Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - How Criminals Exploit The 48 Laws of Power (Banned From Prison)
Episode Date: September 27, 2024How Criminals Exploit The 48 Laws of Power (Banned From Prison) ...
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Know your victim.
And we do.
Social hype.
I know what you're going to say.
I know what you can see.
I know what you're going to ask for.
Bate your enemies.
Hey man, you ain't never, buddy.
Yeah, I have.
I'm going to be Jimmy.
Play by the rules.
That law, major problem for me.
14.
Letting his silence.
I did not know you were here.
Yeah.
Basically, the 48 laws of power, it was the most popular book ordered in.
prison. Then the prison actually banned it because it was focusing in on, you know,
which is funny, it's focusing in on manipulation, supposedly. It was like huge about,
it was a huge push for how to become powerful and manipulate people. So they banned it in federal
prison. So I've since then, since I got out, I've listened to it a bunch of times on YouTube.
And so I like the book, not every single aspect of it, but I do like it, although it seems very
nefarious. You know what I'm saying? It's very, it's very, it makes it seem underhanded.
A view into the dark arts or something. Right, right. It's like learning witchcraft and
it. It seems very dark. It doesn't seem very like it's, it's very mischievous or
Machiavellian, you know, like here's how you manipulate and you that. And I get it,
that's true. But that's in that anything in general, any type of sales or any type of success or
Well, that's the, again, I think, that's probably the government's perception is, which is why
they ban it.
You know what I'm saying?
Right.
They don't, they think it's some, and they deem it a manipulation book.
And so sometimes people fall into that like, well, they say it's manipulation
book, it's probably some arts of manipulation.
Because like, wielding power is that always manipulative or can it be used to maybe some
time get you out of situations that you, you know, you want to, you don't want to be in?
Right.
You know what I mean, all I know is I've read it.
I think it's interesting.
and we thought we would do a video on it on what two-season,
let's want to go with two-season con men.
I don't know.
I shouldn't do it.
So on what two-season con men think about the 48 laws of power by Robert Green.
Right.
But so ask yourself this question.
When you were in prison, like, can you remember any inmates telling you about that book?
Yeah, I do.
Yeah.
I remember guys that had read it, like, you know.
Think of one in particular.
Just like, picture one in your mind right quick.
Okay.
Like, doesn't that person seem like they're manipulative?
Doesn't it seem like they were talking to you about it?
Like, hey, I just came across something that's going to help me change the world.
Those were the guys that were always, like, looking for, like, the, you know, they thought you had, they'd want to talk.
Hey, man, man, can I talk to you for a little bit?
Because they think you're going to be able to tell them, like, the magic formula on how to be, you know, how to, how to be a fraud,
or a scam or how to, how to convince that.
It was always very manipulative.
Like you said, they were manipulative or they were, they was looking for the secret.
And, you know.
And that's, that's, there is a secret.
So I would think them banning the book would automatically make everybody want it.
Right.
It was everywhere.
I don't even know.
Like, I don't even know when they banned it, but boy, it was already in there.
Yeah, there wasn't a, there wasn't a shortage of them.
No, it was.
And some people would read it when they tell you they read it, you know, they kind of like, okay, now I got the.
Now I got the mojo to do what I want to do.
I mean, it just be, and I'm thinking to like, dude, like from a book, you think you can apply all those laws in jail?
You'd have to really, you'd have to really go out of your way and really try and really work.
Unless it just innately came, you know, it was just natural to you.
If it was just natural to you, then it's just natural to you.
This is something you naturally do.
Here's what I thought would be interesting is that you and I could go through it piece by piece and, you know, either and discuss the law or give an example of when you've used it or maybe it doesn't,
apply at all, you know? And like we spoke, you know, before, that there's some of these that actually
seem that they're actually, they're conflicting. Right. So, and maybe, you know, maybe I'm
wrong. Maybe, I've never listened to this version of it. So let's, let's go ahead and start.
Law one. Never upstage the boss. Exceptions. If your superior is a fading star, don't be
afraid to outshine them. If they are weak, cleverly hasten their downfall.
Kick-a-Mullies going to head down, right?
Well, first, you have to identify the boss.
Well, no, I think this is in business-type situations.
Or so you're saying in general.
In-general or in, yeah, in life.
In life.
Or if, so if you are working for someone else, how, well, I guess you could outshine the boss
and make it like, hey, what you're doing is not working.
You're right.
That wouldn't make you last long.
No.
Well, and I think it's more than just, it may be more than just that.
It may be, like, you go to a meeting and you have ideas.
And so your boss is running the meeting.
You just happen to be there.
There's four guys on his team.
You're one of the guys.
And then, you know, of course, the owner of the company is there.
And then in the middle of it, they're like, yeah, what are we going to do about this?
And instead of saying nothing, you say, well, hey, what if we try this?
And then suddenly the guy goes, you know, the owner's like, well,
what do you mean? You go, yeah, what if we booing? You go through the motions.
Yeah, that would help a lot and then this. And then actually, this could happen and that could
happen. So think about it. Your boss right then is thinking, holy shit, like I look like I should
be working for him when really you probably should have gone to your boss first. You see what I'm
saying? And said, hey, you know, or said, hey, I have some idea. Let's talk later. You know,
that sort of thing goes. Now the owner's like, you're the big shot. He's not. And so let's face it,
the next opportunity the boss has, he may fire you.
Like, hey, we need downsize.
Get rid of Matt.
Why?
Because he's looking good and he may be in the, he's hanging out with the boss or the owner
of the company now.
I may be, you know, my time here may be short because of that.
So, so can I, so can I say that's probably one of the reasons why I didn't like the book?
I don't think that should be law one because that leaves, that to me brings a lot of
questions because well he's vague he's you know he's not super specific he's
he does give the example of to me that'd be like hey I pull in to the parking
lot with a brand new Porsche right you know your boss is driving a sports car
salesman car salesman whatever and you're driving in a hundred thousand dollar
Porsche or a $200,000 Porsche your boss is driving you know and a $60,000 you
know whatever the sports car equivalent is that's you know you know whatever I
I don't know, what are they, like an infinity or something, you know.
And so the owner of the company and everybody above your boss is like, hey, nice car.
You're doing really.
Yeah, you know, I'm kicking ass, man.
I'm making good money.
I'm doing this.
Like, they're like, wow, rising star.
Yeah.
Your boss might get jealous of that.
And jealousy is a real thing.
Like, I'd never seen jealousy until I went to federal prison, like, really in my face where it was so overt that it was like, you would see guys talking about other guys.
And you'd be like, he's a nice guy.
You're always talking shit.
about him you don't the things you say aren't true they're your opinion you know and it's like and
you realize after a while you're like you're jealous of this person because this is a decent guy
you're just a you just don't like him for and it really it brought down to he's jealous of him
for some reason right but but like so here's my thought you ran a mortgage company this is back
when we were legit and you were the boss you wouldn't if someone pulled up in a nicer car that
wouldn't make you like, I need to fire this guy.
I don't know.
But I don't have those shortcomings.
You know what I'm saying?
I want people.
I want to see you do well.
Exactly.
So if, so outshining you wouldn't consist of me bringing you a good idea.
You know what I'm saying?
I understand, but I'm saying in there, these are all kind of general.
Like in general, he's saying it's probably better to not upstage your boss because he may be
that guy.
He may then say, you know, you're done.
Right.
And keep in mind, too, I had some people that were super.
like big shot brokers. They were just amazing. And I had multiple of those guys would work there
for six months or three months. And then they go up their own company. And it was like, so to me,
and then when they did that, typically a lot of times, they took their files. Now, to me, I always told
everybody, if you're going to do it, don't just bolt. Let's work something out. Don't, you know,
don't take the files. Because I'll have somebody call those people up and say, hey, we'll take over the
alone. We'll do it for nothing. Just to fuck you. So, you know what I'm saying? That's outshining the
boss. Right. Right. So don't, don't do that. And you need me in the future. You're going to
need somebody to help you do certain things because you're not as savvy or qualified as I am.
Right. Right. So a lot of these guys realize that at some point where I'm going to, I'm going to, I'm going to need
something and that's going to be able to have the answer. Well, there's the never outshine your
boss right there. Right. So don't, don't do it. Like you may need this guy in the future.
So, anyway, let's, I mean, so that's one of the things.
There's 48.
We got to move.
All right.
Be wary of friends.
Use enemies.
So, this law emphasizes caution with friends and the utility of enemies.
Friends can harbor envy and dishonesty, jeopardizing trust.
Basically, he's just saying be weary of friends.
Like, don't put too much emphasis or too much, too much what power and confidence in a friend, right?
And I'll give you an example of that.
Six and I talked about this.
I said six, so when you went to prison, like, you know, all those people that you hung out
with, all your buddies, all your buddies that you were making money with, everything.
So they come to see you, put money on your books, the whole thing.
You went, oh, no, no, no.
So, and so same thing.
When I got in trouble and I went to prison, you know, the people that I thought legitimately
owed me something.
I made you a lot of money.
I've done a ton of stuff for you.
I've been over backwards for you.
There were many times when you made money and you're like, bro, how much do you want of this?
And I was like, no, absolutely.
Don't, I don't want anything.
I'm good.
I'm glad you're doing well.
Like, I wanted to help you.
That's good.
Because we were friends.
None of that ever, none of those people ever turned around and said, damn, bro, like, this guy could have asked me for a couple grand here, five grand here.
I just am giving it to you.
You don't even owe me that money.
Those people, which I, in a way, and I probably did that in a manipulative way of thinking I'm buying loyalty.
And that's probably not true.
That was the wrong reason to do it.
It was definitely the wrong reason to do it.
Because for one thing, it didn't, they weren't loyal.
Like these people turned around.
They all cooperated.
And then they all turned around and nobody came to see me in prison.
Nobody sent me money.
And those same people don't even talk to me.
Some of those people don't talk to me to this day.
So, so I can see like being weary of who your friends are.
You know what I'm saying?
I can see like, like don't get too crazy.
Right.
You know, but then by the same token, like I often, you know, I tell people that too,
like friends of mine, you know, that if they,
say like yeah man i was thinking about this thing i'm like absolutely not not gonna be involved one i'll
tell you right now you cannot trust me because if the cops show up and say boom we got you on camera
i'll be like hey that's right there right there so don't put too much trust in me because i'm not going
to prison for you i don't give a shit whether we're friends or not so um i think that's that's
true so you're saying at that point you'd flip to an enemy yeah just like that but what about the
enemy thing what do you think about that have you ever had people that you've ever had people that
you knew were kind of enemies and you brought them into the fold thinking that they would be
more loyal to you in a way?
Probably.
Okay.
Probably.
But you knew how I thought about, you know, I used to think about revenge for enemies
and stuff where, remember I would say we'd set them up.
We used to fantasize about setting up enemies.
Like, we're going to buy a house, put it in their name.
I spent years in prison setting up people I was pissed at.
Well, years.
The day dreaming at night, I'd go straight to bed.
I just daydream a holiday, oh, my God, if I could just see his face when they show up.
And part of that plot always dealt with being in his face, making them think that they were a friend, or making them think that we've accepted certain things or like, hey, I can work with you or I'll deal with the consequence of it.
So as far as using an enemy to benefit me, I guess it would be someone that was opposed to what I was trying to get accomplished.
You know what I'm saying?
So I'll take it me.
Someone that you knew didn't like you, you know, you kind of like, okay, I'm going to be nice to you, you know, just because I don't want you to turn on me.
You know what I'm saying?
Right.
I could see that.
Like, I was going to say, I've had people that have, that I, I had, I don't, I hesitate to use his name.
Anyway, I'm not going to use his name.
So I had somebody that basically we had a major issue with, right?
But I offered to continue to help him, even though he really fucked me over, thinking to my, thinking to my,
And I said, look, here's what we'll do.
I'll do your mortgages.
You handle the real estate.
I'll handle the mortgages.
Even though this guy had made every attempt to fuck me over.
Like, we were actually kind of, we were partners for a very short pair of time.
We separated.
He just completely, he separated.
He had just fucked me over.
And then actively tried to fuck me over for the next few months trying to get my clients.
So after about a year or two, I was doing really well and he wasn't.
So I went to him and I said, look, how about we do this?
You're a good realtor.
You know how to write up the contract.
You know, bring me your clients.
I'll get your clients to loans and you can get the loans go through and you'll make a chunk of money.
And so we started working together thinking to myself, he'll be loyal to me because he's now.
He feels like he owes me.
And he knows deep down when you f*** someone over, even if you just try and justify it, deep down, you, you know you someone over.
You know you're in the wrong.
But it's like people whenever I talk about, you know, being a landlord.
Guys are always like, well, I don't want to be a landlord because what if they f*** your house up?
Like, you know, the person doesn't pay and you have to evict him and then they fuck up your house.
Listen, I was a landlord for five or six years.
We had one person damage the house, a property.
Didn't even do a lot of damage, literally probably less than a couple hundred bucks.
Because the truth is, you know you owe the money.
Yeah.
You know you didn't pay it.
And you can scream and holler and say, I'm being unfair.
But deep down, your subconscious is telling you, come on, man, you said you were going to
to pay $800 a month.
You're not paying.
Right.
They're guys evicting you.
And I can scream and holler and say, this is leaking and you could give me some more time.
And, and, and, but, you know, and let's face it, you give me a hammer and three minutes,
I'll do $15,000 worth of damage to your apartment with a hammer in three or four minutes.
And it's that simple.
Like, they don't.
They just don't.
So I get that.
And that's kind of like, like I said, that one guy I brought him in and thought he would.
And he did.
he did. He worked really well with me for a while until he tried to fuck me over again.
But the point is, is that I get that. I don't think it necessarily always works, but I've tried it.
I'm trying to figure out the, besides, what was your motive for doing that?
I just thought that he would work hard and he would realize he had fucked up and then we would be
okay. And he would continue to work with me, right? Like, here's the problem with real estate
agents is every new real estate agent you bring in. If your client is up, then you have to
basically, they come to you, they'll write up a contract. Like, and before,
a lot of times before you even get to that talk to the client or the client finds a real estate
agent and they're working with them, I then have to call that real estate agent.
I have to explain, look, yeah, my guy's approved up to $200,000, but he doesn't have the $5,000
to put down.
And they're like, well, what do you mean?
Yeah, he needs $5,000 to put down.
He can get the loan.
He just doesn't have the down payment.
And they're like, well, then how's it going to close?
And you're like, yeah, okay.
So it's $200,000.
