Shawn Ryan Show - #160 Tim Sheehy - Former Navy SEAL & Aerial Firefighter Breaks Down the Los Angeles Wildfires
Episode Date: January 17, 2025Tim Sheehy is a distinguished politician and former Navy SEAL, known for his leadership and commitment to public service. He served in the U.S. Navy for over a decade, participating in numerous combat... missions and earning commendations such as the Bronze Star and the Navy Commendation Medal. Sheehy then moved into the private sector and founded Bridger Aerospace, an aerial firefighting company operating across the US - most recently in Los Angeles in the Palisades and Eaton Canyon wildfires. In 2024 he left Bridger Aerospace to run for public office, aiming to bring his military experience and business acumen to government. He emphasizes policies that support small businesses, improve healthcare access for veterans, and enhance national security measures. His book “Mudslingers: A True Story of Aerial Firefighting” chronicles the history of aerial firefighting operations in the US with 100% of proceeds going to firefighters injured or killed in the line of duty. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://hexclad.com/srs https://patriotmobile.com/srs https://ShawnLikesGold.com | 855-936-GOLD #goldcopartner https://americanfinancing.net/srs NMLS 182334, nmlsconsumeraccess.org. Call 866-781-8900 for details about credit costs and terms. Tim Sheehy Links: Website - https://timformt.com/ X - https://x.com/TimSheehyMT LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/tim-sheehy-a2362678/ Mudslingers - https://a.co/d/4WNVHPB Bridger Aerospace - https://bridgeraerospace.com/ Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram | Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
the NBA. Bet MGM authorized
gaming partner of the NBA has
your back all season long from
tip off to the final buzzer.
You're always taken care of
with the sportsbook born in
Vegas. That's a feeling you can
only get with Ben MGM and no
matter your team, your favorite
player or your style, there's
something every NBA fan will
love about that MGM download the app today and discover why that MGM is your basketball home for the season.
Raise your game to the next level this year with that MGM,
a sports book worth a slam dunk
and authorized gaming partner of the NBA
that MGM.com for terms and conditions
must be 19 years of age or older to wager.
Ontario only please play responsibly.
If you have any questions or concerns about
your gambling or someone close to you, please contact Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak
to an advisor free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario.
Breaking news happens anywhere, anytime. Police have warned the protesters repeatedly, get back.
CBC News brings the story to you, live.
Hundreds of wildfires are burning.
Be the first to know what's going on and what that means for you and for Canada.
This situation has changed very quickly.
Helping make sense of the world when it matters most.
Stay in the know.
Download the free CBC News app or visit cbcnews.ca.
Tim Sheehy, welcome to the show.
Thanks, Sean, good to be here.
It's good to have you.
This is the latest interview I've ever done
here at the Midnight Hour, but I
really appreciate you coming down. I know you're a busy guy and especially in congratulations
on your Senate.
Well, thank you. It's more like condolences because it's a huge, as you probably see,
you know, undertaking for anybody, but we have to do it. Guys like us have to get involved.
You know, we were just in the Pete Hegseth hearing yesterday.
We got to get guys like us involved
and getting this country back on track.
So, it's now what we're doing.
Yeah, a lot of people are stepping up.
It's good to see.
And then, you know, our conversation downstairs.
So, you're only the second ever special operations veteran
to enter into the Senate. As far as operators,
I'm sure there's been guys who've been through commands, but as far as I know, you know,
I'm only the second operator. Bob Carey, Medal of Honor recipient, Vietnam seal was Senator from
Nebraska previously, and then me. That's pretty incredible. That's pretty incredible. And yeah, I saw your remark in the the Hegseth hearing
Well, how did that go again?
Well, you know, it's to be honest, so, you know, i'm the most one of the most junior members of the senate
I just turned 39 and most senators are you know, 70, uh, or whatever and that's not to be disparaging
It's just a fact. It's it's a very you very, they call it the most expensive nursing home in the nation.
So I'm very junior.
So I was-
It'll be great to see somebody that doesn't just space out
in the middle of a press conference
and not know where the hell they are.
That helps.
A lot of people are looking forward to that.
Yeah.
And so I was the last guy, as you probably saw,
it was a five plus hour hearing, I think.
It got to, so I was the last one in line.
And at that point, the lines had been drawn.
The Democrats were hammering over anything woman related.
And Pete's never said he's perfect.
He didn't say, I'm a saint, I'm a preacher.
He admitted, yeah, I had some challenges,
but now I have a wife I love.
We have a lot of kids together
and I've committed to our Lord
and I've committed to our Lord,
and I've committed to serve in this country.
So they were smearing him,
and of course our side was righteous indignation,
rightfully so, defending him.
And it got to me as the last guy,
and I'm like, you know what?
I had all these fancy questions laid out.
Nobody wants to hear these questions, you know?
So I'm gonna ask him,
and it wasn't rehearsed at all
when I asked him five, five, six, nine millimeter,
night vision goggles, how many pushups. I was just, you know what? I'm gonna ask him questions five, five, six, nine millimeter night vision goggles,
how many pushups, I was just, you know what,
I can ask him questions he knows the answer to,
to show all these people in this room that
this guy knows what he's talking about.
And of course, I asked him how many genders there were,
toughest question.
This day and age, we shouldn't have to, but we do.
And I reminded him that there are two genders
and I'm a sheehee, so I know that better than anybody.
Oh, that's amazing. But quick introduction here.
So Senator Tim Sheehee, U.S. Senator for Montana and former Navy SEAL officer, like I said,
second ever special operations operator to enter the Senate, completed numerous deployments around the world. You're a family man.
Your wife Carmen is a former US Marine officer.
You both are raising four children, an entrepreneur,
founder and former CEO of Bridger Aerospace
and Ascent Vision Technologies and owner and ranch hand
at Little Belt Cattle Company.
And most importantly, for're going to talk about, because we'll be talking about the
LA wildfires, you're an aviator and water bomber pilot.
So we'll talk about, you know, your expertise and what you know about this disaster that's
going on in California right now.
But before we move into the nitty gritty stuff,
I've got a Patreon.
Patreon's our subscription account.
They've been with us since the beginning.
They're our top supporters.
And so one thing I offer them is I offer them
the opportunity to ask each and every guest a question.
And so this is from Amit Shamgar.
What do you believe is the most pressing moral challenge
facing our society today?
And how do you plan to address it
through your legislative work?
Apathy.
I mean, the greatest cultural threat to America is apathy.
That most Americans don't really seem to care
about this country anymore.
They don't really seem to realize that we live
in a pretty damn special place.
And not only do we live in a special place,
we are so lucky.
You and I, anyone in this country,
I mean, you've been all over the world as I have.
I mean, there's 300 million over the world as I have.
I mean, there's 300 million Americans,
give or take 340 million.
There's seven, eight billion people in the world.
Our chance of having been born in this country,
just statistically, God, the universe,
whatever you believe in,
the chances of you being born in America
are pretty damn small.
And think about other places you could have been born,
Mali, Iraq, Afghanistan.
Yeah.
You know?
Pretty much anywhere.
Yeah, Southeast Asia.
And there's some beautiful places there,
but there's only one country in the world.
People are starving in the desert and drowning in the ocean
trying to come there to become part of that country.
And that's right here.
And I think so many Americans have forgotten that.
I mean, that's why I'm sitting here.
I've never run for anything before.
Not even student council, walked away from a company.
I love my ranch, my family to do this
because I think so many Americans
have just lost sight of it.
And so I think how do we fix it in legislation
to amidst question is education.
Making sure that our kids are reminded
how special America is.
And they've been told these past several years,
how bad we are, how racist we are, how broken we are,
how evil we are, how our institutions are bad
and inherently racist and our American power is bad
or the fact that we're economically strong.
The list goes on that we want to tear Lincoln's name
off of school.
We want to tear the statue of George Washington down.
We want to erase our history
and replace it with something new.
And that's a fundamental threat to our existence.
And it's scary that that mindset has been adopted
at almost every level in our government.
Yeah.
So how do we fix the legislation?
Number one, we hold government accountable.
Number two, we actually make sure we're adhering
to constitutional government,
because the thing that set America apart
that's made us so special is not our government,
it's not our military, it's not our geography,
although all those things are great, it's not our military, it's not our geography, although all those things are great.
It's the fact that we are the first government
that was formed around the concept of a free individual.
That every mind, soul has its own unique destiny,
its own unique potential.
No other country was ever founded with that entire concept
as the foundation of a nation.
And we were, and we're not perfect,
we've never been perfect,
but we're pretty damn special place.
And I think we need to remind our kids how special we are
because how do we expect them?
We're all time low recruiting in the military.
How do you know, we have all time low trust
in government right now.
And that's a product of us telling generations of kids
that they shouldn't be proud of this country.
Yeah, you know, you brought up,
you brought up holding the government accountable
and we try to do that here as much as we possibly can.
And sometimes we get a little bit of success.
Most time it falls on deaf ears, but you know,
when I, when I asked my audience
to hold the government accountable,
I'll give you an example.
They always want to know how do we do that?
And a lot of people, we've lost, you know,
it's no secret, America's lost a lot of confidence
in the voting system.
And, you know, I'll give you an example.
You know about the Taliban funding stuff.
Oh yeah.
Thank you for highlighting that, by the way. Thank you. A lot of know about the Taliban funding stuff. Oh yeah. And-
Thank you for highlighting that by the way.
Thank you.
A lot of us knew what was going on.
I didn't know the extent till you started talking about it and really highlighted it.
And I mean, you kicked off a firestorm and we have legislation going on.
I signed on to co-sponsor today.
In the Senate?
Yes.
No tax dollars to the Taliban.
Man.
Thank you.
So like, and that was started, you, Scott Mann,
the whole crew of guys, I mean, again, we all knew about it.
I was aware of the existence of this,
but until you started quantifying it
and driving that truth home,
it didn't rise to the level of consciousness that we can,
now we have legislation on the floor
in the 119th Congress to put an end to it.
Man, that's amazing to hear.
Yeah. Thank you.
It's happening.
But it took a long time to get there.
It took a long, Tim Burchett out of Knoxville,
knocked it out of the park.
He did not give up.
It was bill after bill after bill that he wrote up.
And, but we had a petition and that petition went up to, I think last time I checked it said
like 400,000 signatures, and we couldn't get Congressman McCaul to do anything.
