The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Matter of Facts: Civil War, the movie
Episode Date: November 11, 2024http://www.mofpodcast.com/www.pbnfamily.comhttps://www.facebook.com/matteroffactspodcast/https://www.facebook.com/groups/mofpodcastgroup/https://rumble.com/user/Mofpodcastwww.youtube.com/user/philrabh...ttps://www.instagram.com/mofpodcasthttps://twitter.com/themofpodcastSupport the showMerch at: https://southerngalscrafts.myshopify.com/Shop at Amazon: http://amzn.to/2ora9riPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/mofpodcastPurchase American Insurgent by Phil Rabalais: https://amzn.to/2FvSLMLShop at MantisX: http://www.mantisx.com/ref?id=173*The views and opinions of guests do not reflect the opinions of Phil Rabalais, Andrew Bobo, Nic Emricson, or the Matter of Facts Podcast*The recently released movie Civil War has been a source of conversation, among it the infamous “What kind of American are you?” scene. Phil and Nic sit down to disect some of the scenes and give their thoughts and discuss what jumped out at them. Matter of Facts is now live-streaming our podcast on our YouTube channel, Facebook page, and Rumble. See the links above, join in the live chat, and see the faces behind the voices. Intro and Outro Music by Phil Rabalais All rights reserved, no commercial or non-commercial use without permission of creator prepper, prep, preparedness, prepared, emergency, survival, survive, self defense, 2nd amendment, 2a, gun rights, constitution, individual rights, train like you fight, firearms training, medical training, matter of facts podcast, mof podcast, reloading, handloading, ammo, ammunition, bullets, magazines, ar-15, ak-47, cz 75, cz, cz scorpion, bugout, bugout bag, get home bag, military, tactical
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Welcome back to the Matterfacts Podcast on the Prepper Broadcasting Network.
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I'm your host, Phil Ravele. Andrew and Nick are on the other side of the mic, and here's your show.
And welcome back to the Matter of Facts podcast. Phil and Nick are here. Andrew's not dead. He hasn't been fired. He's being an adult.
Yep. Unfortunately, we all have to do that now and then.
Yeah, I mean, y'all can give him hell about being an adult, but like, I'm not going to because like, sometimes we just have to do that now and then. Yeah, I mean, y'all can give him hell about being an adult, but I'm not going to because sometimes we just have to do adult things.
It's all right.
We'll make this work.
Yes.
So let's do just a brief little bit of admin work.
There's already five psychopaths watching this,
which that should give me performance anxiety,
but we won't talk about that.
That gets really weird,
really fast.
First things first,
got to thank the patrons.
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whatever you want to call it.
And hello,
Jeff.
And hello,
Rachel.
I'm not,
I'm going to be good enough to ask to not ask why you're watching.
And thank you for lending us your spouse.
Probably because she's bored at work,
but that's valid.
It is.
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merch is available at the Southern Gals Crafts.
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You get to wear really cool stuff like this.
One of these days, I'm going to make a shirt that has like an outline.
So you've seen like the things like where you have like a scale and it says if you're this tall, it's this.
If you're this tall, it's this.
We need one that has like beard.
Yes.
It goes down the shirt or just like a graphic that is completely around the area of your beard yeah so it only makes sense if you have a beard because i'm i'm not gonna lie the
first time i put on the shirts that uh chris and tiffany made us that was the first thing gillian
told me was you literally can't see what's on them because of your beard. And I was just like,
well, but that's why when we put the post on Instagram, which if you're not
subscribed to our Instagram, you should be because it's occasionally hilarious.
But when I put posts up to kind of like show everybody the merch,
I had some pictures Andrew took. I had some pictures
of my wife and my sister and my brother-in-law because my brother-in-law is clean shaven.
And thankfully, my wife and sister don't have beards.
Yeah.
You could actually see what was on the front of the shirt.
Whereas if I do it, it looks like, you know, this.
But it is what it is.
It'll do.
Okay.
So, with Nick's coaching, I think we figured out a way to do this in such a way it doesn't turn into a complete and total, like, internet pileup.
No, no, I think this will work.
So, tonight we're going to talk about the movie Civil War, which, for anybody that hasn't seen it spoiler alert I'm going to spoil like
most of the movie with this
not most I mean
some key scenes yes
some key scenes
but I snipped what I did
mostly I'm doing I'm saying this for
the people that are going to flag this for like you know
me stealing somebody's content buzz off
all these clips came off of YouTube
so if you're not happy
about the fact that we're commenting on them i got them off youtube be mad at somebody else
uh none of this is pirated nonsense raggle fraggle see i i agree and don't don't agree
that it i i don't think it i don't think civil war was like before we start the clips i don't
think it was like oh my god best movie ever i don't think it was bad
the cinematography was good i will give it a cinematography you i think you kind of took
issue with the ambiguity of the backdrop well okay i having talked with you about it my initial
my initial concerns about the movie were okay is this going to be a partisan
hack job which it wasn't i was surprised bravo to them for avoiding that especially at this time of
year yes um number two was it was gonna be some kind of i don't know pearl harbor romantic
wannabe with a civil war background which it was not. Congrats for not picking the low-hanging
fruit. And my final concern was that they were going to be too vague about the causes
or far too specific in an unreal fashion, which I think they danced that fine line of a,
for those that don't know, the president in question postponed
elections, gave himself a third term, and that's kind of what kicks off the whole disagreement.
Some people take issue with, I did initially as well, with them pairing Texas and California
as the belligerents on the same side fighting DC. But I suppose the way they worked it out to where it's a president that is clearly overstepping constitutional authority and it has bridged the political divide in this country.
Perfect.
Excellent.
Very well made.
Anyone can watch it.
Jeff's correct.
It is a war reporter road trip movie.
And I think they pulled it off fairly well.
Some of the dialogue is a little ham-fisted, I think.
But I do believe, having watched a fair bit of real-life combat footage recently following what's going on in Ukraine,
having been growing up watching g-watt and all
the footage coming back from that but never being a combat veteran it looked fairly well done to me
what do you think Phil so before we get into the first clip because I I want to start like picking
out things the two of us saw in these clips that like we thought were well done or we thought were applicable like for me i i'm gonna make a lot of comparisons to some of this
to like the urban conflicts in the cities of iraq and some of the um
i'm gonna make some very loose analogies to like hurricane katrina new orleans
not that it was a civil war it was a conflict on this scale but just like
devastation to an urban area where people are still living you know i'm saying like
i was as i watched this movie there were things that jumped out at me and then i went hunting
for the clips so we could talk about them because there were things that i saw that i thought
or pointing out but like as far as like the backdrop of what's been presented here
i i appreciate the fact that it was kind of like it was given to you in tidbits as you went, rather than a big exposition front load.
Great example of show, do not tell.
Yes. California and Texas being the belligerents in this case, because first of all, it would in order for a civil war to really.
Kick off, you would need something you would either need a hyper polarized.
A hyper polarizing issue, but you would also need like geographical polarization and you can't have that in in in our modern country.
You're talking about city-states versus rural areas. So the concept of a 19th century civil war where it get is that you have two states that are so large and so self-sufficient, they can kind of stand on their own.
And by banding together, they pooled resources.
And that's what I see.
That's what I noticed in the example of like California and Texas.
California and Texas are both very large, have lots of natural resources, have enormous military power.