You're going to bump it to $210,000.
And that extra $10,000, the 95% loan will now incorporate his down payment.
Be 105%.
Well, that would be, I don't know how I feel about that, man.
That strikes me like it's fraud.
Like, listen, bro, don't write it for $2.10.
You know what I'm saying?
So I have to go through this whole process with these idiots.
And so that, you call that massaging into the, and honestly, I'd say 90% of the time, they're like, okay with it.
But if he's, you know, you still, you lose one out of ten.
And then even then, the whole, the whole transaction's dicey.
These guys are on edge.
They're spooked.
They're scared.
They're, you know, and you know for a fact that they get one question from anybody on this, they're going to say, well, Matt Cox told me.
So this is a guy who's a real estate agent that I can now send my people to and he knows how to write up the
contract. Oh. So that was mutual. Well, yeah, it's always mutual. Obviously, it's mutual. I need
you. I need your help. But I also think that you're a good agent. I think, and now I don't think
you'll run around behind me and try and me over or bring my people to somebody else. You know,
that's a pretty big risk. I mean, it's only a risk to you find out once and you just cut them
loose. And he'd already been cut loose. So you'd already been, you know I'll cut you. And you saw how
well you did on your own for six months. Right. I feel like that's a flip of the coin. All right. Go ahead.
you're up to by keeping others uncertain and off balance you limit their capacity to counteract
your plans people's trust in appearances makes it easy to mislead them false sincerity
feigned changes of heart and noble gestures create effective diversions besides employ smoke screens
familiar facades to put others at ease and catch them off guard yeah was hide what you're
that's a given we're yeah no i'll tell you what here's the problem for me
Like, this is a major problem.
This, that law, law three, major problem for me.
I have a big mouth.
I love to brag.
I love to talk.
I have to be told.
Shut your mouth.
Don't tell anybody.
Listen, Jess, the other day, something.
Something happens.
She's like, listen, you're going to stop doing this.
You know, and I was like, you know, to me, I sometimes do it because I'll brag because I'm trying to motivate.
I think I'm trying to motivate somebody and on this and this time I'm trying to get them excited
about or something, but really, in the end, I'm bragging.
And it's like, and that's not helping.
Like, putting your business out there only gives people ammunition against you in the right
circumstances, not always, but in some instances.
And so I see that hiding what you're doing, I'll get excited about something.
I'm doing something.
I want to tell you, oh, my God, this is so cool.
And in this, and then you're like, oh, my God, wow, that's crazy.
But the truth is, it hasn't happened yet.
Now, but that I'm telling you about it, it may never happen because you're going to tell 15
people. Before you know it, the whole thing is they put the kibosh on there because now it's
out there. Right. So, you know, yeah. But I always consider you doing it for insight. Like,
you know, you do that to everybody or you do that? Like, I figure you're telling me like, hey,
what do you think? No, no, I don't do it to everybody. I do it to people that I think would be,
will find it funny or comical. Like, you know, I, you know, like I'm, you know, I do it when it's, when I
think, you know, for instance, remember the kid when the Uber the other day? Like, I didn't
say, oh, and tell him, oh, I was in prison and this and that. I didn't say all of those things.
Like, there was a kid in an Uber that as we're driving, he clearly, when I, he said, oh, what do
you do? And I was like, oh, I run a YouTube channel. But keep mind, he's listening to, like,
Christian music. He's very, very, you got a, I got in the car and I felt like, kind of like the
glow of God. Like, like, you were in the middle of an exorcism. But, like, but, like,
Go ahead, I'm sorry.
So I was just like, you know, so as we're talking, and I could tell he was super judgmental.
Like as soon as I said, oh, I interview people about true crime.
He's like, what do you mean?
I said interview like former criminals, that sort of thing.
You said former?
Yeah, he said former criminals law and fraud.
Fraudian for, oh, go ahead, I'm sorry.
Former criminals and law enforcement, there's 48 of these, by the way.
So, you know, former criminal and law enforcement, that sort of thing.
And then he was like, well, and he was like, well, and you bring them to, you bring them, you know, like to your.
you see them like every day like you bring them to your house like you're one of my
studios in my house and he's like and they come there and i'm like well yeah but i said these are
guys that have like flown themselves from california here to to be on the podcast i'm like it's
i said they're not coming here to rob me you're like these are decent guys he goes doesn't sound
like it and i and i and i and i was like you know my first thought was i didn't say anything
because one i was thinking this guy pulls over i'll never get to my appointment on time he pulls
over says, can you get out of the thing? I got to call another Uber. That's another 10 minutes.
So anyway, but yeah, I just, but I knew in that moment, don't, like, answer the questions, but
do not reveal that you've been in prison. Do not, you know what I'm saying? Don't, don't do that.
Like, keep that close to the vest because it's not in your, in your best interest to let this guy.
And he's super judgmental. Not that I give a fuck that he's judgmental, but I'm really thinking I might
get kicked out of the car. Right. But you, you do, you do and did give a fuck because you're thinking,
I don't want to get kicked out of the car because the normal Matt, the normal Matt would have, like.
Oh, no, I don't, I'm saying I don't care that he doesn't like me.
I cared about the result.
I cared about him.
Like, if I told him and he was like, well, you're a f*** up person or you're this or that.
I'd be like, okay, well, just get to me to my destination.
Like, I wouldn't give a about your, I don't care about your opinion.
What I care about is the result.
The result of you pulling over and be like, yeah, man, I don't want you in my Uber or maybe I'm like,
you know.
Who knows?
He calls Uber and says, this is a bad guy.
Next thing you know, I can't take Uber.
Like, I'm down to Lyft.
So anyway, yeah.
So there are times when I'll hold back because I see there's an advantage to me.
But the truth is, I really just need to not tell everybody.
I need to not just have this, this vomit, verbal vomit of telling everything, every, all the, like,
she's like, your whole life is out there on the internet.
Like, you tell everybody everything.
And I'm like, yeah, it's fine.
It's fine.
deal. She's like, it is. I don't want everybody to know everything. Like, you can't tell
them this. Like, when we would break up and get back together, like, I'd do a video. She'd
like, what are you doing? We're broken up. That's your fair game. She's like, fuck. You know,
so yeah, I need to not do that. So I need to follow this rule is what I need to do.
14. Must of silence. Intimidating is cool. I did not know you were here.
I was saying the right thing, though, right?
Like, I need to not put everything out on the Internet.
I needed not, right?
How long were you here?
Did you not hear what I said?
What is this law?
What I talked?
What does this law say?
Yeah, where I was saying.
What is this law say?
What does this law say?
I was saying that you were, like, when it talks about, like, you know, you need to hide your intentions, you don't know not put everything out there.
Yeah, I know what you're saying.
And so I was saying, like, just as I do that all time, like, you need to shut your mouth.
Like, you're throwing.
You say everything all the time.
You blurt.
I was like, and then when we would break up, I'm like, then I would do a video on it.
She'd be like, what are you doing?
Like, it's personal.
Don't.
I'm like, ah, you're fair game.
And you'd be like, no, no, you can't put our whole life on the internet.
So anyway.
And I agree with that.
Well, I mean, listen, we're a con artist.
Well, I'm just a fraudster.
Of course, you don't walk into the bank and say, I'm here to take the money.
Hey, I'm here to get you guys to lend me $300,000.
and never make a payment.
They're like, come on.
You never know, though.
It's funny, too, because I'm always, I always tell people like, I'm a super honest
person, you know, with the exception of a scam.
But there's a result to that.
That's a specific thing.
Like, in general, I'm very honest.
Like, this is what I did.
This is what happened.
This is this.
Oh, why are you doing?
I don't want to do that.
Why?
I don't really like that guy.
You know, and like, I'm very honest.
Like, even to people's faces and just blatantly, that's the way it is.
Oh, but no, you're not honest, you're dishonest, because you lie about this, and you've
manipulated.
Yeah, you're right.
If I had to do a scam, or you'd see one cunning.
You'd be like, Jesus, my God, Matt.
Like, you convinced me almost that your name is Richard Johnson.
Law 4 says little as possible.
According to Green, you must speak sparingly, using vague and ambiguous words to keep others
guessing.
Silence discomforts people, making them reveal more, while brief comments,
excessive attention, portraying significance and mystery.
So can I say I've learned a lot about silence and to the point where both ends, like,
from Dale Carnegie, which How to Win Friends and Influence People.
Great.
And Anthony, so each person that I've learned motivational skills from, silence is like,
like he says, a very powerful tool.
One of the seminars I've been to, they had a,
sit with someone else and just look them in the face and not say a word.
It was like a five-minute exercise.
And what he said is we're weeding out the people who can't do it.
So I remember thinking to myself, like, who can't sit and look somebody in the face for five
minutes?
Literally, he got rid of 75% of the room.
Like, you're supposed to sit, look at somebody else for five minutes.
And, like, I was with about three people who couldn't do it.
And I remember thinking to myself, like, what in the L?
is wrong with you, you can't just sit in silence.
I would definitely think I could do it for five minutes.
What are you talking?
Are you serious?
Absolutely.
It's unbelievable.
Exactly.
I think that it's like that's the most unbelievable exercise in the world, but it's true.
He's right.
Silence can tear people apart.
And I didn't learn when I did that that day, that's when I learned how powerful it was.
And then I learned that because I was comfortable with silence, that I would have that type
of power over people. So I can sit here and, in fact,
Hey, so what did you want to talk about? Well, I want to tell you about Wagovi.
Wagovi? Yeah, Wagovi. What about it?
On second thought, I might not be the right person to tell you. Oh, you're not?
No, just ask your doctor. About Wachovie. Yeah, ask for it by name.
Okay. So why did you bring me to the circus? Oh, I'm really into lion tamers.
You know, with the chair and everything. Ask your doctor for Wagoe by name.
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And I'm in silence.
I start telling myself, okay, this person's breaking.
You know what to think.
Just be calm, he's breaking.
That's what I started telling myself.
Otherwise, I would break.
Try it.
Just try.
One day, try it.
Put a five-minute timer and just try it to sit and just look somebody in the face and say,
we're going to do this for five minutes.
And then, like, your mind started, like, your mind-sitting data, you're like, stop, stop, stop.
I definitely think I'd do it.
But then again, to me, that's just a task, right?
Like, here's the, oh, yeah, you don't talk at all.
She doesn't talk when you're talking to her.
But think about the power.
If you ask her, what is the power?
How are you feel when you're doing that?
Like, you know, like, what, what, what?
Do you know how, here's the problem.
Do you know.
That's what I look at them in the eye, though.
Here's the reason is that I'm saying that it's, it's just a task.
It's, do you know how many people that, you know, even, well, Colby and I talk to in
general, right?
Guys that are doing either, they have YouTube channels.
I mentioned this the other day, too.
Luckily, he doesn't put the videos out like chronologically, so they'll never know.
where literally it's like you have a YouTube channel all you have to do is do this one
or these three things and in this period of time you will conservatively be making
$2,000 you know and then it will only go up from there if you just continue to do this
and they can't do it it's like to me it's like if you're not the only one but but
but it's like it's like saying look every day I need you
to come hit this red button. And in two years from now, you'll, someone's going to give you a
million dollars. Do you know how many people would? I'll bet you, you're right. I bet you 75% of
those people would stop hitting, like to me, that would be my 100% priority over everything else is
every day I got to go hit this red button. There are so many people that will suddenly say,
I'm going to go to New Orleans with my buddy. I'm going to have my friends going to hit the
button for me so I can go for a couple of days. Like, what are you doing? It's a million dollars.
You have to stay in your, you have to basically. You have to basically.
do whatever you want, but you have to come back at least once a day and hit this. Yeah, yeah,
but I got my buddy who's like, you're a failure. Like, you're somebody who's going to fail in
life. This should be your number one priority, not going to New Orleans for a week. Right.
So, but I know so many people that it's just like, I said all you had to do is this.
And they, yeah, I know. I know. I know, man, I don't know what happened. And I just, I know.
It's like, what the fuck? Yeah, but what does that have to do with silence though? I'm saying, it's the same
thing. I get to win this contest if I can be quiet for five minutes. Be quiet for five minutes.
Hit the button. Then you're giving yourself the mental capacity to do it, but it doesn't mean it
could be done. And really, what I'm, what I'm, I'm serious, Matt. Have you tried it?
Me? Yes. I'm sure. We'll try it right after this. At the end.
All right. All right. My point is he's right. Silence is extremely powerful and you don't know it until
you've done that experiment.
That is the experiment of experiments
because your mind,
it gets, like every minute,
it gets more and more intense.
It becomes a crazy deal.
And I'm talking about just sitting and quiet
and looking around
and playing with your phone and whatever.
I'm talking, looking someone in the eye.
How long have you been in the shoe?
I was in the shoe 18 months.
18 months?
I was 45 days the most.
Remember I told you?
But I was a good inmate, by the way.
I was a good inmate.
I wasn't.
But I lived with someone for 30 days and we never spoke a word to him.
I told you that.
That's right.
You know?
And a couple of times I saw where he was about to break.
I remember saying like, oh, he's going to break today.
And he didn't.
And he didn't.
I think at that point I'm like, yeah.
Did you guys have a conversation?
You had an argument and you said, oh, he said, don't talk to me again.
Right.
I said, okay.
And that was the end of it.
And he broke, though, at the end.
Like, after 30 days, he broke.
But, you know, that's sleeping and, you know what I'm saying?
It's not sitting face to face.
That's the artist.
But in the moment of, when you're in a conversation, you're looking at someone in the face.
Right.
And there's silence.
That is very, very powerful.
That's my whole point.
Okay.
I think I sit it three times.
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Guard your reputation. Your appearance and the qualities associated with you are integral to
your reputation. Craft a memorable trait to be recognized for, creating an aura of power.
A strong reputation can precede your actions and impact outcomes. Protect your reputation from
attacks, but avoid being defensive. A note attacking
others' reputations can benefit you, especially against more powerful opponents.
Soutily undermine opponents with ridicule.
Backmouth someone else to save your reputation.
It need be.
I'm not saying I would do this.
You know what?
You know what this is, though?
Do you not talk about me?
No.
I don't know.
I was calm down.
Remember I said, don't talk about me.
Okay.
What, how broad?
This is Jess.
Look.
Listen.
Listen.
How broad was that statement?
Look, listen.
I'm saying, I would point at you because you know somebody.
Oh my God.
I'm not talking about you at all.
I'm just saying I mentioned this to you the other day.
Jesus, God Almighty.
You see where I'm dealing with them?