And you would think at the time, I think I brought it up when I interviewed President
Trump, it was 300-something thousand back then, but I mean, it is just...
People get so frustrated because they don't really know how to hold the government accountable.
And so I would love to hear, you know, your suggestions on what can people do.
Does it actually do anything when people write a congressman's office or a senator's office
and they get hundreds, maybe thousands of letters
demanding change.
Well, you asked what do we do
and the number one thing you do is what I'm doing.
Get in the arena.
I mean, it's not a glorious thing, it's not a fun thing.
You want to find a way to lose a lot of net worth fast.
The most expensive hobby isn't horses and planes or boats as politics. I can promise you that
but I guess unless you're Nancy Pelosi, but
The point is get involved. I mean the world is run by people who show up it is
I mean whether it's school boards do I mean whoever
Gave a shit who their County Health Inspector was five years ago
Yeah, who, nobody cared.
Or who was on the school board.
No one even thought of that stuff.
Like I might waste my time.
Well, guess what?
When COVID came and face diapers
and shutting schools down, closing businesses,
you can't go to church.
You can ride in the streets,
but you can't go into a church.
People started, who's making these rules?
What's going on?
I'll tell you who's making the rules.
It's the people who showed up. The people that said, no one else's making these rules? What's going on? I'll tell you who's making the rules. It's the people who showed up.
The people that said, no one else is making the rules,
so I'm gonna make the rules.
And that's how I got here, was Afghanistan.
Watching Afghanistan collapse,
being convinced watching Kabul collapse,
a nation I fought in, you fought in,
my wife fought there, we lost friends there.
At some point, an adult was gonna enter the room
at the NSC, at the Pentagon, the White House,
and say, hey guys, pick up the phone
and press the red button.
What the hell's going on, guys?
This is ridiculous.
Stop, this is amateur hour.
And it never happened.
It never happened.
And for me, that was like the watershed moment
of like, wow, like there is no one behind the curtain.
We better get involved.
We, our generation, the generation that lived
through the great finance crisis, 9-11,
fought on our nation's longest war.
We better get involved.
Good point.
You know, I was gonna ask you too, you know, I mean,
what level do you think people should get involved,
should it be at the city, local level,
state level, federal level.
I mean, it seems to me like if a lot more people
would have gotten involved in LA,
we probably wouldn't be seeing the mess
that we're seeing right now,
but I would love to hear your thoughts on that as well.
No, you're absolutely right.
I think any level.
I mean, you got to figure out what works for your lifestyle,
what works for who you are,
what issues you're concerned with. I think at any level. I mean, you got to figure out what works for your lifestyle, what works for who you are,
what issues you're concerned with.
I got involved in politics not as a candidate,
but as a speaker, as a fundraiser.
And as I spoke at events and helped other candidates run,
some folks said,
hey, we have a really important Senate race coming up.
You're pretty good at this.
Would you consider running?
And I think for a lot of folks,
maybe you're a farmer in Northern California. I say that specifically because people don't think farmer
when they hear California.
They think Santa Monica, they think San Francisco.
It's our biggest ag state in the nation.
I mean, it's the Central Valley of California
is our most fertile ag area in the whole nation,
arguably.
I mean, of course there's different, you know,
whether it's grains or, you know,
soybeans, et cetera, et cetera,
but it's one of the most fertile areas in the country.
And California farmers are at the center of this fire crisis
that we're going to be talking about today.
And, you know, common sense policies have been ignored.
And, you know, when we talk about this modern conservative movement,
MAGA, America First, I think so much of that
is misinterpreted by so many people
that America First doesn't mean isolationism.
America First doesn't mean nationalism.
All America First means is the American people,
it's not too much for the American people
to ask and expect that the government
that they've elected and pay for
makes decisions that are good for them.
We put the American people first,
we put American businesses first,
we put the American border first.
We make decisions as elected officials,
we may disagree on details and procedure, but ultimately when we make a decision
it's for what's good for the American people.
And what we've been seeing for so many years now
are decisions that are bad for the American people.
We put the rest of the world first.
We put in Southern California,
we're putting environmental groups first.
We're putting the smelt fish first.
We're putting endangered iceberg lettuce first.
We're saying, you can't pump water out of this smelt fish first. We're putting endangered iceberg lettuce first.
We're saying, you can't pump water out of this reservoir
because there's a snail in there that's endangered.
Don't touch that water.
We're saying, don't cut any of those trees
out of that forest because it's protected area.
Well, guess what?
That forest burns.
We're saying, you know, we're not going to be ready
to have community resilience for this
because it violates our endangered species
to act protections.
And then we're not ready for a fire.
So I think this fire, you know,
is going to be a wake-up call for the whole country
because, you know, I started my company's quick background
to how I got into fire, you know,
how is a Navy SEAL Senator now?
What does wildfire have to do with me?
Like you served overseas, the SEAL team leader.
And as you know, during those war years,
we got very good at integrating close air support
and airborne ISR real time into a ground team.
And for years, you know when the first time aircraft
were used in support of military operations?
No, I don't.
Napoleonic Wars.
They started hot air balloons on a tether up so they could spot for the artillery and deflate.
No kidding.
Yeah.
Very rudimentary.
They'd look at, you know, and then yell down corrections to the cannons.
And of course that progressed through obviously in World War I, early airplanes, Sapa with
camel, et cetera, et cetera.
Then, you know, World War II, of course, was the first real air war.
And throughout all, and then of course Vietnam
through the Cold War, but the first,
during those 20th century wars, you know,
we'd take imagery, take pictures.
And if anyone's ever watched that movie, 13 Days,
where it shows the F-8 Crusader flying over Cuba,
taking a picture of the Soviet missiles
and then landing in DC.
And it shows how all the steps the guys had to run
the film through before it gets shown to the president.
Airborne reconnaissance was a tool
of the strategic commanders, generals, secretaries,
presidents, the average guy on the ground like you and I,
we didn't see those pictures in World War II
or Vietnam, Korea.
But what we saw in our war, the global war in Ontario
was a closure of that information loop
to where every operator on the ground
was starting to get access to that information.
And that was a game changer on so many occasions.
See how many guys are on the compound,
see where the rocket point of origin sites on the ridge line,
see where the enemy's squirting off to
and seeing that information in a timeline
that you can make a tactical decision, not strategic,
not we're gonna invade the country on the East
instead of the West, because that's where the missiles are,
but hey, split second decision,
squirter out the North end, you know, go.
So I was part of that era,
and I started flying planes when I was a kid.
My neighbor growing up was a Navy pilot, Harry Thiebaud,
great man, Korean warrior, Navy pilot,
and he took me out flying when I was about eight years old
and I fell in love with it right away.
I'm like, flying is gonna be my life.
And he started teaching me how to fly
and his son Steve Thiebaud started teaching me how to fly.
And I was flying planes before I was driving cars.
Got my pilot's license right away, sold when I was 16,
pilot's license 17.
And I went to Annapolis and I went to Annapolis
to be a Navy pilot.
Like that's what I was gonna do,
be a Navy pilot and an astronaut, you know,
like the movie, The Right Stuff,
that was gonna be my path.
And of course I get there and the wars are kicking off,
Afghanistan, Iraq, and realized pretty quickly
that me flying planes was really a selfish desire.
I loved flying, but this was a ground war.
We didn't need guys circling around in jets, no offense to our pilot friends, but this was a ground war. We didn't need guys circling around in jets,
no offense to our pilot friends,
but this was a door kicker's war.
And I wanted to be where I was needed the absolute most
in that war, and that was on the ground.
So I went into the teams,
but I always had that aviation knowledge and passion.
And my first deployment was RAC 09
and part of a joint task force there at Baghdad
and we had the integrated ISR all the time.
And I really saw the power of those sensor systems.
And my next deployment was Afghanistan 10,
the few others after that.
And across those deployments,
I saw the impact of having real-time information
being shared with us and then being able to bring in aircraft
very precisely conducting airstrikes
in support of troops in contact.
And one of the times that I was injured
was actually friendly fire,
and Apache shot at us instead of the enemy.
It was a mix-up, and the coordination
as I'm sure you've heard that.
Luckily, nobody was seriously wounded or killed, obviously,
but we all got our bell rung and a little bit of,
you know, next dents and scratches there.
But I came home from that after I got out of the military
and there was a fire in Arizona in 2013
called the Yarnell Mountain Fire.
They maybe made a movie about it called Only the Brave.
And in that fire, the team of hotshots,
the Grand Mountain Hotshots were fighting a fire
and the fires in the Southwest is in Arizona,
sage brush, high desert.
When you have a terrain and wind driven fire
and that kind of fuel type moves very fast, very dangerous.
All fires are dangerous, but like heavy timber fires
in the Northwest are really tough to put out,
but they don't move quite as fast.
Dry sage brush and high desert fuels,
those light fuels, it rips.
And the wind shifted direction.
The team leader made the right decision to say,
with this fire, as you get out of control,
I'm gonna get my team out of here.
I'm gonna move them to a safe zone.
Well, unfortunately, he made the right decision,
but with the wrong information.
And instead of moving to a safe zone,
they moved into a zone where the fire burned them over
and killed them, burned them all alive.
19 firefighters killed.
And about, as I was getting out,
it was about a year and a half after that event,
I read the debrief on it.
And I realized as I read through it,
had that team leader had the same, 19,
that's about how many we'd have on the mission with SEALs.
And I couldn't, and in the desert mountains,
I was like, I could feel myself in his shoes in Afghanistan,
run around with my guys in Afghanistan.
And I said, man, if that team leader had the same tools
I had as a team leader in Afghanistan,
his team would be alive.
So I started my company, Bridger Aerospace,
to bring that capability, If I could bridge that gap
and provide that kind of data to our firefighters,
we could save some lives and do some good.
So we started my company.
It was another veteran co-founder of mine.
We started my bar with every cent we had.
And it was classic like shoot first, ask questions later.
Like let's just start a company
and we think we can solve this problem.
Having no idea what we were getting into. And man, it was an adventure. 10 years, ask questions later. Like, let's just start a company and we think we can solve this problem. Having no idea what we were getting into.
And man, it was an adventure.
10 years, it was awesome.
We went from two guys in a barn,
we created over 400 jobs all over the world.
We split into two companies eventually.
We spun out our technology that was infrared
into a defense company that shot down drones.
It was very successful.