If this if the state says, buzz off, we're doing our own thing.
And the military that is ostensibly kind of invested in that state says, I'm with them and I'm taking my hardware with me.
So like you're talking about a situation where like Texas, just the Texas Nationalxas national guard is bigger than the the armies of
most other countries you know i'm saying same with california national guard and that's not even like
federal troops that might jump ship that's state assets so texas and california being involved in
this this weird little marriage where the enemy of my enemy is my friend or you know like i i can see that i could see that
because it's california texas and those specific states but i agree with you that in order for
those two to ideologically like pair up and become kissing cousins you need something that cuts
across all lines like suspension of elections because like i've said before the minute we don't
have a peaceful exchange of power we don't have a peaceful exchange of power
we don't have a country anymore agreed that that is like the one thing that separates has always
separated our nation from other nations because like in most other nations when you're not the
president anymore it's because you got killed a lot of them yeah so anyway um so the way we're
going to run this is that i'm going to play a clip. It's going to completely wipe out the screen.
You won't be able to see me and Nick until the clip is over.
I can't speed it up.
So these clips last anywhere from like three minutes.
Most of them average two and a half.
The longest one, and I'll front load that before we get there, is seven minutes long.
But stick with me, watch, and then put it in your mind because then we're going to come back
and talk about what the two of us noticed from them.
And for those of you who are listening to this
in audio only,
I mean, we'll tell you what goes on the scene
and you'll be able to hear it.
Take my word on it.
I think it's worth a watch.
Yeah, I think the movie's worth a watch for sure.
But let's get in the first clip
before we lose any of these 22 people
that are watching. Nice.
Bunch of sociopaths. Good to have y'all. Hey. We'll be right back. Hey, hey, hey! Here, here.
You okay?
Oh, fuck.
What?
What?
You're Lee Smith.
This is crazy.
Take this.
Oh, no, I can't take take this take it and put it on
thank you so much
you All right, for those who are just audio,
the sound of the movie completely cuts out due to a bomb explosion.
That is purposeful.
Yeah.
So Rackle Fraggle raised an interesting point and said,
are we going to get a copyright strike for playing such long clips?
And to be perfectly honest,
I kind of accepted that we're going to get copyright struck because there are certain people with blue hair and facial piercings
that just don't like my content i'm emotionally at peace with that yeah we'll get all kinds of
things for all kinds of reasons yeah so this this first scene you know where well like what what
jumped out at me and thankfully i remembered at the last second, I have a list of what my thoughts were in the moment as I was watching this.
But, you know, you see a bunch of people like crowded around a water truck.
So obviously this is one of those things that's like a secondhand or a deleterious effect of any kind of conflict in a nation is that resources start to get very scarce very quickly.
Things like food and water, the integrity of the power grid, supply chains, everything starts breaking down.
And you end up in a situation very quickly where even the people that quote unquote want to stay out of it may not be able to stay out of it because the war is going to bring an impact to your home one way or the other.
So you have people crowded around this water truck.
Tempers are flaring.
Troops and cops are beating people back, using violence to try to maintain order.
The people are not responding favorably to this.
And then in the midst of all this, somebody runs in with a backpack and a flag and boom.
And what I wrote in here was, crowds are targets for both sides.
Acts of violence will seem random, but in hindsight, we're almost predictable, which is something that I want to put in y'all's heads. Like anytime you get this many people that are scared or angry or desperate in one place, like there was a point in here where one of the reporters got hit with a baton.
She wasn't even part of the conflict.
She just got hit because she was in.
She was right there when the baton. She wasn't even part of the conflict. She just got hit because she was right there
when the baton got swung.
So the lesson to me to try to get across to people
is that if there's a crowd of people
and they're angry and unhappy,
you shouldn't be in that crowd.
Agreed.
Hallelujah, amen.
It follows the basic tenets of concealed carry.
Don't go stupid places with stupid people to do stupid things.
And crowds, as much as the individual people may be intelligent, crowds are not that smart.
And once they get fired up, all it takes is one person to throw a punch and then the scene devolves.
And I think you're right, Phil.
Anytime you have a conflict situation, resources do get scarce.
you're right, Phil. Anytime you have a conflict situation, resources do get scarce. But in a civil conflict or in civil strife, civil war, anything like that, a complex insurgency,
one of the main targets is going to be resources, power grid, water supply, roadways, bridges,
anything where you get a bigger impact for your dollar. And realistically, all you have to do is hit a water distribution point.
And then your water supply for a large area is down.
Most small towns, at least in the Midwest, are supplied by a single or maybe a pair of water towers.
One bomb takes out that water tower or at the very least the supply pipe to it and who knows
how long that could take to fix especially if you can't get materials due to the ongoing conflict
yep and this is this is why i like to tie some of this back to like preparedness lessons like
this is also part of the reason why i've consistently told my wife and people that
listen to me like down here when we get when a hurricane gets close, you start getting lines
of people at gas pumps trying to tank up. What I've consistently told my wife is, is I'm like,
as many days out as we have reasonably, the hurricane is going to hit us. You go tank your
vehicle up every single day on the way home. The first time you drive by the gas station and there's two cars in line,
one at the pump,
one behind them,
pass it up,
go home.
Because I've been in that situation where like I pulled into a gas station.
There was,
there was no weight.
And in the time I was tanking up like my truck plus two,
five gallon cans,
two people pulled in behind me and they were,
they were doing this number where their nose to nose trying to figure out who's going to hit who to try to get in line behind me and they were they were doing this number where they're
nose to nose trying to figure out who's gonna hit who to try to get in line behind me and that was
the moment which i was like i'm sitting there by the way with like a nine millimeter handgun on my
hip locked and loaded under my shirt but i'm thinking myself i'm like if one of these two
pulls out a gun or gets into a fistfight they are five feet away from the back of my truck.
Like it was just,
it was one of the situations where like,
it's not like I broke my own rule.
There was no line when I got there,
there was an open pump,
but in the,
in the short amount of time I was there,
the situation I'd always feared my wife being caught in the middle of
happened right behind me.
And that's why I've consistently said,
you see crowds of people.
We have stuff at home.
We don't need to be in the crowd.
We don't need to be in the fist fight at the Walmart trying to get toilet paper.
That's nonsense.
Exactly.
It's a lose-lose situation.
Even if you're the victor in that fight, you're still going to get hurt.
And odds are you're probably not going to win, especially in a crowd.
Well, my problem with being involved in a conflict is that there is no winning.
It's not like you win in a fight because you still run the risk of getting hurt, and that sucks.
You still run the risk of having to deal with people in polyester uniforms.
Like, the only way to win a fight to me is to avoid it.
And that comes along with don't be in the stupid place with the stupid people when they start doing stupid things.
This is very true, and I did not even notice this at the time.
Jeff brings up a perfect point.
The movie's a bit out of date because Flag Lady would have been a drone if not for the time of filming.
Well, judging how ukraine's gone well but i i would say yes and
no because like suicide bombers are still extremely common all across the third world sure but the
third world place doesn't have people with basements full of half finished drones true i
mean think about how many people do you know that have at least one of those little fun camera drones?
I can think of a half a dozen.
No, I mean, you have a point.
Jeff has a great point.
Yes.
But I still don't think suicide bombers are going to be out of style for a very, very long time.