Yes.
Yeah, I do.
Okay.
So, um, uh, I have a, uh, I have a buddy who does this.
Um,
Well, first of all, first of all, first let's talk about this, two parts, right?
One part is, you know, your reputation, like, that's a done deal.
Like, we don't have rep, like, that's over.
But I think in my case, you know, or in your, what we're trying to do in your case, which
you're fighting, is crafting your reputation to say, hey, this is like, in my case,
it's like, hey, this guy's a podcaster, he does true crime, he's a great storyteller, he,
you know, so that in that case, yeah, it, that's my reputation, right?
In this case, I don't think that Robert Green could have imagined this scenario.
He's thinking you want to be someone who's always well-groomed, very polite, very business-oriented.
You know what I'm saying?
He's saying be a good businessman or a good, that sort of thing.
For us, our reputation is, hey, you're a con man, but now you're doing a podcast.
So I think that's tweaked a little bit.
Does R-DAP, the power orientation, come to mind with this, labeling someone weaker?
Because I think he's saying, like, they're weak.
Those guys are weak and we're the strong ones.
Right.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Kind of an adversarial situation is probably what you think he means?
No, I'm, I, no, no, that's, you're thinking about, about the last part.
I'm saying, he's saying always worry about, you're like, be concerned with your reputation.
Like, you don't, you don't want to get caught lying.
You don't want to get caught.
You always want to be, you know, polished.
You want to be like a very, very polished.
person that everybody trusts and your reputation is good. In our case, we don't have a great
reputation. So this doesn't really, we have a different version of that, of that. I'm a good, I'm a good
podcaster, I'm entertaining, whatever. But the second part where it's saying tarnish your
adversaries. So I have a friend, I'm going to use his name, Trent, when I grew up with Trent
Calta. Trent Colta, I used to say, had a scorched earth policy. Like, he would date a girl for six. But keep
mind, too, you know, I meet these guys that had friends that, that they're like, like, if Colby and Colby's buddy dated some girl in high school, like, let me see what, so if your buddy dated some girl in high school for a year and they broke up, would you date that girl?
Probably not
Yeah
Like I had a
Like yeah
Like my buddy in college
He likes some girls
She liked me
And I just want to talk to her
Off of principle
That's what a decent
That's what a decent human being does
Right
Not the guys I grew up with
Troy, Trent
Like all of us
They pass them around
Bro we're actively trying to
Your girlfriend
While you're dating her
Like I mean
Trent would like
Slide his hand
On my
On like this chick I dated
named Amy
And we're sitting
And I remember at one point
Amy just went
she goes switch places with me because Trent is sitting next to her and actually puts his hand on her
she doesn't want to say anything at the moment we're in a restaurant she doesn't want to cause a scene
she doesn't want me to be like the fuck are you doing you know so she goes switch places with me
I'm like okay we switch and so of course later when we got in the car she's like you need to talk
to Trent she's like the guy he does this all the time you put his hand on my thigh he's always
flirting with me he'll call me like he would and she'd call me and he would be have called her a couple
times. Like, you're like my best friend. We spend almost every day together constantly. And you're
calling my girlfriend. I was looking for you, bro. You want to look it for me. You know what I'm saying?
And so this is a constant thing. So he had a, but he had a scorched earth policy. He would date some
chick. And then they'd be dating for six months. Day this chick Michelle one time. Dated for like a year
or so. And in high school, that's a long time, right? And when he was done. See how there's only three years of it.
But yeah, go ahead.
Well, when they, when they broke up, he said, I was like, what happened?
I understand.
He said, yeah, bro, you know, it's just not going to work out.
Like, we fight all the time, we this, that, yeah.
He said, I'm going to be honest with you, bro.
Her pussy stink.
Yeah, it was bad, bro.
Like, I mean, it was fucked up.
I mean, I tried to get over it, you know, but I couldn't go down.
Like, he had a whole thing.
And I was like, so my stomach's turning.
I'm like, oh, my God, really.
Of course, the next chick he dated for 90 days or whatever.
broke up, he said because she gave him the clap. The next girl he dated, there was some
other issue. So he wanted you to stay away from him. Listen, I had banged Michelle a couple months
later. That shit was good. I mean, you know, it's not, you know what I'm saying? Like it's,
it was a scorched earth policy. He's trying to slide, he's trying to talk shit about them so you don't
go behind him and do anything. Ah, find out his, his shortcomings. Yeah, he doesn't want to, he didn't want
you to go because he doesn't want you to date and it's going.
He knows he knows you would because he knows he would.
Exactly.
Oh, listen, I had a horror.
The guys that I grew up with after speaking with normal people, you realize like, oh,
these are horrific people.
These are horrific.
Or, or, and I was just as bad, by the way.
Because I'm with them, I'm hanging out with them.
I'm thinking, this is normal.
Like, I got like four years of being, of being cultivated by Trent Colta, who was just
just the worst human being.
It's just hilarious, very funny.
We were like best friends through high school, but just, yeah.
Not a good person.
No, no, just some really bad, bad traits.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I had dinner with him a few months ago, too, by the way.
How's he doing?
He's doing great.
Is he married?
He does have a girlfriend, which he's had for years.
What's about time for to start stinking?
Yeah, it's just bad.
It's bad.
Next law, we got 48 of them.
Oh, okay, sorry.
When I'm talking, hey, there's a bunch of these, by the way.
And then when he's talking, like, hey, we got plenty of time.
What are you thinking about?
I'm just saying.
All right.
4-6, attract attention.
This law emphasizes the importance of standing out and being noticed.
Greener advises being scandalous to garner positive and negative attention using any necessary
means.
To apply this, associate yourself with distinct traits, even if controversial.
But I can-
Garnish your reputation, but attract attention.
Right.
Well, and he's saying even if it's in the negative.
Exactly.
Which, hey, listen, I'll tell you right now, though, I give you an example of this, Andrew Tate.
Hmm.
You see what I'm saying?
Like, he garnered that attention, even though it was in the negative.
Now, what he's done since then is tweaked it.
Once he got all the attention, he's tweaked his message to the point where now,
Now that everybody knows who he is, he's tweaked the message so that he's more, a little bit more mainstream, not mainstream, but a little bit more.
He's closer, where before he said these outlandish things that he knew would get clicks, and now he's dialing back slightly, or now he's refining his message.
Well, I mean, getting attention, I guess, was his way to get out there.
And once he's out there, he's kind of like he's got to maintain stayability.
He's got to maintain.
It's almost like fake it to you make it.
Amen. You know what I'm saying?
Amen.
Take credit for others' work.
Gain power, it's essential to leverage others' efforts for your gain while claiming recognition.
You can adopt two approaches, waiting for others to complete tasks, and then appropriating them or enlisting others actively and taking credit for Tierra achievements.
Like a real-world example.
Like, it seems cruel, right?
It seems cruel.
Like, you did all the work, and then I swoop in and I take credit for it.
Bosses do this all the time.
people like team leaders will like their underlings will come up with the ideas and work the
ideas and they kind of manage the whole thing and then they go and present the idea and the entire
the structure of that idea to their boss and their boss like great job but the truth is you just took
his ideas right and so and i was going to say someone who's but but a good example of this that
you kind of say okay i get that like like i can see that because in a very real way this is perfect is
two people come to mind. One is Steve Jobs. Like, Steve Jobs, like, not that he's saying,
hey, I built the iPhone, or I built these computers, no, you know, Wozniak did that, right? So Steve Jobs is
the frontman, but Wozniak was the brains of the operation that put the computer together and
designed it and everything. However, of course, once they started making money, they hired more and more
people. But what's funny is, and there's a comedian that talks about this all the time, he always
jokes around about, like, Steve Jobs.
He's like, like, Steve Jobs is out there on the stage annually because they do their annual
event.
He would go out in the stage.
He'd be like, you know, we've got this and Apple's coming out with this and we've got
and he talks about all this, but it's like, you didn't do that.
Like, it's these nerds in the back room who put this shit together.
You're the guy that walked in and said, you know, I want my entire, this is the joke that
the guy said, I want my entire music collection in this device.
Make it happen.
And he's like, like, and then they make it happen.
And then he goes out.
He's like, yes, that's right.
We now have, it's like, you didn't do this.
So that and Elon Musk.
Like, it was like, he's, to me, it's like, you know, when does he go out and say we've done this?
But they don't say, I, they don't say, they're like what we're, what Tesla is currently,
they say what I, what, what Apple's currently working on.
It's still, you're the guy out there.
Right.
So what I'm saying with Elon Musk.
And look, I love Steve Jobs.
Me too.
Did you read the biography on him?
No.
He was a horrible human being.
Yes.
He's a horrific person.
Oh, to employees, yes.
Yes, yes.
Very demanding.
Not just employees?
What about his family?
His wife?
His parents?
It's the whole thing.
Yes, very demanding, very like lost his temper all the time.
Yeah.
I read articles about that.
I haven't read the biography.
Oh, listen, it's massive.
It's a massive.
You know, it's by whatever that guy can't even say the guy's name.
That's the fallout he had with, what's his name from Microsoft?
off. Oh, yeah, Bill Gates, yeah.
Yeah, he was, he was, well, Bill Gates is a horrific person, too.
Yeah.
In general, what I'm saying is, is, but then in that funny, because it's like almost nobody
gets to the top without just cutting the throat of everybody that helps them, which is
despicable.
But, but then again, you don't get the top if you don't do it, I guess.
So what I'm saying is, so you got Steve Jobs and then Elon Musk, which I love, by the way,
which I think Elon Musk is a mate, you know, their visionaries is what they are.
You know, he has his vision, like, I'm going to, if you gave me, if I became like a
trillionaire and I was one of the richest man in the world.
Like, I'm not going to be thinking, let's go to Mars.
Like, this guy's got this grand vision of helping humanity and doing all these things.
Like, I'm not doing that, bro.
That's not going to be my pocket.
That's not.
I'm not doing some other crazy shit.
But so, I mean, I love, I love what he's doing, but you're not making rocket chips.
Like, you're not in the back room.
Like, give me a wrench.
You know what I'm saying?
But they're the ones who go up on stage and say, we're doing this.
We're doing that.
you know, Tesla's doing this and SpaceX is doing that.
And you look at them and it's, it's there the ones in the, in the photograph, you know,
oh, it's not the people.
They don't even put them on stage.
Those guys don't even get sit up.
I doubt those guys are even sitting in the front row.
True.
Or acknowledge.
But do you think that applies to that law?
Yeah, because I think you're in a way, you're taking credit.
I mean, that's a way of doing it.
Right.
But I think mostly my first example, which like your boss, who's not saying like, hey, no, no,
I didn't, I didn't really come up with this.
It's Jimmy from my department.
He came up.
The guy's brilliant.
You got to meet him because a lot of bosses don't do that.
They don't do that because they don't want Jimmy to take their job later or, you know what I'm
saying?
The next round of cuts, it goes back to like the second law, you know, where don't outshine
your boss.
If that is the second law, I don't know.
But you know what I'm saying?
So do you, like, can you think of an example?
Well, I mean, it would be like delegation.
If I delegated, like if you told me, hey, Azac, build this table.
And I say, hey, Colby, get me some wood and help me hammered it or hammer this in together.
And you, Matt, you do this part.
And then I'm like, hey, Matt, the table's done.
I got the table done.
Hey, you two leave.
Hey, I got this.
Yeah, I just put this together.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
And people do that.
They'll delegate the work.
And then it seems, it just seems skeezy.
It is skeezy.
Right.
That's what I'm saying.
But it's done frequently.
It is done.
And accepted.
And I was going to say, and I think that, yeah.
Yeah.
It's not.
It's not.
It's not right.
But I guess it's life.
But, you know, Robert thinks it'll help you get ahead.
Bait your enemy.
Bating your enemy makes opponents come to you, giving you control.
Instead of using aggressive attacks, consider strategic trapping to force opponents into reacting,
depleting their energy, and maintaining your initiative.
Emotional manipulation, luring foes onto your turf,
and capitalizing on their greed, enhance this tactic's effectiveness.
We call that snitching.
Like, when you're in jail and you get someone to give you all the details.
Oh, yeah, you're right.
We say, man, you ain't never killed nobody.
Yeah, I have.
Who do you kill?
I killed Jimmy down at such a kid out of here.
Man, I bet you could even tell me where the gun is.
Yeah, man, I got my mom.
That's the guns in my mama's addict right now.
And your mama's in what state?
Yeah.
But you mean your mom would want to tell us?
but good so okay and what's funny about that is like you actually haven't deemed whenever you're doing that
because I witnessed that firsthand and I was a victim I was lured to be a victim of that when doing
the little income tax in jail but because I remember one guy's like hey I want you to file
taxes for me I'm like I'm not really filing taxes you got to tell you what I'm going to give you
my social and I want you to just get whoever's filing it to file it for me I'm like what do you
about it. You know, I'm telling him the whole time I don't want to do it, but he's like,
hey, here's my social. Right. And I'm thinking to myself, like, why is this guy just voluntarily
giving me his information? Even though I'm telling him to know. Yes. I don't do this.
That is bait your enemy. Like here, please put me as part of the conspiracy that I hear
that's going around the Coleman compound. So what, yeah, that's bait your enemy. So, and
And that's also making them think you're a friend.
Because what I'm thinking about is, if someone's giving you their story, you know, they have no idea that they become your enemy.
They're like, oh, yeah, we can talk, you know.
I trust in you.
And you're like, you have no idea.
It's a mistake.
You're like that little piercing around your neck.
That's that knife.
I had a guy on the street before, of course, before I went to prison where we had, he had, he had.
taken a bunch of files that he was closing, and he couldn't close him. And so the eventually,
and what I did was I called up the borrowers, because I knew that a certain amount of fraud
had to be done to get these loans to close, and he didn't have the expertise. He wasn't going
to be able to figure it out. So I called his borrowers, and I said, listen, here's what's going to
happen. You know, he took the files, you're supposed to close next week. He's going to call you
next week, and he's going to tell you he can't close. And I'm telling you if you were with me,
you would close. But that's fine. I get it. He's your real estate agent. Now he's left with the
files. And he wants to also be the mortgage broker. And the guy was a broker, too. But he was more just
a real estate agent. So I went, I said, here's what's going to happen. Next Friday, you're
supposed to close. I'm assuming Tuesday or Wednesday is going to call you and tell you he needs more
time. He's going to tell you there's a problem with the lender. I don't know what the
excuse he's going to come with. So what's really going to happen is at this point,
he's going to, they're going to ask him for stuff that he can't provide. Now, he's then
going to have to send it to another lender, which starts to process over again. The problem is
with the other lender that he signed up with, they're going to want this and your house isn't
going to appraise for that. So, you know, because we, we boosted the price of the house so much
to cover the down payment. And I knew that if they did a review, it wouldn't pass. So I'm like,
that's going to fall apart.