We sold that and then we took
our firefighting company public. We're one of the largest aerial firefighting
providers in the world now.
And then Little Belt Catalico, we'll talk about later.
My sniper from my SEAL team runs Little Belt Catalico,
farmed to table beef from the time the calf hits the ground
to the time, you know, it's processed never leave
the state of Montana.
And it's minimally transported because every time we move that cow,
it stresses out the animal.
And I'm really proud of the product.
It's some of the best beef we're ever going to have,
all veteran run operation there.
And we're really trying to rebuild
the American food supply chain
because we're sending so much of our food supply chain
overseas and it's so unhealthy for our people.
We're an unhealthy country right now.
And we'll get everything we can to make our food here again.
So, but anyway, so back to fires.
And Bridger was the core of all these other amazing businesses
that I'm so proud of our veteran team.
All were led by veterans, every single one.
And we started bringing this close air support model
to wildfire to say we can real time infrared surveillance
giving the ground team real time intelligence. say we can real-time infrared surveillance,
giving the ground team real-time intelligence.
Then we can come in, bring water bombers in
that specialize in tight, direct attack,
high volume on the fire.
We can put that thing out and give the team
the best support they can possibly get.
And that's what we've done.
And one of our pilots actually was one of the guys
we got out of Afghanistan.
He was an Afghan Air Force pilot
who with his squadron snuck out of the country.
The Wall Street Journal had a great article
about him and the company a few years ago.
We got him out of the country, flew to Uzbekistan.
As he was flying out of Kabul, they shot at his plane,
shot a hole in his fuel tank.
So we ran out of fuel, crash landed in Uzbekistan.
We're all in touch with them the whole way,
the team that got the noon that were handling them
all the way, got them to the States, American dream.
We get him out of Afghanistan, get his family to the US,
get him legally set up and now he's flying again,
fighting wildfires in America, fighting for our country
again.
Damn, that's amazing.
Yeah, and he's a great guy.
But what we're seeing in LA right now is a catastrophe.
I mean, it is the culmination of so many facets
of just basic mismanagement
and wrong-headed policies come to a head.
And unfortunately, this isn't the first time.
In the last year and a half, Lahaina, Maui, remember?
Hawaii, who thinks wildfires when they think Hawaii? Very few people, 100 people dead, In the last year and a half, Lahaina, Maui, remember?
Hawaii, who thinks wildfires when I think Hawaii?
Very few people, 100 people dead,
Lahaina wiped off the map.
New Jersey in November,
who thinks about wildfires in New Jersey?
But we had big fires in New Jersey in November.
We had the largest fire in Texas history,
one of the largest fires in American history,
the Smokehouse Creek fire last March.
And of course now we're seeing literally our nation's largest city burned to the ground.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, we're going to dive into this, but, um, as of right now, just lifted up.
We got 25 dead.
Uh, it sounds like from the fire, about 40,000 acres have been burned to the ground.
Thousands and thousands of structures gone.
And it sounds like there was a lot of incompetence.
Sounds like we saved a lot of fish and snails, but not a lot of people.
And where are all are we going to,
where are all these people going to go?
I mean, like you said,
this is one of the largest cities in America
and where are they going to go?
This is going to take, this is going to take years.
To a different state.
I mean, remember what happened Katrina,
when all those folks evacuated New Orleans,
New Orleans still hasn't recovered.
A lot of them fled to Houston.
Many of them never came back.
Once they were uprooted and gone, they stayed.
I think a lot of these people who are leaving the state
to go stay with family elsewhere,
packed up the car and drove away,
many of them may not come back.
Man, man.
Well, you know, Trump called this actually on Joe Rogan's podcast.
He talked, what was the fish?
The smelt.
The smelt, the smelt fish said that they weren't pulling water from there because they wanted
to save the smelt fish.
Is it, I mean, a lot of incompetencies, we'll get into those, but what were your initial
thoughts when you saw the fire?
Knew right away it was gonna be a catastrophe.
And actually, it was recently about three weeks ago,
four weeks ago, I wrote an op-ed before all this.
Are you serious?
Well, I wrote an op-ed,
it appeared on FoxNews.com saying,
we are not ready to fight wildfire in this country.
Our system is fundamentally broken
and we have a big one coming and we're not ready.
I wrote a book about it two years ago called Mud Slingers
about aerial firefighting.
And 100% of the proceeds of that book go
to fallen and injured wildland firefighters.
I don't make a cent off it.
But in the book I wrote about it too.
I said, I've been fighting fires for almost a decade.
Now I'm not an expert.
This guy's been doing it for 30, 40, 50 years,
but I'm telling you how we fight wars in other countries
is such a far cry from how we protect our people,
our own people.
And when I see, I'm not criticizing the brave firefighters
on the ground, let's talk about our firefighters.
A structure firefighter in whatever city you're in.
You do a 9-1-1 by national code,
National Fire Protection Association, NFPA 491710,
they have a whole list of codes.
There'll be a big red fire truck at your front door
in about five minutes, 20 seconds.
Every city in the country is laid out that way.
And we pay those firefighters year round,
fantastic salaries, great wages,
because they do a dangerous and important job
for our communities.
We may not need them every day,
but when we need them, we need them.
And we fucking need them right away.
We do the same thing with the police officers,
same thing with our military.
Right now, our firefighters have been staring down the battle that the barrel of a 40% pay cut, our wildland firefighters.
We pay our wildland firefighters
like hourly seasonal employees.
We treat them like-
A 40% pay cut since when did that happen?
It hasn't happened yet, but that's what they're,
if we don't enact legislation to protect their pay,
that's what they're looking at having.
And every year, that's what our firefighting community
that protects our wildland firefighting,
our wildland firefighter community is constantly worried
are we going to get paid next year?
Because they are paid as hourly seasonal employees.
And you look at the disparity
between how we treat a veteran that goes to war.
They get paid a salary.
It's not the best salary in the world,
but it's a salary to live on.
They get housing benefits, they get medical benefits.
And if they get hurt, injured or killed,
either in the States or on deployment,
basically the military and the VA take care of them.
Basically, it's not, we all know the VA is not perfect,
but there's a system in place.
Overland firefighters get none of that.
In fact, my team and I started a foundation,
raised hundreds of thousands of dollars specifically
for that, the Montana Firefighter Fund, specifically to help severely injured people. get none of that. In fact, my team and I started a foundation, raised hundreds of thousands of dollars specifically
for that, the Montana Firefighter Fund,
specifically to help severely injured
or killed firefighters and their families
because there is no SGLI, there's no VA,
there's no Wounded Warrior Project.
And when these guys get hurt or God forbid killed,
their families are kind of left like, what's the big deal?
Like, what, I mean, what are we supposed to do?
Where's the help?
So it's incredibly sad.
But if you look at how we treat the problem holistically,
this is such a challenging problem to solve.
It's actually very simple to solve,
but it's very challenging
because it's a whole of government issue.
Let's take the LA fires we're talking about.
For years, California has led the nation
in environmental reform.
There's some good things about that.
We all want clean air.
We all want healthy forests.
We all want healthy ecosystems
and we want as many species running around as possible.
I know very few people,
I don't think I know anybody who doesn't want those things.
But those policies come at a cost.
And this is, again, going back to America first,
policies have impacts.
And if you're going to say that the smelt
or the Eurasian snailfish or the spotted owl
is more important than the safety of millions of residents,
that's a decision you have to make openly and clearly.
And you have to be honest with your constituents,
hey everybody, I know you all want
spotted owls flying around.
Are you comfortable with your neighborhood
burning to the ground to protect that owl?
And people would say, no, absolutely not.
Are you crazy?
So how our structure firefighting community is built,
it emanates from the great fires of the 19th century.
So, you know, go through history, especially in America,
we built our cities fast during national expansion,
built them out of wood,
and they built them without any rules.
People just threw up whatever they could.
Denver, Kansas City, Chicago, Boston, these great fires,
the great Chicago fire really was the impetus.
I think it was 1893.
I might be wrong on a year or two there,
but late 19th century.
And after that fire, everyone came together
and said, never again.
We're done with our cities burning to the ground.
This is happening too often.
And actually who came out and fixed it was private industry.
Westinghouse, General Electric, the electric companies who were wiring our cities with early electricity. is happening too often. And actually who came out and fixed it was private industry.
Westinghouse, General Electric,
the electric companies who were wiring our cities
with early electricity,
there was no code of how to run wires.
Now you can't put an outlet in it
without pulling out the code book
and a guy coming by expecting it.
Back then, it was so new, you just, yeah, whatever,
stick the wires in here, let's go.
So all these wood buildings jammed together
with a bunch of wires running through them
that were shorting out all the time
and these cities were starting to fire
and they'd literally burned to the ground.
So in the wake of the Great Chicago Fire,
the electrical companies came together
and formed an association.
An association that today is known
as the National Fire Protection Association.
And they said very clearly, number one,
this is morally wrong, it's also bad for business.
Like we're burning down cities.
We are going to create a system of codes
to better protect our cities from wildfire.
And fast forward through the 20th century,
what that did was building codes, fire sprinklers,
how we wire our rooms to make sure that
the outlets in our wiring's 16, 18 inches off the ground,
depending on what state you're in,
how we run the wires through conduit,
where fire hydrants are, those early fires,
what would happen is, it was before water in the cities,
so they'd fight it with bales, pails of sand,
and shovel on the fire, and lots of times,
they'd create fire breaks in the city.
So as buildings were burning,
instead of spraying water on them
because they didn't have fire hydrants,
they would just demolish a line of buildings behind them.
That's where the saying fight fire with fire comes from.
And then start them on fire to create a back burn.
To literally, they'd burn down part of the city
to keep the rest of the city from burning
when the main fire got there,
which is a tactic to fight wildfire.
And eventually they said that this is ridiculous.
We should be able to fight fires in our city.
So they created a system to fight fires.
And that starts with building codes.
It starts with a fire hydrant in every street corner.
It starts with hoses that match the fire hydrants.
Because then as we started to use water
in cities to fight fire,
different boroughs would help each other out.
Brooklyn would go help Manhattan
or Long Beach would go help Anaheim, whatever.
And they'd get there and the hoses wouldn't match
because they bought different equipment
or they made their own thing up.
And then you'd have a fire wagon show up
and try to plug their hose in.
Oh shit, these are different sizes.
Like what good is it if we can't hook the hoses up?