Because in most conflicts, human lives are the cheapest thing on earth.
Agreed.
That sounds really harsh, but at a certain point it is.
Well, yeah, especially when you're talking about, say,
an insurgency-style conflict where, yeah, your materials are in short supply
and drones are in short supply and everything else,
but there's people around and you can indoctrinate people.
You can always indoctrinate or recruit more people, unfortunately.
Yep.
All right.
I don't remember this next one.
So I might not let this one run to full completion
because it does get a little bit slow,
but the very beginning has the parts that I wanted to kind of like.
Well, let's do the highlight of the very beginning.
Help you folks?
Just looking for gas.
Got to look at the fuel permit.
No, we're
actually just passing through.
Can't help, sir.
Sir, if we pay.
I was never going to give it free.
Over the odds.
What's over the odds?
300 for half a tank and two cans.
300 buys you a sandwich.
We got ham or cheese?
300 Canadian.
Okay.
All right.
And the rest of that, I think, goes to like a kind of a broad look over the whole movie.
But so the things that stood out to me in there was, you know, when the reporter offered $300, the guy kind of giggled.
When the reporter offered $300, the guy kind of giggled, which if you think about areas of conflict, let's say non-hard assets, fiat currency, the value goes to almost zero.
You're talking about a government that's literally under siege.
Their paper currency that is backed up by our IOU, if we survive this conflict,
has almost no value. But the minute he heard 300 Canadian,
I'm assuming, because it's never stated in the movie,
I'm assuming that's a more stable nation in this world,
so the value is still there.
It might be tradable in the future.
But, um...
Moderately organized militia maintaining order and custody on limited resources in the absence of law and order. And this is something that like this is something I feel definitely harkens back to like some of the conflicts that the global war on terror vets might be familiar with.
of government or in the absence of law and order, you will see local militia activity spring up to try to maintain some semblance of order because there's nothing else to hold
it together.
Sooner or later, you're going to get into these little tribal coalitions where it's
like, well, me and my cousin and my brother, we're making sure things are okay right here
because we're protecting what's ours.
We're protecting our community.
And you get into these weird little situations where like you have a local fuel permit because
they know they only have so much gas they ain't giving it away to strangers and from the sound
of it they're certainly not selling it for currency that may not have value absolutely
you know i know we didn't run the whole scene and i think there's it's like a three minute scene
and there's a couple minutes afterwards where they've got some guys hanging from the car wash out back all right
that's another thing that you're going to see a lot of i wouldn't say a lot of but in situations
like this where there is no formal law enforcement one of the guys makes a comment of we've been
arguing for days over what to do with them the looters that they have i suppose you could
say arrested because they're the only force of authority in that area and the guy who's making
these comments by the way knew one of the looters went to high school with yeah so you you're you're
gonna like there were stories that came out of the u.s civil war where you had like brother fighting
brother or cousin fighting cousin and you're gonna you're gonna see situations like that in any situation that gets desperate enough where
people know the people who are wronging them because they're in your community you've probably
grown up with them but they're so desperate their morality goes to zero and they just need to get
what they feel like they need which puts people in this weird position of like stringing up guys
you went to high school with but in the um in the you know in the car wash behind the gas station
because you can't you can't let them loose you can't allow them to loot you can't let them commit
property crimes against their neighbors but there's there's no law to call so what do you do
with them yeah the debate if i recall correctly from that scene is
whether or not to shoot them or beat them for a few more days and then let them lose
yeah so you if you were to to pull some shenanigans in a situation like this and loot
or steal or assault someone you're at the mercy of the person who's a who's arrested you arrested you seized you
um at you're at the mercy of their morality and how wrong they feel personally yeah but i will
also say that at a certain level you are you are you're at the mercy of very practical decision
making because if you're in a situation that is desperate enough,
you don't have the resources to operate a jail and house and feed these guys.
So your only two options that are left are either take them out of the gene pool.
So they stopped being a problem or let them lose and hope that they learn their lesson.
And if you let them lose after you beat the fire at them for a couple of days,
they very well might come back with a bunch of buddies and just want to tune you up for it.
So it really becomes one of those situations where like, you know, yeah,
you could totally get into this very serious, heated morality argument of like,
what's the right way to deal with this?
But sometimes the right way might have to give
way to the way you can deal with it and in this kind of a situation with this wide range of a
conflict there will there will be no judge there will be no jury there will be no jail there will
be no prison it's gonna you're you're gonna have to make a decision on the spot and just live with
it and i don't know i i'm not saying that to be like flippant or say it's an easy decision to make,
but you're not going to,
you're not going to have the luxury of,
you won't be able to outsource your decision-making.
That was the word I was looking for.
You're not going to have the luxury of outsourcing
dealing with societal problems.
You're not going to have that luxury anymore.
There are no guys in polyester
uniforms with badges on their shoulder on their their chest coming to take the bad people away
they're not coming you know and realistically it doesn't have to be a scenario this severe
you know say the earthquake that everybody's been fearing on the west coast cracks off
cascadia subduction zone i believe it's called could be, I think they were saying on the best case scenario,
three to six months before restoring,
restoring normal functionality in the area.
Okay.
It took a few days after just a hurricane wiped out some roads for people to
start getting any kind of government assistance.
What happens if every single highway
for an entire coastline is is destroyed all right you might have a couple weeks where you either
have to hold the person who has looted your who's trying to loot your house or deal with them yep
and the police are going to be busy doing with every single thing else and their family.
Mm-hmm.
All right.
So on to clip number three.
Yeah, sure.
So I saw this clip labeled very different things, but the one I grabbed is called Boog Boys Shootout.
The Hawaii Church Shootout, yeah.
Okay, so admittedly, i was multitasking when i watched
this and i wasn't like watching super super close i had to go back and re-watch it to notice that
they were wearing hawaiian shirts yeah they were i mean maybe maybe that maybe that's my own personal
blinders i was more focused on like you know the weapons and the tactics and what they were doing
and you know like i was looking at this from my perspective of dissecting the scene and the tactics and what they were doing. I was looking at this from my perspective of dissecting the scene
and the fact that they were where Hawaiian shirts went right over the top of my noggin.
Well, usually when people are shooting at each other,
the last thing you're worried about is his fashion choices.
Yes, but in this case, kudos to the director for this little nod.
Yeah, that was a nice little internet drop in there.
Yep.
All right, Here we go.
I say don't slay the fucking building!
Got it.
Get ready to move!
Prep the smoke!
Get the fuck out of here!
Fuck!
Smoke out!
I'm down to three. Three!
One's on the way!
Bullets down!
You gotta get hit! Get him! Move back! So I'm going to stop it right there, just in case we have somebody who's a little bit sensitive in the audience.
Yeah, the rest of that scene gets a little bit gory.
Yeah, I mean of that scene gets a little bit gory. Yeah, I mean...
Rightly so.
So let's first talk about what happened immediately following that scene.
The gentleman who was shot had what appeared to be a through-and-through lower abdominal wound.
He's not going to make it.
No.
No, unfortunately not.
Zero percent chance of that.
Kudos to his battle buddy who was unrolling a thing of
gauze and trying to shove it in there and wound pack.
That's probably the right thing to do in that case,
but he ain't gonna make it.
That's not happening.
