have fake knees, I have fake hips, titanium everywhere, including my throat.
Oh, I, you know, now I do a lot of reps.
Yeah, that's good.
I do, I do like 12 reps my first set to exhaustion.
That's what I try to do.
How much was your best squat ever, sorry, Jim.
Oh, I don't know.
I don't do squats.
I do, I do, I do, I typically until I had my hips on, I was doing eight plates on both sides.
That's a lot, right?
Eight plates on each side?
Yeah, it's more good at you.
You don't hit legs.
It's about eight hundred.
He doesn't really hit legs.
No, I squat a lot more.
Come on.
Okay.
No, no.
He's trying to undermine me.
It's fine.
I'm used to Steinie.
One last question.
I know you got to go.
but what would your like dream position or how would you like to like contribute
if Trump wins like in terms of like a cabinet position or like what would you like your
role to be in an ideal situation?
Well right now they've asked me to be on the transition team which I think is really good
because that allows me to have input on all of the people who are picked and ultimately
policy is personnel so it's going to be you know the people who are picked on that you
know the in the USDA, the Department of Agriculture.
So transition team is like you're helping pick the heads of each.
And there's 20 of us on the team and Tulsi's on there too.
She's awesome, man.
She's on the team too.
We need you for the health stuff.
Yeah.
We need you there.
You know, I don't know exactly what my functional will be in there.
But I, you know, I'll do something with public health.
Yeah, you're a massive asset to, to Trump.
This was, this was huge.
Yeah.
And then you got to run in 2028.
Okay.
Will you?
I don't know what I'm going to do.
No, you got to, bro.
You have to.
You need, like, the help thing is so important because everything starts from that.
So.
We're helping out, we're helping out Team Trump.
They have a website, sendthevote.com that we're helping, like, our audience is like 18 to 30.
So sendthevote.com.
If you guys want to register to vote, RFK on the transition team.
That's my demographic, 18 to 30.
Yeah.
If you look at my, you know, my, that's,
I was beating both Trump and Biden with people under 35, you know, and that's, we got to fix that.
Does that surprise you, though?
No, because I, you know, that's my kids' generation.
I see what they're doing, what's happening to them.
I see how unfair, how screwed they're getting, you know, where they're going to get, they're the ones who are going to pay the $35 trillion debt.
Yeah.
My kids went to the best schools.
They have great jobs and none of them can afford at home.
And, you know, and their friends are not going.
Their friends are still living at home with their parents.
And these are kids from Harvard and Stanford.
Yeah, that's great.
And I'm thinking about kids, you know, who don't have that
or who don't have any college education
and out-loss this generation,
how just abandoned they've been by our generation.
and then they've all been poisoned.
Right.
Oh, you know, all of these kids coming up to me,
I did, when I was campaigning actively,
and I still do this, I did.
You know, we'd have 1,500, 1,500 people every night,
and I did a selfie with everybody at the end.
But we moved people really quick through the selfie line,
but I got to talk to people, you know.
And all these kids were coming up to me and saying,
yeah, I've got an autoimmune disease.
I've got, you know, and it was, it was really just shocking and, you know, and troubling.
I had a girl come up to me one night in Pennsylvania, and she was, you know, maybe 22 years old.
And she said, okay, now we're getting in today.
Okay, well, she said, I violated house arrest to come see you tonight.
And then she pulled up her, her stuff, and she had.
she had an ankle monitor an ankle monitor and she said I'm going to get in a lot of trouble
and then she said are you going to legalize cannabis I said is that why you got that thing on
she went like yeah I said yeah what state was that in Pennsylvania okay so if we can get people
healthy jacked it'll be a better the world would be a better place exactly yeah so we need because
then people would be sharper they'll be able to like spot the bullshit and yeah fix it yeah and
they and they're not going to they're not going to allow themselves
be the slaves. Yeah. Hell yeah. If they feel like they're in control of their lives and they have
hope for the future. Yeah. I'm glad you're here. I hope you. I think the swamp. The swamp just must
have nightmares about you. Yeah. They want them. They want a swamp vacuum. We're unhealthy. We're always down
to get a lift in too. Yeah. I would love to work out. That'd be dope. Where do you guys work out?
Brad's gym. I have a gym. It's in Encino. It's called. Yeah. Oh, cool. Yeah. Because you were
in the pandemic. God. Yeah, I kept it open during the pandemic. Well, hold on. I.
of friends who went down there during the pandemic because you weren't making people wear masks
no i i went to i went had to go to court like nine times i didn't do anything i said what is this
we should smack like a boy's arm day that'd be so cool yeah it's called zoo culture it's an incino
it's an enino yes just be aware of it isn't there one here too no so there is one in woodland
hill's the original one that i kept open and i moved it to a bigger location in insino right there
on ventura okay yeah we'd love to that'd be so funny i'd love to come down there be
prepared for a little expensive day pass maybe a little sunday arm day i was because i'd hit you up your
team to do an interview and like a time ago and someone changed positions can he get a free day pass
no 60 no okay yeah of course of course a day pass 60 it is well depends who it is but yeah yeah
inflation right how does your gym floor floor compared to golds you'd you would love my gym
yeah it's a dope gym it's a great great gym it's a real gym you'd love it yeah like i'd love it
I mean, I love golds at places.
I'm going to golds after this.
Never been.
Really?
Yeah.
I'll go with you.
Let's do it.
What?
I'm going to go, I'm going to go to train with you.
I'm going to go to gold after this.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I'd go over with you, but already went.
What time do you, you go early probably?
I go at, I shouldn't say it because of security.
Yeah, I don't know.
We'll cut it out.
Don't say.
I'll tell you.
I have to word.
You hit the cold plunge or no?
I have a cold plunge in my house.
Nice.
Yeah.
Do you believe in a lot of that, like the cold plunge sauna, red lights on? I believe it because on the red lights on, I've read a lot of literature. The cold plunge, I don't know. I know people swear on it. I don't know how strong the science is on it. And it's really, it's painful to get in there. I have a son who hasn't taken a warm shower in a year.
He's a savage. I love that guy.
A cold plunge every day.
See, I hate cold showers, but I love the cold plunge.
It's more so just doing the thing you don't want to do.
Like, it's a good thing for your brain.
It's a good thing for your body.
That is absolutely true.
That's just it.
That's discipline.
Yeah.
That discipline.
That alone, I think is worth it.
Yeah.
I got a cold punch out of the gym, too, if you want to come by.
You go every day?
Yeah, I have one.
I have two, I have a hot and a cold at my house.
And I have a cold at the gym now?
You have a hot.
What do you mean?
So I have two cold, I have two cold tubs and one is hot all the time and one is
cold so I go back and forth like contrast oh that's good yeah we we go to the gym too we're natural
we go to the gym too we're natural so that's probably why you didn't be able to tell that we go to the gym
as well you say no just saying all right can we just have our moment you had your moment he knew your
come on all right well this is amazing we appreciate you coming okay thank you this is amazing
awesome man thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you amazing
They want you to come to the gym tomorrow.
Okay, morning.
I'll come.
I can't come this week, and I'll come another time.
Okay.
Yeah, man.
We'll see you.
All right, see you guys.
Drop a thumbs up.
That was fired.
Straight up.