So they standardized hose sizes, respirators,
how to train firefighters.
And it created a national standard for firefighting
that as it was adopted,
decreased structural firefighting deaths
in civilians and firefighters by 80%.
And as you well know today,
I mean, firefighters, we call them firefighters,
but really I think 94% of call-outs for firefighters now
are medical related.
They're basically EMTs and car accidents.
We've largely eliminated structure fire
from our nation's regular everyday occurrence.
And around every city, fire stations are located
to provide a five minute response time anywhere in the city.
And within that response time is a table of requirements.
Okay, it's four story building, it'll be a ladder truck.
It's a 10 story building, this big,
or we need two ladder trucks, four rescue rigs,
two ambulances, and they basically construct that
based on a response matrix.
And a five minute response time means you call 911
because you have a kitchen fire.
They get there while the fire is still in the kitchen.
They show up half hour later or an hour later,
now the fire's in the living room
or the whole house is burned down
or it's moved to the next house.
So time is of the essence in fire response,
any kind of fire.
You know what the response time is nationally
for wildland fires?
I don't, I'm afraid to ask.
That's because there isn't one.
There is no requirement, none.
That's why like last't one. Oh, perfect. There is no requirement, none.
That's why like last year for the Texas fires, it took three to four days for aircraft
to be able to be ordered through the system.
And I'll tell you why.
I'm not blaming anybody.
It's not the forest services fault.
It's not the departmental's fault.
This is just how the system we've allowed to exist works.
When the fire season's over, season, it's January, and we have the
biggest fire, worst disaster in American history burning as we speak and it's January. So there
is no fire season. November, we were burning in New Jersey. All summer, of course, is Colorado,
Utah, Montana, the West. February last year we're burning in Texas.
Now it's January we're burning in LA.
So there is no season anymore, if there ever was one.
But when these traditional federal systems
says the fire season is over,
they deactivate all the air tankers
and all the firefighters, all the engines.
They lay off the fire crews
and they shut down the fire stations.
It's literally like if this here in this neighborhood,
you said, you know, we haven't had a fire here
in about a week, we feel pretty good.
Hey, Mayor, fire all the firefighters,
sell the fire engines for cash
and shut down the fire stations
because we obviously don't need them anymore.
We haven't had a fire in a week.
So why do we need all these people hanging around?
That is the exact paradigm that governs
our wildland fire apparatus nationally.
And that's why in January,
there was not a ready-made response matrix
ready to go for this because come winter time,
winter time, we sent everybody home.
How many people have been,
do you have any idea how many people are now displaced?
I've heard, I think we're over 15,000 evacuated.
15,000?
Oh, I'm sorry, I think it's almost 15,000 structures
have been damaged.
I think 60, 50 or 60,000 people have been evacuated
as of today.
Wow.
I know some people are starting to trick trickle back in,
but yeah, pretty serious numbers. I mean, those are huge numbers
How did this you know we and you had a we had a phone conversation?
What a couple days ago when we put the interview together at the timeline Herman I asked you
How did this start could this have been you know, we talked a lot about terrorism on the show
Could it be, could it be terrorism?
I mean, you said yourself, go ahead, you know, what Al-Qaeda said.
No, it absolutely could be.
And, you know, we recovered plans, you know, not, not we, but the Royal
we, you know, special operations, intelligence, community, law enforcement.
I'm not sure who was the, the appropriating, you know, agency, but there
were plans recovered from Al-Qaeda. That's that had a proposed plan
To attack America with wildfire
Because anyone who's been to the western u.s. Spent time out there you go out there in those dry months August September October
Especially like now the Santa Ana winds kicking
It's the cheapest way to wreak absolute havoc on our nation the cheapest way
I mean 9-ele11 was pretty damn cheap,
but they trained those guys for a few years.
They had to hijack airliners,
and it was a complex plan.
Well executed.
Hate those guys, but you gotta respect,
that was a well executed plan.
Terrible.
Think about wildfires.
Easiest thing ever.
I mean, drive down the interstate with a Roman candle
or a Evian bottle of kerosene, light it
and throw it out the window and keep driving.
And the fuel is so explosive that,
especially in winds like this, those fires will move fast.
I mean, so last year, the Smokehouse Creek Fire in Texas,
we'll get back to LA in a second,
but I think it's important for folks to realize
everyone's talking about LA as they should be.
But there's so many other incidents in the past
many, many years that illustrate why this is preventable
and why we need to act now to fix it.
The Smokehouse Creek fire in Texas last year
was a disaster.
The local response as usual is great.
These local fire departments man up, they get out there,
they fight hard, they protect out there, they fight hard,
they protect their communities,
but they do not have the resources.
A local fire truck is not designed
to fight a million acre fire.
It's designed to go fight a little two-bedroom house fire
in a neighborhood.
These guys are outgunned, they're outmatched.
That fire at peak spread,
when it was being pushed by 80 mile an hour winds,
was burning two football fields a second.
Wow.
I mean, visualize that.
Wow.
That's how fast it can spread.
So this isn't the perception of people that think
about a fire, it's plodding along.
Two football fields a second.
It's plodding along and it doesn't burn in a line.
I fought a lot of fires from the air,
fought two fires myself on a ranch this summer.
If you live out west, especially if you're an ag,
fighting wild, you better be always ready
with your pick and your shovel and your plaski tool
to go fight a fire, because the hay baler,
the hay rake, the swather, you'll hit a rock
when you're pulling hay and it will start a fire.
So two football fields a second
is how fast that thing is moving.
And it doesn't move in a line,
especially when it's moving fast,
the heat of the fire.
Like when people look at these pictures in California,
they'll look at, they'll see trees intact
and they see a house gone.
And they look at those pictures like,
how did that happen?
How come the trees are standing, but the house is gone?
Well, a lot of this,
because the proximity heat of the fire
will cause things to self-combust in front of the fire.
So it's not even the line of the fire,
it's just the heat that it's creating causes the flash point
of material to just burst into flames.
And then embers will get blown by the wind out in front of the fire line,
and you'll have spotting.
And spotting is where you see spot fires starting in front of it.
And that's how sometimes the ash will blow miles
in front of the fire and start spot fires.
That can be a whole new fire.
And that's what we're getting seen now in LA
is a complex fire.
That's what we call a complex fire
where it's not one simple fire.
It's a whole area of fires.
Like we're seeing in LA now,
there's multiple fires around the valley
that have been started. And now you've got a whole area of fires, like we're seeing in LA now. There's multiple fires around the valley that have been started,
and now you've got a complex fire.
You've got a huge incident of multiple different fires
that are all part of the same ecosystem,
but they are different incidents.
And that makes your response to that that much harder.
So, I mean, do we, you know, kind of back to the,
thank you for that, that explains a lot on how these spread
and that's, I mean, two acres a second, that's moving.
The terrorism, do we know how this started?
Not yet, and obviously one thing about arson investigation
is it is inherently challenging
because the area has been burned.
There's definitely been accusations that this is arson.
I have not seen any, you know, foolproof evidence
that it was, but there absolutely has been arsonists
all over the country that started these fires.
And one thing that has been a big issue in the West Coast
is a lot of the homeless drug population
where they're out there, they've got a stove,
they're either cooking their food or meth or whatever
in these homeless camps and then fires kick off in there
and then boom, it's gone.
But when you go back to the terrorist concept,
it makes a lot of sense.
I mean, this is now the most expensive natural disaster
in American history.
I mean, it's not even over yet,
but it's not attracting me the most expensive disaster in American history, I mean, it's not even over yet, but it's on track to be the most expensive disaster
in American history, billions and billions of dollars.
And think about this, Sean,
this is the scariest part about this fire.
The deaths are terrible, the families and the homes destroyed,
but this is the really scary underlayment of this issue.
Insurance, wildfire insurance could go away after this.
I mean, it's been happening.
These fires, we have more people living in wildfire
and pro-nuclear than we've ever had before in America.
You know, Western US, whether it's resort communities
in the mountains, whether it's LA, I mean,
people are building homes up into the hills,
literally in the middle of a fire country
than never did before.
And as a result, those homes have to be insured
because normally to get a mortgage,
you need to have homeowners insurance.
Well, wildfire homeowners insurance has already been creaky
these last few years that the foundations are starting
to crumble after that Paradise fire,
the Camp Fire in Paradise, California, Lahaina,
so many fires across the Western US,
insurance companies are starting in far more risk averse
on whether we're going gonna underwrite a home
in a wildfire risk area.
This fire may eliminate it altogether.
And if that happens, think how many people
will lose homeowners insurance
and will not be able to finance their home
or will lose their mortgage.
Or their homeowners insurance will go up so much
they can't afford to live there.
I mean, this could be a crisis in home ownership,
which is, as you know, for the last four generations
has been the main vehicle for American wealth creation.
The vast majority of Americans wealth is in their home.
That's where we put our nest egg.
That's where we generate long-term wealth.
We make a salary, we have a 401k,
but really most of us, our eggs are in our home
and we're betting on that's gonna appreciate
over our lifetime.
And that will be my,
that will be the foundation of my net worth.
Yeah, you know, I mean, the same thing's kind of happening
on the East coast, especially in Florida with hurricanes.
And they're interlinked because they all feed back
to the same reinsurance pool.
They're not, these aren't segregated pools
for the most part. They're all coming back to the same reinsurance pool. They're not, these aren't segregated pools for the most part, they're all coming back
to the same reinsurance underwriters.
So they're all exposed to the same risk.
And we are approaching a crisis point
where almost 08 style real estate crisis
because a third of America lives in wildfire prone areas.
And a lot of Americans live in hurricane prone Southeast.
But think about wildfires far bigger impact
than the southeast hurricanes.
And not to belittle it all,
but a lot more people live west of the Mississippi
than live in that kind of Gulf corner.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, I know I've got a lot of friends down in Florida,
I moved up here from Florida.
I mean, some of these,
I think their insurance went up 40%.
40%.
And that's not done going up.
That's just a short trend line.
Some of them can't even get insured
where the flood zones are, but.
And if you already own a house,
maybe you can keep your mortgage,
but you almost can never get a new mortgage
if you can't get insurance.
They require it.
Yeah.
So if you're trying to buy a home and you can't get insurance, they require it. Yeah. So if you're trying to buy a home
and you can't get in hurricane or fire coverage,
you may not be able to buy a home.
Yeah, so I mean, is it,
is it,
kind of moving into insurance, I wanted to go back.