So what stood out to me was
I said broken chain of command,
which doesn't necessarily apply
to this specific situation,
but I feel like that's gonna be a theme in any kind of a conflict like this where the objectives are almost centralized around that group, which this was obviously not.
This was a paramilitary group, but it was obviously like kind of a local group of like Boogaloo boys, and they have assigned their own objective and decided on their own how they're going to achieve it.
So broken chain of command, no inner unit tactics.
I mean, they might be operating within their own unit,
but it didn't appear.
I wouldn't expect there to be a lot of coordination
between this group and another similar group.
Small groups choosing individual objectives
towards a perceived group goal
not necessarily a cohesive one um what else no quarter likely to be given for oppressor
nope never mind i am on the entirely the wrong freaking bullet point jesus christ i told you i
was gonna screw all this up that's all right right. We're amateurs. So varied weapons, varied tactics and experience levels.
It was very obvious that there was one guy who seemed to have his stuff together
and everybody else was kind of playing off of his lead.
Did you notice that there was an AK in that group?
So I noticed, in addition to several very different ARs
that were all outfitted very differently,
but even different weapons, possibly different ammunition,
different armor packages as well.
Yes.
So again,
this tends to be something you see with unorganized militia activity is that
everyone kind of brings whatever they have and you're not going to have that
cohesive.
Everybody runs the same gear.
Everybody has the same magazines.
Everybody has the same ammo.
You're going to see a lot of rum which you
brung, which can be a blessing and a curse,
especially if you start trying to swap mags.
Hey, I'm out. Throw me one.
That magazine
may not fit in that weapon, and that weapon
may not like that ammunition. Who freaking
knows? Questionable
resupply strategy.
So I noticed they were throwing some smoke grenades,
and I think to myself, where did those,
it's not like smoke grenades are illegal currently,
but I wonder about where they were getting them from,
unless they were just looting them off of scavenging.
I mean,
possible.
Look,
if you're,
if you're a disorganized militia,
say guerrilla style insurgency or whatever,
and you're going up against a state
actor, you're going to be robbing
the bodies of the state actors
that you take out. You're going to be stealing
from their supply depots when you can.
You're going to be interrupting their supply shipments
when you can. You're going to be harvesting
every single thing
you come across.
Whether or not you need it now, you
damn sure can't get it from the armory
because there is no armory yep and then the only other thing i had in here was through
through and through gunshot wound arterial spray unsurvivable like probably unless you have a
serious kazivac ability or or higher level of care don't beat me to the to the later punch line yeah
but yeah i mean this is
something that's just very worth pointing out and this is why like just in the last scene i was
talking about like the only way the best way to win a fight is not to get in the fight because
in these kinds of situations if you get hurt you are probably not going to make it because this
this lack i don't i don't think a lot of people fully respect the fact that the reason why mortality rates in war
have gone down so much over the last 80 years is largely because, first of all,
believe it or not, we're filling much smaller groups of people than we used to.
There are no more world war one trenches
and even like the big battles of world war ii we don't have anything approximating those anymore
but the other the other reason once you get past just the raw numbers is the fact that a lot of
people get wounded and they survive because we immediately kazaback them to the rear and we have
life-saving technology that was like science fiction 80 years ago. So there's
a ton,
the number of
Purple Hearts handed out has done
nothing but gone up because a lot of people get
wounded, sometimes critically, and they survive.
But in this situation, without
CASVAC, without field
hospitals, without
really ironclad supply lines,
if you get hurt, you gonna see jesus more than likely
yeah but that was those were all the things that like really jumped out at me as i was i was really
looking hard at like the weapons the tactics how this was being prosecuted the one thing that
really frustrated me and it's not a criticism of how this was shot or how this was done it's a criticism of what i saw but at the moment they
were calling for their buddy who was kind of like you know stranded on an island they were calling
for him hey you gotta move you gotta move they stopped shooting at the opposing force that's
the wrong freaking way to evacuate a buddy from an island like at the moment you tell him run
you should have everybody on your side pouring fire at the enemy to keep their heads down
or better yet you sent two guys around the other side of the building to flank the freaking building
wait until they flank the building and then the guy the op for has to take fire from two different
sides at the same time and they will put their freaking heads down and you'll be able to get your buddy out.
So like, that's just a, that is a total 20 years ago.
I was trained like this and it came back to me real fast, but I just looked at that and I was just like going back to my original point of like the, there's an out, there's an element here to me of i don't want to say a
lack of training but maybe a disparate amount of training where like you've obviously gone through
some kind of training but maybe not enough to execute these types of attacks without casualties
well in actually executing any kind of attack without, even among a very well-trained force, is extraordinarily rare.
I mean, anytime you're going into a firefight, chances are pretty good that at least one of your team,
unless you're hitting a really numerically inferior foe or technologically inferior foe,
chances are somebody is going to
catch a round or a piece of shrapnel at some point. I mean, yeah, but I guess what I'm saying
is, and like to raggle fraggles point, yes, he did send someone to flank, but why didn't he wait
until that flanking element was laying down fire and then he was laying down fire. So you have fire
from two different directions because like
what i see is if you tell your buddy to get off the x and the other side can pick their can lift
their head up off the wall without getting immediately perforated or can do you've done
something horribly wrong yeah you should have a volume of fire going up you know and especially
when you're talking about shooting in an elevated position you need four times the fire going uphill to keep their heads down.
So the fact that they were able to pick their head up without getting canoed when you told your buddy, get off the X, you did it wrong.
Like that, that was what I saw, which given we're talking about, like, I don't want to say marginally, let's say less than professionally trained paramilitary activities.
I didn't feel it was
inappropriate but it did jump out at me i think it was completely appropriate i think it was
completely that is something especially if there's only one person that's actually trained in that in
that squad let's call it yeah yeah it falls under the heading of like i think i think it was scripted
well but if this was like a professional soldier
someone would be smacking him on the back of the helmet telling him that's not the way you're
supposed to do that oh for sure oh for sure but i i don't know that any of them were intended to be
professional soldiers i think you had one guy that had at least a cursory knowledge of tactics techniques and procedures but maybe no
training and probably no experience which i think is very much representative of what you would see
in the surprise spring up little militia groups very much so like i said i thought it was well
scripted i just when i saw it it kind of jumped
out at me and yes and jesse so this isn't so much a movie critique it is more of a as i saw these
things these were things i thought were pointing out that like had parallels back to like modern
urban conflicts the preparedness community just you know different things it's kind of like i saw
this and it made me remember this other thing that
comes from somewhere in my brain box.
And it's just kind of an interesting film.
It is.
It's a different,
it's a different take on the genre,
which I really appreciated.
All right,
let's go to what I have named the sniper scene,
which if anybody seen like previews from this
this should all look familiar because these were kind of
the highlights of the movie
but you know for the reason that
they're the highlights they're the parts that jumped out at me
so let's fire
this one off
keep going
shit Shit!
Where you going?
Sam.
Don't be such a hot shot.
Just keep your head down.
No shit.
Don't try driving on.
This guy's a good shot. so i'm gonna cut this short apparently we're not streaming on facebook because somebody got their feelings hurt oh well it happens sooner or later yeah they can deal
anyway so you know free fair use is a thing, even though, I don't know, media companies get their panties all knotted up if they can't get you into a theater for 50 or 60 bucks.
Well, you know, Facebook's got the whole violence, whatever, but they've got Ukraine war footage all over everything, so, eh.