I said, so then he's probably going to go somewhere else.
I said, I'm telling you right now, if in the next few weeks, he's going to push it back,
push it back, push it back, and eventually you're going to come to the conclusion.
He just can't close it.
I remember the chick's name that I called.
And I called several of his people, but I remember this one specific woman.
One, she was friends with the guy.
Two, he was a real estate agent.
She was friends with him.
Her name was Becky Ka.
K or C?
No, no, K.
Oh.
And just, I'll always, she worked at Home Depot.
Like, she had like a good job.
Like, she had a good, she had a good job.
She didn't have the down payment, the whole thing.
But I can't.
Oh, the customer was, I think, the customer was a Becky call.
Okay.
So I said, here's what's going to happen.
I said, when you get to a point where you realize this guy can't close it, I said, call
me and I'll close the loan.
I said, or I said, I said, but I'll tell you right now, I need him to call me and him to ask me
to close the loan.
Now, by the way, there were two people that there was another,
guy also. Same thing happened. Because I called him. I tried to get him to just come with me.
And he was like, he was like, well, you know, he's my real estate agent. And he's closed a bunch of
loans. And I'm thinking, no, I've closed the loans. He was just a real estate agent. But okay,
that's fine. I said, well, look, Steve, when it gets to this point, you realize he can't
close the loans. You can call me. Just have him call me because he's going to have to give me this
stuff. Can I inquire why you wanted to have him? I bait because that was baiting.
You wanted him to eat shit. I wanted him to call me and have to ask me to.
please close these loans.
Here's, give him the spoon.
But I didn't call him.
Right.
I bade, I told them he can't do it.
When you need me to do it, I'll do it.
But you're going to have to convince him to come to me.
And so sure enough, a month and a half later, this guy had put this chick through hell, through hell, bro.
She was living in a motel.
Like he just dragged this shit out of her just because he was, he just, it was.
he couldn't stand the idea of having to call me.
And finally one day, she called me and told me he's going to call you.
Matt, I, you know, I'm living in this hotel, he this, he that, she's furious.
She'll never talk to this guy again.
She's fuming.
And I was like, okay, then he didn't call me for another couple days.
She called me next day.
What would you talk to him?
I said, yeah, I didn't call me.
She said, can you call him?
I said, absolutely not.
I don't need him.
He needs me.
And so what happened was, sure enough, two days later, she called him up and went nuts on him.
And so finally he called me, hat in hand, bro.
And I was absolutely the politest person I could have been.
Absolutely, no problem.
I got it.
I'll take care of it.
Name was Eddie.
I got it.
I got you, Eddie, no problem.
Just go ahead and send the loan over.
Yeah.
And you closed it.
Close it.
Here's what happened with Steve, the other guy, Steve.
Steve calls me.
I'm sorry, when Steve calls me, he tells me, here's what's going on.
These guys are panicked, you know, because it's just been one failed closing after another.
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Like after another, they schedule a closing.
can't get it closed. Next thing you know, hey, do you don't need to show up tomorrow?
We're going to have to push it back. What do you mean push it back? Like, again and again.
And by the third or fourth time, these guys are losing it on them. So when he calls me,
here's the funny thing about this. He calls me on this one, he's upset. Because on this deal,
he is the seller of the property. And the seller has to pay the closing cost. That's how we
structured it. So you're paying my broker fee. So he's telling me, yeah, yeah, you can close that
when I'm like, oh, no, it's no big deal. I don't have to close it. You go ahead and close it.
Well, no, I'm, I know. And he's sitting there like, no, man, I'm saying, I'm going to let you
close it. I said, I don't need you to let me close it, bro. I don't need to close it. You close it.
So I need you to say, I want you to close. So he finally gives up, bro, I, I'm going to,
I need you to. Do you need me to close? Is that what you're saying? You need me to close?
He's like, yeah, I need you to close it. I said, okay, go ahead. And so he, we start talking about
the closing cost. Blah, blah, blah. Well, you typically charge $3,500. And that's too much.
And I'm the one coming out of my pocket and this and I said, okay, so with the broker fee,
you want to be what? What's, what's a reasonable broker fee? He was on, I think $2,500 is
reasonable. I said, okay, I'll do $2,500 for the broker fee. He was okay, fine.
You were completely compliant.
No problem. Just, just having them eat shit.
Well, it's worse than that.
The loan was like a hundred and, let's say that the loan was a $200,000 loan.
I forget what it was exactly.
But let's say $200,000.
I think it was close to $200,000, like $180, $160,000, something like.
So let's say $200,000 for the simplicity of, for simplicity's sake.
So we get to closing.
They review the closing statement.
Right.
Goes around.
Steve looks at it and Steve's like, yeah, that's good.
because Steve's looking at what's the interest rate.
I told him what the interest rate.
He was okay with it.
To okay with the payments.
He's not putting it down, payment down.
He's getting an 80% LTV that we've jacked up so high.
He's walking away from closing with money.
And he had to put nothing down.
You're signing papers and you're collecting rent in three days.
Before your first payments not even do for another 45 days.
You're going to be collecting rent twice before the payments.
And you're walking away with probably, it wasn't much, maybe 20 grand.
So the point is, is that we're sitting there at the table and everybody, he's ready to sign,
and all of a sudden, Eddie goes, whoa, wait a minute, looks at it, and he sees the broker fee
$2,500.
And then he sees on the side, there's $4,000.
So there's something called yield spread.
So I tell you, if your interest rate is really 7%, but I jump it up by a quarter of a point,
I get one point back on the loan.
So Steve's interest rate was like seven and a half.
I added two 25 point basis, two quarter points to it.
So it's a half, two quarters is a half.
So I added his true interest rate was seven, but I wanted to get money on the back of the loan.
Right.
It jacks up his payment, but he was okay with seven and a half.
He's still making like 200 and change for every single one of these units and there were four units.
So it's a quadplex.
So he's happy making about between $800 to $1,000 to $1,000 profit.
He walked away with 20 and he's going to make a profit of,
almost $1,000 a month on this property.
You put nothing down and you got $20,000 in your pocket.
He's thrilled.
So, but Eddie sees it.
He was, and by the way, that money is being paid by the lender to me.
Right.
Your concern was my broker fee, which you have to pay.
So he goes, well, wait, wait, what's just $4,000?
And I went, that's yield spread.
I said, see, Eddie, when the lender gives you an interest rate of, let's say, 7%,
He's like, I know what yield spread is.
Like, he's such a child.
But he's like, that's not coming to me, though.
Right.
No.
No, it's coming to me.
Exactly.
So my $2,500 brocrophy ended up being $6,500.
And here's the thing.
He didn't want me to make $3,500.
His argument was it's coming out of his pocket, so we lowered it.
Now here's what the real crux of the problem is.
So he is, I don't want you to make any money.
Because he's one of those guys.
And there are those guys out there where they feel like if you're making money, that's money they could have made.
Even though this, even though had I not raised the interest rate on Steve, you wouldn't have made that money, Eddie.
The point is, is he just doesn't want me to make money.
He's one of those greedy pricks who doesn't want anybody to succeed other than him.
And that was one of our problems.
So I was like, yeah, yeah, that's yield for any.
And he said, well, you're only supposed to make $2,500.
bucks. And I went, no, no. You said 2,500. I was going to make 35. You said 25 because it was
coming out of years. I said, the yield spreads paid to me by the lender. And he sat there. He's
like, no, no, what I wanted was for you to only make $2,500. I said, why would you give
what I make? It doesn't cost you anything. He's like, well, I mean, you're raising his interest
rate to do that. And I said, Steve, are you, were you okay with 7.5% interest rate? And
Steve goes, yeah, well, what's the problem? And then he jumps in and says, well, he's raising your
interest rate. Like, he's trying to drive a wedge between us now. The great thing about Steve
is, Steve, I've done, I've done multi. Steve, we did a couple million dollars in loans for Steve.
Steve's a smart guy. He already knows what the deal is. So when he says, yeah, he's doing this and
this. And so your payments a little bit higher. He didn't say a little, your payments higher because
of that. And I said, I said, right. I said, or Steve, you can come up with four grand. I said,
because you're walking away with 20. Why don't you just give me four out of your 20? And he's
there and he's like, no, I'd rather just pay the extra on the interest rate. He said, I'm going to
refinance in a few years. And I went, exactly. I said, he said, I mean, he was, Eddie, that's just
how it works. And Eddie was steaming. But do you, do you see what I'm saying? Like, it's, it's, it was,
it was just like a sickness. But yeah. Yeah. So, I mean, I can. That's, uh, absolute absolute hatred
right there. Yeah, there's something wrong.
there's something wrong
but yeah
I baited
that whole situation
I never said anything
to the like when he's
oh this is no I'm like
okay cool no problem
well I'm like
but yeah you
that was listen
honestly
at that time of my life
he ate a lot of shit
behind that at that time
of my life
that was that was
possibly one of my best
my greatest moments
one of them like
how are you feeling
just recounting
that incident
excited
like I just thinking
about it
has me all tingly
I love
I mean, I loved it.
Listen, this guy.
You're reliving the phone call when he calls you, like, the deep breaths.
You're like, oh, God, just bring, bring me that energy.
And I was so, I was so, listen, I was so like, absolutely, no problem.
No problem.
I go ahead and sit over the file.
Like, it's not even a big deal.
Like, oh, I'm eating this up.
Yeah, that's easy.
I can have that clothes in 10 days.
You didn't even give him the stall.
Like, I don't know, Steve.
No, not Steve.
Eddie.
Eddie.
Eddie.
Like, oh, Eddie, I don't know, man.
You're like, oh, I got you.
This is nothing.
I'll just add it.
Well, I'll get Susan to handle it.
Any one of my idiot brokers can close this.
You can't.
But anyway, so yeah, I've definitely baited people before.
Of course.
Don't argue, demonstrate.
Because arguing rarely changes minds and can breed resentment.
Use demonstrations to convey your point.
However, in cases of being caught lying, arguing can distract from deception.
Count Victor Lustig exemplify.
this tactic by vociferously defending his swindles.
So if I think you're wrong, you're like, hey, that's not a, this cup,
doesn't have coffee in it. I go, look, look, look.
No, I think it's more like...
It's not coffee, that's hot cocoa, you know what I'm saying?
I think it's, I think it's giving more of it like an example of something.
You know, you give an, sometimes people are like, oh, no, no, I'm on this, or I believe
this, and then you give them an example.
And then when they hear the example, they're like, oh, wow.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, wow, that did change my perspective.
Like, I didn't, I hadn't thought about it.
like that. True. So I'm not, I don't think that works all the time. No, I'm not, none of this works all
the time. It's, these are just like tools, you know what I'm saying? There's just, it's just a tool to
help you. That's all. Don't argue, demonstrate. Well, yeah, misery is contagious. Avoided.
So, yeah, I agree. And, and who wants to be around somebody miserable anyway? Yeah.
Yeah, I think that's just, anybody who's hung out with someone who's just super negative is just,
anybody this is just a given you know i like that that it's contagious that but you're right if you
hang out with a couple of people that are really upbeat and happy all day and you hang out with them
all day like you go home feeling great you hang with a couple of miserable boy they were these guys
that we called them the brothers grim at uh at uh at low at the low oh really yeah they were a couple
of uh of um uh you know winers chomos oh and they complained
consed as it was like three of them to be honest there was like three of them to be honest there was like
but it's just you would if you got behind them it was just like because they they literally spent
the four years or five years they got complaining about everything and everybody and they were
just the most miserable they was just like you didn't want to be not that you wanted to be
around him anyway but in general you didn't want to be caught like in line behind them because
you're standing in that line for 30 minutes and you're listening to some two jerkoffs complain about
like how stupid the new ward and this and this and I don't know what they're thinking doing this
I don't know if they only did this and they was just like oh god shut up enough it's contagious
yeah I learned that too Reese told me that oh really when I first got to the low he had one of
the same things he told me because I was complain like he's like how much time did you get again
I was like 26 years man for a white collar crime and I did a whole little you're poor poor me
and he went yeah he said he said look um this is what Reese is
Yeah, he's like, look, I'm going to, you know, you grab this hat, you know, Matt?
Yep.
I'm going to tell you something.
Nobody wants to hear you complain.
Don't be complaining all the time.
People don't want to hear people here.
People here that are never leaving.
They're leaving in a pine box.
And so nobody wants to hear you complain.
I know you got a lot of time and I know you can try and work that down.
You're going to figure something out.
You're going to make that work.
But I'll tell you right now, nobody wants to hear you complain because everybody, everybody here thinks they got too much time.
So, absolutely.
Oh, Reese exhibited.
the law of power? There was not a lot of wisdom that he threw your way.
But he had a moment. Yeah, he did. Be needed. When you're indispensable, you can secure
freedom and control. Power doesn't rely on isolation, but on relationships, with dependence
giving you influence and independence. Develop irreplaceable skills or knowledge, foster broad
involvement or possess secrets to become indispensable.
Being needed has to be the most work.
You know what I'm saying?
You've got to figure out or analyze what that person might need or want and put that
the action.
You know what I'm saying?
That's got to be the hardest.
But it's funny because you and Pete have the same, had the same strategy to this in prison.
Me and Pete?
Yeah, my buddy Pete.
Oh, did Pete here?
The law?
No.
Pete's coming?
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
So, you know what he did?
And I remember him telling me this when I wrote his book.
I was writing his book and he got to, I think it was Leavenworth.
He's like, I was in Leavenworth.
He's like, I'm not Spanish.
You know, he's like, I'm not with the Mexicans.
I'm not with the, you know, he's like all of these groups I'm not with.
He's Brazilian.
He's like, like, there's no Brazilian car.
There's no, like, you got to figure out who you're.
And he said, this is.
There were cars at the low, but go ahead.
I didn't say the low.
I said he was at, this was when he went to, I just said it, Levinworth. Leavenworth.
This is when he went to Leavenworth.
And this was 25, 30 years ago.
So, right, yeah.
So he said, when I got there, I realized, like, there are guys that, like, this is a serious place.
There's the Italians.
There's, he's like, I'm part Italian.
I'm part this.
Like, you got to try and figure out what you want to do.