I mean, I do believe there is,
we'll hit on the insurance in a minute,
but I believe there is proof.
They caught that one guy with the blowtorch,
who was biking off, going behind the house with a blowtorch.
I have no doubt some of these, again,
there's multiple fires, were definitely human-started.
No question.
Now, my...
I guess the point is, I don't know if they're coordinated.
I don't know if there's some crazy meth head
who's off his rocker, who just feels like doing it,
because that has happened several times,
where just some jackass who's literally out of his mind,
or if it's somebody who's malicious,
or if it's a coordinated attack.
Because Al-Qaeda did have a plan
to basically cripple the American West Coast.
They wanted to start fires basically
from Southern California to Washington,
all along the Pacific Coast Highway essentially,
and just create a firestorm in the Western US to cripple us and as we're seeing right now
It would have worked. How would they I?
Mean, how would they even find out what caused this will they they will I I mean, I don't know for sure
I mean sounds like the you know, the emergency response stuff in LA hasn't been up to par
So I don't know but I assume they will
And we'll probably find that some of it was genuine.
Let's talk California policies.
The Camp Fire in Paradise was caused by a PG&E gas line,
Pacific Gas Electric, I'm sorry, a power line
that shorted out started the fire.
I think some of these were intentional arson. Some of them may be utility lines,
but PG&E was blamed as a big evil American corporation.
These guys didn't maintain their power lines,
their corporate greed,
and they got multi-billion dollar judgment.
They got taken to court, basically put out of business
and you owe all these people billions of dollars
for your failures.
Fair, got to hold people accountable.
I'm not afraid of accountability at all.
But the reason PG&E's infrastructure
and their power lines was so old and faulty,
the reason they didn't pay to upgrade it was because
the state of California had forced them to reinvest
all of their income into solar power, wind power and DEI
and wasn't allowing them to make the necessary upgrades
to their traditional fossil fuel oriented
power infrastructure.
And for years management was saying,
we need to upgrade these century old transmission lines
because they are a fire threat.
We need to be able to cut trees down around the power lines
so they don't start them on fire.
And of course, what does the state of California say?
No, you can't cut trees down.
Cutting trees down is bad.
We don't do that in California.
You can't cut trees down.
Oh, by the way, we're not letting you spend any more money
on these power lines because they carry dirty power.
Dirty power is bad for mother nature
and it's bad for the world.
So instead you're gonna take that money,
you wanna fix your old dirty power lines,
you're gonna build wind turbines.
And over the objections of management, that's what happened.
And the impacts we feel now.
And there's no different,
that there's a great science experiment
you can do with somebody when they ask about,
aero firefighting, which obviously you're seeing a display of that here in
California right now. The big yellow planes that come in and scoop the water,
that's where I fly, that's where our company would operate.
Everywhere else in the world, when those planes drop water on fire,
you know, you take a glass and you fill it with a carbonated beverage and you
pour it in quick, it fills. You know,
you maybe pour three ounces
and the whole cup's full of carbonation.
You pour still water into your glass,
it only, however much you pour in is how much you fill.
Every other country in the world,
when you see those water bombers fly in,
they use what's called water additives.
So you scoop the water out of the ocean,
out of a lake reservoir, you add in gel-based additives,
foam additives, whatever it is, retardant-based solutions,
and increases the effectiveness of that water
dropped on the fire by five to six X,
three to four X depending on the, but you know, significantly.
And because when it drops on the fire,
it foams up and suffocates the fire.
But here in America, we don't do that
because we're not allowed,
because that foam might harm the white tail deer population that complicates the fire. But here in America, we don't do that because we're not allowed,
because that foam might harm the white tail deer population
or the Eurasian snailfish or the smelt or the goldfish.
Well, we don't want that stuff poured in our forest.
So that's bad.
We don't like-
That's throughout the entire US.
Yes.
You are prohibited.
Not like you're not encouraged not to do it.
You are prohibited from putting those things
in your airplanes.
It's like the rest of the world fights this way
because it's more effective.
Now you're forcing, it's like if you were deployed
overseas and they said, no, you can't carry that AR.
It's too effective.
And there might be a stray bullet to hit a civilian.
You can only carry your side on this department.
That's who I'm in.
Jeez.
And that's the type of rules.
I mean, there's many that we can go on for hours
about all these different codes and regulations
that restrict effective firefighting of wildland fires.
But that's just one example of one thing we do in America.
And it's wrong-headed environmental policies
that are having these impacts.
And we're seeing the thing about these fires,
whether you're a billionaire, a millionaire,
or an actor or a homeless guy, they affect you just the same.
It doesn't give a shit who you are.
It's burning your community down
and you better get the hell out of the way.
And we're seeing everyone on their phones,
what the hell, how could this happen?
And I pay the highest taxes in LA.
We have the more rules than anybody.
We're doing more climate crap here than anywhere.
And guess what?
Our city is the one burning down.
And sometimes you'll be fighting a fire and you want to pull water from a reservoir
to go fight the fire.
And time is critical, as I mentioned in the fire,
initial attack, get there fast.
Well, you have a reservoir right next to the fire.
Your turn time could be one minute, two minute,
three minute, five minutes.
Nope, can't use this reservoir.
There's an endangered goldfish that lives there.
You need to go to that reservoir 20 miles away.
Is that what happened in LA?
This happens all over California.
I personally, personally, it's recently like September.
Can't go in that body of water.
You got to go over to that one.
And now your turn time instead of two minutes is 20 minutes.
Doesn't sound like a big deal until you realize
over the course of a day,
you are decreasing the effectiveness of that asset by 10x.
10 times.
And oh, by the way,
because you haven't put that foam in the water,
now add a 5x on that.
So now we're at 50 times less effective than we could be.
And if you're someone sitting there
whose house is about to burn down and you're like,
hey, over here, and the plane flies over your head or the helicopter flies over your head
and you're like, oh, sorry, the goldfish pond can't use that.
We got to go 20 miles away.
We'll see you in 20 minutes.
And you're like, this fire is spreading at two football fields a second and now it's
20 minutes away to get air support?
Imagine being pinned down on a valley in Afghanistan and being told, sorry, the aircraft is available,
but because of the environmental impact
of the bomb is gonna drop,
you just keep holding on that firefight
for another half hour,
and we're gonna find a green bomb for you
because the dirty bomb's too dirty.
Wow.
And that's what these people are,
and our brave wildland firefighting crews
who are underpaid, they don't get medical benefits,
they don't get VA benefits, they don't get taken care of,
they're on the ground, as you see these pictures,
soot covered faces, underpaid, hacking away,
chainsaws and Pulaski tools
without the air support they need.
And we don't have enough of them.
So, you know, we will spend billions of dollars
on protecting other countries.
Yeah, I was gonna get to that.
In our own country, we can't protect our own people.
And that goes back to America First.
We're like, oh, you know, all America First means
is we owe it to our people to protect them.
I mean, that's the first duty of Maslow's hierarchy of needs.
That's the first duty of government
is to protect the safety of its people.
It's just like being a parent.
There's a lot of things you need to do as a parent.
You gotta educate your kids.
You wanna make sure they're well-rounded,
make sure they're humble,
make sure they're God-fearing and respectful,
and that's all good.
But guess what?
The first thing you do is make sure they're safe.
The first thing a parent does
is make sure the children are safe.
The first thing our government should do
before they worry about transgender education,
before they worry about welfare payments,
before they worry about utilities,
before they worry about any other function,
it's are our people safe?
And right now, as we're seeing,
the largest or the second largest.
It's a big one.
One of our biggest cities that's a beacon
of the American dream is not safe.
I just got camped.
So they put a fish or a lettuce or the spotted owl
or whatever the hell it was,
they put that above human life.
And I think.
And that's a federal law, that's not a California law.
It's all above.
And here's the challenging part of this wild land paradigm
is it is so insidious around us.
And I want to be clear, there's no mastermind,
there's no George Soros back there,
like I'm going to burn down America
and here's how we're going to do it.
This is just the accumulation of decades of bad policy,
just bad policy, forest management.
At one point, the US Forest Service was the largest
percentage wise contributor to the US National Treasury.
It was a profitable agency.
That's an oxymoron.
I mean, executive branches, you don't earn a profit.
You are a cost center by definition.
If the government was a business,
our executive branch agencies are cost centers.
We raise money from taxes, tariffs, revenue,
and then we spend it in our executive agencies to provide services to our people. Our executive branch agencies are cost centers. We raise money from taxes, tariffs, revenue,
and then we spend it in our executive agencies
to provide services to our people.
By definition, not really supposed to generate revenue,
but the Forest Service would through timber leases.
That's why it's under the Department of Agriculture.
The US Forest Service sits under USDA, which is weird.
The Forest Service should be under USDOI
by modern kind of cognitive standards,
but because it was a harvestable commodity product,
they put it under US Department of Agriculture.
Well, the USDA is worried about corn subsidies
and soybean prices and egg exports around the world.
I mean, forests are tiny pimple on the ass
of what USDA does every day.
It's not core to their mission.
And as a result, what's happened is
the environmental lobbying groups
and the very litigious environment that we now have
has shut down the American timber industry.
And now we buy our timber from Canada
and Chile and everywhere else,
but we don't grow timber here in America anymore
because it's impossible almost
to have a business model that works with American timber.
I mean, in Montana, and this connects to fire,
I'll circle back here to explain why this is important.
There used to be 36 timber mills in the state of Montana.
Important jobs for these small towns like Libby and Troy
and Columbia Falls, where every town would be surrounded
by big, beautiful forests.
They'd bring the logs in, build timber
to build American homes,
with American jobs, with American trees.
And over the years as the environmental groups
partnered with Enviro's in government
who were active in wanting to shut down the timber industry,
who then partnered with massive donors
to conserve and protect wild land,
they started shutting down massive swaths of our country.
I mean, Biden just did a massive grab
for national protected wildlife refuge land.
Obama did them all over the place
where they're just grabbing millions of acres saying,
boom, wilderness, national monument, national monument.
Can't touch this, can't touch that.
And, you know, impacts of that somewhere are economic.
We can't drill in those areas anymore for oil and gas.
We can't pull lithium out of the ground.
One of the largest lithium deposits in the world is on DOI land,
BLM land in Nevada, where that could be like,
they're saying hundreds of billions of dollars of lithium
that could go right into the national Treasury, pay off national debt,
and we're not touching it because we can't pull things out of the ground.