Yeah, well, they also had, like, Taliban beheading videos back in the day. They did.
Let's just assume for a moment that all of Big Tech and big media can buzz off as far as I'm concerned.
Yep.
You guys are useful, but not welcome.
My wife just said, we are still streaming on Facebook, but it's blocking some of the video you were showing.
Oh, that's okay.
Well, we can discuss what it was.
So essentially what's going on here. Let me pull out the world's smallest violin for lion's gate i know play my song if my heart bleeds for you cold-hearted you know capitalist bastards you
you poor bastards you only made 50 million dollars talk about your videos which is free freaking
advertising you freaking morons i know right, right? Because, yeah. The only reason
I watched this movie is because we were going to talk
about it, damn it.
I was going to avoid it.
Well, in honor of Lionsgate,
I'm not going to promote
someone violating federal laws,
but let's just say hypothetically that
if you are smart with the internet
and know what a VPN is, you don't really have
to pay to see a movie.
Let's just leave that right there.
There's that.
Anyway, so the sniper scene.
Opens up with them in a car.
Sitting in a car discussing what they're going to do,
and a round comes through the window.
Driver does.
Perfect textbook reaction.
Into gear.
Get out.
Yeah.
Get off the X. get out of the kill zone
the only freaking thing you're supposed to do when somebody's shooting at you in a video
yeah the only the only thing you should really do when someone's shooting at you at all start
moving as fast as you can pick a direction it's probably better than standing still i mean yes
than standing still i mean yes you know there what i found was really interesting about this whole situation and and we didn't really we didn't really show this part of the clip one of the
reporters is kind of doing a back and forth with the uh counter sniper pair that are laying on the
ground in their ghillie suits um interesting choice of hide for them but all right i'll allow
it they had to have a convenient place for them.
The reporter asked them who the people were that they were getting shot at by,
and the guy said, basically, it doesn't matter.
They shot one of our people.
There's a sniper in the building who's shooting at us.
Doesn't matter who he is.
Doesn't matter what our orders he is doesn't matter what
our orders are doesn't matter what we were doing that is now the problem of the day yeah
yeah when when you get to the point of somebody's trying to send you a a lead cord high velocity
f off whatever was going on five seconds before, and especially if they whack one of your buddies,
that's all off the table. Now there's
only one mission and one objective,
and it is to absolutely
end whoever is messing your day
up. Yeah, so what I was
thinking about this was exactly what I said on the last
video, because I got my stuff out of order.
Broken chain of command, no
inner unit tactics, small groups choosing
individual objectives
towards perceived group goal and the reason i went down this road is that i don't think these
two snipers i think these were part of the western forces possibly and i say that well i say that
because you got one guy with his hair dyed 14 different colors that doesn't strike me as like
big army federal oh no dude that was that was improvised camo to
hide him among the christmas decorations it was the same colors as the christmas lights laid out
in front of him on the grass if you look if you after this go back slow it down pause it on that
scene they are one-to-one matches of the christmas. I'm still going to go with the idea that I just, I don't know that these two, because in any, okay, in any kind of a, because both of them had it.
in Western forces, even though I couldn't see like patches to indicate that was the fact that they're in the middle of BFE on farmland.
And I can imagine that at this stage of a conflict where by the end of this to spoil
the, to spoil the movie, we see the Western forces kicking in the door of Washington DC.
So at this, at this stage of a conflict, I would imagine that the majority of the federal
troops would be either in DC or protecting high value targets, not playing peekaboo with farmers
in the middle of BFE. So what I'm imagining this probably was, was Western forces that were either
reconning, which would make sense for a sniper unit. They were gathering intel. They were looking
for OP4, but whatever they were doing
someone has taken issue with them traipsing on their land and now they have a problem to deal
with and the thing that kind of jumped out at me was you know like the reporters were trying to get
trying to get at like well you know what side are y'all on what side is that guy on and you really
can't tell at this point and it really doesn't matter well i think
that's how the scene was designed to be you know it's it's supposed to be ambiguous on both sides
you know it doesn't matter who the who the soldiers on the ground are no not really does
it matter whose side the sniper's on no not, not really. Friendly fire is not contrary to popular belief friendly.
And that's the wild part is that this, you could have a farmer in that building who is
sympathetic to the Western forces who is currently trying to Merck a couple of them, but you
get, you get those kinds of situations in, in, in civil war or in urban or in civil strife
situations because the lines get
really blurry really fast yeah it it it begins to devolve into whether you perceive that person
to be on your side or not and perception is not always accurate and even and even if it's not
necessarily you perceive that they're on your
side or not is well there are some grumpy old farmers that well you don't belong on my property
period don't care who grand torino energy yeah exactly it's like what are you doing
my lawn exactly get off my lawn immediately this This is not a discussion.
Yeah.
Alright, so now is I just named it
THE scene because this is the one
that everybody has seen and we're
not going to play all seven minutes of it.
No, it's way too long.
I don't think we really have to.
Everyone has seen the scene that's coming up.
It's been discussed to death.
And there was only like one thing that really jumped out at me, which I found.
There's a couple things there that I thought I saw.
All right.
Well, let's get into it.
This is the infamous scene of what kind of American are you?
Yeah.
Hey.
Hey, guys.
What's happening?
I guess there's some kind of misunderstanding here.
Yeah?
Yes, sir.
Those two guys over there, they're my colleagues.
What kind of colleagues? Journalists, sir. We're actually just, we're passing through.
Passing through to where? Charlottesville. Charlottesville.
What's in Charlottesville?
Good hiking, I hear.
Actually, we are...
No, we are covering the university campus there.
They started a new program. They are covering the university campus there.
They started a new program.
They are reopening the school, which is a real feel-good story.
I guess we all need that, right?
Yeah. yeah this guy's your colleague this guy here yes he's my
yeah i think i snatched that just in the nick of time yep no no pun intended to my post perfect
yeah so so basically what we've got here is we've got either Western forces or a militia group.
It's very not clear.
There's no badging on any of these guys.
I have a theory.
Yeah.
And essentially what we have is we've got a mass grave full of apparently civilian bodies.
And the guy just taps one of the journalists.
Probably for, I'm guessing, racist reasons based on his next line of questioning.
Yeah, and that was kind of where I was going.
So I don't think these guys are Western forces, and they're certainly not federal forces.
I think this is probably like local militia, and if not even like organized local militia, this is a pair of rednecks who are taking the law into their own hands because there's nobody to stop them.
And the reason I go down that road is the – really I'm looking at things like mannerisms certainly not military not trained
i i'm telling you there is no one that has spent any mad time in uniform who's going to be
approached by a group of people who could possibly be he concealing weapons on their person who's
going to be sitting there that non-freaking chalant with a firearm in their hands. Yeah, I would agree with that.
10 out of 10,
that is some cousin banging
redneck who has
shot a whole bunch and never had a professional
bit of firearms training in his life.