He's like, and the problem, he's like, so I realized right away, the way to
survive this is to become needed. Like, if I'm needed by pretty much everybody, he's like,
then you're protected by pretty much everybody. Oh my God. Right. He's, and what did he say?
What did he tell you that? Like in prison or? He told me that like eight years, nine years ago when I wrote
his book. And, and he said, so I decided, you know what I needed to do? I need to start doing
legal work. And he said, so I started doing legal work. He said, but good legal work. There were a lot of
bad, you know, jailhouse lawyers.
Like, I wanted to be really proficient at it.
And if you meet P, you'll realize right away.
He's super analytical.
So it was a perfect venue for him.
And so he's like, so he started studying really hard, started studying legal work.
And I was going to say, that's something you started doing.
Right.
Well, you got to the pin, like, well, you were doing it a little bit already.
But then you were doing your own.
But then you got to the pen, you were like, do legal work.
You become important.
And people, it actually works.
And now that I think about it, that was my form of manipulation.
And it's not that I studied law indeptly.
What I found is, like, people who came to me about their case,
it was if I just listened to them and I could just repeat what they were saying.
I say, so you're telling me, I'm like,
but what do you think it is about that law?
Why do you think that's an issue?
And then, you know what I'm saying?
Then I could just turn around and repeat back what they said
in different terms with bigger words.
and they're like, oh.
So they let them formulate the article or formulate the motion.
The argument.
And I do some snipping and putting in.
I plagiarized everything.
Yeah.
Like I go find a judge's order and like I plagiarize everything.
But most of the time when talking to them, I only repeat it back what they told me.
Right.
You know, I just, I use listening to manipulate them where I make them think that I was paying
attention because I was listening to him.
You know what I'm saying?
And listen to them whining.
Yeah.
That was my deal.
I was like, okay, when you came, I did the old Dale Carnegie, I'd give you 30 minutes
of talking.
If I listen to you for 30 minutes, then you think I'm good because you think that I'm
actually concerned about what you got going on.
So you would tell everybody I'm good only because you think I'm concerned.
Yeah.
Not because I've said anything brilliant.
I just listened to you for 30 minutes, really, and just repeated what you said.
Like that wasn't that difficult.
That's it.
Yeah.
But like you said, you're letting them formulate their own argument so that then when they see their own argument written in legalese backed up by some case law, they're like, they're like, oh my God, this is amazing.
You've done exactly what I wanted you to.
You don't have a prayer.
But because there were how many people did you see file motions that you're like, bro, that's not going to work?
So what I found about the feds is when it came to like relief as far as the time, like 99% denial.
But anything technical, probably about 50 to 60% approval.
Right.
But when it, like, they're like, okay, we'll meet you on that.
They were very fair with everything else except your time.
Like, you could be absolutely right.
And they're like, eh, we're just not going to do it.
But like Pete, Pete kept winning motions.
They'd bring him back and knock off.
Like, he's got like 40 years.
Pete was winning like that?
Oh, yeah.
Pete would win his, no, his own personal motions.
Oh.
I mean, Pete won in general a lot.
Like, I mean, I know multiple guys he filed shit and it.
And he would only file.
Like, guys would come to Pete and he would go, I'm sorry.
You know, I looked it up.
I did this.
I did that.
But there's so much case law that is this.
And he'd read off the cases exactly like what just happened with you.
Like they've already determined that.
He's like, I mean, and they're like, well, we file it anyway.
He's like, I'm not going to take your money.
Because if I take your money and you lose, you walk around the compound saying that I filed something and I lost.
Oh, my.
I love Pete already.
Right.
He's like that.
I never did that.
I'm like, yeah, I'll take your money and lose.
But, but, yeah, so, yeah, it was, you know, anyway, yeah, it was rough.
It was, you know, the loss sucks.
The law is hard.
But Pete, well, that's, I guess that's his secret, because I would take their money and lose.
In a matter of fact, I'd be talking to them and I'd give them the opposing when I've seen this.
Oh, yeah, my, blah, blah, blah, blah.
I'm like, okay, bro, go ahead and order me this.
Yeah, at least.
And let's do it.
Right.
I mean, at least you can say, look, here's what I think's going to happen.
But I'll take your money and file it.
And then when it happens out, I told you this already.
We had this conversation.
I told you this is what they were going to say.
And they did say it, and you're lost.
You said, do it anyway.
It didn't go like that.
No.
Yeah, that's good.
Then they're like, we'll share you, but he sucks.
Disarm others by being nice honesty and generosity can distract and disarm people,
allowing you to execute your plans without arousing suspicion.
This approach appeals to.
the emotional responses of individuals, reminiscent of a child's eager gratitude.
The con artist Victor Lustig successfully swindled Al Capone by employing selective honesty
to surprise and distract him. However, this strategy should be approached with authenticity to
avoid breaking trust. I have a buddy in prison who's, you know, I'm not going to say his name
because I know him and everything. Listen, this guy was the master of this. This guy.
people with generosity? Absolutely. But here's what he did. So here's how it would work. It was always
you walk in, hey, you need something to eat and you, yeah, yeah, okay, hold on, open up this thing and
give you this and give you that and hey, let me give you some, and you're like, oh, I'm good, I'm good,
I'm good, okay. So right away, you think, what a great guy. He's giving me food. He's always
asking me, you okay, always asking me about my family, my parents, my this. And then, and so you get to
think like you're like good buddies and then it would be like a hey can you do me favor
and then you do something for him and he would of course immediately pay you back
and builds you up and build up and build up and before you know it he's he's into you for like
$300 you're not friends anymore like that's it it's over so he's yeah you keep thinking well
he's he's been paying me he's good he's a generous guy's a good guy he always pays me so
yeah, this time it didn't come through, but he's, he had an issue. And I know he had,
I know the issue he had was real. It was real because he's a good guy and he's always paid
before. Like that's a, you know, it's like, it's doing the whole, you know, paying, paying,
and then letting you get so much. And then one day, hey, bye, blah, blah, blah, boom. It's going to be,
you know, whatever, $300,000 or something. You're like, yeah, yeah, but I'm good for it. I got such and
oh, yeah, yeah, I know you're good for it. Of course. The guys paid me back, easily paid me back
a couple hundred thousand dollars over the last fucking six months. And then you bought, give them,
lend him $300,000, and boom, he's gone.
Not in prison, but I'm saying, that's the kind of thing where it's like,
shit.
But you'd never know because he was so generous.
Of course he's generous.
It's easy to be generous when you're using other people.
It's like these Ponzi scheme guys.
Let's go get on my private jet.
We're going to fly to such and such.
We're going to go have an Italian dinner in Italy.
Get your wife and your two kids.
Get on my private jet.
And you're like, this guy's amazing.
He flies you to Italy.
You have dinner.
You hang out and you.
And you go.
go to Venice, you pay paid for everything. And then, of course, two weeks later, three weeks
later, when he's talking to you about, hey, man, you really should invest in my, in my, in my hedge fund.
Of course you're going to invest in a hedge fund. You give him half a million dollars or a million
dollars, but the truth is, he took you to Italy on somebody else's half a million dollar
investment. Ponzi. Ponzi. That's the beauty of it. It's super generous. Of course you're
generous. Listen, Ron, Ron Wilson, the guy.
the Ponzi Scheme guy in prison, super generous.
Very nice guy.
It's easy to be a nice guy when you're blowing other people's money.
I was, listen, when I was stealing from the bank, I was very generous.
Oh, those guys on the side of the road, hundreds.
20 bucks.
Go get an apartment.
So, what do you think?
Like, I agree with the generosity or offering somebody something absolutely puts,
Especially when you know it's a need.
Well, I think you, listen, I know you're generous.
Six.
I told us, remember?
Oh, what do you tell you?
He told me he was in the shoe and he said, and one day I get a, he said, over the top, the letter, get the letter, it's like, hey, this is Jimmy from such and such.
We're thinking about making a movie or something, and he thought, this is Zach.
Overdramatic.
You know, code.
He said, horrible code.
He's like, it's so obvious what he's saying.
He wants me to, as soon as I'm done here, he wants me to come work for him, wants to know if I need anything.
He's like, and I remember when he said that.
But that's not disarming, though.
It is, but the other thing is what I thought to myself was as soon as he was discussing the letter, I thought, I know Zach sent him money to.
And he said, and sure enough, sent me $1,000.
He said, and then he said, but I was in the shoe, I couldn't respond.
He said, I remember that when he was all put away.
He said, I do remember that now when you think about it.
He said like a week like, he said like a week later.
He's like, I get another letter.
He's like, and I get another $1,000.
I'm like, oh, he doesn't know you haven't responded because you're in the shoe.
He is right.
He said, I said, but he's just throwing that money at you, right?
He's like, yeah.
He's super generous.
Yeah.
But I had worked with six at that point.
I know that.
But still, it's, it's my buddy Rudy, right?
I'm not going to go into the whole thing.
But I had a buddy Rudy.
When I met Rudy, he's like being evicted.
His electric is turned off.
We just done a deal.
So we did, or no, we hadn't even done the deal yet.
We just met him.
I'm just listening to him.
He's like, are you sure you can make this deal go through?
He's just, you know, blah, blah, blah.
Like, he's just, you know, and he's yelling and stuff.
And I remember saying to it.
And we were like, you know, he's like, because I need this money to go.
I'm probably going to go back to Belgium when this whole deal is done.
And it's like, why?
He's like, I want to get into it.
I'm like, bro, sit down.
What's going on?
I mean, what's happening?
So he's like, so he finally just, he confesses that, like,
he's like things haven't been going good for him, blah, blah, blah, he's not a good
realtor, he's not making money.
He's trying to sell this property.
He had a bunch of deals fall through and you're saying you can get it done, but so are
those other brokers and I'm like, I promise you, I can get it done.
And he's like, how, how?
And I explained to him, I'm going to commit blatant fraud.
So I tell him, oh, yeah, it's a five unit building.
I'm going to say it's four units.
You got an appraisal that's going to say that?
Absolutely.
I got a dozen appraisers.
So I tell them the whole thing.
But I'm like, what is the problem right now that you're waiting for this money?
What is it you need?
He's, I'd be honest, was he was I'm in the middle of being evicted.
He's, I'm in the middle of being evicted.
My lights have been shot up for a few days.
And I'm like, how much money you're doing right now to get you straight?
And it was like, whatever, it was a couple grand.
I was like, hold on.
Dave, write this guy a check for two grand.
Dave's like, yeah, it pulls his book out.
And he's got near the old, the old books that they had.
How do you spell that?
He cuts a check and boom, gives it to him.
And he's like, well, I got you, but as soon as this does close, I'll pay you.
Yeah, we're good.
We're good.
Didn't make them pay me back, by the way.
You're not to pay me, Matt.
But, of course, I'm generous.
I need you.
You're a real estate agent that's desperate.
I know that you're manipulative.
I mean, you're manipulated.
Able to be manipulated.
Yes, able to be manipulated.
Thank you.
Understood.
Yeah, you're a prime candidate for me.
And for me, it was the inmate.
So, I mean, I guess.
Right.
But I knew six, you know, but I won it anyway.
Still, you didn't have to send him $1,000.
Most people wouldn't have said.
You just sent the letter, hey, bro, look me up when you get out and sent 50,
bucks you send a thousand you're a thousand dollars is to a manmate yeah how much can you spend on
commissary a month not a thousand like three like the most you can spend on commissary is like
three 90 or four 10 that's the most you just send him two and a half months worth of maxing out
his commissary whatever you need bro for a guy that's already you that's that's you call that
send me a receipt bought and paid for yeah he's working for me when he's
gets out, trust me. All right. Go.
Show others what's in it for them. Green also emphasizes the importance of appealing to the
self-interest of individuals in positions of power when seeking their assistance.
Instead of focusing on your needs, demonstrate how fulfilling your request benefits the other
person. Historical examples like Portuguese missionaries versus Dutch traders illustrate this
principle. Similarly, pragmatic self-interest should
guide your appeals, the scene in the Corsair, Athens Alliance. However, exceptions exist for
those who relish altruism for self-image. Law 14. Yeah, I've never been very good at, you know,
just convincing someone, but like I've never pushed that. I'm always thought like I'm, I don't
know, doing it because I'm a nice guy, because this, because that, where it's so much, to me,
it's so blatant when it's like, you want to do this because it helps you for this and it helps you for
then and it would be good for you and like, I'm not really great at that.
Well, what you described saying you knew that it would help them?
No, I did, but he's saying, he's saying, like, trying to sell it to him.
He's saying appeal to their self-interest.
So appeal to, so say to you, Zach, you want to do this because it's good for you because of this.
Not, don't focus on on your knees.
Like, hey, I need you to do this.
Oh, he's saying change their mind.
Right.
In the long run, this is going to help you because you're going to be able to get promoted.
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more. Conditions apply. You listen to the other videos. The other videos basically, because these are
consulate. This guy's consolidating the book, right? He's he's condensing it, summarizing it. The other
explanation and the other book is they talk about like, don't bring up things you've done for that
person in the past. Like, don't try to appeal to that person by saying, hey, remember when I did this
for you? Remember when I did this for you? And I'll do this for you. He's like, he's like,
or not, no, it's all things that I've done in the past for you. Like you owe me.
He's like, don't, don't appeal to this person because they owe you because they'll easily
be able to say to themselves, they'll easily be able to dismiss why they don't owe you anymore.
Instead, appeal to why they're doing it in their best interest.
This is the presence.
Right.
This is good for you.
This is going to do good for you because you're going to make this much money or you're
going to get this because of it.
Well, that's a lot of work for somebody else's benefit.
You know what I'm saying?
It just.
See, to me, I'm the kind of guy.
I'd be like, yo, bro, well, remember when I'm not.
I did this. Remember when I did that? Like, hey, I've been, like, I've been good to you,
but I'm loyal to you. Like, you need to do this for me. And that's, that never works for me.
But I think you would only do that if you can't appeal to their better interests.
I think you would look for that. I try that first. When the truth is, he's saying, just go straight
for it. Like, bro, I need you to do this and you're going to make this much money or, and you'll
get this or, and your wife will appreciate that because of, you know, trying to appeal to why
they should do it for them, not why they should do it because they owe you or for you.
And then if that doesn't work, then you're like, but bro, what about what I did in the past?
Yeah, but I think by that I need you to do, by that time, you're like, if you do it or not,
I don't give a damn, let's go.
It's a tough one.
Deem like a friend, but be a spy.
True power lies in acquiring information through spying.