So how this relates to wildfires is you have massively overgrown forests.
Forests are supposed to burn every few years.
That's part of the ecosystem.
And if they're not going to burn, we need to be re-thinning them with logging,
like we did for centuries here.
Well, that industry was basically shut down in America 30 years ago.
It's basically been litigated out of existence.
So now you have these wildlife areas where you can't build roads, you can't cut a tree down,
and you can't run any kind of utilities
because they're wilderness.
They have to be left exactly as they are.
Well, what happens is you get a buildup of fuel loading.
And if you haven't spent time in the forests
of the Western US, the vast majority of them,
you can't walk off, if there is a trail,
you can't walk off the trail
because there's six, eight, 10 feet of deadfall there.
It's largely inaccessible.
Well, when that fire comes through,
a natural fire is supposed to burn
through the floor of the forest and rejuvenate,
kill the saplings, burn through the underbrush
and rejuvenate, bring nitrogen back to the soil.
Now with so much fuel loading there
and that fire comes through, it burns about 10 times hotter
than it's supposed to and it scorches the ecosystem,
destroys it, and that fire is hotter and stronger
than we were able to fight.
And those type of environmental protection policies,
wilderness policies, don't touch this land,
don't build a road there, build up and make it so we can't fight fire
in these parts of the country.
So fixing this fire issue means we need to bring back
common sense public lands management
because most of these lands that are mismanaged,
the vast majority of them are public,
they're owned by the federal government.
Well, I should say they're owned by the American people.
They are public.
But a long time ago, the concept that the American people
control these lands left.
Now the government runs these lands
and it's run by environmentalist groups.
It's run by the Enviro Lobby.
It's run by environmental lawyers
who injunct every single decision.
You try to put foam in an airplane tank and say,
we need to, boom, they'll injunct that.
They're waiting like sniper shot.
You poke your head up, boom.
Hey, we want to start logging this 600 acre section.
Boom, no, we're going to sue you for that.
Hey, we want to start mining with, no, boom.
Hey, we want to build a road here.
No, sue, you're violating this wilderness code.
And they litigate you out of existence.
Hey, we want to use this reservoir
to fill our fire hydrants.
No, boom, that's an endangered species classified,
body of water can't touch it.
And then you think about these fire hydrants going dry
in LA, there's a lot of reasons why, but.
Is that, I wanted to ask, is that true
that there was no water or the?
A lot of the fire hydrants were running dry,
and a lot of reasons for it.
Some of it was power was shut down,
and obviously if you're up higher elevation,
like if you're on a promontory out there,
you need electric pump pressure to get those hydrants full.
Well, when they shut power down, that's not happening.
Number one.
Number two, I mean, what's a,
what do you think a fire hydrant's built for?
I mean, what do you have a fire hydrant on the street corner?
It's for a house fire, right?
I mean, it's for one fire truck to pull up,
hook up his hose and spray down the house.
So that's what our fire hydrants are designed to do.
Again, urban firefighting.
Our whole cities are planned for urban firefighting.
Pull the fire truck up, plug the hose in, spray the house.
Now imagine turning every single fire hydrant on in the city
to fight 5,000 house fires at once. Shit.
The water pressure's not there for that.
It's like turning every shower in your house on at once
and every sink on and flush every toilet
and turn your washing machine and your dredge washer on.
You probably don't have enough water pressure anymore
to keep all that running.
So when you turn every fire hydrant,
plus every citizen's got their garden hose on,
pretty soon, I mean, the system is taxed
beyond what it's designed to have.
So we're in a great fire period
like we were over a hundred years ago
when we have now had many US cities wiped off the map.
Literally, I mean, Lahaina is gone.
Parts of LA are gone. Paradise California is gone.
It's about time we realized we can't keep doing this.
So who's, you know, at the very beginning of this interview we talked about holding
government accountable.
Yes.
So, for the LA wildfires, who needs to be held accountable?
Is it Gavin Newsom? Is it there's a lot of talk about the the three, it sounds
like the three top people in charge of the fire departments in that in LA or
DEI types,
I mean, who needs to be held accountable there?
Or is it the federal government?
All the above.
And the best way to hold people accountable is elections.
California's gotta wake up.
I don't know how they have.
Why do you keep voting for these people?
I don't know.
Gavin Newsom got recalled
and they put him right back in there.
But, you know, I mean, I don't know why this is.
I don't, I can't wrap my head around it.
I can't, it doesn't make any damn sense to me.
But I mean, so let's talk about the-
But accountability, it's important.
Listen, I want a quick hit on that
because accountability matters.
And there is, as Pete Hex has said
in his interview yesterday, or is a hearing,
if you lose your rifle as a soldier, you're crucified.
If you lose a war as a general, nobody cares.
And that same paradigm holds true in a wildfire.
When these things happen,
go through all these disastrous huge wildfires
and go find the chain of command for each of them,
whether it's a federal agency or a state,
you're very rarely gonna find, if ever,
that after these fires, after these disasters happen,
after it'll take four or five days
to dispatch aircraft to go fight a fire.
Why do that takes so long?
What happened guys?
Well, well the system, you know?
And how technical do you want to get on some of this stuff?
Cause I mean, there's some interesting technicalities,
but I don't want to get too deep.
I think what I'm kind of leaning towards is,
let's go down the,
let's just go down the chain of command here,
or let's go down the chain.
Who with the federal government needs to be held accountable?
How can all these places that are having these wildfires,
Hawaii, Texas, New Jersey, California, Washington, Oregon,
how do they hold the federal government accountable and who?
And why?
Why?
Yep.
So here is, now you are getting to the crux of the issue with wildfire.
Why it's such a big problem and why we have not fixed it.
Because there is nobody accountable.
There is not a single confirmed or appointed position in the US government
that is accountable for wildfire.
Not a single one, not a single one.
Now there are employees down the chain who, you know,
are career GS employees that have responsibility,
but it's not like the military where boom, it goes up.
Secretary of Defense, you are responsible.
Fix this shit now or you're gone.
There is no train derails,
director transportation, get your ass in here.
Why are our bridges collapsing?
Fix it or you're gone.
Planes are crashing.
FAA director, get your ass in here.
If you don't have doors
stop falling off Boeing planes, you're gone.
NASA director, Challenger just exploded.
Why the fuck are our rocket boosters not what's up with the O-rings?
Fix it or you're gone.
There is nobody in the US government that can be held accountable.
So there needs to be some type of appointee.
Because how it works-
In the new administration that some kind of director of wildfire.
Exactly, and I'm not giving,
I'm not criticizing anybody in the current government,
I'm just stating a fact that there's no one to bring in.
Even if you wanted to.
If Trump said, fine, get that guy in,
who's our wildfire guy?
They'd be like, oh, we don't have one.
How do we not have one? Cities are burning down, millions? They'd be like, oh, we don't have one. How do we not have one?
Cities are burning down, millions of acres burning.
What do you mean we don't have one?
They'd be like, well, we're going through the paperwork, sir.
It doesn't appear we have anybody responsible for it.
And that's true, we don't.
Now, how wildland fire responsibility is dictated
is whose land it is.
And here's part of the reason that we're delayed
when we dispatch our aircraft or helicopters or ground crews
is the first thing that happens when a fire starts.
It depends on where, but generally they pull out
the land map and they figure out whose land is it.
And they will literally argue over whose responsibility
the fire is because it comes out of whoever's budget.
Always comes back to money, right?
This is BLM land, that's Department of Interior.
This is BIA land, this is state park land, this is BLM land, that's Department of Interior.
This is BIA land.
This is state park land.
This is state trust land.
This is county land.
This is private land.
And they'll look at the checkerboard map,
which is what land looks like when you look at
land ownership map in the Western US, the checkerboard.
And they'll basically argue over whose responsibility it is.
And what we need to do is cross cut.
It's like 9-11 when they said,
who the hell knew this was coming?
And everyone got in the room.
No one's putting the intelligence together
from law enforcement to military
to the intelligence community to say,
we better start talking.
And in the wildfire world,
there is no cross lateral communication
that ensures that there's one responsible organization.
So there needs to be some type of a committee or an appointee.
Yeah.
That is created to...
100%.
And that person, the people that oversee wildland firefighting, who they exist under, are not...
They're farmers, they're bureaucrats, they're administrators, they're not bad people, but
they are not an emergency response organization.
They are not, it's like taking a SEAL team
and putting it under the Parks and Rec Department.
Like we have smoke jumpers and hot shots
and water bomber pilots and hell attack crews
and awesome guys that are alpha dudes and women like us
who are tough, they go through tough training,
they're awesome servants for their country,
but then they work in an environment that's not an agency fit for purpose.
You know, you and I always worked, at least at some point up the chain,
we had meat eaters up there deciding whether we were going to go kill the bad guys or not.
That is not the case in this community.
You know, eventually Department of Agriculture,
the Forest Service guys are, you guys are 15 layers of grain traders
and commodity crop forecasters and administrators.
And the DOI, it's a little bit better.
They're a little bit of a thinner bureaucracy,
but firefighters are not led by other firefighters.
And the decisions are not made about emergency response.
They're made with a risk management outlook
and a financial management outlook. How do we do this cheaper? How do we keep our
people safe? Not how do I send a team in there to save this town and save this
community? So how do I mean, how do we start this? I mean, me and you just
started the conversation and you know hopefully it spreads but I mean how
would that be implemented?
Is that, would that be implemented by the president?
Would that be implemented by Congress
and then go into the Senate?
I mean, how is that implemented?
It's gotta be both.
Again, one of the beautiful things about America
is our republic, how our founders who were so wise
designed an amazing form of government.
It's not perfect, but it works better
than anything else in the world.
And dual track it.
So the 119th Congress has to bring in wildfire accountability.
This disaster is the wake-up call.
We've all been warning about it for years
that we are not ready.
We need to fix this.
They need to bring it a real solution,
not just more of these stupid hearings and commissions
where everyone talks and nothing happens.
They need to create a real legislative plan
to actually create a national wildland firefighting service,
task force, accountable commission, accountable agency
that says we are going to be the accountable conduit
for all firefighting.
President Trump and the executive branch should say,
I'm going to point to wild wildfires are a wildfire director
call whatever the hell you want.
But I want one guy from the executive branch
to support our legislation over here as they craft this
to make sure that we build a single point of contact
and a single line of accountability.