The fact that the group was able
to come up on him, theoretically
in surprise,
is not a great sign sign especially in broad daylight walking
across an open field there's no sentries that does tell me this is probably not professional
military at all even semi-professional military so and to go down that road a little bit more
like what i wrote down was tribalism in group versus out group breakdown society gives way to people dividing along
ideological racial or tribal lines and like we saw a lot of this in iraq where when when
because you have to bear in mind that like as much of a a son of a bitch as saddam hussein was
he actually did kind of like force the country together but when he was deposed from power all of a sudden the country fractured along family lines
tribal lines religious lines i mean i'm sure you've heard there's like sunni and shia muslims
and they don't like each other very much because they both think each other are like halfway
infidels because they don't they don't do the religion the right way well the country fractured in all these different little subgroups because if you ask – if you take an American and you put them in any other country and somebody says, where are you from?
They're probably going to identify themselves as an American, right?
In Iraq, if you ask them, are you an Iraqi?
Most of the time, the answer you would get is, is no i'm part of so-and-so family or
so-and-so tribe like these people had no cohesive concept of being countrymen they did not see each
other that way these were this was based like it was as if you had four different countries all
like all bordering each other and then somebody somebody drew a line around the nexus point
between the four and said, y'all are a country now.
Well, that's exactly what the
British did, though. I know, but that's
the road I'm going. We can blame the British for
the Middle Eastern problems. You can blame the
British for a lot of stuff, if we're being really
honest.
A whole lot of people for those spices
they refuse to use in their cooking.
Jeff Jag, if you have a comment, stick it in the chat and I'll send it, man.
But like I said, like so that was what I noticed.
Like the whole point of this scene is he winds up shooting the journalist.
I just winds up shooting several people.
Well, he starts by shooting that journalist and he starts asking the rest of them, like, where are you from?
What kind of American are you?
And what he's looking for is, are you from places i consider to be america and the answers you got
was like missouri colorado florida i'm sure if he would have said oh and i'm from maryland or i'm
from from the dc beltway he'd probably got shot too but more than likely but then the sir guy says
i'm from hong kong he's like oh china he him on the spot. So what we see here is we see that when the national identity is no longer cohesive, people find new lines to draw between the in-group and the out-group.
And I'm just saying that usually, historically, winds up being religious, racial, national origin.
You know, like the beauty of family and clan structure,
the beauty of the United States for most of our history has been that like we have this shared national identity
that kind of like cuts across where did your great grandparents come from?
Like I feel like most Americans, like we remember our former national heritage.
We remember our culture.
But we've also melted them all together into this new national identity
and the fact that we're all Americans.
But when we're all Americans goes away because the country has fractured,
you resort back to the only thing that's left.
And you find new lines to draw.
And we'll enforce those new lines in a very bloody
manner well and fortunately for us you know none of us have ever really had to experience that
in this country thankfully you definitely saw it overseas yes there is racism in this country and it is a serious problem
fair enough it's bullshit it's stupid but that doesn't that doesn't change the fact that it
this country has from everyone i know who's traveled outside of it
done away with it to a very great degree at least compared to europe china asia i mean a friend of mine he
was overseas stationed on a i think an air force base uh i forget which island which of the japanese
islands he was on but he was on japanese uh island and they would refuse service to anyone that was not ethnically japanese
completely legal to restrict service to you for not being ethnic ethnically asian enough
yeah that's that's insane to me but again group in the midwest there's everybody here
so before we go to the next clip there was something I couldn't find this clip, but it happened right after this.
In the process of making the escape, one of the journalists winds up getting shot.
And, you know, they do their best to rush him to want to be in the Western Forces Field Hospital to try to save him.
He didn't make it.
to try to save him, he didn't make it.
And this is a very similar note to what I said earlier,
which was Breakdown Society will render insignificant injuries serious and once survivable injuries immediately fatal.
So this guy, he was obviously hit, and given his rotundness,
he was probably going to have a rough time.
But he survived long enough to like drive apparently
several miles down the road before he started to have issues with consciousness so i'm i'm thinking
of myself like if this had been current situation and there had been operating hospitals around like
there there's an argument to be made you might have been able to roll the dice and get him into
an emergency room maybe maybe maybe maybe, maybe a shot.
But in this kind of a situation with breakdown society,
like a,
a gunshot wound from the top of your head to your pelvic girdle is
immediately that that's a no go zone.
You are not going to survive any of that gunshot wound to an extremity.
50,
50.
If you have a tourniquet,
but maybe, but like like if you get hit from
eddie's gonna love this if you get hit anywhere from the top of your melon to your taint
you're done there is no there's no saving you without access to immediate access to a very
very good trauma center yeah you cannot tourniquet the tank you You can't. And, you know, I think that the reaction of the journalists to this whole experience where there's this great shot of, I don't know who the actor's name is, the guy with the mustache that's in the back going. The young girl that's. Them looking at each other. And they cannot even breathe.
And process the situation that they're in.
Because of how overwhelming this whole thing has been.
That is probably some of the best acting.
I have seen in a movie.
In a very long time.
I mean that's.
That's exactly the kind of response.
I would expect from anyone realistically 100 and i'm
going to tell you honestly that like in these kinds of life or death situations
there is absolutely less than zero shame in a person getting overwhelmed because like
these are overwhelming situations it happens oh yeah there there is no prior life
experience that can prepare you for seeing two of your friends shot for not being american yeah
air quotes probably means white he probably meant white uh i think that was the writing that they were leading to uh american enough for for someone yeah okay we're at an hour i'm gonna skip the sixth scene and go straight to
the seventh sure um if you're this one's a i don't think anybody's still watching on facebook
um we might have some people watching on rumble and we have have five on YouTube. But this will be the last one.
Stick with us to the end.
And there was something I meant to announce
at the very top of the show,
shameless self-promotion,
and I forgot.
Yeah, we can do it at the end.
So I might do it at the end.
All right, last but not least,
this is the Western Forces
knocking on DC's front door to say hi. Thank you. I'm sorry. Take your positions!
Move, move, move! I'm going to get you! Let's go.
all right so i don't want to let that run for the whole four and a half minutes i'm trying to leave some meat on the bones in case somebody actually wants to like go and watch this because i think
it's worth a watch oh the end of the movie's pretty good it's it's intense it is but i think
this is a there's one problem I have with this scene,
and Phil, maybe your experience will correct me on this.
Why in the hell is DC not blacked out right now?
Two reasons.
First of all,
I am allowing for the possibility
that perhaps they were caught flat-footed.
Okay. In other words, like, you know, the... that perhaps. They were caught flat footed. Okay.
In other words like.
You know the total surprise.
Not in and okay.
Total surprise when you're talking about a military force this large.
Might sound kind of laughable.
That's what I'm getting at.
But consider the fact that.
If you have defectors.
If you have divided loyalties.
If you have subterfuge. If you have sabotage, it's not inconceivable that somebody didn't tell, you know, POTUS and crew, hey, the redcoats are coming.
And also consider like, think about the amount of forces you see coming in versus what is in opposition. There's not a lot of opposition so true i'm going i'm going down this
road of like very obviously this is like the last stand and most of the opposing forces given up
or they jump ship or they do or whatever i mean they're not there and the other thing i mean it's
just it it's it's kind of like modern tactics 101 ever since World War II if you've got an
opposing attack coming in
you cut the power you cut the lights
you make it as hard as possible for them
but the other reason is because it really screws
with the photography unit
well that's fair
I mean you could
I mean you know you could have got some
cool night vision scenes in there
I'm just saying like with a green tent on and
done.
And it'll look like,
but no,
that really,
Oh yeah.
It would have been fantastic dudes in panels running around.
I mean,
come on,
we could have been really tactical about this.