Spies, though useful, are risky, but being your own spy disguised as a friend is more effective.
Listen attentively, especially at social events,
subtly extracting secrets without arousing suspicion.
Create traps by sharing misinformation and observing reactions.
Be cautious of reciprocal espionage and consider sewing deception to gain the upper hand.
You remember I told you the letter that I used to send two inmates?
Yes.
You know what I'm saying?
That's sowing misinformation to get secrets or to find out something about them.
I mean, but face to face, person to person, I mean, yeah, if you're, if you're getting
someone to confess them, but like you say, like, have you ever committed a murder?
Or like Ron Wilson?
Yeah.
Where I'm walking around the compound with him and he's, he's, we're, you know, I'm like,
ah, they're going to reduce your sentence.
Don't worry.
He's like, ah, you don't understand.
I'm like, well, what are you talking about?
You know, you know, you know what I'm saying?
Where I just, he's saying, play the friend, but be a spy.
And that's, you know, like that actually wasn't.
my intention, you know, from the beginning, but as things progressed and he's talking more and
more, when he said, listen, when he told me, I was like, I went straight spy mode.
Like, I was like, whoa, I went, is that enough for a reduction? And if anybody doesn't know,
I was walking around a compound with a guy one time. We were, we were friends. I liked the guy.
So we're walking around and he's a con man. He'd run a Ponzi scheme and he was in prison.
He was currently cooperating against his co-defendants. And so we're walking.
walking around, he kept saying, the government's never going to reduce my sentence. And I would
be like, I'd say, well, why do you keep saying that? He'd go, oh, they think I've hidden Ponzi
scheme money. And I would go, well, you haven't. So don't worry about it. Like, they'd have to
prove that you withheld funds to withhold your sentence reduction. So just keep doing what you're
doing. And he, ah, you don't understand. I'd be like, okay. And then we keep walking.
And then two weeks later, we'd be talking about something else. And he'd go, ah, you know,
the government, they're never going to, I'm not going to die in here.
And I'd be like, what are you talking about, bro?
They're going to, you're working with them right now.
They're going to reduce your sentence.
I'm telling you, they think I've got Ponzi scheme money still.
And I'd go, yeah, but you don't.
You don't.
And so eventually he ends up saying, can I tell you something?
And I went, what?
Did you, but that's what I'm asking.
Were you working him the whole time?
I wasn't because I genuinely didn't think he had any money.
Like, I was just talking.
This is, this is three hours worth of conversation.
And this is a glimpse of just one thing and kept.
going. Had I been actively working him, I probably wouldn't have gotten nearly what I got
out of him. Because we were just talking about everything. And so we're friends. And then one day,
he says, can I tell you something? And I'm like, what? And he goes, can I trust you? And I went,
probably not. And he goes, and he goes, and he like, and he, and he, and keep on, he knows I just
got back from court. I just gotten seven years knocked off my sentence. You know, and he's like,
And he's one of those guys that would be like, you know, if somebody said, you know,
hey, Cox, how much time you got left?
And I'd go, shit.
You know, I got 10 years left, but somebody might f*** up and tell me where there's a body.
I could be home next week.
And they'd be like, oh, man, that's fucked up.
He's heard you say that.
He's heard me.
He's cooperating.
He knows I've cooperated.
He knows I'm more than willing to cooperate.
And he says, can I trust you?
And I said, probably not.
And he went, ah, he goes, I did hide some Ponzi scheme money.
I went, really?
I said, he's not a lot.
And he didn't even tell me the right amounts.
told me way let, like, oh, my ex-wife, my soon-to-be ex-wife has like $150,000, that's it.
Now, my brother's got maybe $20,000 or $30,000.
That's it.
That's all.
There's not even a lot of money.
And I was like, oh, okay, turns out it was actually half a million.
But he says that, I'm like, okay, I don't, I'm so not concerned about it.
I didn't even go to the government or go immediately.
It was like a month later, I was talking about a lawyer when I happened to mention it.
And only because she was like, what's going on in there?
Nothing.
I'm doing my time.
And nothing's happening?
No.
And then she's like, okay, anything, nothing going on.
I was like, well, listen to this.
And I told her.
So that's the only reason.
Her reaction was, like, does she know the guy or she's like, I'm looking into it?
She looked him up right then.
She goes, oh, wow, this is a bad guy.
Oh, wow.
And she starts reading about him, right?
Like he's stolen from pension funds.
He's stolen from churches.
He's, oh, this is a bad guy.
She said, and you're saying they're looking right now.
They're still looking for the mind.
He's like, that's what he said.
And she's like, oh, let me, let me make a few phone calls.
I mean, I never expected to hear anything.
A week later, they, the CEO comes and goes, Cox, you got to go to SIS.
At the next move, go to SIS.
And I go, okay.
The move happens.
I go to SIS.
They sit down.
What, hold on.
Guy dials the phone, puts me on the phone, I'm thinking, what the fuck going on?
You know?
Pick up the phone.
The guy's like, hey, this is agent, so-and-so, you know, agent from the Secret Service.
And I'm like, oh, shit.
He's like, I, you know, I heard you know where there's Ponzi scheme money hidden.
I was like, whoa.
But here's what happened.
After that, then they're asking me questions to ask him.
So now I am the spy.
Over the next three to four, three, four months, maybe six months.
They're literally, now they're emailing me saying, hey, find out from Wilson about this.
How did they get on your email?
You had to send a request?
Yeah, send a request.
So they're...
The typical way, but go ahead.
I'm surprised.
I'm probably that it just pop up.
Like, so, yeah, so they were like, listen, I'll find out about this.
And I'd come back and be like, look, I can try.
try and find out that, but that's a, I don't know anything about this. Like, how do I interject,
give me some more information? How do I interject? Who, you know, was, was Kelly, you know,
Kelly Kimberly, you know, involved? Like, I've never heard the name in my life. How do I,
who is that? Like, what involved in what? And they're like, and they come back and they give me a few
more things. And I'll try. And then you got to walk around for the next four or five days and
drop a hint here and a hint here. And the next thing you know, he's like, he, you know, we had
this chick worked this. I had this girl working for me. Your name was like, he just volunteered that or you
just? No, I never said her name. Right, but I'm saying did he volunteer information or did you have
to drop tidbits? Yeah, that's what I'm saying. I would drop little tidbits. Like I'd say, you know,
you'd be walking around. I'd say, well, who, who set up the seminars? Like, were you setting these up?
And how are you getting people to set up? Like, because we're just two scammers talking about,
we're just two con men talking about a con. But, all right. So my question is, did you know his con? Did you know
that he's still in pension funding money? Of course I know.
know that. He's told me, he's, you know, guys in prison are very open. Yes. You know,
you might see that same person on the street and you go, hey, man, what happened with something?
So you'd be like, what are you talking about? Oh, wow. Right. So he had seminars, people sign over
their pension money. Oh, my goodness. He was holding huge seminars and he'd have, there'd be 40, not huge,
maybe 50, 60, maybe 100 people. And then he'd go, he would explain how he's going to invest your money
in silver and how he knows the silver market. And he can,
you know, you buy whatever, you buy a percentage of the silver and he trades it and you make
this much money and whatever. So he explains that. Well, these guys would bring their financial
advisors and explain the whole thing. He'd tell their financial advisors. Here's what I do.
Here's how I know. Because gold is slightly behind, sorry, silver is slightly behind gold.
So when the gold market moves, the silver market takes a few days to catch up. And he gives
examples. And then we're like, what about this? What about that? He'd like, well, that's as much
I'm going to tell you. Well, you're asking us to invest a lot of money. He's like, don't. Don't invest your
money. And that was a big thing with that. Well, that was a big thing with him. He's like, I don't need your
money. If you don't want to invest it, don't. But let's face it, you don't tell your clients why
they're, why you're buying and selling, you know, their stocks, right? I'm not going to tell you
how I'm doing this. What I'm telling you is, I've been doing it for 15 years. And you know, by all
means, guys, you can go sit for the rest of the of the seminar. It's up to you. Anyway, and he just
keep going. Of course, here's what he realized right away. When you do that, they immediately come
to you. No, no, no, I want to sign up. We want to sign up. Oh, yeah, because they feel like...
It's the fear of loss. Right. I think it didn't, what's his name say that? Madoff used to say people
get pissed off at him when he didn't want to take, like, oh, my money's not good enough for you,
I'm Bernie? Yeah, exactly. It becomes an exclusive club that you're not a part of. So, anyway,
he um so yeah uh uh these guys were to start asking me and so what would i do is i'd be walking
i go i have a question about the seminars he go yeah because he of course he's a con man he's a narcissist
he loves to be asked about you know he's so proud of himself um he go yeah what's up and and and so
then i'm like how did you set up these things yourself like how do you get the people did you
advertise and he go no no we had this girl Kimberly and it's like oh oh my goodness just walked right into it
And I go, and then starts telling me about Kimberly and where he found her and how this and how that.
And then I, you know, as he's explaining the whole thing.
And, and then next thing, you know, you're like, I'm like, you're like, did she know?
Like she had to because you said that she's, these people are calling.
And he goes, no, she never had a call.
She never had.
She never had.
One time she asked me.
And so he told me this whole thing, boom, but I told her this.
And one time she said this and I, you know, I, but I answered her.
And she, I don't think she ever, she never had a clue.
really, to be honest. And so what do I do? I go back and I go, boom, here's what he said.
He said that in 2004, he hired her. And then I write this whole thing and I'd send it to him.
They'd be like, okay, we just excluded her. I mean, you know, I'm excluding people. And some people I'm
saying, oh, yeah, yeah, this person knew. So, but I'm playing the spy in prison, right? So, I mean,
I hear that. I'm garnering information by playing the spy. But he, of course, so I get this rule.
Sometimes you're your buddies with people at work or your buddies with people that you don't necessarily like, but maybe you need.
Right.
Right.
Like I don't really like you that much, but I'm interested in what you do for a living and I've thought about it a lot.
And maybe I might even be able to use.
Or somebody who's doing well and you've got both got businesses and you're like, where are you advertising?
Like you might be a dick and I don't really wouldn't hang out with you, but we're at a party.
And I'm going to start probing you for information on where you're advertising because I sell T-shirts and you sell.
wallets but you're super successful and like what are those what are those ads you start tweaking
them right what's working what's not working and they're like well here's what i found out right this is
working great so who knows what the but i get it right that's that i like that though that's have you
done a podcast on that no oh on that yeah i have i've actually told you about it too a couple of
times annihilate your enemy leaving even a spark of opposition can reignite into
revenge. Historical leader's mercy resulted in resentment and the eventual resurgence of enemies,
to ensure security obliterate their ability to retaliate. This doesn't always mean banishment sufficed
in the past. Empress Wu exemplifies this law, ruthlessly crushing rivals to maintain power.
Sometimes allowing opponents to self-destruct might work, but leniency can backfire.
In the scam world, our enemy would become either the victim or the police.
Yeah, well, I was going to say in the scam world, it might annihilating them maybe
notifying the police of their scam where they live, what they're doing, and getting them
arresting.
I know in the drug world.
But it's not annihilation because they're going to come back.
It is annihilation.
They're going to go to jail for 10 years.
I don't have to worry about them.
It's bad.
You know, I'm saying that's pretty, you know, or if it's in the drug world, it may be 30 years.
But I was thinking.
other examples of that are, you know, for instance, Napoleon, you know, initially they
banished him to the island of Alba.
And then, of course, he, wait, no, is that when they finally did that?
Anyway, at some point, they had, they initially sent him off to some, some prisoner island
or something and kept him there.
And he eventually raises up an army and comes back and takes over.
So, same thing with, um, um, what's his name, uh, El Duce?
what they call him, was El Ducay as he was the Italian, Mussolini.
So Mussolini, when he got, when he lost power, they put him in prison, right?
Well, they had, they could have executed him.
So what happens?
Hitler ends up sending paratroopers in, break him out of the prison, and then they put him back in power.
So, I mean, there's many, many things like that.
Even in the Godfather, in the movie The Godfather, remember he's looking for that kid to kill the kid initially when he got flees to the United States because he knows, I've killed his father.
And he can grow up.
He's going to grow up and want to murder me because it's the truth.
So I see, Carl, I can see that where, you know, you have to, you have to, you have to limit their ability to come back.
I mean, of course, in some of these examples, obviously that's them, but in a lot of them, it may be contacting the authorities or.
destroying their businesses, how many, what is it in Oceans 11 where the guy, he caught somebody
cheating and he ends up, like, he sends him to prison and then bankrupts the guys, his family
members, businesses and does like a whole bunch of stuff, just annihilates him, just does everything
he can to just destroy this guy's ability to ever, ever be able to make a comeback.
Be successful, yeah.
Don't wear out your welcome.
Continuously being seen dulls your influence, but strategic.
Withdrawal revives respect.
This principle applies to relationships, economics, and fame.
I got an example of this is I used to always say,
when I was dating someone or started to date somebody,
I always leave them laughing.
You know, if you call them on the phone, you're talking,
you talk to them for a little bit.
You always want to be the person to cut the conversation off.
You know, so you talk, yeah, yeah, this, and then,
and when they're like, oh, my God, hey, yeah, you're like,
well, hey, listen, I've got to get going.
Because their last
Their last thoughts of you are
One funny
It's something funny
He always makes me laugh
He's interesting
And he's busy
So you're scarce
Your time is valuable
You don't get to a point
Where you've talked for an hour
And a half
And they're like, okay
Well look I gotta get going
You've worn out your welcome
They're like
Okay I've had enough of you
I'm sick of you already
Better to you know
Well you haven't been
Dating in a while
So all those
When you got out of prison
Those techniques
weren't good, especially when you're online dating.
You know what I'm saying?
Well, yeah, when you get them on the phone or you get them in person.
Oh, yeah, they want to meet you immediately and it's just, or what's the,
you don't do like Starbucks?
Like, I don't know, I'm going to go to dinner.
We're going to Starbucks.
Yeah, they want brief meetings anyway to build up to something major.
And then after maybe one or two brief meetings, it's sex anyway.
So it's just, it's, be unpredictable.
People seek predictability, making unpredictability a potential.
tool. Such actions generate fear, confusion and respect, keeping adversaries off balance.
Chess legend Bobby Fisher bewildered Boris Spaskey in 1972, leveraging unpredictability for victory.
However, strategic predictability can be used as a smokescreen. Yet, this approach demands caution.
In certain situations, it can lead to distrust and adverse consequences. So, recognize when to deploy
unpredictability for maximum impact.