So we can fight these fires because it cross cuts the EPA.
We gotta get the EPA out of the way. So we can manage the forest and we can fight these fires because it cross cuts, the EPA, we've got to get the EPA out of the way
so we can manage the forests
and we can not have to be not scooping water
from places we should be scooping water.
We need to get the Forest Service on board,
the Department of Interior on board.
We need to get state foresters
and State Department of Natural Resources on board.
The FAA who governs aviation,
they've got to make sure they craft a specific FAR so that aircraft
that fight fires don't have to go through these like circular carding inspection routines that
take them so far from airworthiness in the mission that it wastes time and grounds capable aircraft.
Right now our wildfire fighting spectrum is spread across so many agencies that there's
no accountability.
It's impossible to hold them accountable.
So we need a committee or an appointee with bilateral communication from all these other
organizations and agencies.
Let's move to the state level.
California.
Yep.
Governor Newsom.
Is he held accountable?
Does he need to be held accountable? Does he have, I mean, you know, we talk about, you know,
why does this guy keep getting voted in?
I mean, I think we need to educate on the discrepancies
if there are any that he needs to be held accountable for.
I mean, they held PG&E accountable for billions of dollars
for what they call gross negligence
and the maintenance of their transmission lines
that started the campfire that destroyed Paradise
killed a hundred people.
I believe there should be legal repercussions
for mismanagement.
I believe there should be for city officials,
county officials, state officials that said,
hey, you ignored the warning signs.
This wind event was forecasted that came through.
Yes, fires can start,
but the conditions the fires start in
will impact their behavior.
And aggressive, fast moving fire behavior
will be driven, especially in that type of fuel,
which is the Southern California,
the Santa Ana winds come in.
It's well known in California.
My wife's family farm is that area.
It's up north of Camp Pendleton area.
Or, yeah, and they, up here by Camarillo,
it's a fruit farm.
She has two brothers in Down syndrome
and they use their farm as a,
it's all Down syndrome kids work on there.
And it's a way to keep them engaged
and make them part of something.
It's a really special spot.
It was destroyed in November by a wildfire.
So again, this is a very personal issue for me.
Her parents and kids and brothers got out,
but it was a close call.
But those fires moved so fast
and this wind event was forecasted.
And there should have been dozens of planes
and helicopters on standby, ready to go.
They should have had evacuation plans
already communicated in place very clearly.
They should have had firefighting crews
already deployed, ready to go.
And they didn't.
What about the reservoirs?
Reservoirs.
Could Gavin Newsom have overridden that and said, no, pull from that reservoir right there?
I don't know if he, I don't know the legality, but he certainly should have.
I mean, that's what you do as a leader.
You make tough decisions.
Well, I can't violate this right, because then you can't violate, you know damn well.
I mean, you let oversee, all right, I know this is a rule, but guess what?
People are dying.
I'm going to break that rule right now and I'll deal with the consequences later.
You know, if I have to drain this reservoir
that's being reserved for some water reclamation project,
sorry man, I got people dying and homes burning.
We're going to use that water and we'll deal with it later.
And you know, the water management is tough.
I mean, this is also a consequence of we built,
we're inhabiting areas that, you know,
we're not designed to be inhabited by 15 million people.
You know, they just were not.
Should he have allocated more funds to-
Oh yeah, I mean, him and Karen Bass cut fire funding,
you know, and it's funny, you know, again,
I go back to the Hegseth hearing,
cause it was just recently, you know,
the Democrats were very focused on Pete's ability
to fiscally manage an organization.
It's amazing that Democrats all of a sudden
worry about fiscal management.
They've never cared before.
And of course in California,
they're constantly spending themselves into oblivion,
yet they wanted to cut firefighter funding.
And they wanted to cut funding
for the wildland resilience firefighting apparatus,
which they did, they cut that funding.
So they want to spend more and more money
on homeless camp restoration.
They want to dump billions into homeless issues,
rehabilitation, free needles for drug addicts.
Well that's creating a whole business.
I mean we know why that's happening.
That's creating an entire business to house homelessness.
It's an industrial complex.
But I mean, geez.
And folks say, well we don't have the funding for this to fight fires, that costs money.
Well this is not the most expensive disaster
in American history.
We're spending billions upon billions
recovering from these fires.
And there are estimates out there
that 20 to 30,000 Americans a year
die from wildfire related smoke inhalation.
And if you're in a valley out in the Western US
breathing that smoke choked air all day, every day,
it's not good for you.
How about the, you know, we talked about arson earlier,
you know, had there been, I mean, California I believe was,
there were a big defund the police. Absolutely. State, correct?
And so, had there been more police,
maybe they could have, you know, mitigated some of the arson,
some of the stuff that we saw going on.
People posting videos on X.
Do you think that had anything to do with any of this as well?
Oh, I'm sure it did. I mean, it's, it's...
When you have abject lawlessness going on in the streets,
um, you know, when what... when you have abject lawlessness going on in the streets,
when we reward bad behavior and punish good behavior,
when Daniel Penley gets arrested and tried and hard and feathered for rescuing people.
Yeah, people are afraid to step up.
There was that video of the citizens
intercepting the guy with the blowtorch
in their neighborhood a couple of days ago
where he was gonna start another fire.
And you could tell they were hesitant to take this guy down
because they see what happens.
Eventually they finally did
because clearly they saw what he was about to do.
But people are afraid to get involved now, rightfully so.
They're saying, well, I don't wanna go,
I don't wanna stick myself in a situation
where I might be the next Daniel Penny
So that falls on law enforcement who as we well know they've been
You know, they've been treated so poorly in places like California these past few years that you know, so demoralized
They cut their legs right out from out. Yeah, God bless those guys and girls for doing what they're doing. Thank God
They're out there but man, it's tough.
Tough to know no one's got your back.
Anything else at the state level
that could have gone different?
Absolutely, I mean, Cal Fire actually
is a really good organization, especially, you know, just,
I mean, no one's perfect.
There's certainly things that I'm sure they can
and could have done better, but you know,
they do a lot with a little,
but they should have had more assets on contract.
That's not really a decision they can make.
That's a decision that's gonna come from,
obviously the state level, CAL FIRE works for the state.
But they have access to emergency funding,
but at the state level,
they have to be giving the directives to CAL FIRE.
Listen, you need to have all the resources
required to be able to respond to fires immediately.
California had already lost a whole community in 2017, 18.
We had those fires all over this year in Nevada front.
And obviously Camp Fire destroyed Paradise, California.
We had some devastating fires near Truckee.
This isn't new for California.
They need to be ready for this.
And they weren't.
Let's move to the local level.
Yeah.
Fire chiefs.
What do we need to hold them accountable for?
So, in LA specifically, I don't know these people personally,
but obviously we've seen their recruiting videos and the priorities.
I mean, what does leadership come down to?
I mean, it comes down to prioritize and execute.
One of my SEAL team leaders,
when I was going through junior officer training,
had a great piece of advice that he wrote in the windshield
of his Humvee in Iraq, prioritize and execute.
As a leader, especially in emergency management situations,
whether it's combat, whether it's fire,
you're almost always gonna have more things to do
than you have time to do them.
So the most important thing of a leader,
the most important thing for a leader to do,
crystallize the mission and then prioritize
and execute tasks that support the mission outcome
that you were expecting
or you've been directed to achieve.
And as a firefighting organization,
your sole mission is to put out fires,
save lives and protect your community.
It's not to create firefighters
that look like the people around them.
It's not to create equity in the fire department.
It's just not.
That's a characteristic, not a mission.
The mission is to save people's lives.
To have a department that looks like
the people you're serving, that's a characteristic.
And if you want to have a characteristic,
that's fine, I'm not criticizing.
But if that characteristic interferes with the mission,
you're wrong.
And this leadership was wrong
because they were focused,
and apparently the fire chief was making like $400,000
a year, which I did a little bit of research on that.
I guess that's fairly normal for Firefighter Chief salaries
in California.
Like they make three to $400,000 a year,
which hey, more power to you.
We should be paying for responders, you know?
But if you're getting paid that much money,
you better be goddamn good at your job
because that's a lot of money.
Yeah, yeah.
Do you see, I mean, do you see any similarities
between the LA fires and what happened in Maui?
Absolutely.
Delay of initial attack.
So it is absolutely critical that we get there early
and aggressively when these fires start.
And with Maui, that was the transmission line start also.
That's very common cause of these urban interface fires.
And there was no aerial response, effectively nothing.
And I say, I keep going back to air,
not just because that's what I used to do,
but I mean, that's how you fight a wildfire early.
Because by definition, wildfires are usually
up in the hinterland, up in the hills,
it will take time to get enough ground crew there
to effectively fight the fire usually.
Now, maybe you can get a hand crew out there quick,
if it's a quick hotspot and they contain it, great.
But more than likely, they're gonna get there
and what they're gonna do is maybe start building
a defensive fire line.
Maybe they'll start getting people evacuated.
They might get a heal in place to start,
get an anchor in place to start flanking out
to one end or the other just to get a fire break.
But they're gonna depend on aircraft being there quickly
to get that thing under control.
And quickly means like 20 minutes, 30 minutes, hour, two hours.
In Maui there was zero air response.
In California, they only had like two planes nearby
ready to launch in these fires right away.
Now, high winds, conditions, but that's the job.
You know, a lot of it's risk.
They say, well, it's too risky to fly.
Well, that's the mission guys.
I mean, there's risk in a seal mission,
there's risk anywhere.
And sometimes you don't want to take undue risk.
But when you're watching hundreds of homes burn,
people being burned alive,
like that's a time. You're at maximum risk
Geez don't sit on the ground go fly
What about you know the
You know a little bit different switching gears here, but we're seeing a lot of I mean
More I think the the rent, you know, we're kind of moving into relief
here and we're seeing a lot of price gouging with rents in California. We have thousands
and thousands of people that are now displaced, their homes have burned to the ground and
of course, now you see rent prices going up, People can't afford to rent anything now.
I mean, how do we mitigate that?
Well, first of all, having plans in place ahead of time.
So it's not scramble and grab whatever you can.
Second, you remember North Carolina?
When they were trying to get hotel
rooms and they couldn't because all the FEMA employees had come to town and FEMA had soaked up all the hotel rooms and then the evacuees couldn't find any.
These people are freezing to death right now.