I know,
I know.
But I guess what I'm looking at is,
is like,
you know,
like I look at the amount,
I look at the,
the volume of forces coming in on the Western forces side versus what's in opposition.
And I see an enormous disparity, which seems very, this seems very late stage conflict, which we didn't show the scene.
But if you look at the very beginning of this movie, you have the president basically saying like, we're on the verge of victory.
And then an hour and a half into the movie,'s like him and the sea the one the one lady from secret service and a couple of a couple
people that stuck around to the end and the entire military has disappeared so that was obviously bs
well you you're not gonna go on national television and say, hey, guys, I know we're really close to losing.
No, no, no.
What's that going to do for you?
But the things that stood out to me about this was that a civil war will divide loyalties.
You will have federal troops who are going to say, I'm from Texas, or I agree with the Texans, or I'm from California.
And when they jump ship they're
going to take their hardware with them hence you get why would you not hence you get apaches and
chinooks and tanks and humvees and this begins to look like a quote-unquote legit army as opposed
to a lot of the other scenes which were like local militias or the Boogaloo Boys or a small element.
But this is like traditional big stand-up army.
This is like the difference between George Washington and his boys versus the guys hiding out in the swamps, you know, sniping redcoats off the backs of horses.
Like that's the level of disparity I'm seeing here in terms of equipment and tactics.
But that happens. There's a terms of equipment and tactics. But that happens.
There's a chain command, obviously.
There's cohesion in the unit.
There are...
Multi-unit tactics.
There are obviously significant supply lines.
The scene that we jumped over to get to this
so this doesn't turn into too long of an episode
is showing the Western
forces base, and it looks like a freaking
bob. I mean, it's...'s there are obviously very very stable supply lines pushing this which is something
that's very very important as you get to any kind of a large-scale military build-up you have to
have supply lines what a lot of people don't realize that i guess has beaten us come from
the military background but when you look back through military history,
the big jump didn't come about necessarily because of mechanization.
Like we look at World War II and it's mechanization. It's the era of like the Jeeps and the radios and radar and technology infiltrating the military.
But the most significant change in military tactics was not mechanization. It was supply chain. That happened in World War I. Because if you look at the battles 20 years before World War I, they couldn't last for more than a couple of months because once you get – once the supply lines get too long and too fragile and you can't supply food and bullets to the front line. The conflict cannot go any further.
And it can't last for too long because the nation supplying that supply chain just runs out of freaking steam.
What one saw was the ability to apply industrialization to a war effort so that a nation could increase their output enough to perpetuate a war almost indefinitely
and the ability to stretch the supply line so much further than they could previously because
of the beginnings of mechanization so in such a way that like you could prosecute a war very far
from your borders much much longer than you could previously and that is that is why the supply chain
is the the bedrock that wars are built on.
And that's what I saw in this scene that I didn't see in any of the others.
I see a supply chain that's pushing this.
I see the ability to perpetuate this war all the way to the steps of Washington, D.C.
in a way I didn't see in the previous scenes.
Absolutely.
I mean, you can't say it any better than General Omar Bradley.
Amateurs discuss tactics.
Professionals discuss logistics.
Yep.
I mean, realistically, the big reason why our military right now,
the U.S. military, is the danger that it is on the global stage
is because within 24 hours, we can deploy a fighting force
anywhere on the globe with a burger king yep i mean there i mean there are literally army units
that are designed to be able to like next day ship you hell on earth in a box right exactly
you know and and the big thing that you're going to see in any kind of civil conflict or any kind of civil unrest is a breakdown in logistics.
So whoever can win the logistics game first, fastest, and best is going to be the victor long term.
I mean, that was realistically one of the Romans' big advantages over anyone else that they were dealing with.
Their army was their logistics
train. They didn't have a separate logistics
train.
Yeah. And the only
other thing that was in here was like this
one little footnote that kind of like wraps
up the whole movie to me.
And that is that the only people that
wish for war are the ones who have never
experienced it. Open
warfare will scar a nation physically and
emotionally for multiple generations and i'm drawing parallels to iraq afghanistan conflicts
around the world where like there there were entire generations of fighting age men that were
that were disappeared over the course of years and then a result, there's an entire generation of young men,
children growing up without fathers,
which leads to further instability and conflict down the road.
Like I,
it does this and this,
yeah,
this is might be kind of a soapbox moment for me,
but like,
I I'll be the first to admit I've had those moments of frustration where I've
said,
okay,
just burn it all down.
Let's start over again to hell with it. We all them but you know rational right brain phil really doesn't
want a major conflict on my soil ever for the rest of my life because like i've seen what that
does to the nation and to the people of that nation up close and personal and it's not something i want my countrymen to have to experience it's
it is emotionally debilitating to watch to what i mean imagine and nick i'm gonna put you on the
spot is there a local place where did you and your wife go on your first date was it a restaurant or
movie theater movie theater actually yeah movie, actually. Yeah, movie theater.
Can you imagine the emotional shock if you just happened to drive by there tomorrow and it was a smoking hole in the ground?
Like a bomb.
Oh, I'm sure it would be traumatizing.
I'm sure it would.
We that were in the Louisiana National Guard that were deployed to Katrina, we witnessed that because we were going,
we were driving past neighborhoods that we knew people that lived there.
I was driving by coffee shops and restaurants that I'd gone to with friends
at University of New Orleans that I remembered and they're gone.
It looks like a war zone.
So like we had that experience over and over and over through that city.
And then you get the experience of being with buddies of yours when they go to
check on their homes and they're gone and it's gone and you,
you live through that pain with them.
So,
I mean,
it's,
it's one of those situations where it's like,
I don't want an entire country to have that experience of watching your home,
you know,
like picked up,
shaken up really good and put back down haphazardly.
Cause that's what happens.
This is my biggest gripe with politics right now in this country.
We have had it so good for so long and it has been so stable that our
politicians feel like they can risk the kind of vitriol that
they are now without worrying about the consequences i mean how long ago was it that we
had the chas chop zone in seattle and a group of antifa members fired several hundred rounds into an SUV containing children on a joy
ride. Do you want that in your town? We all can do our part to tone this back,
but we can only do so much when the media continues to push these stories.
And fortunately, more and more people I see are completely ignoring these mainstream media stories
that are trying to push the vitriol and the hatred. And that's fantastic. And we all need
to ignore those people and shame those people because it's not doing anyone any good.
Yeah, I will say that the more you ignore them, all mainstream media, the happier your life gets.
I see some.
Oh, my gosh.
I see some chatter in the comments.
I think perhaps our stream got pulled off of YouTube as well, because why wouldn't it?
So if anyone's if anyone's still watching, and there's five of y'all,
you should be able to go check out our Rumble channel.
And I don't think Rumble does all this censorship shenanigans.
So, you know, that's...
Well, as long as it's transformative,
as long as we're commenting on it, Rumble doesn't care.
We just can't play the movie in full.
Which, fair.
Fair.
Come on.
Okay. Well, they're live now. Yeah, which fair, fair. Come on. Okay.
Well,
they're live now.
Yeah,
we're live now.
So two pieces of a piece of administrative work I meant to do on the
front end of the show.
And then we'll wrap up.
First of all,
for the patrons,
the annual secret Santa exchange is going on.