That unpredictability with Bobby Fisher,
I'm a big chess fan.
I was in chess club in high school, too,
which was nerdy, yes.
No, nobody saw that coming.
No, the big move was he sacrificed his queen
about three moves out,
and then checkmated the guy like four moves after that.
And that's like one of the most infamous games
because everyone that watch,
and I don't know how they used to watch,
chest back then gasped like
yeah it was over
lost his queen he's done yeah and
of course afterwards he claimed
in an interview that he did that
because um
he didn't want to be predictable because
I guess he had had a certain
maneuver with all his moves and
he just tried something in during
a world renowned
you know watched tournament
where it's like you become the chess champion
right yeah he's just like hey I'm gonna try this right
quick, you know, so, and they, they fame him for that unpredictability.
So I just happen to know that.
Being unpredictable, so when I think about that on a scam level, it's like, that's the one
thing I always try to avoid.
Like, I want everything to appear normal.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I concentrate scamming, you want everything to look normal.
Unpredictability is what I would do if I was actually.
If the situation was real, like, if it was real life, my money, I wasn't trying to get something from the bank, then I feel like I could go in and just be like myself or just say whatever because, hey, this is good.
It's all legit.
Right.
But in a scam, because I've created the entire situation, I want everything to appear to that person as normal.
You know what I'm saying?
I want it all to operate within the, and anything unpredictable, especially if the person says it, like, absolutely.
scares me. So it's, I don't know, maybe that's the being unpredictable is that I want everything
to appear normal when it absolutely isn't. Right. Like, I'm stealing from you. So I don't need you
to see anything that kind of makes you go, this is weird. Yeah, I can't, I mean, the unpredictable
thing, I don't, I don't get it. Like, to me, as far as scams or concerns, just in general,
you want things to go smoothly.
So I don't know about throwing somebody off, you know, saying something.
Well, it gets attention.
Did you ever see that?
There's a technique that I guess detectives do every once in a while to see if someone is telling you a story.
So if you're, if you have a preconceived or you have a pre-prepared story in order for a detective to see if you'll,
break from what your story is to see like because if you're just having a conversation
answering questions and you're kind of all over the place a little bit right um but if you
have a story that you've come up with that you want to get out then um then it's very hard
to break someone from telling that story so detectives will do they call the nanny nanny nanny
booboo where they're literally they're like right so then what happened okay so yeah yeah
And the guy's like, you know, I haven't seen her since such and such.
And, and, you know, my buddy Paul called, and they'll sit there and they'll go, okay.
What was that?
That's the nanny nana boo-boo.
Just real quick, they go, all right.
So what happened then?
And if a normal person will go, what was that?
And if you, there's multiple things on, on YouTube where the, you know what the detective?
You know what the detective?
What happens is that these, these suspects will go.
so I called her and you can check her phone like I've called I called her twice and she didn't
answer and a normal person would get the fuck was that bro they don't because they have a certain
story they're trying to tell you I'm trying to get you to believe this so I'm going to tell
you my story I've already thought about it 10 times I have a perfect story and I need to get
off track I don't want to get off track they're focused so I can't allow absolutely I can't
allow responding to that to divert me right so if you watch the video it's hilarious because you'll
see the guys see them they're like so what happened was so so i got in the car and i and they just
keep going and the detectives are like he's he's just telling me a story he's lying it's not true
what he's telling you that they know that they don't say it but they're like okay okay but they
know right then they're like yeah yeah so they know right then like this is a person
But they've done that and someone will actually go, what the hell was that?
I mean, if they do that, then they think that this probably, he's probably telling me the truth right now.
Like, it's just a technique that they.
But that is unbelievable.
If you watch it do it, though.
If you watch the thing, when they do it, you're like, even watching it, you're like, the fuck was that?
And you'll see all of them.
These guys, they'll, so, so anyway, she called me.
But what do you think about that?
Do you think is that accurate?
I mean, I think so many things that they, there are so many.
things that it's like, it's like these people that say, like, oh, if you look to the right,
then you're lying.
Stop it, bro.
I do that all the time.
And I'm not making it.
Like, they go, oh, he's lying.
I'm lying.
I'm sitting there.
I'm like, they're like, well, how much times you do in prison?
Cox?
And I'll be like, um, I do, oh, he's lying.
I'll be like, I did, oh, basically 13 years, just shy of 13 years.
They're like, oh, he's lying.
I did almost 13 years in prison, you stupid.
Like, your little system doesn't work.
You know what I'm saying?
And I'll have people say that where they're like, oh, oh, he's lying.
he looked at the left.
It's like, sometimes you're just looking to the left, you know?
Some people are searching, but they're not, he's searching for a lie.
No, I'm searching for the answer.
Like some of these techniques are just stupid, but to see a cop do it, it's hilarious.
It's the human nature.
So let me ask you this, because this piqued my curiosity for some reason.
Did you, when you went into a bank, did you ever look for, um,
ticks or things that people did to make you know that something's wrong.
Did you ever, were you ever on the lookout for that, or you just kind of like...
I mean, I think that, I don't think that I was looking for ticks or anything.
I tried to look, you know, as comfortable as possible.
But I also kind of felt like, like, if something went wrong and they're calling the cops,
like, they're probably going to be able to do it in such a way that I don't know what they're doing.
You know, and there were times, too.
And keep mind, too, I wasn't going, I never really went into a bank thinking that they even
had the ability to detect that I was committing a crime.
So, for instance, like when I went in one time to get like, I forget the amount, $6,000,
whatever, anytime I went into this bank and asked for over $3,000, because the account was new,
they always had to call in and ask for permission.
And I'd been at five different times, you know, to five, six different times to get out this
amount of money or, you know, $8,000, $9,000, $7,000, $4,000, $9,000.
They're always calling.
They're going in the back.
They'd take two or three minutes.
They'd come back, go, okay, fine, they count the money.
Okay, cool, we're good.
So the time they grab me in the bank.
What about the title company?
Wait a minute.
The time they grabbed me in the bank, she walked in, she had to go, well, she went in the back and called the cops.
Right.
So it's like, so this time, I'm, you know, am I concerned?
Well, she went the back.
Didn't you know?
She always goes in the back.
Right.
So there's those little things that they just do.
So it's hard to tell.
Well, what about the title?
So, and I asked that because my crime.
occurred in the bank.
Maybe yours occurred at the title company.
Is there a time when you're kind of...
I didn't catch it.
I'm not...
You know, and I pride myself on being on intuition, right?
Being very perceptive.
Yeah, intuitive, perceptive.
And I had one time where literally I was about to sign the documents and the attorney was
explained the documents and he looked at me.
And he went, can you hold on a second?
And he actually grabbed the document, close the file, and got up and left.
Like, first of all, those are my files.
Like, I'm signing these, but that's mine.
This is my loan.
They sent to you.
I'm signing it in front of you.
You're notarize it.
You're giving me a copy of all that.
He took, like, there's a separate copy that's yours.
He took my copy, too.
Like, he's showing the documents, but he closes mine up and takes it.
And I, who, who stop.
Do you know how fast you were going?
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independent optometrists. And I remember thinking that's strange, but I'm also thinking I'm, I've got a
driver, an ID in this guy's name. He's a homeless person from Vegas. Every credit card I
ordered. Like, there's no way this guy knows anything's wrong. What I found out later was that
he recognized me from my wanted poster, which was in the back room. So he walks in the back room,
he looks at the poster, he reads the poster.
It says identity theft, but it said that I was wanted out of Atlanta, Georgia, and he looks
at my file, and he sees that I'm from Tampa, Florida, and he thinks, and I'd been on with
my company for like five years, and he thought, well, this just, I just got this.
He's, you know, he disappeared from a couple months ago.
He's like, it can't be the same guy.
Closes it, comes back in, lets me sign all the documents, and then cuts me a check for like
$200,000.
And you found that out in the discovery?
No, I found out when I was being interviewed by the Secret Service.
They told me, they go, do you remember such and such when you were so-and-so?
And I was like, I said, yeah, I think I do remember that.
Because I remember it was weird because he took my file.
Like, why wouldn't you leave my file so I can review it?
Like, you took my file, not just yours, but mine.
And they were like, yeah, he actually went and had your poster, looked at your poster.
But see, by that point, I'd had plastic surgery.
I also looked like a scoundrel in those pictures.
I'd had plastic surgery by this point.
I've had hair transplants.
I've pulled my hair far.
Like, I had a different look, but it's still me.
Anyway, so, yeah, you would think, like, if you were smart, you would have picked up on that.
You would have seen and been like, oh, no, something.
But even then, I'm not leaving.
I can't leave the, I can't leave right now.
If I leave, then they definitely, then it's over.
It's over.
It's over.
Well, okay.
What?
You have one?
What?
So let me just say this as, as homage to you.
like your entire
what you were doing
you felt was absolutely airtight.
Yeah, I was wrong.
I was wrong.
Right.
Well, I mean, you felt it was
because you didn't feel like
there was a possibility
on the scene anywhere,
bank or title company anywhere,
where there was going to be a problem
enough for you to be arrested.
Even though it happened.
I was so cocky.
I was so cocky.
Well, and that probably came from,
well, you had been arrested.
I don't understand.
but I'll go into that on a different podcast, different later.
For me, it was always what I was doing was in the bank and I was someone else.
And even though I was someone with a valid ID and Social Security card and I was
completed that person and that person was in prison.
You know what I'm saying?
I still had situations where people had been arrested.
So I'd get nervous.
Plus, we made fake IDs that passed 98% of the time.
But I was there, the 2% of the time, where the guy actually opened the account, right, and said, okay, here's all your paperwork in the account, I've made your deposit, it's your receipt, and that police officer wants to talk to you guys.
And me, I went with somebody else and the other person that put on an identity, and we looked at the police are there, and the police is kind of like, I'm going to, when he ran the fingerprints, and actually, when he ran the prints, it ended up taking over an hour and a half, and he had to leave.
Like, we waited.
Nice.
But officer, my prince.
Oh, yeah, he goes.
I want to clear this up.
Yeah, well, I mean, I never told that story, but the cop says, what is it's taking too long?
I'm going to leave.
I've been wasted enough time here.
If these prints come back and it's not you, you're in trouble.
Come back and it's not me.
You're never seeing me again.
Like, come back as soon as you leave.
Yeah.
I don't give a what comes.
I'm not coming back
but I mean that's a whole different story
but having viewed that
what happened is I started
being nervous like that triggered
off nervousness so when I'm in the bank
doing what I'm doing
you know like I try to watch
for ticks
like one of my things is
because I had trouble if the person
I'm dealing with hands start shaking
because people can
control their face
you know their facial movement
the things they say
because I always have conversation
and if you no longer want to talk
that's always like I'm always joking
like yeah you know Matt
that's a nice shirt
like I wish I had a shirt like that
and then when you start
not comfortably giving answers
like yeah yeah thanks
yeah you're preoccupied
yeah your mind's brought by
and also their hands
start shaking
like the person is focused on
tinsing up
but they can't stop their fingers from shaking
it's like a lot of thought
and emotions going through them.
And it's like, I need to call the police.
What if they're just jittering their leg?
You know, some people will do like the leg thing.
Well, they have to leave.
They have to excuse themselves.
And when they get ready to leave, they have to take your ID.
Like, being, going through that twice made me aware.
So when they are about the whole time I'm watching their hands, like my eyes are
consistently on their hands.
Because that is the clear indication about it's time for me to get the F out.
Mm.
If I felt like you knew what I was up to, then I would grab some unpredictable.
I would become, like, if you were nervous and shaking, like, I need to go to the back
and I would actually take, I've taken stuff out of people's hand.
No, you're not going to the back.
I'm going to, I'm going to be leaving with this.
You know what I'm saying?
I don't give a fucking where you go.
You're not taking this with you.
I'll holl at you.
This is no your victim.
Various types.
Know your victim.
We, and we do.
Social height.
Videos react diversely to deception.
Avoid dealing with those who waste time or retaliate.
Understand the oversensitive, insecure, pathologically suspicious, cold and calculating,
and slow-witted or literal personalities.
Failing to comprehend your targets results in wasted efforts or inviting trouble.
Research and assess before engaging with someone as a peer.
Can be misleading do I know my victim? I was a mortgage brokerage business was an FHA approved lender like I know I've met with that with the owners of banks that we dealt with like I know all of the ends and outs of underwriting guidelines the security procedures the fraud detect like I know the systems in and out so I that's why I'm so comfortable when I would walk into a bank even when things seemed odd I was like
Because I'm thinking, I know what they're doing right now.
They're pulling the, they just pulled the credit report.
They see that there's four different inquiries.
They're attributing two of those inquiries to credit cards.
The other two are mortgages.
So he may ask me if I've gone to other banks and applied for loans.
Okay.
You know, or they pulled check systems.
They're going to see that I went to two other inquiries from two other banks today.
So they're going to wonder, have I opened any other accounts?
I need to say yes.
I need to have a reason why I said that.
So I know what all.
you're going to say.
So they're like, have you, have you applied for, have you opened up any other credit
union or any other thing?
And I'd be like, yeah, yeah, yeah, I went to Chase and I went to SunTrust.
Oh, why, why'd you?
Well, so here's the problem.
My wife and I have, and then I have my little story, blah, blah, blah, and they're like,
that's why I say yours was so complete that you didn't have, like, yeah, I wasn't
unprepared, but because I know my victim, I know what you're going to say, I know what
you can see, I know what you're going to ask for.
Right.
So I definitely think I knew that.
You did too.
Like you, when you met with the guy from the fraud department, he told you exactly.
We don't, we don't investigate anything under $10,000.
So here's what's going on.
Boom, boy, explain.
You just had your victim.
That was the introduction to the victim.
When I met with him, he's kind of like, okay, this is who we are and this is what we do.
I'm like, oh, like, you're vulnerable in that aspect.
Yes.
Oh, my God.
But that's the whole thing.
That's your victim telling you.
everything he just told you he just introduced himself to you and told you exactly what their
procedures were you now know your victim i know what you're capable of i know what you know what
you know it's funny when he mentioned the um like stay away from like vindictive but remember when
walmart prosecuted everybody fucking they still do that five dollars no now they just kick you out
they just tell you to leave i think um jay told me cat got arrested not paying for something
thing so I know I know I know a couple of kids the other day that grabbed and they were like look we're just they just can't come back here they're like they're like it's you know whatever it was like a hundred dollars worth of stuff and the guy was like look we got the stuff back they didn't get out of the store just we're just going to order issue a whatever no trespassing and I mean not just that look at what look at all lot of these places like uh where they just steal they they steal and they just walk off and they leave they don't even they can't stop you so imagine what the criminals thing they're physically not allowed to stop me
They can say, excuse me, sir, can you stop?