Yes. And they're like, oh well, sorry this hotel is full because the FEMA people came
down from like DC or wherever
and they're in the hotel rooms working on their laptops.
Well, get them the hell out of here.
Send them back to their home office
so these evacuees have a roof over their head.
Military bases.
We have a lot of military bases in California
and they're probably not being utilized.
As you know, a lot of these big bases,
training, Fort Irwin, 29 Palms,
those are training bases
where like a whole regiment of guys will go out and train.
Open them up, open those barracks up,
put up those wall tents, you know, get them out there.
Like we have giant bases out there with infrastructure,
with showers.
I mean, it's not permanent,
but it's somewhere for them to go temporarily
while we recover this.
Now, of course, once they start coming back in
and finding permanent housing,
I mean, we're going to be tens of thousands of houses down.
I mean, this is the true truth bomb,
I think that's really going to hurt everyone
on the back end of this crisis is the housing impact.
I mean, it's structural nationally
because this will affect home insurance rates all over the country.
It's not just gonna be localized to LA,
this will have a national impact.
What about, you know, just natural disaster relief
or just any disaster relief?
I mean, you know, we see billions and billions of dollars
going to Ukraine, going to Israel.
What about our people?
Yeah.
You know, I mean, like I said, people are freezing to death in North Carolina that lost
their homes in that hurricane.
Maui, still a disaster.
Now LA, a disaster.
I mean, we're just, it just, I mean, I think everybody sees it. They see
all of our money, what appears to be all of our money getting shipped to Taliban. You
know, we're funded the Taliban upwards of a billion dollars a year. Ukraine, like I
said, all these different, we're just just we're exporting all of our money
Overseas to help problems that maybe we should or should not be involved in but I mean
Why are we not prioritizing?
American people and in rebuilding these cities and getting these people out of the freezing cold the loss or home six months ago
And yeah, you know, I mean, how do we fix that?
Everybody in the country's frustrated about that.
And they should be.
Again, I talked about America first earlier,
and I think that phrase and that concept
are so unfairly portrayed by so many parts
of the American media and the American mainstream,
the people that read The Atlantic every day,
and The Yorker, and the New York Times,
oh America first, it's this low-brow isolationism.
Like no it's not.
It's simply saying it's about time we put our people
and our communities first.
Before we send $50 billion to another country,
we better make damn well sure that those people
that lost their homes in North Carolina
during a once in a century storm
are not out freezing to death while we're sending the money elsewhere.
It's just good for everything.
It creates business, it creates jobs.
It's just pouring money back into our own economy to rebuild what was destroyed.
And I just cannot wrap my head, rather than just shipping it off and not saying it
ever again.
How does that conversation start?
Where does it start?
I mean, I think it starts in the halls of our elected leadership.
It has to and I think it has.
I mean, that conversation happened, the American people spoke on November 5th.
They just did and they said decisively, we're tired of that paradigm.
We're tired of seeing our money go everywhere else.
We're not isolationists.
We don't hate other countries.
We're simply saying, you know what?
If we got a dollar to spend,
we better damn well spend it here on our people first
and take care of our people
before we send it somewhere else.
What other countries sending money to us
to keep us afloat?
Nobody. We've been doing it for the rest of the world sent for 80 years. What other countries sending money to us to keep us afloat? Nobody.
We've been doing it for us for the world sent for 80 years.
Since the end of World War II,
we've been the tent pole of the free world.
And I'm proud to be, and I think we should continue to be.
But the world's also evolved since then.
We talk about the America first construct,
and we talk about NATO and our allies there.
Yeah, there are allies, and we should be their form
just like they were for us in Afghanistan.
But they've also had 75 years to recover
from the economic cataclysm of World War II.
They should be able to defend themselves,
pay for their own defense of their own GDP,
and deal with their own regional issues now.
I mean, they've had 75 years of economic training wheels
to get back on their feet.
We got some stuff we got to deal with here on our own
You know, so so these communities deserve investment from from their own government for it goes somewhere else and that's not isolationism
That's not nationalism or extremism. That's just common sense. Mm-hmm. And like that that's what you know
again, I'd never run for anything before until
2024 and my whole campaign was based on common sense. And common sense means that most Americans want
secure borders, safe streets, cheap gas, cops are good,
criminals are bad, boys are boys, girls are girls.
Pretty straightforward things.
And it's not too much for us to ask
for those from our government.
So I agree with you completely that these disasters,
when they come in, we need to be prepared
for them ahead of time. We know when a hurricane is coming, we need to be prepared for them ahead of time.
We know when a hurricane is coming,
we know it's coming for weeks.
It's not a secret.
For the most part, I think the state of Florida
has done a pretty darn good job with that.
And I actually think the federal government
has gotten pretty good at their hurricane.
It's never perfect.
Obviously no one was ready in North Carolina.
They were ready in Florida and Louisiana,
but they weren't ready up in the Appalachians.
We know that.
We weren't ready in California.
And California's got no excuse not to be ready for this.
I mean, they are seeing major fires every single year.
There's no excuse for the complete lack of preparedness
that we saw in LA.
I'm not pointing fingers, I'm just stating a fact.
Mega fires are happening in California every single year.
The fact that this response
in America's arguably greatest
city was just unacceptable.
Yeah.
Are you gonna be bringing some of this stuff up in the Senate?
Absolutely, I already have.
We've already got bills drafted to bring common sense
to this, like for one, for example, is going to,
and oddly enough Gavin Newsom like tweeted it out
the other day, not mine exactly, but almost the same stuff, which was we are going to, and oddly enough, Gavin Newsom like tweeted it out the other day, not mine exactly,
but almost the same stuff, which was,
we are going to expedite permitting for timber projects.
We are going to expedite, you know, permits for water use.
So we don't have a water shortage again.
You know, we are going to make sure we have enough funding
to have appropriate levels, you know,
of firefighters and aircraft available.
Which this should have happened years ago,
because as I said, California gets burned every year,
but we're seeing it in California.
We're already introducing bills in the Senate,
drafting bill language,
a lot of partners, bipartisan I might add.
Although I may be as far-
That's great to hear.
Yeah, and you wouldn't believe the,
as I started talking about,
and I'm CNN and Fox News all over this last week,
scrambling from the rooftops about this.
I've had so many Democrats come up and say,
hey, I want to work with you on this.
This isn't a partisan issue.
We need to fix this.
We owe this to our people.
You know, even Adam Schiff,
Adam Schiff and I probably don't agree on much of anything,
but he was one of the first guys to come up to me and say,
hey, I want to work with you on this
because I represent California and they expect a solution.
And that was before the LA fires.
Good for you. Good for you.
It would be great to see some proactivity in this country
instead of reactivity.
I mean, we're killing ourselves here.
We're killing ourselves here and you know, it's horrible.
I hate, I just hate seeing all these people displaced
and people dying and it doesn't seem like much
if any relief is going to them.
And well, Senator, do we miss anything?
Is there anything else you wanna cover?
Well, you know, I just think,
I really think this is a turning point in America.
I think this fire, not to overstate its significance,
but I do think this fire will go down in history books
like the Great Chicago Fire, like Pearl Harbor, like 9-11.
This will be a turning point where, you know,
there's those times in history
where the trend line in history abruptly changes.
And I think coming off the election,
a historic election,
this event is kind of crystallizing
a lot of the things that have been going really wrong
in this country for a long time.
It's almost a perverse, terrible Shakespearean tragedy
to say on display,
America, look at how dumb we've been.
We've taken the safety and prosperity of our communities
and we put them in the back seat
of a lot of really bad ideas.
And those bad ideas, we're a free country,
you're welcome to have them.
But when you implement them,
and the impacts of those ideas are so raw
and obvious and bad for people,
those are the consequences,
and you're going to be held accountable.
So I think although this wildfire is,
in California, specific to wildfire,
I think the implications are going to be broader.
I think it's going to help us drive a lot of change.
I think it's going to wake people up that
we've got to bring common sense back.
We've got to bring common sense back
to everything we do, our foreign policy.
We don't have to be isolationist, but we should do what's right for us on the world stage.
That's what every other country in the world does.
They make tough decisions that are good for their people,
our military.
Great, you know, my wife's a Marine.
I love that woman in the military, but guess what?
Same standards, combat lethality, number one priority,
no questions asked.
You know, our government agencies,
before they worry about, you know,
green New Deal initiatives and solving world hunger
and sending, you know, free aid to the rest of the world,
let's make sure our country is strong.
And you know what, when we want to talk about
America first on isolationism, when America is strong,
the rest of the world is strong too. You know, the rest of wanna talk about America first in isolationism, when America is strong,
the rest of the world's strong too.
You know, the rest of the world needs a strong America.
And, you know, I've been about 94 countries
all over the world and I was in Israel
just about three weeks ago, was proud to be there
with our allies, getting the first person view
of the war on Gaza and what's going on.
I was there when they went into Syria.
And when Assad collapsed, it was a historic time
to be there in Israel.
They want a strong America.
They don't want us weak sending,
spreading ourselves all over the world.
They want a strong, decisive America.
So I think it's a turning point for our country.
I never thought I'd be here
and never once thought of running for office,
to be honest with you, but it was,
I saw a Kabul fall where you and I fought in.
I saw a lot of things happen and said,
it's time for a new generation of leaders to stand up
and that's why I'm here.
So we're not gonna sit on our hands
and make YouTube clips every day.
We're here to get some work done
and hopefully do a job and go back home to my family,
my ranch and fly water bombers.
Because that's what I want to be doing.
But the nation needs us here.
You're doing your duty here spreading the word
to the American people and I'm doing mine in DC.
But for you, well, I know we all have big aspirations
for you, so Senator Sheehy, thanks for coming on
and hope to see you again and keep up the good fight.
God bless.
Let's get her done. Hi, I'm Joe Salci. I hosted the Stacking Benjamins podcast. Every week we talk to experts about saving, investing, and personal finance trends.
Crypto.
Can't do it.
You could have done all that research, all the breadcrumbs, and thought this company's
never going bankrupt.
Spoiled again.
You never knew personal finance could be this fun.
Throwing down the gauntlet.
I'm bringing it today.
I'm only going to be off by six figures instead of seven.
Every boy has a dream, Doc. Every boy has a dream, Doc.
Every boy has a dream.
For sure.
Stacking Benjamins.
Follow and listen on your favorite platform.