If you need information,
you should have gotten that from the patron group that's on Signal
or you should be able to log into Patreon
and get your information there.
Or,
I did go on the patron-only RSS
audio feed and let y'all know.
So if you missed us in all three of those spots,
then I don't know what y'all are doing.
Like, come on, guys.
I mean, I just forgot to email
Stuart that I was there. Well, that can be amended quickly and guys. I mean, I just forgot to email Stuart that I was.
Well, but that can be amended quickly and easily.
Oh, no, I already hit him up.
He sent me an email text and he's like, hey, man, are you going to do that?
Like, oh, I I neglected to hit the send button.
See, this is why as much as Stuart makes me pull out what tiny little bit of hair I'm holding on to, I do love him to death because
he is really good
at keeping my
little herd of
autistic squirrels somewhat
contained in one area.
I don't know how good
of a job he's doing, but they're
all accounted for.
We know where they are. They're all just a little nuts.
No pun intended.
And the other thing was shameless self-promotion time.
So recently, and my wife and I talked about this on Raising Values a couple weekends ago about the big thing that I was being encouraged to pursue by my wife and some family to start up our own nonprofit with the intention of starting to do like local prepared community readiness and preparedness classes with the potential of expanding those like into regional area.
It's something that like I've been torn with the idea for a couple of years.
Like I've been torn with the idea for a couple of years.
I honestly,
I held off on it for a lot of time because like,
you know, like some of y'all know that I really am very shy and I'm an introvert.
And the idea of running an organization like this scares the hell out of me.
And the idea of being in front of people scares me,
but I am one of,
I'm of the mind that like the one thing that the preparedness community has
not been good about for the last handful of years is we've held our cards too close to the vest and we're not trying to reach new people.
So like me talking to y'all on the internet is cool and we get the message of preparedness out.
But what I don't do is I don't spread it to the five or ten people in this area that I might be able to, who need to hear it because they may not be listening to podcasts.
They may not be on YouTube,
but if I tell them,
Hey,
there's a local event,
you can meet me face to face and hang out with us for a morning and an
afternoon.
We'll teach some cool stuff.
They might show up.
So the name of the,
so what you're saying is they can all show up and make you extremely
uncomfortable by their presence.
I will tell you right now that I will be terrified and surprised and honored if a whole bunch of people in like, you know, southeast Louisiana, St.
Tammy Parish area show up to this event where we're almost at the point of being able to announce a date.
I will just say that, you know, look for it like first quarter of 2025 and the name of the organization is cypress survivalist c-y-p-r-e-s-s
because in my brain cypress is always spelled u.s and i don't know why but that's not right
but um it's on youtube i'll have to ask my wife if we've put together a facebook page my wife
spent most of her career working in non-profits so she's much smarter at this stuff than i am and
she's been the driving force behind like actually organizing this little herd of cats to go in one
that's the reason we all get married our wives are smarter than us come on now well they did marry us so that is that somebody
kind of makes me question their intelligence sometimes even the smartest people can be fooled
yeah yeah but so i'm sure we'll talk about it more yep gillian's in the chat facebook and
instagram cypress survivalist um i don't don't know. Like we're going to,
we're going to start with like this one local event and we're going to see if
we can grow it and make it in something incredible.
Like my big thing is that I,
I really want to use this platform to try to teach practical preparedness and
survival skills to people who desperately need them.
Like I'm not averse to bringing in a person that knows bushcraft stuff to
teach people how to make feather sticks and bow drills and all that stuff.
But like,
it's not my focus.
My focus is you are brand new.
You live in the suburbs or an apartment.
What can I do to get you self-sufficient?
And that's my focus because that is meeting the broadest segment of the
population where they're at today and getting them to a point where if
there's a major natural disaster,
they're okay for a few weeks and they're not immediately screwed.
Hey man,
I'll take a few days.
If I can get it so that you can make it through a long weekend without any
external input
that solves
what would you say Phil three quarter
three quarters of the natural disasters we have
I mean realistically
I mean honestly if you get
three four days if you can last that's a good start
if you can last three days
without your utilities
being hooked up and powered up
you just solve probably 75% of your problems.
Yeah, I would say so.
You're easily going to make it through a Cat 1, Cat 2 hurricane
down here on the Gulf, as long as your house is in a flood zone.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
It's like one of our guests brought up in a recent video of ours.
There are some emergencies you cannot prepare for
because your preps get taken by the emergency yep shit happens sometimes you just got to eat
that suck sandwich yeah but if everyone around you is capable of handling themselves
then emergency service can handle the exceptions yeah and that's also part of the reason why we've
started talking about doing doing this specifically is because it's not just enough to build up the
individuals anymore now it's about trying to build up communities like if you if you are a prepared
individual and your neighbor is also a prepared individual then the two of you can back each other
up and y'all can solve a lot more problems than you can by yourselves. And I think that's why, I think that's why, like, to me,
this is kind of an extension of something I used to say in the pro-gun community years ago, which
was, we're at a point where you don't have the option to not be an advocate. Everybody has to
get off the bench and get in the game and start preaching what you believe. And I believe that
for the preparedness community, that if you truly believe this lifestyle is worth living it's time for more
of us to be comfortable being the brunt of some bearing the brunt of some of the jokes some of
the derision and oh you're getting ready for the zombies and all that nonsense and going out in
communities and showing people like i'm gonna always quote to always quote Holly, Kyle's wife.
The first time she met me and my wife, she said,
wow, y'all are really normal.
And that was like the best compliment I could have gotten because I was like, yes, we are.
Like, you know, we don't live in a bunker and eat MREs
and dried beans all the time.
Like, we're a normal family.
We just do some things differently than most other people do.
But I want people to see the preparedness community as normal people i want us to spread the lessons we've learned and
i'm i'm willing to take that first step with my wife and my sister and my brother-in-law
in this in this local area southeast louisiana and we're going to give it a go you might as well man i mean what have you got
the only thing you have to lose is a little bit of mockery from your fellows and honestly
to quote my one of my favorite tv shows your booze mean nothing i've seen what makes you cheer
come on yeah from from my perspective i'm going to repeat something i've told gillian
many many times before.
Mockery has never stopped me from doing something I think is right.
And in order for someone's criticism to matter to me, I'd have to give a damn about your opinion.
But let's go ahead and punt this one out the door.
Cypress Survivalist, if you're a patron and you'd like to be part of the Secret Santa Exchange, you should look into that.
You should get in touch with me or Nick or get into the Signal Chat or some kind of way.
Get in touch with us.
I mean, we're not that hard to find.
Yeah, find one of us. Who knows?
Maybe I'll make another cannon for Christmas.
Don't play with my emotions.
Stuart, pair me and him up.
I mean, I don't need a cannon, but I need a
cannon.
I mean, no one says
no to a surprise cannon.
I could put it on my desk right here
and just, you know,
I can't be trusted with a cannon.
But anyway, Matterfax
pod, I think my brother took this to work.
Oh, Jesus.
Matterfax podcast is going to
go out the door. Thank you to the four of you
who are still hanging around.
To the 22 that were with us
when we first started, I guess either we
were too long-winded or YouTube and
Facebook shut that party down, so I apologize.
But check us out on Rumble.
I blame Zuckerberg. Yeah, check us out
on Rumble if all else fails, and talk
to y'all next time. Bye, everybody.
Later. Thank you. Outro Music