We need to talk.
Nope, fuck you.
They throw it in the back.
They got a car pulled up with a tag cover.
They throw it in the back.
They jump in and leave.
Nothing you can do.
Cops didn't show up.
They're not physically allowed.
Those criminals know their victim.
They know they're not.
You know, same thing with Walmart.
If Walmart prosecuted every single, no matter, I don't care of it's five bucks you're
getting prosecuted, people would stop stealing.
And if physically they could stop you, people would be like, don't rob, don't go to Walmart.
Why not?
Physically, they will hold you, they will grab you, knock you, knock you, knock you,
knock you the ground, and then they'll prosecute the fiss out of you.
You know, that that's the reputation that Target has for shoplifters.
Like any shoplifter, oh, my God.
Oh, I kill Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe's.
They go, what about Target?
They're like, don't f*** with Target, bro.
Like, Target keeps that reputation of do not F with us because we ain't with the bullshit.
I mean, I, but I think that's a version of this.
You're right. You're right. Don't take sides.
There is an advantage in maintaining independence and not committing to any side or cause except oneself.
By being unattainable, you garner respect and attention as both sides vie for your support.
If there's no benefit to me on either side, I typically don't pick sides.
Now, if I'm trying to sway someone one way or the other or one person's more important to me than the other, then maybe I might.
I might.
Well, then maybe you, at that point, you still wouldn't pick sides.
You would kind of, this is what they're saying, play both sides.
They're saying play both sides.
And try to bring them to a resolution that you think is best.
Right, but what's best for you?
Exactly.
Make others feel smarter.
By appearing naive or less intelligent, you disarm suspicion and encourage them to drop their guard.
Bismarck employed this tactic to manipulate Count Blom
into signing a treaty that favored Prussia.
San Francisco con artists successfully swindled wealthy New York business people
by portraying themselves as bumbling rubs who stumbled upon a diamond mine.
This law can help you advance by downplaying your abilities
and making others feel good about themselves,
but use it cautiously and avoid overdoing it to prevent becoming a threat.
You know what that makes me think of?
You ever heard of a famous TV detective?
What is two of them?
Columbo.
Columbo.
I'm having a hard time with this.
You know, can I ask you something before I go?
Yeah.
You know, like, and I don't know what it is, but as a kid, my mom loved Colombo.
And I have Amazon, and Amazon had Colombo.
And I remember all the days I used to watch it with my mom and think to my, like,
I remember the episodes, but I thought to myself, that was very smart.
When I'm a kid, I'm going, that way.
And I look for it.
for those episodes again
just to watch the clues
because it would remind me of being with
and I was doing that for my mom watching it
but then I realized that
he would look like an idiot
to the murderer because people
they had one episode where
one of the people that actually committed
the murder said Mr. Columbo
if I actually committed that murder
he goes intentionally he goes
I doubt if you could ever
you know what I'm saying?
He told him that and he ended up
he goes I doubt if you could ever catch me
right and he ended up catching him right you know but he just felt like you're a bumbling idiot there's
no way you would know so and he would ask these questions because they were he was so you
these people thought so little of his intellect they would trip themselves up he'd just trip
them up left and right left and right well he would he would nag them oh like by nagging them
about the mistake they made or what he questioned and getting their answer i think he'd be like
Oh, you did it.
You know what I'm saying?
The whole crime would unravel.
Yes.
He kept asking these.
And he was always like, maybe a little confused here.
You said that you had coffee before the murder.
And then, you know, boom, boom.
The next thing you know, like, then how was the coffee spilled here?
And then they're like, okay, I did it.
And then they're just like the Perry Mason where he would get him on something that they basically could be like, yeah, I don't know.
Instead, they always just break down and admit it.
Okay, you got me.
I killed her.
Perry Mason and Matt Locke, the breakdown on the stand was always my favorite.
That was my mom's.
But listen, also Monk does that.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Like, he's the one with the OCD.
Yeah.
And, yeah, my mom liked that one, too.
These are, like, memories of her watching all these bumbling people, breakdown master criminals.
Good times.
Yes, yes.
But, yeah, I don't ever seeing applying that.
No, I don't think anybody's ever broken down on the stand.
I don't think anybody's ever broken down in front of the, they're always like,
well, I didn't do it.
No, both they do in the.
Well, you know, in Perry Mason and Matlock, they, you wouldn't be the person on trial.
You'd be somebody else that confessed on trial.
Yeah, yeah, they'd be on the stand and confess.
Like, come on.
Or, well, I was going to say, but this happens all the time.
where the detective gets you into the interrogation room and you, you know, okay, I did.
I killed him.
You know, and they do.
It's like, my God.
Like that happens.
That does happen, you know, all the time.
When they get, they're like, look, we got this, we got this, we got this.
What happened?
Just tell me.
And they manipulate the shit every.
They're like, look, I get it.
Like, I know you're not a bad guy.
I know you didn't do this.
I know you didn't hunt, to go over there to kill this guy.
But what happened?
What did he do?
He had to have done something.
You know, damn well, that man didn't do anything.
You brought the gun there.
You told four of your friends as you were going to kill them.
Like instead, but they say, you know, they, they, they're like, I know you didn't bring the gun to come them.
I know that you didn't.
And you say, you know, so what did he do?
And they go, man, he, he did this and he did that.
And I happened to have the gun.
I pulled it out.
I killed him.
And of course, then you think so you're going to get, you know, and then, of course, the cop saying, well, you know, look, let me help get you manslaughter.
Like this was obviously an accident.
You didn't mean to.
And what happened.
And what happened?
Then he tells you.
And then you turn around the next day, you're being.
arraigned, and you hear your charges being read, and they're like, you know, first-degree
murder, you know, intentional this, and you're like, no, it was, what, we, but, well, that dude
was lying to you.
You brought it.
Your four friends said that you had a gun, said you were going to kill the guy.
Like, he's manipulating you to get you to feel comfortable enough to tell him.
He's not going to charge you with manslaughter.
He's going to charge you with first or second-degree murder.
So, yeah, that happens all the time when they break.
You've seen the 48 hours, and none of them guys not talking.
that's ridiculous that that show good though that you don't think it was yeah because it tells you how
quickly these guys break like I ain't telling them shit well I think murder is a very emotional
and some people can't handle because the people who get away are cold-blooded yeah
unquestionably cold-blooded murders you know what I'm saying the ones that don't break down
they're you like that's a cold-blooded murderer right there yeah well you know I love the
ones where they've got your DNA. And it's 20 years later than they got your DNA. And you were in
the place and you knew the girl and you this, you that. And they just finally ran the DNA or found
the DNA or whatever. And they get you in. And the guy was like, yeah, no, not me. Didn't do it.
I don't know why my DNA. You don't know why your DNA would be intervadge. Like you don't have any
idea. No, I don't. Maybe somebody planted it there. Yeah. No idea. I did throw away a lot of condoms
like like you got to know. Like, you got to know, like, bro, you're going to prison for this.
Like, we arrested you.
You're going to prison for it.
Like, you might as well just tell me.
And then they go to trial, and their whole defense is, you know, I don't know.
What to me?
All right.
2. Surrender to win.
When faced with a stronger opponent, surrendering rather than fighting for the sake of honor
can provide you with time to regroup and undermine your victor's power.
Surrender confuses your opponent, allowing you to build strength and plan revenge,
while appearing compliant on the surface.
This tactic requires self-control and patience
to wait for the right moment to strike.
By surrendering, you position yourself for future success
when power dynamics inevitably shift.
An example of that to me is someone comes to you,
you're not in the wrong,
but someone comes to you and they're yelling at you
and they're this and they're that
and you do the whole, the whole,
bro, you're right, you're right,
You know, I, I, I, because you're disarming them, you know, you're not going to win the argument.
The guy's screaming and a hollering.
He's made his mind up.
So you just, you're right, you're right, you're right.
I agree.
I don't know what I was thinking.
I, you know, I hadn't thought about it like that.
And the truth is, you know, I am not, I'm not wrong.
You're wrong.
But you're not going to win that argument, you know, or maybe, you know, maybe it's a physical compliment.
You're not going to win the fight.
So you go, nope, you got, I gosh, you're right.
You're right.
You're, I don't know what I was thinking, you know.
And so you just do that because, and then it gives you, at least it gives you the, the opportunity to step back and plan your revenge.
Like, I'm going to do this and I'm going to do that.
Like, you know, in prison, I think it would be more of a place like that.
Or in high school, something stupid.
But, I mean, I can see people in a business environment where somebody's mouthing off or saying something and you don't want to get into a conflict.
So you say, yeah, you know what?
You're right.
You should go ahead and take that.
I don't know what I was thinking.
I didn't think you would care.
So you.
okay well now I know who this person is and from now on I'm going to do this and this to cover my
ass and you know what I'm saying that sort of thing so I can see retreat when there when there's no
there's no possibility of winning the argument then retreating so that you can regroup makes total
sense to me or or adjust to avoid this like you look at it as a learning experience like oh okay
yeah this like you've just exposed yourself and and I don't want to deal with you anymore so rather
even dealing with you now I'm just going to okay yeah you you got that right and it's like okay now
I'm just going to go around this person probably like you like you say you regroup in order to
either avoid having this happen again or like you say come out at a different situation
a lot of times if for I think for us it would be just like okay yeah
Bye.
Whatever I have to say to get you out of my face and, like, I'm never, ever, if I'm
right that, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Or even if in a situation, like, I had the one time when we had had something go
wrong at a closing and we already had a check that was worth like $100,000.
And to me, I was ready to walk away.
I'm walking away.
Why?
Because so many things that are going wrong right now, like let's walk away from the whole
situation.
You know, we'll walk away.
we'll regroup, we'll start another scam in another spot and another, like, I'm ready to just
scrap all the work that's going into this because, because continuing forward means you could
get arrested. I'm not willing to risk being arrested when I could just regroup and start another
scam. So not everybody, not everybody has that. No, no, it's worth it. It's worth it. Like it's
100 grand that we're splitting? That's not worth it. So, but yeah, they, you know, it just, I think it depends
on desperation on whether or not what you think is worth it. Amen. Amen. Focus your efforts.
The law advises that in pursuing power, it's crucial to identify your key goal and focus
your resources and efforts on achieving it. This principle can be applied to various aspects of
life, including building alliances, achieving personal goals, and maintaining influence in
organizations. Examples include the stories of Casanova's escape from prison, the successes
of the Rothschild banking family
and the downfall of empires
that expanded too broadly.
While concentration can lead to success,
there are also cases where it might be dangerous or too risky,
particularly when dealing with stronger opponents
or relying solely on one ally.
To me, you know, when I got out of prison,
I was painting and doing all kinds of stuff
to make the bills, right?
But when I started doing YouTube eventually,
after doing YouTube on the side for a year or two,
it started paying more and more of my bills,
and I realized, well, what's paying, what has the most potential is this.
Right.
And so I just focused my effort on what was paying the bills
and what I thought had the best chance of success
and stopped doing the other things.
Right.
So to me, that was a right call, but they're saying it's not always the right call.
I guess sometimes it could, right.
If it had it failed, that would be starting from scratch.
Good point.
Play by the rules.
This law underscores the value of mastering the game's rules to rise to power.
historical courtiers excelled by manipulating within defined behaviors.
Guidelines include avoiding bragging, using subtle flattery, adapting to situations, and controlling emotions.
So Mussolini had marched to, he had led a march in Italy on the capital.
And as they, it got more and more people marching towards the capital, they basically turned around and they, they just,
just gave up. Like, he never got there. There was no fighting. Now, by the time he's halfway there,
they're like, the government's ready to succeed. I mean, to, to, to, um, to, um, just the threat of it.
Yeah, just the threat of it. They're so, and it was, the government was so weak to begin with.
It was falling apart. That was part of the reason that they're almost right, they're writing and
stuff. He's marching. They basically say, look, let's start another government. You'll take,
you, you can be a part of it. Like, he's nobody. He's a reporter. Right. That's all he really was,
was a reporter. Mussolini ends up taking over the government and becoming, you know, the top
dog, whatever the president, or whatever he ended up being called. So, um, and then in, and Hitler was
inspired by that. So he did what was called the, um, they had the, uh, the beer hall, I think it was
called the beer hall push, right? They called them pushers. So the, or the beer hall revolution,
or whatever you want to call it. And he gathered a group of people. And they marched and they were fired
upon. And he was arrested and thrown in prison. And so while in prison, of course, he wrote a book called
mine comp but while in prison he sat there and he thought like what went wrong well well he thought
you know it didn't work like it worked in italy for this guy and we had a bunch of people and
our government's weak and it's falling apart and like and so what he decided was you know what
I'm going to do because people got shot like people were shot people I think people oh no people died
several people died people got shot like it was it was a catastrophe it wasn't like a hey they
arrested us like it was a it was bad and he's thinking it was an of
supposedly a bullet just missed, you know, went right next to him.
He almost died.
So he thought, you know what I'm going to do?
I'm going to win this, but I'm going to play by the rules.
I'm going to get myself and my party elected.
There are a lot of us.
He realized, like, there's a ton of us.
So if we play by the rules, we could probably just get ourselves elected.
And then take over.
And then take over.
From the inside.
Right.
So what did he do?
It's not like, hey, there was a coup.
No, it wasn't a coup.
I played by the rules.
I got myself elected.
And that's what ended up happening.
He never got elected.
He was appointed.
But he started getting the Nazi party elected.
And eventually he became appointed and then elected and seized power.
Regardless, a lot of times if you just play by the rules and manipulate the rules, we see that happen all the time.
I agree with you because most of what we did was using the bank's rules.
Like, we understood the rules in order to get what we want.
right so I was going to say yeah that's that was I said that's perfect for for me like I know what
the underwriting guidelines are so I know what you're looking for so I just give you what you're
looking for and give answers that are like you said like you knew what they would see right in
your circumstance so you already had prepared answers so you develop the paperwork you know
in what they're looking for which was an example another example what you gave this morning
It's just like, hey, listen, I know what you're looking for, and here's more.
Like, holy, yeah, yeah.
Hey, you guys, listen, I appreciate we did half of the 48.
We were hoping to get the whole 48 didn't happen.
So look, if you want the other half of the 48 laws of power, please let us know in the
comment section.
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